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HARINES SENT TO NICARAGUA ZONE Rirplanes Also Detailed to Pro- tect U. S. Interests Washington, Feb. 17 ()—Concern for the safety of American lives and property because of the recently in- creased outbreaks in the Nicaraguan civil war evidently has augmentation of United States naval forces, in the Central American re- public. The additional forces included company of 200 marines and a divi- Ssion of six airplanes, marking the dispatch of aireraft to the ragu- _an zone for the first time. Both units were ordered from San Diego to Corinto on the west coast of Nicaragua and will be ta destroyer tender Melvi the airplanes are mad shipment. While the Washington gov is hopeful that the recent conf between Rear Admiral Latimer charge of special squadron in Nicaraguan waters and Dr. Juan B. Sa . Liberal faction leader, may fnaugurafe a peacefu solution of the civil v is manifes ficials over t to ns and oth ‘residents. In addition to the San Diego units, the naval transport Henderson which is prepar il today from Phil- adelp ort, R. I, to take aboard 800 bluejackets for duty with th ting in where s are 14 in readin Aepartment to from the Qu: s by the navy transport marines Va., base to d for them the Rich- mond, airbiehead, ahich arrived y Honolulu from Nic gua to the Asiatic fleet, ir ing de port to await further ord The airplane division of 100 offic and men, will be used for reconnaissance work, particularly 1o keep the American naval com- manders on both the east and west coats of Nicaragua posted on the movements of the Nicaraguan fac- aris in waters, also is be- | ained at the Hawaiian | | miral Latimer, commander of the | United States special service squadron in Nicaraguan waters, says he had not requested that additional | forces be sent to Nicaragua. ! \ On his arrival here on the way | from the east to the west coast nf; | Nicaragua, he declared: “There is really no need for them, as there al- ready is a sufficient number of | marines and bluejackets in Nicara- | gua to fulfill the requirements.” Admiral Latimer is en route to | Corinto after conferences at Puerto | Cabezas with the Liberal president | of Nicaragua, Juan B. Sacasa. He | characterized these conferences | as. “having no particular signifl- | cance,” and said the situation had | not changed as a consequence of | them. | AT BOY SCOUTS' CIRCUS| i Lads From Home in Newington | Coming to Show at Center Church Chapel. Members of Troop 1 of Newing- ton, located at the Home for Crippled Children, will guosts “The Good Turns of " which will be presented iday night in the Center church apel by Boy When Troop 4 gave its last circus | the performance was repeated at Ithe Newington home and received | such an ovation that it was de- cided to let the members of thpt troop, which is led by Frank Boardman of Troop 4, see this show in its original setting. About boys will come over by trucks nd will be given seats in the front row. | The program for the Turns” has now been completed. |1t will begin with two numbers by the troop drum and bugle corps. |Then will come “Bungle, the |Brainy Pachyderm,” followed by |four “Tiny Tumblers” in an exhi- bition of flips and dives. The Uker- akenley Symphologists will offer |the “Murder of Music.” Mastoid wil! stage an act of Hindu icism, assisted by Hudhson the Moslem mathematician. | signal | half of the_show, to be followed by |a shadowgraph operation and a rio of jazzers in “Musical Variety.” | There will be football | game, “Harvard vs. Y: hen the |longest leap in the world will be Newington | Scout Troop 4. | tower will open the second | ([ ouR scHoois ) | “Good | management in the plant. Rajah | | rions' forces. The planes also will after which the troop's| carry standard machine guns and bombing equipment. Needs No More Men Panama, Fe act. The show will conclud: n Evening at Canip,” typi o PUT it down now for a double-riveted, copper-cornered fact: Prince Albert will give you more pleasure to the cubic inch than any other tobacco you ever packed in a pipe. Maybe I'm prejudiced. Even so, my statement holds. DIl leave it to you, after your first P. A. pipe-load. Buy a tidy red tin of P. A. and follow these simple directions: Tuck about a thimbleful into the bowl of your favorite pipe. Light up, and pull that cool, con- soling smoke up the stem. Exhale slowly and get the full benefit of that wonderful Prince Albert taste, PRINGE —no other tobacco © 1927, R. J. Reynolds Tobace Company, Winston-Salem, N. Co ¢ giants will repeat their two- |traffic officers in Paris not only ar- | too rest traffic-law the fine and collect immediately pay b. 17 (P—Rear Ad-[cal of any scout camp. imnnt. NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1927. DUKE OF YORK S " NOW IN TROPICS | }Wim His Wile, He Arives af ] Suva Today | Suva, (Fiji), Feh. 17.,~(UP)—In- to the picturesque tropical harbor here, surrounded by palm-fringed shores and studded with native vil- lages, the British battle-cruiser Re- nown steamed today, .bearing the Duke of York, second son of the king | of the British Empire, and his wife, daughter of a Scottish earl, on their memorable tour of New Zealand