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SELECT WELL THE REPRESENTATIVE! 80 Says Speaker of the - House, Frederick H. Gillett Washington, Feb, 21.—As the sick man, discouraged, becomes the easy prey of the quack, so the eitizen, dis- contented, becomed the ready mark of the demagogue, Speaker Frederick H. Gillett of the house today teld the citizens of this eountry in a message given to the Rotary clubs of the coun- try, “Den't let your discontent lead You to blindly follow the first man who promises a panacea,” adds the speaker, “The quack and the dema- gue alike always follow one method, They paint sympathetically your suf- ferings, which are real, In order to win your confidence in their remedy, which is generally chimerical,” Speaker Gillett's message was on the subject of the individual citizen's responsibility for legislation, He sald: "*The individua! ecitizen's responsi- bility for legislation is mainly in- direct, Weo are not a democracy; we are a republic, We elect representa- tives to legislate for us, And the first duty and responsibility aof the citizen towards legislation is to select well his representative, *“The other chief responsibility of the citizen s to keep informed on questions of legislation, “¥Yet in drawing your conclusions you should not be too assured. In this enormous country of ours with ts sectional differences, its racial prejudices, and its class jealousies an unbiased and all embracing vision Is difficult. Don't assume that all legis- lation which seems to favor your spe- | clal interest must be right, or must be permanently beneficlal even to you. Try to look on all sides. When keen- Iy conscious that wrongs exist it is natural to support the first plausible project for righting them. But as the sick man discouraged becomes the easy prey of the quack, so the citizen discontented becomes the ready mark of the demagogue. X “Therefore, your responsibility as an individual requires you to select well your representative, and to study the problems of legislation. NEARER CITIZENSHIP- Federal Judge Opens Door for the Admission of 288 Porto Ricans Who Refused It in 1917. ‘ San Juan, Porto Rico, Feb. 21.,—By a reversal of his previous attitude that 288 citizens of Porto Rico, who declined American citizenship in 1917 were not eligible to become citizens of the United States because (hey were not foreign citizens and had no allegiance to forswear, Federal Judge Odlin has opened the door for their admission to citizenship. Several of the 288 at different times have made application for citi- zenship, but in each instance the grant was refused, the conrt holi- ing that an act of congresi was neces- s.’ri' before citizenship could .he grahited to them. In th2 «pplication . gitizenship of Justo Adolfo Rau- counsel pointed out that zation laws provided for ttion of ‘"aiiens and and Rauschémplat . citizenship. 'The court < necessary for those of <k seeing citizenship to make in the regular form, ti application Aweil the usua two.year peried, and Pass an examivation In eourt hefere the Anal papers could be lesued When the Jones Act exten led eiti- senship to Forte Rico, it provided that all citizens of Porte RRice would become Amsrican citigens unless they declared in the proper,court their in téntion not 1o accept ritlzenship, WILL PITCH HORSE SHOES, BY GRACKEY Entrants Ready lor National Tournament in §t. Petersburg St, Petersburg, Fla, Feb, 21.~—8ev- eral men of three score or more years are amopg the entrants in the fifth mid-winter national horseshoe pitehs ers' tournament which will be held here this week, beginning today, Some of ithem -are former baseball and football stars of note, Entered in the sport meet are five former national champlons, twelve state champlons and the present na- tional title holder, Frank Lundin of New London, Ia, The former holders are Fred Brust, Columbus, O.; C, C, Davis, Kansas City, Mo, George Ma Akron, O,; Charley Bobbitt, Lancas- ter, 0, and Frank Jackson of Keller- ton, Ja. Of the state champlons now In St Petersburg are G. E. Snyder, Alblon, N. Y.; Harry J. Borne, Atlantic City, N, J.; J. W, Ogden, Kansas City, Mo.; s Wilkes, Battle Creck, Mich,; C. A. Glant, Pittsburgh, Pa.; A, F. King, Akron, O, and Parker Moare, Chicago, 111.; Ralph Spencer, of Pich- er, Okla,, holder of the champlonship in his state is also entered, Harold Faler, described as the oy wonder of Akron, O., has entered in the tournament, In the Des Moines mid-summer meet he defeated C. C. Davis, then national champion. In a recent exhibition game played at Orlando where the Akron youth is in training at a camp established by his father, he again won from Davis, Faler is fitteen and pitches a one and quarter revolution, his shoes landing open at the stake. According to James Todd Flower, vice-president of the natlonal associa- tion, who is already here, there will be a sixty or more contestants repre- senting practically every state in the +{union. Prizes to be distributed among place winners will aggregate $3,000, includ- ing expense money to cover the trans- portation of place winners in the event. The park here where the meet will be held seats 13,000 people. No two pitchers entered here hurl the same kind of a shoe, it is said, and their grips are different and the number of revolutions the horse shoes make' vary from a three-quarter turn to the rapid five five revolutions that almost bend the stakes when they hit. ¥ g ENGLISH OARSMEN TRAIN FOR BIG VARSITY EYENT American Students Competing for Places on Team That Will Row in Classic, Cambridge,, Feb. 21.