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ARBISCH TRAINING KICKERS Much of Success of Toam De- pends on Drop Kicking Genias West Point, N. Y., Sept. 25 P— The dropkicking genius of Ed Gar- bisch may play a part in whatever successes the Army football eleven wins on the next ten Saturday after- noons, Four years have passed since the| great Garbisch, center of the Army| team, won a Navy game entirely single-footed by booting no fewer | than four field goals for the only| points of the game and a 12 to o victory. Since that day the slim young| man with the accurate toe was, graduated and substituted the mufti | of the business man for the gray of the service school. His business allows him quite a bit of leisure and Garbisch quietly has placed his services at the call of Head Coach| “Biff” Jones. { There has been no official an-| nouncement about it and there probably won't be, but it would not Le at all surprising to see the Cadets show some hitherto unexpected | strength in goal-kKicking from the field this year. Jones has a pretty | accurate idea of the importance of the foot in this game of football. It was the good right toe of Bruce Caldwell of Yale that cost the Army | the Eli game and a clean sweep of | its achedule last season. So since Garbisch is available there is little doubt he will be used. He already has done a bit of in- structing and as a consequence some | of the more obscure members of the squad may be seen at odd mo- ments, booting away at the goal- posts on their own initiative, hope- ful of developing a kicking talent that will make them valuable to the team But as Garbisch sees it, the kick- er should be some regular member of the lineup. If so, it is not un- likely that the man picked will be “Chyis” Cagle, the red-headed ace of the backfield. Cagle is no novice at dropkicking. He booted over two extra points after touchdown in the Navy game of last year. The coach- ing of Garbisch might make him a kicking star. Another prospect is Charley Allan of Tampa, Fla., who has been picked to fill the shoes of Harry Wilson, the one first-string back lost through graduation. “The man who does the Kicking| should be one who ean run with the ball,” said Garbisch. “That was where I was not so good. I re- member in the Notre Dame game of 1924 we might have won it if 1 had been a good ball carrier. 1 was called back from center and of course everybody supposed it was to be a kick. So I got the jump and it I'd been fast on my feet we'd have had a touchdown. We needed it, as they beat us, 13 to 7. As it was, there were just two men any- where near me. Elmer Layden, one of the “IFour Horsemen,” brought me down, after I had made twenty yards. “Kicking is all technique. It's like golf. Form is everything. After you get that down it's just a case of nerves. You've got to forget every- thing and just go through that easy motion as though you were the only person on the fleld.” Whether or not Jones and his new volunteer succeed in developing another Garbisch, the 1928 Army outfit will be a veritable and tricky team, as well as the possessor of one of the mightiest pairs of tackles any eleven ever had. A passing attack with Cagle. or| his understudy, the long-striding | Dick Hutchinson of Minnesota, do-| ing the sending, and Nave, Allun.] Murrell or the ends taking care of the receiving share of it, will play an important part in the cadet of- fensive. In this department Jones s handicapped more than a little however, by loss of Born and Har- bold his great wingmen of last sea- son. In their places are Malloy and Messinfer, plebes of 1927, who have been showing up well in practice as catchers of passes. The rest of the line is in about as good shape as the backfield which FIT 1t you have Epilepsy. Fits, Falling Sick- ness or Convulsions~no matter how bad —write me today without fail. Attack stopped over night in_many cases. NO NARCOTICS—no barmful drugs. Satis- faction or money back. | Southern Methodist, |other is private FREE| | obtainable at the Fair Proof presents Nave, quarterback; Murrell fullback; and Cagle, brilliant haif- back, all of whom started against the Navy last year. Captain Mort Sprague, twice all-America, and George Perry, make a matchless panr of tackles. Louls Hammack, veteran guard, will have either Walsh or Humber, promising ne\\- comers, as a running mate; al both Hall and Pearson, centers, wh alternated last season ,are a\mlable | again. After Boston university, which will be next Saturday, the Army| schedule presents such teams as| which will be| played here Oct. 6; Harvard, Yale Notre Dame, Nebraska and Stan ford, an unrivalled group of oppo