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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1929. 17 Hardware Demand Shows | | ing gooa: mas tree lights, hollow ware, spofte and tools all share in the 1d for holiday goods, Most factors are considered favor= improved dema abl to a very satisfactory sales volume during the last quarter of 19 Prices have r r tendency in some h all recent price ve been minor in character. Collectio continue to maintain a normall rood average. Kiss-s ada, custom. ing was not a crime in ( an old French to according He was a family doctor for more than forty-seven years. He specialized in the disorders of the digestive tract. He tested this prescription in thousands of cases. Men liked its quick and thorough action; the children liked its pleasant taste; old people praised it because it never gripes. Today, millions of families rely on Dr. Caldwell’s judgment in the selection of their laxative. Dr, Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin is now sold in all drug stores. It is the world’s largest selling laxative, SYRUP PEPSIN A Doctor’s Family Laxative Dr. W. B. CALDWELL'S Pantages Faces Cross Examinati S ) aT adges I aces i 08s .afnma l-on ) TIMS[]N UMPILES I\orgpa} SZeasonal Gains e or] Oct. 23——Accelerated | f n D l f G l Cl | by a good early demand for holiday fi B LHBY HMAYSIE GRELG el A JNse 0 ay enial o Irl's aims |goods and seasonable merchandise, | | the normal activity in hardware has e e S e A That He Attacked Her In Office ke e rbara anc ay are|niless saxophone player whom ar- | statement o some from e lips {in the general situation is noted drifting apart! Ray, embittered by |bara Landon had married, he n.x.x.!nf this soft piece of femininity who S[ate Depmmem Busy Onldm reports received om’ \) .‘:nft his failure in the office of Barbara’s | instead, Ray Lowther the famous|but yesterday must have been a market centers, Hardware Age will ally accepting money from her, is|higher planc than that it had yet|not be serious. summary. Moderatc ser approaching a crisis. He refuses | e | “That blasts my hopes complete- Actress Assaulted le I s 5 retarded orders for scasonal lines in | attend parties with Barbara's friends | Ray had not intended to accom- |1y” he said. “We'd been getting | ywh He Refused Washington, Oct. 23 (®—Secre- | some sections, but the first cold snap | because he cannot bring himself (o‘pxu\,\' Barbara and Henderson to|on so famously tonight that I'd be- | en e eluse tO tary Stimson and state department|will produce genuine a enjoy their company. Their acqua Bertha Mai But since [ gun to hope. officials are compiling technical re-| Toys, cutlery, appliances, | quick to draw in he had called him personally on | “Cut out the sob stutt” she inter-| 300K Her Vaudeville ACt |RORSRCOnEhE e lo SEAm Rl ol asleg | fUeniileNy éhiciamiall Verwdre (ChTISE- | whisper that Barbara and Ray will |the phone and had insisted that|rupted. “Besides, cvery one knows iNOI‘mal SChOOl Smdents Ba,se BaslenitoRtic Londontnayalicontersy) soon separate. Then Ralph Hender-|she had planned it on a Saturday | that you're hooked already.” ENee; son comes to New York and Bar-|night especially so that he might| Again he regarded her in amaze-| Los Angeles, Oct. 23 (P —Alex- Pl[] ()fl Chllds Deflh Actively assisting the secretary bara invites him to stay with her|be there, he did not see how he|ment. These American girls could jander Pantages. after more than are Joseph P. Cotton, the under- and Ray. The two men, obviously | could reasonably refuse. |be frank: distressingly frank! But !vour strenuous hours devoted to re- | |secretary of state, and J. Theodore aml y Octors unfriendly, see little of nmhI m]h,r It was nothing unusual in the |he answered good humorcdly. | counting on the witness stand his| The tragic death of a school Marriner, f"'n:'t of ;’h(:hwvgu:rn hx-:u»! but Barbara is always in Hender: of parties, A jaded crowd, mu-| “That's interestin’. On \\hnu-‘\\'rimu of an attack alleged to!onild in S B _|ropean division, both of whom son’s company. | sic from an electric Vietrola; ,h,,!hw:{ LT un‘x-o.