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NAVY WANTS HELP FOR AIR CHARTS Trans-Oceanic Fliers Urged to Do Their Part Washington, July in laying out occan aviation routes and charting upper air conditions, the hydrographic office of the Unit- cd States ¥y has prepared a standard flight log form which all &viators making transatlantic or other ocean flights will be asked to fill out in the future, Through the collection of this in- formation and with the aid of data from weather and hydrographic sta- tions the navy hopes to provide ex- tensive charts and routes for the air just as ocean routes have been charted for ships through the col- leciion of data and observation over a long period of time, The hydrographic effice recently took the leadership in prepavations for transatluntic mail and passen- 8er travel by auzurating a month- Iy pilot chart of a north Atlantie giving information on wind condi- tions at various altitudes, fog and temperature lines, recommended transatlantic and Central Ame can routes for the month, 27, P—To aid In addition it now is preparing | an extensive series ot aviation charts covering all of (e coustal arvea of the United States, Central | America and the West Indics, This | program when completed will in- | clude more than 60 charts giving | air routes and navigational infor- | yyo.. . o e e S o mation, including aerial photo- | Her e Ate the fighters in the ring as they graphs of outstanding landmarks | SONg, the cha}pplon smiling, ) and charts of all scaplane anchor- | right: TLou Fink, Heeney's trainer: Tun ages. . Maori robe from Australia; Jim Henne: More than a score of aviation eliarts dy have been issued covems" s on "New| - Heeney Rocks Tunney York to Haiti and from Key West - ¥ to Now Orics Others will be G i added at als. i The monthly orth Atlantic | charts of the upper air which were inauguratod last.De Tirst attempt charting of The may smber are the toward systema upper air | conditions. made with the gooper. tion ol United Stytes Weather bureau, have brought enthusiastic comment from aviators'all Over the world. Th: chart gives prevailing wind conditions, fog areas with the percentage of fog to be encoun- tered during the mnth, avera the | water and surface air temperatures | and recommended routes for the month from America to Europe, from Africa to South America and | from the United States to the West Indies and Central America. | Data printed on the reverse of the chart includes o meteorological analysis for the month, navigation- al comment relative to air and | ocean tempera and fog and upper air data having a bearing on ocean temperatures and fog and upper data having a bearing on I the selection of plane routes. i Additional information will be | incorporated in the charts as rapid- ly as it becomes available, and the North Atlantic charts Wwill proba- bly be followed by similar enes for other occuns, Upper ai* observa- tion atations probably will be es- tablished at Bermuda, the Azores and on the north coast of Africa in the future, In connection with ‘he air chart- Fighters Shake Hands Before the Gong unperturbed, and Heeney grim and somewhat nervous. ! . NEA New York Bureau received instructions and shook hands just before the n Left to v; Joe Humphries, announcer; Heeney, wearing his the challenger’s trainer; Ed Harvey, referee. With Jabs STOP" sfi;ns OF RUBBER ne, | | ers Instalicd At Stanley and Allen Sureets. | Flexivle rubber “stop” signs of a |[type uscd in some ci in- :~ alled today at the inte of Stanley and Allen str ington and Myrtle str be given a triul at thes |dangerous corners. The % and Wash- s, and will « and other signs are |tastened into the pavement and are lintended to withstand the heaviest lof traffic on uceount of the flexibil- ity of the made. |eral inches, |“stop” is plainly rubber of wiich the They are sove 1d the yellow lettering visibl: for several hundred fect. When run over by vehicles, they snap back into posi- sjton immediately RNigns of this sort are of particnlar value in connection with the boule- [vard system of regulating traffic, for iotorists are expected 1o bring theiv cars 10 a complete stop when ap- proaching corners proweeted