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WEDNESDAY Eastorn Daylight Saving Time NEW ENGLAND STATIONS $80—WTIC, Hartford—535 6:20—Summary of program news 6:25—Sportograms 6:30—Instrumental Trio 55—Baseball scores —Voeal recital Silverstring Players sk Me Another” s—Studio Party 9—Troubadours 9:30—Orchestra 10:30—Correct time 31—Dance_orchestra 11—News and weather 1130—WICC, Bridgeport—266 6—Merchants' Music Hour 7—Studio program 7:15—Al and Eunice Emmons :45—Question Box 8—8tudio ensemble $:30—Mrs. Northrup Rogers 9—Piano recital 9:30—Studio program 9:50—News 30—Dance orchestra 31—Correct time 900—WBZ, Springfield—333 —Weather reports and and Mabel 6:30—Correct time 9:30—Radio Nature League $—WBZ Players $:30—S8ingers 9—Herbert Operetta 10—Correct time 10:01—Dance orchestra 10:30—Baseball acores 20:35—Dance orchestra 31—Time and weather 850—WNAC, Boston—464 $—Ted and His Gang 8:15—The House That Jack Built $:25—Ted and His Gang €:10—Organ recital 6:30—Dinner dance 6:86—Visiting the Theaters 7—News 7:10—Dinner dance 9:30—Motorists’ Guide 3—Vocal recital 8:30—Hawaiian Music 9—"Stardust and Moonbeams" 9:30—Military band “Olfvette"” 500—WEEI, Boston—508 @—Concert orchestra 6:49—Chimes 6:50—News 3—Mixed quartet 8:30—Musical Memories “Troubadours 9:30—0Orchestra 10:30—News and time 10:35—Studlo program 11:05—Weather and Flying fore- cast 11:10—Organ recial NEW YORK CITY 6—Time; markets 6:10—Joe Mooney, popular pianist 25—DBaseball scores 30—Bpanish lessons 30—Time; police; baseball 35—"Rtate Parks,” H. Torrey 80—8ophie Loopo, song recital 10—Ellsworth B. Morss, baritons 6: 6 ¥ 7 —Time; Goldman band concert 20:15 — “Rosalle,” one-act comedy, by Max Maurey 10:40—Police; weather; tide; time 610—~WEAF—191 5—The Village Grovers B:30—Jolly Bill and Jane 55—Baseball scores 6—Dinner music 30—Orchestra. 7—S8ynagogue services 7:30—Orchestra 83—Mixed quartet 8:30—Venetian Nights 9—Troubadours 30—Orchestra 10:30—Correct time 30:30—Light opera, Hers™ 31:30—Orchestra 860—WJIZ—454 §—"French Readings,” Bertha Dupee B:15—John Dunbar, tenor 6:30—Stock prices; financial mary; cotton prices; agricultura reports §:45—Mme. Lolita borg, planist €—Orchestra 5—Baseball acores 0—Orchestra “The by Mme. Cabrere \ 6:45—*Read Us a Poem,” by Nor-|; man Hamilton, author and poet 7—Correct time 7-—Orchestra :30—Talk by John B. Kennedy 7:35—William Ryder, baritone —Jean Kaplan, pianist $—May Singhi Breen and Peter de qung during o p Rose 130 —Singers 9—"Babette,” operetta 10—Correct time 10—Venetian Gondoliers 10:30—The Wayside Inn 11—Slumber music 710—WOR—12: —Dinner concert 6:45—Baseball; Radio Franks 7:15—Reminiscences af a reporter ~Dance orchestra lick: 9—The open &e 9:30—Military Musie \—The Time, ne 11:05—Orche 11:30—Emil hour Buccancers s weather a Velazeo, 60—WPAP—395 6—American period §:30—Anna Crews, contralto 6:45—"The Trish Trio” 7—Orchestra $:30—Will Oakland's Terrace 9—Charles Horh, tenor 9:15—American news flashes 9:30—Dance orchestra 10—Combination dance ship 810—WLWI—330 6—New Rochelle college hour 6:05—Anna Laurie, soprano 6:20—Grace Ensemble 5—"Books You Should Know" —Joseph Bier, baritone 0—John Shultz, piano solos :30—Talk; Christopher Martin 7:45—Instrumentalists by Raymond Gondo- sum- Gains- the witching | w7z The champion- $10—WMCA—370 5:30—Studio program $—Oswald Garrison Villard 8 ntonio Lopez, baritone Imo Russ and Bert Dixon 9—Studio ensemble 9:30—Heatherbell quartet 10—N. J. Chamber of Commerce 10:30—Concert 11—Dance orchestra 12 mid.—Piotti and Hardy 860—WGBS—349 5:40—Golf talk 0—Music; news; “Jolly Jester” 15—Studio program 0—Bouts from Ebbets Field News; dance orchestra 920—WPCH—326 New Jersey industrial program O—Jimmy Timmon, ukule songs 9:45—J. Fred Coots, composer 10—WPCH studio ensemble 70—WAB(—309 5—Hodgdon's food educational serv- ice 30—William McMurray, tenor, and 6:15—Orchestra Conway's Broadway 7—Time; weather; orchestra 7:30—Orchestra and show §—"The Old Lady Who Lived In a &h $:30—8t. Thomas’ Chapel, organ re- cital 9:02—Studio party 10—Weather; orchestra 11—Time; Handel's Duck Inn 11:30—Castillian Gardens 970—WRNY—326 5—Time; orchestra 30—Sam Hedman, planist 5:45—Fred Ehrenberg, musical saw 7—Time; orchestra 30—Hour of radio vaudeville 8:15—Dr. Juan Romano, “Common Sense of Philosophy and Psychol- 9:30—0Orchestra EASTERN STATIONS 1020—WODA, Paterson—3204 5:30—News; sport; police alarms ¢—Weekly book review 6:15—Jack Wehrlin, pianist 6:30—Hal Brack, tenor 7—Sod Busting, H. E. Wettyen 5—Shoppers’ Guide 5—Ten Minute Tour s—Orchestra 30—Wilfred Wilkinson Barr 5—The Banjo Boys :58—Bascball; time 11—Entertainment 11:30—Pat Cristello and Gondoliers 1120—WGCP, Newark—338 5—Merchants’ program —To be announced 0—Robert Cannon, baritone 0—Holly Park 9—Jimmy Shearer. songs 1120—WNJ, Newark—268 10:01—Orchestra 11—Hawaiian Screnaders 390—WGY, Schenectady—380 6:30—Dinner music 0—Studio program —WGY's aviation school, No. 6 0—Ethel Osterhom, planist s lesson .