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I i i _— .. BLAVES “AVENUE FOR HIS THIRST “You Can't Help Drinkiug% There,” Man Tells Judge | “If you avenue you me s e Commits Suicide With Vest in Police Cell Revere, Mass., March 19 (UP) —Shoving his head through an armhole of his vest, John J. O'Toole, 46, attached the gar~ ment to the door of his police cell and committed suicide by hanging. The bod¥ of O'Toole, a laborer, was discovered shortly before midnight, a few hours after he had been arrested on a drunken- ness charge. MAN DECLINES T0 TALK IN NON-SUPPORT CASE hang can't around Hartford help drinking,” | Joseph McNamara, 30, of 55 Oak | Street, told Judge M. D. Saxe n po- | lice court today after pleading not | suilty to the charge of non support | and admitting that he had been drinking more than he should since being laid oft the Last Main | &treet subway job on February 1 “Keep away from Hartford acenue If that's the casc.” Judge Saxe ad- vised him. and continued the ¢ for one month in the hope that M Namara will find cmployment and support his wife and five children as his wife testified he had been do- ing prior to February 12 Dey res He Has Lngaged Lawyer Who Will Speak for Him— Back in Payments, Edward Semrau of 335 Main street declined {o make a statement in po- lice court today svhen he was ar- raigned on the charge of violation of | probation, because he has engaged an attorney, he said, who will do his talking for him. Probation Officer E. C. Connolly testified that Semrau went to jail last June in default of a bond, but was released July 24 and continued to contribute towards the support of his wife and child until December He was taken ill and was un- Mrs. McNamara told the court her husband gave her only $2 since he | lost his work, and one of the chil-| dren has just been discharged from the hospital while there for treatmer | drinking steadily, she said | McNamara, in reply to a question | Prosecuting Attorney ‘W. M. Greenstein as to where he got money with which to buy liquor, | another is still He has been S ; able to work b said he had friends. He expressed a | yp. \‘gm\‘;]"’_ ']'::J\"l Hehniary, el wilingnees to work and Judge Saxe | 1o+, Connolly did not require him suggested that he stay frconi | s s s AU N Ath Isquor and make a determined « fort to obtain employment so that he might stay out of police court. Attorney Michael A. Sexton ap. peared for John Langen, 25, of 19 North Main strect. Manchester. who ‘was brought to this city from Man chester yesterday by Sergeant P. McAvay on a non support charge. |- The case was continued until to- morrow, Attorney Sexton suggesting that the probation department make &n investigation into it Later, however, Mr. Connolly call- 38 | ed on him for a week but he would pay only He was notified to be in court yesterday but he did {mot put in appearance until 10 10 %o to the factory where he works nd Lring him in. He is eight weeks nd in his payments, Mr. Connolly dded, and he claims to have re. Attorney C. J. Danaher of of the highest priced o'clock, a¥d today it was necessary | Dodges Taxicab Fare Adolph Abucewicz, *1&.' of 60 Franklin street, who is oh proba- tion for past offenses, pleaded guilty to the charge of evading taxicab f; and Judge Saxe scored him severely, imposing a suspended jail sentence of 15 days and continuing him on probation with a warning that on for the fact that he has cight chil- | dren and would lose his job if sent | to jail, he would receive a substan- | tial sentence | Sergeant I. A. McAval testified | that Abucewicz engaged a taxicab in | Hartford last Sunday night and on | arriving at his home, left the driver, | Charles Hathaway of Hartford, waiting outside the house for tae money and then did not pay hir Abucewicz claimed to have taken a trolley car out Farmington avenue by mistake for one coming 1o New Britain and when he learned kis ¢ Tor it was too late to get another car. so he came home by cab. He | sad he jumped the fenee leading to a neighbor's home .intending to bor- row the money. but when he re- turned he could not find the driver. After court Abucewicz assured Hathaway he would send him the