New Britain Herald Newspaper, November 2, 1928, Page 4

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o ' UNIONVILE POST OFFIGE [ e ; MSPIJSI.TFII,UBI:II:!DU%BIIEES SPACE 10 B8 DOVRRD i St Detwiller Believes Projects Are Desecration of Nature Goverument Leases Larger Quarters | ton water. Lady Heath stood on the deck of From Masonic Bullding Asso- |4, "shin waving & farewell. The Projects such as those for carving | gigantic figures on the sides of Stone mountain and in the Black ciation in That Town fliers, both men, dropped Sowers to hills are desecrations of nature, de- her. GEORGE H. MANNING Lady Heath's latest exploit was (Wnlhkf(’wn Correspondent, N. B. Herald) 4 SN clares Frederick K. Detwiller of New Yerk city, who opened an exhibition establishing a new altitude record ‘Washington, D. C., Nov. $.—~The for Engiand several weeks ago, post oftice department announced | o7 IFEEC ST ST O0 today that it has entered into an = . of his oil paintings at the New Brit- | n institute yesterday. He con- emned the Stone mountain memo- | While in the United States she will rial in Georgia and the similar one Good Reasons JORDAN’S is the leading women’s apparel agreement with the Unionville | Masonie Bullding association to lease |211°03 the interfational Conferoncs for a term of 10 years enlarged post |, "o o office quarters in the l-oc(-tion'l’ building in Unionville, located on the | 1., - cast side of Main street between | Find Lair of Cattle Main and Lovely streets. Thieving Group The building is ““‘:hb"“‘r."; Mack, Colo., Nov. 2 UB—In a per- roved and as soon as the wol . naned 1nidhe JRoptn Dabois pila. tompleted the Unionville post office gfgfi:“:;;‘-flfl"‘c;';‘mfi; e s o the s nills, will occupy 990 square feet of loor | of Utah, Grand county law enforce- ;:ll;rr-:l":;a::::;:;‘:e'*z:e:" un, space, nearly double the space NOW | ment officers have found the lair of e ; ; . ) ' . used. elaborate cattle-rustling ga der way in many parts of the country i . . oia @hnartrisnt Diaa heon DAVIE :‘;:lcllhuvroln o‘u'tm ::: ‘lve:t gang e basare suoh natural Bebjine by $600 annually for rent but under the | Cattle stolen from the Baker iy Ahe sioe on Rhich ShOr Y new leasing agreement the annual | ranch last spring were found yester- | i E i el g Ot el rental will be $1,200. Tt is expected | day grasing in the luxuriant forage | bl A b the enlarged quarters will be ocou- |of an isolated range 100 miles | B e pied In the near future. distant. The range was shut off by S patmied The’ Summit-: which is mountain ranses. and entered by a | one of the pictures in the exhibition Lady Heath Leaves narrow, hidden, natural gateway. | and which shows Lantern hill, near U. S. Lecti T The discovery came through an | Mystic; This canvas shows, in the For U. S. Lecture Tour |anonymous leter addressed to the | tor’:lr%uud lmc:n‘::“ eu:'u rising . o Southampton, Eng., Nov. 2 (® —| ranch owners last week. sharply on both sides, while between G k. Lady Heath, noted British woman them, far down in the distance, les filer, had an appropriate send-off | READ NERALD CLASSIFIED ADS the Mystic valley rolling away to the ses. The cliffs, Mr. Detwiller sald, have now been destroyed, a mineral deposit having been dl:;mre:mh . - . - them and a rallroad run through the £ - " gap to tap it Mr. Detwiller ve- . 4 : | e hemently protested against this ac- g e i < . I tion when it ‘was done, but he was . , unable to secure any retarding ac- tion. o e ] J § 9, The subjects of his canvases pre- L b o ere s a t 0 sent a great variety of city and A . -2 % { A country scenes at all seasons of the ! 5 - year. Many of them have their locales in Connecticut. “Mysterious Lake” was also painted from the top of Lantern hill, the depths of the lake holding a haunting and fore- boding charm which can only be realised upon seeing the picture it- self. Lantern hill is an historic apot, having been used in Revolutionary times as a place from which the plonists signalled to their ships at oea. Even today it is a mariners’ landmark. “The Port of Noank” shows the ‘wharves of this old Cennecticut town during a period of inactivity. This pleture, which is illustrated herewith, emphasizes pedce and sunshine by its mere coloring effects. A view of Noank from the fields is entitled “New England Village,” while “Lob- ster Traps” shows an old fisherman ‘making his traps and floats in t! spring. John Mason's house on Mason's island, near Mystic, is seen in the background of *“Old Pent Way.” Mason was an early settler ‘who distinguished himself in fighting the Pequot Indiana and this historic atmosphere has been well caught by the artist in his picture. Overcoats for store in New Britain THE PORT OF NOANK Another historical subject {s “Treason Hill,” which depicts the house in which Benedict Arnold plotted treachery against the Amer- lcan colonies. The forbidding gray house, barren land and dead wal- nut and locust trees with their gnarled and shattered branches, de- picted in cold, weird colors under & bleak sky, all have been painted In a fashion which has trapped the very atmosphere of intrigue and | treachery. In fact, in such