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— . i NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1929. 5 | i (’h:lfk’n [lr}ppl Ilic*_Dlltf ansgression. Ate $ | | S, The police were notified today of i i ; N of I'ra nders of Maii o ( | j e (Tared a petit he building n- strect, and suspension of the licenses - « | 1 t 15kl v ruling, but nent today indie ut to that office | Vice President of American Lo- , . Ccomotive Co. Succumbs | New York, Nov. 14 —{P—Lester 8. Carroll, vice president of the American Locomotive compary, col- lapsed today on a Lexington avenue Ils more than 450 feet own to the enormous BRIl e e et 'I“i‘,;’_j»i‘T:;-}Expects {0 Open Garage to Sup- Tremont bt steeet L port Immigrant Wile | | ‘u: the following; Laval ambori of 23 West 1 see the play “The| New York, Nov. 14 (UP)—Wil- - doseph’s Play-|jjan W, Willock, Jr., who ran the Advt. tion of the rs, Tabs' hall, Nov. isk of losing an inheritar e | Family” Upstair | The Woma subway train at 14th street. He was {South Congregational church will|$120:000,000 bhecause he mar o dead when an ambulance surgeon Tt o P T bermaid. faced the rcached the scene. He was 65. (s NepifainE Al g ‘ol timistically today morrow, beginning at 9:30 o'clock ] N Began at Age of 22 | Luncheon will be served at noon In an apar OF = Forty-three years ago. at the age | ¢ lley in Oys B ars, Mr. Carrall began his| HEL revealed yesterday LMOHAWK railroad career a helper in a lit- : while unwill or station of the Chicago & North- ST . ] A western road in South Dakota. | T not quarrelled with Mansfield Withdraws | While running errands and helping | e i in fact. sent Reaquest for Recou: 5 | ] ing at § o'c 1 ! quaest for Rec t ; round the station, he learned | ; ssstblaltirite, T e . ! e NATALIE [ telegraphy and in time became the o e 5 ! ’ o = 3 | The first and second degr T'he youth ‘ 1¢ » station’s operator and its agent St ”',W“‘l” o oGl by LINCOLN fasten ooyl iyearapHaRe aB i na] | “Jackaway's annual clearance sale [in the Willoc Y SUMNER 3 ferred to Chicago and became a |now in progress, 58 West Main-St. |a week ago. Willc « i traveling auditor for the Chicago & ; e sy 2 3 N Northwestern. He had become gen- eral traveling auditor in 1901, when he was appointed purchasing agent for the road. Subsequently he was promoted to the position of general purchasing agent for the C ROMANCE LD e e e R T : ; INASETTING rect complained o the poiice st |cqrally coniaont that Jove ki oy ' OF MYSTER g t Valentine Wi Jackaway's annual clearance sale [enough i now in progress, 68 West Main St for hims advt The | < of 3N |find a way Northwestern and the Chicago, St. | treet had his dog and wouldq In & | y INTRIGUE : Paul, Minneapolis & Omaha, Hel R e SRR ¢ g \ 1 ol { A it up. Officer L. E. Harper [leave soo to the ! Associated Press Phot |10 &t up: omeor £ 52 st e S ¥ ADVENTURE; s ment took over operation of the rail- [y o4 b A g T A = I s e L s, roads during the war, Mr. Carrolt |MI. and Mrs. Martin k. Johnson sailed from New York for | ity owner, Adelaide v ideal g 1 liave « vas appointed chairman of the |Africa on their m}h expedition for the American Museum of i B 'W':" ":; ;fl_ T e to L do Starts northwest regional purchasing com- | Natural History. They will spend two years in the Tanganyika | S Tabs' hall, M 1-22 by o : i h! - mittee, | territory and the Belgian Congo. |5t Jo! Players. 