money. The trip cost 34.90, exclusive of the overtime charge for waiting, and if the driver cannot collect. he will be obliged to pay his cmploy out of his own wa Speeder 1 Otto C. Iifland, 2 strect. Hartford. pleaded ty 10 the charge of ding and was fined $10 without costs. Officer Peter | C. Cabelus testified that he made the arrest about 6:30 o'clock last night on East street. after following Jif- | land from Clayton to Newington avenue and observing a speed of 45 to 50 miles an hour. William H. Turncr strect, Middletown. pleaded guilty to the charge of overloading an tomobile truck and was fined * and costs. Officer Alfred Tanzuay testified that he stopped Turner on | Corbin avenue about 2 p. m. and found the load on the truck to be | 0 pounds in excess of what the | law allowed. Turner is employed by the Cromwell Quarry Co. and was hauling from the Sherman Sand Co. ned . of §10 and spe 8, of 14 Vine | s entered by Assistant Prosecuting Attorney W. M. Green- stein in the case of Hyman Rabinow of Arch street, who was st- ed last week on a breach of the peace charge resulting from an al- tercation with Henry Schupack over & sign advertising le in Rabi- now’s store on Main streef I Skin As Vt;lvety as Schoolgirl’s One woman who had long been annoyed by a bad complexion writes, “It was worse than usual | and I began to use Resinol Soap and Ointment regularly. Inafew days my skin was clear and as soft and velvety as a schoolgirl’s.” A complexion cleared of unsightly blemishes can usually be kept so by daily use of Resinol Soap with a touch of Resinol Oint- ment when needed for a tempo- rary pimple or roughness. acka uest. Dackage on reauest FREE {2 Ay Resinol | awyers in the state,” according to Mr. Connolly. Judge Saxe ordered Semrau to post a $300 bond to insure payment of $8 a week, or go to jail for 60| days. “You ought to support your wife and child instead of spending your moncy for things which will probably do you no good,” Saxe told him. BARTLETT ACTION DEFENSE STARTED Former Fish and Game Official (laims Deal Routine from the sale of a boat owned by te to his own usc Does Not Deny Deal Robert C. Murchie of the defensc said that the purch of the boat hy the fish and partment was not denied and that exchange of property within the de- plain details of the transaction, Ile asscrted that there was no secrecy concerning the t saction and that Bartlett decided to hold the $300 Judge | : © | the Revolution. N S 57 sokgE . “ruceER | = vse \ PEACHY HOUSE ROCHANIEAU HOQTs, NEW BRITATN DATLY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 19, 1930. Rockefeller Rebuilds Historic Colonial Capital at Wiliiamsb@ This quaint old map is a relic of colonial days. drawn before the the restoration work now in progress is completed, the town once mors liditor's Note: This is the first of a series of three stories, describing the greatest restoration project ever attempted in this country —John T. Rockefeller's rebuilding of the his- teric town of Williamsburg, capital of the province before th2 revolytion. Millions of dollars ar, being spent to restore Williamsburg to its colonial condition. This and the succeeding two articles tell how the job is being done. Wast on, March 19.—Millions of dollars of John D._ Rockefeller's | fortune are bcing poured out in a | little town a short distance south of here to bring colonial Virginia back. as a living reality. to the middle of | the twentieth century. The old town of Williamsbury Va.. capital of colonial Virginia in the days when Virginia ran all the way to the Mississippi river and the Great Lalkes, belng reburlt so that when completed it will look exactly as it looked before Costs Many Millions 1t is a stupendous task—pron- wbily the greatest restoration proj- t ever attempted. Work hus been in progress for nearly three years and 1aore than $5.000,000 I been spent; vet a beginning has barely been made. It will 10 years or 15, before the job is done, and many more millions will have to be expended. But at the finish Williamsb will look exactly as it did two c | turies ago. game de- | This project contrasts strikin Concord, N. TL. March 19— — |1y with Henry Ford's antique