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/ NEW BRITAIN DAILY. HERALD, {01 0R PAREGORIG? ASH LORD CONDRAY JMessenger Gonfuses Bottles and | Causes Confusion There is much of mystery as to why Lord Cowdray had to let go his big ofl properties in Mexico. The Royal Du has taken them over and government, which used t suspicious of the Dutch- Deterding, master of the Royal Dutch Shell, now is working hand and glove with him. Lord Cowdray did more when he /was Sir Weetman Pearson than since / he has been raised to the peerage. He is one of the world's great builde He has monuments to his genius in all the continents. He made the port of Vera Cruz, the great harbor it is today. At the mouth of the Amazon he checked the waters of the might- fest of rivers and made them stop in- terfering with man’s efforts to estab- lish a sound and safe entrepot. He sects to tunnel the British channel as a crown to what he did in making the port of Dover. He dreams too of tunneling the Mediterrancan at Gi- Baltar so as to make possible direct traffic from London to the Cape. Just now his lordship is drilling all over England and Scotland for oil. He has what uncultured persons term a “bug” on oil. He believes there is oil in the tight little isle and he will not be satisfled until he taps insides from Lands End to John O'Groat and s9es what's concealed there. By the way, Lord Cowdray is a very serious minded person and has no time for jokes. One day recently tendent of one of his drill- g outfits that he had struck oil and would send a sample. The sample came and Lord Cowdray was eager to legrn what proportion and quality of petroleum there was in it. He de- 8patched a subordinate to a famous ¢hemist to have an analysis made. The subordinate, bei © and prop- er perzon, did not consider it becom- ing to go to the famous chemist in ordinary garb so he first went home to change his clothes. Waving been impressed by Lord | Cowdray to take great care of the | #ample the messenger took the bottle | from his pocket, placed it in the closet of his room and then proceeded to £hange his raiment. When that was went to the cleset bottle and in a mos igfied way proceeded to ¢hemist and discharged Next day Lord Cowdray, Ry USE “TIZ” IF FEET ‘ ACHE, BURN. PUFF UP Lan’t Beat “T for Sore, Swollen, Calloused Fect, | I he got word from accomplished he once more, got a dignified and sat- the famous duty eager for Tired, v-footed in a mo- and never with tender, raw, burning, blistered, gwollen, tired, aching feet. “Tiz" and only “Tiz" takes the pain and soreness | out 6f corns, callouses and bunions. As soon as you put your feet in a ' %Tjz" bath, 3 just feel the happiness | #shking in. How good your poor, old feet feel. They want to dance for joy. “Tiz" is grand. “Tiz" instantly draws out all the poisonous exudations which puff up your feet and cause sore, in- flamed, aching sweaty feet Get a 25-cent box of “Tiz" at any drug department store. Get instant foot relief. Laugh at foot suf- ferers who complain. Becausze your feet are never, never going to bother | ér make vou limp any more “UFT OFF CORNS, | MAGIC! NO PAIN store or Drop Freezone on a touchy corn then lift that corn off with fingers Tiny bottles cost y a few cents. Drop a little Freezone on an aching porn, instantly that corn stops hurt- Ing, then you lift it right out. It ficesn’t pain one bit. Yes, magic! Why wait? Your druggist sells a bottle of Freezone for a ?fil sufficient to rid your gvery hard corn, soft corn, or corn petween the toes, and calluses, with- tew | feet of | {nformation, phoned to the chemist. ‘Was the result of the analysi promising?” he inquired. “Promising!” exclaimed the chem- ist.. “I should say so. You've made a wonderful strike, your lovdship, if this sample is any index." “My word,” said his lordship. “And what proportion of oil do you find?" “0il! your lordship,” exclaimed the chemist with a hee-haw, “why, you've struck par arie.t LADY MURIEL PAGET HEADS RELIEF WORK Is In Charge of the Administering to and Orvganizing of People of Czecho-Slovakia. Paris, France, May 15, (Correspond- ence of the Associated Pres: woman has been entrusted with big task of organizing and admin ing relief work in one of Europe's states, Czecho-Slovakia. Lady Muriel Paket, an English- woman whose devotion to the Czecho- Slovak cause well known, arrive here from Prague recently the new Press respondent her scheme for the relief of that country. Her plan, which has the approval of the Czecho-Slovak au- thorities, is to enlist a body of able and willing social workers to train the women of Czecho-Slovakia in s cial welfare work. Her ambition to interest patriotic Czech women in America in the welfare of their na- tive land. “There are roughly 5,000,000 peo- ple in Czecho-Slovakia today who have just enough to keep bady and soul together,” Lady Muriel said. “Against these, who may be described as the rural population, there are 7 000,000 who are below the line of bare existence. They are. broadly speaking, the industrial and mining population.” “Faod. most of ‘it from America, is now coming into the country through Trio te of about a hundred ; carload yet 400,000 people in | castern are starving, and | even in the better situated parts the flour ration is only three pounds a! head per month.” Lady Muriel explained haw this| situation is utilized by the Magyars in | A | the Victory B the O month's tour of the mew republic, and | ' { outlined to the Associated i (Peru) Hungary to sow discontent among the i all the intelligent! ave left Slovakia,” Lady Mu- | riel continued, “and uring the present crisis and until their own peo- | ple can be trained to do constructiv and