New Britain Herald Newspaper, March 21, 1930, Page 13

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WET CANDIDATE IN PENNSYLVANIA ROW Phillips to Run for Governor on | Repeal Platiorn Philadelphia, March 21 (A—The prohibition question has been in- jected indo the mixed up political situation in Pennsylvania. T"ormer Congressman Thomas W. | Phillips, Jr., of Bradford, the latest candidate to enter the free-for-all| race for the republican gubernator- | il nomination, announced that he would make the fight on a platform calling for the repeal of the 1S§th | amendment. In announcing his candidacy last | night, Phillips stated that he has de- cided to take the step after consul-| tation with “a number of prominent | (itizens of Pennsylvania,” but he did | rot intimate whether he had sup- port of any organized group. His opponents for the governor- +hip are Francis Shunk Brown, who s backed by the Vare faction of the party; Samuel §. Lewis, the running 1nate of Senator Joseph R. Grundy: former Governor Gifford Pinchot and Judge J. Ambler Williams, of Montgomery county. Phillips is the only one who has made any decla- 1ation on prohibition. Secretary of Labor James J. Davis. | candidate of the Vare organization for senator against Grundy, and | William §. Vare planned to confer | foday with Mr. Brown in an effort m} complete the remainder of the ticket | which will oppose that headed by Grundy and Lewis at the primary on | May 20. A tentative slate has been | lcoted by members of the Phila- | delphia organization and upstate | leaders who are supporting Davis | and Brown. | The energy output of an average | workman, it is estimated, is about one-tenth of a horsepower in an | eight-nour day. 241 Butts Strap and T Hinges— Butterfly Hinges Wire Nails .. Galvanized Nails qt. ALASKA qt. POLARIS . ICE CREAM SCOOPS DISSTON WOOD HAWKS .. v ALUMINUM HAWKS . MORTAR HODS BRICK HODS MORTAR HOLS . Hardened Head FORSTNER BITS—all sizcs ODD CHISELS . ALL PLIERS e LATHEING HATCHETS; C€EMENT TOOLS . Round—Square—3 Co: STRING SOLDER ... LIQUID VENEER—Regular METAL POLISH— 1-4 Pint 1-2 Pint . 1 Pint. 1 Quart SOCONY F 1-2 Pint ... 1°Pint ... 1 QUart wmessassss Wood Screws—full boxes . 2 qt. WHITE MOUNTAIN ODD TOOLS; ETC. 12 in. COMBINATION SQUARE— WRENCHLES—DBillings & Spencer Plumb male, CARBORUNDUM AND PIKE STONES— NITURE POLISH— SILENT SICKNESS SHOWS INCREASE IN COUNTRY Life Extension Official Says Hearr, Kidney and Clrculatory Ail- ments Growing Worse. Boston, March 21 (UP)—"Stlent sickness” is becoming an ever-1a. creasing threat to the nation's mor. tality rate, the sales congress of the Boston Life) Underwriters’ associa. tion was told today. “Checking the waste of human life at the older ages is the greatest need of the present,” declared Presi- dent Harold A. Ley of the Life Ex- tension Institute® in a speech on he Opportunity of Life Insurance the Conscrvation of Human Life.” “Chronic diseases of tha hea-t, blood ves#els, and kidneys, or what we have termed ‘silent sickness,’ arc one the increase in' this country. Likewise the death rate beyond ag: 40 is on the increase. Indeed, in the past five years an increasing death rote is shown beyond age 37. “When I speak of ‘silent siciiness’ I refer to the vast amount of sick- ness that is present in the population but unrevealed until it ‘speaks’ i terms of acute illness.” DEFENDS.D. A. R, FOR RED WARNING Mrs. Buel Takes Slap at Dr. Parker's Decision Bridgeport, March 21 (UP)— Recent communist demonstrations were offered as proof that thé D. A, t's warnings against indifference were not untimely in a speech Ly Mrs. John Laidlaw Buel, state chair- man of national defense, at the opening session of the state conven- tion of the Daughters of the Ameri- —AND NOW GOOD BYE! We Say It With Prices That Only An Honest Going Out of Business Event Could Bring - OUR TIME IS UP! BUILDERS’ HARDWARE light and heavy. Hinges Catches . Springs Just two Screen Doors left and . Ib, 5¢ 1. ¢ . 