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ravy responded. “@ea, beating the other pouches by ' MORE DETAILS OF FLOATING CASINO Log Angsles Doep Sea Gambling Joint Visited Los Angeles, Aug. 14 (UP)—"The | ancient mariner and Jonah had a few tough breaks, but they never shot craps on the good ship Johan-| na 8mith Louis Wolheim, actor, stumped aft | through the casino of the remodeled lymber bout to relieve himself of a | few cholee observations concerning Tady Luck as she is found floating seven miles off Long Beach In the | Pacific ocean. Wolheim's soliloquy was delivered | a m The roulette is bad. the poker, 1" and chuck-a-chuck worse, but | the prize albatross thesc guys hang around a neck Is at that craps table. A gume of chance? Huh? “The only chance they gave me to catch that change girl trying to | give me 18 quarters for a five dol lar bill to play the slot machines.” | Forward, in the gambling room, great lights blazed in the cloud of | amoke which hung over the heads | of the crowds still bending over the | 13 gaming tables and clustered about the 38 slot machines. The | die-hards alone remained to play. *The last of a week-end “take” of $100,000 was showering into the Johanna Smith tills. | In the waist of the boat were the comparatively disconsolate. They | had been stroling from the gambling tables, broke, all night long. Now they lined up—ditch diggers, clerks, studepts, plasterers, movie stars and | visiting millionaires—to go back | home, The speed boats can take off ony 40 at a time, and one must wait his turn. Music continued for entertainment of the gamblers whose purses were, gone; At last one’s turn comes to finish | using the only bargain the Johanna Smith offers. Mobody can deny that 14 miles of boating for cents is & bargain. ‘When our boat left, there about 1,000 still aboard. The portion of woman was nearly per cent. In we scudded—some two score high-lifers who would be on quarter rations for a week. were vro- | 40 Mrs. Hoover Anxious to Buy Hushand’s Old Home Towa City, lowa, Aug. 14 (®— Negotiations looking to the pur- chase of Herbert Hoover's birthpluce at West Branch by Mrs. Hoover, | wife of the republicun presidentiul nominee, have been going forward | for scveral weeks it was learned to- | day. Mrs. Jennie Scellers, present own- er, has expressed a reluctance to | disposc of the homestead. Mus. | Hoover desired to acquire the deed | to the place by Aug. 10 and present | it to, her husband as a birthday gift, Mrs, Heellers said, Further discussion of espeeted when the Hoovers arrive | at West Branch Aug| 21 for the Hoover home coming celebration. the sale is Jrooklyn National League Club Director Is Dead | New York, Aug. 14 (P—John &choll, merchant and member of | the board of dircctors of the Brook- lyn National Lcague baseball club, died last night on the beach at Sea Gate, Brooklyn, after a swim. He | was 52 years old. | Mr. 8choll, one of the admini. tors of the estate of (harl Ebbets, former owner of the Brook- | Iyn team, purchased a considerable portion of Ebbets’ holdings. He was an admirer and active supporter of Wilbert Robinson, manager of the club. French Naval Men Man Liner on Ocean Voyage New York, Aug. 14 (#—One hun- dred and sixty-five Stalwart youths from the French navy got passuge across the Atlantic aboard the steam Jle De France which docked here today. They replaced engine room and deck hands who went on strike just before the liner sailed trom Havre. Because the steamer is a regular matl carrier officlals of the French line appealed to the government for aid in Alling the vacant posts and the | Three of the 2053 mail sacks borne by the liner arrived in New York )'(‘s*rdly by ampiibian planc | catapulted into the air 450 miles at | Marriage license applications were | «d today at the office of the town clerk as follows: Charles Ewo- nowskt of 64 Collins reet, and Katherine Gi st street; | Frank Dadario of 407 Myrtle strect. | and Ameiln Scoozato of the same address; James E. ¢ and Mar- | fon €, Chandler, both of 160 Asylum | street, Hartford. RESCUED AT & shington, Aug. 14 (UP)—The British steamer Mayaro reported to | coast guard headquarters today that it had rescued the captain, crew and captain’s wife of the schooner John 1. Martino, of Bajtimore, 27 miles | . south of Barnegat Light off Atlantic | | Hoyt, New York, will command the | City. The Mayaro reported the schooner badly damaged with only one mast left standing. YACHTS WILL RACE New York, Aug. 14. (UP)—Paul | Hammond's yacht, Nina, winner of the Queen's Cup in the race from New York to #pain, will compete in the fourth suiling of the Fastnet race in England, starting from Cowes Wednesday. Mohawk, an- | other competitor in the race to | Spain, will also be entered. 