New Britain Herald Newspaper, February 11, 1927, Page 22

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, & Co. | day {in the OECRECY SHROUDS STATE DEPARTHENT All Officials and Employesa Under Orders Washington, Feb. 11 (UP)—The state department has been blanketed with secrecy regflations unknown since war days. President Coolidge’s new disarma- ment proposal message was 5o close- ly guarded that even high White House and state department officials denfed its existe even they were not in on Investigation today reve The contents of all waste ure destroyed late eve by special functionarl ning force arrives. Stenographers’ note boc ocked in drawers when n All telegrams are cent tow rooms, lo vith an off of the day. Papers carried from one another within the building m enclosed in envelopes, and im documents signed for on rec one official from another. ortant Two reasons were understood to be behind the new reg which have been steadily during the last three mont 1—Nicaraguan and Chinese poti- cies have involved warship and troop movements, and acts under some criticism in this country and abro “That applies also to the Mexican sit- uatlon, involving consideration of possible removal of this govern- ment's arms embargo. In connection with the disarmament proposal, it as feared that any advance infor- mation might work to the advantage of foreign opponents af the move. 2—There have been two alleg ks" in the department recently An employe was discharged after investigation of a report from an @ American ambassador abroad that a foreign government was curing confidentld] department information even before he received it. Another employe department charges t find used improperly advance copies of examination questions for en- trance into the American diplomatte Service. The press has been eonnected In no way with improper “feaks”, it was sald. ; Italy Is Preparing for The Coming Olympiad Rome, Feb. 11 (UP)—Italian rations for the 1928 Olympiad in today threughout the coun- under the direction of Deputy general secret of th ty. Almost 00 afth ng té6 6 s belon 5,000 clubs will enrolled by Turati. Premier Mus- solini has ekpressed deep interest in' the games and wants Italy to make o better showing than ever before. Deputy Lando Ferretti, president of the Italian Olympic committee, tele- graphed Turati: “All the athletic forces of Italy are welded for the National Olym- pics. It Is a tempéred army wish ing to march according to the ne national ryhthm which Il Duce has given the nation.” Residents Protesting Empty Bottles on Lawns Chicago, Feb. 11 (UP)—War against care-free youths who empty gin bottles on their front lawns has been declared by cftizens of Rogers Park, a North S8hore community. At a mass meeting it was decided to declare a ban against parkir along shaded streets. “Young people sit in their cars until midnight,”” W. E. Murphy said. ““The girls smoke and drink They throw their empty gin hottles out to elutter up the strects MANNINC The annua holders of the meet Hu of th Manning, Br sovnin will be held at the offices of the company In Meriden on We ines- February 28, The meeting will be called to order at 11 forenoon, A board of direc- tors will be elected and votes will b en on the ratification of all con- tracts, 1cts and proce incorporators, hoard officers of the eompar ganization as se lings of book of the . lan must be NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1927, MOTHER OF TWO LITTLE FATE OF RELIEE BIL IN DOUBT .%o self—Formerly was Resident of Willimantic. Westerly, R. L, Feb. 11.—{P— Hearing a shot, Albert B. Smith, Jr., investigated and found his wite, Mrs. Vera Blake Smith, 26, in a pool of blood at the head of a flight of stairs early this morning. Mrs. Smith, who had just returned from a | hospital where she had ISAmeN ARMY DENIES ACTING AS AN INFORMER Brands Story of Willimantic “Agent” r as Fletitious—Man Him- MeNary-Hagen Measure Belore Senators Today } selt Disappears. Feb, 11.