New Britain Herald Newspaper, January 5, 1927, Page 12

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 5, 1927. | ) ‘ appeal. |would have been possible for what the legislative action will be, “MY TWEN'I'Y_ FOUR HOURS” ‘KIP, L“SES IN In refusiog @ new trial the aP- | Rhinelander to have carried ,,,JHMJL T0 WORK HARD FOR |Seracor st sata today. . pellate division held that Rhine- B g lander knew that his bride was |3% higher with the c wo,ooo DORMITORY FUND Twenty-Six Di . o o . appellate division. - wenty-dIX Die B B M 1 P 0/ ltal part negro, and that Mrs. Rhine- ‘ ST y entfo Musso ini, r’'remier 'y {lander did mot deceive him in this| Rhinelander married Alice Bea- | From Bad Booze told to respect. The decree of Justice |trice Jones of New Rochelle, a|Senator and Colleagues Pleased To| Hartford, Dec. b.—Deaths from as to | Morschauser allowing $12,000 coun- |servant girl several years his sen- S Pl e n alcolholism in Hartford during 1926 : L T i |sel fees and $300 a month alimony [ior and the daughter of a negro . |aggregated twenty-six, the third THOMAS B. MORGAN, Rome Manager of the United Press Annulment Denied, He May Now 5., <5eo Siowea. crachman "t "5 il nsigh S et ke s 4 & 3 4 i : : . woman, on October 14, 1924, He vere instituted in 1881, and ex- Copyright 1927 by United Press Associations. Mrs. Rhinclander was awarded dotc lo \ : | were inst 5 hahia v 'gd e et ivutbited Go fo nghfil‘ Tribunal 5300 @ ‘month alimony and $3,000 |1eft heg on November 20, and five| Senator Edward F. Hall and his ceeded only by the figures of twenty i i e R e P A |counsel fees on December 27, 1924, [days ldter starled a suit for an-fcolleagues who are to represent|nine in 1906 and thirty-two in 1003, in all parts of the world, slightly more than a month after [Ulment, charging that she had de-|New Britain at the state capitol this| Since 1922 a steady increase has New York, Jan. 6 () — An ap-iper wealthy young husband left her 001‘"{0‘1 1;511" "“ ;‘0 J"" °°1°‘”‘m .|y are pleased with the an- been apparent in alcoholic deaths N a " sel | . Eli; . ones, mother o t that the state board of |in thi it In 1919 d 1920 tw k bt by Bes Mus: i to|peal to the highest state tribunalfon advice of counsel for his father, | st nouncemen n this city. In an o (This 15 the first of a series of articles on his dally life and work by Benito Mussolinl, as told to|p Phitte, Rniniandor. | Up to. uhe|Mrs. Rhinclander, expressed satls- |education will seck 500,000 for & |deaime cam yinr wene mirieted o Thomas B. Morgan, Rome manager of the United Press. Each article in this series has been personally |is expected to follow a' decision that v : et | eod, comesdted” and approved 'y, Preniles Mussolini) Leonard Kip Rhinelander must re-|present she has collected approxi- |faction over the court decision. dormitory for the normal school that cause. Then, in 1921, the low Feviscd,scorrected P ’ 8 main wedded to Alice Jones Rhine- |mately $7,200 alimony. In October,| “It has been a long year waiting|here this year, and they will exert record mark was established, when , $3,500 additional counsel fees |for the verdict, and if it had not[every effort to influence favorable|only one death was placed under the 3 EFFICIENCY THe appellate division o the|Were allowed. been for our visit to my relatives |action, the senator declared today. |alcoholism classification. PRECEPTS U SS SCORES BEAT 26,-appa i s T ky dissented a|in England during the summer| Senator Hall played an Important| y. 4. ¢ e Yol tn- . eme court yesterday re-| Justice Lazansky dissented on a e i d D n the following year the total in. Master your body and mind. INITED PRE. e e trial to. the slon of |point of law, holding that the tril |months, I do not belleve that Alice [role in having the school Building | oreqgeq to twelve. Ror 1923 fourteon Concentrate on the one thing Y