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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY §, 1927, few hundred years ago, also ac- 1(||flm aged cabbage and dis- enroot, McLean, Metcolf, Moses, { HIT WITH GOLF BALL MORE THAN 20 MILLION PERSONS WILL LISTEN IN ON PRESIDENT Coolidge’s Speech to Be Broadcast February 22 Over Biggest Hook-Up That Ever Has Been Made for Any Talk. New York, Feb. 8 UP—Through PECULIAR WAYS TO " PAY GOVT. TAXES will be cities which will “tap"” the| wire, take the voice to the radio stu- 2 { Various Peoples Adopt Un- usual Methods dio and sent it out over the kther while transmission proceeds unin- terrupted to the next “stop-over.”| At all cities along the route and aH some stations between will be tele- phone company apparatus to magni- fy and renew the vigor of the sound| yyashington D. C., Teb whenever it lags over a long circuit. | gelegation from the Virgin Is As a further insurance for g0od| ecently appeared before a Congres reception in the studios, “monitors,” | sional Committee and appealed fo skilled listeners with head sets, will| (he removal of the export tax on be stationed at hundreds of points.| sugar. one occasionally s | provinces |t for each one of them was levied upon. Windows were also taxed and today n of this le have been brick eva do ked up. Chinese Paid Taxes in Salt TFor centuries, blocks of s sent to the rulers of China from t taxes. Ric in importanee Today. of the Republic, silver in payment bordering the sea, and silk vied with s in so1 sup: of le ancient times some tribes teeth while th related, made u\xhs. frogs, snakes phant: is he ( It w to T me plem vies, sent e one: payments and crickets. part ces evidence of the where old win- ere al rts nts fit in counted for the number of hearths \ 8 and chimneys in their buildir ties of tz when ¢ Improvised Flare Saves Lives of Malooned Men Fort Lauder SR pourin gaso {xmmm save e revenue col- ipali- tem Pepper, vania), worth, POLL INDIGATES ed Fl {Survey of Senators Shows Opinion on ¥arm Relief Edwards, Hawes, Walsh, (Montana).) King, Couzens. Broussard, son, HEL s G dusk by ¥l al rovis Harris, Washington, Feb, 8 (UP)—A poll cnate by the United Press to- re-up on the Me- price stabiliza- lives of Merle I arooned 1 Andros Is: s mas when uck in mud. cted a sloop, man- o were crats; for the Phipps. Reed, Shortridge, ‘Warren, Weller a Democrats (12)—DBay d, eorge, Pittman, (Massachusetts), Doubtful (11)—Republi Democrats Ferris, Ransdell, Stephens and ’I‘rmnmell: Absent (5)—Bclieved to be against the bill—Dupont, republican and Un- derwood and Reed, xico) and (Penn Smoot, Wads- d Willis, Bruce, Glass, Swanson, ‘Walsh, Gerry s (1)— (10)—Blease, Fletcher, Harri- Smith, (Missouri) demo- Jones, democrat Stanfield, repub- Ambasador Fletcher's Wife Struck In the Eye. Rome, Feb. 8 (UP)—Mrs. Henry P. Fletcher, wife ¢ the Uhited Statey ambassador to Italy was painfully in- jured today when a _olf ball hit by the ambassade. struck her in the right eye after a bad bounce. The United Press was {informed that the.. was no danger of Mrs. letcher losing the sight of the eye. Travelers from one city to an other in China soon became familiar with other ways of raising revenue, than that collected from land own- ers. Tlikin or ‘“squeeze” stations which might be compared with our nearly obsolete toll gates, are met \\l’h at frequent intervals along the ight of the ations re encountered during the S4-mile trip from Shanghai to Sooch each station one’ effec while ever stination, at | have been paid on aro sponge fisherme | wi 1 and wate lled from the Against, 35. Doubttul, 11. Absent, J. The poll indicated clearly that the bill would pass if brought to a final {bailot immcdiately. There some subsequent switches if “Fighting \Iarme" Is bell'ls cral days but the margin manifested ia the poll should be suf- Determined to Fight ‘ Honolul . 8 (P—A desire cient to insurc ultimate passage. The line-up follows: 1 as led Co ton, L the efforts of thousands of behind- the-scenes mechanical workers, pail to “keep the air clear,” one-sixth of the population of the United States and many thousands in sev- eral foreign countries on February 22 will be able to hear every word of what the present occupant of the White House has to say of the first president. It is their duty to listen for (hr“ slightest interruptlon or interfer- ence and to be able to detect the nature of the trouble by the sound Experts on the Job At each of the “stepping up” sta- | tions a progress similar to the one taking place in the national broad- casting studio will be repeated. That One hindred and. thirty