TELEPH(•IE 1•'For •he Publication of Item•
of In•erest in The News
LXXXVI, No. 80
Has Served Bank
21 Years.
,- Charles E. Smith of 640 Mare
street was elected prestdent of the
Southinton Bank and Trust corn-
E. Smith RE-ELECrED
Pres ent oDanKI
• M•rk J •e} of Ne• Button
" AUXILIARY'•ucceeds Late J. H. PraR; Peck, S• and W,Ic,,x compan) at
HOLD MEETING do) af•rnoon m the ¢ompan• of-
MONDAY NIG
•1 Gr•u• To Enjoy Out- Other offwers named at the•.•n• at a meeting of •e d•r•to• door Se•ion At George• meeting acre
preshient. Edward (; Ha•kba•h.• •enday afte•n at •e ba• i•l•& MX. Smith •ucceeds the' l'rentice Es•te, E•t •r-,hn •ce-pleslde•t and treasmer,
lin.
The ladies' auxlha.r) of •ltontc urer, Samuel C Wd•x of Ne•
p•t, Ameman •gton, will hold an [ Brats'n, as.• taut secretar), R£ph
DodDer m•tmg Monday evemng,, W. Hurlbut, anti •smmnt • the
Aunt 2, at the esta• of G•r• qre.,dent, Fhlgard G Harkba•h.
•entice, Berhn, according to • D•rec•m el•d b) the sU•k-
nnoencement made he• by M•. hohlem for the co•ng year
•bert ChMmer•, auxflmr• pros- elude I)ewe) S Blakeslee, Ed•m
dent. , S Todd, Edward (; H•kba•, allThe membe• of the auxdmryl . on• Southm• ; George S. Ca• of
a• •ues•d to meet at the •- Cleveland. Ohm; Mark J •¢eyof
•on home Monday at 5 15 p m New Bm•n, Charle• F Tread•a•
• make the t•p h) au•mobdes, of Ne• Haven, Samuel M Ste•eA roa.,t will be enjoyed at the i of Ha•ford, Mawr F•nk
P•n•ce esta• at a•ut 6 pm. •x of BeHm, •d Samuel C. Wtl-S•mmmg will bo enjoyS,
•-•l•te'Jamas H. Pratt us head of the
Mr. Smith has been trea,q-of the Southmton Bank and
company since 1916.
: office of treasurer, vacated,.Mr. Smith'• elevatmn to the
will be filled at
",he, next annual meeting of the
Clifton I. Stone, a director,
eleoted assistant secretary.
Smith was born April 11,
at Chester, Conn. He at-
the Ohester schools and was
frrn M•ddletown h•gh
m 1890. In 1891 he grad-
the Huntmnger Bus-
Samuel C V•flcox ts the
•" "• ----qlar., wall ,•resent a toard, haling been elected to fxll[
snor•• •r•gram-- of entertmnmoot- the vacancy, caused b). the death I
Mer•bers of the committee m '• of James H. Pratt on June 18.
ments are Mrs. I Mr Lacev reported to stockhohicharge of arrange I ' "'Mary Prentice, Mrs. Besom Hurley,, ers mat an increase of 27 per cent
A Weekly Newspaper Servin•
Southmgton Since 1868 and
G•vmg a Concentrated Cover-
age of Plantsvllle, M•fldale,
M,•non, t ht -h•re and pL•mwlle.
sOUTIIIN(;TON, CON\I,('TII'I'T, ,11 IA" :•% 19:¢7 l'ubhqmd t'Ner5 Friday ,,,• ....
,RI,WAI{.E CO Businessmen MayNLW PRESIDENT OF HARI)•ARE CO.llOLl/S AN N UAI,
Make Final PMns
Wd|iam E. Smith
For Organization___"
to 1899 he was station agent
company In Chester.
".•'e was employed by the M. S.
and Sons of Chester frm•
to 1900., Mr. Smith entere•
-. Chester Savinga Bank as dexk
July 1900, and was elected
of the bank on July 8,
orgunized the
•n 1914 and was
•i" 1£6tt[ 'U•qin'dl
16• 1916, when he became
of th• •0nthington Nati•-
was sacceeded by
Sank and Tl•st
on 19, 1916.
Smith w•m married January
to Lconora Grmwold. There
two children, Graydon .C_•-
, born April 5, 1900, died De-
1916; Thornton Gins-
November I, 1997. Mre.
died Febram'y 1• 191L Mr.
was again married ou Oc-
:15, 1912, to Ruth Oatling.
•VO
Jambore¢ir•g Obituary
•D•¢HES
I0:00 a. m.--High Mass. I
2:00 p. m--Catechism.
II'H.'I TRIXII'I ('dU,RtH
l•t'• J.-cph l'ekala, l'a•tor
ST. PAUL'S EPISCOPAL
Dr A. L Whtttaker, Pastor
Ma•n Steer
Sunda•, Se• lees
m. Pohsh• 1o 45 a m ttuly• and Sermon l•rmg the month of
• Augud there •t]] be a selvlce of
EXCHANGE CLUB
The regular weekly meeting
the Exchange Club wall be"
Monday at 6 p. ;n at t•he S•
]ngton Country Club. A
program w•ll be enjoyed f•
OFTH! WOrl,l) FAMOUS
SALE STARTS
TOMORROW
INDEBTED TO
EARLY IRISH
Dishing Out OId$o!
New England today, owe their po-
sit.K.n and hvehhemd to the fore-
thought of John. Young and h*s
W•re.•r, M•achusetts, in 1718
[t w• thin father and •n, ch•ed
oht of old Erln for their reli#ou•
¢pnmna, •ho bruught the lowly
•pud. ah•dy known • the "lrmh"
f•m •vhv,h Sir Walter Raleigh h•
pilfered tt in the l{;th center#. The
•x achu•ett• Federal
in thetr new volume,
setts•A Guide • Its Pl•es and
People," rela• the story In all •ts
found by Raleigh in 1554 •r all{
his find, as ]mportttnt a (hsc•ver.•
a3 an• made by the lbth centuryexph)rers Raleigh exhibited the
anti then sen• them to his [rmh
•ner• planted the •eget•tes and
all o•er Erm
•i•al as•eml,ied for the M•hu-
for a happwr [and rhey found st,
as later did •lan) of their
patrmts, m the N• Worldfl•t boatload, •ludmg the two•
meter, d•Yelopod by Dr. MatthewLmcklesh •nd A. H. T•ylor of theGeneral Electric Lighting ResearchLaboratory.
mum benefitThis new device employs a photo
to sunlight, pasw mal• current
which in turn clocks a countttlg re-lay of e-vlton, which Is a atiltultraviolet producing the mini•perceptible erythema- The counUngcontinues as long as the meterexpoaed, measuring the sun'sby the spoonful.
lndzviduals vary greatll[ In tl•lrsuse•phbdlty to sunburn With thlsmeter the average per•otL tnlt•nned.could, take about 125 unlt• wlth0t•tdanger Rochelle, an olive-sklnn•dbrunette is shown holding the"spoou" •hlle Loin. her •ondeteam-mate seeks the shade, on thetheory that blondes are more •u•cepUble to sun-burnang than brun-ettes The gtrls, who are featuredover NBC every Monday atP.M (•.DSTt. teemed the nmt•rwhile bathing at the LongshOreBeach and Country Club, Westport.
