New Britain Herald Newspaper, February 28, 1929, Page 14

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BOY SCOUT COURT BADGES AWARDED 138 Troop Members Receive Honors at Session Three star badges, 10 first class badges, 18 second class awards, and 107 merit badges were awarded at the Boy Scout court of honor held last night at the South Congrega- tional church. Kenneth Tibbals of Troop 11 and Scoutmaster Emil O. Shjerden and Wesley Gwatkin of Troop 1, Berlin, were awarded tieir star badges. The following merit badges were awarded by a court composed of Chairman George B. Taylor, Deputy | Commissioner Neil MacDougall, and Executive O. A, ckson, Firemanship—Milton Miller, Don- | ald Holmes, Howard Johnson, Wal ter Larson, Roderic Linnehan, Jos eph Weir, Joseph Scully, John Cian flone, Wilfred McKeon, Edward M. McKeon, Edward Callahan, Jack Depot, Thomas Griffin, | Personal health—Edward Calla- | han, Wilfred McKeon, Edward Mc- Keon, Jack Depot, Burdette Huck,, Vincent Moorad, Roderic Linnehan. | <ph Scully, Joseph Weir, Howard | | licraft—Joseph Weir, Edwurd | Callahan, Jack Depot, Thomas Grif- tin, Mortimer Baker | Brown. | Wood carving—Raymond | Mainer, Theodore Annunziata, Hor- | ace B. Brown, William M. Schwan. | Harry Bonney. | Gardening—Fred Peters, Thomas | Griffin, Walter Kiejko, M r!i\ Swanson, Kaminski, Michael Oleyer. Cooking—Marvin . Heisler, Ed- ‘ ward Callahan, Walter I 3 First Aid—Ernest M Kiejko, Michuel Kaminski. Printing—. Depot, Michacl Oleyer, Everctt Graffam. | Swimming — LEdward Callahan, | Jack Depot | Wood Work—Walter Kiejko, A. § M. Theodore Annunziata, S. M. Har. ry Donney. | Bookhinding— Baker Brown, ILiv-| erett Graffam | Leathercratti—Baker Brown. ! Physical Development—A, 8. Theodore Annunziat Scholarship—A. . Annunziata, Basketry- Cement Work—aA. Peters. Masonry- Metal Work: 3 . ‘ Peters. ‘* Second Class Badge Awards— Thomas Higgins, Frank Marine, John Milne, Wm. Moore, Dan Haw- ! ley, Karl Gjerpen, Paul Olson, John Dorsey, A. Bayram, Joseph Leone, J. Anselmo, R. Anselmo, Leo Skelly, Ed. Malloy, Rod Washburn. | First Class Awards—Edward Mec- Keon, W. McKeon, Rod Linnehan, John Cianflone, Arnold Vining, Wal- ter Larson, Everett Graffam, Philip Nigh‘‘ngale, Serge Dankevitch, Myles Moore. Girl Secretary’s Bail Is Reduced to $10,000 Waterbury, Ieb. 28 (UP)—Miss Josephine McGroary, pretty, 26 year old secretary, who is charged with embezzling $25,000 from her employers in order to buy ‘“nice t1ings,” walved examination in city court here today and was bound over to the April term of criminal superior court. Bonds were reduced from $20,000 to $10,000 but were not immediately furnished. Public Defender W. W. Gager rep- resented Mrs. McGroary and former Judge Frank T. Reeves the Liberty 0il Co., complainants. ‘\‘:u-‘ ter M M. Theodore Mortimer Swanson. M. Fred Whale flesh was a recognized article of food during the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, Always e | | | | the material written ’ When Your Children Cry for It | Here's relief and comfort for cry- fretful, feverish bavies or chil- that you don't need to mmand them to take. delicious taste of Fletcher's C: ! sur doctor will tell you ly safe, so you can give | v and as often as needed to vep your children happy and weil A rew drops i all it takes to quiet trul, feverish, colicky babies; re- > their biliousne nstipation p in a jifty. in older children, olu , gas on stom- them disor- ! grown- bics or childr Ninety per cent. of Fletch s ("astoria: of proves 1 ture is Fletcher |a solution of the problem by estab- —three | di. He formerly was a pugilist. fight- |ing as Jack McGurn. He is reputed | Lincoln park, near the murder |scene, and that on several occasions | oughly that only one SECRETARY WEST FAYORS PUTTING INDIANS 70 WORK Congress Commiittee is Advised to Make Red Men Wage Earners and Thereby Self-Supporting Washington, Feb. 28 (B —Iavor- able consideration of the bill to cre- ate. an Indian employment service as a step toward assimilation of the Red Men in the industrial life of the nation was recommended today by Secretary West. The rapid