nents scheduled. Rumor says it dis- | proves the contention of Navy ad- herents that West Point would be | unable to get any worthwhile op-| ponents until it adopted a three-| vear transfer rule. SAYS HILLERS ARE. 10 BE PAROLED Leopold and Loeh Commitment o Papers Announced in Error Chicago, Sept. 25 (®—An errvor in the commitment papers under which Richard Loeb and Nathan Leopold | Jr. were sent to the Joliet peniten- | tiary four years ago makes these | |two slayers of little Bobbie Franks | eligible for parole in six more years. Hinton Clabaugh, chairman of the | state hoard of pardons and paroles, | said today. Clabaugh spoke of Loeb and Leo- pold as “sons of wealth, who are pampered pets in Jolict.” Life Sentences These men, each under life sen- tence for murder and 99-vear sen- tences for kidnaping, are building up “fine records,” Clabaugh said, with a view to seeking parole when, because of the error in the mitti- mus, they become eligible within six years. “One is private secretary to the first warden.” “fabaugh said. “The secretary to the Protestant chaplain.. Yet Leopold is generally believed to have been the brains of the prison outbreak a few months ago which has cost, so far, several innocent lives and re- sulted in the hanging of three men." Loeb and Leopold were the col- lege students. whose crime marked the birth of the “thrill* murder. They were defended by Clarence Darrow, the Chicago criminal law- yer, whose strategy of having them enter pleas of guilty was one of a series of astonishing developments that marked the entire case. Fol- lowing this Darrow introduced testi- mony the object of which, as he ex- pressed it, was not to keep them from paying for their crime, but to prevent their being hanged. The court in passing the double sentences | recommended that neither should | be granted a parole, no matter how long they might serve. Clabaugh did not explain the error in the mittimus was. what FISH BEAUTY HIGH New York, Sept. 25 (#—One hun- dred pounds, British gold, for one fish was the top price paid at the recent British Aquarists’ association exhibition in London. The fish was a blue, telescopic-eyed veiltail, one of the new forms of goldfish bred by the Japanese. Gold, white and black in these forms are common, but blue is a rarer color. READ HE Do Your Feet and Ankles Swell and luflame and Get wo Nore You Can Hardly Walk? Have You Varicose or Swollen Veins and Bunches Near Ankle or Knee? To stop tlic misery, pain or sorcness. help reduce the dangerous swollen veins and strengthen the legs, use Moone's Emerald Oil. This clean powerful pene- | trating vet safe antiseptic healing ol is | Drug Dept. and | all first-class drug stores. In hundreds of cases 0il has. given ne's Emerald blessed rol Wonderful for Ulcers, Old Sores, Broken Veins and Troubles s of Eezema, MOONE'’'S BI]RAH'ANSWERS GOVERNOR SHITH Replies on Thme Major Issues| o Canpaifn Sept. 25.—(P—Sen- 3. Borah answered Smith on three of the. presidential | campaign, farm relief, prohibition and immigration in a campaign speech here last night. He made no reference, direct or indirect, to the so-called “religious [controversy.” which, he declared arlier in the day ssue—and 1 refuse to discuss it.” Refers to Smith Tusa, Okla., ator William Governor Alfre major issue Only twice during the entire talk | | did Borah refer | nominee Ly name—at all other times Govern Smith was either “the shed gentleman who recent- poke in Oklahoma City” or “The Governor." Oklahoma, were in is “deep interest” presidential campaign. explanation of a friendly uppose, saying: “You've always rather irregular heretofore—why in this campaign?” “I am interested, -deeply interest- ed, aid. est is known as the farm problem— and the best equipped man in the been considered as a are you regular 1he entire output of a It is manne DAL butter we pack a coupon. Twenty coupons and $6.00 Carlsbad China dinner set. bring 34 more pieces EMERALD OIL “is not a political | to the democratic | His opening words, after greeting | in the presenll “This afternoon I received a Iet-, |ter at my hotel, republican | and for two reasons,” the senator | ‘The first reason for my inter- | United States today to deal with that complex problem is Herber Hoover. My second reason is my desire to see the constitution of this country maintained and enforced as the people have written it, those rea- sons are why I'm regular now.” ‘The senator said he believed Gov- ernor Smith’s stand on imumigration meant he would revise the present laws which might permit an influx of European laborers of low stand- ards to compete with American workmen. | *“Hoover's stand on