Wecld ngsMcKFNNEY.GRANNISS
SOI.W•4rNGTON, NEWS. I•IDAY, JULY $0, 1937
... P] RSONALS .'.
M•ss Juha Tangney of Oak err-
eel is eajo•m4• a vacatton from
hal duue• at the local ¢l•ffweof the
Southern New Ft.glan 4 Telephone
compa• 3
Mrs Joseuh D'Angelo of Hobart
street has returned t. her home
frvm St Raphael's ho.p•tal, Ne•
Mrs Kathryn Dalton of Wood-
weekN vacation at Point O'
Woods, Oht I,vme
Mrs H Galfiell .lone• of Hobart
arm Thursday •hen he fell at hid
home He wns trvate,t hy Dr R.
lant, Boa, h •e•tor•/•, 1• I
Horse Back Riding : .Prk•te bridal" path., in beautiful woodlands:
Closed rin• for safety of children and. t .',•,?.
M/ss Mary LouWill be in attendance at all •mea'to ,nstrttct
For •me time, according to the Kenney of Eden avenue, son of'NPA historians, the lrmh here put • Waiter McKenney of Milldal* ] peace, and forfeited hm $10 caah Oak street, who •*. a •)ahent at the Kei•, •wk ,,f p'ant•vllle, I• en)c• tag ,
• , bond
laons they had encountered in the, the Fhr-t Congregatmnal church,
homeland Man., of them left •d Saturday, July 24. by the Rev Frostx uhlte, xx•thoUt u touch of I operation --
"•ff•tt of 301 Main street. Beltz and Mar• Snow.
N
Oil
T^KtI o look at the size of that Buiek-
w•teh it in flashing action on theMgh-
way-li•ten to •e admirln• comment
thot rises up on every hand-can there
be any-questlon es to what car you ought
to buyPNor can there be any doubt as tO when
m decide or. n Buick! The time is now!
For there's plenty of ideal
weather left. You'll bc making runny
summer and fa.II trip yet this
when you'll thrall to Buiok get.•p<md-
travel to Buick comfort end ease.
An#. ]f you buy while the Im•ring's gee_d,you'll get one o| these h•ndsom• troy'el-
arrangementa to try one out
It's got wkot you want
n]e•ely within ,
SUIT ¥OUIt UKINO
SOUTH INGTON NEWS
VUBLI•V • ---O-•PANY
PUBL•HED EVERY •ID ,
•ember of the Connecticut Ed•tormi As,o•m•onember of the New Et•land ]'re.s Aa•mtton
Fnda,y, July 3o, 1937
in favor of the a.•sociatton agent Lecoming active
put considerable amount of effort into the ta•k of m-
' others in the •dea. It ha.• been difficult to arrange
dates convenient for a ]a|ge majority of local reel- t ---We'll do ,•s much for •ew sum
•sinco various numbe• of them have I•n on their v,e •da•-- AsMc •* J,m Hohne, "S,nee
lout V•OUS pa•s of the current •el'. •hen tit} •a bar the door, against
have s•ted •fore, a I•al buslness•n s m•s•l ]the entrance of a coupla )er bud-
' •3• a •nefieiM pmj•t ,f pro•rly operated. There '
. which wdl accrue t,) the mercnant• a d to- - " f•c ' miles just to see ya. and •hen th%if the •sociation •s agmn slat[eft [ arr,ved the} •uhln't get in "---
['• it should. Such an •a•on •n do •uch to keep No• that MerMen has b•ome a
• t•e in •uth4n•n, rather th• allow •t suburb of Southlngton •e a• con-
Of Special InterestTo Our Depositors...
to other cities and towns from which our own
little or nothing in return•the other hand, an association of this type can be
in tile event that •t is sloppily handled.
fidentl• expecting big doings
the lad who recentl• popped
must have as close to 100 per cent cooperation bud, i.• m,nna get knocked some- I t ...........•- ........................if it is to do the work for which it ts designed , •here for -•omething or other, we ' . __ __
operate withthebackangofonlyafewanditwdl sugk•est a mgid and intermivel• -- At Othertraintng c°ur•e'sines he" neither I qlfirpses
Before steps for the completion of the organiza- I h,g enur or tuff enuf to carry out !
are taken we would suggest that an accurate checkup h,s talk m such fashion---Should I . -- --
of allloc•l merchants to see just how their opmlons be, however, fail to accept thin I • • - .....
regarding it. If this checkup should prove negative, then ' gentle hint, regar•hng letting well '• final steps until a later date. In the meantime, how- enough alone, then let h•m watch ] JULY 31, 1902 The Mm•es Laura Roy and Min-
out--There are ,everal chapters of A baby daughter w,.as born Sun-' me Renmng are in l•tr•fleld on a
we further suggest that the tnt•-ested merchants set his doings •h•ch we know defimte- day to Mr. and Mrs. Fred Walden emit. •
meeting" dries to gt together R•d discuss the sits- ly to be mcontroverUbl•' which a at their homo •ere • *
bringing with them from time tO time other Hterchants I lofts hi• friends wouht hLe to know •
not heartily approved of the idea- In this ntanner,*, abet ¢---Enuf sed---! T•ese are shuts real dog dab's; of the few will be ntaintained, snd the interest of •
acquired. Such a preee•.ure• we feel would 'cause practically all of our pals
the organization of a wellok•t group of mer-the work•oLthe aasoc•tiol} t@•the full-
•ble.hope that this Bustnessmen's Association will be
soon for it is a worthwhile enterprise. But let's
,group of this sort •nless we can have one that
out to the linlit the policies for which it stands.