development of the west, the secretary saia, in a com- munication to the chairman of the senate and house Indian affairs committees, has created a demand for the services of the Indian which presents a favorable opportunity for employment. “The situation today is favorable to make immediate progress toward lishing the Indian as a wage earner, gaining a competence for himself," | he added. “When an Indian reaches this stage he need no longer be a ward of the government. He and his children take their places as normal members of the body poli- tic. So far as he is ~oncerned the Indian problem has been solved.” Secretary West said it was his belief that “the decades of super- vision which the government has exercised over the Indians has de- | veloped them to the point where they are prepared for a steadily in- | creasing participation in the indus- | trial life of the nation.” MGURN ACCUSED AS GANG ASSASSIN (Continued from Tirst Page) = | motive—and have known it for two da | McGurn, of course, will fight H.~" will set up an alibi, using as his witness the young woman with hom he was avrested. but the alibi will not stand. All we want now is five more men, We shall have them | The prisoner did little talking, but | did deny having had any part in the crime. He suid he could establish, | through the hotel, that on the day | of the sevenfold murder he did not! cave his room until after 1:30 p. m. hours after the crime. 1 We have been living at the hotel for (wo w " he said. “We rarely | left the hotel and seldom arose be- | fore noon. I don't Kknow a thing| about this murder.” ! Police said McGurn had “plenty of reason” for wanting at least two of the slain gangsters out of the way. The Guscnberg brothers, who | were killed, are believed to have been the ones who twice last year sought to kill McGurn, and one nearly succeeded. He was shot #s he stood in a telephone booth, being seriously wounded. On another oc- casion the automobile in which he rode was raked by machine gun fire, but he escaped harm. Found With Machiue Gun On May 14, 1928, police entered a room in the Guyon hotel and found | McGurn there, a machine gun on his lap and a pistol, loaded with dum-dum bullets, in his possession. Although possession of the weapons is a penitentiary offense, was freed on a technicality, the po- lice having entered the room with- out a search warrant. Yesterday's arrest was the first to be made since Commissioner Stege broadcast a list of 17 “wanted men.” McGurn's name headed the list. Po- lice said they had established the fact that their prisoner went to Florida in December and conferred with Al Capone, but that he re- turned to Chicago several weeks be- fore the gang massacre. McGurn gave his name as Gebar- to have attained machine gun ef- ficiency during the war. A mysterious woman witness was at the showup last night, but Com- missioner Stege requested newspa- permen not to inquire who she was. He said she was horseback riding in | quietly, | the law office of “Coolidge & Hemenway” in the buliding (upper left), | Massasolt strect (lower right) is little changed, although some of the old ncighbors have moved a McGurn | s B Respe Northampton, Mass.. I'ch. 28. (® —The cven tenor of life in North- ampton is calling Calvin Coolidge home. Historians may find a similarity between the simplicity of Coolidge’s departure from Plymouth, Vt., for | Washington upon becoming Presi- | dent in 1923, and the orderly wel- coming back to civil life planned this year at Northampton. These people of Northampton al- | ways will feel that they became the original discoverers of Calvin Cool- idge when they began choosing him for public office more than a scorc of years ago — setting an example state and nation followed. Since he was elected state representative and mayor here circles of his in- fluence have reached out to touch the whole world But Northamp- ton knew him first. And because these people have known him from old they are go- ing to welcome him home simply— the way they know he would like best. Most prominent on the city's wel- | coming committee are Maj. Thomas | . Hammond, in whose father's of- | fice Coolidge studied law a genera- tion ago; Ralph W. Hemenway, law partner, whose office door still beurs the linked names, “Coolidge & Hemenway;" Mayor Jesse A. G. Andre, and Judge Henry P. Field, partner of Hammond when Cool- | idge studied law in their office, and | now president of the Hampshire | county bar assoctation. g the president’s wishes, Northampton, Mass,, Not a little smeculation has been in progress, however, over the redecoration and refurnishing of plaas to w Although actual plans were held in abeyance until the last minute. this committee made it clear that speech-making would have no part. ‘The concern over the health of Mrs. Lemira Goodhue, mother of Mrs. Coolidge, was another factor in- fluencing the decision to have a simple celebration. It happens that one of the chief centers of interest these days is Coolidge’s old law offices. Mr, Hem- enway has had the place entirely redecorated, refurnished and gen- crally “fixed up.” Mr. Hemenway has deniced that the sudden refinishing and trans. formation have anything to do with the return of his former part- ner. DBut people point to the fact that Coolidge’s desk still stands in the old office and many of his per- sonal hclongings still are there un- disturbed. And it is pointed out that the name of Coolidge still is on the office door. A feeling persists that if the. of- fice Is not to be used by Coolidge as & permanent quarters it may be- come at least a temporary head- ouarters for transaction of such business as he may have. At the Coolidge apartment in the two-family house on Massasoit street things have changed little since the days when Coolidge made his home there. But the neighbors have changed as they do in even the most stable of New England communities. Of course, some remain., Among velcome Coolidge back to civil life just concluded. The old home on them are Mr. and Mrs. Reuben B. Hills, only a few doors down Massa- soit street, and they are among the closest Northampton friends of this city's two most famous citizens. Mrs. H close friend of Mrs. Coolidge, has bheen a frequent visi- tor at the White House. Mr. and Mrs. Louis L. Campbell, near ncighbors. have been acquaint- ed with the Coolidges for years. Mr. Campbell is a former post- inmslcr of Northampton and now is the proprietor of a hardware’ store. 'The neighborhoed group used to take turns at entertaining, and “sings,” at which old familiar airs Were sung, were then the vogue. Mrs. Coolidge commonly was at the plano. Often the group met at the Methodist parsonage, close to the Coolidge home. But. the minister, the Rev. C. E. Holmes, now has taken a Congregational pastorate in the nearby town of Hadley. Mr. and Mrs. George R. Spcars. | who ence occupied the other half of the Coolidge house, have moved |over to Elm strcet, but they are not so far away that Coolidge may not walk over when he feels in- clined to enjoy the quiet hospitality of a neighbor's sitting room. And in his old shop, still & maker of soles, is the old shoemaker-phil- osopher, James Lucey, to whom the President once wrote while in the White House, “If it were not for |you, T should not be here.” BERLIN NEWS (Continued From Page 7) | The woodland adjacent to the | Slegrist property is being eut down. Some of the best timber in the town of Berlin can be found here. The demonstration on rat exter- mination will be held tomorrow morning at 10 o'clock on the Dyer | farm on Savage Hill. The Hartford County Farm bureau is sponsoring the affair, The ladies of S8acred Heart church will hold a food sale tomorrow aft- ernoon from 2:30 o'clock until & ‘o'tlock in the church social rooms. The public is invited. she had seen men who were pointed out to her as “West Side gangsters.” “Un the day of the killing these men | vote from this district. Much inter- were in the slayers’ car, she said. “Beanpot"iComes Out With Contents Cold Boston, Feh. 29 (UP)—Carefully ensorcd and stripped of most of s rvisqueness, the faculty numb of the Beanpot, Iloston University's omic monthly, will go on sale Mon- day after barely cscaping