MUSSOLINI || of' New vorics stacs: famitcs court haa mado a sorious ervor in could have ~stood up under ~(ho ferected in New Britain. o worked \orc'vaported, increasing to nineteen Rplone au, : WITH SERIES B A In his annulment suit against his|its charge of the jury. The jury|strain sald Mrs. Jones at her|for a dormitory appropriation, but |y, yosq " twenty-four in 1925 and seven hours' sound slecp. ‘ : ek he ehargon she de. |was told, he held, that no presump. |home in New Rochelle. because ot the larse amount. In- | enty_six in 192, £ eI arten the o One of the outstanding newspaper exploits of recent || %5 ", 1" 10 ner negro blood. |tion grew out of the failure of Mrs.| “There has been so much pub- Towed I the chool Diniding, that] More than half of the year's total papEOR RS enIngs - T years is revealed in the release today by the United Press Tho dissenting opinion of one of | Rhinclander to testify or make de-|lished about her and about our |item was sidetracked. '‘he origital o reported in the last four month, R ethoanenipapars hile of a series of articles by Premier Benito Mussolini, in |[the five judges. it is said, will per-|nial of Rhinelander's testimony |family that is untrue. We hope that Plan carried a dormitory 8| Four deaths occurred in September, dressing. A R T ) being taken to the|that she had told him she was not |we can be allowed to continue life | Of the present building. {four in October, five in Noveémber ’ lander, negress. shave. “f am anti-whiskers” || which Mussolini tells the intimate, personal story of his ||mit the T e Naptias catbe il o Untll the schedule of requested|and one in December. Drink a glaes of milk for break- daily life. N. Mills, counsel for Rhinelander,| Had all judges upheld the deci-| Mrs. Rhinelander was not avail- |appropriations is perused there wiil| —_— 1At The articles were secured exclusively for newspapers |[|announced that he should advise an [sion of Justice Morschauser, it{able to newspapermen. be little opportunity to forecast| READ HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS n " receiving United Press service through the enterprise of It has been my rule of life to em- Thomas B. Morgan, Rome manager of the United Press. ploy the body and mind to render |} Thay were in large part dictated to Mr. Morgan by Mus- the maximum output. We have not o e q vet fully exploited the potentialities solini. For an hour or more each da)j over a period of four of physical and mental man to the weeks Mr. Morgan worked side-by-side with the Premier, point of calling him efficient. Just assisting in the formulation, revision and correction of the now, we can but meditate on those artinlen possibilities and try to attain as best . . . " . we can the limit of our capabilitie: Securing the consent of the Italian Premier to author- 1 believe as William James, tha ship of such a strongly personal series of newspaper arti- the use of all our mental and ph cles was a task requiring a high degree of personal ability . n . . ) R Vo u:lnr;:;fs"}i“;r\'r.‘;\?nl:xl? r;:,:,’,'.:,'l,;::r:o 2‘\\“6 and tact. It demonstrated the confidence which Mussolini ne story of a glrl, who fell lntO a trap ?} | / \§\ Y g ! & can even imagine, should we use || Teposes in the United Press organization and its Rome of- these faculties with proper coordi- || fice. Mussolini is regarded by his followers as the busiest . Y o h """'I""v e iy man in the world. He works intensively 14 to 16 hours a whlch a human wOIf had balted wlt gold fRdeote s i Z‘;;i“’w'_”" with || day. He personally holds seven portfolios in ilis own gov- o oD L LCe) hand, ernment, Every minute of each day is scheduled in ad- et Ot sl Fi u]r:":!i-‘ vance for some definite thing the Premier must do. Per- | HOUGH her mother was dead, and her busy father almost a stranger, recting the government. I pour out || sonal