the meeting Tuesday night and take part in this fine,
" RURAL FIRE LOSS
•'e•.most fertile field for reduction of fire loss in the
in the rural sections of the country according to
from a recent report of the National Board
Fi• Underwriters ._,In 1936, for instance, the per capita fire,loss in the na-
a whole was $2.05, an increase of 10.8 per cent over• Uyear. But the per capita loss in reties w•th pop -
• of more than 20,000 was $1.40, an increase of only 5.3The better record of the cities is ascribed "not only
efficiency of municipal fire departments, but also to
effects of fire prevention activities and of
building code requirements."
fire prevention in rural sections present• diffi-
•owcver, as many sections of the country
shown', 'they are by no means at a' state beyond solu-
interest of farmers should be .aroused in spurring
cam•gns, and, in learning the. Felatively
that make it poss•bl• for individuals to elirn-
great bulk of the hazards in homes and places el
have been m, or are on the verge
of entering the doghou.e---The
rousers for these actmn• are too
mulUpte to mention here, and bo-
a,des some of the boys' gais might
I not hke •t, and we already got
troubles ennugh without hawng a
bunch of irked women on our trail
--•)ne coupple ha• reached the no'
uxlkang stage through the interfer-
ence of a third party---Anothercouple Is about • call tt a day, •nd
a third couple has already middle-
amled •t---
We'd g•ve a large ami variedassortment of stuff to be able to
attend some of the American Le-
gion convention ses•ons in New
Haven--Bet the outing of local
bore and town offtcmis will be
something, too---Wonder how com•
they p•cked RYE Beach?---Caeey
see he's gonna go to Florida 'cause
thor's more real lemons in thet
part of the land---Rumors have
reached our ears t•the effect that
Gawge Coyle ca_n"•to in•ger take
it---Say •t ain't so, George---
In our collum of last week we
expressed an opimon instead of a
predlcUon and we were still wrong,
but so were a intUt other pipple---
Red Heller lost two more leer' in
anudder encounter wit' a local den-
tist during the past few days---
'Sa•out time ya took a trip.to Bus-
ton, ain't it, R•d ?---Vi'let made |t
known to us the other day that •ve
Miss Lizzie Savage of Hartfoxd of Woonsocket, R. I., have re{urn-
is spending her vacation at herded after spe•dmg a vacation inhome here. town as the guest of fmends.
The road roller is back at wn•k• Mrs. Elfner of West street zs
&gem on Mmn street where the entartaimng her mece from Meri-
n•tcadam improvements was not Ides"
laid up to the required atandard• . . .
* * • • ,, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Holt of
A•n old-fashioned "calathump" •eat street went on the excursionto Glen lslasd during the past
was perpetrated upon Mr. and
Clinton Judd Friday night• A law
number of their fr•enda, who ha
been foiled a week previous who
the couple es•ped immediately a•
ter their marriage, assemble
about 11 o'clock and teat•fled
their presence in a m•nner
awoke their neighbors. The onl£
week.
Fred Mills of Southport is stop-
at Mr. Bakers home onpingWest stre•L
Mrs. T. H. MacKenzie is visit-
way to atop them was to inwt• ing m Yaleswlle.
them in and they spent a most
•oyable hou• w•th M,r. and
Judd.
The town has made a
upon the selectmen of the
Berlin for the expense incurred
the recent Ripple smallpox case°
The Berlin authorities deny
h•dlities and it leaks now
though Southingto• would have
stand for the $700 or more in
iebtodnea• which the sickness
the Berlin man caused the town.
The Roy. F. Q. Blanchard an•.Mrs. Blanehard will leave tomorL
row for a month's vacation to be
spent in Newton, Mass.
William Hutton
Mxs. Woodrnff of West street
has been spasdmg a few days in
Weatmlle.
Miss Jennetto Whiting of Mill-
dale is spending .part of her vaca-
tion as the •g•est of friends in
Meriden.
The infant daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Wllli• Dilger of Mtlldaie is
recovering from her recent ill-
Raymond Diekerman of Water-
bury spent Sunday with his par-
. ; e•ts• Mr .and Mrs. Fred Dicker-
has rents I man of Mflldale.
Member Federal Reset're System
THE PLANTSVILLENATIONAL BANK
Accumulated
Better MealsMAKE BEAUTY PRODUCTS
IN YOUR OWN KITCHEN
The beautles of anclent Rome
rubbed their faces and skin with
bread soaked •n mdk to make them
fair, The beautiful Poppaea Sab•-
na, Nero'• favor:to, m credited by•mto•ans to have bathed dvaly in
milk.
FundsTo start a bank account for a child and t •
make it grow with him by constantly add-
ing to it, is the finest gift he can have.
Accumulate•d funds, plus interest can pro-
vide a complete education, offer a sound
start in business and give the self con-
fidence necessary to success in life.
ter as beauty products; for m-
stance, tn the cold ,regdons butter
is •L-•ed as a •leansing cream, tak-
ing the place of the water bath.
The pec,ple of Tibet use butter as
an ointment for their skin and the
natives of western Africa, whdm
the scientist Metchm'koff reports as
being extremely long-lived, u•
the cream from •ur milk a.• an
ointment for their akin, dmnkmg
the milk itself. The bleaching and
softening value of buttsrn•Ik as a
lotion for the face, nee-k, and arms
was well know• to the beauties of
the previous generation.
Today's seekers for falv skins
who use ninny of the cleansing,
bleaching and vanishing creams on
the market would find t•at they
were often from a milk curd base,
according to a report made by a
labocatary which has examined
beauty lotions. These same scion-
tints suggest that the chief -•lue
of a wrinkle • is a psycholog-ical one, its action being • of I
prolong'rag the period of relax-
alton before a mirror before godng
to bed, sad of cheering the user,•
with the confidence of becoming
better I•king.Beauty, after all, it "•us, is
not r• much sl• deep as mind
deep--that" is, we believe o•r new
Jar of eeld •ream will help our
looks, and therefore, •t does.