8Bherman | Nina in the 615 mile event. CURTIS IN NEW | AND | Portland, Me.. Aug. 14 (M—8ena- | tor Charles Curtis of Kansas, repub- ‘ lican candidute for vice president, will make two speeches in Maine | during the present cum paign. lzva.l sentative John Q. Tilson of Connceti- | cut, head of tie speakers’ burean of | the repubiican national committee | sald today. ‘1‘\‘“(\! i | armored motor ¢ | the new Miss Eunice Adams of Bristol ix spending a week here as the gu of Miss Dorothy Cadwell of Ches nrut street. Mrs. Mary T. Crean of 622 Main street, will leave for Atlantic City, N. J., Friday morning to attend a wmeeting of the national board of di- rectors of the Ladies’ Auxiliary, A. 0. H. Miss Marjorie Gibney of 411 Park street left today for Storrs, whe she Wil attend & young people’s conference. B. H. McElhone, manager of the New Britain district of the Connecti cut Light and Power company, is enjoving his annual vacation at | Double Beach Miss Betty of i3 Burritt street has returned from her vacation spent at Block Island. | | South | P. Yeaden of 85 Columbia us returned from @ two weeks' vacation spent at Asbury| Park and Atlantic ¢ Miss Gladys Hennig and Miss Win- d Kensel of Plainville arc spend- ing a twe weeks' vacation in the Berkshires, A. W. Borg of 136 Jubilec street, has returncd from a two weeks' va- cation spent in New Hampshire, New York and Canada. Mrs iolz of Newington spending a two weeks' va- R. L cation at West: Miss Helen Leach of 1484 Stanley strect has returned from a two weeks' vacation spent at Cape Cod and Gloucester. Howard Clark of 445 Common- wealth avenue, Gotlieb Bruce of 376 Chestnut street and Frank Schmidt of 439 Church street hh_\v returned from a two weeks' hiking trip in the Green Mountains, Mr. Clark and Mr. Bruce had the (rying experience of getting lost in the mountains for more than 24 hours, being without food or watcr lor most of that per- iod. TRIBESMEN ON WARPATH Wahabis, Under Command of Dow- ish, Reported to Have Made Raid on Villuge, Killing Al | | | | | x i ; 1 | during the same period members of | members of the Protestant ¢ BEAUTY SEEMINGLY HIGHLY INPORTAN Women Spead More On It Than Tor Religion Chicago. Aug. 14 (UP)—Ameri- can women last year spent five times more 1o save their beauty than on | the salvation of their souls. | Religion cost them an average of | a nickel a day, while beauty costs them 25 cents every 24 hours. | Those statistics were introduced today by Miss Francis Martell, scc- | etary of the American Cosmeti- ians' society, before its annual con- ention. “Plety comes high,” Miss Martell told the visiting besuty experts, “but not ene-fifth as high as pretti- ness. Boauty of all kinds, including | cosmetics, facial treatments, and the care of the hair, cost American | women $1,525,000,000 in 1927, or an average of $5.000.000 « day. Yet all the Protestant churches in Amer- | ca and Canada expended only | 76 for foreign and home sions and cengregational ex- s .or $1.940,901 a hese statistics $459,428,0 m the urche in North America invested | years or more, per member in religion during the |vd player 12 months, while the 21,000,000 |ney opening at Forest Hills, N. Y women of cosmetic age, those be- pext Monday. tween 17 and 70, put an average of | The second $91 aplece into cold creums and all | the rest. : “Beauty ranks third in the list of America’s luxury expenditures, Pub- | lic school education, which com: first, cost $2,171,844,639 last yea and theaters and motion pictu rating second, approximated ! 060,000,000,” MANY COUNTRIES HAVE NOT REPLIED Have Thus Far Ignored Kellogs Pact Signing ikl {1otte Hosmer Chapin, of 8 Paris, Aug. (UP) — With the less than two wecks away, foreign London, Aug. 1f (UP)—Wahubi|¢ffice officials expressed concern to- tribesmen, mostly those under com- mand of Faisal Ew Dowish, again are on the warpath and in a recent | a: | taid on the encampnient of un Atich | tribe killed every one in the village, Daily Express said today. The Dowish tribesmen have been aided by thosc of the Maun, Trans- jordunia, district and all are closely aligned with the Transjordani: Iraq authorities & air force Emir Abdullah of the alert 8 ready to bring an end to the uprising. Well informed persons, the respondent said, are of the opinion