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other. Wu's troops hold the weslern} 3 N 3 WMWW | G\ENER&\: SHANg K?‘-SHE;(. a | tiv N Vi , TIMBER RESOURCES s 22 st s sont ™0 WHO IN CHINA. IN CRISIS. £ s o, v it kA § WHC in the Boxer rebellion. An able sol- W. LAMPSON, British |he was elected by Comrade Michael Delay In pressing southward to- |\, jorq of Manchuria, strong, sil- ' minister at Pckin. | Bl sndin 15 commada) the Cantorass i i ward Flankow is belleved to be due | i man of the old feudal type. Out-| OWEN O'MALLEY, British charge [and make the march on Shanghal Fm Has Wlp&d 0“[ Mllcl] to unwillingness of Chang's forces {0 | 4o o¢ fghting the Cantonese on the d’Affaires at Hankow, where he has | and thence to Pekin, the goal. He = advance with Wu's troops on thelr oy ho ig threatened on the north |been-in consultation with FEugene | wears a Sam Browne belt and treas- Lumber D[u‘mg Year |flank until assured that the two y,y Rygsia which covets Manchuria. | Chen. | ures photographs of Sun Yat-sen, leaders have patched up an endur- |y, oon \oants Manchuria free as a| EUGENE CHEN, Cantonese for- | Lenin and Borodin. He is reported i1l AT ing peace to remove danzcr due 10 |pyfrer petween herself and Russia. eign minister. While strongly pro- | in a hospital. Washington, Feb. 11 (UP)—Forest | [1o/F, former bliter rivalry that re [Ghang is no more favorable to the testing the British attitude, he prom- | 3. GALENS, Russtan _adviser to e L " British than to any other “foreign- ises no violence at Shanghal. In!General Chang Kal-shek. The two fires took a huge toll in the nation’s | hlgodshed. Dolitical stratery would oo pys declares himselt bitterly reply to Austen Chamberlain's speech | were recently in Klangsi province timber resources last year, accord- reauire that Wu lead the way, it 15| opp000q to Bolshevism. Chen says the Cantonese, or “Na- | preparing an attack on Shanghal. P istuts aubitied to) Congre de:o)tfoush 1he predbnge gl hoe § i e AL CHANG , HSUEH. tlonalist.” government is the only Galens is reported 4n hospital with : ! : . L | Chang, a modern soldier, dashing 2lso denies Soviet leanings, saying| GpNpRAL TANG SHE-CHI, sec- »st number of fires in his- Heiane, the “Christian general, g o e ied it 1998, - de- D e ot of the ~ Cimaae |and impetuous, who has already won Nis party is only availing itself of ;.44 command to General Chang | Russian military knowledsge, 376 board feet of tim. |military picture since his defeat by |Victorles and is immensely popular | ! : Kai-shek, and General Targ Yen-ta, | Dot ibhae 7res ‘covered total|Clians. st Beking some mianths agn, | Wit BIs trongs. | MICHAEL BORODIN, allas chiet of the political department, area of 722,000 acres. is not to he overlooked by Wu. YANG YUN-TING, chief of staff George Brown, alias Jacob Borodin. haye returned to Chang-sha and also e ¢ | 1t complete cooperation between |and right hand man of Marshal alias Michacl Grusenberg, delegate are threatening to withdraw the While the number of fires the largest in h quick action Chang and Wu is assumed. military by the forestry service prevented the experts In Washington personaliy Chang Tso-Lin, stationed at Mukden. |from the Third Communist Interna- ' Hunanese support owing to the Bol- He has sent an urgent call for Mar- e, invited by the late Dr. Sun ghevism rampant there. en to head lis propaganda ADMIRAL CLARENCE STEW- i iy s %ldier but an embittered Oriental ARE HEAVILY HIT :lha :h:}:‘h‘ "“‘:’ “;\’ PrERSED ; EREXS SN “ Trained in a Russian military school, | BRRLOIEIE sanmwAre. MARSHAL CHANG TSO-LIN, the | MII | future.” At Kansas the percentage is damage from becoming familiar with Chinese conditions be. | ¥hal Chang to proceed to that point. | TRRE e athat ve Tn 1919 * lieve Hankow and probably Wuchang | a8 he believes the Soviet troops are bureauw. K ART WILLIAMS, commander of the were 6,800 fires, which destroyed across the W e river could he |COncentrating on the Manchuria bor- | MRS. SUN YAT-SEN, widow of | American Asiatic fleet, with the 3,718,003, the largest destruction on |captured from the Cantonese, as the | deT- Dr. Sun Yal-sen, president of the | pittshurgh as his flagship. oo northern forces are superfor in num | MARSHAL WU-PEL-FU, overlord | southern Chinese republic. She was| REAR ADMIRAL HENRY H.