
■Wanted immediately, five or six first-rate journeymen shoemakers, for men and women’s work, to whom good encouragement will be given. Inquire at Nos. 2 and 3, Town Hall. Measures taken for boots and shoes of all descriptions, which will be furnished on short notice at the lower cash prices at the above place in Northampton.
■Lost, on Monday last, between Lyman’s Inn in Northampton and Boltwood’s Tavern in Amherst, the trimmings of a watch, consisting of a seal, ring, and key. Whoever has found the above, and will leave them at this office, shall receive the thanks of the owner and be rewarded for his trouble.
■Emphasizing the necessity of adequate safety precautions, railroad officials have persuaded President Coolidge to do his train riding in special trains or private cars, rather than share the regular accommodations with other passengers. When the President and Mrs. Coolidge went to Chicago several months ago, they rode in a regular train.
■The careless flicking of a match by a bystander watching two motorists extricate their machines from a trifling accident resulted in the complete demolition of a Ford sedan, owned by William Bostick of Southampton near Laurel Park on Saturday night. The collision sprang a leak in Bostick’s car, and a pool of gasoline collected unnoticed on the ground.
■Robie Hubley, director of Arcadia Wildlife Sanctuary, and his wife, Judith, editor of “The Curious Naturalist,” the Audubon Society’s magazine, will receive the Distinguished Public Service Award of the University of Massachusetts Alumni Association on June 7.
■Alumnae of Smith College heading toward Wright Hall yesterday at noon encountered an unlikely sight: a line of protesting Smith students, carrying picket signs and petitions. The protesters were up in arms over the college trustees’ recent decision to tear down Alumnae Gym to make way for an addition to Neilson Library.
