New Britain Herald Newspaper, April 7, 1926, Page 6

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6 NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 7, 1926, TAKING MUSSOLINI Premlor Mussolini of It the d New Britain Herald| HERALD PUBLISHING COMPANY | making a tour other (wued Dally (Sunday Excepted) At Herald Bldg. 67 Church Btreet SUBSCRIPTION RATES Year, $2.00 Three Months 18c. & Month was to take him to Trip he to A ordered planned visit Itallan cltfes. dispat oo Rome he and Larbor pay him Entered at the Post Ofrice at N a0 Becond Clams Mal) Britaimn Matter But Mussc Fomet not g TELEPHON® CALLS Buriness Office 33 Editorial Roome . 026 Rome¢ fore 1ing A woman with a revolver and fire ank at t The oply profitable advertising mediur | tor 15 h i the City. Circulation booke ani press room always open to advertisers Member of the Associated Press. The Assoclated Press Is exclusive) titled to the use for re-publication all news credited to it or not otherw! credited In this paper wnd also loc news published herein. caving of surge th ons ind minal, en ' A dift hav Itallan dictator, The 3 would meant Member Audit Burenu of (Areulation The A. B. C. 1 & natlonal organization whic? furnishes newspapers and adver- tieers with & strictly honeet analysis of efrculation. Our circulation etatistics are based wpon this audit. This ineurer protection agalust fraud In nawepaper distribution figures to both national and | loca) advertisers, neldent emy tor's he Des asm b widespre whil 18 been worl cismo in The Ferald ts on sale dally York at_ Hotaling’s Newsst i Bchult ewsstands. Central, 42nd Btreet, En lthough T me most part swept away THE FLECTION igham s will ha BINGHAM AND : Senator Hiram B among | ront lods and He senators who ¢ o . the crowds. Some of nd” for re-election 4 len harbor reven has been fi g the of the late that time The Connect having quite a happy t earning reputation one of the he ator se will go B tl id of the state. On Is this yea 5 4 this mo! but luck me in Wash- for | en the premier, Being a dlctator has | ington, a erudite learn espec KISSING BUGS His a University rectly. The o ticula od culture Per! nomina aps the 1 for by ican con- a niche in the had } plain vention this and comes to licity fame write his pla might do o in ¢ iger sing Latin. Tt Senator Bingham will have str pufis, through and preside X | Kissing, on powder 9 "% iead pencils. The and back coattails al- the on his own feet in electio! fair upon a potato, 3 lips of a mai pleasure of riding the not have into the '?!-t"j e ber placed in an of a presidential landslide, Thi dish, told the distressing ¢ kiss the the potato in a fc ated a looked onvenience 1 sledding. The ways lg an in lives of sena much harder crats of the rs and it makes for w Demo- colony like magnifying of state have an oppor- moulds — £l tunity to make it interesting and no doubt will avall themselves fully the chance, frain frrom quarreling among them- long strong strong of rovided they can re- ; 5 | is terrible fo news tha 1 saying to i enougl agree upon selves BOYEN I bushel of soi some senatorial aspirant, if any can be found. One notes t anyfican il | ous always human arc “ifs" in the pol but Senator Bingham little there are some body. ament; firmam : : as been a deal also has'a few of these things lso ha on from time to contend wi bl itics have If and no fi as far on R e Wat I PRIVATE In defying the society Mencken tho sonal grievanc rs Boston, a with of cha society would indica en dead have having Menc of a per- against WOt announ VERMONT'S tled rmont magazine L writer emba Ve they m Union etime Springfield D rld ote ocle that a ba methods in unfavorabl Mend their 1t Chase has up. llion tr som o co-operaling the il Vermont fla other tinue be a ma Sith: the dair enhar bad Appearance situation in di is bucket ar uipment. ernized, or maple lead the lines to oy ly Ay oll, nu ch the happened tol he nlm was hu v w io the more gunning wa ts to do with bugs, A SHOT AT began | which | First merous from