in this {aanner. The board of police com missio has had the boulevard system under consideration for some time and it will probabiy be put in effect eventually ,on West Main, South Main, Stanley and other [ thoroughfare project vertically s |New D'ia;no'ndWCmfiplete KIWANIS DAY IN CCURT I.':Il brother will address the members of the elub. Joseph Kloskowski will pre- olde. tablishment, defendant in the case, | and their respective counsel, Donald Gaffney and B. J. Monkiewicz, are often said. oLp M. 7. AND F. 8. CHAPMAN “Indian Town is ifferent Sensibly Restricted according to the plaintiff, defendant claimed w City ltems Tt looked like Kiwanis day in|the field of city court this forenoon, during the | electrical job done in the Cigszynski trial of the Rillings-Cieszynski case | eStablishme! The Polish-smerican Political | before Judge Henry I Roche. 11 Which, €lyb will hold ts monthly meeting | happened that the plaintiff in the | Amounted t tonight at the *alcon hall on Broad |case, Harry C. Billings, and Val- street at whiet Dr. B. Lutecki of [erlan Cieszynski, manager of the according t Harttord and lormerly of Pittsfield |A. Cieszynski & Sons furniture ex- | should I 411, T saw vour ad in SAYBROOK, CONNECTICUT One Hundred Acres of Safe Playground Lots Here are not Expensive ing program the hycrographic of- Ay 4 fice has assembled navigational At Washington §chool analyses of virtnally all recent A bascball diameond at \\:l&hnn(-‘ tranoceanic flights, The office has {ton paric will:be completed 1his week had the personal soperation of 2 5 ¥ and in readiness for use hy Monday, Celonel Charles A. Lindbergh, Hel‘e vou see Tom Heeney in the second round, when his short | Park Superintendent Clyde Elling- | Lieut. W. V. Davig Lieut. FE. B. jabs were threatening to give Gene Tunney a.battle. They |wood announced. I{lw':n.\dléxg'\\:rl; Bronte, Arthur Giebel -and other|” wore hittine P v anna) o ; S pight. |and construction of the diamone fliers concorning thetr respeative| 1€ NItting, but they weren't hurting. Tom is on the righ was carried out within the $5,000 | flights. T ~ - allowed by the board of finance and taxation. The park asked for $13,500, and when the smaller amount was granted it was announced that nothing would be done with it since the amount was | considered too small to allow of any- | thing beneficial. The present hoard {was of differing opinion and start- Kiwanians, meeting on legal battle® over an nt sometime last fall, 0 $585.51 and which the incorrect as o his figures the amount baseball diamond. Herald Classified Ads never fail to hit the mark. the Herald is! OWNERS AND DEVELOPERS Home A Real Yacht Basin IMBEDDED IN ROADBED New Warning for Automobile Driv- | commission | ed operations which resulted in the | APPSR s FLASHES OF LIFE: NEW YORK IS —_—— the highest peak of the Canadian Rockles and the first woman 1o 40 | yoir “street whon with the old Damon's shov he made a | opens on Staten Istand tonight, Mr S R e ‘\41 will be in Fairview cemeter: j will be scarce on carth, but there'll | MR sy be plenty of food. Seience will find | )EATH OF MRS SHEEHA a way to make it from the sun and b3 | the air, the American chemical so- | = ciety has been informed so by Dr. Mis. Catherine C. Sheel . Barnard of Indianapolis. | | Passes Away at Home of Son in| AT G New York—Federal Judge \\,1,1' Py Ils::.;\.“l.rl:‘l‘;\lll()Ll.] {liam H. Atwell of Latlus. s | Fast Hartford—Funcral Monday. | S Telepnonc 311 IRk but shataios S ekl e e S | et an N8 maxtimhainit tiotugl (1o SURIASETRATN ©f BURKLAD (nEN [in court. “but since the advent of | ‘o YU, divd 4t 4:20 o'clock whis | the prohibition law I have not taken | MOTMINE 4t the homw of her son, |@ drink in this or uny other coun- | Wilam Sheehan of East Hartford, Ste our uwsed car ad in the Classified Bection of this paper. |try. because T fel that as an Ameri- | Where she had resided the pust thre | weeks, can citizen I must obey the law. Brevious foFgolne S0 [Hartford she lived for a time in | Washington—One hundred of the |Binghamton, N. %. -~ | American officers are now getting | She was born in County Kerry, | . | belated decorations from foreign | ITeland. and resided in st S | Bovernments. Some of them were |MOTE than 50 years. She was one i held for years by the state depart- |°f the oldest members of St Mary's ment. The recent congress authoriz- | PATISh. : 4 S [ Sy s urviving her are three daugh- ! J ters, Mrs, Joseph Blanchefte und nc. ! New York—Pawnee Bill is gn | MUs Mary sarmer of this city and | . ; Mrs. Harry Mack of Binghamton, : : " . town with a rievance, Cowhoys aze S v 9 ' et e e four sons, Thomas, Georze | 357 Main St. Opp. Myrtle New Britain, Conn. | watches instead of six shooters, And | ANd James C. of thi pug Wl - - —— |a liam of East Hartford: 14 gry for Tunney reading Shakespeare, SR R i vkt &)umm. and five great-grande . | dren, Greenwich—Mrs, Mary Campbell |, . The in icharge of M |Nenney undertake will {held from St. Joseph’s church M day morning at an hour to be B [ nounced later. Previous to the Mystic—Andrew Startz, year and |ices at the church a short @ half old baby is killed and mother | Will be held at the home is knocked through store window ' Blanchette, 14 Pearl strect. Moore, widow of Charles A, Moore [1raves estate valued at $300,000 to {velatives and servants. of M GOLDENBLUM MILLINERY (0. Our ENTIRE STOCK of SUMMER HATS | Nothing Reserved, Everything Must Go Millinery for the Matron, Miss and Child Is Included In This Remarkable Offer Special For Tonight and Tomorrow A New Low Price. hite Felts 250 HATS $1.00 Values to $5.00. EXTRA SPECIAL Goldenblum Millinery Co. MUCH MORE WINDY THAN CHICAGO By the Associuted Press | when machine driven by B. €. Dodc New York—Which is the Windy w\:.lulull :‘;‘ \\'j.||\ l’j.l\m y«’ and n\l.J. inahis work and that of Dr. Hrdlicka City and Why? , The merchants as- | other membors g 4 P a 5 . indicate the existence of an early 3 hy? t bers of family witnesses s : soclition of New York notes that |ooreqn clentists Still Think Asiatics(coturs in Ataska quite ~aistine weather burcau records show that | ——— | from that of the Eskimos—ef a oy o e of e wind ve | Puinvitle—Town moeting voues to| (A Across That Way jrecvis who. driven out o Asin or locity last year of twelve miles an|uccept gift of 60 acres of land and | |Urged on by wanderlust, presumubly hour; New York had sixteen, |$2,500 from Charles H. Norton and | e settled there for few generations, his daughter Elizabeth for park pur-| Washington, July !:n_n finally moved southward where Washington—Dbivorce secmis to be |POSes. Swimming pool and fountain | dence relating to the migration. of i) ‘t"’]"'ld be suatained more easily on the decrease in the president's | Will be built. | primitive man trom Asia inte Amer- [ 2" the natural elements were not native state. Official statistics are v [ica by way of Alaska is being sought | %0 hostile. . that 257 decrees were granted in | Waterbury—I Imeenter of his summer by a Smithsonian arch- | 1he eXpedition this summer witl Vermont last year, compared with | CitY BUTRS out two upper stories of | iglogical expedition headed by | ALCMPL 10 substantiate reports of 497 in 1926. The decline is attrib. |UWHI4INE at Bank and Center streets. | ey B, Colling, dr.. nssistant direr, jancient village sitcs on Bt Law- ; uted to legislation providing that | e — _ {tor of the division of ethnology of | Island and the Seward Penin. i decrees shall not be effective until |, Plainfield—Louis E. Viet, 15,10 Ciional museum | sula. If they ean he found. Collins ] ) Quinebaug river after go- ? Beum, plans to excavate them with the six months afte ave decids | APowns in Quins} ; | The : 5 aBamn U; o) after courts have decid |ing in beyond his height. A group Ihe expedition left Seattle nh\?unl {help of Eskimos. He purposes also z J of smaller boys tried to save him I8 revenue cuiter “Northland” (o take physical measurements of o Mor T o Lt | May for st. 1,4\\,'1.