vii- Judge Henri I. Burque today de- |lage at Dearborn, Mich. nicd a motion by counscl for Mott| Like Rockefeller, Ford has p L. Bartlett, former fish and game | crormous sums into recreati commissioner, for a dirccted verdict [the colonial ~— atmosphere. But | of mot guilty, and the defense be- | Ford's village is synthetic: thu | gun the presentation of its answer |is. its buildings. all genuine an- 1o the accusation that Bartlett em- | tiques, of historic interest, h: bezzled state funds while in office. | been collected from all parts of The specific charge is that the former commissioner converted $300 Va, | |the country and transplanted to | Michigan, Rockefeller proj- ect calls for the restoration of zn old village on its own site. | Many Workers Are Busy Nothing is being left to guess- | work. Research workers are busy in America, rance. Scotland anil | England going - into old documents in musty libraries for inforny: | tion. | ernor's palace | for instance, w found buri in a British museum. Ten buil | ing architects and six landscap. | avchitects are at work. togeth ith many draftsmen and er neers. Archacologists are at work nding only ‘oundations that hi been completely forgotten. The plans for the royal gov- in Williamsburg 1 | Sixty-eight buildings in Wi | liamsburg which have been | proved to date back to colonial | days will be restoration | whereves ft as they are, with rengthenivg necissary. Al modern | Luildings ¢ being razed or moved away. Cement sidewalls are to be torn up and replaced by | walks of brick or gravel. The ve- stored houses will have electric | lights — but all wires will be ua- der ground. | Most of the land and properiy in the colonial area has already | been Lought by the Rockefeller | kolding company, and the rest | will be bought as soon as agree- ments on the price can bz straightened out. All of this tremendous Job owes inception to the idea of one its | man—Dr. William A. A. Goodwun, proctor of the Bruton Parish Epis- copal church Dr. Goodwin was born in Vir- ginia nd has long studies its his- torical traditions. Twenty-eignt years ago he visioned tion of the old town. Conditions Arc Ideal | points out that Williams- the restora- | He I'didates for public office | sent to the capitol at Hartford and | because no suitable candidates from | New York | the first and third wards were avail Bandit Gets Dollar Back, But No Loc Buffalo, N. Y., March 19 (UP —A bandit entered the grocery store of Philip Bigati, ordered a bunch of celery and proferred a dollar bill. s Bigatl turned to change the bandit shouted: “Stick 'em up and give what you've got.” Bigati gave back the dollar bill, the bandit fled, Bigati un- wrapped the celery and rang up “no sale.” e e———————————— R s b ““\E make me 'C.P. 0. A, FILES NAMES ON INDEPENDENT TICKET No Candidates Listed in First and Third Wards—Rally Tomor- row Night Martin Kelly, candidate for n on the independent ticket, announced this afternoon that the list of can- had been URSERY OWNERS | VOTE RESOLLTION | Protest Proposed Japanese Beetle (uarantine Ruling New Haven, March 19 (P—Nur- | serymen who appeared at a hearing | upon the state’s proposal for state | wide quarantine against the Jap- | anese beetle this summer, were unanimously opposed to it. at the | Connecticut agricultural experiment | station yesterday and expressed that opposition in the form of a resolu- tion to be sent to the federal au- thorities at Washington. The issue was raised at the outset and 50 or more nurserymen present supported the resolution which was offeffred. asking the federal authori- ties to reconsider their quarantine order and have control established |as it was last summer. The quaran- | tine of 1929 was along the Long Tsland shore from New Haven to the state line which was | treated as one infested area, while American Revolution to show what Williamsburg, Va., looked like. When |able, the Citizens Property Owners', other places in the state where the Will look just as this map shows it. | association which is backing the lpest had apppeared were treated as 2 | ticket, will go to the polls without | icolated areas. is about the only place where | dur the siege of Yorktown. will|any candidates from those wards.