surround- ings as are shown, it seems as if a man would be driven to such trai- torous actions. “Moonlit Towers” is & view, trom | the black sea, of Provincetown. Mass,, and the Pilgrims’ monument there, the buildings and monument standing out in ghostly whiteness against the dark sky. Beveral of Mr. Detwiller's pictures show scencs in Maine, around Bar Harbor and Mount Desert. A number of thes: were painted in winter and show fce fishing, the rarely seen “anchor fce,” and other interesting features | of the cold months. At the other | extreme fs “Willlamsburg,” in which the onlooker gazes up from | the wharves up the East river at the towering structure of the bridge @8 it passes overhead. The present exhibition is the sec- ond portion of Mr. Detwiller's show. The first half, consisting of “water oolors, etchings and lithographs, Was presented at the institute dur- g February and March. The ex- hibiion is° open to the publie. KILLS DIVORCEE AND ‘ THEN SHOOTS HIMSELF Pat Thompeon of Cincinnati Mur- ders Mrs. Katherine Forsting tn Louisville Early Today. Louisville, Ky., Nov. 2 (M — Pat | Thompson of Cincinnati shot and killed Mrs. Katherine Forsting, a @ivorcee, early today and then killed himself. Thompson was separated from his wife. Police belicve a quarrel led to the tragedy. Thompson called at Mrs. Forst- ing’s home late last night. After he bad left, Mrs. Forsting went to the rear of her house and soon after- wards her sister, Miss Mary Habich heard two shots. Two bullets wer in her head and she died without saining consciousness. Miss Habich told police she had seen Thompson running away. Thompson then went to the home of his sister, Mrs. Georgia Hamil- ton, and awoke her and her hus- band. He kissed her and then drew % revolver, shooting himself through the brain Mrs. Forsting and Thompson had been acquaintances for ten years. Australians to Fly To Java Tomorrow Sydney, New South Wales, Nov $ P—Captain Frank Hurley ani Flying Officer Moir, Australian air- men, bound for England, arrived at Wyndham, Northern Territory, at 9:45 a. m. today from Daly Waters, They intend to fly across Timor Bea to Java tomorrow if weather tonditions permit. Natives of the Solomon Islands wear necklaces of beetles’ legs as iove tokens. | BELIEVES THEORY !ctpt the result and believes that the ‘Washington, Nov. 2 UP—Although theory will eventually be regarded he believes that Einstein, in evolv- as the most important since New- ing his theory of relativity, made ton's laws of gravitation. correct results grow from incorrect | —_— assumptions, Prof. A. A. Michelson, | The tax collected on complimen- the University of Chicago's distin- |tary tickets for the Tunney-Heeney i guished physicist, 'has come to ac- ‘flght was $13,399.22. WOMEN SCORE Morgantown, W. Va., Nov. ¢ (A— Women make better grades than men at West Virginia university. Statistics show the coeds as a group averaged 80.41 per cent last year, while the men students made a grade of 78.11 per cent. SALE OF HIGH GRADE HATS Marked Down FOR QUICK CLEARANCE asfernillinery 133 MAIN ST, 50 Hats .- Velvet, Metallic, Feature Impoitant Values at An unusual opportunity to purchase a high grade hat at this very low price. Most of them are marked down from $10 and $12, Only 50 Hats at This Price—Come Early Black Claret Madeleine Blue Wins Hunters Green Wood tones Paradise Beige Chocolate Gray Slate Bhetlands Camel Cloth Harris Tweeds Miltons VERY Coat designed to the Ashley — ideal of style, character and distinc- tion. Fach Coat cut singly and finished in the custom manner that distinguishes all Langrock clothes. The coat illustrated is one of a special group featured at this price. It is the popular 48 inch model with fly front. o i THE HOUSE OF ST Style First . Quality Value First ONE THIRTY NINE MAIN STREET, NEW BRITAIN Whenever you visit Jordam's youll find styles here many weeks ahead of other stores. Only in the leading fashion stores of New York will you see them at about the same time, Through our manufacturers’ ocem- nections we make our purchases long before the merchandise is prodnced. The result ls—that fn ot mare than 3 or 8 days after the apparel is man- ufactured, you'll find it in our store, This is Metropolitan servics. Every piece of apparel Jordan's of- fers you must measure up o @ standard that's far above the price you pay for it. We stake our repu- tation on it. Ffllflerlll'.m can be successful unless the custom-~ ers are more than eatisfied. The best evidence of this is the fact that our customers make & habit of buy- ing at Jordan's—It pays o, | Again, by reason of our manufso- turers’ connections, along with the tremendous merchandising facilities, , |7 our policy of smaller profits and larger volume brings Jordan's prices the most economical t6 be found anywhere. Comparison will prove to you that this is correct. When you buy a garment at Jor- dan’s you must be satisfied—and t0o maintain the good will of our cus- tomers our entire organization is at your service. Whether #t is special fitting or a special request for cer- tain garments, Jordan’s will m them for you.

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