menace is due to the fail- ure of the recent Anglo-Irag nego- tlations concerning refusal of the Iraq government to demolish the British are ke FLIGHT IS APPROYED Mexican Goveram t Grants Permis- sion for Licut. Col. Fierro to Make Trip Through Central An ca. Mexico City, Aug. 14 (UP)—The proposed good-will flight through America of Licut. Col. Rob- Mexican aviator, was approved officially today. The start will be made from Havana at the end of next week if the weather is favorable. On“Saturday Fierro, considered the successor as Mexico's good-will flier to the late Capt. Emilio Car- ranza, made a non-stop flight on Saturday from he to Havana. Fierro would fly through Guate- mala, Costa Rico, Honduras, Salv: dor and Panama, halting several days in each capital. Anothe;' Myster ot: North Is Solved by Canadians Ottawa, Aug. 14 (P—Another mystery of the north has been solved by the Canadian mowmited police, who radioed today that the bodies of John Hornsby, explorer, and his two | nephews, had been found in a lonely cabin west of Hudson having apparently been starvation. For two years no word had be ard of (he explorcr and phews, swallowed up in lonce of icy wast The wireless message received here today from Staff Sergeant M. A. Joyee of the imounted police at Chestertield inlet Bay, death caused by it | sald that the bodies were found in a in - on the north Thelon river in the west of Hudson Lay. of the n land hank ba Holyok;T\ian Struck By Autoist in Bristol (Special to the Hevald) Bristol, Aug. 14—While walking along Broad street shortly hefore 11 v'elock this morning, Joseph Borus- ki of 111 Wyman street, Holyoke, Masx., was struck and knocked down by an automobile operated by Ulrique J. Munn of Farmington. Mr. Munn took the injured man to the Tristol hospital where an examina- tion showed him to be suffering from numeros cuts and bruises. His condition is not regarded as serious however by the hospital author Pes. Munn was notified to appear bf re the prosecuting attorney Wednesday morning. SON 1S BORN Oswektry, Wales, Aug. 14 (P—A son and heir has been born to Lord and Lady Trevor whose marriage in July 1927 attracted wide aftention. ford Trevor, who is 63, met hiy wife who was then 23 at the hom of his sister where she was a8 nurse. ter of the village plumber of Kirton Lincolnshire, his | the si-| acting | The bride was the daugh- | { the Jerusalem correspondent of the | because about hulf of the 15 replied. Bellef was that the failurc cxpressed, howev to respond was due more to the absence of sonsible | officials on vacation rather than to | fuck of intercst in the efforts of the ! American seeretary of state to pro- mote world peace, - foreign oftice reiterated today | t ither Russiu nor 8pain have | [ been invited, despite the insistence | | of Premuer Primo de Rivera that | prostige demands she with | cor- | | | {through his support of a New York the position of an original Yy nation. i Meanwhile, the French official | press has been instrueted by the | Quai d'Orsay 1o create @ better pub- lic understanding of the purposes of | the pact. French officials pointed | ut that the pact is not intended asl w stepping stone to general disarm- nt but leaves it entirvely to the | rested nations to arrange proper | | proteciion against wars of domina- | tion or conquest The semi-official that an insidi ram has bee; armament of the n Versailles treaty d The news ment is corollary to the attempt of Soviet Russia to promote Temps us propaganda hinted tions just as the | rmed Germany. | for peacc, BAY STATE SUES FOR THOUSANDS IN TAXES ar B, Day s, Wealthy Oil Opera- wr and Philanthropist, is Made Defendant < Boston, Aug. 14 (P— Davis, wealthy ofl | Philanthropist of Brockton, Mass., and Luling, Texas, has been made defendant in a suit brought by the State of M. achusetts to recover several huadred thousand dollars in | income tuses and interest assessed against him in 1 Although the prohibits the state commissioner of corporations and taxation n disclosing the amount involved, it was reported | today, when the suit became known, that the tax with interest amounted to approximately $400,000. The suit | 1so would determin whether Mr, Davis s liable to yment on 149 income in which ¢ an additiwal $ would he involyed. Davis formerly lived in most of his in oil operations in Texas 0 Mr Brockton hut acquired wealth and through other enferprises out- side of his home cit achieved considerahle Recently he publicity with | irnation in which he is a be- theatr rein cal