| “We had on onal ex- pment and hattle experd. |Of central China and helping Mar- 4 ong, a studious gradu- | HOUGH, U. 8. N., commander of the | treme fire seasons during the sum- |ence and has better and shorter lines ; Shal Chang to defend Shanghal. e of Wesleyan college, Macon, Ga. | yangtze river patrol. ] f communication. They do not be-| MARSHAL SUN CHUAN-FENG d is now accompanying the Can- VICE ADMIRAL SIR REGINALD lieve, however, that the northern COmmander of the northern troops forces could proceed any farther |Of Marshal Chang, victories over the southward than the general Yangtse | Cantonese forces at Chuchow. line to local hostility certain ,treat of the latter to the south re- to be encountered in the southern (lieves the tension at Shangh RAL FRANK SUT mer of 19 ester Roy I v.' In area burned over, there h been four worse seasons tional forests were ms of the cost for has been only one y it has been more expensiv “The trouble duri s not &0 much in mander-in-chief of the China station. Flying his flag from the | Enterprise at Kiuklang, a treaty | port. ¥ FO, son of Sun Yat-sen, of the Cantonese govern- s first president, who is We see no neces- g our own territory pro- | tected by foreigners.” four ment and provinees. A ekiang province situation, it |the Manchurian army, Britis seems to be secure for the dier of fortune, captain on th taff du moment against further Cantonese iSh general |expert in charges of the ar: al for re nt Is in ) slightly less n Has a grudge against the vears; but ms rere, but denies having been | Jue chiefly to the | Mukden. eiarithy United Strtast the hunching of lightning fires. Most of NATI N [Soviets and is with Marshal Chang | pyilippines, Seas ntan o One package the lightning fires came from two [, |to the Anish. BT AN ANG: well known Clnass!l = him to say good-bye to pills! storms, one on Ju 6 and one op | JOHN VAN A. MacMURRAY, | ctor, who is aising war funds by July 12. So man : rted by | United States envoy extraordinary | giving entertainments throughout those two storms, particularly the | and minister plenipotentiary at Pe- | the country. At Tsinan the marshal | latter one, that the available force | L {kin. lin command of the Kuomintang | Read Mr. Awtry’s )¢ guards and rangers was 1ot able | —_— M. VAN BIERVLEIT, Belgian lfnn,.g“_,h,\ Nationalist or Cantoness | testimonial as to to get around fast enoush to keep - {consul, also acting for Holland, at | troops of General Chang Kai-shek— what ALL-BRAN them under control. {Would Make Memorial of Wash- mankow. !sold tickets to merchants at from | does in stamping out constipation. These two storms covered prac- [ WELLINGTON KOO, Chinese for- 0 to 3500 each. Tsinan foreign “I'm a man 56 years of ;ze. bave had gn minister at Pekin. Columbia | merchants paid on an average of $20 | chronic constipation for 35 years. I iversity graduate and Ph. D.;: min- | a ticket. The Chinese Chambe have been taking all kinds of purgs v 5 C tives, scarcely—if ever—have a natural ter to Washington 1815; and toCommerce of Tsingtai is ba | movement. Have spent a great deal of western part of northecn MMont ° troops in her Amerlcan-made yORKE TYRWHITT, British com- |Charles S Hale, who was injured past s } Liblels b MR. HU, Chinese Bolshevist leader ) ‘ u 1 A evlsive |Im Canton. Bpe fluent English | | number was advances toward Shanghai. A mUUnE S SHRIDeer (AT PIOSIVE | 414 is said to have been a laundry- | NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1927. — REAR ADMIRAL JOHN EWEN | [ttt ettt =ttt 0ttt CAMERON, at Hankow with seven British ships. Hankow, at the junc- | tion of the Han and the Yangtze- Kiang, is second only to Shanghai in commercial importance. MAJOR GENERAL JOHN DUN- CAN, British commander of the Shanhai defence force, with a picked command of 12,000 troops, including | the Twentieth Indian Brigade. Kansas and Missouri Co-Eds Lose Their Jobs Kansas City, Mo., Feb. 11 (UP)— Co-eds at the University of Kansas, | Lawrence, and the University of Missourl, Columbia, seem to be com- peting in letting the hitherto pop- vlar locks grow long again. Girls at both institutions started to let their hair grow, much to the dis- | gust of tonsorial artists in both | towns. | A recent check-up on the Missourl | campus revealed that 60 per cent of the girls either had long hair or were “expecting to have in the near slightly larger, and exponents of lengthened tresses are gaining new cohorts daily. DIES OF INJURIES Worcester, Mass., Feb.. 11 (P— when his motorcycle collided with a fruit wagon in Shrewsbury early last night, died at the City hospi- tal here shortly before midnight. | e o S e o o o o o o o o L U L L o L o o ALL-BRAN enables with every meal. Guaranteed. Doctors recommend it because it is 100% bran. Eat ALL-BRAN with milk or cream—and add fruits or honey. Use in cooking. Mix with other cereals. Served and sold every- where. Ready to eat. Made by === e e e e e e e e B e o o o Yo (o o T o e o e e D TIT D DD a——— Since 1916 a total of 67.524 fires | | Great Britain 1921; also member of | entertainments now he! | money and no permanent relief. ... Kellogg in Battle Creck. Recipes s iaetic oo e HAOL0) Bosa |l G EArTIsbuTe Pt Fen L (mey e e 1 s BN S enadnen S B Rang me g m‘ ‘W?y‘l"'f’ red ane DAk ot s OB package. | ALL-BRAN, T found feet of timber. | The colonial farmhouse which serv- | | pills and tablets. I haven't felt as good 9 ed as the headquarters of General | in 20 yeart W. Awmy, Atlants, Ga. SPIJT RF !