New Britain Herald Newspaper, February 28, 1927, Page 6

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New Britain Herald HERALD PUBLISHING COMPANY fosued Dally (Sunday Bxcepted) At Herald Bidg.. 67 Cburch Btrest SUBSCRIPTIOR RATES $5.00 » Year. $3.00 Three Months. T6c. & Month. Entered at the Post Office at New Brituin as Second Clase Mall Matter. TELEPHONE CALLS Business Office ” Editoria) Rooms 91 The only profitable advertising miedium in the City.- Circulation booke and press room_always open to advertisers. Member of the Associated Press. The Associated Press i exclusively en- titled to the use for re-publication of all news credited to it or not otherwite credited in this paper and also local news published therein. | Member Audit Burean ot Circulation. | The A. B. C. 1a a national organization | which furnishes newspapers adv, tisers with a strictly honest analy! circulation. Our _circulation statistice ara based upon this audit This insures protection sgainsi fraud In newspaper distribution figw.es to both national and tocal advertisers. of | The Herald 1s on sale daily in_Ni fork at Hotaling's Newsstand, Timel Square; Schultz's Newsstands, Entrance | | Grand Central, 42nd Street. | e S S S —The good will aviators seem to have the good will of everybody but not ‘of fate. It can be spelt either “clo losure;” but “filibuster’ spelt only the one way. —The mayor insists our cou men hearken to the wishes of public; perhaps they got out of the habit from the time of the war memorial eplsode. NOT A GESTURE AT SHANGHAIL The Chinese minister at Wash- ington, Dr. Alfred Sze, declared re- cently that the Chinese people would never rest, now that the Can- tonege Nationalist troops have been | uniformly successful in the drive against Shanghai until complete in- | | | | suspected. The | the | made three days Pr telegral thoro s to|mer ma sceretar Sunday obably one| his repos two repo: lematical; and the fact the flam-|will remain sore. ing sign was intended to impress|reason the flood of itself upon the mind of the govern- | the White House were so congratu- | or also is problematical. It was a|latory of them good show, anyhow. cast, particularly There evidently are active l{lux-{fmm ers round and about; it they are| sincere thelr minds should be open | to reason rather than prejudice; if | they are not sincere men on a wrong track then they must be gulded solely by a specles of pre- judice which is un-American. | | INSULL was because most from the fi the cost of sending con the th of fo rec | came at la: ptions juare ncial cente tuiatory telegrams is as important a finan- cial transaction as buying lead pencil. None of the near-brok western farmers to \! le that [ingly out oon. a new are disposed n number of working on Church "Twa tax be per men,w 1, street waste money in that fashion. I It does not take a large organi tion to pe active. The Kluxers in | to tell th this region cannot be large in num- | COmmittee $40,000 i bers, but perhaps they are better | CAmpalgn contributions went, on | organized than has been generally | the they were to the| nationwide organi- | Chicago local campaign over which | zation must also be closely knit if it | Ne says the Senate has no juris- | is true similar bills can be projected | diction, Samuel Insull of Chicago | into all the legislatures. In some of | takes it upon himself to be the| states such activities have|Judge as to these matters. He is| brought about much more of a stir of course, than in Connecticut; in Ma which chusetts, for instance, they the state house. In | Citation for contempt. no doubt, such bilis| The Chicago utility magnat will be easy age. Perhaps| s lawyer appear to of the| v their introduction in Connecticut | OPinion that if the worst came—if | burd was merely a matter of form, with | contempt a bonfire thrown In by way of a lit-| they were found guilty,— it wo tle supplementary So | spell merely a little extra m far few of us have lost any sleep | DOINg expended in,the way ofa f worrying about the situation, Jail would be more salutary. ing where yer of score given BY ROBERT QU Boomer | acting, upon adv Fifty | counsel, makes his {join him in being a a furore in some states, be charges were made and excitement. SHALL WE PROTECT DOHENY'S OIL WELLS? ! “Whose property is Kellogg pro- | { tecting?” asks the heading of a lld- | -« ing article by Carleton Beals i And th TILSON'S SUCCESS Representative John Q. Tilson, ding himself as floor leader |of the next Congress has again shown the state that it is