New Britain Herald Newspaper, January 12, 1927, Page 4

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ERRING CHILDREN SOGIAL PROBLEM Miss Bristoll Describes Her Work on Exchange Club The New Britain Exchange club put on their best bib and tucker | last evening and celebrated thefr an- | 0 oo™ g0 S progident Cool- | Coolidge to the American consress 'lin to protect the interests of his | Chaplin could not be served with nual Ladies' Night at the Burritt hotel. Miss Ruth Bristoll of the probation office was the speaker of the evening. Miss Bristoll spoke on her work in the probation office and of the|Mexican naval officer has left Mexi- |tion of the United States in Central |torney, and Herman Spitzell, ng co for Nicaragua on such a com- |American territory took place and | ggtat means and methods of children who are liable to become | selinquent. She stated that she had several agencies for the purpose of tinding cases which needed super- vision, the parent§, neighbors, wel- fare organizations, schools, and the volice. Most of the cases, she stat- «d, come to her through the last tamed avenue. When it is possible, the speaker nave peen on several occasions since {the Monroe Doctrine from of | August, 1926, shipped to the revolu- tive theory is seen by the Times in stated, the case is settled out court. The local office s always tending away from the ldea of gi ing a youngster a court record and | whenever it is possible and the case is not an important one, a talk with the child and the parents is held. In case of property damage, resti- tution s sought and it rule that the probation officer insi: that the child be punished by their parents. The complaint is then placed on file o that a recurrence will show that comething is radically wrong with the echild. When a case is brought before the court, a form is made out by Miss Bristoll to give to the judge. The hild’s physical and mental ability is | Jetermined and set down and his amily's record is also put on file 1 Three dispositions The ; he is siven a suspended sentence or he is committed to one of the state homes. | \n effort is always made to adjust the child rather than to punish him \fiss Bristoll stated. In case thisd coms impossible in the environment which surrounds the child, he or she is committed to a state institution.! Miss Bristoll ended her address with an appeal for aid from the E: change club and other civie clubs, stating that work can not be carried on without outside aid. One of the high lights of . club’s meeting was the group sing- ing by the separate tables. “Jingle Bells” was rendered with orchastral offects by Willlam Fay's table while other groups tried to outdo the next | table in volume of noise. After the | meeting, the members adjourned to the Capitol theater where they view- ed the Lions’ Frolic. PO NO RACE SUICIDE HERE South Carolina Farmer Recites His the Family History To Prove His As- sertions. 8 ¢, Jan. 12 ®—J. n, farmer of Greenvil to Greenville, (] Furman Sl county, has issued a challenge the world. generations ago. Sloan's father, Richard Sloan, of Simpson- ville, was the father of 183. Mr. Slpan’s other grandfather, | S8ampie Babb, of Inman, was like | wise the father of 18. Mr. Sloan’s father, George T. Sloan, was also| the father of 18. | His second wie, nee Miss Zalle! Davis, survived him. After her husband’s death she married a wid-) ower, Julie Smith who alrcady had| 13 ehildren. She gave to her sec- ond husband three more children, making a grand total of 34 children of whom she was either the mother | or stepmother. | Of this total 34 children J. Fur- man Sloan was one. He was mar-| ried and his home now boasts of 11 sons and daughters. | “Why,” Mr. Sloan sald, “the| Sloans at one time became so plen- | tiful that the Lebanon church| wouldn’t hold them all and some had to pull out and go somewhere | else.” | Y. W. C. A. NOTES | This week is Music Week In all departments of the Girls Reserve. Miss Eleanor Zimmerman, planist, will teach the girls of the different clubs songs which the Girls Reserves are singing throughout the country. The mid-winter eonference, which is year will be held fn Hartford. will occur about the second week in | March although the date has not yet been definitely set. Girls from de- partments in Hartford, New Haven, New London, Bridgeport and New Rritain as well as departments in the smaller towns, will be present. The mid-winter banquet of Girls Reserve will be held t part of Febr All girls joining any of the clubs between now and one month prior to the be formally Initiated at with a candle light ser quet will be Leld in the g of the Y. W. €. A grand- | the occasion The being started in the various clubs and the members are learning nev At the regular business of the Pinnacle club held Miss Jennie Buden wa Current Hardware Demand Is Very Light New York, Ja 12.