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Hartford Courant from Hartford, Connecticut • 2

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Hartford Couranti
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Hartford, Connecticut
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2
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THE HARTFORD DAILY COURANT: SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1937. China Bound War Planes Arrested In Transit Report Nazis Drop Financial Expert Record of Fires Friday, Sept. 17, 1937 Black Issue Deplored By GOPLeader Direct Ballot Is Asked On Constitution The Great Game Of Politics By FRANK R. KENT Lonergan Proposes Plan Giving People Prompt Vote on Amendments for Social Reform State WPA Cuts SeCOlld HiglieSt September 30 for new post office 4 sites at Oakville. Madison and Shel- ton' 111 bid's W1'! be Pened b' Derby rirm dets eter- postmgters at the ioca-ans Building Contract; uons.

i (pi Kir. tf" I DR. HJALMAR SCHACHT. Bids on I OSl UlllCe Sites Open Sept. 30 EY ARTHUR C.

WIMER. The Courant's Washington Correspondent. Washington, D. C. Sept.

17. With the New Deal seeking to alter the Constitution through control of the courts and judicial interpretation. Senator Lonergan today let it be known he feels the people themselves should be permitted to Associated Press Wirephotos. San Pedro. Sept.

17. Cases containing war planes consigned to China are shown as they were unloaded from the freight3r "Wichita" to a barge in the outer harbor Thursday in accordance with this weeks Presidential decree prohibiting arms shipments to the Orient in Government-owned vessels. The ship carried 19 planes. Mutual Savings Banks At Peak vote Qjrecuy una President Roosevelt's ban on war they want the Constitution changed hipments t0 lhe Far East nad en to accommodate demancs for so-; conveyed t0 the 5tate Department cia! reform. jn Washington bv Dr.

C. T. Wang. The Senator made known his the Chinei ambassador, views in a Constitution Day state-; -president, Roosevelt's action," the ment handed newsmen. He an-; sresman saju -may be neutra'ity nounced he had written a letter to b'ut certainly is not impartiality.

Chairman Ashurst of the Senate i -A complete embargo would be Judiciary Committee urging ap-, fajrcr, f0r it would halt ail slup-pointment of a commission to study nients either to Japan or China." the many suggested changes to the The American Government's Constitution. He suggested the com- ian in causing airplanes for mittee be composed of members of china to be taken off the freighter the Senate and House Judiciary Wichita" at San Pedro, committees plus Presidential ap- would cause China to turn regret-pointees and that the group should juiiy from America to Europe for devote at least two years study to her" airplanes, authorities here be-the issue of Constitution altera- heved. tions. May Buy From Italy. Some Changes Necessary.

Tney expressed the opinion that Mr. Lonergan. a conservative at Italy was the only European nation heart, is opposed to any wholesale i sufficient' advanced in the of the Constitution. He ment race to send China airplanes does feel, however, that certain i direct from her factories. Hence it modifications are desirable and es- i was believed Japan was trying to sential.

He himself is sponsoring invoke a common Italo-Japanese Another Rift In The Labor Lulc One of the reallv sad thincs nbout politics is the lack of appreciation which so often is the fate of the noble and unselfish, jealous of his! aeservea success, the toneues of envy and malice are always busily engaged in disparaging the heroi: figure risen to the heights. Bravely baring his breast to the assaults of the common foe only makes it more painful for the hero to be kicked in the pants by his intimate friends. This happens more irequentiy in labor politics than in any other kind. There appears to be somethins about labor DOlitics that engenders bad feeling among the brethren who get to the top. Their feuds seem especially bitter.

Th abruptness with which they can turn upon a brother and beat him up is little short of amazing. For example, take the case of Senator George L. Berry of Tennessee, formerly Federal coordinator of industry and president of "Labor's Nonpartisan which is the name given by Mr. John Lewis to the political instrument of his I O. Major Berry was chosen by Mr.

