New Britain Herald Newspaper, January 19, 1927, Page 3

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 19, 1927. Howard M. Barber, Pawcatuck, | Heights. Soil-vibrating ag assignor to C. B. Cottrell & Sons, Co.. | Harvey Feldmier, Westerly R. I Preventing undue | H. Burrell & tension to multicolor perfecting | N. Y. App printing presses and Web slack pre- | liguids, 2 supporter. nest F. M Wick adjuster, Alphonso C. Pratt, Deep River, as- signor by American Chain Co., Tne for tires. BUT YOU GET USED TO IT “You going to America? 1 suppose you know that it is night here when ft is daytime there?" 1 suppose that will seern very funny at first” — Jugent, Munich. FLASHES OF LIFE: WAIST LINE IS o i vl i, i | IMPORTANT IN LATEST CREATIONS| saricors—tom of s555.26: m_fl]RMER EMPRESS lature will be asked to appropriate | "I: MEX'E" I]lES printing presses, for Connecticut Agricultural Collegs | ditional building to replace con- | Charles A. Gregor, Norwalk. are mesne assignments to Bead Thomas A roton | David A By the Associated Pres: Daniel G. Reld, tinplate king, held ! ."\ includes $435,720 for class room ad- | New York—The walst line, high, about 40,000 shares of valueless Brewer, low or normal, {is a conspicuous theme in spring styles shown by the National Garment Retailers’ asso- ciation, and the length for after- noon wear is a bit less, but consid- | erably more for evening formalities. Austin—At the instance of Miss Margie Neal, Texas is re-dedicated to the cause of the prohibition of liquor. She {s the first woman mem- ber of the state senate, and her first resolution was adopted. New York—It pays to advertise. | One brand of women'’s shoes priced at 315 sold three times as fast as| another grade much the same priced at $12.50. From this discovery H. N. Lape of Cincinnati told the National Boot and Shoe Manufacturerers' as- sociation, he deduced that women wanted to buy only merchandise that was discussed and written 1bout. Crown Point, Indiana— Mrs. Deulah Annan, described as the most beautiful woman ever tried in Chi- cago for murder, is a bride. Her husband is Edward Harlib, former pugilist. The Hague — Princess Jullana plans to study at Leyden university, specializing in international law. New York—Prince Willlam of Sweden likes us so well that he is almost inclined to take out first citizenship papers. And as for re- porters st met gorillas in Africa T was inclined to shrink a bit, but soon I found they were not so bad.” Cleveland—Fighting fires may be + man’s job and gossip a woman's orivilege, but no chances are taken in the volunteer fire department of Bay Village, a suburb. Members who zossip about affairs of the depart- ment will be suspended. New York—Advice to executives y David A. Shulte, “when yvou fire man, unless his successor is at 1t 25 per cent better to start with, vou've hurt yourself because it takes the new man time to fit into the picture.” London—Prhaps the Prince of Wales was curious about how things about himself get into print so auickly. Anyhow he's just inspected newspaper plants, asking a lot of questions, especially about pictures, Albany, N. Y.—The debut of the ‘greening” apple, nationally famed e basis of pies, has been fixed e orchardists as on a road- stand In Rhode Island In 1748 he variety was brought from Eng. and and long was known as Green's from Rhode Island.” mel, N. Y.—Three months rduous work was necessary to dis- sipate a murder theory here. Discov- Ty of a wrecked automobile in a 1 mine at Cold Spring led 1 reports of a gruesome The mine was drained to its vest depths but the only “clue” re- soverrd was a miner's hammer, Asbury Park, ph Sullivan 1 blazing delic: J.