—‘ | George Washington at the Battle of | You can get permanent, natural RIFD ot o) VITAMIN-BALANCE | s erty. of the Siate of Pomsylvania Kellogelel FEBRAN Tpaalls: ALL-BRAN I and a national shrine er 5 . . . §inoo o, 2 14 IN EANT[]N PARTY terms of a bill now pendins i the Science is profoundly interested in | 1 s e e the nutrition problems of childhood, it : . : . D. McDade, and ba | i i . . q Conservatives and Radicals in e e because the child of today is the adult 1 T Tihearsazen . that the “Gurmhouse it of tomorrow and early youth is the time OMIKOWSK1 awson d re battlefield as well, be con- 5 pen Disagreemen |verten into s Hate park s to build up a strong, sturdy body. s i s 1 —————— | ans are now under way for a 7 1 — o 4 Washington, Feb. 11 (P—Indica. | célebration of international scope to Scott’s E.mul‘".on’ tbe .fOOd.-tom.C i tons of an Imponding split in the Celebrate the 150th anniversary of that abounds in cod-liver oil vitamins, is fildepm i Cantonese nationalist parties, with (h° battle, McDade said in present- d in th ds of h to gi i the conservative and radical wings N8 his Dbill and urged action at| now used in ousands o omes f{o give i drawing farther and farther apart, | °NCe SO that the field would become proper vitamin-balance to the axly | 1 are contained In official advices re. | State Droperty before the date of the celved from China both by the gov. | Ceremony. diet. rrmant 1 Interested | diplomatie | The battle of the Brandywine, sald circles. Observers here attach great | (0 have been the bloodiest of the Scott’s Emulsion is purest Norweg“ nificance to thes> reports although | Revolutionary War. was fought September 11, The celebration| ian cod-liver oil Erepared in delightful Blue B thoy are not complete enoush to fur. feptember 11, Lunsee : : . Risi @ clear ploture of the nternal 13 planned by the Legion posis of | form, not unlike rich, sweet cream. situation in the party. = e ai : * . In some diplomatic circles which paris of tho batclfild be- f Children take it giadly and adults o o i 4 unty. i a . ’ rents fn China tne et 1n ex. || Presdent Contitz: an Governor| N[ relish it foo. Demand Scott’s = ately conservative | Fisher of Pennsy v will deliver * s hal IBtely SOpseENEHIYe | mdceasas ‘ot tha ‘colebration, | Tha Aké& Emulsion! control of the nationalist party will be established, to be followed pos sibly by an understanding between Chiang Kai-Shek, Cantonese war lord and some members of the alliance of northern Tuchuns in which Chang | Tso-Lin is now the dominating fig- the Ring farmhouse that | ure. Whether it will come before there has been further fighting on n flag was unfurled to irst baptism of fire, ac- WAI I PAPI;:R SA the fronts where (Cantonese and | COrding to historlcal traditions. [ I ,I': governors of the nal thirteen At your druggist — Price 60¢ and $1.20 will be in attendance, and all e, hich had troops in the bat- SRR Scott & Bowne, Bloomfeld, N.J. 2611 (N ill be represented. from Washington's head- Tuarters the Ameri receive its tional shrine Price 50C to $3"50 Per Bundle Fu, are able to trust each other in Millinocket in Penobscott county, MI@I)"I")ISHADE Serge Suits DRESSES e T T N T Vo oo are unwilling to predict, { Much depends, It is said, on the T ——— G : an attempt to recapture Hankow |apparently leads the state in snow M K = l 'rh I : -from the Cantonese, moving down depth, according to the snow bulle- Ol'gall, lilgs Ey OmpSDn, nc. 3 the line of the Peking-Hankow rail- ISt iesteraay by B weatlior i northern forces are now in contact,| The Brandywine battlefield is situ- | and what form the realignment |ated only a few miles from Valley might take, the diplomatic observers Forge, another state park and na- | ROOM LOTS extent to svhich the two chief lea DEEP SNOW IN MAINE ers in the Peking and central Chin Portland, Me., Feb. 11 (A—With areas, Chang Tso-Lin and Wu Pei- 32 inches of snow on the ground, way from the Hwang-Ho or Yellow hureau. 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