and Australia. With her pale grey coat of paint | shimmering in the tropical sunshine of late afternoon, the Renown pre- sented a spectacle of silver magnifi- cence and might. As she was sight- ed on the offing, shrill cries of wel- come came from the white residents | of this outpost of the British Empire ;ax‘.d excited natives, arrayed in their 5 s best clothes for this occasion. Suva L i r‘v}n "}.: “‘::mm" ‘\gms little excitement beyond the il R { regular calling of the mail boats, and Fiaic NExtule Schock | this was an occasion only equalled Peter W. Bauer's department at|previously by th the Stats Trade school has the dis-|0f Wales in the tinction of offering the highest train- APril, 1920. ing in machine drafting of any| Launch school of less than college grade in|ROWD, an the gigantic vessel the east. | crept slo to her mooring in the His industrial expericnce betore| harbor. launches and a flotilla of na- coming to New Britain was as tool | tive canoes swarmed~ around her, maker with the Winchester Repeat-| Their occupants shouted glad cries v, welcome, the nativs tongue ing Arms Co., New Haven, where he | of Welcame, the nafiye tonghe was promcted to overseer and sys-| Mingling ’ . 3 S S | greetings of the Britishers. The Duke tematizer in installing :.\“ “‘mior g lctng W Wantniny o ame. an ongincer In the|InE alongside him, acknowledged the manufacturing enginzerings depart- | T°CCPtion from - the LEtdss okt ment. He continued his career as| orovit Ll an engineer when he accepted s, Governor Sir Hyre Huteon vistied place at the Bbll Wrench Co. off G0t o"Colcoming him to the hospi- New Haven and Tuisa, Oklahoma. it T 0 I B o Uoe He was drafting instructor = abiywogiern pacific, of which Dodsman) Tae aoul . en Ha-|the neadquarters. The Duke and ven for many years. I Duchess of York gave a dinner Born in Hagen, Germany, he Was| ,poqrq last night, attended by the graduated from the teachers' train-|yociit BR0 LR B e govern. in_ school which is being conducted | nt officials and businessmen. under the auspices ot the statel" ggicarg of the Renown told of a board of education. He is a mem-| . esing-the-line ccremony. The men ber of the American Society of Me-| ,nq ofiicers of the Renown evolved a chanical F In September, | sy pageant, on a scale of magnifi- vice in the State|conce only previously rivalled by a | similar ceremony on the ship during — —— [ the Prince of Wales' visit seven years In order to reduce court costsiago, High naval and military officers part in a well-organized scenic r. The duke did not enter into nally as Wales did. Head same warship in ed out to meet the Re- violators but assess 3\\.\“8 you straight - DA is the work EEEEV T Cool as a claim-adjuster. Sweet as an unexpected inheritance. Fragrant as pine-boughs, swaying in a summer 2 visit of the Prince | Proceedings began just before the | |ship erossed the equator, when a | fearsome King Neptune, surrounded {by his “court,” a crowd of British | bluejackets garbed In all kinds of fantastic costumes,” hailed Captain Sullivan on the bridge, apparently |from the sea. The captain stopped the ship and invited Neptune aboard. Rockets sent up from the forecastle disclosed Neptune and a few attend- ants emerging from a hawse-pipe. SuMivan megaphoned an invitation to come op the flag-deck, where Nep- tune was received in formal state by the duke and others with Witty, topi- | cal speeches. Neptune in turn wel- comed the duke and duchess to his domain of the Seven Seas, and the duke was initiated as a member of “Our Sea King's Brotherhood” and invested with the Order of the Equatorial Bath. Two Men Die Tonight In the Electric Chair Ossining, N. Y., Feb. 17.—(#— Plans to photograph the heart action of two men who are to be electro- cuted at Sing Sing prison tonight have been abandoned, prison officials announced. The doomed men are Paul E. Hil- ton, radio burglar, convicted of kill- ing Patrolman Arthur Ke: y, in New York, and Anthony Paretti, gangster, convicted of killing two rival gangsters in Brooklyn more than ten years ago. Prison otficials recently announced 1t an electro-cardiograph- would be used to record tlie heart action of Hilton and Paretti while they were ibeing executed to determine the t effect of electricity on the art | BIG WATCH ROBBERY Milwaukee, Wis, Feb. P es valued between $25,000 and ,000 were stolen from a guest !room on the sixth floor of the Wis- consin hotel last night. The thieves picked the lock of a room occupied by Robert Herrmon, i lesman for a watch ¢ stole from a trunk a tray containing about 500 watches, 100 of which Herrmon told police were studded with diamonds. | The s rode down an eleva- | tor, mingled with guests, and depart- led In a taxicab. | READ HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS FOR YOUR W. Locky TiGER Stops Falling Hatr. Cor- rects dandruff and scalp ecze- ma. Money-Back Guarantee. Whyte-Fox knocks pimples. Tryit. At Barbers and Druggists Hotel La Salle, Chicago Six Famous Dining Rooms Known the Country Over ~ _The Louis XVI Room The Rookwood Room Blue Fountain Room The Gentlemen’s Cafe The Dutch Room The Roof Garden AN Serving the Finest of Foods Studies for Housewives