immigration |can not be misunderstood but 8mith |never has been definite in the mat- |ter, in my opinion,” he said. | B e e SR |“Last Chance” Saloon Goes Up in Flames Oakland, Cal, Sept. 25 (®—The | “Last Chance” saloon, cradle of the literary endeavors of Jack London and favorite grogshop of Robert | L.ouis Stevenson during his residence on the west coast has been de- stroyved by fire, Mementos of the two famous au- thors, including the chair in which R. L. 8 sat to plan his South Seas | trip, first editions of Jack London’s book with inscriptions from the author of Johnny Heinhold, owner of the saloon, went up in the flames. | The “Last Chance” was built 43 years ago from the timbers of an old clipper ship that grounded in the Oakland estuary. letter 1| | SHIP | St Catherine’s, Ont., Sept. 25 (P— The Norwegian freighter Doris which had been jammed across the | Welland canal since early Sunday, [ blocking movement of wheat ship ments, was released vesterday. Indi- cations tonight were that normal traffic would be resumed by noon | today. Czecho-Slovakian pottery provides premiums for our patrons. Read this offer Every woman knows what a vast difference there is in china tableware. We had this in mind when we searched the globe for fine dinner sets to distribute among our friends this year. We found a cf)lcturesque old pottery in far-off Czecho-Slovakia. by some of the world's most expert artisans. has long been famed for the quality and exquisite workmanship of its products. We were able to obtain its entire output. Now this treasure-trove is ready for you. Can you use an extra cinner set of this beautiful Carlsbacy have one. Read how easily a forty-two, seventy-eight or one hundred and twelve piece artistically patterned set can be yours. BUY PARKSDALE EGGS . It China? We want you to 7YV W\ W\ AN XNICNTZNN TN e e ¥ ), Save the Coupons Parksdale Eggs are carefully selected from the country's finest, —graded expertly as to size, fullness, Butter comes from pure, rich cream, pasteurized for purity. Comes sealed in odor-proof, ultra-sanitary cartons. Eggs are sealed with a paraffin coat to hold the flavor in— to keep impurities out. With each dozen eggs and each pound of It contains full details. ive you the beautiful 42 wenty more and a second get you 36 additional pieces. Twenty coupons and $6.00 more A total of 112 artistically patterned, individual pieces of this fine ware for only $18.00. You couldn’t buy them for many times this price. P. BERRY & SONS, Incorporated Hartford, Connecticut Sole distributors for New England States F O WO WY W VWN flavor. Wedgwood Berrydale icce 6.00 o ¥ 3 PERSONAL LOANS AMOUNT OF LOAN $150 INTEREST AND SERVICE CHARGE $12.00 deducted NET AMOUNT GIVEN TO BORROWER $138.00 REPAYABLE IN TWELVE MONTHLY INSTALLMENTS OF $12.50 $300 $24.00 deducted $276.00 $25.00 $600 $48.00 deducted $552.00 $50.00 FIDELITY INDUSTRIAL BANK 136 West Main Street New Britain, Connecticut | | ALDERMAN WILL BACK UP GOVERNOR Yirginia's Presideat Is Support- ing Smith in Colleges Washington, Sept. 25 UP—Edwin A. Alderman, president of the Uni- versity of Virginia at Charlotteaville, in a statement issued today through the democratic national committee announced that he would both work and vote for Governor Alfred E. Smith, democratic nominee, He will serve as vice chairman of the col- lege league for Alfred E. Smith. President Alderman compared Governor Smith with such democra- tic leaders as Jefferson, Jackson, Cleveland and Wilson. Knows Nmith “1 know Governor Smith personal- 1y, he declared, “and I have studied his amazing and Inspiring career up from the city streets to his present high positidbn. I find him to be a brave man, unafraid of Handkerchiefs 2 5 C each kerchiefs for Wednesday. 79¢ « Values to $2.95 23 Pc. Waffle Sets $4.98 men or fssues, & clean and hoavet nian in mind and morals, an exeou- tive of rare gifts, a man capable of straight thinking and singularly free from prejudice or demagoguery. No public man of my lifetime suggests the demagogue less than Alfred E. Smith.” President Alderman said he did not agree with Governor Smith on the liquor question, but added that he respected his motives and ad- mired his open mindedness and de- clared he did not regard their di- vergencies of opinion as a sufficient reason for deserting the democratic party. President Alderman characterized the position of Herbert Hoover, re- publican nominee, on the liquor question as “weak and amiable.” SEVEN INJURED Black Rock. Ark., Sept. 25 (#— Seven men were injured, five criti- cally when a 400 foot span of a newly constructed highway bridge over Spring river near here col- lapsed yesterday. Ten men were on the span when it fell into the river but three escaped* without injury. The bridge was to have been opened for traffic next Saturday. READ RERALD CLASSIFIED ADS Reluses to Take Back Statement Aboat Hoover Baltimore, Sept. 25.