efficiency is his fetich; hard work his gospel. He { there were few advantages that Beverl had not enjoyed. Yet, at liie same enthusiasm on a simple e R f 1| consented to publication of the series of articles largely in % . YR ities. i Sy para. || the belief that his own example of efficiency might do eighteen, she knew almost nothing about life’s realities I work hard. My mind works on that | | some good in the world. Her first test came when her father lay at the point of death. His great which I will it to work. Should it be | rced to change Its train of thonght | fear for her future touched her deeply. The coming of Hugh Stanford, to take up another, it can do it with il e b e s e p | my window open, there is need that such a breakfast as mine, There fs however, altered all that. - Stanford, her father said, was rich and powerful. " | the lungs resume actively their fune- , no fruit. There is no toast. There ous matter completely behind. It is | rlci [ 5 3 : & issuig lately b It i5 | tions for a working body and not a | are no sausages, ham and eggs, nd for Beverly and her future would be oo S that jehich is before | sieeping one. That operation just | breakfast foods or anything which He would make an ideal husba Y 3 ¢ 1 choose for it its work. |iyeq o minute or two and I am | would typify the modern breakfast. assured. then all else is left outside for that | 5 T i = % then in my bath. There is even no coffee, for I do not moment. With such a power, the | i ¢ g 7 r v 5y ¢ irin, mind is always ready to devote its| ¥ bath is always tepid, the | drink coffee in any form,—it is not But at first sight of Other Inspiring ature of the body. T am not | @ food, it is disastrous for brain- full capabilities to that wh ;] LGS 4 ; e ), 1 il wille, umhimdered by oo #he | Jisciple of the cold bath the first | Workers, My breakfast simply con- him, Beverly’s heart [ February True Story Stories In the = | thing in the morning, for the reason , Sists of a glass of milk and is a mat- pressions which try to push them the functions of the system | ter of one minute. I drink it at the quailed. Hewasa blg Has Seventeen Blg February Issue Are: seves into its gearing to disturb it: 4 = R xers a & | 1 o re; i table in small gulps so that it might 2 R tar ¢ b ctiovng. have not reached their maximum ate- ea . 5 V,‘,m,:;:i Rule momentum and to require the heart b"\‘]’_r&i’"_”!' -“““"‘“]“L‘_ Ao mlan éwth 601(31’:&25?1 Features: “The Cast-Off Wife” — i B el STt | Milk is a wonderful food, per- — - s This mastery over body and brain | £1d nervous organs to resist a cold | | MIK 1s a wondertul food, per- colgrecyeseran I Married for Money, “Every man sows wild travels with me the day long and the | P3th is asking too much of them be- | haps Pl stinctively disliked and {4 3 £ A el fore they have properly put on fu g as k conta A n = H - A GG IR Al T e e et ts Fistalnins feared him right from the graiiow oats, if not before mar Sup el e rton Rl g | SR LRI R TR Y T R e sy, Usteat bl VEpirs st The Secret Shadow riage, then after mar- ey e aoi, T vk et tmport | Rencs, It s jalaas Gl miice I8 He Cannot Forget This Secret riage.” Trueornot, thatis S i /3 ' a a ea oV . o which form part of the nervous sys. | &1ce o the latter. T perform it my. | 471 00 for & A7, Bot & Svest BUCt There wasno question, | I Hated My Husband Until— what theéytold Joanwhen ie: tha % se anc briskly, ver; briskly., | i d & .. h et Could steep in | will not allow S s S Eiog. as | honor T can bestow upon anyone te however, that he was The Cast-Off Wife she married]Jack,whohad sicep soundly during a bompardment |1 10 M3 rub-down to my own lfkdng | to Invite them 2aiet il greatly taken with Was I Too Hasty? sworn to her that he had mander would permit me after long | forced to circulate and I feel my | e e oy 'r:ul;:; e beauty; and though al- An Amazing Trick of Fate Joansaidin her heartthat lays and nights incessant conflict, | Whole being somehow springing into | Withdraws. She is and silent, 7 : t0 snateh even fifteon mimites sltep, | action. The skin is refreshed and | uncommunicative. itnd ways courteous, the Her Stanl'mg Excuse if Jack ever went astray, Even now, on big days, such as the | Fidden of all redunbant surplus| It s 7:30 and T am ready to take strange gleam in his eye Fools’ Gold she would sow some wild : £idas g1 8 rit07 b e e etV {ay | my morning canter. 