Lewis as head of the league. He was regarded as second only to Mr. Lewis as a leader of the movement, his righthand man and trusted lieutenant. Serving without pay, certainly no one could say that the major's heart was not in his work. He became generally recognized as labor's outstanding spokesman.

Actually, he seemed to be speaking most of the time. No man in Washington has even been more articulate; none has issued more or longer statements. In lambastin? the horrid traits of the greedy rich the major has been unsurpassed in both volume and force. And not even the La Folletts or Congressman Hamilton Fish made better or more frequent use of the word lib-, eral. All of this helped make it natural 'for the major, with a little push from the President, to succeed to the Tennessee senatorship when the vacancy occurred.

One would have thought that labor leaders generally would have rejoiced; that this would have opened up ways for even more noble and unselfish work by the major and that certainly it would enhance his sta- tus as a iaDoMeader. Curiously, none of these things happened. On the contrary, the major has come in for some very heavy criticism, not from the degraded and debased representatives of Well Street and the interests but f-om sources which he had every right to consider friendly. In the Nation, last week, for example, the statement Is made that the major has been forced out of Labor's Non-Partisan League, which he did ha much to advert'se, and Mr. P.

L. Oliver, another friend of Mr. has become its acting head. It is further charged mat under Mr. Berry the league largely existed cn paper, but that the new has already "energized" mary of the state chairmen and committees into building, a mass memb-r.

ship and lobbying effectively for state and national legislation. There is the further allegation made by Mr. Max Lerner. writing in the Nation and evidently clos? to the CIO heads, that "the sort of man Major Berry is may besr. seen by his lecord in the NRA, where he made a lot of roHe accomplished nothing, and his recent record in the Senate, where has accomplished exactly the same without opening his mouth once to answer the attacks on labor." There's gratitude for you! That's what a man gets for unselfish -b-votlon to a cause.

This is h's reward for the hundreds of thousands of words he has uttered or issued In defense of the rights of labor and against the industrial oppressors of the working man. To forced out of his position as hnad of the league he had nursed for two years and tefld in a great weekly that he makes a lot of poke amendments to ban tax exempt se- curities and to permit a direct vote on future Constitutional amendments through the convention system. The Senator feels that Congressional committees have been unable to give adequate attention to proposed amendments. As a result, but few have been laid before public, and individuals and groups desiring changes have been demanding these be effected through judicial interpretation. Much of the turmoil now confusing the courts i Schacht Reported Out As Nazi Head (Continued from Pare 1.) Reicnsbank, of which he is president.

Opposed Arms Spending. week ago reports circulated he had resigned after prolonged disagreement with Nazi oflicia'dom over continued expenditure of such huge sums for armaments and public buildings. Dr. Schacht contended more money should be allocated to purchasing raw materials for building up the export trade, thereby working toward a more favorable trade balance. He sought to build up export trade and take advantage of rising world prices.

At the Ministry of Economics it was said Dr. Schacht's functions had been taken over by administrators of Colonel General Hermann Wilhelm Goering's four-year plan, which is designed to make Germany economical se'f-sufficicnt. Ranked High in Banking. His term as president of the Reichsbank does not expire until next March, but it was bclievecTthat unless he reaches some compromise with Chancellor Adolf Hitler before then, he will be completely through as a force In German financial or economic affairs. Dr.

Schacht has ranked high in international banking circles for years, being credited with remarkable success in his adroit handling of German finance and trade. He was referred to sometimes as the only German a'iowed to criticize the Nazis more than once. but accomplishes nothing. That's I about the limit, It's a silly allegation, false on its nyrnw Rptrv is todav a mem ber of the United States Senate and no other labor leader has gotten that far in public life. And he is still president of the pressmen's union, which position he.

has h'd for 20 years. And he still has his million dollars accumulated by thrift, energy and self-denial. What other labor leader can match mat record? In face of these facts, to tell the major that he has accomplished nothing is ridiculous. Whatever Justice there may be in the charge so far as the league is concerned, the major appears to have accomplished a good deal for himself. He can afford to laugh scornfully at his 'abor detractors and probably docs.