60c; O . 15¢ ICE CREAM FREEZERS Rope—all kinds MASON SUPPLIES PLASTERER'S TROWELS DISSTON BRICK TROWELS .. COARSE STEEL WOOL— NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, MARCH 21, 1930. can Revolution. Reports of state officers were to be made at the second session to- day. Referring to the recent resignation of Dr. Valeria Parker of New York, who expressed lack of sympathy with the D. A. R.'s blacklist, Mss. Buel said: “A member more prominent in her other lines of work than in her D. A. R. actlvities has resigned because of our iniquities. Nevertheless, 7,000 new members have joined the society in the past six months. Maybe ae 20 RESCUED TODAY INEVERETT BLAZE {One Woman Burned, Fireman Gut in $15,000 Fire Everelt, Mass, March 21 (UP)— Twenty persons were taken down ladders to safety and about 80 other occupants escaped unassisted in their night clothes during an early morn- ing three-alarm fire which swept the Norwood apartments on Norwood street here today. Starting in a basement airshaft, apparently from a carlessly discard- ed cigarette butt, the fire quickly en- | veloped the three-story wooden structure. With aid from Revere, | Malden. and Chelsea, firemen suc- | ceeded in controlling the blaze after | aamage ectimated at $15,000 had re- sulted. Miss Kathleen Taylor, 21, restau- | rant cashier and an eccupant of the | building, had her hair burned be- fore she could escape. Hoseman John J. Madden suffered cuts from flying glass. Deputy Chief George . Haceh, who had been confined to bed as re- sult of injuries suffered in the recent 750,000 Merrimac Chemical com- pany fire, insisted on aiding his fel- low firemen at today’s blaze and was partly overcome by smoke. SCREEN DOOR " HARDWARE 10c pr. 13¢ a few window screens HARDWARE CLOTH Galvanized Barbed Wire—3 rolls left .... 8349 a roll 28 inch $3.00 a rofl 27c 1b. -MOPS Just a few lef coarse; reg. 63 fine and Now 39¢ COMMON FUNERAL FOR FIRE VICTIMS Three Children Probably Will Be Buried at Service Tyron, Okla., March 21 (UP)— | Funeral services for three students, all under 10 years of age, who died vesterday when the Pleasant Valley school house was destroyed by fire, | may be held jointly and their class- !mate may attend in a body, it was | understood today. | Although parents of Freddy Fa |ton, 8, Granville Murray, 6. and La- | | wanda Boddrill. 7. who perished be- | fore they could be rescued. had not communicated with officials, it was | thought they would agree. | It had been Freddy Eaton's desire |to “help teacher” that caused the | tragedy. Some students had com- | plained of the cold and the teacher | was busy elsewhere. Picking up a can of kerosene, he threw its con- tents into the stove with ofe flourish. Immediately he was turned into & mass of flames and the blaze leaped out into the circle of students seat- ed closeby. Terror stricken. the children bolt- ed for the two exits before their in- structors, Mrs. Reese Carpenter and Miss Dinita Smith, could stop them. A jam was created at both doors, the séreaming children fighting onc | another in an attempt to get out. A few dashed to the windows, ’lhrouing them open and attempting to dive through. The open windows | and doors created a draft which drove the flames to the ceiling and turned the room into a,furnace The ‘Baton boy. badly burned. was unable to get out. Granville Murray and Lawanda Boddrill were trapped too. The Greek government is planning | to harness five waterfalls to obtain | electrical power for industrial and | chemical purposes. | | I [ | P | 1 | | FERTILIZER INSECTICIDES Altacide Weed Riller Black Leaf 40— Small 1-2 Ib. 2 lbs. Red Arrow Spray— Small Tarils Green— 1-4 lb. Sheep Manure— 2 lbs. .. 