1wy 1in e Monday, rromoted In 1921 | : sk o % e in | uy 7 1 e . On March 1, 1920, the railroads | e = A e T . ey 20y hinery atir November, 18* : aving been returned to their own-| o | : 2 iz Recting e ier started y v, M. Carroll was appointed gen- | MOUIaIn groun HREMEN bPflNS e e Sl it Fihie : e in the L i - / eral purchasing agent for the Amer- | %0 F 0 Come and see “The amily ican Locomotive company. He was e R e 4 promoted fo the position of vies iy e ) L D all, Nov. 2 Advt o A g e president in charge of purchases in | o'y, 7oL e, i : M S — e ( S Tt B et v : USE HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS eud. ! |ing back when the T " Newington Evenf Is Success— |items 1 Chief Accountant Wil-|company No. 1 of A 1u.m\ V. King of the power « Power Concern Seeks $30,000,- | son aceidea ro sunccie out it TR nue No Subsidized Press! He was overrule former exeen bridge | N Sk o lar is paid by the po i phase of the never-ending fight over opposition contends that the 1 el t would not excerd “lectric power concerns the valu- | TRCT AS BEEN REMOVED | sble power site omned by the Flat- (5 o Ho BE e e ame 9 | read Tndians in Montana. The issue| 4oecq” (o ere donations g Men's | & Shether the “power trust” is go-|STATECd up were donation v | 0 to get the site for development | g S0 B TOM Jos- I whether someons else Wil fet oy Scouts’ & fian 4 AMERICAN INTELLIGENCE assures the freedom of the press— Public opinion has been at it susket parts bou « This site fs worth somewhere be- | charged for salaric freed from the tyranny which denicd it the right to pass judgment on public _ estions. F ween $50,000,000 and $100,000,000 | Montana P'ower officials and $3° e | 1nd is sometimes called “the Muscle | for flood dan r from the aAfter | shoals of the Northwest.” power site. Moy 15 also paid corted The government has been trying|to men who atter 0 hand it to the Electric Bond & | the Indians . Co. for the last couple of | Mountain hid years, That is, it has' sought to | yer. Consur urn the Flathead over to the|to stand “entertainme Rocky Mountain Power Co., which | e nyace sa subsidiary of the Montana | | ower Co., which is a subsidiary of ! dlectric Bond & Share | Power Trust May Lose ! But always there has been some- | ¢ to step in and make a holler at critical moment and now in the | end the “power trust” may lose out. | Solicitor Charles A, Itu commi who joine n pro 1 this strar an opinion that if approved tax payers ever would be soalked for noto Show Flims | I'here is not any thought of letting | L “‘“’_‘)‘"‘}”;‘ ity | American Legion I 7 the - government build and operate | Vinst - ih public In.|Will Dresent & six-recl me | A power plant at the Flathead as | Rt d ture Wi e ; - there was in the Bould SN e e turin i T I b Muscle Shoals rizhis ridiculous, preposterous and 3 sehool 4l loes, however, involve the in B Wale 3 | of the Federal Power Commission, bl iy | 3 , which has been involved before R e Notes i Under the power company's offer paEaE R & Harold 1 of M left ‘ had one-third o e payme; 1 S S " g ot £ thirds. More than two years ago|tof.® “EETECHET s as a&ion auxiliary will be held at the| A \1&""%“& someone got President Coolidge to| o e 5 000 zainst the |home of Mrs Alice Avery on Ridse | NCEE gt propose legislation which would [0 " G i contends that it [10ad. Wethersfield tomorrow I & L, allow former Secretary of the In-| 5 %yo jipoesinle for the n- ning at s o'clock terior Work to divide the royalties | o P8 BEREE e (hed [ with the whites. Senator Wheeler | X MAYOR REVERSES VERDICT | it R¥; of Montana tlmv]} this ]xln\itu)n' TAX REFUND ANNOUNCED Walt hi \Ma ok ROy i snocked out by the appropriation aahinglol o P e- Former Mayor Patrick J. Duane, DIl passed by the House. Th ni"n“\,\q N e ln‘u“n‘; “t ® ® .59 when Wheeler was in China and [ o A e B e e I as ln Senator Tom Walsh in Europe, the ‘“":m\‘.‘l_ e ‘I ‘m‘ Frb Iy ,‘?,H',d, ,”‘H“mw‘ L e “'.‘,‘:“"_\j O l l = power company came ad got Work | ;o5 000 0" T 1626 wa ne- [ next mayor and the Indian Burcau and the ! " oA e I ceount, completed late yos. . 