a ban. Harold T. Burns, assistant editor, stated today that Prof. Harry I, Center, faculty adviser, had edited for the issue in question, had “killed” some of it. nd that the publication would be “d Monday. Beanpot editors from posting placards advertising the forthcon g issue at hoth the college of liheral arts and the col- 1 of practical arts and letters. It was understood that officials of these colleges considered the adver- 1ents objectionable, “Too late, 1 discoverd she was ith a past—" read the ad all the sorbid details in the ‘true confes- a professor'—by one of This is only one of the grip- ping exposes in the faculty number of the Beanpot.” Banton Shakes Up His Homicide Staff York, Feb. 28 (®—Joah A district aftorney of New has shaken up the WF of his homicide hureau so thor- of his several tants assigned to duty there will left on the job tomorrow No reason for the s had mnounced by nton, and the hurean’s handling of ved Rothstein murder mys- any connec he learned reports that had heen so handled were restrained oW tanton, York con ch tion with them other The town meeting tomorrow eve- | ning is expected to bring out a heavy | cst is being shown over the proposed | new school. Opinion on the new | school is about evenly divided here. | 1t is planned to have another set | of travel pictures at the Methodist | church Sunday evening. The last set | shown was of Northern Haly. This | set will show Central Ttaly. | The Pythian sters will meet | Monday cvening at 8 o'clock in their rooms at Community hall, | The Modern Woodmen meet this evening at 8 o'clock In the K. of P. rooms at Community hall. Every member of the organization is asked to attend as there are important an- nouncements to he made. ' The next meeting of the Parent- Teacher association will be held bout the middle of March. A social program will be arranged. The Boys' club will meet tomor- row cvening at the usnal hour. ;Stratton to Address New England Council Boston, Feb, 28 (A—President !Samuel W. Stratton of the Massa- chusetts Institute of Technology will he the principal speaker at the quar- terly meeting of the New England council, it was announced today to be held March 1 at the Hotel Stat- ler, President Stratton will speak on the opportunities of New England, industrial and otherwise, in the avi- aton industry. Chairmen of the six divisions of the council will ve- port on the constructive legislation before their various state legisla- FIT DR ML SIMPSON Co.. W. i ST, CLEVELAND, 0. FREE Proof Vits, Falling Sich 1609 { he sent the BRITON HADDEN'S DEATH IS LAMENTED AT YALE College P'aper Says Passing of “Time” Editor Constitutes Loss to Amcrican Journalism, New Haven, Feb. 28 (UP)—Com- menting editorially today upon the death in Brooklyn, N. Y., of Briton Hadden, editor of “Time,” weekly news magazine, the Yale Daily News said the werld has been deprived of “a force which in less than a decade after graduation from Yale had al- ready given much that cannot be | easily reproduced and gave promise of a potent and valuable career in the science of general intelligence.” Hadden died at a hospital in his 324 year of infection of the blood strcam, just six years to a day after first issue of “Time"” to press, As chairman of the Yale News, Hadden established a reputation in the university for brilliance and ori- ginality. He is credited with respon- sibility for the fact Yale men still sing “Bright College Years™” to t tune of “Die Wacht Am Rhein During war years, when a flood of cmotionalism threatened to engulf everything Germanic Hadden fought a successful fight against changing the tune of the historic Yale song. ording to the News. Briton Hadden's death is a great loss to American journalism,” Presi- dent James Rowland Angell of Yale said today. Transcontinental Air hows Profit of $798 New York, Feb, 28 (—Transcon- tinental Air Transport, Inc.. which is to operate air-rail service to the Pacific coast, in its first earnings re port since organization last May to- ay showed a net profit of $798. Of its asscts $2.200.000 is out on lean |in the call money market and $: {250,000 