Southlngton's Industries
SOUTHINGTON HARDWARECOMPANY
SOUTHrNGTON, CONNECTICUT
It i-s practical for a g•o,up of small .toWns to a.cq.ui.rs' apparatus that can be stratogmally loca•ea m,
l to calls quicidY over a fairly wide are•. The costs of•re far outweighed by the benefits derived
of millions of dollars worth of property
"on farms and in villages. Lives are many times.waste can be largely prevented if the public is
how it may be obviate&• have a fine fire department,• one that has a re-
by f•w if any in the state. C•lls to fires are
have again incurred her disfavor---,
But, we'd still like to know when
she's gonna make that trip to the
Big Town--•I•ttle need be said
about the recent trip to the city
which was taken by Joe Comen,
t Fonzt and Danny MzKay---But t•e
boyo did meet a fo.roiguer named
O'Shea at Coney Island---
That guy who has been silent
for the past few weeks is gutti•s
noisy agmn, and if he keeps it up
we're g•nna tell yez all a swelland fires efficiently exti•ng•s•.hed. But thecannot teach each indivtdh•d•tfi• fuddamenta • about him that he doesn't H. Mart•fi Co.mp•.ny• •
•.•'ftre prevention. This must be done by each •nd know that we know--Are ya lis-• of US. At this time of year, when ralus are infre- lenin', Stuart?--Thi,n.ge•l be dif-, Miss Emma Faith offorest next week the cause Walter otreet has retuxusd from a wm
farmer8 to be especially caxeful of fires is genna go by Cape Cod for u ca- with her cousins, the Misses
obvious that it take.longer for..flr• apparatus to eeahun---What'll his gel in the 'nig of New H.ave.n. :been
ho'ls•es .d fai'ms • •h.?so?n •he ,•OWa prop" backwoods •o widout him for thatlengtha flme?--Gill is •ad becsUas Fred C. Snyder of Harri•b.u again.
" " " " the ,,Priscilla," which formerly Pa., to.pending a vacation in 'as the guest of relatives. No
• plyed 'tween New Yawk and .Rhode * * &Did• yom• •d s•b•p"*' • L•l•d is gonna e•o•--Wish wt e'd * aktng•he•.ffe•d t• dmught?t'
"•'•';" BE AN EXCEP'•IO.N'TO THE I•UL.E " get the real dd•e ,o• the trip Miss Josephine Donaldson
rS out of each100 met], on're•ching th• age °f 65 °r Gawgu took on •et'bost---Hello, Conn., was the l "Not.• ,•L•k'' ' '
incomes sufficient for them to retire in decent pipple in Newport•Hope Mr. and Mrs. WSalter Neal in t•w• *.'Ymi 'to•ld emt have adminL•last week.
The rest •nust continue to work, or subsist on char- enjoy the boat races--- • • * • •: •t•ke•the prie• ..
•O•l•lnt|Vee, -- BeHove it o• not the collum has "•rs. Lucy Upson has sold a tot off the tmtfle."-•MousUque Cbo•.
the strongst possible argument for savings ,mitted mention of t•o of its fore- on Bristol istreet in Charles Fait• • '"
plans, such as those provided by life insur- most characters this week--Hope , , , -• have nb
purpose is to azsu• old age security. Nothing they appreciate it--Be careful thto Wltlism McKenna of Bridgupe• .did
than depedent old people. The tragic lessons coming, week.end 'catme we're is the guest of Michael Moran..'gonna stay in town to give yotme , , 4
plight can•.ot be remedied speaks louder the one•-bvm, llghtly--•Jo tong -Alfred Or.lay is in
is a deeper, more basic 'way, how-Grove Beach cottage and willhis family there tomorrow for a Mr. and •d*re- *Daevid Hutton of e•er, to approach this whole beau-
ty problem. Iusts•d of applyingvacation, are entertaining Mrs. let's apply it in-
* * * of Hartford. t•at is. us• a quart el
The Roy. T. M. Ndes •f Bmstolpreached at the Congregational Mrs. W411ia•n •ilL•rd m•d son of whole milk •nc•udtng its crs•m
church Sunday morning In an ex. Milldale are spending a vacation in every day. By•and veget•les, and a ]•eral
change for the day with the Ioca! Springfield, . * • of whMe grain corsal• and
pastor. .. * • Patrick '•angney of plontsville f•her health-•iv•ng foods, we
James Duncan will meet ths was injured last Frlday while at be doing far )•o..•# for •ur
members of Isabella Council, K • work b•y the breaking of a chisel, beauty t•m if we try .tp buy it in
C.. tomght at the store 'of the a pines •f w]ktch cut his right arm ten ceett or five dolla• Ja_• at the
ami caub•ed the loss of considerable beauty cotmte• ,e•'yest glossy, hair, a
THEPE•X COMPANY
I 1 II
PLANS "POIJSH TEAMFOR REUNION BOOKS GAME
ON AUGUST 7, mR SUNDAY •
Hotchkiss Family To Convene Colt Park Team To Meet,
At Prospect; B. B. Sanford Polish All Stars Here Sun-
Is Association Presides4. day At Rec. l'ark.
•.sncement amde here by BurnttSanford of Memden avenue,
ident of the as.socmtlon Mem-
• l•sed of all d•rect Hotchklss de--'
eendants an dthe*r families.
The C•lt Park A A of Ha•rt-'
The fifty-fifth annual reum-n •f fo•d •d[ pin) the Southmgtontl• Hotchkms assocmtmn will beh•ld Saturday, August 7, a[ Grange i Polish All-Stars here at the Re-
•creaUon Park, Sunda• afternoon•.•'•ll. Prospect Center, Prospect, at 3 'clock, according
E[onn., accordt•" to a recent an nou•ncement made here toda.• b.•
bM Tulek, ideal manager An
ber• of the Colt team prevented
their scheduled game here a fe•
•kt ll-15 a. m., D.ST., an as- Ha•Xf,•rJThe thes•nb|y and regmtratton permd • dl , team has wmtten for •nother gamebe h•ld m the Grange hall From and has promised to have his reg-
dinner will be served Members of the fray The game • expected
the •socmtmn are urged to bring to be fast anti clo.e MURPl4YEXPE•T
JOHNSON
thmr 'speclalty' as well as wvlttcn John (Lefty) Dui,ckl wall proh-
recipes for the F•,mly Cook Book I • • \\a • oe on the nmund for the local .Mr. Sanford wlll premde at the • tea• •th Tu•k doing the re-
Assembly which wdl beg•n at 1 45 i ce•vmg. • :•
p. m. ,n the G•e Hall The pro- i•am fo •he assembly will be as,•ilie% Past and Pre•ent", Mu- ONE DAY (;OIX [follows: •ectM subJ•t, "Our [ TOURNEY ATtAinS•C, arranged by prugr• comnut- • I,ARGEST FIELD •ro • ••e. Yo.n•, People's Pmze Essays ' [ •Op•,• LeO •. Ca•aOtt
•e h•tt 20), also open to older •nt•nued f•,m Page 1 I PLAY• rOb•k• DIVE•GENT
•, Cheshlre The Children'• for fi•t prize an the •turda>o•oorae• wdl be m cha•e, te•oon s•eep•ke• at the club New York, • Y•"IT'S TRUE t t•t R•ta Jo•n, who
• M•. Ruth Bosworth of Sey [ he•. George •ott •tth 96-19-77 makes her screen debut in M-G-M'sher career by selhng ttcket subscnpttona for a st•k •mp•y."