—Hardware in- ventories a about the sam 1 did a y orts from lea ority of wholes: th annual stoc ma e completed . Ha will say tomor ardwa about 1 thoug complete their zes being FOREIGN PRESS AND Mexico. Mexico, City, Jan. 12 (P —General and navy, has given denial to the !idge’s message to congress that a | Mexican naval reserve officer com | manded a gun running vessel taking | {arms to the liberals in Nicaragua. | “I categorically deny that any " General Pina said. “I |also declare it is untrue that there is a naval reserve of any Kind in | {our country.” ! missi | President Coolidge In his message |said in part: “x x x x I have the most conclusive evidence that arms and munitions In large quantities (tionists (liberals) in Nicaragna. Boats carrying these munitions have been fitted out in Mexican ports, and some of the munitions bear evidence of having belonged to the Mexican CRITICAL OF U. S. INTERVENTION Mexican Official Brands Coolidge’s Charges As False —London Editors Condemn Action in Nicaragua— . Latin-Americans Incensed—Boycott Suggested in NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 12, 1927, SPOKESMEN RECEIVERS NAMED N CRAPLIN CASE Film Comedian’s Property Com-| pletely Tied Up 1 (P —The principal newspapers here| TLos Angeles, Jan. 12 (P)—Receiv- Miguel Pina, under-secretary of war publish in full and in a prominent i""" mounted guard today over the |to New York with the Intention of position the message of President !California millions of Charles Chap- | regarding the Nicaraguan problem. |estranged wife, Lita Grey Chaplin, Commenting on the message El whose suit for divorce asks a portion Diarlo says: “This document points |of the film comedian's fortune of | out a progress in American feelings, | $16,000,000. because in other times the interven- The recetvers, W. L Gilbert, at- | | real | operator, were appointed by al no one took any notice.” | superior court order yesterday as a | La Critica says: “The message of |regult of a surprise move on the part | {r. Coolidge constitutes a history of | of Mrs. Chaplin’s attorneys, who filed nkee imperialism,” and adds: “the |an application for an ex-parte re- | president of the United States wants | ceivership. | to explain eversthing without hoW- | myo court empowered the receiv- | ever managing to clarify anything" | org t take over all of the actor’s London’s Views properties and funds in California London, Jah. 12 UP—Evolution of | oo 2" outeome of the divorce A NCEA- [gujt. Gilbert recently was an at- 4 |torney for Mrs. Aimee Semple Me- the policy pursued in Nicaragua by phorson in the’ comspiracy c the United States. : {which has been dropped. Mrs. Chdp- “The ~ American intervention 4 contends that $10,000,000 of the it says, “Is in logical accord orpune js community property. with the recent evolution of the The first step to take possession of | dent Coolidge's outline His story begins several | ® Monroe Doctrine which, from the negative proposition that no Eur- opean country shall interfere in the American continent, has developed into the positive theory that the United States is free to intervene covernment. It also appears that he ships were fitted out with full e of, and in some cases encouragement of, Mexican nd were in one instance, commanded b naval reserve officer. knowle with the officlal interests. x x x | “No people has been so fervent as | the Americans in championing Qhfi‘ causes of independance and national rights, and opposing entanglement in the affairs of other countries, but! they are being drawn by the magnet of political and economic interests far into the disputes of Central America, and their spasmodic ef- forts to release themselves from fits ottractions seem at the present mo- ment less likely than ever to stc- ceed, however unwilling they may | be to be numbered among the im- | perialist nations.” | The Dally News believes President | Coolidge is committed fo “a very dangerous policy.” declaring: “While his professed purpose 18 to protect American citizens, every- body knows the real intention is to support one slde of the revolution | \zainst the other