in time loans. | Although the line, which will run in conjunction with | vania and Atchison. Topeka & San- Ita Te railroads, has mot started |operations yet. a subsidiary, North- | Airways, s cities, west Tnc. is carrying pas- hetween Chicago and the Minneapolis and St. connecting at hoth terminals with through Limited trains to and from the east and west, Colonel Lindhergh is associated with the company and has selected | sengs twin Paul the Pennsyl- | JUDGE KEPT WAITING Case of James Tobin Postponed For Two Weeks But Someone Forgot to Notify Court, Everybody but the judge was in on the fact last night that the trial of James Tobin of this city, alleged proprietor of the Black Kittens Inr on the Plainville-Farmington high- {way, had been postponed in the I'armington court for two weeks. Judge J. Elliott Hewes and about 6/ spectators were on hand but none of the other principals put in an ap- pearance. County Detective Edward J. Hickey and a number of his assiat- ants raided the Black Kittens last Friday night and Tobin was ar- rested on liquor law violation charges. Bonds were set for his re. lcase at the time and the trial sct for last night. After more than an hour's wait in which time efforts were made to | tind Prosecutor Wessell Doherty and | Mr. Tobin, Constable Nathan Fuller | was reached by telephone and he stated that the prosecutor had con- tinued the case for two weeks. H2 | had been notified by Clerk of Court | John J. Rourke, he said. Judge Hewes then adjourned court and announced that the case | was postponed for two weeks. {Chamber of Commerce | To Hear Ralph Bradford | More than 200 members of the | Chamber of Commerce are expected {to attend the lunchcon at the Bur- |ritt hotel tomorrow noon., when | Ralph Bradford, assistant manager of the commercial organization de- partment of the United States Cham- 1 - of Commerce, will speak. The |luncheon will make the opening of !th: membership extcnsion move- ment, | | LECTURE JAMES WATERMAN WIS | Youth’s Challenge To Church and Synagogue | CENTRAL /| JR. HIGH SCHOOL March 3rd—1 P. M. sion 50c after tests the type of planes to be | used in the service “Tt is too carly to es ate upon which undertake i dent C. M also head of the and Motor corporation he tded. will he until the line {operate in every detail. operation Keyes, wh Curtiss made fo start is ready Acroplane | No attempt. Goodwin optical Spe 'l 527 Main St 7 Phone to | GLASSES FITTED MARRIAGE IS HOLY, PRIEST DECLARES athér Cletus Asks Serious Consideration of Matrimony Father Clctus of the Passionist Order of West Springfield, in the second of his series of Lenten ser- mons at St. Marys' church last night, stated that young people today think more of their trousseau and their bankroll than they do of God in contemplating marriage. The church was filled as the orator asked for more consideration of the spiritual factor in marriage than the mate- rial. “The Holiness of Marriage” was the subject of the sermon and in it he scored the man who coi siders it of more importance to ar- range the details of a trip to Europe or the purchase of a car than to con- sider the choice~of a wife and the preparation for matrimony. “If more people in this nation would put God into their wedding agreements, then there would® be fewer matrimonial wrecks scattered along the trail of life,” he said. *“Then matrimonial fidelity would no longer be a source of gibes on the stage and in the press.” “The woman,” he continued, “gives her love, her affections and even her will, things more dear than all the jewels on ecarth. She asks only that the man remain faithful to her as a protector and guardian and over their contract God throws a mantle of protection. The sacred- ness of their union writes it in the records of heaven.” Bpeaking of new theories of mar- riage and of the records of the di- vorce courts, IFather Cletus added: “We of the Catholic church are dubbed old-fashioned and strait- laced. It is not the Catholic church, though, and not its priests who are responsible for the eternity of mar- lage, it is the divine founder of Christianity Himself, for