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WTaPa g i Gty. MISSING SIKORSKY | *- #- ¢ & { - Eojey Hoffmann's. Delicious Hot j{Crees Buns daily all’ through Lent, Themitt G will hold ita {C; A witioantimee ¥ range reg- — e . g D bly ular meeting Saturday evening at § . ::“:: m::‘“ will 'probal weteck t Jr. 0. U. 4. - na” | Rogers Notiies Miami of Arrivalcheove st A uet th Mr. Vool ot 3000 [y e o et U ADNS D |G s e e " by the “Villige Choir” There will e AR also be other musical selections and at ‘the b Aincola, N. Y., Feb. 14 UP—Three | Fecltations. ’ Washington, Feb. 14 UP—J. T. Huiyer institute at the Y. M. C. 18 year old youths, held in connec- [ 8t Maryw Ladies’ T. A. and B. %, | Trippe. president of Pan-Americau - tion with a score of robberies in|ciety will hold w meetnng in Y. M. AR i AT e Nassau county, were sald by the|T. A. and B. hall tonight at SL Assoc police today to have admitted giv- |o'clock.:A social hour will follow. Press this morning that he had re-| ing away $50,000 worth of jewelry Permission to purchase an auto-|ceived a radio message from the to. girl friends and relatives, keeping ; moblle out of funds which are avail- iamphiblan Sikorsky piane, missing class and M for themselves trinkets worth about|able will be asked by the board of |aince it left Miami yesterday morn- " 1 o : 3 B 34, health at.the February meeting of (ing, and that the crew and pnme‘:flvl ten nw:u \ Detectives found one of the girls, | the common council:-next Wednes- | were safe. ;n lying -dormant i a servant in a Jersey City home, |day night. Trippe said he received his mes- 'he education department, which washing dishes while wearing a $6,-| Irving“Raschlin has leased a store |sage at 5:11 o'clock this morning is offering this course, also wishes to 000 diamond ring and a waitress|at 60 Main street to the S8tandard |and that it came from Floyd 8.|announce that the hooked rug clasal with a $2,500 diamond wrist watch. Both articles were identified by the police as having been part of the loot obtained in recent robberies of wealthy homes on Long Island. Po- lice believe most of the jewelry will be recovered. The three are Michael Szymanski of 350 Fifth street, William Pos- piech of 282 1-2 Sixth street and Frank Grafonskl, 298 Pavonia ave- nue, all of Jersey City. They were: arrested in Queens Sunday while robbing an apartment house. Small Boys Drown As Thin Ice Breaks New Bedford, Mass., Feb. 14 0P ~Edward Kochonek, 11, and his Jirother, John, 10, sons of Mr. and Mrs. Michael Kochonek, 7 Savigney street, Acushnet, were drowned when they broke through thin ice of the Acushnet river yesterday. The two boys walked across the river to attend church and were within 100 feet of the shore when they perished. Employes of the New Bedford Rayon company attempted to save the boys without avail. One of them, Camille Bartholdi, attempted to break his way through the thin ice while co-workers held a rope tied to his belt. Before he could reach them both sank. The bodies were recovered late last night and were not Mentified nntil that time. Providence Warehouse Fire Loss Is $100,000 Providence, Feb, 14 (M—Fire, be- lieved to have been caused by spon- taneous: combustion, caused a loss of $100,000 in a building of the Fox Point Warehouse company in East Providence yesterday. The entire fire department of East Providence was summoned to the scene and succeeded in confining the fire to the building in which it originated. (Firemen were forced from the building several times by heavy smoke and Hoseman Arthur Ring. who was knocked from a ladder in- side the burning structure, was overcome by smoke and treated by a #hysician. Clouds of smoke from the burning building attracted attention for miles around. Dying Patient Signs Check for Hospital New York, Feb. 14 UP—Eugene littauer, retired glove manufacturer of Gloversville, N. Y., knowing he was dying in Mount 8inai hospital yesterday, signed his name to a check for $25,000 made out by his brother and payable to the hospital. He died a few hours later. Littauer's death followed an operation for gangrenous appendi- citis