production dealing hever. Davi | 8t for a foundaiion and early this year he bought con- | {trol of a trust company in order to lish a friend as president of | i bank. Davis contends he and is thercfoi residence is not FEMININE WORLD Helen Wills and Mrs. Mallory Head Seeded List W Wills, York of Berkle women's siglos chawpion, and Mrs Molla Mallory, of New Yorl titleholder, dominated championships the seeded Sutton Bun Cal, was placed in the Bundy | famous figures in the game tlon. Mrs, real veteran of {the title in 1904, not he won champinship since | 1915, Just hall of the seeded players are California entrants. In addition Mrs, Barbara, took and Edith Cro. No. 4. The east in Mrs. Mallory, Muss., No. o Morrill, of Ded s Penclope s wert lish star, camc Wills, In the lor, of M The other ed as follows Mrs. Mallory ritt, of Toronto. M 2 Yor Mus, Miller, Bundy of N. Miss Morrill be | Blodgett, of Ioston. X. Miss Jacobs, vs. Miss Louise Fen- Englewood, N sterer, Miss And O’Brien Boy Improving After Blood Transfusion Considerable been shown in the condition of John o son Director James srien, {mont street who ha condition at the Last week Acting Mayor David L. » ex-Mayor George i per added that the move- | Martin H. Horwitz, deput neis Clynes, tos erwent a hlood son A Hitcheock, of Glenhead, For a long period, tirough support ,the play ran with- {out any admission charge. | More than a year ago he estub- {hshed a $1,000,000 fund in Brockton | to be devoted to | charitable and educational purposes | TENNIS STARS OF Aug ¥ Gl whe between them have women's natic or the head the list of 5 for this year's titl former ol vight, of the | M to Miss Wills, who ranks No. 1 Bundy, Helen Jucobs, of Santa No. 3 of San the ne 0 and ham, Anderson, {mond, Va., was sceded No. 7. no for r Miss Betty Nuthall, through the signing of the Kellogg anti-war pact | Ment to contest the final with Miss first round matches Miss Wills and her opponent in the | countrics invited to sign have not |svcond round, Mrs, K, dr cded players arc pair- vs. M Vs Mary Heaton, of Vs, Miss Charlotte vs. Miss Dorothy N Vs, impry of A o New 1 pro- | hospital for wecks, set afoot to force dis- | his illness could not he def const disarma- [eral members of No. 2 fir ment before the world is orgunized | ment offered a pint of blood in ni | blood transfusion and Ladderman | Stanley Gadzik was accepted for the Previously the hoy trans Suggests Eléct or; Day Golf-Vote Tournaments that transierred dence from Brockton to Luling, Tex. | not subject to the | Massachusetts tax. The state claims | that his real home is still in Brock- | ton and that the alleged change supported by any actual change in his home. one Mrs, The in Decen his. of | 14 P—liclen 1, American former wl tennis last thirteen tour- | champion in Mrs. May it Monica, | tinal posi- | of the most and the lay, last won | . Mallory has | , and I three ol 2; Mrs. Char- giicld, Nurjoric No. 6.1 of Rich- vign o tourna- both | unde; W byes. Tay- iss Gene Bur- I | Theodore J M Jeanet'c Y. ovement has mericani Brien of Tre- een in eritical Iritain General nature of srmined ition AL Q ible, and depart- sev- s father un- | usion. | Providence, . T, Aug. 14 (P — President Alfred M. Costs of the Rhode Tsland Golfers' Association suggested today that fournaments | by state on election only entry fee he player's name f Tias cast his ballot nd state clection, This is suggestion to 11 businessnien New York n of w the closing of all golf courses in the country ber 6. Mr. Coats has sent his suggestion w York committee and will Rhod to the circularize the plan. Lancaster, Pa held in all the golf clubs of the Wy, the o a it of n's co hich on the morning of Novem- de sl | Aug. What is said to e the larges pl in nd that the ing of the that he the Republi- mmittee, ine s asked for md clubs on 14 (UPy -~ hox- is on its way to Dupont Gardens on the Dupont est ton, Del. mory in diamater and alued at more truck on which being moved night. 1te ne The shrubbery. than 200 vears old, is 12 feet Righ. than the will ' as many eggs.. 50% faster beating VAN Mayonnaise Miner, Read & Tullock Local Distributor HOE ;ar - Wilming- which is $2,000. shrubbery travel only at 7 Cas IVORY $.10c " 16 Degen WOMEN'S HANK'D Rummage Day 3¢ BRITAIN'S SH N R CASH YOUR FACTORY PAY CHECKS HERE TOMORROW, WEDNESDAY RUMMAGE DAY WELLINGTON SEWING COTTON Rummage Day 3« 10c Z. B. T. BABY 25¢ TALCUM Rummage Day | 1c YOUR BABY'’S PHOTO—Size 4x6, taken here. 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