He has given the law and the church merely forces its observance to the very end of time.” Claiming that the church always championed the cause of the wom- en, Father Cletus continued: “Through the years, the church and its popes have lifted you from a place such as that of the Turkish woman to a position as mistress in your home. “And remember, men and wom- en, it is not one of your privileges to decide for yourselves how large shall be your nursery, how many children it shall hold. That rests with God, by whom your children are given, “My dear young men and women, who either contemplate marrying or who will marry some day, realize what a mighty ard serious proposi- tion marriage is and be ever so wise in the partner you choose to walk the checkered path with you. Let not beauty of feature or hard cash lead you to a decision. A ‘stunner’ or a Beau Brummell will be of no use when you face the stern prob- lems of life. Those charms of fea- ture, that gleaming gold, may make a hell.” Mouth of Bosporus Choked by Icebergs Constantinople, Feb. 28 (M—For the first time in more than a hun- dred years the mouth of the Bos- porus is almost impassable because of icebergs and icefloes which have floated down from the black sea. Turkish vessels arriving in Con- stantinople from the Black sea after cutting & channel through the floating Ice, report many icebergs are floating southward. One floe was said to be seven miles long. The dden springlike warmth which has come to Constantinople after the terrific cold of the past two weeks is expected to melt the ob- structions shortly, A terriffic landslide has destroyed a mosque and many dwellings in the Anatolian village of Inegueil. The entire populartion has left the vile lage because of the recurrent danger from landslides. Georgia Confronted By Serious Floods Atlanta, Ga., Feb. 28 (M—While middle Georgia faced the prospect of its worst flood in several years, continued heavy raing in the area and in eastern Alabama and north- west Florida sounded an ominous note for residents of lowlands drain- ed by strcams that in some cases have gone above flood stage. At Macon, Ga., city employes worked throughout the night plac- ing sand bags on the levees of the =Yl Mandarin Ameri and Chinese Restaurant 213 MAIN STREET d0c¢ SPECIAL SUPPER TONIGHT Choice of onc Mock Turtle Soup with the Order Bolled Virginia Ham with Butter Spinach Broiled Pork Chops, Sweet T Veal Cutlet Breaded and Puree of Tomato Stufied Spring Lamb Currant Jelly Roast Milk Fed Chicken with Dressing CHINESE DISHES Chicken Chow Mein Beef Chop Sucy with Green Pepper Chicken Fooyoung Don VEGETABLES String Beans Mashed Potato Ll Fruit Jel Tea or Ooffee Served from 5 to 8 P. sic For Dinner Furnished B . Rosenberg and Hans Wagner NO COVER CHARGE Ocmulgee river ich early teday had risen to 24 6 feet, 6.6 foet above flood stage. Spreading over a wide area, the high waters threatened lowland homes. Police reacued one woman who was trapped in her flooded home. From Macon northward for a dis- tance of twenty miles, flood waters from the Ocmulgee and Oconee rivers were up to the tracks of the Southern rallway and trains were moving cautiously. SECOND DEFICIENCY MEASURE PASSES Senate Seds Last Supply Bill t0 House Conference Washington, Feb. 28 (M—The sec- ond deficiency appropriation bill, last of the necessary supply measures, was passed today by the senate and sent to conference with the house. The senate struck from the bill all of its provisions which had been in the abandoned first deficlency measure, thus forcing a revival of the first bill with its controversial $24,000,000 increase in prohibition tunds, The first bill is technically before the senate and the second now goes to conference between the senate and house. The second bill carries an increase of $2,700,000 in prohibition funds as recommended by President Coolidge and leaders hoped to obtain elimina- tion of the $24,000,000 increase vot- ed by the senate previously on mo- tion of Senator Harris, democrat. Georgia, Additions to BIN The following additions to the bill, proposcd by the senate