| A program of popular dance se- lections will be offercd tonight by the Troubadours at 9 o'clock through WTIC. A cello solo by Lu- cien Schmit will be featured during the program, the selection “Till We Meet Again.” The popula numbers include “Kiddie Kape “Girl of My Dreams” “Imagina- tion,” *Joan” ‘and “Do 1 Hear you Saying T Love You? Vocal selections, instrumental solos and ensemble playing which will include a specialty orchestra and a symphony orchestra will be presented at 9:30 through WTI Some of the numbers included Weber's “Invitation to the Dance, “What a Night for |“Leave 1t To Jane.” ody Abbott's | Baby Don't Mean M Want a Girlie ‘Arabesque No. “The Gondolicrs,” a Gilbert and <ullivan operetta, will be presented lin tabloid form over WEAF at 10:30 I with Paula Hemmingbans, Theodors | Webb, Rosalie Wolf and Stecle amison in leading roles. The | scene of the play is Jaid in Venice at [the time of the Inquisition. a 1 Don't Debussy's 1 of Alma Mater, American be Songs in praise number of hiversities, ram to ast throngh W will inelud; Pennsylvani “Roola” 5 ' ¢Old Nassan," Mater r Harvard,” m , 1mous 8 ‘Hail Yaule Ambherst cago Alma I ! comic opera n three Her “Babette.” a Vietor ISy sented with Je [the Jead Tath sica D The action lakes place in century in Belgium. The the hour will e taken rpts from other musi- soprano, in with exer cal plays. from 1 open Leoncavallo's the hour 11 p. m. through ram also includes ana's “The Bar- annve's CSuite Enchant selection Paghiace of slumber music pro nees from | e [tered I Trianon, Hour," and a UThreads Danks. on's srenade on Gold L. Mo Elgar's *“ paraphra Among the HE SAW GHOSTS ] ; (GP) Melluh Cape Warrant Officer I had heard tales of Cape May ghos! ! He saw them through his binoculars, land attacked with a short piece of He s b treated for a dis- is bring shoulder from swishing at | hose {lecated la mist wreath. i - s of the All ehoice pl ola world gradually are becoming a part | on the starter, and the truck ranT(Copyright of American agriculture, | here at notification time, and also | being | pi ~ | scious digr offrey | NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 15, 1928. HOOVER WATCHING THE SOLID SOUTH Not Entirely Absorbed by East and Farm Issues Stanford University, Cal., Aug. 15 (P—While there is a general notion that Herbert Hoover is devoting most of his thought and attention | at this stage of his campaign to the {cast and agricultural middlewest, such is not entirely the case Developments in the “solid south,” as the presidential race gets its be- | lated start, probably hold as much interest for the republican nominee as those in any other section of the | | country. This is due in a measure to | { reports which were brought to him messages which he has received | from that section as to the recep- |tion of his acceptance speech. While it is still too early for him 10:45—Bert Dixon and Elmo Russ |to formulate his plans for the two)ord at all in some instances, the in- |and a half months remaining before election time, it is fairly certain that he will invade the south, speak- ing at least at Memphis, Tenn. which was hi§ headquarters during | the first phase of his Mississippt | flood relief work last year. Whether he will extend his itinerary to take in other cities further southward probably will depend upon condi- | tions six weeks or two months from now. It may be that he will go into Alabama and one or two other states from which have come re- ports of ‘a growing sentiment in fa- vor of his candidacy. There will also be speaking en- gagements in the cast, where lead- ers are urging that he not only de- liver a series of addresses but also make special trips for conferences with state and district managers of the decentralized organization which he has insisted from the first would be set up for the purpose of carry- ing the campaign into every cross- road