clities of the ho- out of ok aim dlet a convention bad Inches dif- isiastic ¢ gov- be for ith the their They go with ul- ionally for did so s with disad- Arkansas has n heard from at last. The par- irning that earn- | this Ozarkian institution of | hall of pub- the either htaway and the airtigh or, developed days and bues, un ol r it and that germs of v: present in the o Te most long g S d T ¢ they distre nd v ma from 1por mor line work VET PENSIONS SPANISH Maybe =aant to be funcral or or on when tu- glass The on b ere- which der t a r le- kissers every- dirt ri f kiss. immemor: sultod, kissing bugs labora- Ar- us of ago. w pro- to the son buckwheat dighes e of of tl other ermont c} ch sap | like | of a personal God cing DECLINING SOLACE OF RELIGION To go to his death like G | Factsand rald Chapman did, is one Wher was born and | thing; 1o decline full solace of L | the chureh in which he u other baptized at ne acing ¢ middle h good Eng ation el death 1s quite h | | difticult ¢ & and o more and unusual procecding It Is a common trait of men, 5 Henry s facing o death, to scek and emb death, to scek and embr R solace of religion and its prom- ise It is ot forgiveness in the aft A fe with Diplomacy: 9 a primordial urg playing choess that causes us to ac t q the pilia ministrations of religion during our | I'rance has point where last hours, and it is one o nothi that it religious experience s st during such a time of le, who A prohibition atmosphere, hut relative humidit that more detalls hanging availa the Chapman arg ears that oving pricst the condemned man luring his la ing hours, consoling him turn thoughts to mect- did ed in ner's wi s 10 or, not sucec ingne full benefit of his faith it of the is said, explained the fail- Man droppir tion plate on a r goes a gallon of gus, ure priest to carry the cruci- i fix before him during the march to the death chaml man, like rately v o refuse You live longer i sleep, but what fur ing if you're not | A ipman, who will the full fits of religious consolation when on de of | Tet . His and |* bene- the eritles d. ablished orde o world will be be the threshold of death, is r ditferent stuff than the avera indicates callousnes explain history. actlon might much of his earlier Futility: Trylng t mad at a Secretary whyle taxes are con For a man bereft of every vestige likely menace of religlous instinet is moro the | that Chapman to do wrong to be At any rate hob “nough time to perr curli to soclety was—than one who felt the reality An ambassador truth! How a should bother There has been some speculation as to Chapman's attitud not with a vie th body rd re- ligion, w of talning his personal views only, ascer- put| It won't do. A s out of curiosity regarding what such a bandit really thought of the here- after. It 1s sald that he believed in | but did not re- | Him as a personal God. In as might be a Supreme Being, | gard other words, Chapman, ‘Nut;w‘cl(‘d did not consider himself | accountable to God nor man; which | i might account for his mode ot life. Americanism: Rid and wondering if th room really have m Throughout the ordeal of the exccu- tion one cannot help admiring the dig- nity of Father Barry, the spiritual The priest’s claim for the body, and the splendid manhood and churchl adviser of the condemned man T s Looking back at ge that kings at case in the pre Hoy arrangement of a burial in conse- was the himself a friend of the monstrous past like Christ over- the thief on the | crated ground, ot of one ! who considered as a gentleman clo the much D who, | | That *“vague, unc universal in the light ones all the overlooked of Chapman looked the of The happily o have nothin out, but fu same old thir cross. Just as Chapman, born in a re- i a atmosphe unfortunately off when he shook the hold of religious this s to Correct cided where 1id she, “and v crook, so | de And worse anets me Pl 1 di ' Anderson, 1 void of religious s it cted by Publ learne was in (Prote than Chapman, son, was this respect hav heen an elst. Here