3 A U R T U e g e o) Hevaloh [Brernfer as he watched her every I Tried to Get Even oats of her own. Read cil, which reaches long into 1 . | : : ; : S o T A Trained Reader Bugsalit (el whny e oo sdh movement, filled her Almost Married what happened when she ~ 7] o e | S ay of recrea . o . . o . sleep and return to work refreshed | When I come from the bath, the | his one Tour a day of recreation. heart with a kind of More Foolish Than Guilty thought the time had and relaxed. newspapesr are brought to me. I|Also, he definitely answers f > Ordinarily T g0 to bed at midnight | Tead them while dressing for my | world-wide rumors that he is afflict- secret terror. In Search of Love arrived to put her vow and rise at seven. The orders are that | horseback 'fl“0~ 1 o1 (e of those | ed with an incurable malady. My Punishment to the test. T or to be disturbed except | Who can truly say that he was once e ¢ Btcis ot v ,: .,:,,d,::.":’,m"“‘i\::,‘,‘; a newspaperman and responding to | Approximately 600 lions in Cal- A Forced Don’t Ever Tell My Daughter! i 18 n) Y “ s "__ ShNbsodhy ehat good i Caw ] my training T can glance through | ifornia kill 30,000 deer yearly, or Marriage Love Is All That Counts Fools’ Gold”—is the g S experi- | twice the number killed by hunters. 3 ioa ¥ noy immediata > - [ them With the eyerot’ the yexperl. | Lice i MAmBer sl Y RIRIER and Yet— true story of a girl who, gency of communicating it and the | nced editor. To dress while reading | % SR - < i q Joy of its anmounceratnt will be|ls not a difficulty. The dressing $s | ficult because it can mot be trapped Yet therewas “Daddy left to the tender mercies enjoyed another two or three hours | attribute whiskers. Fascism s much more greatly relished after a | @ Durely mechanical function ~nd | or poison —whose death might of the neighborhood at e e Sopnel el e e e T come at any hour. Stantord had told him the death of her parents, ran away and dream might intervene anc o | conscious thought. s ] s ; B e 1 mieen i ia e | be a subject for mental expenditure. YOUR SICK CHILD of his wish to marry Beverly; and to please joined a circus when she was seventeen. oW n the morning is a great ani- | el g0t ver 'm*}“y-lK“;;";fif’?\"‘?(’;: her father, that he might die in peace, she ~ She had thought that the constant travel, dot o bt make the physical agenci g 7 2 2 = e .:,m?"_'(',m rule—adopt- | the operation in dressing takes, work ' had finally yielded to Stanford’s love- the music, color and excitement would be B om o ione Dvnone s RICOmAHCHY, It B3 oncls “,,’}"’;", ls CONSTIP TED. making—though inwardly she shrank from very romantic. At first she could not un- gihieven R e e nansaiteor e his very touch. d_erstandwhy Henri Dubou, the handsome and T find that It per. | becomes an added product “of the ring-master, took such a fancy to her. Her wits & generous rest. the disturbing | mental mechanism, which it c eloments being all eliminated from | perfectly well accompish while the Nevertheless, she forced herself to go s}lbsequent adveptures taught her some the mind, putting it in repose. . The | { re occupied elsewhere, Tl Lttt “Afierall” sheeasomad life-lessons she will never forget. fact s that T have only be k- | My shave comes before I put on Mol R ot through with it. terall,” shereasoned, 3 ; ; ned (hree times since 1 . 