COUNTLESS women 'in Chicago go to Hottl La Salle occasionally to gain new ideas on food and service. are completing the Stevens—the largest hotel in the world. Just because so many Nowhere in people delight in luxurious living. America can one enjoy finer foods or more luxurious settings. And rooms are 0 popular with men that all housewives desire to learn why. One would need a column to even name the specialties they serve. But here we deal only with thecoffee. It is La Touraine. Go to any of these rooms for breakfast, luncheon or dinner, ot to the roof garden on a summernight,and this éxquisite coffee greets you. The luxuries of Hotel La Salle have carried its fame the world over. Now its owners these famous Think what it means when such a hotel selects one coffee in a thousand as a factor in its delights. And that same coffee— ouraine—is at your groceryatamodest price. The finest homes around you serve it. Also the finest tearooms in New York. That coffee is at your call. The coupon will bring you enough to try. And your grocer will supply you what you want with- out fancy price. Please learn, for your own sake, what such coffee means to you and yours. Interesting facts about La Touraine (Extra) Coffee It is the largest-selling coffee in New England, the birthplace of fine coffees in America. In this home of exacting coffee critics, it is considered the supreme result of 237 years of coffce de- velopment. It is the coffec served in many dining place ous for théir cdffess. In all Statle: 5 for instance. In the magnificent Shoreland of Chicago. In countless country homes which study fine hospitality. The blend combines the four finest coffees that grow. E: comes from a differ - each is the pride of a nation. Each derives its excelient flavor from one of the rarest soils of his blend. Hi i e this blend. His duty is to main. tain, without regard to cost, this premier coffee flavor. He pays aay price necessary to combine in La Touraine (Extra) the maxi- mum delights. Three of the coffees combined in this blend cost 50% more than ordinary coffee, and 25% more than Sao Paulo, the prize coffee of Brazil. One is so rare that only 30,000 bags are grown yearly. LaTouraine(Extra) is sold direct to retail grocers. This to save middlemen’s profits. It is sold in double sealed cartons, not in cans. These and other econo- mies pay for the extra quality. Thus users get this matchless The formula for this blend is a seeret, carcfully preserved. Cof- fee cxperts spent twenty years in perfecting it. No other blend has been made to resemble it. Those who find here their ideal flavor can find it nowhere else. Mz. E.]. Butler, the noted coffee expert, personally tests, tastes and selects all coffees used in coffee without a fancy price. You might as well have the best © Why People Love It The coupon will bring you a quarter- pousd of this exqu coffec. Brewitas we direct, and you will know why so many coffee lovers have adopted La Touraine. Do this because your home deserves it. You might as well have the best. Clip coupon now. RADLED inover-size springs that measure 82% of its wheelbase, the Erskine Six makes touring a new At All Grocers 56¢ a Pound | gaesssansesssnnsenanannnns Ten Cups Free Mail ehis o W. . Quinby Co., Adantic Ave. Buutoe e g o) package of Ls Touraine (Estra) Cofive Please PRINT Plainiy ™" rode in a mare comfortable car than the Erskine Six or bought gas for a more economical one, for it yields 25 breeze. Mild, but not willy-nilly, if you get me. And of course you do! Make the test today and check-in with what I've been telling you. You'll probably say I wasn’t enthusi- astic enough! Anyhow, get some Prince Albert now and get on the sunny side of pipe-pleasure. No matter what your pre- vious experience with a pipe has been; no matter how set you appear to be, try Prince Albert, It will be a revelation! ALBERT is like it! P.A. ii s0ld everywhere in tidy red tins, pound and helf-pound tin humi. dors, and pound crystal'glass humidors with sponge-moistener top. And elways with every bit of bite and parch res moved by the Prince Albert process, 'K KR experience. And even in city driving this Little Aristocrat of Motordom smooths out the cobbles and tracks that come too many to the mile. Although the Erskine Six Custom Sedan is only 5 feet 74 inches in height, it is so spacious- ly dimensioned within that men over 6 feet tall find ample leg and head room. Here is the luxury and comfort of custom bodies at the cost of bare trans- portation. You never ALBRO 225 Arch Street Tourer . ERSKINE SIX THE ERSKINE SIX CUSTOM SEDAN The Little Aristocrat 399 5 E:'cgb}iiv Custom Coupe .. « . Business Coupe .+ Prices include bumpers, front and rear MOTOR to 30 miles to the gallon. Don’t be surprised when you find you want an Erskine Six the instant you discover how easily it handles—how it weaves its way motorcycle-like through the tangled threads of traffic, accel- erates from 5 to 25 miles per hour in 8% seconds, and turns in an 18-foot radius. Critical motor- ists in Europe as well as in America have pro- nounced the Erskine Six the most revolutionary car in years. SALES Phone 260 <o $945 995 945 Studebakers New 2% Litre Car