10 lbs. Bone Meal— 2 lbs. 10 lbs. Barric’s Plant Food L 1b. pkg. 10¢ OIL CANS— K 35¢ 14c 1 gallon 2 gallon DRY CELLS— Genuine Columbia No. ¢ IRBY PISHING HOORS— 100 for 19¢ ONLY 1 CROQUET SET— . 39¢ up 1eas SBC 105, ol A 107 om palished. . . another Suit Case Straps... rnered . 30c 0O-CEDAR OlL—Recgular 30c .. LYKNU POLISH—Regular 30c . Best Grade—Regular Pearl ICE Glidden’s Lacq— $1.98 19¢ Knives Scissors left at Handle TPocket 1-2 Price few 21c 1o 40¢ TONGS— 11 inch . . 18 inch . . S COLONIAL PAINT 60¢ 89¢c Shades 1-2 Pint v 1 Pint 1 Quart 1-2 Gallon .. 1 Gallon ... Water Glas.— WOOD LAWN Best gradc Spades— Long and short handlc $1.19 Shovels— Tlound point Steel Rakes— Garden Hoecs— Good grade .. Scythe Snaths .. Pyrox— 1 1b. 5 1bs. 10 1bs. 25 lbs. Rutland Concrete Iatcher— Small Large Pint . Quart RAKES Bush Snaths ........... Taint and Varnish Brushes White Wash Brushes ..... 19¢ to $1.59 88¢ Scythes— Little giant ... ABBE HARDWARE CO. - 405 MAIN STREET NEAR EAST MAIN NIN ETY YEARS BALANCE, DEPENDABILITY BRFECT COMFORT, PERFECT PERFECT CONTROL, HANDSOME APPEARANCE Imperial Coach Handsomely finished in genuine Duco. Upholstered in leather cloth. Convertible bed cushions and safety belt. Hood is leather cloth lined and has storm boot. All joints chromium plated. Chromium trimmed handles! $39.75 Fibre Pullman An inexpensive Whitney quality. Sides uphol- stered in corduroy-mattress cushion. Sliding hood lined like body. Tubular steel gear and 12 inch Whitney tread cushion wheels. $14.75 carriage of WHITNEY BABY CARRIAGES ...at Low Porter prices. .. 1t is that standard of quality workmanship that has made Whitney America's Finest Baby Coach. Mothers choose the Whitney because it is created by an organization that has skillfully made baby carriages for over two generations. the fine upholstering is soft and warm, that the deep tonneau keeps baby snugly away from drafts, that all Whitney designs are stylish and that they are made safe and sanitary. the protection that eighty-two years of* coach building insures him. They Know Give your baby, too. Fibre Pullman In an rtment of pleasing colors. I'ancy corduroy up- holstery. Mattress cushion and safety belt. Hood is lined like and has nickeled adjust- Bquipped with turn- table gear and 12 inch Whitney balloon artillery wheels. $35.00 Reclining Fibre Go Cart Adjustable reclining dash. Handsomely in corduroy to match general color. Mattress cushion, semie balloon artillery wheels. $12.75 Stationary Fibre Go Cart In an assortment of attractive colors. Leather cloth is used for upholstery, seat is padded. An inexpensive Whitney product of real quality. $10 men back and upholstered Fibre Pullmanette With adjustable reclining back and dash. Corduroy cushion. Sliding hood- lined like body. 10x12 inch Whitney tread cush- ion artillery wheels. $26.50 We Also Have a Special Assortment of Folding Beach Carts B. C. PORTER SONS Connecticut’s Best FurwitureiStere fomorrow ——— A Striking Collection of DRESSES — COATS in the most important event since we opened our new store DRESSES Sparkling new Spring Dr Jong—Dhut not extreme—these new dresses feature the even hemline, and slightly dip- ping flares at side or back for graceful after- Everything —nipped-in waists, noon cffect. COATS Nothing is missing in our S lection to make it a comprehensive pic- ture of the Spring coat mode. Leading fabries, important style details and ex- cellent tailoring have combined to give vou the fashion types for every occa- sion—Camel Hair Sport Coats in new pastel shades. OUR CREED No Sale Is Considered Final Until the Purchaser Is Satisfied NEW YORK CLIFFORD 168 MAIN STREET es fashionably new about them necklines and sleeves. $2.90,, $15.90 ng col- 2250 Other Conts - $77.50,, $34.50 NEW In Name Merchandise STORES. INC. Opposite Strand Management NEW BRITAIN CONNECTICUT PENNSYLVANIA

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