we have two men, hotl modern time ely denied the Jame of —_— who fully and compe o nce of religion in their lives et man in South ) in d n s | pair who were materialists; w W a glorious gospel, instead of bei planted the fence and to 3 f He of ‘ upon his voice, ; no ch him. interes er 1o th line t Brita Qu was one liospi against Those of a cha ate a trolley art of New through Stanley brotherhood of man the money by hook or crook.” What ads to can be in- | such materialism It ferred from their ignoble ends. Francisc for Bohemian life o tory k) [tee on railroads Hollywood. [tee eome to zag ke chain was held sever no report has been | The city elcction In the third ward t two sets of tickets, lidate for only the can Drunken driver . { lightning and are hout vastating. t-and-dry he b h Wash it on c more thrilling 1f {other cilman. ngton would mode H somehody sald sometl ndit was The bers of t {was held ve officer B G Hu f a About will s in the ne ted that de fr rs. friend, The yes- Camp M aud N w Mrs. Chu round Jles four in L. A\ Hat haps ¥ or paf u r of which T tays. T of the brought tal ecc 1s0n is f1 1 up Altho in Hanr boxing Hamil match 1 Bill or se secured on school 1 how s on how T to mention [ nlicensed D Another a good scout, lions who wish only abou much as a good cry. iny Sunday awake? at Geneva would be too far a soft-soap the farme It seems impossih who try it again laugh at Premlers of and such were so mary 25 Years AFU Today Lampher “p pool of clling company to oper- hrough the north ten to the chairman of the to have the commit- | number New Britain {over the proposed 1 \derman and the | ley nd around ) stree trop! ven Fine of $50 Fancies a wlill there's a o &4 | Maxs | »ml ull unnmunlflllun- o l un || Shop kditor, care 0f the New || Britain Herald, and your fetter || will be forwarded to New York | [ N | Don't Let's Be Copy-Cats, Folks! |There may be clouds in April's sky, But is that any reason why 1'1 here should be clouds in ours? We s the one In scews an affect. | ! | | | | at that, He ome advertising. W stubborn men the lives of mil- to be let alone. t ng the 80 reached will help s make the day! | Let fun shine every bate may it won't ¢ v clear hange That Rich Flavor Roger: “Clff read somewheres the cigarette brand he uses is Herbert: Roger "“u now he bufters them | oking. | THE EDITOR SPEAJ To the many Fun Shoppers who | have so generously and so excellent- ly contributed to THE FUN SHOP, we wish to offer our hearty thanks say: Keep it up, In general, contributions are al- ways in order for thq sensationally |popular KRAZY KOLLEGE and | KRAZY KINDERGARTEN series. | In order to be a member of these classes in good standing, get hold |of your dictionary and evolve origin- |al and refreshing twists to ordinary 0 make the peo- | words. of the Treasury | Poems of 4 to 24 lines, on every ning down. | general topic, are decidedly welcome, |1f you have what you think is an e cellent humorous idea in verse, send it in. If your poem ueeds re-touch- we'll do it Carfoon ideas and cartoons will be warmly received, and Carl Anderson | will lend his best artistic efforts to make acceptable any cartoon that has a real, genuinely funny idea, tart fn today with a new deter- | mination—{o contribute to Krazy | Kollege, Krazy Kindergarten, also | |verse, cartoons, jokes, epigrams, | short prose burlesques, children's sayings, in short—anything that's | | smart, crisp, clever, and humorous, —M. F. J. oin in th t you get enough | 1 18 there in live o thelr worst, Tf r can't survive it, ter for a change, hed hair saves mit a good job of used of telling bsurd that any. to deny it. | uper-government | y to T, The Right Type “Your credentials ory,"” said a manufacturer to-a youth who was applying for the job as a ‘Have you a grandmother?” No, sir. Any dear old Aunt?" No, sir.” Or any other relatives who might during the 1926 basehall ling in a Pullman | lose in the noney. state- | | but widowers again, 2 Atds it now, it seems "Il do. Come in tomorrow for sence of