•,u•. I• a. •o.d,.The business meeting and elec-• The M•xed Fou•ome ma•he• •ys Wdey Padan "When an employee ab•nded, funds. Rtta had to •ork xn a tea r•nt to •n enough to pay
•n of officers begins at 2 45 p.' we• played Sunday at the club back nor fltends t''
• The• •ill be a dl•u•lon re-•and J Alhson antl Mrs. O Young
•.•0•.• w•thor o• .o• • =o., • •o,-•-,, ,o• •--, or,•. Th• El EC•O• VOTE H.•aOWA•E CO.should be re•larly orgamzed and , fi•t low g•sa p•ze •a¢•on b• • HOLDS MEETINGhave a consUtuUon, by-laws ..and Ed AIhson and Mrs. P. Gazanago'• forth. .-, I with 9• The second low net pmze ,
laformat, on regardlng the reunion x, as •on by •lph Hutlbut and
may Mso be obtained by •ltlng Mm E •dw•th wl• 117-68-49
Mabel Ho•hk•, assoemUon sec- On •esday afm•oon the ladws
•, •D. 2, Wa•rbu•- of the •uthmgton club pla•ed a'ma•h •th the •omen of the
CHURCH GROUP' Chlppa.ee e].b of Brmto]• The Memden group of •e Con-
• ENTERTAIN .•.• • an• •ow. •o•y• and the Wa•rbu• g•up f•m the
same comply held an all-da•
APPROVAL FOR, Cont,nue,, fr• m ,'age 1
SALE OF LAND ,•,•,,• r•malned ,, th '•,s cornpany
Special M•ting Hela •,ednes- M,•I c.mpa'•, •aterhur}, where
day; Authorize •el•tmen he remained until 1915 He •-
To Fslablish Fund; Ap- turned to Stmthmgton m 1915 anti
prove O•her •quests. became aff•hatc,i •th•he •u•-
match at the club .•e,.terday.
OBSERVE 44THANNIVERSARY
Mare qtreet and Eden a•enue for Mr .qm•th has "been active in the
$5000 to C Albert •.betz, •h,, affa rs ,,f the to•n, hav•ng •erved
They have three daughters, Mrs.
enna Morelh of South•gton, Mrs.
lenme Dudley of Hartford, •nd
Mre. Lomse VeceJuola of Meriden;
five sons, Joseph, Albert, Frank
and James Aldl of Southmgton,
and Amos Aldl of Menden.
" rth weddin- a_nniversaxy r price of the land ag the begmmng J.hnson of Cheshire, who d•ed•forty-tou• F 'bat -am• •ear Mr Smith •Monday n•t at •e•r home •a• of a fund for the future erects,*a fa•t droner part}. Mr •d of Iubi•c bmhhn•- which ma• h( rearmed m 1914 to bliss F•ee9
M•. AI• were roamed •n St. Mi- ] needed by the town C Dickerm• of Milblale
chk•l's chu•h, N• Y•k c•ty./ An add,Uonal apropr:at,on of Mr Smith •s •Uxe m several
lui) 23, 1893. '$1500 for the to•n h•ghgay de- f•te•al order, a member of the
GROUP PLANSPICNIC SUNDAY
partment an, ,,n• for $500 for the Knights Templars, Sphinx Shrine
financing of local federal projects and the Plantsv•lle Conreatmnal
were al•o approved by the electo-• church
at the speeml town meeting The Ielect•r• further voted to refund •$31 to the a.twater Manufactur_ • DISMANTLE HOME OF
ing Company for exce• tare, paid LATE MRS. HAZARD
Wdham J. Hurley acted a• meet-ing chmrman and Joseph A De I Dr aml M,r• Charle• It. Glover
Paulo, Jr., was clerk About 50 of Woodbury, N. J., son-in-law and
electors attended the meeting daughter of the late Mrs. Came
'Hazard are m t•w'n to dismantle
the Hazard home. Mr& Hazard
The monthb meeting of the lre•ded on Mmn street. She died
Mflblale F•re department •dl be lm Woodbury, N. J., • July 16,
MERIDENITES
The annual outing and picnic
sponsored by the Mann S. S. De
Women's Missionary Societyof First Lutheran Churchplans Meeting On August 5.
q +l#y.of the h,,manuol Lutheran•.hurch o• Meriden will be the
•ests of the F•rst Lutheran chur-
ch of Southington at a meeting to
•e held here Thursday, August
"• •t the home of Mrs Christian
Espensen of Vermont Court.
•'he meeting wdl be hehl out of
doors. Mrs. E. W. •urkhardt•Ierlden avenue, president of the
|heal group, ]s m charge of ar-
rangements for the meeting. An
interesting program will be pre-
• •. •ented and wdl be followed bysocial hour. Refreshments will be
.•erved. It ]s expeetod that there
Will be a large attendance.
•3LOSE FIRST BAPTIST
: C•IURCH "FOR SUMMER
"•'" • No services will be held at the
" ,•i•t Baptist church until Sunday,
according to an an-
here by the Rev
F. Requa, pastor. Church
sessions will also be dmcon-
until that t•me. Mr. Requa
• spend the month of August at
amer home at Schodack
An•eli society wll be held Sunday held at the fire house Mopday at i and not Phfladelphm as was pre-
afternoon amt evening, August I, 7:30 p. m. A report of the recent t• xaou-l• •tated ,n the NEWS. M,ss
at Borysewicz's grove, West street.
A sports program wall be held in
the afternoon. There vall be dane-
no" in the evening. Refreshments _ __will be •erved. The public is cor.
drolly invited to attend.
BANKING
COMMERCIAL ACCOUNTS
SAVINGS ACCOUNTS
INTEREST CREDITED QUARTERLY
SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES
carmval •dl be read at the meet- I Layette Hazard wall return w•th
mE. Members ave urged to at- , Dr. amt Mrs. Glover •nd will maketend. ' her home w•th them.
,WOLY 80, 1937
WITH THE
HEALTHSecond Phase of Weight Reduction
SO far we have, spoken of dtetIlf you havent written in yet
for )•ur copy of the helght-we•ghtchart and calome food table, doso at once) We come now to thesecond phase of •e•ght reducUon
Overweight in most persons is
a perfectly normal reactlon Ourbodles, tf furnlshed wlth moreer•rgy In the form of food thanneeded, w• store up that energym the form of fat •e increaseour supply of fat by eatmg morethan our bod•c• need. We decreasett by us*rE It up through exerciseor physical work. Obvmusly wecan reduce our weight by eatlngless. by exerclsmg more, or byeombmmg the two. The last tndally the best plan, for It moot'yes
neither starvation nor overwork.