administrative work that the| Czecho-Slovak government and the i op ons in people have asked me to organize temporary assistance and provide ad- vice.” Lady Muriel will headquarters at Presst center the 16 nec districts will be medically assisted HISTORIC SHIF 1S BUT MEMORY ablich her relief rg from which sitous Slovakian fed, clothed T. 8. S. Oregon, Feature of Many Pa- triotic Celcbrations Will Be Seen No More. San Fr dear ncisco old Oregon,’ was d by h childre the se ndreds of men, 1 during iberty Loan campaign when they visited the famous old ba tleship for the last time as she lay at | | anchor in s Franci Within a few weeks t T Iy a quarter of a her place with the hearts of 20 bay 1ury z ‘Con American gon will g0 o and becomwe o A few weeks the Battleship ) t Havana Oregon was in neisco when there flashed the conti- nent on March 12, from t itutd in people; the sinking of San across 1898, | navy department to the Oregon’s com- mander an order to proceed to Callao soon as practicable. On Captain Charles E. Clark command. and two days la- the celebrated trip around March - assumed ter began the “Horn Captain Clark was not advised that | war had been dec until his arrival a 30 Great concern was felt United States for the lone as the whereabouts of the fleet under Adm'ral Cervera, red against Spain Rio Janeir pan which had just left Cape Verde Islands, was nknown. The nation breathed a sigh of relief ived that the Ore- | Jupiter Ir P of 14,000 gon had ar (fely at let, Fla., May 24, after a miles made in 68 days. A fow days la- ter she joined Admiral mpson's fleet off Santiago, Cuba, and she par- ticipated in the great battle of Sun- day, July 3, 1893, when Cervera’s fieet annihilated. The Orcgon forced the Colon, the last of the Spanish ships, ashore to her destruction. Subsequently the Oregon steamed from New York to Manila where she was on duty during the American he Philippines. Of late she has been used for a training and has been years school for voung sailors NIX ON New York Central | nhundreds of who met in These schoolchildren THAT SODA T Zoo demonstration, the sentiment Park in an open-. are indicative of but soreness or irritation. Freezone js'the much taliied of ether discovery .| the wreck of the NC-3 as it arrived|tion of Commander Towe & Cincinnati gentus. This is the official photograph of Azores direc- Note the under at Punta Delgado, in after raxiing 200 miles and | women | the last week of | i fighter of near- | 1 take | of commission | THURSDAY, JUNE | the feature of many ¥ vents celebrations and s built at the San Francisco in carried a ccmplement of 1 671 men. 10,285 tons. Union Tron 1896 and 34 eificers Her displacement whs Works at COULDN'T RAISE RENT, CHARGED FOR LIFT Phiiadelphia Man Hed TLease Which “Protected” Yim For Three Years, (By Richard gpillane.) Some of the tales told of the rapa- ciousness of landlords would be unbe. YV Were not supported by 3 Apparently gone wild in rn - te ndlords ol some their Here are two instances in one day's court record in Philadelphia A permanent injunction w ed by Judge Rogers to He Wasserman restraining owner of the Lennox hirteenth and Spruce enving to W; erman vator, telephone ana as grant- rbert B. Max Levy, apartments, streets, from ree use of the other house the | S¢ harbor | rman testified he has a three- vear lease with 18 months yvet to run Levy bought the house recently and was not satisfied with the price V serman was paying. Unable to make him pay more he decided Wasserman ould pay for riding in lhe elevator. W an’s apartment is on the twelfth floor He and his family had to pay or use the stairs. Francis Jarvis, a music teacher, rented an apartment at 4947 North Broad St Within three weeks the landlord, David Jacobs, raised the rent 75 per cent. and insisted it apply to | the first month. Jarvis declined to pay the extra sum and while he and his family were absent Jacobs re- | moved all their furniture and put it in a storage establishment. Jacobs was held by Maz | ris in $400 bail for trial The landlord who, to extort extra rent from a tenant, would make the members of a family climb twelve flights of stairs is not punished ade- quately by the issuance of a court in- junction Neither a landlord who renders a family homeless likely to know the wrong he commits when his casc is treated perfunctorily by a mag- istrate. There are few conditions worse in America today than those of housing in the city and they are aggravated by the conduct of some unconscionable landlords. strate Har- AX—KIDDIES SLOGAN ! | l!hronahmn the country against the tax on soda and ice cream. WRECK OF THE NC-3 AT PUNTA DELGADO (the manner in which the lower wings | f were riddled in the battle with the waves. { throughout launched and the above photo show 2 wtl, — DAD sSAID IT WAS > A FouL BUT NoBoDY HEARD T BUT HIM — m < i AN, THREE STRIKES - Mou’RE QU ¢ A leagu- pledged to fight disease and suffering | From left to right they are of the Itallan Red Cro of Red Cross the world has been |ator societies | the board of governors of the league. rasoara; Henry P. Red Cross, Comte de Korgoriay; Jap apan Red Cross, Professor Nina gawa Sen- , Count Davidson; French (e¢) Underwood & Underwoad NK any Firestone Truck Tire user in this eity about his experience with them. Ask himabout the kind of service he gets from our tire press, our orjgfer tire machin- ery and—our men. You'll et the reasons, stralght from 5’16 shoulder, why over half the truck tonnage of Amer ica is carried on Firestone Tires. And when you put Fitrestone Truck Tires on your truck you'll find that it runs faster with safety, wears less and keeps moving on lessgasoline. Let us prove these things,