in the hope of de- | stroying Mexican influence in Nic- | aragua and substituting United | States domination. x x x | “The immediate results of Mr. | Coolidge’s grave blunder has been | to excite contemptuous comment in | the Buropean newspapers on the| glaring example of the hypocrisy of | American moral philosophy in inter- | nztional polities, and to deeply anger the peoples of Latin-America. | Tt is certainly a strange interpreta- tion of the Monroe Doctrine.” ' Boycott Suggested Mexico City, Jan. 12 P—A boy- | cott of all merchandise and other products of the United States roughout Latin America is pro- “Spanish-American Ico City, as an ion of resentment against the ¢ the Washington gover: ment toward Nicaragua. The committee represents an or- ganization seeking to bring about closer relations of all the Latin- American states with one another and with Spain. Chile Remains Silent a brief ber of deputies last e the motion of Deputy Enrique Matta Figueroa, liberal, calling for a herence to the slogan “Lati ca for the Latin-America mark of protest against the policy of the United States in Nicaragua. The chamber also rejected a modified motion by the communists whereby it would be placed on rec- ord as denouncing “United States imperialism generally and the inter- ventjen in Ni; ua specifically.” During the debate the conserva- tive deputy Ramon Gutierrez de- clared Chile did not peed to take a stand in the matter. fnasmuch as “the president and many citizens of Nicaragua” had already protested | United St ' action and the' tion did not gre ect Chile. Commenting editori. on Presi- of the Nie- uan situation in his congres- sional message, El Mercurlo sayg the explanation is insufficient to clear up the impression detrimental to the . United States caused throughout the HUNT MISSING WILL ’ ringfield, Mase., Jan. 12 (P—| Disposal of the body of Bernhard| Kalman, 76, retired cigarmal who died in a rooming house hem:| Monday, Is being delayed while a| ch 1s instituted for a will he is id to have made. The Wil it inderstood, was placed in the of a Springfield lawys is not known. Kalman is said to world, and especial in Latin- e relatives in New York city and | America, by her “int ntion” in rts are being made to l"""M: Central American affairs, S Fear that the investment of United | States capital in Latin-American | countries will lead to future armed | interference such as that in Nic- aragua. it adds, is likely to make countries which otherwise would he endly toward such investments 10stile to them, thus reacting to the detriment of American capital. Argentine Comment Buenos . Argentine, PRISONER DEAD IN CELL Stamford, Conn., Jan. 12 (A— James Smith, age and address un- known, was found dead in a cell in the city lockup today. He hag been hrought in last night on charge of intoxication. Medical Examiner Dr. Ralph W. Crane is to determine the »ause of death which police helie t esult xposure and | Kivea T he result of exposurc and Dage Hartford 2-7171 INC SUPREME AMONG FUR wa Attorneys for Mrs. Q@@d and Hot! S delectable as the fin- est dessert—hot pan- cakes with butter and ayrup —or would gou rather have them with jelly? After such a warm and satisfying et s by e e wholly a failure. Pancakes are unbelievably better when Grandma's Pancake Flour bakes them, Its specially milled and blended to make them so. Grandma's . PANCAKE FLOUR Qllen & Co. 2-7171 Tel. 3005 SALES Our Entire Stock of FUR COATS Including the New Coats Just Arrived At Reductions of $50 to $1000 on a Single Coat Every coat mercilessly cut in price—but ev ry coat fL!l]_\" measuring up to high Sage-Allen standards — quality, workmanship, every smallest detail. These sensationally low prices will allow many a woman to have the beautiful fur coat she has longed forl And remember — early shoppers best choice. will have the the comedian's holdings here was taken when notice of- receivership rved on officials of the Chaplin studios in Hollywood. The receivers indicated they next {would take possession of Chaplin's |there at any time in defense of her | 49 room manion in Beverly Hills. Chaplin said they had advised their client of her legal right to move back into the comedian’s home and maintain her residence there if she so desired. When Mrs. Chaplin left the actor's home last November, she declared she would never return. The affidavits which placed the actor's funds and property in the har.ds of court receivers was sworn to by Edward T. McMurray, an uncle of