performed January 27. He was 67 years old. B He was born in Gloversville and had resided there all his life, Pershing Reluctantly Accepts Confinement Paris, Feb. 14 (P—Gen. John J. Pershing is still keeping indoors, al- though apparently chafing at the confinement. He. has bowed, how- Tire Co. of Hoston. Negotiations were made through - the realty of- fices of Rabinow & Raschkow. Oil Company Merger Likely in Mid-West New York, Feb, 1¢ UP—8imms Pe- troleum company has offered to ac- quire, through an exchange of shares controlling interest in the Pennok Oil corporation, which has oil and gas leases in Kinsas, Texas, Okla- homa and Montana, it was learned today. The offer is for exchange of one share of S8imms capital stock for four shares of Pennok capital stock, providing at least 51 per cent of out- standing Pennok stock is deposited on or before March 29 or within 30 days thereafter if the time limit be extended, Simms, now producing about 10,- 000 barrels of petroleum dally, has a large potential production in West Texas. Baby Dead From Gas, Mother Found Dying Lynn, Mass.,, Feb. 14 (P—Philip Richards returned to his home yes- terday to find his 20 months old baby, Mildred, dead and his wite ap- parently dying from Asphyxiation. Mrs. Richards was lying with her arm about the baby and part of a lace curtain in her hand, apparently torn as she tried to open the win- dow. A gas heater in the kitchen, ac- cording to police, exhausted the oxy- gen in’ the room. Mrs. Richards was taken to the Lynn hospital. Church and City Given Most of Widow’s Wealth Brockton, Mass., Feb. 14 M—Of an estate of approximstely $16°,000, only $2,000 was left in private be. quests by a will filed here toda; The will was that of Mrs. Abbie D, Packard, widow of Moses A. Pack- ard, forn Brockton shoc manufac- turer, The Universalist church- and the city of Brockton were the chief beneficiaries under the will. Four private bequests of $600 each were made. BOOTLEGGERS SENTENCED New Haven, Feb..14,(UP)—Three Ansonia bootleggers, who delivered liquor in hot water bottles, were given six-month sentences in police coyrt here today. They were Frank Grazio, 35, Manuel Lopez, 32, and Manuel Travaris, 36. ever, to the fiat of his physiclan, who insisted that he remain in the hotel at least until the end of the week to slight attack of grippe. slight attack of grip. The general seems his usual quiet cheery self but his voice is tired and hoarse. His doctor has not con- cldered the ailment sufficiently seri- ons to warrant the issue of a formal bulletin, HAVE KIDNEYS EXAMINED BY YOUR DOCTOR Take Salts to Wash Kidneys if Back Pains You or Bladder Bothers Plush your kidneys by drinking a quart of water each day, also take salts occasionally, says a noted au- thority, who tells us that too much rich food forms acids which almost paralyze the kidneys in their efforts to expel it from the blood. They «come sluggish and weaken; then m may suffer with a dull misery i1 the kidney region, sharp pains in - k or sick headache, dizziness, stomach sours, tongue is coat- . ind when the weather is bad you rheumatic twinges. The urine cloudy, full of sediment, the luunnels often get sore and irritated, licing you to seek relief two or times during the night. o help neutralize these Irrlta!in:’ ¢ids. to help cleanse the kidneys and flush off the body's urinous waste, get four ounces of Jad Salts from any pharmacy here; take a tablespoonful in a glass of water he- fore breakfast for a few days, and your kidneys may then act fine, This famous salts i« made from the acld of grapes and lemon juice, combin- «d with lithia, and has b used for years to help flush and stimulate sluggish kidne also to neutralize the acids in the system so they no longer frritate, thus often relieving || bladder weakness, Jad Balte is inexpensive; cannot ON E THIR ALL SILK LOUNGING ROBES, TERRY ROBES, OMBRE FLANNEL ROBES —ap PRICE MANHATTAN SHIRTS ARE A GOOD BUY ANYTIME SEE THE injure and makes a dclightful effer- vescent lithia-water drink. PATTERNS Special Suggestio B iy Whalton, mechanic on the plane. Whalton reported that the airplanc was