appropri- ations committ , alse were ap- proved: $6,000,000 for loans on seed pur- chases in the hurricane area of Virginia, North Carolina, 8outh Car- olina, Georgia, Florida and Alabama, $48,000 for remodelling the Mount Weather, Va., weather atation as summeér white house, $100,000 for Mount Rushmore, South Dakota, memorfal commission. $25,000 for dry land field station, Tucumcari, New Mexiceo. $10,000 for coast guard academy building, New London, Conn, $50,000 for federal building, Salls- bury, North Carolina, $30,000 for international strest, Nogales, Arizona, $150,000 for survey of Nicaraguan uIS.lJll for storage of ammuni- tlon in Hawail, and $1,103,000 for the army housing program., Don't buy! Wait! Don't miss grand opening of Mfrs. Outlet Co., 321 Main 8t., Saturday. Wonderful souvenirs free. Read Friday's sen- sational ad.—advt. SUIT SBTTLED FOR $3.000 Persons Injured in Awto Collision and Joha Absalom. Settlement for $2,000 was yesterday by John Absalom in actions brought against him by Mr, and Mrs. Harry Cooke and thel daughter, Mrs. Mabel Ellsworth, f¢ 85,000 each, the result of & coli on December 15, 1928, at Stanle] street and Hartford avenue. The cases were heard yesterd before Judge E. C. Dickenson a: a jury in superior court, and Jud Dickenson recommended to the al torneys that a settlement be mad The evidence was to have been co! pleted today. Attorney 8. Gerard Casale rep! sented the plaintiffts and Attorne Edward C. Carroll represented thi defendant. City Items A regular meeting of Lande: camp, Modern Woodmen of Ameri ca, will be held this evening at o'clock at 8t. Jean the Baptist hal on Church street. Mr, and Mrs. R. R. Secarles of Tel Acre Road are in New York city. The Valkyrian lodge will meet t morrow evening at Vega hall. Di trict Master B. A. Olson will b present. All Vasa members areé in| vited to attend. Refreshments will b served. ‘The police are investigating a port that eight pigeons were stole from a coop at 472 East street la: night. Charles White of 11 Oak stre reported to the police today that small express wagon was stolen || his yard last night. India imports small hardware (in cluding agricultural implements) t the extent of about $20,000,90 yearly. This Great Healing Oil Must Banish Eczema and Skin Troub Or Your Money Back. That's the Plan On Whick Emeral 0il Is Sold By Fair Drug Dept. and All Good Druggists. Make up your mind today that you are going to give your skin a real chance to get well. You've probably beenm, like & lot of other people, convinced that the only thing to use was an ointment or salve (some of them are very good) but in the big majority of cases these sticky salves simply clog the pores and the condition primar- ily remains the same, Go to Fair Drug Dept. or any oth- er good druggist today and get an original bottle of Moone's oll, The very first application will give you rellef and a few short treat- ) ments will thoroughly convince y that by sticking faithfully te it fdq & short while your skin troubles wi| be a thing of the past, Don't expect a single bottle to 1t all at once but one bottle we kno will ow you beyond all questio that you have at last dlscovered t! way to restors your skin to perfed health, Remember that Moone's K Oll i & clean, powerful pen: n Antiseptic Ofl that does net etain leave a greasy residue and that must give complete satisfaction your money cheerfully refunded, A Qrealer car- -+ STUDEBAKER'S NEW COMMANDER a lower price-$137 4-Door Sedan ot the factory Commanoer Six Convernrise CasnioLer—Sixwire wheelsand truskrack standard equipment—$1495 at the factory. Bumpers and spare tires extra, NEW Commander Six — smarter, larger, more lux~ uriously appointed—yet the price is lower than ever! Luxurious comfort—hydraulic shock absorbers, new ball bearing spring shackles, wider, deeper, softer cushions, Ft s still safer, with a lower center of gravity, a steel-core steering wheel, 2 non-shatterable windshield. /7 is she greatest motor car ever built and sold at its pricel ALBRO MOTOR SALES CO. 295 ARCH STREET TEL. 26

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