Colonel ~—Richard I. Lewine. When a man showers attentions it | asy feeling isn't > lis a pretty good sign that a girl is | riy Some wear | . going to attend showers soon! | WHAT KING SOLOMON HAD TO | LISTEN TO to Leon Dahnemann) | “I don't care if she is your hundred and seventy-eighth wi I'm your elght hundred and seventh and T guess I have a right to dress just as well as she does! You hought | 700 hat's didn't you? Well, where's mine? I'm not going to make th hideous rag do another year just be- | | cause your fifty-ninth wife does “If you don't get rid of those three women you married last month I'm | | going home to mother! I can't bear are those to quarrel about the | (According ied new Iways | “John de- the shrubs,” argue about nt dn't ishers Syndicate) arrested & He found er | hanging on 1t the top i vas taken to the will be o here! You told Wife Number | 446 that you spent the evening with | sick friend, and vou told Number vou had trouble with your char * Then you have the nerve to tell you were detained at the offic t fen't that I'm jealous, Sol, but | T think you are paying too much at- | to Wife . The other wives are beginning 1(» H.‘ nd if you're not careful there'll be a scandal. nding | Look at this nice cake I baked for writ- | you today “0-0-0h! igh rect, (o pressed | granting | in the tentiol in and exte parter have commit Sol's hateful wife my ducky boy a wifie number 809 Did 9 give and go |black eye? Let Tho hear- |Kiss it and make it well but | boy loves me more than all the res | of s wives put togeth number $00!" | Gt Sweetum al days ago, made was Deld today. he Soclalists h one having or | r, do Kis Al e A Nuisance suppose they ring a | used fo, | | that it Visitor: “I curfew in this town? Native: “Wall—no. They but folks got to complainin' disturbed their sleep.” —Walter H. Coblentz. late for coun- ors in the six | W W. H. Corbin, James Eagan, ng of the mem- itain Institute and the follow- o Corbin, 1 e NOW YOU GIMME A | | DECE O' YOUR CANDY, | [ OR VLL SNIP OFF | YOUR SUSPENDER 1 | asurer, Wiard; direc- W. H. Hart, F. " Platt. for new | and it s will be Max g her Meriden Terrors wiped nvight Street 18-0. h of t t deser cary ANDERSON —— en in this section. | IN KLASS AT KRAZY KOLLEGE Kioens andl (Conducted by M. F. J.) cived with | Teacher: “While Miss Gertrude is knitting ‘a hot water bottle for the charity |bazaar, I will k 'l‘!m': to | favor us with Adam Thing The IVl owlet cries: } n Jack | Barrett was one | kne was re entist Is fivr “Hoo hoo—hoo two ntal Ii'l crow en 1"l chicken peep,’ illegal don’t m al” on de s its raucus ca goes e LTl peep peep— He | But | er sug- | any sound at KRAZY KINDERGARTEN ncted by Gertrude, Jr.) |Tuh show my sister Malzie, Bur | tent Sigil"? | shing as chief of are satisfact- | 27 { Africa. | rived from the Anglo. | death; | desig] | seldort. {of residence. {nut m the mean, It Is always greater than 29 days. At any fixed place on the earth, therefore, two full moons cannot occuy in February. Q. How many Liberty Head nick els were coined in 1912 and 1013 by the United States? A. In 1912 $1,747,436.70 worth of GETS INSURANCE A \Judge Rules Parents Are En- | nymieact, tn iho Jargot oty in 1 {itled to Govt, Compensation |the United States In population and | |area? | A. New York city. Q. Why is Charles Dickens some- |times referred to as the novelist of |Fetorm? [the dcath of their son, Frank Jos- A. Because he felt tho movement [eph, who ivas killed at Seicheprey, among the British laboring classes |while serving with Company C, which was shaking England at the [102nd Infantry. The suit centered time he wrote and becauge he did laround tho question of whether or 50 much to portray the feelings and |not the youthful soldier had made |living conditions of these clagses in [application for government insur- | his novels. His books have had a unce. The government, represented |great influence in better understand- Ly Attorney Lawrer A. Lawler of ing of the problems of laboring | Washington, claimed that he had | classcs. 