forced down when it ran out of gas and that it floated to Red Bay at the north end of Andros Is- land. Whalton procured a boat there and went to Nagsau where he sent his message. The plane left *"iami to aid in the search for the plane of Stephen Calloway, who was afterward found by a passing ferry boat. The Sikorsky was piloted hy Harry Rogers and besides Whalton Ralph Dalstrom, assistant pilot and J. Angus, mechanic. Col. Charles A. Lindbergh was one of those who aided in the search for the Calloway plane and later when it was found and it became known that the ship piloted by Rogers was miassing he also aided in the search for it, Adrift 5 Hours at Sea Port Au Prince, Haiti, Feb, 14 (® —A mail plane of the Pan-Ameri- can Airways was safe here today after an 8 O 8. call at sea yesterday. and five hours afioat on the open water, The plane, a Loening amphibian, !lett Santiago, Cuba, in charge of| | Pilot Rowe with mail, but no pas- asengers, at 8 a. m. yesterday. A broken rocker arm soon forced the | plane to alight and it was forced to taxi for five hours at a six knot speed in a high wind and heavy sea until it reached a protected cove. There the necessary disconnections were effected and *the plane was soon able to take the air with eight cylinders functioning. It arrived here at 4 p. m. In the meantime its 8 O 8. calls had been heard and the naval tugs Woodcock and Montcalm had gone out to hunt it. Two mine sweepers from Guantanamo Bay, Cuba,also aided in the search. will hold its first séesion next Mon- day from-2 to 4 p. m. Mra ' B(WS Wallbank, who has had training in deaign and painting in New Y city and who taught the class ) fall, will be ‘the instructer. All’ fey istrationa should be at -th Young Women's' Ch lflé‘i‘ tion’at once. Fliers Fall to Death In Oklahoma Ravine Fairfax, Okla., Feb. 14 M—H. L. ‘Helton, irfax .garage qwner and student pilot, and Jo4g i I P! Cushing, Okia., woré Al JM plane piloted by H,olto? crashed 1.- 000 feet into & ‘deep /ravine five miles west of here yesterday. 1 The men had been in the air for some time before the crash oc- curred and Helton, who had about four flying hours to his gredit, was at.the controls. ' ey SIR BERTRAM WHIBIEDEAD Toronto, Ont,, Feb, 1¢ UM — Sir Rertram Windle, professor of an- thropology at the University of Tor- onto, died at his home here today. and I will tell you how in a short time the bladder irritation was relieved by Lithiated Buchu (Keller Formula). My case ‘was of long standing and painful. Was bothered ¢ to 5 times each night.” It acts on bladder as epsom salts do on bowels.. Drives out forelgn de- ‘posits and lessens excessive aclidity. This relieVes the ' frritation that causes getting up nighta. . The tab-|. lets cost 2c each at all drug stores, Keller Laboratory, echanicsburg. Ohio, or locally ;at!thé Fair. Dept. READ HERALD CLASSIFIED Al)filltan. ([ (;\u \“x noo e J y HE HOUSE OF TY-NINE OoDD LOT SHIRTS ≪r fimhfd and neck- ; $3 ang $3.50 values. . s l 'oo SILK SCARFS g‘;‘l‘l‘;?sl)ay. . s l ’00 HOSE That w 51.;0-;2e-r§2.5o.$ 1 .00 NECKWEAR and 5200 Sots $1.00 Group of HICKOK Vs %5 $1.00 Group of Fancy SUSPENDERS $1.50 and $2 sl .00 values ..... MAIN 250 ARCH STREET added beauty, improved performance, and, we: succeed those ‘which in 1928 established ‘a: new- - stration of the thrilling performance of " the 7 . _ HOWARD W. WHITMORE i TEL. 2810 . GRARAM-PAIGE ns for Special '-'Dollafs 1 “)"AlSn‘-~ STREET UNDERWEAR - | $3.50 Union s 50 $3.00 Unjion{ 3200 3 Suits ..., Suits ... 4. $2.50 Union,,»slgsfig y 1 i LA AR YR | On All $3.50 and $5.00 DUNLAP CAPS '1 off The Sale Price' On All SUITS AND OVERCOATS ‘1 off On Each Pair of SHOES UNPRECEDENTED VALUES FOR DOLLAR DAYS ~ $7-$8-$9 - WOMEN'S PUMPS | and OXFORDS Y. 8.8 These are all from our regulsr stock—our usual high quality of shoes. They include a large assortment of beautiful black and brown suedes. Also patent leather and brown calfskin. The sizes are broken—but there are all sizes in the group. FOR MEN . 150" Pairs Tan Oxfords AT THE ONE PRICE $4.95 Formerly from $6 to $9 SEE OUR WINDOWS MANNING BROTHERS Shoe Store 211 MAIN STREET