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NVEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, JANUARY 7, 1930. BOY SCOUT FINDS .. Synopsis: A great railroad ject through the Sierrs riage to Anne Wil soclety beauty, ambitions of Leon may woo her free the railro: and her mountain Morse be has An Morse finds his ed by an i Failing in an cffo construction Mor Glenn, the you charge, who _Anne’s interest durate and to shake 1 one | sudden flame ch man can had - flame i a an's eves seemed h travelling a | and mar- e know— Dougla halft bout i Morse from co darkness; still held hor her down. Al right for buill- | s and piling up money, s to makin witiful and hic he shrugged ex his loss 1 for a man—" “At all gain events, meaning enough in inmis arden s eyos th she thet ore Ir in or¢ on clos ihed 50 oft Ve r did MAKES AN ENEM) 8 1 erself—s halter's was ai- | and t 1 tow im. tell you to say that?" she e Voic tly “Why ANNE t Burkhalte ards sked, ironic no out,” idea what | Douglas t of motio Scross the 1 dhe open windows. The soft roc Jul feet keeping Fountry dance t Ziddles you can I may flirt - a n- A riot of motion and color greeted Anne in the dance hall Lectiously o the night; above all, [ with every other n but not with his ¢ Friday!” Dou from n in the world, idential—man Jang the stentorian cries of the deader calling out the figures - as winced red to purple. point of Anne the His face went He scemed on plying, but checkrd Auntered dance floor. 2 Anne and Douglas ma Jvay through the crush of onlook- wrs dowards a ®: the dancing room, where thoy Tould watch the scene without call- dng attention to themselves. feaned against the window sill, Forbed in the picturesq and lively Scene. = The hugze, Dy flickering at intervals « vivid glow Bt the women ¥ JInem pretty, and their ored gowns and the flowe ons in their lent ch Jplashes of color to the scene, Around thre: of the was a dense fr of spectato Tor the most part elderly. At th Jarther end. on a slightly rais wlatform, was the orchest = There was something va Inillar about the lead Dumping and sawing wover his old fidd 1 usicians — a ) Jar, several Jews' harps . perfect Jeaned fo of him “Why, She had Inz beside » “Who's § wuriously. 7 She Drehest awisti “head who thronged and casua He fol- vard poreh window near the int interval of silenc d by strapping man, who dropped # paw on Douglas® shoul- , and drew him to one sidw. Soon Douglas spoke to Anne. I wonder if you will excuse me for a few moments? Tl find you a seat near one of the windo b one hairy bare room was lights] end.d > walls, castini crowd. Most oil lamps s from t he ready assent a of the rust bowing disap- siant stranger. after them though that she had made | the attorney ! anyway—she migh well have him in the open and wcidentally spare herself the di 15t of his presumptuous love-mak- | re vou ot Siioen benehes a looked she col- rib- t pea hair Anne fully: knew it sides room v of but—ne en ona 1y fa- A tunc melody ples hurrying tloor. lost in who was and rocking working brought cou- back to the dance the joyous aban- her foot beating Douglas, forgot hersel with a g with I a Mexican don of t time seene, forgzot Presently she became aware of familiar face among the unfamiliar It s the man sh ce scon bef most Douglas nd he prople phrase leaped to certainly avoided afflicted scemd him as with mind for poir Ruth Cross) nother conquast atches Glenn, tomorrow. HILLIONS OF RUSSTANS LEARNING THEIR ABC'S, Arowncd scended Yains & Thats and bld-f: Campaizn - of Soviet Government Raises Percentaze of Literates I'rom 22 (o 55 In 9 Yes | ern California city | United Press. | time. | Sands, the only key witness not ENEMY' TREASURE | | Kicks Toe Against German's| Gold in Sydney Field | T (RSt | s down Sydney Zoo, in the unex- | Sydney, amid virgi to Sydney Harbor, the of the most heautiful world, was th ne of an pected treasure discovery. A boy scout campaigning the trees, struck his foot a glass jar thinly covered by carth. | To his ama nt, he found it fuil of glittering coins, $1,500 in gold. | port the find elicited a strange story from the rdkeeper the zoo. When the war broke out an old German, employed as an underkeeper, was afraid his savings would be confiscated. So he buriel them. n he went into the back country for ten years. Meanwhile scme treeg had been cut down and others had grown up, and though he carched until he was broken heart- | he could not find his jar of