When •t come to exercise, noneexcels that taken out of doorsOne •f the earnest ways to exer-
cise m to walk. It costs nothing.It takes relatively httle tlme. and
tt ts not strenuous Every healthy"person should walk at legist a male
every day.
So many sports are avadable.that [ shall not attempt to morethan mentton some of them--golf,tenn• horseback riding, swtm-ruing, hiking and so on The chiefdd•tndty shout aufllctent exerc*•ew*th most of us ts sheer mdtffer-
Of cours• tt Is only fatr to ad
REBEKAHS TO
MEET AUG. 19
hour wdl be enjoyed aml refresh-
of us are able to gtve to them--certainly as a thee/ form of exer-
drills have b•en introduced to take
to outdoor sports m thetr health-building character But they servs
as a fairly good substitute.
PERMANENT • AVES
Nestle, BonatFrederlck•
$3.00 to $:1.50
Machinele,•u$3.50 to $4 00
Hot Oil Shampoo andFinge• Wave
65c
-•,adies" HaircuL•- 35cChildren's Haircuts -- 23c I
Betty'sBudget Shop
HOLD JOINT OI'TING
MerilLers of •,'onx trli)e, IORM,
Britain hehl a joint outing and I
Park S•uthmgton A feature of • :• State St.
the outing wa. a softball game be-
and So•th•ngton tribes
TO PENALIZEDELINQUENT
TAXPAYERS
Tel. 1814I,awton Bldg.Meriden, Conn.
Tontor•o• I"inal Day For Pay-ment On 1936 List; IssueOld Age Tax Warrants.
QUARTERLY
The qtmXte(rls,
the women of St. Thon••
•,II be held at the ehumht
da), Au&,•st 15. The women
attemt e•mmumon in a body at
7 30 (/clock m•s. Confe•alonl
be heard Saturda• afternoon
e•enlng• August 14.
d.hn P McGr•th of
street, treasurer of Engine
i,any No 1 of the SouthlngtOll,
it De-hi on FrMay and
Help Th• Cle•mof Harmful Bodj
•HO• CROWING Aeou•.
Marvels smokers can afford
what they want--and no
cigarettes afford them greater
satisfaction than Marvels.
Coal -- Koppers Coke
Buy Now. Lowest Prices Now
And place your order while prices are down! '
Everyone knows the uncertainty of the prices of
commodities. They are more likely to increase insteadm. rist01 ........
SUNDAY NIGHT of decrease, taxes and increased labor costs must still
be accounted for, therefore the wise and thrifty
will take advantage of the present prices of coal which
are subject to increase without notice.
LOUIS PERILLOCOAL COMPANY
Southington• ..
TRUST,DEPARTMENT
ADMINIS•..,TOR --,E_•X•UTOR
.... "" BRI)uthlngton & o,
" Trtis/ EVERY SATURDAY NIGHT
FIREWORKS -- DANCING
8to6
"102 West Center St.
b0UTHIN_GT_•0N NEWS,,FRIDAY,. ," 1997
FASHIONS
ENTERTAINMENT
HOUSEHOLDHOME FF_/xTURES OF TIMELY INTEREST
Oncea Week
• Weighing 'Is Best
By Ji IJET SHELBY
PRI]: ITS SMM :i' FOR AUGUST)t ,hutchIs Helpful July Shopping "
for New DressQuite ExcitingPsychologist Tells
of Attendance in
the Country
GARRY c. MYERa, PH. D.
"•VltlLE A boy on the farm, I at-
[Cote, •hch I aso attended oeca-
]there are large •alues worth con-! ser• mg
spend the summer in another
•m•y of each faith attending the
three f• are • nearly alike as
t%ey Ion't @o ¢oge•er•d form a' comnmnRy congro•U•, hire a
ective p•m It might • de-
C•mmunltv Church Developing
The community church t• devel-oping in mmay • rural community,tmd It Is about th• only hope forthe fxature of the rural church Byand by there will be many morecommunity ehurche• in towns
Printed silk dress and matching etmt bomlfl in grosgrain.
Virginia Lee . Scolded,But It Doesn :t Mean Much
cities It always puzzles mad irks I ONE OF MY readers has writteni•mit• me to see new churches going up a long letter telling me how des-
very similar f•th t•t still have shop•rl w• very discourteous
•e adequacy of •o •duclng •u- ml•gte• p•rly p•d •thmg by the scolding, but w••e she is foH•ng P•n• who live In •1 are•, [t•ng to see how m•y•'• policy is certainly a e•ectally •e who ha• long at- t things he could eay, •d how well
B) VIRGINI• LEE Inn awful fuss trod report to the'manager the fact that only one ofi her packages had been handed toher by the clerk who waited on her.
• She didn't find it out until she w•son her •av home, she said and she
l acted as {f the clerk had kept it1 back • p•rpose I think the• ager placated her and laughed wlthl the clerk about it I bo• •
SHOPPING these July
days is an exciting experi-ence. We expect the shopshave marked down some of
their smart dresses, and wecan pick them up for that
special occasion in Augustor the vacation at a frac-tion of their previous cost.
However, we cannot ex-pect to get really fine ma-terials and workmamshipfor too small a price. Butwhatever we pay for thatlove|y little frock that ismade of such exq.mslte fab-ric and has that smart, ad-vanced, new look, itworth it.
Two summer frocks thatare as smart as they can beand equally wearable arepictured. A tlnn silk dresswith a matching sheercrepe coat is shown left,and makes an effective cos-tame for summer days.This one is developed in asmall, light and dark all-over print, and bound withgrosgrain ribbon. Noticethe drawstring neck, thegathers at the waist, andthe smart, broad-shoul-dered silhouette.
Printed Chiffon Good
There is nothing to takethe place of the printedchiffon costume in the mid-summer wardrobe. The de-hghtful frock shown rightfQ/•tures a magnoha printedcKlffon redingote worn over
Va matching silk slip. It issimple enough for outdoorlunching and dmin•'. Brightcolored piping gives it fur-ther distraction.