hamlet. These matters he now has under advisement. Setting out to strike a new note in his acceptance address, that of a call to the people to give their pa- | triotic impulses play in the relation- chip with their government, Hoover has succeeded, in the judgment of | his advisers, who base their con-| clusions on the tenor both of per- sonal messages and editorial ex- pressions. These advisers predict that the candidate’s future speeches | will be pitched upon much the same plane; that they will express the | abiding belief he holds that the| American people want to build in| this nation a human society, not an | cconomie system. | Hoover today was bending every effort to put the finishing touches upon his second political utterance of the campalgn, to be delivered at his West Branch, la. birthplace | next Tuesday. The speech is now in | type and is receiving the final re-| vision. The nomince hopes to have| it ready for distribution before he| leaves here Thursday night on the | return trip to Washington. I While all the details of the home- | | ward journey have not yet been | worked out, it is likely that the| itinerary for Southern California | will include Long Beach and Pasa- | dena, after visits to Santa Barbara and Los Angeles. If it does the nom- | ince will have a busy y Friday| from the time he reaches Santa | Barbara at 8 a. m. until his train| moves out from Pasadena for Ari- zona early that night. | PICTURE OF HOOVER iends and Former Schoolnates | | | From Being | Aloof, Tmpassive Man. i Insists He Is Far i | Stanford University, Cal., Aug. 15 —Californians who have known| | Herbert Hoover since his school | | days find it difficult to understand | | how the public generally has gained | a picture of the republican presi- dential candidate as an aloof, im- | passive man. They concede that he | lis somewhat different when on ade, and that he has an uncon-| or manner and bear- inz, but they insist that he has a straightforward and unaffecicd sim- | plicity that must make one alto- gether forget his official prom- inence. Looking ested face, into his friendly, inter-| that smiles all over, with | | turned up wrinkles at the eye cor-! Iners, one feels suddenly, surprising- ly at ease. Even to children there is nothing of the awesome about him. | On first acquaintance they feel im- | | mediately sure of sympathetic hear- ing. When back ter guests assemble on the ice of his home here, he moves about from one group to an- | others, a biz, comforiable figure in a sack suit. Invariably friendly and approachabl SWIN 10 NEW LONDON Zitenfeld Twins Complete One Long Jaunt and Now Intend to Try dourney to Conn. City. Aug| 15— (UP)— Phyllis Zitenfeld, 14 and long distance swimmers, today planned a swim from New York to w London, Conn., after successfully completing the 21 mile swim from Sandy Hook 1o the Battery. The twins made yosterday in 8 hours 10 minutes through rough water and around many harbor craft. They appeared in zood condition when the swim was npleted. The record for the Sandy Hook to Battery swim for women in 7 hours, 11 minutes and 30 seconds made by Gertrude Ederle in 1 The twins next long swim will be to New London. They expect to swim ahout 20 miles a day start- ing just before school opens this fall. New York, reniee and vear old twins the nd long swim ON STARTER New York Aug. 15 (UP)—Thomas Mastrofilitto, 3. was spanked for be- ing in a motor car accident as he entered a standing truck, stepped linto a telephone pole. | ernment officials is not due to any Sixty Thousand Crime Complaints Suppressed In Chicago, Is Claim Criminal , Investigation Commission Issues State- ment Rapping Police for| Two Years Alleged In- activity. Chicago, Aug. 15 ®—The Chica- go crime commission poured another broadside against the police today. A report prepared by special in- vestigators for the commission charged that more than €0,000 crim- inal complaints made to the Chicago | police in the past two years have| been suppressed. | Bombings have been written on the police record as “malicious m chief," said the report, and attacks | on women have been classified as | “accidents.”