—(A—When a witness said to be a member of the Salvation ainst three men | Willimantic, ocal post of th army Wasington, Feb. 11 (P—With the uthern dramatic vote still in doubt 9wl o ¢ arlac luoc) o8 spec ion rife as to whether ol g O and city police | President Coolidge would sign it if xo in court today counsel for | /Cl O K00 R N Haugen farm fendants asked for an acquit- | PEEREE R o O Ly @ arrests had heen on charges | 3 s of liquor to the man now | APProval or re ng, Adelbert Miner, on January | though 1 the raids no lquor | Hit-and-Run Driver Is failed to appear nd had apparently shot herself be- | cause of despondency over continued poor health. Medical Examiner M. been for |a Reuter's correspon ome time had been sleeping alone | H. Sherman declared the case one of | the rai | no one was p! nd except a trifling quantity ille suicide. home brew in the homes of the bought in thomp.SOHVllle‘ A, Smith ldaves twe: ehndten; | Smen | T_l);o;m.w:mm 4}‘:\‘?!',“[4(\;;111 P ged respectively two years and | Mine t town Tuesday and told | —The ‘;““‘1‘_“‘ N ““"’{ three months. She was dead when he had been trans- | SR e SRl » Ol tound by her husband, the bullet erred to Boston and would not be Scitico, e ' having penetrated the right temple. b for a year and a half. He had night when he was Mrs. Smith's parents are both dead. d to have bought liquor from |automobjle on the . Police said her mother killed her- V. Specer, Casper Vegard, higl e and SRS ans self in much the me manner. They orin, Jr., Mrs. Lamarche|were on ay to a motion | .,me pere from Willimantic, Conn. B Henry. |plcture show 1in Somerville when | Chief of Police Thomas F. Grady |Gemme was knocked down. A bus | | LESS AND LESS SUNSHINE told Judge Foss that he would like i‘lll\'fir]:-,pr\ro:\f'!\h*u I(r‘om the op}nvt» | s to get Miner back to find out if he site direction saw the automobils shes| ng 820 made the complaint in good faith, |suddenl n to one side and then | Manchester, England, Had But §2 | rs During the Past Ye; Th sdny ¢ 3 M xt Thursday and if the | Mr —Manchester s getting worriec | and so jt was ase until n Gemme were taken witness is not on hand the defend- 0 it was found | hout its continnally decreasing por- | ants shall bo discha ¥ cut about the About its continually decr £ T Local Salvation ar. officers ( Mrs. Gemme, nied that Miner was with them tly not struck by the Army | m ell to the hi and vation hway Godlee observatory ins of the rains in Manchester,” ying, but ohserv: tend to show, on the other han .1 that this busy English industrial center is becoming a drier, if gloomler, city. “It alwa is 2 commor ity to Woar Out Opposition Washington, Feb. 11 () — Radio teontrol legislation admittedly is in a Its Effect on the Hitting of Ball ‘Jf‘m:vrmm position in the senate. HELD AS RUM RU | ‘Goose” Goslin Gives His Views on NER inal action on it at this session Feb. 11 (F--Hecomin Players, lnlmmn of ll‘l“\ml’}” e report SR e S already approved by the house—ap- through here today local ot Springs, Ark., Feb. 11 P — | jearg now to depend almost solely ors i e meahinaland oy £ is great siufe for baseball | yp i oot P e UG e ners R Rt v Al e eomdthive 0D il r who fakes a full swi down the opposition at night ses- || o01% = o8 €0 e e thor 2d medicine for the batter Who | sions. P : 2 s | sion boards. The driver, George K es his bludgeon, in the opin- | The compromise bill written by | 103 S eon “Goose” Goslin, slug- ner e Dok his ss & sthutaer R e wastitgtooli TR e oo, e LA L uniiivarean rested Placed er §1, |the Mctadden branch banking bill bonds. “Goose” qualified as a golf late next weck, but proponents then . ty hy‘hl(;w ;;‘.“iv( )nn-l ‘!r:'r!‘x;‘ 1;}\.'“,,; ;k to make it the unfinished HOT AR S Cha b s al open tourname v | business erpiie N which he has an amateur stafus.