(Copyright, 1937, Baltimore Sun.) Truck Strike Makes Hit-Among Students New Britain. Sept. 17. 'Special.) The Central Connecticut truck strike may be casting gloom in som ouarters, but at the Teachers College of Connecticut here it is having a lightening, if not enlightening, effect, upon many of the students. Although classes have been continued.

class assisnments have had to be postponed because hundreds of new textbooks have been held up in trpnslt. A number of instructors have complained of the situation, but not a single student. Shinments of canned goods assigned to the dormitory kitchen have also been delayed. Just A Minute With IRVIN S. COBB.

Santa Monica. Sept, 17. i used to think a typical Texan was one who said he was going to send you a ten-gallon hat and then didn't do it. But he is a sub-species. A really orthodox Texan tells you he's g.ving you a pair of genuine Texas steer horns.

They'll be along as soon as he can have them shipped. But he never ships 'em that's what makes him typical. So many typical Texans have volunteered to send me sets of long horns that, if all these parties were laid end to end. you'd have one of the finest consecutive strings of born L'ars ever seen. But they woun't stay that way; they'd rise right up and start looking for Easterners to promise long horns to.

Not that I'm craving- any long horns. They stretch so far from tip to tip they make you think of a muskellunge fisherman trying to show you how much that biggest, one "measured. If you hang them low, they pron people in the eye. If you hang them high, they're chiefly useful cobwebs to drape on. And no self-respecting wife will let you hang them anywhere.

Besides, if ever I did receive a pair, it would shatter my faith In human nature. I want my typica- Texans to keep on being typical. (Copyright, 1937, By NANA, Inc.) Carpet Union Ratifies To Thompsonville Sept. 17. (Spe cial.) The Carpet Workers Union.

an independent group, at a spocial meeting i-naay saoptea a recom-, menuauun in iu c.auuic iuiuiuiit tee ratifying a new working agree- ment with the Bigelcw-Sanford Carpet Company. Although the union had asked for increased wages, among several proposals submitted to the company, this request was not granted. The company, however, did grant six requests of the union, most important of which are medical service for employees on the night shift and of the union as the bargaining agent. has had its genesis in this situation, tonight that its steam roller of-he holds. i fensive south and soutlwest of Pei- Italians, Germans Convov Two Subs (Continued from Page 1.) and men from both sides in the Spanish civil war, was announced by the British foreign office.

It was particularly pertinent because Italy has insisted the committee is the, only body compecent to deal with the "piracy" menace. British circles emphasized that the withdrawal from the non-intervention patrol did no, mean withdrawal from the non-intenvention committee. They asserted that Britain was firmly convinced that there should be no intervention in the Spanish civil war. However. Britain and France were said to feci that making the Mediterranean trade routes safe for merchant shipping was more important now than that patrol.

Russian-Italian Clash Averted. Rome. Sept. 18. iSai.urday.) i AP.) remler Mussolini's own newspaper.

Popois d'ltalia of Milan, reported today that a clash between Italian and Russian armed forces in the Mediterranean barely was avert-; ed in the Nyon anti-piracy patrol plan. The article, apparently officially inspired, said that the original draft of the Nyon pact would have authorized the Russian fleet to intervene in the Mediterranean "with Immediate danger." The treaty, in which Italy diu not participate, assigned Russia, to pa- trol the Black Sea out ieit ner; treeoom to convoy ne. mercaaiu ships in the Mediterranean; "it is confirmed," II Popolo said in a brief dispatch from its Rome i correspondent, mat me nrst proj- presented me in yon comer- ence would have authorized Russia I I "That would have meant imraedi- Hie uaugei. -it wets uniy wiivi.ij the opposition of the delegates of several little states, among them Yugoslavia and Greece, that that grave error was averted." New Accord Signed, Geneva Sept and Prance tonight gave their i Mediterranean fleets order fire immediately" on air ii'VtinU ant vessels. OUUiiiai iiico niivii ati.a Their extension of the "anti-piracy" campaign previously limited to undersea marauders was based on a new accord of Nyon signed to- i 8:16 a.

m. Box 252 at Front and Morean streets Fire in awnuis of the "New Haven" Road freight office at 160 Morgan Street. Caa5 unknown. Cos. 3, 2 r.nd 6.