Mrs. Chaplin and her chief coun- scl. The court was advised that Chaplin had left the jurisdiction of the California courts and had gone completing an unfinished picture. papers because of the inability to find him or any officer of his com- pany or corporation. ‘With the appointment of the re- ceilvers, each was required to post $200,000 bond. Mrs. Chaplin was re- quired to furnish bond in the amount of $100,000. ENTIRE STOCK REDUCED INCLUDING ALL MAKES 'Ira AN VICE! We said this'would be something to*personally interest all in the city. Now judge for yourself! Be- ginning tomorrow, shoes of every description reduced at savings ranging from Half to fully Three- fourths of the Sale Prices. Lloya Wright, attorney for Chap- lin, declared the screen actor would fight every charge in Mrs. Chaplin’s petition and would oppose her effort to retain custody of their two chil- aren. Mrs. Chaplin's allegation that Chaplin had confessed intimacy with certain motion picture actresses here lef* Hollywood seething with specu- lation. Some observers attached im- portance to the announcement that Will H. Hays, czar of the motion picture industry, would arrive here during tha course of the day with three members of his :taff. MURDERER HANGED Hamilton, Ont., Jan. 12 (M—John Barty was hanged this morning for the murder of Mrs. Nancy Cook, a clerk in a grocery store, last June, when she resisted an attempt to rob the till. Barty killed her with an iron bar. Ay e ! LT e S T shop when not defending his coffee laurels, was checred by ‘a crowd that jammed a hotel where Gus im- bibed the coffee. 7 From the time he started at 7 a. m., he showed championship form. GULPS 8 CUPS OF COFFEE INCONTEST, 25227552 H H |hours but near the end at 2:15 his And Minnesota Man Now Claims zxive vere somewnat iasored. . ‘When he stopped for a rest at World’s Title [2:15 p. m., a physiclan examincd him and pronounced him in “pretty |good shape,” except for a slight fever. But the rest threw Gus off his stride and he quit short of the 100 cup goal he had set. Fergus Falls, Minn., Jan. 12 (#— Once more Gus Comstock, the cof- fee drinking pride of Minnesota, yesterday gulped his way into the national championship. TS e Downing 85 cupfuls in 7 hours 0,000, VIRE) IN; ETAMEORI) and 15 minut ;, Gus won back the| Stamford. Jan. 12 UP—The fire title from H. A. Streety of Amarillo, | damage to the $35.000 house owned Tex., whose 71 cup record recently | by Gus Burns at Shippan Poifit was had bettered Comstock’s 6ld mark | placed today at $5,000. The origin of 62. has not been determined. The house Comstock, porter in a barber | wag unoccupied. | STARTING THURSDAY, JAN. 13 AT "/‘,, i il 9A M i 7 i, ‘ The Sale consists of the following makes of footwear: Red Cross, Sorosis, Sherwood, Walkmore, W. B. Coons, Buster Brown, Educator, Simplex and Florsheim. ALL OUR REGULAR $5.00 and $6.00 NOwW TAILORED OXFORDS These Oxfords are very popular and in vogue at present, also for Spring. Specially Priced during our sale at $3.85. All Combinations. Many other styles at the above price. Regular $6.00, $7.00, $8.00 NOW $ The above in the following: Plain 1 Strap, Cutout 1 Strap, Tan Kid, Alligator, Patent, Black Satin and Calf. our sale. $4.85 JAY DE KAY Reg. $1.95 NOW § IN THE HEART OF THE CITY Kid, Black During Various Other Patterns to Choose From Entire Line Reduced Plain Cut Out All Heels and Leathers One of the Patterns Apove ALL'OUR REGULAR $7.00 and $8.00 NOW $5.85 Blk Calf Tan Calf Blk Satin Pat Colt Were $9.00 $10.00 * $11.00 85 One of the patterns in- cluded in the $5.85 lot. Comes in three combina- tions — Pat Leather, Pin Seal Trim, Tan Calf, Alli- gator Trim, Black Calf, Pin Seal Trim. These are hand turns. Regular $9.00. NOW $5.85 Black Kid Tan Kid Pat Colt Blk Satin All Children’s Child’s Infants’ Children Simplex an 159, All Sizes and Styles Many other patterns at the above price. Regular BUSTER BROWN 1 $5.00, $6.00, $7.00, $8.00 Broken Sizes and Styles Shoes Reduced Boys’ Misses” d Educator Were $8.00, EVENING A Few Style White Satin $2.85 SOROSIS $9.00, $10.00 To Close Out $2.00 per pair All styles and colors. ceptional values. $2.85 and $3.85 SLIPPERS Look at them in our win- ; s and Sizes at dows. This space does not Silver allow us to feature all. Brocade IN OUR HOSIERY DEPT. POINTEX Reg. $1.65 NOW §1.45 SILK AND WOOL Reg. $2.25 NOW §1.00 JAY DE KAY Reg. $1.95 NOW $1.65 VOGUE SHOE SHOP 236 Main Street OPP. THE MONUMENT

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