| Meantime, opponénts will confer | oS Angeles Feb. 1f (UT) Teamed with Joe Turn: profes- | to map out their program with the P i t ‘"’;“‘, '('“ (Yj‘y"_ ]‘-‘R \,,'r'v " s 1, Goslin shared second hon- |leader, Senator Pittman, de iled suit again: Ceci e Mille in the mised professional and | Nevada, who said today that the ex- asking that his f ar contract be amateur best ball matches Wed- [clusion of the provision in confer- cancelled because advertisements of - ¢ ence permitting cach state to have films in which he has played under " Yesterday, Thowever, he must|its own wave length convinced him |DeMille have not carried his name nave heen . {hinking. in baseball | that a private monopoly was the pur- |in the same type_as the titles terms for an excuse to get out ot | Pose sought. LRI his sche me for he pic! hu!} up his ball affer playing only a | holes anmd returned to the {he 1 “Too cold,” he said. helped me a whole, ught me| | hhouse. has “Golf lot," to follc goif 1 knew through on my swing nothing of following LOOK! LISTEN! On February 16th I have learned that i : on thé tees and fair and ) think it has given me my wallops on the The “Goose” ac wood clubs and the te their possibilities of long distances | interested him most > “For the hitter who cow- it and takes a free sw ama of golf 13 a good thing fenee s e expla “but if I were a manager I would | | | shots with | | this Stude- a h’ baker will celebrate its newspaper not let a player who chokes his| bat play golf. It won't do him any | good. it you can't hu free swinging hitter, he ad lr 1 Nearly H'!If Million Is Given Away in Bonuses | Binghamton, N. Y., Feh, 11 (A— icott Johnson corporation, | distributed by check a 75th Anniversary with ; 5 a One-Profit announce- 3.07 to approximate- ' erday bonus of $42 ly 15,000 shoe workers who will| S ' k are in the profit ring plan of = - B D ment of a Stop-l.oo ted among shoe wor Johnson City, Endicott and the amount was 1 and-Listen kind! ' work, the maxi- b | » ; REMARRIED | . . { After liv- | See Special Announcement years fol- | % | them in This Paper February 16th i sw Haven March 17, 1922, Alexan- | ler Hepburn, 60, a carpenter of 244/ Union avenue, Madison, Conn., and ) Mrs. Elizabeth Curran Hepburn, 69, o of Madison, d that the - B 17- ~N R ler of their liv would be irried yesterday in the municipal S LRGP 75. YEARS YOUNG Yorm e sses at mony were G A. Hep- | n of Hartford and Louise Hep- | West Hartford, Conn. | TELLS DETAILS OF PORTUGUESE FIGHT Eye Witness Describes GCon- ditions in Lishon London, Feb. 11 (A—An eye-wit- ss description of Lisbon following today from ne the revolt was received | was wrecked. o) E b din Ji s i b st called by the Portuguese, the Prac: “The military governor has tssued Do Commercio and in which most of an edict forbidding the people to th: government buildings are locat-| go out on the streets except between ed, was full of broken furniture|the hours of 7 a. m. and 6 p. m. | from the ministry of marines where| Civilians found carrying arms are the rebels had entrenched them-|to be shot without trial. selves, “The government Mas the situa- “The damage appeared slight|tion entirely In hand.” or T Great Syonita by Liowiaa) [ RUECIORENTRRD College of Pharmacy here last night. ““Although we sincerely hope that such a situation will never come fo pass in the United States,” he said. “The fact that many draggists’ la- boratories are today conducted at a loss makes it not wholly improbable that the neighborhood druggist may some day abandon his preseription department entirely.” In outlining the position which the pharmécist occupies in the com- munity where he locates Mr. Lynch of the Great Avenida Da Liberdad The roadway was littered with a tangle of telephone . wires and branches of trees, while The journey from Seville, Spain, to Barr Portugal, required four | | days instead of the usual thirteen|; the strike on in was oper- From Bar- reiro the correspo crossed the | to