Trucks 3 and 1. 595 will amp'e funds for the installation of 40 new beds in the space to be vacated when the new building is occupied. Ask Site Offers. The Treasury Department an- inns at all three D'aces. 11 corner lots, they are to be 120 feet wide at Oakville and Shelton and 110 feet at Madison.

If interior lots, they are to be 145 feet wide at Oakville and Shelton and 135 feet at Madison. Hull Stands By Arms Embargo (Continued from Page l. front against Communism to pre- vent such shipments. (In Tokyo a spokesman for the Japanese foreign office said President Roosevelt's partial embargo was considered "an effort by the United Slates Government to avoid entanglement in the Far Eastern situation." The spokesman said Japanej auuiorities believed it would "render invocation of the neutrality act Japanese Take Chorhow. Peiping, Sept.

17. (AP. Japan- ese army headquarters announced pjng had rolled over the walled city 0f chochow, Chinese advance base on the Peiping-Hankow railway 40 miles from here. The fall of Chochow. the Japanese declared, had isolated five Chinese divisions, some 50,000 men, along the railway north of that city.

Two Japanese columns moving pincer-wisc from either side the railway threatened to entrap this force The Japanese drive, launched with bU.uuu men wun me ciossnig ui uie i Yungtlng River 30 miles south of i Peiping Tuesday, gained added mo- mentum and advanced 12 mi.es in tin ine turouient Kivcr auiua was crossed by pontoons by moonlight jonon I 'lthm sight of Chochow walls, ui uie iuiie tuniumcu uuxu' tlle railwav toward the mam Chi-1 nese base in this area, Paotingfu. 80 miles from PeiPg. airmen bombed troop concentrations Japanese also reported rapid iu columtn Penetrating Shansi province -west of the cFiping battle area- Irom 'he "Ortll. They 1-ad taken Hengyuan 40 "lnCi J0Uthca.st of. town of north.

Shansi, and Lainsien. on the Shansi-Hopeh border. Fare Stiffcr Resistance. Neutral military observers said the Chochow success probably would bring the Japanese shortly into con tact with sterner resistance, that 0f the far better trained and armed divisions of the Central Chinese Government. Superdreadnaughts Arrive.

Shanghai. Sept. 18. (Saturday) (AP Two Japanese superdread-naughts appeared off the mouth of the Yangtze River near Shanghai today. Chinese officers while Japan's sea and land forces prepared for wider offensive action.

Japanese said fresh army units had been landed near the Yangtze's moutn, out wouia not say wnere. Neutral military observers believed the Japanese were trying to place an expedition in Pootung, the area just across the Whangpoo River from Shanghai. Two Chinese divi sions are entrenched there. Such an extension of land operations would bring new perils to Shanghai's 3.500,000 inhabitants, who have seen five weeks of san- 6Uinary conflict 4 Student-Teachers Assigned to Schools New Britain, Sept. 17.

(Special.) The Teachers College of Connecticut is departing from its custom this term in sending four members of the senior class to schools outside of New Britain to secure teaching experience. David Erwin and Francis Kelly will practice in Hartford schools and Charles Tolli and John Ryan in Bristol. 44LUIAYS in goodTastc ouno IvI $100 The courts have been forced to bear a burden which should not rightfully be imposed on them, Mr Lonergan maintains. Outlines Plan. To eliminate this growing demand for Constitutional changes through judicial interpretation, the Connecticut Senator would have all Constitution amendments before Congress considered carefully and thoroughly by a commission.