—Patrolman today dashed into ssen etore to rescue 2 mouse trapped in the show win- low. Seeing the predicament of the rodent, he ran into the building vaulted the counter and put the mouse in his pocket. He released it hen it revived in the fresh air. Accidents are most cfall railroad employes in | the first and’the third years of thelr | smployement. J. R. Brady, safety | 1zent of the Union Pacific railroad | “That reminds me’ “when I stocks. His estate, estimated at $40,- | 1000,000 when he died, is appraised at 134,668,679, *The most gorgeous col- lection of valueless securities” ever {noted by the state tax commission is | that of Charles A. Starbuck, who was president of the New York Airbrake | company. The collection had a face | value of more than $5,000,000. Actually he left $390,000 and $600,- | 000 debts. | | Kharkov, Ukratne—A bunch of Hooligans is to be trled for trying to down the soviets. Leaders of an or- ganization known as the honorable | order of Decadent Hooligans are un- | der arrest as counter-revolutionists. | One of the golden rules of the order | is that a Hooligan is an aristocrat. | | | New York—Some day apparently | another Caruso is to thrill the | world. Seven year old Gloria, the | | tenor's daughter, is regarded by her | tutor as a splendid and remarkable | pupil, and her mother says: “She | undoubtedly has inherited much of her father's talent and those who have heard her sing have said that |already her tone is perfect.” Chicago—Butch Crowly, who once {bribed a prohibition agent, has re- formed, the anti-saloon league an- nounces. He charges the league only | 1860 an hour for use of his radio| station, WWAE. Other stations ask | 13400, Annapolis—Among old laws slated | |for repeal by the Maryland legisla- ture is one forbidding saloons to |serve any free lunch except pretzels, cheese and crackers. | New York—Souvenir hunters cost |the great trans-Atlantic steamship | | companies $500,000 a year. Memen- {toes taken away by passengers who yearn for something around the house reminiscent of thelr voyage include glassware, cutlery, silver plate and linen. East Marion, N. Y.—An ailanthus tree, planted accidentally according | to legend, when a pedestrian's cane | sank into a soft spot in the ground | and was left there, has just been {cut down and yielded seven cords of | wood. It was 50 feet high and 15 feet in girth. The ailanthus is com- mon to the Orient where it is known | as “the tree of Heaven.” Saranac Lake, N. An assign- ment of mercy and death has kept | Game Protector Seckingham of Ls. | sex county out in the snow drifted hills three days—and may keep him | there several more. Somewhere in the wilds a large buck faces starva tion because a hunter's shot tore |away its lower jaw. The warden has been ordered to make every effort to | find and dispatch the animal. | | Hartfori—If Calles government | enforces Mexican land laws United | | States should withdraw support of | bis government, Trinity professors say in radio dialog. ' | Rockville—Nobody injured when | | engine and two coaches of special | New Haven railroad train, Hartford | | to Rockville, leave rafls | | New Haven—Shipping board will | | pay $5,000 to estate of late Robert | V. McFarland, killed when life boat | on shipping board steamer “Hybert" falls 50 feet with MacFarland and | two others In it last October. | New Haven—Litigation to compel Judge Arthur W. Marsden of Madi- on to show books in estate of late ederick W. Sautter to representa- es-of-bonding company is continu- ed ‘when Judge Marsden agrees through counsel to produce accounts in court Friday. |Garvey Jones, demned structure. Waterbury—Compensation award- ed to Philip Jaquette former Con- necticut Agricultural College athlete for injuries received lifting 40 quart milk cans to get sleigh through snow drift. Hartford—Connecticut Light & Power Company directors’ meetings will be held in new offices here, in- stead of in New York, President Roraback announces. CRAZED BY LOVE, TAKES OWN LIFE Chicago Medical Student Shoots Himsell Chicago, Jan. 19 (UP)—The futil- ity of his love for Miss Alyse Davey. a co-ed at Syracuse university, led freshman medical student at Chicago university, to kill himself, fellow fraternity members agreed today. It was Jones' second attempt to end his life because of his love for the girl. Last Friday he attempted to take gas but was saved. Late yesterday he shot himself. Just after his attempt of last Fri- day Jones told a member of his fraternity “I want to marry her (Miss Da- vey) mow, but it isn't possible and life 15 not worth living this way." He had been morose lately. his fraternity brothers sad. His sulcide caused comment on the number of young men in varl- ous parts of the country who have declded that life is not worth living and taken their own