years or|lf the voice will enter the coils where it is renewed with' fresh cur- ;g:‘;‘;:t ‘,Gfe";g:orvwgfl‘wf“’c"oo f‘d‘éd rent and hurled on its way to the | will address, thgough 37 radlo sta-| N¢Xt station. tions, more than 20,000,000 listen-| In each of the hook-up radio stu-| cjares that “Nojtax or duty shall be ers-in when he speaks before the dios another force of experts will be laid on articles exported fr joint session of congress at its ob-|0n hand to take the voice off the|giaie,” And, according to the courts, Servance of Washington's birth 195 Wire, magnify it for the final time, | state in this case, means a State, not | vears ago. It will be the biggest|iron out the Kinks and interferenco a possession. g : “hook up” it is said, that has ever|and guide it into the microphone lllor-x-.-hocs, Nails and Roses | cloth are principal heard a president—or anybody else|from which it is d to the| <ymile an export tax seems add |Scction of the speak. acrial and released Into the air.| o o citizen of the Unifed States, it [Bres 4nd water e ~ivid contrast.of the prosen | FLeTe the monitors not only observe | cunnot compare with tome of (he | SONSUME are taxed, Doy itk th% Ty When® Washing-| & Yoice asillicomes oft he s ‘]um\mo\\\ levies in foreign cr‘\\\nlru,\'.‘ Do Dl fon's sole communication with his|BUt 2150 hear it again as it leaves on | > seudal times the K ‘ = people was through a few smail|!(S journey through o | newspapers of a purely local circu- lation and through letters to gpv- this purpose an ordinary cry is often used. Faulty mechan crnors brings to the fore the con- | detected and at the re: sideration of the many skilled per-|iccted and : the broadcasting apparatus is thus| stration dials ; L / 3 that cover the face of the transmit- gons ‘““‘;““;“’ :“":;‘"“L"e' r;g"g;l“"“:;: ting board usually. discloses what | miose utles v (0 keep MI.|phase of the mechanism is not op- | oolidge's volce moving elearly | paping at maximum efficic along the gigantic network of wire ; : Ay e L Control men guarding the dia As the vast audience settles in its|Stand with hands on the controls, | a : casy chairs, there will be little to|ready to vary t worth §10,000 but as long as the | indicate the feverish.activity behind|ing to the report of the mo fizacsjare Sg Rl G0 thie oenes Hetessary fo. Wegin . the |the régistration of the meters, | mittea to continue in pe broadeasting. and fransmission and| With all the preparations made for ion. Peppercorns (pepper p it up smoothly for the estimat- | 9UICK transsit of the voice over the | r! ) are paid by the Royal -\M'lm ed hour and a half of the program.|¥ires and the various handling for its London site. ¢ more than a hundred ¥ enssunigoc will stll ko fiold imiland s men will bo engaged in the actual| o thainrediasn Ga yolonees [hani|BEDILy. SER DB SRDE0 G oS SO broaHlcasting over the hook-up buf|® thou second a ) Gty I L R broaiicasting over thie, hook-up BYE | 5092 mave Tost Tis lips. in the summer, and three live slightest fault in the mchanism they| The program begins at s suesiihae ':,’1““‘ WEe L are onpagad 1ASwalohiDy: fern standard time. Tiondon | OWISEL 18 Slsewhioling 0 .puw cle “Stepping Up” Process Tl npaelve o diizaldentis worda |l STE QUETHE SRR ESE 0 OX However, the nummbss of telephone|OVer & special short wave transmis- | Yiree times a year ct the Sovereign company employss who will be gc-|sion from stations KDKA at Pitts- il pedroomi ol water [ng (Whe T1ries or wizs | Duzeh end WG ¥t Sohenectady, | 0CE J7AS ORSRCERERIEER e B O L trouble, “stepping up” the weaken-| e T e s e A eriaros Wil sun| Birmingham Publisher The tenant of Copeland Manor is | ac A : y vequired to hold the King's into the hundreds while an even To Be Sued for Libel | (o 1 aaielc |\while _larger force, divided into ‘“road| Ala, Feb. S (B ing the stormy waters of the crews” will be sent out at Intervals | chaighl 1ibel a | lish channel from Dover to Whit- along the line where they can be i ar s Gy o sand Bay. reached instantly for repair| wrederick I. Thompson, Birmingham A crosshow work found necessary the | publisher, Attorney General | ancient city of Goutfefor thekprogrim, Charles C il i connection | lord of 1 The president's voice Will be Put| ith an cditorial criticizing him for | hou on the wires in Washingtén and car- | his conduct of the state’s suit to | tion ried to New York to the studlo of| jower the price of school books and the National Broadeasting company. | mentioning him as being tdentificd | Here it will be taken off the Wash- ash- | with the Ku Klux Klan, | 4 ington wire, sent through a labyrinth| ~ A warrant to he served upon Mr. | & S of coils and wires, ; magnified, clari-| Thompson was mailed early last | In money, to whom large fled and redistributed to stations|night to the sheriff of Jefferson | parcels of feu 1 were granted | over the country outslde 6f New|county at Birminghar The or- | were bound rform forty York cit | ney general who was inductc in the s military e At various points along the route | office four weeks ago, announced a iment and to 1 reaching south as far as Atlanta|the same time that a civil action for | duty. and west as far as the Pacific coast. | damages would follow. | Property What'’s the Use? Rough Dry Service 6lc Everything washed, starched and dried. All of the flat pieces ironed and ready. Your wearing apparel returned ready for ironing. 11 cents a lb. 1b: That an exfert tax is lmccnsulw | tional is a matter of common knowl- cdge to American news readers, and | since the Vir ands belong to the United States, some may ques- tion why the delegation should | peacctuily plead for the removal of | the levy, when it could be attacked as unconstitutional from the time ¢ its imposition. But the Constitution does ot say that there shall be no tax on ar- | ticles exported trom the United States and its possessions. It de- 3 95— (one Tilinois seat va- oud A vote fs expectnd either late to- ¢ or tomorrow. Opponents of the bill intend to use the Curtis-Criep bill to buftet McNary bill and| ipon it first a Much of the support for | McNary bill would go to the rtis bill and opponents of ary bill fell in behind the bill it could be m bloc leaders d to have a ir opp inst both b 1 there and » late to itute, For (44) — Itepublic Cameron, Ernst, Howell, Johnson, y ton,) La Follette, McMas- Means, Norbeck, Norris, Pine, Robinson, (In- Sackett, Schall, Stewart und ns adopte however, from many ies received from the | 1 r which | usually paid in | ot S b i meal and used. In S Benya i |t country, the o vy : t he | W Tibetan cattle e bt not the ach artic Tibetan taxes are goods ep, wool, one republican, arm blo the Nary-Hau considered Wednesd He predicted passa Tyson a margin of 40 votes, due to the re- cent acquisition of representatives from tobacco states who consented to vote for the measure if tobacco vas included as a basic product un- the equalization fee pl Democrats (17)—Ashurst, ton, Caraway, Copeland, Dill, s [ Kendrick, MeKellar, Mastield, Fish | e crman, Robinson, (Ark: NEW COLD WAVE |Sheppard, Simmons, Steck, | Chicago, Feb. o {and Wheeler. temperatures in abor (1)—Shipstead. fall before a 1 (35)—Republicans (23)— ind tomorrow, th , Dale, Bdge, Fess, Gillett, ne, Hale, Keyes, 1into their hands ction upon arrival Heflin, cly, | would be igs of sas), | the hou aneous prop- | Tn many European coun ancient intertown tax is st While visiting Giardini, Sci respondent for the socie food dodgers w a shoppir middle west v six horseshoes, and cold wave ton e sent to the King's | s of London each reel of land nd, while a | Two knives, sixty-one nails a urt by the City year for the.use o sar the famous Str school occupying_a piece of prop- erty near the Tower Bridge, sends bunch of roses. The land is| ned from Some of his 12:30 p. Montgomer; charge of in county any during is -‘0!'”‘1‘\1\‘@1 by the Chichester, while the vandon, Dorset County, is fly presenta- nd an un- | arrow His "Majesty's he decide to war with for should rvice Ki owners | 'Clean clothes get soiled, Soiled clothes are washed clean, Clean clothes get soiled, Soiled clothes are washed clean, These two vacuum floats tell the story. Socony Gasoline was used exclusively in the one on the right. The one on the left was taken from a car’ in which another gasoline had been used. That shows how careful you should be about your gasoline. Socony Gasoline is free from ac1d and all harm- ful impurities. It is refined under exacting Socony standards—every gallon the same wher- ever you get it. That is what we mean by Unidform Qualsty. That is why you get Best Results. Clean clothes get soiled Soiled clothes And so on and so fort! r What's the use— When we have Every facility for doing min. for 61c Thrif Tee Service For $1.25 All of your flat pieces washed and ironed. The wearing apparel returned damp, practically ready for home ironing Tc a 1b. $1.25 for 18 1b: this wearysome task While your enjoy life’s fleeing hours. 04 is our number DELIVERIES EVERYWHERE Look for the Socony Sign on the Red Socony Pump SOCONY REG.U.S.PAT.QFF. GASOLINE & MOTOR OIL Backed by 50 years of refining experience STANDARD OIL COMPANY OF NEW YORK, 26 Broadway min. ARCH STREET WEST MAIN STRE aundry