10t ISTIONS ANSWERED Q. How fs the name of Governor | The {o, ay Finchot of Pennsylvania, pronounc- 1917, ed? parents, | A. It s pronounced ‘(ll- *0" being lon s in Q. What is meant by fority complex”? A. In psychology, the term comple refers to associntion of ideas; mental elements knit togeth- er. The inferiority complex is a group of ideas centering around cer- tain experiences or thoughts which |make the individual keenly con- sclous of his own lack of ability, power, etc., and gives him a certain sense of hurt or inferiority. Those |suffering from the inferiority com- iplex often try to cover the ct by being mora self-aseertive, opinion- ated and disagrecably —self-centercd [than others. Q. What s the {Kill an oak tree? The simplest gay 's to ring or |girdle the tree, cutting o deep enough to cause it to die. The tree can bhe allowed to stand wi danger and cut down when desire suade’ i SOLDIER'S FAMILY I seen a guy do de Charleston " \ And foist he toined his toes In | Den dissuade go like crazy ~Jullet Fay Costill, (Copyright, 1926, Reproduction Forbidden) Haven, April 7 (®—Judgo |Edwin 8 Thomas has awarded John and Marguerite Mendillo $10,000 for w young man enlisted in Aug- without the knowledge of e at the time, Boucher, postal employe v platoon sergeant in the testified that he had talked men in his company taking out insurance. He that Mendillo did not consent plan until the company was front line trenches in France, of protecting the rricdly consummated. taken into a dugout ry papers. Bou- had witnessed You can nst, | question of writing " to Now Dri t an answer fact or information by the Question Editor, in Herald, Washington au, ew York avenue, shington, D. C., enclosing two ents in stamps for reply, Medical, | legal and marital advice cannot be given, nor can extended pesearch bo undertaken. All other questions will receive a personal reply. Un- slgned requests cannot be answered. All letters are confidential—Editor. Q. Wl Latin phrase was “Pin-sho ‘go.” 1 “Infer- \\ ahot suid to the in the ()} family Mendillo being to sign the nce cher sald that the signature, Three months later the man was killed in action. [Junk Dealer hned For Buying ol Bow stolen from the Connecticut nd Power company and sold to Phillip Seiderman of 117 Willoy street by three boys of a minor age ulted in the arrest of Seiderman 4 coneequent fine in court this A request of the accused | man that put on probation | granted by Judge B. W. Alling. ¢ of $15 and cost was meted The costs made the fine total is the meaning of the he “Thesaur Amer Sep- young A. The meaning is “Seal of tho Treasury of North America.” The complete words aro “Thesauri Amer- leae Septentrionts Sigillum.” Q. What are the names of tho “Sherlock Holmes” books by Sir Ar- thur Conan Doyle? A. “Adventures Holmes" (1892), * lock Holmes,” (1 Sherlock Holmes" Last Bow” (1917.) 2. What is the rate of expansion | of water when it passes from the liquid to the solid state? A. It expands about 1-11 of ifs | volume; that is, one volume of water | forms 1.0008 volumes of i easicst way to of herlock Memoirs of Sher- ), “Return of (1905), and "Hlsi and morning. he be Qbservation On The Weather Q. Who succeeded General Per- | f(yashington, April 7.—TForecast staif of the army? |for Southern New England: Rain Major General John L. Hines. | tonight and probably Thursday How many independent states | morning; warmer tonight; colder in there in Africa and what are |western Massachusetts Thursday, | west ehifting winds becoming north- a, pt and Abyssinia | west only independent states in | Foreeast for Fastern New York: All other countries in Africa | Rain in south and rain or snow in under the dominfon of Great|Thursday morning; warmer 1in | France, Italy, Belgium or {north portions tonight and poesibly | Thursday morning; warmer in Q. What is the meaning and ori- | southeast portion tonight; colder gin of the name “Walbrink?" Thursday; fresh shifting winds b A. It is an old English name de- | coming