. Complaints of pocket picking have not gotten into the rec- vestigators said. Although the report criticized practices alleged to have been pre- valent during the police commission- crship of Michael Hughes, it was pointed out that Hughes himself had | been of great assistance to the in- vestigators in uncovering the facts. It was made clear that neithe Hughes nor his predecessor at the head of the police department, Mor- gan Collins, were responsible for the conditions charged. Mostly, said the report, the suppression of complaints was traceable to precinct captains who sought in this way to make their records look better than they really were. During 1926, the investigators charged, only one out of every 525 complaints of assault was reported trom the station that received them to the office of the secretary of the departiment, Since statistics on Chi- cago crime have in the past been based on figures of the secretary, previous reports have been “far from trustworthy,” the investigators sald. Col. Henry Barrett Chamberlin, dircetor of the crime commission, found the records in the secretary's office “absurd on their face." “According to the secretary's rec- ords there were in 1927 no safe hlowings, no pickings of pockets, no larceny and bailee and no purse snathirg,” Col. Chamberlin said. “If these figures are to be taken as cor- rect, it will be found that in 1926 there were no bogus checks passed, no forgeries, no extortion by threats, no arson and no pandering. 1If the published reports of the police de- partment are studied and analyzed, they will furnish great amusement for anyone with a sense of humor.” Col. Chamberlin recommended *a careful, accurate, impartial and com- prehensive survey of the entire de- partment, looking to its rehabilita- tion.” PAPER CURRENCY HUST BE AGED So Public Will Have to, Wait to See New Bills By GEORGE H. MANNING (Washington Correspondent. N. B. Herald) Washington, D. C., Aug. 15.—You| won't, no matter who you are, get af glimpse of your Uncle Sam's new miniature greenbacks for about a year. At least you won't until July 1, 1929. This caution on the part of gov-| selfish desire to keep the cute new bills all to themselves. Nor can it, ilke so many conservative measures, be referred to as the New England or Coolidge variety of thrift. The| rather surprising reason is that greenbacks have this in common with whiskey: Both must be aged before they're at their best. | Treasury officials declare that the | government lost a lot of money dur- | ing the war when paper currency to | meet the emergency was turned into circulation too quickly after print- ing, with the result that it soon cracked and had to be replaced. | Now, however, there is plenty of time and the pint-size certificates will repose in storage until properly aged. Whether this aging takes place | in wood is unknown as yet. Not only will you not be able to e the new money, but you won’t even be able to sce a picture of it —not even the one dollar kind, which is piker among the two, five, | ten, 50, 100, 500, 1,000, 5,000 and | 10,000 dollar issues. This again is not from any unreasonable willful- ness on the part of authorities, but because Section 150 of the United States Penal Code specifies that photographing of money or any other federal obligation is forbidden. And so you must wait until next| July to sce the brand-new engrav- ings of George Washington that | adorn the lowly dollar denomina- tion which composes 53 per cent of | the one billion pieces to be issued. Nor will you see the picture of| Thomas Jefferson and Monticello | which ornument the front and back, | respectively, of the two's, nor those of Lincoln and the Lincoln Memorial | in the same positions on the five dollar bills, Not until next July. Of course, you may not see them then, at least not many of them, if you are the average cltizen. Alex- ander Hamilton and Andrew Jack- son should gt a fairly large audi- ence for their portraits on the ten and 20 dollar issues, but how many | times will you, if you are the aver- age citizen, view Grant, Franklin, McKinley, Madison or Chase in their incarnations on the front of the $50, $100, $500, $1,000, $5,000 and $10,- 600 specimens of what are some- times lovingly called mazuma? Echo be quoted as the authority answering, not often. | 1t may perhaps be some consola- tion. however, to this average citizen | {to learn that it is as impossible for him to sce a picture of a postage | stamp as it is of the $10,000 portrait of Mr. Secretary Chase. Each s equaily banned by the Penal Code. | Hollywood itself also furnishes the average citizen with consoling material. In a recent film manu- factured in the