1 have become rather Hurry, Mother! Remove poi- “does love really mean so much? This “In Search of Love”—If riches and social tion of power. The first v skillful in the use of an American sons from little stomach, 3 Ith 5 : ( 3 5 il at the central telegraph offic or and, though my beard liver, bowels man can give me wealth, position, every prominence were safeguards against evil, Rome, the very heart of Italy's sys- |18 thick and stift, T have atlained ; pleasure, every comfort and luxury that Biddy Merkle would never have eloped tem of communication and the sec- | such dexterity tha ecl like say- ' . . ” . 3 i 1 ond fime was during the Corfu in- | ing “s0 many seconds from lather to Give *‘California Fig Syrup’’ my heart could desire. with a man much beneathh;r in station: S10ent in 1928 g 4 ‘ fowel” or whatever self-shavers ar if cross, bilious or and she wouldhhfa\fie a\éox ;d ‘the con(i negotiations. ¢ on | supposed to measure their speed on. . sequences of such folly. But she was prou the latter occosion to deal promptly | However, T a new blade And so she consented to the marriage— q g \6ith 1, Whe there 18 a setiots sit. | eveyr time T shave for there are no a choice she lived to bitterly regret. gHad and reckless, and thought she knew what ution ‘on hand. the prompiee (he s made that can stand more | . e e By e ttinsel el she was doing. Learn the price she paid dsiion, the betfar. s might b . And, . righted, while a fow hours deliy shave every dr : ) loss of the world—had she been able to ~ for disillusionment. misht spell disaster. After setiling off, too, : : 8! . ] the matter, T returned to bed and e, which is one of my American <4 : see and judge the true values of llfe'—she The Purpose and s { ; 2 would have chosen poverty, loneliness, Power of Truth s0und repos : ; : The third time 1 was disturhed | anti-whisker. Whiskers are a_sign Y. dcatl’} itself, rathgr than sell herself into a was on the death of our lamented | of dec: _ Glance at the '“;"; A 7 marriage unsanctioned by love. In our business and social life—in our works Queen “'\H:h»‘ rita. She had ¢ !n' \’ ; of the ”L:‘{ 4 : j;vfl"‘v’v'uu‘ B erors \47\‘ ’;‘ Df art—in our dcalings \Vi‘h Olher nations—we 'l“'virn'p senanimons endowed | you will tind them al clean-shuven 5 h bl ’ hurl 1 all recognize the supreme importance of TRUTH. hess and, sympathy with high and | ciin an glory began, whis- For ¢ at one fatal step was to hurl her Eor it js only in the light of Truth that progress low. She was gracious to all and to came into siyle, Tt is true of headlong into a terrible battle—a battle of any kind can be made. ol J " i s her last wished me well for the > Renaissance w with aathless tteachery and evil such as ¢ 3 started to run—when something caught my t hail 1. Whiskers were t Fatih q B Is Truth of less importance in the moral and footin a grip of steel, checking my headiong ist queen” and a ir old b peglme, 5 (C"V women have fought and emerge spiritual instruction we receive? No. Everyone flight, and jerking me backward. I remember ‘\(; her b ]‘-"m‘Hv o s ] o tasotmn di ek s victorious. knows that it is in these departments of life that screaming as I fell"— 2 i‘\\'\pl'h :mr:ln»)‘\ S s | oriental, the smooth fa ntal, Truth is most important of all. From *I Married for Moncy, and N ? t T should be inforn A Speechless Barber. in February True Story Magazine lition and be akened Let those who place wealth and luxury That is why True Story Magazine plays such a on the tter what ails your child, | above love read Beverly’s story, “I Married ~ dominantrolein thelives ofits millions of readers. smplishment of the safety. When g thorough laxative should K It carries weight because its stories record the her it i i f i him the first treatment glven. for Money, and Now—" one of seventeen 2 whether it is a story of joy or grief, of pleasure