In Paris all the fashioninterest seems centeredaround •he exposition. TheAn•.erican ambassador gavea Fourth of July party atwhich were an occasionalAmerican •oman wearingan American version of aParis model, and a Paris-lenne dressed in •e French
liege • had been working in the P..•I• replica was 1 t. Tile
far them ureter flaring tip ,,hen later the. ,ame x, omcn ,,crc usually prettyaw•l. Flecked With White
4ends to be a perfect bolng in thefirst place to be a wi•e parent NO
plea•ed, and so a•t L althou•a•ll miss her Courtesy to •
As to you, Mr. T. J L, r•prol•rly •panked, attd •ea hadffrand time "playing with ,
girl of 17, and she loves him The'are planning to walt fourbefore marrying I.s she toofor him, he •mlca? Sheand he younger than theirtire ag•.
I think if you wait a littleto be sure the girl does knowown mind, there is no reasonyou' should not marry andhappy, P. A. T
WORRa-'E•: Your feeling ofgin" when you see this mancar• for with oth•r girls, isly •aatural. However, thevnan'e attltude inr,eazd you isen•onraglng. He evidently
.nOt w•nt to become involved•'0•, I should think from whattell •le
I think your happiest •oluUo•to try to forget about him.Uflnk you • do that • He so
you, Why not work totoo. ment is especially appropriate for By mo•t garden .tu7s. It neutralizes your reputation ? You a• :
aura that the coudltlorm houses where there is no viable and combat• ao|dity in the soil, youl•, and even if this manwlfloh yon weigh yourself fnundnthm. When a hmme. with. eh• •lsdaze, kills soil peats e nd sufl•cienUy interested in you,
tflg•lti•l•t all Umea. You ea• out a foundation rising above the tna• a'vatlahle the plantfoods in fine men will be, •o why not• •nether or not the re ground, looms up from a mass of the soil. t2m0 is best applied to vats a good •aracter for
is too solid shrubbery, part of soll• in the fall and light •atl•@aotion, and to be s
Magnolia printed eklffon. I•go•e worn over ma•ehing silk dip.
Mary Morton Has Cod l ,
Recipe Named After
BEAUTY
RECREATION
HEALTH
Summer iIllnessesEliminated
Infant Mortality Cut
by Modern Milk
Treatment
I "•By LOGAN CLL•NDENING, M. D.
NOT MAN• years ago summe.-"
•a• a Justly dreaded time for chile
dren The record of our grand-
fathers' famUles showed that of 10
or 13 chUdren who were born, mor•
than two-thirds on the average
were carried off before their Rftl•
Keep the tea kettle xhlnmg,wh•te%er .mate¢iul R may be
made of Wash It •he•t youx•ash the dishes, •our It If Ita• it. Rinse It well on the ln-Mde a• put a cup of vinegar
the kettle to get •d of the de-.it that cakes the lnmde
XVife Pre rvers
By MR& MARy MORTf)N egg and milk Cook over botlmg rhea either in infa..l• or adult,•enu Hint ' Iwater until the mixture thickens lar-:l-
Baked Fish ,,s Baked Potatoes I and coats a spoon, surfing con- p•rlr•dYofUs•v•tt0•l isSliced Tomatoes al•xttly SUr in lemon Juice slow- v•sable. The 8dministr•tion Of
w rot s ly $.nd boat until smooth A few vCreamed Ne Tu p 1 . fluld• ho'•e er, is importt•tklea dr°De of onion •ulce may he addedCreme Ellasa •our Cream Coo 1 . should be done by mouth. Th•
or e This makes a fluffy, thick •aladTea Coff e I I p•rtleularly true of infmata after
• •,• .•" - • _dr•_•g. This makes one mad on•- ] the starvation t•erind_
the dysenterleS due to Infected
foods, particularly milk Today
ply is such that these tragedies
rather to reduce the high birth
of preventLng infantile deaths.
leading lady In the drums of mori-
on June 7 and 8 The high nutrl-
oughly eanvaff•edIn the deHvery of clean milk to
the infant, t•e housewife hereeif
ha• some responsibility. Milkties left out on the doorstep toolong wtll exude milk thtuugh Diestopper, attracting irmects, dogeand cats thus contaminating the
nn the stoppers and every bottle
mer Ume are almost nvarmbly duotO eouLt•nlt•ated fOOd, •nd me•t•
are more hkely to be Infected •vegetables. Some of the mo•t vir-ulent orgmfl•tm do not pro•.ue.•any change in tim odor of the
they centre.minere.
T•e L•eatl•ent Of •mer •
nofigci gTONCE STARRED
IN ROSE BOWI,
Ended One Career and Start-
,. ed Another OnGridiron.
Hgrace He.it, c0mmg to Lake I
Compounce Susday niffht •th h•.,
•{gad{ers, cloaed one •hapter •f{
•s, e•nfful ,lifo and began an-
other m the Rose Bowl, hm
•phers d•clo•a.
Dr., He,dr. a hneumn on the
•niver•ity of Cahfom• footbaH•
•uad, •e close to •mple•
•OCAL WORKOUT
two. They are both
I Wha| Do You Know About Re• .,yy FISHER GROWN and NAT FALX
SOUTHTNGTON NEWS, FRIDAY, JUI,Y •0, 19,•7
Classified• ADS •
Answers: i, Th• pasteur•za-
mdk *uppl). It was m 1912 that
logical standards •or aJl mdk used m
2 The •ook •nd "carrwr" who m
,<
' h)o bru>cd h,,d, f,,,'n theft old Ih'
livion in 1923 when h,s spree was brought him back. tIN athlet•c (her- Br,)•ne arul 3 hot
worked m New York City. TheHealth Department finall• caught up
htmselL harbors the germs and its-
THE SOUTHINGTON NEWSAND COOPERATING NEW ENGLAND WEEKLY NEWSPAPERS
i# MI•2OOO
sSOO•2OO)1OO•50s25
•5
First PrizeSecond PrizeThird Prize
Fourth PrizeFifth PrizeSixth Prize7 th t03P Prize
!BIG MERCHAflOISE PRIZESContributed by the makers of these products
•ssd hded foods The Perfect Tea for
,o... •r.... ICED TEA
Y/Fu fH". ,•.-." A PRIZ-E FOR EVERYONE
',• CAff,•OU GUESS THESE SIX NE• ENG•ND PATRIOTS•
•.WA•RREN SETH PREBLE WARNER
_• ETHAN HALE , ALLEN WILUAM
EDWARD JOSEPH NATHAN BARTON
The• JUI•BLF.D WORDS repre•nt six New England Patrlots---one for
each state. Theae six-names are made by taking one or more syflables orwords from the slx ¢orrecg names and mi-Ang them..F.o..texample:"What arecorrect names •or 'theao lwO jumbled New England C•t•e•-MANISTON andLEWCHBSTER?" The m)rrect answer is MANCHESTER and LEWISTON. 12 houri, like linen.