‘ 4 to Dbe dang-|have been made by him \ufan Eu-“'“l? I Slmsbiry recently 1?5“ I0- | gealt intimately’ with the naval ]_axatlve whole house permeated by a forced [1ing? [ nice, Pringle, youthful co-ed dancer, |SPiTed the production of a “safety [question while Ambassador Dawes | Chapter 21 hilarity that had little real fun be- “Barbara Towther's, of coursc. |today faced an indefinitely longer|Play,” from the pens of Miss Ma. and Prime Minister MacDoneld | PAYING THE PIPER neath it | tie b e period of hostile cross-examination |rion Bowen of this city and Miss|Peld preliminary discussions this In the days following Hendersor Late in the evoning Ray found| With his innate reserve, Hender- |DY the prosecution. e e e arrival, Ray scarcely saw Barbara. | himself momentarily isolated, a|son's first imp S e ) Denies Girls Charsos R e e R e A Facts Go to Marriner | Rarely did she tumble into bed un- | brunet he had been endeavoring | her outspokeness. But, on second | The gray haired 54 year old the- Normal school. Stimson has ordered that all in- til long after Ray was aslecp. Helto amuse having drifted away in|thoughts he reflocted that to be 80 later magnate denied the girls| Misses Bowen and Barnes, senlors |formation pertinent to the London had left for the office hefors she | the arms of some other man. Notic- | openly coupled with Barbara might |charges yesterday and declared they | &t the local school, were pursuing a |meeting which may come into the arose, and she had given up lunch- | ing that men were in the majority, | be to his decided advantage. oy frame ur He sald the|course of practice teaching and ob- [hands of any in the department bz 7 ing with him in the citv. {he felt no compunction in wander-| “I'll admit that Parbara and T do | 17-year-old girl grabbed him and ing at the Simsbury rural school [made available to Marriner, who | /,'/%’ en when he did see her alone— | Ing off ino one of the adjolning | hit it off pretty well.” he conceded. | sereamed, without provocation, att- | #hen the child was run down by an [has been prominently mentioncd a rare occasion in itself-—she would | TOOmS. | “That's obvious! But what T!er they had been in his tiny cubby- |automobile truck and killed instant- | Stimson’s chief coordinator and ad prattle continuously of partizs, par- | It was a small room, romantically | can’t figure out is how her hushand | hole office but a few minutes. Principal Paul D. Collier issucd |Viser at the conference. ties, parties, until he felt that he | darkened, the only light filtering | #tands for it. He doesn’t 100k white- | Questioned by District Attorney |* PUlletin to members of the facul- | The assistance of naval officers, could scream at the mention of the | through heavy purple lampshades. |livered to | Buron Fitts concerning his posses- ty urging cooperation in reducing |some of whom are yet to be chosen word |He smiled sardonically, thinking| Henderson laughed shortly. [Son 6 the hay o b i e it wylno two New Britain (as advisers to the American group, | Sei6mAla he actomn them | on the reason for this thusness and,| “The poor devil has to stand for | tery room" Which he was accus. | Students concelved the idea of writ- being enlisted by the secretary in T f i - ' on these occasions, pleading that | without more ado, flung himself at |it. All the money belongs to her r-(l'\n;n;\n‘;.myrng‘ m’“ 2”‘7‘ Pantames|INE and producing the safety play, |these preliminary activities. Itear | Y(J;.“R el ;rs !:;0 'mm‘l:‘m' late hours interfered with his office | full length into an arm-chair. and you know the old maxim: ‘Who |denied that he had a private desk |\MPFeSSing upon the other pupilsiAdmiral Richard H. Jackson, a| . You cantafford experiments work. Soon, as was ineviiable, | DPresently his lids closed down | pays the piper is at liberty to call lor a private office in his suite of |L’¢ Wisdom of caution. The play|member of the general board of = With your delicate bowels when a since he invariably used, Bar-|and he felt I It floating away ' the tune! " |oftices in which to keep such a key, | W25 A SiEnal success _|the navy, who has been mentioned coated tongue, bad breath, gas, ba friends gave up inviting him. | into space. For = while he rou,:m‘ (Copyrizght, Dial DPress) |He denied the room, ropnamxr_v‘ml"’”:flr:\.r‘"mn,‘\tnh:;‘;d:gmzhyr;,w ;;; “ possible ;“hmcn by the presi headaches, nausea, feverishness, “Do come, Barbara, and bring against this fecling but, in the end, ) |identified by his own e res as| o © phikis 28 22 boys dent for an advisory position, cor ili that charming English friend of |1t must have conquered him for the| Agaln—sa “luxury'—hut the hus- |“sr, Pantages private o"{‘r?rlm & :Rw““d girls, the principal and the |ferred with Stimson yesterda ‘ I’fl“’“mesf' lack of appe“}"ex““d yours, Mr. Henderson,” some girl or | next thing of which he was actively band revolts in tomorrow's chapter |such, declaring that It was “a gen. Ner | Missi MaudeliTouslsnant | AR Ryl I e s enes | SO caerEy,mAIT foficonsBipation., other would say over the phone. | conscious was voices in a far e | of this story. |eral office” to which all employes | {here next Wednesday to put on thelin London is not successtul th This applies not only to grown raalalll o srazy abost nUmIY ner of the room \had access. 