| The federal government can only L thing is possible be rebuilt so that the Frenchman's | Several other places on the ticket |establish quarantine at state border “You could not reconstruct the ¢ it ever revisits the place, | are also vacant. | points, leaving the state authorities or Philadol- feel perfectly at home. | Vincent Dobrowolski, president. {{he power of making the quarantine You might 1f Washington should com; | stated that the party will cndorse | it areas within the state. The Con- honses, but is Councilman Maciora of the fifth 'necticut authorities proposed a state have m surrounded the streets, 1| ward, who is seeking reelection on | wide quarantine in cooperative with skyscrapers. He in r the victol k n, | the democratic ticket. the federal authorities. Now, in the surrounding terr e would not see any c e. E A rally of the independent party |view of opposition of the nursery as 1t was no tall buildir of a rolling cou nourished 200 ve are vline yoars withou chance that he would oy i illcd. Then, three years John D. Rockafeller, Jr.. went to Williamsburg to attend the dedica- ion at the Phi Beta Kappa hall at William and Mary College, whicl lceated there Dr. Goodwin unfolded his vision o Rockefeiler. Rockefeller was in- stantly taken by it: and shortly after e Williamsburg was surprised t d the rector ¥ opal ¢ ‘quiet ing up re ntind an ss property wholesale, all over town —and pa casa for cach purehasc Asked to Explain mazement at last gave way to rm. In 1 Dr. Goodwin wa ing to v some public proper and a town mesting was ecalled. H vas asked to explain, and he did The city promptly astic, and votod to s vroperty. So now the work is going forward Il the required in the open. Scores of laborers, carpenters and supery are an the job. Old colonial ho taverns shops and streets are being restored or rebuilt, so that the city, a few years hence, will look just as it did when George Washington, Patrick Henry, Lafay and Thomas Jei- ferson were there e old Peacn House, on the Court House Grecy where Rochambeau was quartered grew enthusi- | i have o parlors and ballrooms where ccurted and won the Widow Cusiis will be as they were in his day Land is now being ex cd for th brick of the old fornual the with their hed colonials, and these restored just 2 used to be. When compl Williamsburg will not be a 4 1odera- ized version of its old self. It "will be its old selt a it is buman- Iv possible to make it so, People now ing in Willianis- turg who have sold their buildings they could be restored wil) given free occupancy of them they five. After that the property passes into the hands of the holding compa One Irish st « retused to sell his property. feller, on one of his liamsburg, went to see him “No I won't sce You my proper- ty.” said the storekeeper. “Theve is more than the value concerned. lived hese for generations. Their homes are imbued with the traditions and spirits of ple “Yo in the world a storckeeper. give property, Mr. Kockefeller, hepe you'll take it So it was do | the property as ve the man a substa Itock richest m n only a poor vou and J Rockefeller tool tial check in Bebuilding an Amor- WILKINS RETURNS FROM ANTARCTIC ASKS ABATENENT " INLARGELEGACY {Plans Submarine Trip Under|Judge Brings Suit fo Learn Dis- ' from the sale of the boat until he could buy another onc. | Murchie declared the defense | would endeavor to show that Bart- lctt had often indicated his plans regurding the disposition of the $500 and indicated that the defendant would take the stand himself to ex- plain details of the tarnsaction, He | ately said it would be proven that Bart. | Cruise under the lett had aM of his life been by his gbrother, John former first assistant general and now international y commission. He contended that Bartlett had received $500 from his brother about the time of the boat sale and placed this monay in his office safe. YOUNG-TESTIFIES ON CHAIN BANKING ssisted J. Bartlett, postmaster- irman of the Up in Plan Washington, March 19 (P—Gov- ernor Roy A. Young, of the federal rescrve board, today told the house banking committce that