or pain, 0 A not proessed ot him o Aepbigtgen: D Hil : actual experiences of real pcople. Their prob- f tri h or fail £ hanpi despait—i R b \o shaving. He i no c little one is out-of-sorts, big features in the February issue of True | i Gk he o giomphior Safuteiof nappiness or despuiz=it always g Qrapdra T o . R el ) half-sick, isn't resting, eating and S ) ems, temptations, mistakes, sorrows, are the teaches a powerful lesson that no reader can ever forget, e A Lk N s wakae e D e urally—look, Mother! see | Story Magazine. same that may come to all of us. And “Daily Dozen™ would which ordinary barbers are | if tongus is coated. This is a e Every month True Story Magazine publishes from eighteen ¢ a1.:;1] o the "lvh;:"or‘l\\.:“llv,w ‘:,f to twenty heart-gripping narratives. If you want to be er of seven hours. 1 asake on a | tolls me nonc of lis {roubles aad 1|4 howels aco ulogged il wate) February instructed, entertained, thrilled and inspired —ask for the i, greatly refr e, SHeL estoran|y lds his joys and 1 withhold mine February issue at any newsstand today. srergy and replaced force, Sei Joes not play and fondle | stomach-ache, diarrhoea, sore throat s it to prove my re-gotten | my face when I allow him to show | full of cold, give a teaspoonful of strength, T instinctively stretch and | haw much he can beat the i up,” and in a| 9 Use the Coupon If You Cannot Get yawn, giving my lungs and muscles | He t r ] all the constipated poison True St t Your Newsstand 3 extra wakening and s q 3 h artist and ed food and sour bile gent- /—\ ory al our INewsstan as a flash, T am out of hed. My day lat it any e s| Iy moves out of the littla bowels b / B T e T e has begun. I never stay in bed a mo- | raw F ace | without griping, and you have a well A MACFADDEN PUBLICATIONS, Inc. ment after the yawn. I eannc essary expend f | playful child agaln, \ 64th Street and Broadway, New York City. ihink that the praciice of bt sttors e eppuechulanialin | Mothera iRl oot oaa; gt e The Greatest Newsstand Sale in the World S Vol b e e e a ns is conduoeive “ ) 3 rt is lost E ing harmless, uity laxative™ | to la 1 dullness. Tt cannot well ha us carri iis | because it never fails to cleanse the | Please enter my name to receive the next five issues begin- but 1 o body and t we have not exch little one’s liver and bowels and = | ;L';f“:,::h the February number. I am enclosing $1.00 In full mind. Tt is demoralizing to the d more than two words—outsic sweeten stomach, and they dear- 3 [ 3 3 5 Don’ : i dotias el on’t be fooled (If you prefer (o examine the magazine before subscribing stmply cipline of self. 1t puts a defensive | gre in the entire four years iy love its sant taste. Full di- I h D t b t f I h l nt ve 0 et Loy das i s, e Febuesy e spirit In life and robs the individual s been giving me an occasional | rections for babies, children of all e ls rl u lon 0 ls ssue byimitations!All | o5 Al Yoone cop3 o7’ the ary lasue at 4 of a bold and smashing offensive to | shave \ges and for grown-ups printed on MacfaddenTrue | [ face the day. | T go then fully attired wearing my | each bottle. . . Story Magazines Name While still In- my pajamas, T take | riding breeches to breakfast. It 18| Beware of counterfeit fig syrups. 18 2’400,000 Oples hawythisieal in : by a few very Rimple arm and lung | what T call a hreakfast. I wonder| Ask your druggls : a bottle of movement just to lmber up. I |sometimes what an Fnglishman, or | “California Fiz § then see RED on the cover Lrenthe deeply to get my lungs full | an Am n_or a German would | that it is made ‘California [T — of fresh air, for though I sieep with | call it gnd what he would do with | Fig Syrup Company.” E—— e e——— . e { Ordinarily, it is from a sound | made in. He is not loqu 5. He stomach sour, breath or has e e e e e e

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