Siml31y •mble t•ele six namea and fill in, the name €orractly spelled • CHATEAU R] NS 0
START NOW-•SEND YOUR ANSWERS EACH WEEK
THERULES :, -" *0 °:•FATH• • MAI,D
PLEASE READCAREFULLY!
LIQUOR PERMIT N()TEIA •.\1. N()l'l('l Mr and Mrs K]rtland
IIIOM\> [ \\l,l' •1
-*' "" UBY.... ,. MONUMENT<
( OOI, XNi) ('OMFOR'I'ABI,E AT
PALACE
lhur• b•t July 29 31
.)C,Ul •tthm ,imlEos•,tld \I hold 1,1
"'Exg• t,l•lNG °"
1'110\ F: II ',1 E R II)I.•N PHONE
Sun-Wed -- August !-4'
•%atne• BaxterWalFace
"•I.AVE SHIP"• dh Eliz•tbeth A•en
•2nd"l;chmd'llu IIc:d m
and I)tan.• ( ;d).(),)• %% •t h Rochelle Hu•o•I l•ri•
;%( OMINI, sOON
•l.t) h'.c I)leh Ich irl "K\IlilIT WITHOUT
(la,k ,•;,d)h ,Lr.l h • II:ulo• in "SAR
5 H. WOOr• &
"SARATOGA"
"TOPPER"('on•tance
"•MORED CAR"W;(h C@m•a• Romero
('OOL
Drive in Smfe•/to I
Plu•"YELl O• CARGO"
•n•d Na•l•hleanor Hunt•RTOON • NEWS"MARCH OF TIME"
IT'S
Why Not I.ct The
Sanitary LaundryDo Yo.r Wash:.ng For You I)uring
These Hot Summer Days?
'I'IU= ()NE O1.' ()1 I{ |.'()1 I{ Ol T. 1%AI)I\(. MO|)EI{N SElL%ICES ' ! !
1. l) XML' W •,:';11 NI:ItX I('E -- :ill ch,th('• :ire v ,t-h,'d 1),'• h•'tly clean and
I t'•.tll Ilt'd d;t•llp
:2. TIIiIIi"T• SEItVI('E -- all cl,,thcs washed perfectly citron -- all hod
hllell.',, tai)iP )lllell', ha,)dkerchwI-, :u',' ironed -- wearing apparel.dld ])ath tox•cl• itic lettnnt,d mo,>t and ready to It'•.
3. FI, 'tT WASII SEIt• I( E -- all tabl," lin('n'•, bed linens, handkerchief•
:rod t.,xxvlq, xta hm• :rod uoned •%e.um•, :mparcl :•,nd bath towel.3
x•,t hvd ,rod d• i,,d. mcely fohi•vi
I. AI.L F'INISIIEI) SI';R•, ICE -- aU table hncn•, toweh,, h:mdkerchiefs
all x• earml• :tl)l•:trel, d)t,,,,,,(,.,,, ,tl)l'Oll>, Illtd(,l• ear washed and perfect-
ly honed, REAI)Y TO WEAl',
The Sanitary Dry Cleaning Service
Is De'cidedly Better!
CO,HIT!Pat O',Brie.r: --t Hear F0nda
Telephone So.uthin', on 140
SOUTHINGTON NEWS, FRIDAY, JULY $0, 1987
1937 -- EVERY HOME ISTO A FINE BED-
AND CAN AFFORDIT
THESE REDUCTIONS.
Far SUITES "" ' "
Made to Sell • "'
•rom $129 .... ::<" •
couches that open to
or twin •eds. So prac-
Modern Suites In The
Choicest Of Woods
We show you two of these
impre.,•ive suites -- there
are seve•-al more on dis-
play in our shownmm rightnow !
STUDIO COUCHES
$22.5OA choice of brilliant upholstery fabrics on
,studio couches with period design or mod-
ern effect carved feet.
You've read about it! You've heard about it! Ever•'bod•" knows
that furniture prices are going up by leaps and bounds! But, you
needn't worry! We were on the job months ago . • • and bought
heavily to protect our customers. We saved from 25•/o to 45°/o...
and in the true spirit of service, we are turning these Savings
over to YOU, our. customers.
BUY NOW . . . SAVE 25% TO 45% . • • A DEPOSIT WILL
HOLD YOUR SELECTIONS UNTIL WANTED. OPEN AN
ACCOUNT AND -- PAY AS IT'S CONVENIENT.
We're Starting Our August Furni.
ture Sale To-day - - - - -
To Give Every Family A Chance
To Have A Beautiful Home In '37
Porcelain Top
DINETTESet •n Maple
Strongly' constructed
chair• and a refec-
tory type table with
drawer for silverware.
Also in ivory or green
enamel
$23.50
Sale! INNER SPRING
MATTRESSES
Only St Down--S1 Weeldy wall deliver any Mottress
• •' 180 (•oil Springs •, High-Grade Ti•k•ng
• F'loral Art Ticking •,' SanlUzed
qt., Four VenUlators •'• Germproof• 220 Coil Springs
4•/Stsai and Felt • Expensively
Upholstered Constructed
THIS ASTOUNDING OFFER FOR
AUGUST CLEARANCE SALE!
New 1937 Premier
Dual Oven Range
Modem
Living
Room
Richly textured
fabric uphols-
ter• this extre-
mely good I.k-$97
rag, tmmfortable
twv piece suite•
Club Suite
A living room suite
designed to enrich
any home. Simpte
design but superb
construction. ,I• thebest of taste!
$89
$98 00• AS $5 DOWN THE
BAKES WITH COAL O.R. GAS . BALANCE IN $5During.our August Event this amazing MONTHLY IN-offer will be made -- it is the New 1937
Premier -- in colored enamel and S T A L L I•ENTS.
in the modern manner. NO RED TAPE•
20% to 40% off!On All Summer Furniture Remaining in Our Stock
Gliders ..................now $11.75
1.39 Beach Chairs "_ ...............now 88c
•1.25 Deck Chairs ................now 88c
Cedar Closets now 88c
End Tablel -.. 95c
FUR22
20.00 Large -Size Dressei- ....
(walnut or maple)
4 Poster Bed (maple) ...........• ..... 6.75
9x12 Congoleum Rugs .... $5 SO"
Coil Springs reduced tb .................6.50
Chests (wallmt finished) _. 14.50