lives. Before committing snuicide, the youth wrote three notes, one to his foster mother, Mrs. E. Church of Cazenovi; N. Y., one to his room- mate, and. one to Miss Davey. In the letter to the girl he sald: “I can not hope that you will for- get but T do hope that you 11 for- glve. The faalt is entirely mine alone. My weakness for worry is evidently inherent. for three months and it is well that it came to the surface when it did.” English Mohammedan Has Birthday Today London, Jan. 19 (UP—TLord Head- ley, the only British peer who is a convert to the Mohammedan faith today celebr d his seventy-first birthday. He is also the only British peer who has ever set foot inside the holfest city in Isiam, Mecca, to which 200,000,000 followers of Mohammed from every corner of the earth turn their eyes five times a day in prayer. Lord Headley is an engineer of note. and also author of a number of works on athletics as well as on technical engineering subjects. In his youth he w: noted sportsman at Cambridge and holder at one time of both the heavyweight and middle- weight intercollegiate boxing cham- plonships. He became converted to Moham- medanism in 1910 and made the pil- gtimage to Mécca in 1923. born in London, in 18 and ha four grown sons who are not, how- ever, followers of their father's re- ligion Massachusetts Man Invents Jelly Bullet .. Jan. 19 (UP)— is the latest thing in The bullet and the gun from T have fought it | He was | {Death Closes Career of Char-| lotte, Maximilian's Widow | Brussels, Belgium, Jan. 19 (®— Charlotte, once empress of Mexico, ]as the wife of Emperor Maximilian, died at her chateau near Brussels at 7 o'clock this morning. Thus came to a close one of the most tragic careers {in European history, for her mind had been clouded ever since she heard of the execution of her hus- band, Maximilian at Queretaro, Mex- | ico, in 1867. Several times in the last few years | | her strong constitution enabled Char- ( lotte to withstand serious illness, but when last Saturday she was stricken with a severe attack of influenza, the | physicians took into account her ad- | vanced age—she was §6—and held | | out little hope for recovery. At times over the week-end she seemed to improve; then on Tues- | day morning pneumonia developed. | There was a hurried consultation of | physicians and Charlotte’s nephew, | King Albert and Queen Elizabeth and the others of the royal family | were summoned to the sick room. | They were at the bedside when she | died peacefully. | Throughout the ex-empress’ ill- ness, in fact, through the years of her retirement, she had a constant attendant in Baron Auguste Goffinet, | who was a close friend of her| brother, King Leopold 1T, of Belgi- um. | Baron Auguste, knowing that the empress was soon to die, spoke wist- | fully last night of his relations with the Belgian royal house, of the | beauty and charm of Charlotte as a girl before she married the Austrian Archduke Maximilian. | “It Is my sad privilege,” “to bury the royal family was right when he told me years ago | ‘Empr Charlotte is to bury us all, | except yourself'.” | The baron, as administrator of Em:ress Charlotte’s property, added | that there was no truth in the re-| vorts of her great fortune, While it | was once something ltke 10,000,000 | gold francs, he explained that it | dwindled considerably the last few | years because of the depreciation of Russian and German shares. | It was on July 27 last that King Albert and Queen Elizabeth paid a | special visit to Charlotte at her cau, the occasion being the §ith | of her marrlage to| Max She talked a long time with the king and quen, addr them as prince and princess, as had never been jnforr ed of death of her brother Leopold. Mem- bers of Charlotte's entourage safd at | t > time that she had entirely re- | covered her mental powers and that | sh frequently referred to Maximil- ian. But each time it was reported that she had recovered her reason, a veil again descended over her mind To avold troubling her she was | kept in ignorance of many events, | such as the tumbling of thrones and | dynastics and even less important | ppenings withir. the Belgian royal family. Thus she did not know of | the marriage of her favorite grand- | nephew, Crown