Tnis mmmlBinn wmilrt eHminatP thn i nhvinnsiv jirnnnnd and nmtvwo Conaressional annroval of those with merit. Congress would then Hamilton Hopes President Didn't 'Knowingly' Ap point Klansman to Su prcme Court Washington, Sept. It Chairman John D. M. Hamilton the Republican National Committed said tonight it was "inconceivable that President Roosevelt "woulr knowingly have appointed 1 Klansman to the Supreme Court.

Entering the controversy over th alleged Ku Klux Klan cannection-of Associate Justice Hugo M. Black he said in a formal statement tha "all must hope that Mr. Roosevel will be successful in finding a solution to this difficult problem compatible at once with the dignity the Supreme Court and of his owr high office." Tt is a matter of regret to Re publicans no less than Democrat that the President should have re mained in ignorance of the evidence! regarding the affiliations of Mr. Justice Black." he said. "In an issue of such seriousness affecting as it does the integrity o1 our fundamental institutions trier-is no proper place for partlsaif criticism." Has Got First Check.

Meanwhile, the Justice Depart-! ment revealed that the Government has alreadv paid Black 12 davs sal-ary. $666.66. as a member of th court, although he has yet to si upon that tribunal. The American Libertv Leagw virtually dormant since the electioi of last November, returned to th political wars with a statemen contending that President Roosevelt must have known of Black's al leged Ku Klux Klan connection when he appointed him. At the same time.

Senator Bank head. Democrat. Alabama, issued statement in Jaster. de.nvins he assured his Senate colleagues prior to the vote on confirmation that Black was not a member of th Klan. Other Developments.

A fourth development was thp re ceipt of a letter at the Suprem-Court from Patrick Henry Kelly, Boston attorney, asking that committee of lawyers be appoints! to determine Black's eligibility quite aside from the Klan dispute. From Senator Connallv. Demo crat. Texas, came a statement tha the furore about Black is largel-politics. He said an attempt i being made to embarrass Presid-n Roosevelt and added: "lam whoil' our, of sympathy with such effort.

Black's pay check for August wa mailed as a matter of routine. It w.a said. Each of the nine Justices re ccives his $20000 annual salary it monthly installments of $1666.66. Ii many caes the check is sent to justice's bank for deposit and th justice sees it. The Liberty League statemen was issued over the signature of it president.

Jouett Shouse. who ha Just returnd from Europe. Approval Given Paving Project (Continued from Page 1.) Farmington Avenue, Broad S'rer from New Britain Avenus to Avenue. Campfield Avenue fron I Maple Avenue to north line of Sow! Street. Crane Court.

GreenffeK I Street from Woodland to Garder, I Potter Street. Mather Street fror. Main to Bethel and from Bethel Vine, Preston Street, Barbou Street, Capen Street. Garden from Asylum to CNE railroad. South Whitney Street, Shulta Place, Mahl Avenue from Main Garden, Hamilton Street, CampfieL Avenue from South to Road, Ward Stieet.

South Prospec Street, Tower Avenue. Street. Forest Street. Garden Stree I from Greenfield to Westland, Soull i Street, Bartholomew Avenue frot. Park to Hamilton, Hillside Avcnu from New Britain Avenue to While tr-M.

Summit Street from New Britaii Avenue to Zion, Gillette Wawarme Avenue, Prospect Avenu from Park Street to Farmingtoi Avenue, and Westland Street. Morrison W. Johnsor FUNERAL HOME 749 ALBANY AVENUE TONIGHT AS LATE AS 8 O'CLOCK D. S. T.

You can phone your classified ad until 8 p. tn. for insertion i in lhe Sunday lourant. If you have an apartment to rent, a used automobile to sell or any other "Want" to 611, place your message in thous-ands of Hartford homes to morrow through the medium of the Classified columns of this newspaper. You can charge it.