gold. | inally the impoverished old man, set to work to earn enough money to £o back to his native Bavarian vil- Now that imself is Io by the polic made Australia, Dec. bushland slopi one mong st a of his money is found he The treasure is held while efforts are boing | ~e him. MISSING WITNESS FOUND FOR POLICE Taylor's Valet Ready to Testiiyj Belore Grand Jury (Copyr San Francisco, Henry Peave ress in the Wil murder case, W ght 1930 by United Press) Jan. 7 (GR)— second missing wit- am Desmond Taylor found in n today by | north- | the Los | the | Younz “I am willing to return to Angeles immediately and tell erand jury all I know,” the negro said. “I'll tell them more than the dis- trict attorney let me tell the first| *Do you know who lor?” he was asked. “I'll tell that to the grand jury,’ Te said, nervously. He had bcen awakened from a sound sleep. Admits He Named Man “Did you not confide in Thomas ture cele killed Lrity named)—Xkilled | d | | Dr. Filben, who 1 ey, is executive ifornia Law Tie person riended P ry of the ( nforcement league, accused by I'e eer was the one named by Otis Hefuer, another long missing witness, in an exclusive statement to (he United Press vesterday | Hefner, a convict at Folsom peni- tentiary, was paroled in 1926 after | he had ma a confidential state- | ment to the prison bhoard that the | motion picture dircctor was killed | us @ result of the operations of a | narcotic ring of which Hefner was member Was With Sands Hefner said he was with Edward ct loczted, when the latter found T: lor's hody. While ~Hefner's story cevents immediately after including the won covered | e murder identification of a n he said he saw rashing from the bungalow court, Peavey reveal- cd what happened the preceding evening while lor was still aliv “I'd been working for Mr. Tay- lor as valet for eight months before | more than 4.500 stars and plane | idea “He his he was killed,” Peavey said. was my best friend. I've got ricture right here on my dresser. 2 = CHIGAGD T0 HAVE NEW SKY THEATER iax Adler Gives $750,000 Planetarium to Windy Gty Chicago, Jan. T.—(®—The new Chicago planetarium given the city by Max Adler is to be a theater of the skies for the city's millions. Adler gave $750,000 for the proj- ect and vs it is intended “to em- phasize that rich and poor, here and abroad, are of one universe, and that | under the vast firmament there is no | division or cleavage but nd unity.” independ- cnce Beneath its $3-foot dome, 400 cotators may sit in the darkness of night, while a rcpresentation of the is flashed on the dome surface by 122 projectors. The audience will sec stars appear from remote the earth, how they sands of years ago, may be expected to appear thou- sands of years hence. Iach star will be shown in exact relative position, speed and brightness to =21l other how the parts of looked thou- nd how they Prof. Philip Fox, astronomor of Northwestern university, is the di- rectof of the planetarium, which will be opened early next year. Centenarian Complains He Can’t Find Any Work Beaumont, Texas., Jan. 7.—(UP) —Decause the boss lets him out of every new job he gets when his age lez is being driven to seck charity. Kearnes is emphatic in his asser- tion that he is not old—only 101. “I was born on a ship crossing the Atlantic back in 1 and all my life I've been living in . Texas, in MclLennan county ne Waco. But I've been in nearly every country and port in the world,” Kearnes de- clared. Tt is part of a policeman’s du England to attempt to take number of any airplane which breaking the law. Why Fat Men Stay Fat “The trouble with me, and I guess this applies to 999 of the men who |are putting on weight, I didn't have | the energy or “pep” to keep it oft. | I - Drive Drudgery rom Your Home | This Year! Start the New Year with a resolution to abolish un- necessary hard work in your home. No housewife need wear away her strength and health—and the clothes—scrubbing and rubbing the old-fashioned The Universal Electric Washer does all the real hard work—changing wash day to wash hour. Lost all interest in any healthy ac- tivity and just lazed around accumu- lating the old poundage until I got that “Kruschen feelin Start taking Kruschen Salts— that's the common-sense way to re- duce—but don't take them with the idea that they possess reducing qualitics in themselves. This is what they do—they clean out the impurities in your blood by keeping the bowels, Kkidneys and liver in splendid working