1"""' "'&'f"“' \:;“r"“*' school auditor- i o4 L oqors will renew competi-| People; it is particularly the case Nob adntienl ot Ray il By i wak & o, he “n,‘dar,,,; GREET NEW TEAGHERS OF Concerning his key, which some | winl’ speate. \’(‘1:“” R}:p conm; tive building in all unlimited cata- where young children are con- {his elimination of Ray, annoyed | whether the newcomers were ig- {of his employes who testificd was|Barnes will act as hostessen, . |BOTies of naval vessels, was advanc- | cerned. Barbara, and once she had been | norant of hig presence; th might |the only one in existence, Pantages | 5 5 = ed by Rrepresentativ French of | That's wl . "’ known to retort | well be since the back of his chair NORMAL TRMN]NG SCHOOLS admitted that when he lost It, about | srarz e REP R Idaho. chalrman of the naval ap- | .gtu'why a family doctgrs “Why, yes, 1 think we shall he hid him completely. About to [two months prior to August 9, he MAIZE REPORT RECEIVED propriations sub-committee. | laxative is always the safe choice! glad to come. All three of us.|make some movement, he sudden s obliged to hire a locksmith to Rome, Oct. 23 (P—The interna- Means End of Battieship Only a doctor knows just what You're inviting Ray, of course.” recognized from he voices that the | Reception From 4 to 7 o'Clock To- lopen the door of the “mystery tional ‘;‘;‘"“‘“)°'1"“"“”“"" today | He predicted that a successful| will cleanse the system of men “Of course, dear: carcless of me|man was Henderson and the girl, R £ o received from the Rumanian govern- |conference will mean the end of | _ 5 Sy A o ,'{, I,),“_ e onaatri But I|Cora Munford, *hat last word in| 4ay Ior Young Woman Add- | Did Not Ask Aid ment the estimate on maize produc- |the battleship as the backbone of | Women or children without harm. giess 1 thought that, as usual, he'd | flappers elito Bicuites I e e tion for this year the figure being |the various fleets, but doubts that Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin d ! 1 . r S | ! . gnate nh‘numl\(,‘um 000 metric t This is the | sepnaadl s i 5 be too busy to accep I find you, girls over her most | that during the struggle he did not | metric tons. is is the|the submarine can be aboli is prepared today under strict Then just the faint suspicion of a [awfully attractive,” Henderson was| There will he a reception o the a1 for aid. On direct examination | X UM production yet reached. |suggested in the invitation. supervision from freshest herbs laugh, implying that speaker | saying. “Yow've got it all over our | new teachers in the training schools | o had testified there were many | L, CXCeeds by 124 per cent last year's|Italy and Japan have shown a de- ang other pure ingredients, knew as well as Barbara that her | English How do you do it?| given in the library of the Normal{of his employes about the offices | [SUTe 2nd DY 45 per cent the aver- |sire to keep their submarines, he TR el e (5 10 words had been mere bluff, for|You scom to wake up so much {school by the other teachers today |ang the hall before and after the| S Production of the past five|sald, while most nations have indi- il £t g to Dr. wasn't it obvious that Barbara had |sooner and make so much more of | from 4 to 7 o'clock. Dr. William P. | aijozed attack. | years which was 4,300,000 metrlc|cated a willingness to drop even- Caldwell’s original prescription. no use for her husband when she | vour you If you don’t mind my |Dyer is the chairman assisted bY! The seript of Miss Pringle's dance | ©°™* tually the costly dreadnaughts, had that attractive Lnglishman in | saying it ish girl of your | Miss Gertrude St. George, Miss ANna fact, for which she had tried to ob- e 550 e St e s Rokowski, Miss Catherine Callahan, |tain & booking by Pantage was She did want Ray. Tt both hurt|two pig- an irritating g {Miss Edna Risley, Miss Alice Mur-|introduced as evidence atter a| and exasperated her that he would | and a shiny nose!” phy and Miss Ruth Anderson. A lgtormy debate by opposing counsel never accept. But her own pride| Cora Munford smiled. 