fully one- sixth of the total banking resources the country were tied up in or chain banking systents. the end of 1929, Young said, were Lanks and 3,54 . or a total of 28,102 bank ing officcs, with loans and invest- ments totalling $38,500,000,000. Of these offices, he said, 6,353 were in- cluded in some branch group or ain system, with loans and in- vestments of $30,000,000,000. “From this, it will be seen” he added, “that more than half the total loans and country's chain or Athol Man Held Today there branhce banks are held in group, branch tems.” In Alleged $6,000 Theft | Lynn, Rob Mass., March | 9—(P— rt Brookhouse, Jr., of Athol, today was held in $6,000 in district | ! court onda charge of larceny of $5,- | 000 trom Dr. John Kennedy, retir- ed dentist of this city. The case was continued until March 27. It was alleged that Kennedy gave Trookhouse §5,000 sccurties to invest in enterprises pay ing higher interest. Brookhous¢ i charged with having failed to deliv- the certificates for the new in- nt or return the origina sccurities to Kennedy. There is one tclephone ight inhabitants in Berlin, or to every in government | Ice to Alaska New York, March 19 (UP)—Hu- bert Wilkins brought his antarctfe expedition back home tdday after “chipping cight degrees from the edge of a continent.” He immedi- planned for a submarine ice floes from Spitzbergen to Alaska. With Sit Hubert on the Furness !liner Eastern Prince was Parker | ser of Clarion, Pa Al Shees man of Winnipeg, Can., pilot, and Royal Porter, of Detroit, mechanic. The fourth member of the party, G. 0. Tolderadio man, remained in | Montevideo. “My explorations of the arctic by r have shown that the coast line of the continent is an average of | eight degrees further south than has | ered land turned out to be s Says One-Sixth of Funds Tied [ worse than usual, he decla | | found | been hitherto believed,” Wilkins said. “We have chipped cight de- grees from the edge of a continent.” What previously had been consid- he said. The expedition also discover- ed five new islands. Ice conditions this year were red.. He difficult to said he had found it communicate with Richard E. Byrd by radio and even when he was able to do so a “hook- up” through n Francisco was nec Wilkins' would be in the arctic plans to go by submarine Spitzbergen to Alask: from Taunton School Joh To Be Aired in Court | Taunton, Mass.. March 19 (@ — Summonses have been received here by members of the municipal council to appear before the supreme judi- cial court in Boston, Friday, to show cause why a bill should not be issued | to restrain the city from awarding investments of the | the contract for the new addition to the high school here to any but the lowest bidder. The council has voted to award the contract to L. M. Witherell & Sons, of Taunton, whose bid was §1,- 383 higher than the bid of the Shaw- mut Construction company of Bos- ton. The Shawmut bid was $280,355. WOOL MARKET QUIET Boston, March 19 (UP)—The Bos- ton wool market report issued today by the local office of the United States Department of Agriculture follows: “The wool market is very aquiet. A little trading is being done on small quantities for immediate require- | ments. Prices are inclined to ease as L result of weaker foreign markets The decline in prices at the London opening confirmed the recent easing tendencies in the forcign primary markets." next expedition, he said, | where he | posal of Trust Fund | | Bridgeport, March 19 (#—Argu- | ment in a suit over the $2.000,000 | estate of the late Mrs. Margaret H. | McCarthy, of Greenwich, was made today before Judge E. M. Yeomans, in superior court. | The action was presented on a| plea of abatement filed by counsel! | for Dr. James H. McCarthy, of New | Haven. | Written briefs will be submitted to | | Judge Yeomans Thursday. following | which a decision will be given. | The suit is brought by Judge Wil liam L. Tierncy, of Greenwich, one of the executors of the cstate, | asks that the court advise him as to | the distribution of $80.000 annual | income from a trust fund left by | Mrs. McCarthy for her two year old son and her husband. Dr. McCarthy in a suit brought | to