shape and fill you with a vigor and tireless en- crgy yowd most forgotten had existed As a result self in an c instead ©h, of planting your- r every free moment fat accumul you for activity that keeps you d doing the things you've always wanted to to_keep you In good condition Then watch the pounds slide Kruschen Salts are the Fountain of Youth. Take off! up-to-date one-half tea- | spoonful in a glass of hot or cold water tomorrow morn and every morning— and it they don’t change vour whole about reducing, o back and get the small price you pald for them. Got 55 cent bottle of Kruschen Salts—lasts 4 weeka—at- the Falr Drug Dept. or any progressive drugglst anywhere in the world, it 1t's the Little Daily Dose that does Henry Goldsmith & Co. 35 MAIN STREET * Wednesday CRECENT LT BASE RUGS Perfects ox12 $4.98 e SPEAR Fl Tnore Lare decadenc 1 s 3 hardy race.” b ! i Anne 1 t stractedly *sound closi e sound #100d with 4t » list walked o sy even mil- n taugit accord of | ent of Rus- could read | y. The per cent knows its “Society vopl beckoned o0k, window, blished A In the | the Sovict the Li for untn- 5 of introduced in h is easier to learn than the com- | haracters | ent's “Five-Year In- Plan” also extends 1o | vities, and illiteracy cent every conceiva « plexion. That is all sleeping but ing frantically of inc hopeles they pearcd b Anne mi Douglas to over the and st quieted “That's providis | 1 be 5 per Forest Is Rising Again | Where Saws Once Buzzed | Parsons, W. Va., J 7 (Pr—More ’ ) voung trees are being place of those | nd g planted nsylvan Je she Mr. hat Mo aloue, these low prices. 1 COTTON MATTRESS 1 COTTO. 1 INNER SPR 1 SILK FLOSS MATTRESS 1 SILK FLOSS MATTRESS Cross Bar Pantry Shelving Material, yard Water (‘.uvl{)r Win- | dow Shades, cacl.49c | Rayon Bed $2.49 ‘ Spreads, each Regular $1. On Sale 98¢ .. SHOP WORN SAMPLE MATTRESSE used for display purpocses only. All full size. .. 5¢ | OPPOSITE GLEN ST. Specials JOHNSON'S LIQUID WAX ..39¢ —_— —that have heen Just one of each at RODS Pint ch and FELT MATTRESS G MATTRES Dainty Silk Covered Quilts. White cotton. $2'98 49c¢ Felt Base Floor Covering, yard ALL LINOLEUM YARD GOODS LAID FREE UNTIL JAN. 15TH — Bathrooms Excepted. ——— COTTAGE LO CURT Cross B terfal, hems. Pair LACE CURTAINS $1.00 AINS ar ma- inzham s out, W. M. Kcarnes complains | | that he do and needed to do | an | THREE [0 PLAYS WINGREAT PRAISE |"“Street Scene,” “Journey’s (End," “June Moon” Called Best | | New York, Jan. 7 (®—The salient |dramas of 1029 in the American theater were three: “Strect Scene,” | Fumer Rice's tragedy of lower mid- ldle class life In New York: “Jour- ‘s End,” English world war play by R. C. Sheriff: and | Moon.” hilarious and penetrating American comedy by Ring Lardner and George S. Kaufman. 1 Strect Scene,” as the outstand- ing hit of the year and recipient of the Pulitzer drama prize, com- manded most attention. Its author own carlicr in his career a ar for the tempo of the ma- age, and in “Street Scene" employs an unorthodoxy of treatment which shows his inde- pendence of the conventions and |clinches of the theater. | Yet he infuses two familiar n- | gredients of the state—a love story of an Irish girl and a Jewish boy, {and the murder by a stage hand of |his wife and her lover—and these sugar-coat the somber undertone of {the drama, whose main errand is to show the barrenness and shal- |lowness of thi life some millions |or urbanites live along the side- streets of New York. | Through the windows of a typl- can Manhattan apartment house of |the poorer class, and on the side- |walk in front of it, Rice lets us {glimpse the daily lives of a group »f dwellers, His is not a great play, but [play of its scason and it holds up to careful scrutiny an observant :|v\('tul’l’k of a current scene. “Journey's End” is a first play by an English clerk, welling out of his own deep-seated revulsion for war |because of what it does to gentle- men. Inevitably it was compared here |with “What Price Glory?” which holds foremost rank among Ameri- |can world war plays. but the two are as different as the British and American viewpoints. Sherif’s idealistic and gentlemanly officers, young Oxonians proud of |culture and breeding, would find incomprehensible the boisterous veneries of Captain Flagg and Ser- {geant Quirt. | Sheriff wrote passionately of gen- tlemen whose souls were twisted death with high out any zest for loyalty but with- adventure—men “June | it was