5 Ry . o S (T (00 CEpes (03 o (R B gl e S R R Gone is that ancient prejudice against cigarettes—Progress | nit which vir- | TC4U% Th i i a preliminary permit whic ~{caused by addivonal ailowance for 12 voles and thus defe Mayor . . . o tually meant awarding & lease for | (L, fon'and ordinary and noces. | Honry I Teal. sho supposed he| has been made. We removed the prejudice against cigarettes the mext 50 years. No one had| ot ol o had been reclected 3 sl patieipdifieRconaii R e i ) i when we removed harmful corrosive ACRIDS (pungent irri- Presumably the thing would have | i R o B « ” tants) from the tobaccos sone thraven nad ot J. . Avder-| Vipgrinia’s New Governor and “Hostess : , of it and gone rushing to Work |' with vigorous protests. Then Sena . & =5 SR (o) Borah S Howslll Wiazler tana EARS ago, when cigarettes were madg mtho}nt ihe |~1 of Sl LR o el modern science, there originated that ancient prejudice against } Nalsh cable B e demand- | . AR % % i s e o [ g e e SR all cigarettes. That criticism is nc longer justified. LUCKY STRIKE, e i b the finest cigarette you ever smoked, mads of the choicest tobacco, <on hasn't awarded the site, but | properly aged and skillfully blended— "It's Toasted.” | it tentatively turned down the only | | bidder, Walter Wheeler, a Minne- | | apolis cngincer under whose bid | TOASTING,” the most modern step in cigarette manufacture, . | the Indians would get $1.50 per el Z h H | horsepower —a difference of many - Copr R hiehiaTA Bres O s removes from LUCKY STRIKE harmful irritants which are pres- ] ; i sel for the Flatheads, T = R = Sl Ll e ent in cigarettes manufactured in the old-fashioned way. 8 ing to protect their interests, favors . the Wheeler bid as fairer to the 2 i % ; owners. The Amerlean Farm - Everyone knows that heat purifies, and so “TOASTING”— ; reau Iederation supports the bic 7 hecauss of Wheeler's plans for mak- | LUCKY STRIKE'S extra secret process—removes harmful cor- Y z sually cheap fertilizer. | . S S & o o R alter. Whaeler. was recently | rosive ACRIDS (pungent irritants) from LUCKIES which in the e R o T i o hearing to protest the | : % S s Toasted"'——the phrase that describes the - {ive reseetion o hia bid and | | old-fashioned manufacture of cigarettes cause throat irritation and Ches ‘fi o I;ffl pm i i“] i 2 | ittt "Waisldemandsd thatinel| | i 5 2 ¥ 5 Xtra “toasting CESS & he manue B S e e | coughing. Thus “TOASTING” has destroyed that ancient preju- T (o T AT iy, b s { power commission, comprising the dlce i " ki b db 9 acture of cky T g N | cocretaries of interior, war against cigarette smoking by men and by women. bt & e R X 1R B tobaccos—the Cream of the Crop—are sciene ¢ have been in progress and S ificallv subiecte: Aetrats AT {Anaseibseniiniusosremend Sons of 1 ‘ 6 tifically subjected to penetrating heat at minie a resolution to investigate some of | e > ° E | R e | ’ mum, 260°—maximum, 300°, Fahrenheit. The s Wl e | exact, expert regulation of such high tempera= .- | Mountain Power Co. is only a dum- | tures removes impurities. More than a slogan, : f | my corporation. Its “president is . . - ! John D. Ryan. chairman of the| “It’s Toasted” is recognized by millions as the | \naconda Copper and president of 4 | the Montana Power Co., and its . - most modern step in Ci"i\\'clle manufacture, | - cAnaT & * & ) b vice president and general man i 3 N h l = N | ‘.-r wl nk M. Kerr of the Mon- | “Official hostesses” are much in the public eye these days— and | O T roat rrltatlon o Cou h' s, tana Tower. Its directors include|here you see Dr. John Garland Pollard, newly elected governor| 'fi'f»'.-“ s 11, Sabin and Perey Rocke lof Virginia, and his comely daughter Sue, who will be first lady | TUNE IN—The Lucky Strike Dance Orchestra, every Saturday night, over a coast-to-coast network of the N. B. C. The most cffective ammunition | 0f the state for the next four years.- They're pictured tosether @ © 1929, The American Tobacco Co., Mfrs, scd inst the Montana- at their home in Williamsburg, Va. > 1) 4 \