California cinematic | | zone, money that was real money in- | vertently got itself screcned. The gle eye of the censor, government- or otherwise, was not blinded by the dramatic art any more than is that of the average movie fan, and came that sequence and it was G again with stage money. Movie money must be as big a fake as glycerine tears. Perhaps even more momentous a loss than that occasioned by not see- ing the pictures of American heroes of the past, is that occasioned by the delay in secing for the first time the | name Andrew Mellon affixed to the promise of the United States to “pay to the bearer.” Mr. Mellon's will be the first signature of a secretary of the treasury to appear on American currency. Hitherto the names of the registrar of the treasury and the United States have followed the tra- ditional promise. but the depart- ment has reached the conclusion that |its head should be formal sponsor of | the obligation. The fact that it will bear Mr, Mel- {lon's signature is not, however, the reason why the first sheet which has {been drawn from the press will be framed to hang in his office. It is oflicially stated that the {reason is that this is the first im- portant change in currency design since 1863, {a pair of patent leather pumps was | found to have been purchased at a |rests on the extermination of waste UNIDENTIFIED SUICIDE Pretty Young Woman Collapses and Dies, Probably From Polson, in New York city New York, Aug. 15 (®—A pretty, unidentified young woman, found dead on a Brooklyn sidewalk, is be- lieved by the medical examiner of Kings county to be a suicide by poi- son Apparently in her early twenties, she was unknown in the neighbor- hood and the police could find no marks of identification. She wore no coat, hat or jewelry and carrled no | purse. Her clothes were modish and Manhattan shop which specializes in | theatrical trade However, neither the proprietor nor clerks could iden- tify the body. The woman's nose had been bleeding and her knees were skin- ned, but Dr. Gregory Robillard, a: sistant medical examiner ,sald there was nothing to indicate she had been attacked. An autopsy indicated traces of poleon In the organs and they have' been sent to the city | chemist's laboratory for analysis. She was described by the police | as five feet, four inches tall, weight | 125 pounds, blue eyes and Blonde | bobbed hair. She had a small scar | on the left side of her neck, COOLIDGE LAUDS HRLLOGE PACT T0 OUTLAW WARS (Continued from First Page) | cach other's territory and cooperat- | ing toward peace, As for America, her unity, born during the rapidly overcoming her depression, he said. “Self-preservation meant then, as| it always does, response to the call of duty” he sald. “Adequate de- fense meant the proper functioning’ of the entire organic life of the nation. That lesson, carried over| into our peacetime activities, has| been one of the chief factors in the | enormous progress which the last| 10 vears have seen. It is a pro- cess that is vet only in its begin- nings . . . The foundation of it all spirit war, post-war | and the waster, and of slackness and the slacker.” Praises War Vcterans The chief executive paid tribute not only to the men who served in the United States army but to those “who contributed to the wartime} charities, to the purchase of liberty bonds and to the payment of taxes, thereby contributing their prop- erty.” “Those who possessed very large incomes paid into the national treasury 80 per cent of it, which, with their state and local taxes, very close to a taking over by the government of their entl property for use during the war ihe told the legionnaires. | “We have had a great deal of | discssion concerning the injustice of one person going Into tne service ia! a very small remuneration while lanother remained at home in the {enjoyment of very high wages. But 1 wonder how many of you who put {on the uniform and went into action |overseas would now be willing to exchange that experience for the few dollars of extra ‘ompensation |that someone else was able to earn at home during the latter months ‘: of the war.” CHARGE FOR TIME ew York, Aug. 15 (UP)—The New York Telephone company has established a time bureau, where pa- trons may call at the usual city toll | charge to learn the exact time. SHORE “LOBSTER” would have just raked the field and probably stopped safely. COPY OF CHARGES | British Writer Hands