Lisbon by a ferry| ed by a crew'from | hours, on account of ated by iver Ihhnn looked like a dcad ci d the cor- respondent, fact that d to enter the landing stage. ong the water- royed and hardly a glass remained unm- the government building. Horse ' RED.ROUGH SKIN —make your ‘Black Horse Many bu front were de e of is ugly and annoying: soft, white, lovely, by ekin Resm@; Goldenblum's Saturday Morning 9 to 12 NEW SPRING | SAMPLE HATS Reg. $4 and $5 Values CUT PRICES || ON ALL OTHER NEW | HATS JUST ARRIVED, | FOR TOMORROW ONLY COMPARE OUR VALUES ||{ AND PRICES GOLDERELUM MILLINERY CO. | i Main and Court Sts. : New Britai | . nnouncement > epidemie of “Barg new Clothing, » announce the and Furnishings. ain Sales,” w Hats hoes, D) sale you'll uunmmlz If you've attended a s appreciate th | America, was destroyed. Square,” which is & 3 Hour Sale 1 the lamp posts were leaning over in| Nation Minus These Would Be| gyiq: “The pharmacist and his all sorts of directions. ’ | neighborhood ~ depend entirel. 5 Sorry Country, = | neigh ol D entirely on Many private buildings showed v 2GR P e i signs of the fighting. The home of James W. Lynch of Hartford. | cist realizes his dependency at all C. Cam Alexander, British manager | times, realization comes to the of the Bank ‘of London and South| New Haven, Conn., Feb. 11 (P—| ncighborhood only when someone is The fam-| “A nation minus drug stores would | ily had a narrow escape, leaving|be a sorry nation indeed,” said| t before a shell burst in the|James W. Lynch of Hartford, presi- nursery. The palace of the Duke of | dent of the Connecticut Pharma-| Palmellas was wiped out in the| ceutical association addressing the| flerce encounter centering around it.|student body of the ALLING RUBBER CO. 240 MAIN STREET Rubber Goods—Sporting Goods Automobile Accessories — Radios seriously ill and drugs and medi- cines are an immediate nécessity, With the passing of the crisis the feeling of dependency passes and the druggist slips back intq his ac- Conpecticut\ customed notch. Rubbers—Boots—Arctics Rain Coats and Hats Rubber Aprons and Gloves Rubber Sheeting, $1.00 sq. yd. Automobile Accessories Grease and Oils Sponges and Chamoise Chase Auto Robes Moto-Meters, Mirrors Cigar Lighters, Stop Lights, etc. Water Bottles and Syringes Trusses, Single and Double Elastic Stockings, Anklets, Knee Caps, etc. Elastic Abdominal Supporters Work, Dress and Driving Gloves H. 0. W. Sweaters Carter’s Wind-Breakers Leather Jackets Sweat Shirts, $1.19 Traveling Bags and Suit Cases Sporting Goods Basket Balls Volley Balls Gym Shoes and Suits, etc. ATWATER KENT—RADIOLA and KOLSTER RADIOS SPECIAL FOR THE SCHOOL CHILDREN — Brief Cases $1.00 to $3.95 UNITED STATES TIRES AND TUBES—SEIBERLING TIRES | The only news { that regularly saves you money YOU may be interested in the baseball scores—in the politigs of the world—in the latest discoveries of science— | But you are not half as much affected by such news as you are by the welfare of youwr own pocletbook; the comfort of your shoes, the price of the phonograph or radio you want. That’s why advertising news deserves even more attention than sporting or international news. The ad- vertisements keep you informed of all the latest com- forts and conveniences that can make your daily living more delightful. They tell where to secure the best; how to-save money; how, to lessen work; how to have a better homa, better food, better clothos, more luxuries. You can’t keep up with the daily news—the kind that affects you most—unless you read the advertise- ments. . They ave the chronometers of local time. You'll find it highly profitable to adjust your living by them. Advertisements are the only news that really save you money—read them all New Britain Herald OVER 14,000 DISTRIBUTED DAILY The Herald is the Only Newspaper in New Britain With An Audited Circulation,

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