—Twenty-two American students are rowing with the various college crews at - Cam- bridge, but none of them has risen to a place on the Varsity squad from which eight men will be chosen to Other Girls Had Dozens of | My Cheeks Were Pale ai Colorless: Today I Am As Girls Beca use | Have Health and Popular As Beauty and H_-ve a Well. i 'Fellows—I Was a Wall Flower , My Neck Scra: MyLi B N Aot O Secret of Radiant Rounded the Face and Figure. Try myking this slight change in YOUR MEALS for two weeks and watch for the astonishing results it so often gives. For years [ was so unattractive that I almost cried when I looked at myself in the mirror. Oh, how I envied other fl& whose dance cards were always and who were always sought after by boys, who would not look st me twice. Just two weeks I ol in the changed womsnn who had thin, pale Seare. o hat they £ot pack that magaote ehnn”ol ndh;‘"gulth. This lr&dc stated that the most important element in building a strong, beautiful full of grace and mlfiflm with epar] eyes and rosy cheeks was a peculiar form of iron found in the husks of grain and the peels akins of certain fruits and vege- tables. But modern methods of eoohn! throw these important things away so tha &mhblv 19 people out of 20 lack 100% their blood. I tried mixinga little of fton this form of iron with my meals for two weeks. 1 feel and look years {wk::. with'natural color in my lips and which.‘usd of a|of that ily diet which often been Little sive and may be ol gist under the name of Nusated which should be mixed with your food as directed on each package. sults are often secured in onl; time. For sale by all Crowell's, Fair Dept. Store, ‘Store, and Dickinson Drug Co. pazatively ing - btained from Mfi- City Drug Moore Bros. Sanitary Fish Market IS THE PLACE TO SELECT YOUR FRESH FISH—A BIG VARIETY AND FINE QUALITY TO SELECT FROM Native Fresh l{erring; deseive 108 Elegant Shore Haddock ....... 15¢ Native Frost Fish 15¢ Elegant Snapper Blues .......... 18¢ Medium Mackerel . . 18¢ Rockport Cod Steak 22¢ Scrod Steak ...... 22¢ b b Large Bloater Mackerel ....... 22¢ Ib Fancy Butterfish .. 25¢ 1b Southern Mullett .. 25¢ b Penobscot Salmon, 28¢ b Fancy White Halibut 38¢ b Lake Champlain * Smelts ......... 45¢ b Fillet of Haddies .. 30c Finnan Haddies, Live and Boiled Shrimp, Round and Little Neck Clams, Boneless Salt Cod 18¢ 1b, 3 b for 50¢. All kinds of Salt, Smoked and Canned Fish. Blue Point Oysters. Try our Indian Neck Oysters. Opened fresh every day at our market. They are fine. We are open till 9 o’clock Thursday evening. NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1928, Forced to Quit | dally workouts, Later on the coach- | fne oid Georgian stove and quill pens |earlier of the surviving ledgers, the Yace, the erew will be housed in|quiet bedrooms everlooking a peaceful the traditional quarters at Putney Last year, with a shell full of vet. | house, which is in Fleet Street erans, Cambridge won. It was fourtlt sueccessive vietery ever ford. This year only three old Biues| This tradition began in the are back to (ake places in the Cam- |teenth eentury. bridge boat, 11, G, Ivery, K. N, Uraig could not be depended upon to get and T. 1o, A, Collett, all of Pein-|(one down to business on time, so one broke, There are few good heavy |,nl the partners was assigned to sleep welghts from whom te pick, but thelat the bank. lighter tryouts are quite promising. In the old days a leather black- The undergradutes are confident of | jack hung outside the deor of the another triumph, bank being at the sign of "Ye Olde Colenel D A, Wauehope, whe!jcather Rottell" stroked the '08 boat, is directing the i) 4 part of the bank, and so is a Ox-|the big front door with a huge key, seven- Mitre Tavern. Under the carpet is & garden in the rear of the banking | hole through which wine barrels used |county Jail at Geshen, having Evs 10 be lowered into the vaults, new [seatenced to 15 days each by Justics the | ery merning at nine e'clogk he unlocks plled with deed and plate hoxes A slaircase leads to handsome fam lly apartments, where every day the In those days coaches partners still luneh areund a gleam- ing mahogany table, using an old sand sprinkler for & pepper pot. A wafer. holder serves as a mustard jar, The chairs about the table were made by Chippendale especially for the room, and around the walls hang portraits of the generations of eldest sons