—(M—8enator Willlam C. Bruce, democrat, of Maryland, last night issued a formal statement in which he refused any apology or withdrawal of his state- ment that Herbert Hoover and Charles Curtis had violated the pro- hibition law, made during a speech at Westminster on Saturday night. He reiterated. his stand that he was, in the case of the charge against Hoover, merely repeating a statement that had been attributed to Clarence Darrow, Chicago at- torney. He said that it had never been denied by Mr. Darrow or Mr. Hoover, and that the familiarity shown by George Akerson, Mr. Hoover's aide, in denying the charge showed he knew of the statement W.E-D-N.E-S-D-A.Y S-P-E-CILA-L-S Wednesday Only! Women's Silk Hose Fine Swiss colored lawn with neat em- broidered corners ahd cut work, or choice of dainty lacetrim. Selling at practi- cally one half price. Special heel. most renowned hosiery All sizes and colors ..... Wednesday! Closing Out 500 P RAYON SILK UNDERTHINGS A choice of bloomers, slips, chemise and gowns, in a very fine s:lelctmn of styles, sizes and colors. Not every size or color in each style. Imported A very fine all silk to the top hose in a semi-service weight with the new popular narrow Slight irregulars from our of mills. cereee $].15 ces Pottery A brand new assortment stripes and smart checked patterns, all sizes, regular 50c value. Senator Bruce refused to comment on the denial of the charge entered carlier in the day by Scnater Curtis until he had seen published state- ment of the vice presidential candi- date, “It. Mr. Darrow will umllnull' deny that he has ever made such & statement, I will be giad to accept his denial rather than the preas re- port of what he said, as & true ver- slon of the matter and to expreps my regret that | should have used his alleged statement in commenting in my speech,” Senator Bruce sald in his statement. The expression “stony-broke” or- iginated from the old custom of breaking a craftaman's stone bench when he falled to pay his debts. New Discovery Stops Fits Brookiyn. N. Y. A new remedy has been discovered that llwl the born cases of Eplleptic fits; Epilepsy onies use it; great medical specialiste recommend it. THE PHENOLEPTOL CO. will #end a FREE interesting beoks let to anyons who writes to Box 71, Bt, John's Pl Brookiyn, N. Y. Dept, 112, Letters treated strictly confidential. Men's Socks 29¢ men’'s fancy sox in 79¢ « Values to $2.95 Ruffle Curtains $1.39 In imported China, floral pattern, including 6 cups and saucers, 6 plates, one large size covered pitcher and one syrup pitcher with cpxier and plate. Extra spe- cial. Japanese 350 yards pure silk nat- ural color pongee, guaran- teed first quality, govern- ment stamped for slips, shirts, blouses, drapes, 33 inches wide. Regular $1.69 Quality Infants’ Rompers $1.39 ca Many fine styles and pat- terns, mostly sample sizes, values up to $2.95. In amber, green and canary, former prices to 79c. Odds and ends to close OUERBEN . coivnwamanmmmsmnns inens wearing silk for frocks, In Italian and Egyptian pat- terns, a large assortment, in- cluding vases, jardinieres and ferneries. Specially marked at a price never before shown in New Britain ....ooovvuienines High Grade Table Stemware 25¢ $1.00 Kayser Rayon Vests A beautiful vest made of fine quali- ty rayon silk by one of the foremost manufacturers of rayon underwear. In a choice of colors and sizes. Regu- larly $1.00 value. Wednesday ..... Linen Cloths Pure linen luncheon cloths. size 54x54. Choice of heavy linen floral damask or pure linen crash with colored woven bor- ders, hemmed ready for use. An unusual value, for Wednesday only .. eves Wednesday! A Wonderful Sale of SILK FLAT CREPE Pure silk washable crepe-of good firm quality, range of new fall shades including black, white, navy. A practical Y afternoon wear, lingeries and coat lin- Regular $1.69 Quality ings,, 39 inches wide. A remarkable price, for Wednesday only. Boys' Wool Lumberjacks Made of fine quality wool fabrics, in a very good choice of pat;erns, well made, in sizes 8 to 16 $2.59 in a lovely Made of very fine grade voile, cut full width, 2 1-4 vards long. Complete with tie-backs. 89c¢ Turkish Bath Towels 33¢ Heavy pure white Turk- ish towels of soft spongy double weave. Large size, 24x48 with plain white hem. An unusual value for Wednesday only. Kotex 3 boxes for 95(: _Genuine quality, regular size, box of 12. Special sale price.