Duplicate to Manchurian system, it would estab- lish Japanese paramountcy in north as well as south Manchuria. Referring to a reported comprom- ise between the nationalist govern- ment and Chang Hsueh-Liang, son of Chang Tso-Lin and now governor of Manchuria, Simpson declared that arrangements were made to hoist the nationalist flag at Mukden on August 10, but that on August 9 Chang Hsueh-Liang received a fresh and definite warning from Ja pan that such an action would be construed as a highly unfriendly act, FRED STONE GONYINCED Family Impresses Fact Upon Him That He is Through With Being Amateur Aviator. Japanese Minister at Peking— New London, Aug. 15 (®—The Wizard of Oz is no wizard of the air, Fred Stone, lying on his back in a hospital bed here and surveying his damaged shape with a critical eye, has come to the conclusion that he is best fitted to tread the boards and in the future will confine all his activities to earth. Stone, injured when his plane crashed near Groten 10 days ago, has announced of his own free will that he will not again fly. He made up his mind assisted only by Mrs. Stone, Dorothy, Paula and all the rest of his relatives and friends. Telling of the manner in which Claims Assassination Plot. Peking, Aug. 15 (P—A copy of a sensational statement made by Ber-| tram Lenox Simpson, British author. | who returned from Mukden y ‘day. alleging that a Japa | socicty murdered Chang Tso-Lin, the { Manchurian war lord, has been | handed by Simpson to M. Yoshizawa. {the Japanese minister here. Mr. Simpson, who writes under the nom-de-plume of “Putnam | Weale,”” describes himself as an ad- viser to the late war lord. His state- ment includes allegations concern- | his accident happened, Stone declar- |ing Japanese designs on Manchuria, | €d that he suddenly found himself |declaring that the coutroversy be-| in & spiral when only 300 feet above |tWeen Mukden and Japan centers | the earth. He pushed the control as |on the railway question and masks hard as he could and—woke up in|a struggle ov the railw: which the hospital. Later in talking with |the Chinese have built and are| his instructor, Stone was told that |building in Manchuria. | the least bit harder push on the con- | Simpson declared that if, as the | trol would have sent him up 25 feet |Japanese desired, these railways higher in the air and his plantzl\\‘nrv consolidated with South BEE CAUSES CRASH somerville, N. J. Aug. 15, (UP)— A bee buzzed about the head of Lorctta Knoller as she drove her car near here. The girl threw up her arms. Four persons were treated for injuries after the automobile struck a post. READ HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS FOR BEST RESULTS PSORIASIS BE CURED. I SUFFERED ' EARS WITH THIS DFUL SKIN DISEASE, WRITE R. PAYNE, 234 F SECOND ST, COVINGTON, KY. 8. the Watch for the Announcement in Tomorrow’s Paper of the SALE OF SALES Most extraordinary event in our 22 years of business in New Britain —the 10-Day Unloading Sale which begins Friday, August 17th, at 9 o’clock sharp. OQur store and warehouse are overstocked; new ship- ments on the way must remain at the railroad yards unless we can dis- pose of the surplus stock now on hand. So we offer thrifty folk of New Britain an opportunity to secure good quality furniture at savings of 20% to 507c—MOST OF THE SUITES and PIECES AT ACTUAL COST PRICE—in order to dispose of the surplus within the next 10 days. If you need furniture now, or will need it within the next few months, watch for our opening sale announcement tomorrow! Sale Begins Friday, August 17, at 9 A. M. New Price Tags Put On Thursday—Nothing Sold! Tomorrow, the entire day will be devoted to rearranging suites and pieces, and Butting big vellow tags on everythirg—EACH TAG HAVING THE NEW RE- UCED PRICE! Everything will be plainly marked—everything will bear sav- ings of from 209, to 509! The most remarkable sale in our history—the most remarkably opportunity you'll ever have to SAVE! 410-414 MAIN STREET NEW BRITAIN [HE OLD HOME TOWN — THAT ToWEL BACK IN THE WASH ROOM= IM EXPECTING TWO CHICAGO DRUMMERS OFF TH’” NOON TRAIN' DINNER From 5 to 8 P. M. Every Day (Except Sunday) HONISS’S 1928, General Press Association.) 33 State St. Hartford, Conn. (Under Graat's Store) THAT LONG ROLLER TOWEL AT THE CENTRAL HOTEL CAME IN HANDY TODAY, WHEN THE COOKS LITTLE KITTEN WAS STRANDED ON A NEARBY ROOR- B8-15-28 LES W. STAMEY _CEN PREST