the superior court of New Haven| county asks that Judge Ticrney be | ordered to pay over to him all of the { income, both as the cxecutor of the | | estate and as guardian for the son. | The plea of abatement was based l'on the claim that the suit brought who | the local action. This claim was disputed by Judge Tierney, who asks ourt to de- cide just how much of income should be paid to Mrs. McCarthy died a year ago. leaving no will. settlement of the estate was effected in the Greenwich probate co Dr. McCarthy. Lunch Wagon Employe Bound Over by Judge Greenwich, March 19 (®—Roy Collins, allas Albert Parks, 3v, charged with embezzlement of $6061 from Lawrence ‘Wagner, lunen | wagon proprietor, was held in $1500 tonds today for the superiorscourt by Judge William S. Hirschberg. The alleged cmbezzlement curred last July when Wagn to Canada on a vacation, leaving the defendant in charge of the wagor Cellins, it is charged, closed the establishment while his employcr 'was away and left town. He was arrested three weeks ago in New Rochelle, N. Y. ocs went John Osakoicz, street, was practicing Gold street this forenoon driving o intendin;; | was drawn to the uncertain manncr which he was handlin mobile. so he stopped him a the young man was with the auto 1 foun ] A cense. Osakowicz was ar wn releaged on his own for arraignment in police court 13 Commander | in New Haven has preference over|morrow. | Flyers Change 2 & Antarctic Map Air explore explorations by | Antarctica. Norwegian are changing the have unsusp explorers, Sir Hubert Wilkins : Now Captains Riiser-Larsen and Luctzow IHolm, ©of another boy map of the Antarctic. Recent erased much land revealed new hitherto ected. 'Lon>\xl\ red serious. Doing | Wednesday Sena Works on ta bill, Lobby committee continucs Muscle Shoals investigation Hous Takes up Illaneous bills and conside P otorbus bill. | Judiciary committee resumes tak- ing testimony of drys in prohibition hearings. Banking | study of bra banking. Military tinues Mu Post offic es bill to ct system. mi committ coup and affairs committee Shoals hearings. con- air mail revise Tuesday Senate Approved modi on barring e, immoral and ign literature. Lob committee brokerage records of chairman committee. subpoenaed Claudius H. republican na- merec lation bor House Resumed conside us bill. Parker ration of motorl introduced tigation d its Representative Garner olution de 1 revenu handling of tax refunds. House *“ rules denour Representative Howard Federal Ju Harr son of Tenne was defe Representative Fisher reau a income and corpo against n offic les of cor- ate sccurities was proposed in resolution by Representative Mc- Leod Brown Prohibition Poll Announced by Newspaper Providence, R. 1., March 19 (UP) —A prohibition poll among Brown university students will be started im diately, the Brown Daily Her- ald.” undergraduate publication, an- nounced today. In an editorial the Herald said “We hope that it will be of some help in causing something to be done about what in our opinion is a most unsavory condition—disrespect for law in the form of the Volstead act ang terrific corruption in city and | town governme resulting from efforts to ‘beat the law'.” BOY DIES OF 1 Hudson, Mass.. March st baseball fatality of this district ogcurred today when Jo- seph Garcie, 5-pears-old, died at his parent’s home of injuries received vesterday while playing with play- 19 (A—The the year in nd struck 1t was several his injuries were Garcie ‘on the h hours later before | will be held tomorrow night at 7 | Massachusetts Health Head Asks isits to Wil- | actual property | in(ricate artificial treatment, S. H.