CALL 2-3131 Aslt For An Ad-Taker The Hartford Courant Classified Headquarters 9 3 lav the recommended last nours- Bs5na ine un" I (Continued from Page 1.) year fixes a figure of $725,000 000. On the basis of the average gains during the fiscal year ended June 30. 1937 the total might be 000.000 but this is regarded as high. Thrift Clubs Gain 17. Still another group of bank fig- ures discloses how thoroughly the people of Connecticut are exercising the practice cf thrift.

As of Jyne 30 this year the deposits in Christmas and other thrift clubs in Connecticut amounted to $3,289,000, an increase of $480,000 over the corresponding period last year or 17 per cent. Interest Rate Hisrh. The interest rate on mutual sav ings deposits in Corns be said to be the highest in the country. The average for the 73 banks is 2.93 per cent. The maximum permitted is 3 per Only-one other state pays a higher ra.e and that is the State of Delaware, where there are only two mutual savings banks and consequently does not.

offer a fair comparisan. There, if one bank paid 3.5 per cent and another paid 3 per cent the average rate would be 3.25 per cent. 2 Men Bound Over On Federal Theft Charge Two yong men charged with violation of the National Motor Vehicle Theft Act were arraigned before United States Commissioner Wil- liam J. Wholean Friday and were bound 0Vr t0 tn, September term pf United States District Court at Haven The pair are Francis Rogers. 24, of Haverhill, and John O'Connell.

21. of Pumam. Arrested in Putnam and held for Federal authorities, they were taken into custody Friday morning by Deputy United States Marshal Jerome J. Sullivan. Rogers and O'Connell are alleged to have transported a stolen automobile from Effingham.

111., to Putnam. O'Connell is said to have a record in Dayville and both have served time in Missouri on state charges of motor vehicle theft. The Federal charge is based on transportation of the stolen vehicle across state borders. Both pleaded not guilty and waived examination. In default of $2000 bond each they were committed to the Hartford County Jail to awaif.

the court term, which opens on Tuesday. The case was investigated by the FBI. On Fridav Luke Riley. 21. of 297 Hill Street, East Hartford, furnished bond and was released from the Hartford County Jail, where he was lodged after arraignment before the commissioner on a charge of transporting non-tax paid alcohol.

Another War Possible Says Ambassador Dodd Lexington. Sept. 17. AP. i William E.

Dodd. United States am- i there is hardly any possibility of p.nv nation escaping it. If men could only "be Christians we could escape another war." Ambassador Dodd told Washington Lee University students In an address at the formal opening of the eighty-ninth session of the school. The union trsmci a statement Friday night in which it said that udy uv puri, Fl0rence G. secretary framed the original pact against of the Hartord chamber 0f Corn-submarine piracy a week ago.

mcrce was elected vice-president of Today the nine powers made no the Connecticut Commercial Secre-mentlon of Italy in a brief com- taries Association at a meeting of rnunique announcing broadening of I the organization at Savin Rock, the scope of the patrol. The com- West Haven, Thursday. Miss Farrell rnunique said merely: aLso a member of the executive "Powers sienatorv to th arrange- committee of the New England poweis signatoij to tn. arrange CommCrcial Secretaries Association, ment of on confeience signed: Representing the local chamber today at Geneva a complementary the mecting was chauncey B. accord for adopting in case of at- Thompson, assistant to the execu- although there was dissatisfaction with terms of the new agreement, the situation was not sufficiently critical to warrant a strike.

Local of Secretary-Honored at West Haven nve vice-president piwui-Hi, j. rising nm. jnuuaumi secretary of the Bridgeport Chamber oi commerce, secretary ana treasur-l or. The retiring president is Charles B. Whittelsey, executive vice-pres ident of the local chamber.