\‘-( lhl.;ud'nnd the | living Lakimos, A — ! o ol Coust of Seward Peninsula, to carry = happy marriage in the hill country, | forward a systematic study of Alas- = the guest of the literary guild. For| ' ° 4go by Dr. Ales Hrdlicks, noted | San Iancisco, Cal. July 27 (LP) elghteen years she has lived in the | | Smithsonian anthropologist, for the —An expunse of land in the Pa- Tennessee hinterland and the care| popmer Employe of Damon Shoe bureau of American — Ethnologs | colma Wash near here has becn of her farm deferred for u long which the institution directs, made to produce desert flowers, \\h;ln|thu Tgallzation of her literary | Store Passcs Away at Home on | Dr prdticka’s expedition surveyed |many of which, including the eaets ambitions. People marry very young 3 3 the Yukon river region and the |are Leing transferred by tourists to Sheve, ahe #ase; divares is almost!] Weosier Stevolenin Oliy 48 Xoars| 000, o ™ ea ian 00 sns Mo seiba s UnKnown; the mountain folk are Charles G. Anderson, aged 78, a | Uiscovery of a number of old village | The plant is protected against living in an : like that of the resident of this city for 48 years, Sites and probable routes of migra- fanimals and the elements by ita New England Puritans died last night at his home, 210 tion and convinced him that the |prickly surface. It Is a subject that A e Woaster street. following ilincss Ju- | AMericn Indian probably reached |must be handied with gloves Mount Robson, B. C.—Miss Mari- | R {on Montgomery of Hubbard Woods, | 4ot 10 oM age I, is the second person to scale |, 1 ror 1 wny years was ‘L,m_,d,““ store on She \ t DS A\ o it. She climbed Mount Robson with |5 ioas” 1y retived several years two wmen. | 4go. He was also one of the oldest - S Lmemberss of the Syedish Bethany | New York—Society is going in for | " 0e® OF the | Fuabpund tadiue A e fed iiacl) SC g T s - E. of Chicago, Emile I of Macks- and Mrs. Thomas Marjoc Robertson \”h," iy ’.U”‘.‘_"d,mg“:’”_‘ i B0 Billie Burko haveoniered ogs, | ool 1 Suilliams uno (6. Misas B8 el s deckiHedueyibrother Of g B i A Tom. | Anderson, all of this city, a hrotlcr, Aliokinna 5 of | Frank Anderson of this city and . S nine grandehildren, ¥ icorge were boxed once, | K ” i ;)‘f‘{‘h A "““'1‘ ane The funeral will be Leld from his | Exceptional Used Car e, '\',‘;‘_ i Goom e late home tomorrow afternoon t | Values that YO“CIanMOn | S0 i o s 0 o'clock and from the Swedish Arsher ixho ] it dind hare, Bethany church at 3 o'clock. Rev. "l‘:h'" “helf“""d‘““"l""‘-"““'lfl 5 T Carl Fredeen will officiate and buri- thoroughly. The motor is gone ower completely Evanston, TL—A million years I P IRENEWING ALASKAN i s o, e S e " MIGRATION THEME jlowed up this work lasi yeur with | jan intensive study of Nuiivak lstand jand several aundred miles of the maintand, | host | by expert mechanics using Genuine parts for all replacements. Then we attach a Red O. K. Tag to the radiator cap showing exactly what units of the car have been put into first class condition. This tag is your guarantee of quality and superior value, 1f you want to secure an wnueual, dependable n{uo:ln-u-cd car visit our used car display. . N st - | mn»‘ 1. be | on- | an- | V- ice 1rs. The Store of Greatest Values, The to wear cost so little at the Popular Our values can never be duplicated. smartest thin Price. Just Arrived! ;Remarkable Values in a Sale DRESSES For Larger Women 150 Beautiful Summer Reg. $3.30 value, DRESSES $1.95 Dresses of nice enol Dresses of washable printed sflks, colors summer fabrics, silks, guarantecd fast col- plain and ors. Silk pongees. combinations over 2 organdies, foulards beautiful slenderiz- and linens and taf- ing models. Dresses fetas in muny pret- that sell everywhere ty prints. for $6.95. Sizes 16 to 48 Sizes 38 to 52. Don't Miss This Sale of Beautiful Summer DRESSES Extraordinarv at A Great Mid-Summer Clearance SILK DRESSES $2 g Drastically Underpriced $A.95 Dresses of flat crepe, wasl able silks and flannels, in Heavy flat crepes, flowered many pretty prints. You will crepe, washable silks, georg- wonder how dresses of such ettes, novelty silks and com- a style and quality can be|binations. A complete var- sold at such ridiculously low |iety of styles, sizes and price. ‘ colors. SPECIALS FOR SATURDAY | High Grade Boys’ | Wash Suits a1 $1.00 rayon sweaters in novelty|Linen broadcloth and cham- Stl('iiples an(} patterné. Shmgg bray suits in middy button and long sleeves. Crew and| 2 5 V necks. Pastel colors, Sizes |0 and lumberjacket styles. 36 to 42. Sizes 2 to 8. STORE OPEN TOMORROW TILL 9 P. M. Women’s Slip-On Sweaters $1.00