possible for a conscientious man to gain preferment in Congress without be- ing nominated and elected to the Senate, that supposedly higher body which all representatives are thought to consider a most desir- able place into which to graduate. Tilson was regarded as the logical man to take the seat vacated by Brandegee, but just about that time | the reluctant secretary of state by | Hiram Bingham got ambitious and , & determined Senate a few days| not even his election as governor |ago. | swerved him from his aim. This, it| Among companics ! will be remembered, resulted in Til- | have failed to comply with the law ' son remaining in the House. |are only two s Perhaps more use T ep teeth from fallin ver hear of a tor ew Republic. answer | is “Doheny's.” Beals writes from Mexico Cit where he had access to the fi (o the Mexican government. His list of | 2 yp ex oil companies operating in Mexico, | With those complying with the new | law, thus differs in important par- | | ticulars from the list wrung from |° broad, ater ons A gre { | | | | isc At one time tk alized in cows. Now omobiles as a side | is much service There church c the which Americanism: Prayin; shouti yplause when cmbark for the trouble Doctors scem to k spite of theory about of an apple a d. groups which have Tilson mearly failed of winning | falled to do so completely. These the honor of being floor-leader in |37 the Doheny and the Mellon in- the next Congress because he op- | {°Tests. But the Mellon company is posed the McNary-Haugen farm re- | Cited for fairness and is believed to | lief bill. Had have sound titles to its land. More- | the decision been carlier the In-|OVer, the Mellon company, holding It is not probable les will ever surgents think they would have had | 80322 acres, produces only 5.6 per | his sword without cent of the entire Mexican oil out- | dependence has been won from the | foreigner. This independence is be- ing secured in & manner which | heretofore has been regarded as contrary to the basic pacifist nature | of the Chinese—by armed force | The European powers mnever con- | sidered the modification of treaty rights, which they got by force, until the Chinese armed and it be- came inconvenient to exert the old- | time military pressure. The best the powers have been able to do lately has been to protect the forelgn quarter in Shanghai. | Twenty years ago they would have | “protected” everything in China, with the startled natives compla- cently giving way. What could have been more sig- nificant than the recent spurning "ot Secretary of State Kellogg's pro- Secretary of. State Kellogg's pro- posal that Shanghal be declared a neutral zone? That would have | | | politics now have the opportunity | f attorney given to Mr. T the skids ready; but the delay en- abled the friends of Tilson to pull | Put: enough sirings to insure his se- | claim 1,321,167 acres and produce | lection for the new term. This also | 3605 per cent of Mexican oil. means that in spite of having carn-| A pecullar feature of the Do- ed the opposition of the farm bloc | Nény situation s that Blalr & Co., Tilson was able to return to his|Panks, head a syndicate — dom- A cortaln personal 1nated by the Standard Ofl Com- | a good general record | Pany of Indiana—which h the House had |trol of most of the Mexican in modifying, henY interests, but in escrow By y transaction, has never {“for the simple reason | Doheny properties in sold In escrow, pending co Charley ( while the Doheny T concerns s post a winner. rength and as an official much con- Do- of P d on dad’ influence however, been appar: fully cor that earlier bloc. opposition e b how, Tilson ader; long may eted, n strive for rc v get it find there can do with it. is ba the e Mexico were “BACKING THE PRESIDE All those who are intercsted in|Of titles. This expla firmation | the e baseball se ns ' could e power | anch by that the v may be | Something will have fore 1928. There ntent in a third polit Consclence may of noting how deftly the journals|D°heny and indicates iving | Pivot of this whole difficu | aubious of the grand old party are g their credulous readers to under- stand that the nation is backing the | Beals: President in his vote of the late| XKellogg listed farm relief bill. One such news- | Shell inter Doheny titles writes ze 1l ps the Royal Dutch sts as having refu with the Mex| comply n Are particularly susceptible to colds? their ho st eve formed il e see was carri this aft a great sight for the Factsand Fancies TLLE cally wo out. Y alling o sett