the best American ! army | |y swar and who went to futile | |inspired to couruge by their heri- tage rather than by the excitement |ot the moment And probably mo ageless Glory?” which his play will be than “What Pri was rather the bet- | ter theatrical exhibit. Written for the English theater, it lost none of | force when set before American rdiences. | It may be that from the remoter | lobservation point of two or three | vears hence. June Moon” will loom » greatest | landmark of 1929 in the American theater. Its mad humor are only a ve-| neer, for at bottom, as lardner | chides the nation’s song writers, he reveals a savage scorn for the fol- | lies and foibles of his time. If he | follows this- comedy of contempo- | {rery manners and morals with | others in the same vein, he may vet |show himself the ablest playwright | of his time at holding the mirror up to American life. | Of other plays worth there have been several | “The Criminal Code.” by Martin Plavin argues that something is wrong with penitentiaries as insti- tutions for reclaiming men. It stark tragedy, and it is made much | more effective by the vivid set- tings of Robert Idmond Jones a Arthur Byron's portrayal of the \prison warden torn between the | necessities of his job and a desire to be compassionate and fair. In Dreston Sturges, author of “Strictly Dishonorable,” the stage has found a new playwright capa- | ble of writing sheer and trivial com- | edy with a delightful deftness of touch. Tugene O'Neill has brought mrm‘ the intended as the fir: dramas dealing with man's fin God. It was not a success| in New York. nor a good p nd nce its failure O'Neill has de the other plays of his trilogy. | Meanwhile his monumental “Strange Interlude” continucs to be seen widely here and abroad. Musically the year on the stage was marked by the presentation of Sweet Adeline,” a worthy succes- | sor to “Show Boat" by the authors, Jerome Kern and Hammerstein 11; and by the tinued appearance of costly and lavish musical shows of the sort indigenous to the New York stage. Into the theater the motion pi ture companies have come this year to finance gorgeous musical shows, | 5o that when these have attained | the prestige of Broadway success they may be carrled, cast and all, o Hollywood for transference to the audible screen. This trend betokens a growing | domination of the stage by the in- |terests that control the screen. attention but one- new play in “Dynamo,"” three bel | privileges, ‘;s furnished those who reach a sut- | Officials say the new system pro ALMUST SEH[][" | duces zest for good behavior as had conduct means a loss of all privi- leges. 3 o | Judge Pleases Ladies Convicts Have Many Privileges Even if Only a Little When They Behaye I Nunetaton, England, Jan, 7. (UP) —Pleasing ladies, no matter how Dartmoor, Eng., Jan. 7 (A—Dart- | | small the request, scems to be the A woman applied for a mainte- moor prison is becoming almost a | nance order against her husband be- cause she was out of work. She said that he was making cight dollars a week, although not employed for full time. The bench ordered the husband to his wife two cents a weck. ht cents a month, or a little less than a dollar a policy of the local bench. private school. Convicts are now given the priv- tlege of studying history, arithmetiz, keography and the sciences. Books on almost any subject are availaile in the prison library. Bare cells o the old days have been converted into comfortable s and those who have been in residence a few e vears are allowed to sleen in rooms | HARVARD PROFESSORS RETIRE that are often furnished better than | Cambridge, Mass, Jan. 7 (UP)— their own homes. | Two Harvard professors widely They are guarded according (o the | known for their work in the field numbers of years they have been in | Of literature will retire next Septem residence. The “freshmen” have to|Der. it was announced at the uni- rough it somewhat, but after 18 |Versity today. months' residence are transferred (o| They are Bliss Per “liberty hall” officially known as|of Inglish literature, “D" hall, where, if their condvct Wiener, professor of Slavic lan has been good, they get their rirst|guages and literatures, cach of whom will round out a teaching ca There is a jazz band conducted by | reer of more than 30 years in June. a “lifer.” Kood is varicd each day, the same menu never being repeat- ¢d for three weeks. 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