| People | Goodenough, chief engineer of the | their peo-| uy | gift —and thua | What Congress Is } e continues | chain | sub committee works d censorship pro- | from United States | | treasonable | committee took up la- | | | of West mates. A bat slipped from the hands | young | | [} at the Union Painters’ hall at 434 lain street. The party has obtained permission to hold rallies Satyrday nights at the corner of Main and East Main strects and Dobrowolski been engaged. men. it will do nothing until Wash- :lnzton decides upon action under | the resolution to be sent. | Not a man present voted in favor of the state’s plan to fight the pest. | The state had defined generally in- will e | said that a number of speakers have | tested arcas which affects all farm | products, and a lightly infested arca which affects only nursery products. nursery men claimed their busi- I o ness would be badly hit by a state !wide quarantine because intended customers would be scared off by re- strictions imposed on shrubs, plants {and other items. | They claimed that last summer's quarantine reinvoked would not af- | fect them so seriously as the com- |bined federal-state quarantine. RIVER DIVERSION CASE CONTINUES for Pure Water Boston, March 19 (UP)—There is o popular demand in Massachusetts for naturally clean drinking witer | | that doesn’t have to be purified by | A new automobile jack is intend- led to be permanently attached to a |car's axle. <" WILL "OWDUIIANT‘S And 1szam board ‘of health, testified to- | day in the water diversion case of Connecticut vs. Massachusetts. The hearing before Special Master harles W. Bunn of Minneapolis. United States supreme court ap- pointee, concerns this state's pro- | posal to divert water {rom the Swift | . | and Ware rivers, western Massa-| § | chusetts streams that flow into the | . ¢I" Connecticut river, and to store it up | OTHER s a rescrve for the metropolitan | & district. $2.50 Tets. BEST SELLERS 7 STORY of PHILOSOPHY Goodenough's testimony was pre | sented by Massachusetts in refuta- | i§ tion o Connecticut claim that | § ) | this state need not divert water | roaly from the Ware and Swift rivers, but | utilize the Merrimac river or a group of other castern Massachu- seits sources including the Assabet. | Shawsheen, lower Sudbury, and Ip- | swich rivers instead. | The engineer pointed out that the wsheen was exceptionally objec- | tionable because of pollution from | sewage disposal and industrial waste and that the lower Sudbury | {could not be seriously considered | 592 pages. Printed R S the plates of the origmal for the same reason. These might| .y, b £ T ¢ purified from a standpoint of . public health, he said, but the peo- | Other Books Reduced to §1 ple in this section were averse to| THE OUTLINE OF HISTORY using such treated water. He added | H.G.Wels. Former price, $5.00 | that from his experience the state | RASPUTIN: THE HOLY DEVIL legislature reflected this popular | Ren! Fulop-Miller Former price, $6.00 sentiment in its enactments con-| WRY WE MISBEHAVE | cerning water supplies. | Lomuel Schmalhousen. Former price, $3.00 | e | TRE SON OF MAN SENIOR HIGH SCHOOL NOTES Emil Ludwir. Former price, $3.00 ! At their regular morning assem- 71i'E GREAT HORN SPOON bly today the students of the local 2eme Wright Former price, §5.00 enior high school were treated to the 5UOUTING ON TWO CONTINENTS Majer Frederic R. Burnham. Former price, $5.00 These are only a few of the former $2.50 to 55.00 Best Selling Titiew now ready @ BEACON Book and Gift Shop 85 WEST MAIN ST. Telephone 6100 “Reluctant 1 the Amphion present Friday | A small part of Romeo.” a play wh Dramatic club will night, There will be a special time schoc ule tomorrow afternoon because of a faculty meeting. [ All gym classes are on their regu- | | 1ar schedule now with the new gyms, | locker rooms and showers in full HERALD CLA USE 1FIED ADS “Cash In” On This! The rush season for you, Mr, Auto Repair- man, s here . . . don't let it rush by with- out “cashing-in” on. -The Herald Busi- ness Service Ads. Others get splendid RESULTS from these little ads . . . you can do the same. | Anto Repairs, Accessories AUTO TOPS AND SIDE CURTAINS made d repaired. Rumble seat tops. Closed tops_a_specialty. | BATTERY SERVICE. Vulcanizing. BRAKES RELINED and adjusted “‘Brake Tester.” No guesswork. RADIATOR repairing at lowest prices; service; satisfaction gusranteed. Auto electricians. By Continue These Ads in the Classified Section | Tn no other way can you reach the number | of people that will read your ad in the “Businwss Service” columns of =—=THE HERALD =—— bocause it is recognized by New Britain people as | the dircctory for securing odd-job helpmates