d is cast nec ine. oughing Christia g for the 2 r “put out. to arty. b man dur n by | m- | ied er- | uld | ou ut cowcateher spe- at ans | the country to vocal- strong , but it can roll him |y Send all communications to Fun Editor, Herald, and your letter will be forwarded to New York. shop Britain Let's Start it Whirring, Folks! | Out with the vacuum of cheer, o ne; Let's run it through each mental | room And pick up all the gloom! nd Reverses! car no! YOU UNDF Thoughts on a R ry Evening John house All the son In her e old ¢ 1 Can A Boy After Our Own Hc ohn ne night hnny, murderer “But son— such notions pape round anna I no nd a voice said, You proposed last night; Well, the answer Is Yes.” She hung up Before I could find out ‘Who it w : I was never so mbarrassed in all —Theodore Engert Only 20 e of the Ne Days i before THE FUN SHOP BOOK ht, 1927, Reproduction Forbidden) is draw threads of started to | you laud | AND . D) th 5 1l how I w there 15t up? murderer your head? Te ed L You can get an answ r to any question of fact or information by writing to the °‘Question W DBritain Herald, Washington Bureau, 1322 New York avenue. Washington, D. C. enclosing two cents in stamps for reply. Medical, legal and marital advice cannot be given, nor can extended research be undertaken. will receive a perscnal reply. Un- ed requests cannot be answered. ential.— Editor. ks ¢ wind is blow and in end of 1925 there wery the United Stat entire- lled by labor and 2 that ere partly controlled. s the membe Commis- written s smitten; glowed lov ree sion : | tice rd turn- Practically al Commission, s to under ons in the Civil ames of the | es in C Prince New, Mar Scotia Ontario; Alberta; Quebee wan n ton's name wife, Dan learned to rea plic 1 expressed in horsepower? According to recent calcula- Johr au v represented by its of keros count of th mical propert v bility s kerosene or boiling atures not where His Their fro I o kno nd His love nnot drif and care Eternal Goodness” reenleaf Whittier. What is the weight and height ara Bow, the movie actress? 5 feet 3 and one-half tall and weigh 120 pound: by ¥ W Editor, | All other questions the | British Columbia and Yu. | What is the rate of radlation | lightness and elasticity of step but better results can be cbtained from the contour of the lower jaw which grows more angular with increasing age. The usual way is to judge by | the teeth which show a certain amount of wear every year. Q. What i the record of Pete Latzo, the world’s welterweight box- ing champlon and how did he get Tis start? A. He was born 24 years ago and |is of Slavic descent. He has been boxing for about eight years, and comes of a family of ring fighters, | his brothers Mike, Joe and Steve having been prize fighters before him, although neither of them has | Atlanta | been a champion. Latzo lives in | Scranton, Pennsylvania, formerly worked in the coal mines. He was married six months before winning the championship from Mickey Walker, May 20, 1926. He | got his start in the ring by accident. | He substituted in a local bout for a | fighter who failed to show up and adopted the name of Young Clancy | for a time. During the last fou ars he has fought about 10 bouts, and has been knocked out only orce. | How much money is spent for ng gum in the United States in a year? The latest figures for ,124,000 spent for gum. “rom what book was th | he White Monley” taken? | It is an adaptation of Gal- 's novel of the same ea t is the distinction be- | tween “Gondola car,” “Hopper cars,” and “Flat oars | A. A “Gondola” car is one with |low sides secured by stanchions to a platform body. Sometimes the des are hinged to the body. They are usually employed to transport | | lumber, etc. A “Hopper cat” is es- | pecially de a4 to y coal, | el, sand, ete. It resembles the | | 25 | | | | | | hopper of a mill and is built so that the contents will slide down the | | s des when the trap at the bottor released. A * has | vely a platform without sides or How many food calories are | Q. {in an o W | calories, calorie 100 80 large one furnishes An average cgg has Observation On The Weather Boston, Feb. may not come in like a lion, but ither will its advent be particu-| lamb-like, the weather burcau cted today Cloudy tonight and Tuesday, | yrobably followed by snow Tucsd not much ¢ nge in temper: fresh north, shifting to ' was the mornin reau officials said t |indication of a major it that snow flu ould be experienced tions of southern New | morrow. | | i 28 (UP)—March distur s prob in most England