1t was a buifet supper will be served in the !on girect examination Pantages t refused to allow her to plead with | smile that began with her eyes and | dining room and games will be|tifeq emphatically that he had him. So it invariably hapened | worked slowly all over her face. played. There are 10 new teachers'yyreq down Miss Pringle and the | that she and Hende went alone.| “I noticed that when I was abroad | from the Camp school, Miss Clara ' aot pecause the play was too vulgar | Ray, on his part, found that last year,” she told him, “they did | Menkwitz, third grade, Miss Joyce 'ung suggestive—"very suggestive.” Y th evenings he spent by himself { seem awful dumb to me. Why, at Sfo‘ in ory and xvnlurnml\.\x Mi a1l PRO'PH lLAc-T!c were strangely precious. Not as one country house where 1 visited, Saunc lish and genera et oy precious, of course, had he and Bar- | when they heard my age they ex- | Science: from the Vance school, President of Chile | bara been at home together—just pected me to have dinmer in the Miss Martha Williams. first, Miss| Escapes Assassination the two of them —but better, Infi- nursery with the kids:” [EeginaRdschizon fiourth MIssG Santiago, Chile, Oct. 23 (P)—Presi- nitely, than being one of a crowd | They both laughed. trude Telrson. ffth, and Mrs Io-Sqcn carlon Ibanez today owed his of noisy, shricking people. [ “What do you think makes the |dine Jones. sixth grade; from the e 4o%n 4ssassin’s poor marksman- Directly she and Henderson were difference 2" slenllag caiopll) Wit iee COE G 6ut of the house he would go up to| Cora appearcd to be thinking. phin, first, Miss Iva Lutz, second, | ““yigteray as he, Senora de Ibanez | and Mrs. Alice Crosley. his den, a room right at the top of | “It's because we've got the pep. the house that contained little in'she announced finally. “That's| Thiy afternoon at 2:30 Mrs. John the way of furnishing except a counts in a girl. long as | H. Kirkham spoke to the student plano. Once there he would com- | you've got pep, and plenty of it, yow | body of the New Britain Normal mence to play—usually a tune that ! can get any fellow you want!" | school on pt. Mrs. Kirkham has had been running through his he ad| Henderson regarded her with a |Spent many years in Egypt and the of intcrest to both stu- ' all d some clusive melody he | tolerant smile. This sophisticated | lecture v was determined to capture. kid he found vastly entertaining. dents and facul Presently, he would forget his| “And what sort of a fellow do | = = surroundings, ims ng instead | you want? If pep’s your criterion,| BUS DRIVER EXONERATED that he was on a platform leading | then, without a doubt you'll land| Norwich, Oct. 23.—(#—Harold T an orches in some composition | him!" Porter, a bus driver of this city em- of his own. Then, at the conclu-| “Oh. I intend to marry some | ployed by the New England Trans- sion, he would imagine the applause | wealthy men, divorce him, and then ' portation company is exonerated of —in that moment supremely con- | live off the alimony” she an- | criminal blame in the death of Wal- scious of the thrill of recognized nounced lau, zly. | ter McClure, aged 4, in Groton Octo- | achievement. | Henderson ightened himself ber 11, by Coronor I. G. McKay in a No lon Ray Lowther the pen-|with a jerk. Such a diabolical | finding today. Greater Value Event at Sage-Allen’s Basement Store HARTFORD Manufacturer’s Entire Lot of New Dresses In Fashionable Silks and Woolens *15 (Usually Selling Up to $39.50) A sale that is typical of the spectacular values in new and smart fashions always to be found here. And a lucky pur- chase of a manufacturer’s en- tire lot of dresses is responsi- ble for this marvelous value! Ensembles, tailored frocks of novelty woolens, lovely aft. ernoon frocks of flat crepe and satin. Party dresses in the new longer silhouette -- georgettes, chiffons, moire and taffeta. All $16.50 and $18.00 dress- es are included. Good range of sizes for women and misses. and two officers of his staff return- ed from a nearby livestock show, a youth stepped forward and fired a pistol three times at him. None af the shots took effect. Soldiers, and the tells accompanying staff officers arrested the youth, who gave his name as Luis Ramirez. He said he had come recently from the mine districts of Teniente. 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