Italy harvested 293,000,000 bushels of wheat this year. tacks by airpianes or by suriace waters the principles Charlos A. Newton, secretary of the ba.ssador to Germany, declared to-itember 14 at Nvon con- Middletown Chamber of Commerce, day "my greatest fear is that we nemoer ii ai iijou iwi omtlnr nwlrt war and Septembe irnmntlv beforp thp nemV for a 1 direT pxnreson onfnion i direct expression of op.mon. as Air. lonergan views me situ- i ation.

amendments approved by thej neonlp shrmlri hp aonenripri tn The! Constitution Those rejected bv the 1 electorate should be and 1 political and legislative pressure i should not be exerted upon the courts to indirecUy Incorporate I such changes in the Constitution by judicial interpretation. A Mthough Senator Lonergan made mention of New Deal tactics, his statpment. PinhorliPri an imsnnUn inrifct.mpnr nf ttm Rnncpvoitiar. nhi. i losophy that the courts should in-! terpret tne constitution to please the White House and that, tailing in this, the courts should be made over by the President himself, Second in AVPA ut.

curing the week ended September 4, WPA roils were whittled down almost four times as much in Con necticut as in the nation generally. WPA Administrator Hopkins disclosed today. For the week ended September 4. WPA projects gave jobs to 12.903 persons in Connecticut. This represented a decrease oi 435 'jobs, or three and two-tenths per cent, be the week of August 28.

In the country as a whole. WPA workers dropped lrom 1.480.452 to 1.466 631, or only about nine-tenths of one per cent. The percentage cut was greater in i Connecticut than all states save i Texas. In the Lone Star State, the WPA lists were Dared slightlv more than eight per cent. Newington Contract Awarded.

The Veterans Administration expects to have the new administration building at Newington Veterans to immediately install an additional 40 beds. The Administration today awarded the contract for the administration building to the Smith Construction Company. of Derby at a figure' of $69,595. The contract calls lor completion of the building within 300 days after the order to proceed. The order to proceed will go out vithtn the next 10 days, it was said.

The Administration has set aside $30,000 for the Newington improvement. The construction cost of "em r- r. NETHERLANDS HOTEL OtHyWtfltly Mnnthly' Rate "(I Farminffon Ave, 5-9f8H I 1 territorial adopted rrmintr attacks hv submarines. First Snow Reported In Pennsylvania Town Kane, Sept. 17.

AP.) The first snow of the season fell today on the highest Pennsylvania town, sending hay fever refugees and townsfolk scurrying for their over coats. Flurries continued for two min- utes before changing to rain. Low-; est temperature was 48 degrees. Three British Airmen Die in Crash Off Wales London. Sept.

17. Canadian Press) Three Royal Airforce men were killed today when their cabin type bombing plane dived into the 1 sea off Conway, North Wales. ATTENTION! Goldtn Bantam Corn 2 doi. and Potatoes 15o 1. una Brans 4 lbs.

Mriiif and Wax Bran So Swrpt and Hot PfppT qH. ahh.nf 2 heads SdiM'h, all kinds 2c Muskmrlons 6 for Watermelons Or earn and lanmiu Alberta Pe.nhes JJo havket and tip Fanev Maetnloth Apples sor basket Pie Apples lbs. Me It Will Pay Von to Slop at the Pdisado Stand 761 Palisade Windsor The last Stand on the Aveniin We Give Ynn Quirk Rerrlee And OnalitT I ANNOUNCEMENT The TALLY-HO BALLROOM is now opened for DINING AND DANCING There Will be PLENTY OF FUN and ENTERTAINMENT With a Good SWING ORCHESTRA DON'T FORGET SATURDAY is the Night, with NO COYER CHARGE RAIN OR SHINE Steaks Lobster I. Duckling Chicken Turkey Chow Mein EJQC a plat All Fine Brands of Liquors No Minors Allowed Come Early and Be the First to be Surprised at Our Opening Banquets Private Parties in Our Banquet Hall Mett Me At The Tally-Ho Restaurant 1047 Main Strttt Hartford, Connoctieut Opposite Morgan Street YOUR NEW FALL HAT Should become your style, should enhance your Fall clothes, should please your family, should be of warranted lasting quality and full ralue for money expended. LET IT BE A DOBBS 5.50, $7.50 or H0.00 i.

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