Prince Leopold to | Princess Astrid of Swedén, or the | death last vear of Cardinal M Her mind cleared for a few min- | utes yesterday. She was given ex- | treme unction and was able to talk rationally to the members of the roval family. Then she lapsed into unconsciousness and slept fitfully until death came. he sald, | Leopold | | cier. | Patents Issued to Connecticut People | List of patents issued to the Ci- tizens of Connecti THERE WAS A “I don’t scem to be getting ar where,” said the venerable Diog- enes as he blew out his lantern and plunged his callous fect in a tub of warm water.” “In the last year, I've trailed 1,000,000 OLp GoLp smokers and I'm still waiting to hear one of them cough.” out to find an honest man. 4 up the hunt when I discovered that men playing golf.” were either married or “I've smoked two packages daily and can’t get a cough out of ’em myself. All I've found out is that Ovp Gorp's the world's smoothest cigarette, and there i in a carload of 'em."” 't a cough ITS THE SMOOTHEST CIGARETTE “NOT A COUGH IN A CARLOAD” “Then I decided to try something easy, and went in search of a cough in OLp Gorp cigarettes. ” NewBeauty on zz/m’() Wort in i he we says accidents in the first year are | ut for th ek which it s shot are the inventions of ., 4 a " 927, i shed : ue In part to-inexperience while inJ B N rished e third year carelessness resulting rom pride In having learncd the rade contributes to accidents. New York—Tt seems too much at- tention cannot be pald to the char- acter of the securities one buys. | Bridgeport—Jack Delancy, start- ing training Monday for Maloney | bout expresses confidence that he | can deféat Boston boxer and prove himself logical contender for Tun- | ney's heavyweight crown. Baltic—Daniel R. Billington, 84, Reginald J. Alden, unive y student. In a public demonstration here it was shown that the “jelly bullet” would render its vietim unconscious and then dissolve, leaving a clean and harmless wound because of the bullet’s antiseptic qualities. i former Clark -MONEY TO LOAN ON SECOND MORTGAGES The Fidelity Finance Corp. 140 Main St. New Britain Phone 4800 | Treating automobile tires and pro- | by Louis H. Schmidt, Solicitor of Patents, 259 Main street, New Brit- ain, Conn. Harley H. Al 8. Willlams, W Iyn a m, Norwich, and J llingford, Pa., said signor to said Williams. ducts resulting therefrom. Beauty extends in an unbroken line on this newer Hupmobile Six Sedan from the slimly grace- ful radiator to the rounded con- tour of the ball-back body. A car now as outstanding for luxury and refinement of detail as for the stauncher qualities and long life for which all Hup- mobiles are famous. Note the commodious provision for five passengers, the four wide doors, the depth of the rich mo- hair upholstery, the high quality of hardware including remote dodr controls, and the unusually complete equipment. And beauty of line and appoint- ment is just the beginning. What makes Hupmobile the closest- priced six in America is its 10 per cent higher quality. Through- out the car, Hupmobile spends 10 per cent more to make this sixabetter and a longer-lived car. Yet you actually pay less in price for the Hupmobile Six, in pro- portion to quality; and you pay less in after costs, because of that quality. Drive this smartiSedan for half an hour, and then try to think of any other six in terms of what this six reveals. The more you know about sixes, the more emphatically you will class Hupmobile value alone and unapproached in the entire six market. $1365 1385 Sedan, 5-pass., four-door o« . Coupe, 2-pass., with rumble seat Roadster, with rumble seat 1385 Touring, 5-passenger . . . . 1325 All prices f. 0. b. Detroit, plus revenue tax. Come in and See These Equipment Features Many Recently Added Thermostatic Heat Control; Gasoline Filter; 4-Wheel Brakes; Color Options; Vie sion-Ventilating Windshield; Clear Vision Bodies; Dash Gasoline Gauge; Force Feed Lubrication; Oil Filter; Mo- hair Uphostery; Rear View Mirror; Special Vibration Damper; Snubbers; Tilting Beam Headlights; Automatic Windshield Cleaner; Walnut Grained Instrument Board Hupmobile Six. BURRITT MOTOR SALES Co. 236 Hartford Ave Phone 4195

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