northwest. axon “wal” | Conditions: aning ughter, or | pressure prevails this morning from “brink” or “brenk" |the lower lake region southwest- Hence the brink or |ward to Texas with center of mini- It is a locality | mum pressure over Arkani Rains into a family name to [have been quite general fn the cilff | Mississippl valley, the Ohlo Valley, the lake region and ecastward ov When the boys were placed on | the stand they admitted having sold ap to Sciderman on many oc- nd the last time they re- 5 cents. the case of Joseph 2 Allen street who gave s being in the A Q. On request Chanda of 1 [ himself up last night with Tgnatz Wisk when the lat- alleged to o struck car helonging to Alfred Balducei of 12 Derby “street, was continued un- til Saturday to be tried with that of Wisk, Bonds were placed at $300. He, like Wisk, will be arra under three charges, driving while | under the influence of liquor, reck- A long trough of low ||\ "y i iine "and evading responsi- bility. John Sarisky of 152 Wilcox street was fined $5 and costs for driving without an operator's license, we car the ter was a Britain, Holland. “wael,” mes and meaning edge. precipice of death. name, made nate persons living by the or precipice of dangor. Q. Of what nationality { Ney, the pianist? He is a German, born in Dus- | {or ! PUTSCH FRUSTRATED the middle Atlantic and New Eng-| Budapest, April 7 (P—% ration |land states. Pressure remains |of an attempted putsch “of serious on the Pacific coast and high over | character,” is announced in a police ns states from Texas north- |report today. A band of mperatures are h states, Ohlo student it =ays, was caught north Atlantie mobilizing last week for an armed o5 ocourre v into Czechoslova Six of the ringleaders were arreste s vicinity | An unofficial version of af- and not | falr has it that a former archduke | was implicated. fs Elly a0 “fanatical university the southern Q. How often should a nafnraliz- ed American citizen visiting abroad | Te @ the Ameriean cousul- ate in order to retain his citizenship? | A. If intending to stay more than | two years in a forcign country he |should register semi-annually at the | | American consulate nearest his place d else- and rainy weat inge in temperature. cloudy much famous | Q. How fast does the s glacier Mer de Glace move A. Mer de Glace has been found to move an inch an hour in the cen- summer and at half that v in winter, What is the w foot of a AT pounds. How e e e e “FAST 1S EAST AND WEST IS WEST"~— But every country has national dishes which It knows best how to i And, here's & bulletin that tells you how to take advantage of the el t'of forelgn cou eight of a cubic 1 Mexlco, u has_c The Turkey, , Hungary, Ital Washington Bur s for making them. les? our aries from about 28 to 32 you wieh a copy, fill out the coupon below and mail s direct- are Pecan Pralines | CLI¥ COUPON HERE { COOKERY EDITOR, Washington Bureau, New Britain Herald, k. D. C. copy of the bulletin FOREIGN DISHES, and enclose herewith U. E. postago stamps, or coln for same: 2 cups of brown st cup boiling water togetl for five minutes. Add one cup pec ats and 2 tablespoons butter. Cook for five minutes. Remove from | the stove, beat hard for one minute, | five then drop by spoonsful on a buttered pan. Q. tull moons to occur A. The average interval between | full moons is about 29 days 12 hours and 44 minutes and though | the actual interval may vary from | i 22 New York Avenus, Washington, T want a nts in loose, uncancelled, I‘.\ME TWould it be possiblo for two in February? ST. & NO. or R. R. ... SEEMDS A YEAR -~ THE MINUTE T By GLUYAS WILLIAMS — — YOU HAVE JUST INTRODUCED SOMEBODY WHOSE NAME VOU OUGHT TO KNOW BUT DONT, AND HAVE GOT AROUND T BY MUMBLING IT UNDER VOUR BREATH WHEN THE OTHER- POIR FISH CHIRPS UP BRIGHTLY THAT HE DIDN'T possibl possibly Reddy. stop looking so tuff and |prove you can use the werd ‘dis- QUITE GET THE NAME | PLEASE {Copyright, 1926, by The Bell Syndicate, Inc. 1

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