whe The black-jack 1s/have ruled the bank, | Pepy's account is to be seen in the It |ing will be conducted by Pealy, the|aading machines have not nolsed their records that he deposited 200 pounds | | | | Congressional committee may In-,1 vestigate the forced retirement of | Maj, Gen, Adalbert Cronkhite, shown above, who has written In protest to President Harding, The gene! re- cently charged that high officials in Washington had been hamperTe® his | efforta to force prasecution of those responsible for the killing of his son, Alexander P, Cronkhite, near Camp Lewis, Wash,, in 1918, —————————————————————— make the annual race against Ox- ford, March 24, The Americans will have their competitive spirits put to the test soon, however, when the annual Lent Bumping races take place, Every afternoon nowadays the oarsmen on the varsity squad dip their shell into the Cam, on whose narrow, twisting course they will practice until the latter part of Feb-|coeding eldest son as head of the firm, ruary. Then the shell will be taken up to the more favorable water at Ely, and soon afterward to the upper|this da The fortnight just before | Hoare sleeps every night in one of the Thames, OLD ORDER PASSES | =which rgmained overdrawn when he est banks in London, and goes by the old Rowing Biue. Although there will probably be many shifts in the seats before race day, R, A, 1. lai- four, a nephew of Lord Balfour, I8/ almost sure to held his job as coxswaln, Halfour does not share the size of his uncle He welghs only 126 pounds way into the business. In the rear is a parlor sald te be bullt en the site of Dr, Sold for $3007 " LATELY IN VIENNA Customs of the Past Are Pleasant {0 Recall f London, eb, 21.-~The bank in which Samuel Pepys kept an account died—has just celebrated its 260th an- niversary, It is one of the three old- name of Messrs, Hoare & Company. Since the beginning it has been ruled by the Hoare family, eldest son suc- According to the police, an East 8ide, New York, white e gang ab- ducted Helen Goldstein (above) and sold her to two men for $300, Time has not changed many of the customs begun by the founders. To a member of the house of Johnson's in 1680-—long after the diary stops. Pepys soon overdrew the account by 13 pounds, and it never thercafter |balanced, later, Cromwell did busi- ness at the bank, but his aceount did vnol slip into the red, | e JAILED FOR THEFT OF COAL, Middietown, N, ¥,, Feb, 21-—=Eimer Wyant of Modena and Jerry Hab. cock and William Spring of New- burgh have been locked wp in e Leca |Creay of New Windsor for theft of coal belonging to the New York Military academy, which was I [treight cars on the Ontarie & West- e siding at Medena, MPST GO TO CHURCH 50 TIMES ' Dartmouth Students Have That Mini- | mum Heguirement Hanover, N, H., Feb, 21.-If Dart- mouth students go to chapel Afty [times between now and commence- ment—forty-one week days and nine Sundays—they will be within the re. |quirements set by the college authori- ties, President Ernest Martin Hopking, |who directed lengthened services re- vently as a result of a vote by unders |graduates that they would rather go to chapel less frequently and stay longer, set this as the number of re- quired attendances for the next se. mester, Previously sixty-five exercises a semester were required, ANNOUNCEMENT OF THE. OPENING OF THE Marion Hat Shop February 24, 1923 WITH A FULL LINE OF SPRING MILLINERY 149 MAIN STREET NEW BRITAIN Your Patronage Is Invited Each had been baking bread . famous in his own neighborhood In six neighboring New England cities, six bakers were making bread famous in their own neighborhoods. Little by little they became friends. Then one day they gathered about a long table, compared recipes, examined each other’s loaves, and told the secrets that long years of experience had given. ing together of the Six Bakers, and eventually their Master Loaf, the bread that is the result of their combined skill and experience. and most particular in the world—ac- cepted it at once for three times a day From that afternoon came the link- moist. New England housewives—the best eaten. These are the Sixz Bakers who came together to make their Master Loaf Dietz Bakery, Holyoke, Springfield Swanson Bakery, Fitchburg Mrs. Chaney’s Bakery, Hartford Emanuelson Bakery, New Haven Reymond Brothers’ Bakery, Waterbury Borck & Stevens Bakery, Bridgeport *“ From that afternoon eame the linking together of the siz men" serving. They liked the firm substan- tial loaf that plenty of milk, sugar and shortening in the recipe gives. Therich deep crust of the Master Loaf and theclose firm texture thatmakes the bread so easy to slice pleased them, too. You, yourself, will find that the rich recipe keeps the Master Loaf fresh and It is good for the lunches that the children carry to school or for your own table use. And best of all, you'll agree that the blend of the rich ingredients that you prefer yourself gives the full wheaty flavor of the best bread you have ever