to- Washington, Feb. x thern Cloudy tonight whly followed Not much chan I north wind Forecast for T and b; snow in temperatt shifting to northe n New York: nd ay; prob- owed by snow Tuesday; not nge in temperature rtheast wind ure is low over ces and high much esh | north, Con Maritime Prov where he | | Norfolk name. | | from the Atlantic coast westward to Winnipeg, Manitoba 30.82 inches. Local snows were reported from the Lake region and the plains states. Cloudy and unsettled conditions pre- vail in the west gulf states and the southern Mississippi valley districts. Temperatures are below freezing in the northern states between tho Miesissippi river and the Rocky mountains but are, as a rule, moder- ate in other sections. Conditlons favor for this vicinity | fair weather and not much change in temperature. Temperatures yesterday were: High Low .. 3t Atlantic Cif Boston Buffalo . | Cincinnati . | Chicago | Denver . Detroit . Duluth Hatteras Jacksonville Kansas City . Los Angeles . linneapolis Miami ntucket w Haven . New York . burgh . nd BREAKS LEG IN FALL Henry Dennison, aged 65, of 36 | Star street, fell down the steps at his fternoon and suf- fered a compound fracture of the left leg, above the ankle. The police were notified and the man was re- v Britain General hos- home yesterday Deservedly The Favorite Laxative THERE ishardly a corner on earth— however reniote—where Beecham'y. Pills are unknown. Their fame is world- wide—they have been favorites for nearly 100 years. To join the millions of users of these gentle, laxative pills is to abandon experiment. But fadsand fancies pass—Beecham's Pills grow in popularity. These remark- able pills offer quick, positive relief from constipation and resultant biliousness, sick headache and indigestion. Beecham's Pills scientifically cleanse | the bowels of poisonous substances by eliminating them from the system, thereby protecting you from the count- less ills which result from clogged intes- tines. For sale at drug stores everywhere. 25¢. and 50¢c. BEECHAM'S PILLS Thorough Eye Examinations Glasses 5 % Fitted HENRY F. REDDELL 99 West ,\l:\::;“::uu.h;’honc 1185 | Lousewar for shower pa SHOWERS, SHOWERS, SHOWERS! | paper blandly informs its clientel 157 |that of the “flood of messages” |Whereas Beals says the Dutch trust Iten ave cd at the|has asked concessions (the techni-| SHOW. ou below er when he ppropriated | gets in b How muc ns Burea and how ds her an spika | L da fun. ould-a come to been & splendid way out of the dif- my arm rour ficulty; it even would have helped the fis- h of it | ion? u fo T wish a copy ¢ your trouble been recei i hees w T hear you tal out = = = — CLIP COUPON OFF HERE — — — == Sun the so-called defender of Shanghal against the Cantonese. But even he preperred to fight it out—with the tacit assistance of the British. The awakened Chinese spirit of soyereignty—actually, not merely theoretically—has followed western modes. Everything the Cantonese liave been accomplishing has been | due to the adoption of the white men’s methods. Even his ideals are | pretty much the same; His slogans run along similar paths: “China for the Chinese; the forelgners are no | g00d,” is one of them. It doesn't sound nice uttered by Chinese, especially when the “for- | elgners” are the whites, Otherwise | the utterance means about the same thing one often hears enunci- ated in the white man's countries. The Chinese business will not be | over when the Shanghai fighting | ceases. The spirit of the yellow man is aroused, is changed. China wi neyer be Whether for better or worse, nobody can fore- | cast. | when the same. | | RELIGIOUS BILLS | Certain bills which were intro- | duced into the Connecticut Legisla- ture had to do with the rci:ni.xlim\! of religious practices and sought to | revent the marriage of whites and acks. It is said similar bills were | introduced, or will be introduced ‘ into every legislature in the United | States. | In Connecti there bility of these favorable It is interesting connecin the ooking P th to da one nij was plerced by cross, with thr the yieinity. Th tor Plafnville but it is not governor vas slight pos: bills getting a reaction, to upon note in a high crag o inville the govern- | or's “home town,” r K wila o folk wh wn whether was in town that night and 4f he was, whether he took th to at Whether cetion time look tacle had the bwilliant the outdoor with th | self-evident facts will go slow about | White House, cont con- | Cal term for complying) on all its gratulated him his recent | Propertles, though a few smalier | veto. | sudsidiaries remain entangled. Kellogg failed to company 95 per upon n tell mine." Copyrigh mention MOTHER DISAPK ed from the lons | 0F Boys at Meriden 8, a 15 year old boy, 1 | Hartford avenue, gas meter in a closet on Feb. 11, and took which he spent in locs thread which he said he use in sewi the the Let's excrcise a little judgment, | not permitting prejudice or party | Marland Oil and loyalty to decamp with reason. The | Citles Service Co; Beals me) facts are that a majority of the |POth a8 having complicd with th people living in the eastern part of | W the United States opposed the Mc-| Doheny is cited Nary-Haugen bill; that roughly, a|Cent lawless majority of the people living west | of Pennsylvania and south and|{rom surface southwest of the Mason and Dixon | 12782 part of his proper! line favored the bill; that a ma- |™MAINs in legal twilight,” he jority of representatives and sena-| Y¢S Doheny | probation tors, cager to roflect the wishes of|¥hO Was charged with trying to | he Ind wil the majority of their constituent | obtain oil wells from the nava The Do, voted for the measure. With this in | mind, is it reasonable to suppose that the nation backs the President in his veto? This is a free country, brok as opera The main reason appears to card. Indications that a in Is geant P. J. O'Mars to custody aft port of the gas met re- is the same man officer be in mot meter was i 1 re- s w rves of his own government. Who wants to fight M, | co for Doheny iy ording to e O'Mara suspe latt an g his mother of his ili 25 Years Ago Today : (From Paper of That Date) lover and admir birds |saw a large flock of snow buntings {early yesterday morning in this | vicinity. It is very seldom the birds visit us, but the heavy snows | plaint of nearer |of the past few days just what | majotity of [they revel in. ation wrere i L"(::.l:mnu'vh Lml\nu ning : to adopt the civie nam A ratlonal suppositionis| gy Guards” with be 1 from |sent ex-Governor Mor it man of | Bulkele Hartford, and . ‘?n:mm engrossed on a large The Clerks' union met las ind appointed the following en tainment committee for six months: I R. Ramage, Joseph | M. Halloran, T. W. O'Connor 1\:‘1‘ and anyone is privileged to believe anything he wishes, even that white | | 18 black. Those who show a pre- | dilection to base their belief upon A conceding any such wild claim. - The truth probably fact that the people of appointed. that many will the lin, to the same boy | warned him. How C | next | the con- m G have pictu alienat supporting him presidential den— be induced to contest the | any calibe as Low- an next nomination with him. P it does not m erhaps an they would sup- but S0 far as the west is concerned, a new port a Democs candidate Frank J. Lynch At the next meet there will be a five-round hox- | BB match between John I, Willis | noth certainly that, romot William | eoes Commissioner been ed bones, cod liver oil is As st and and near for brir point west is not Of cot explain mor not only lost § ROVES on iv e open at it 1l stor nded was ho cer in 1t nile court provol broken, 0 cents 3 for 1 hi: nagging b ty to obt living nt hildren Quickly | Gain Robust Healh | tive child that h builder t one me helps il repul 181 the| to be- but | a new nilt, him ain and ren ave at | md | | her Aun weet »otblack.” Datsa why uary | prunut tonio e Dear Mr t her caus I ki mother it And my tlone, at up to 1 arence looked to get up earl s T'll say patted me PARDON 1 T n come inna " appropriation was of which PProxir your aunt an 130,000,000 will be used to of Ton, R an- om the French and t in fame.” v what physical caracteris. of a horse be told t to e hors o cor- Expert y th and invit kid sister - SHOWER PARTY EDITOR, ew York aven: a copy of the bu | | | | a enclose or coln, who belor 1ad to B ISNAP St got > tomorrow & in the morning. zood-night.”” The on the cheek nd £5 UP IN CHILL AY DAW OVER WITH ENER6SY BLUSHES KNOCKS AT PARENTS® | BRIMMING DOOR TO ASK 15 HIS CLOCK RIGHT, IT SAYS ONLY SIX, BUT IT MUST BE LATER, ANYWAY CAN HE EET UP L2 f———— HUMS SPIRITE ING SONG WH TONING HIM D \TER, HAVING WHILE EXAMINED AT DID THEY VAS IT TO BE TAMP COLL CORDUROY SUT The Bell Syndicate, Inc. « E P ASKS SHALL HE PUT ON TODAY 0TS OF A BOY GETTING UP EARLY- . . - ByGLUYAS WlLLIAMS‘] BUT- I MARTIAL TUNE AND STA A PARADE, ATTOP VOICE DEBATES WHE QUIRE CAN HE GET HIM- SELP SOMETHING TO EAT. DECIDES NOT, PARENTS ARE SO QUEER, EARLY IN THE MORNING 228 TION,

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