New Britain Herald Newspaper, April 15, 1927, Page 27

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LETTER TELLS OF HANKOW CRISI Says It Is Unsafe There for Foreigners April 15 (A—Reuter's correspondent, in a letter just re- ceived in Shanughal and cabled here, declares it is unsafe for forcigners in Hankow. “Nationalism in Hankow today,” T'e writes, “is synonymous with out- rage and mob violence. The en- voys of Moscow have made the na- tionalist movement here a moclke Coolies who for years were amen- able only to the discipline of the sword now feel free to loot, burn and kill, not out of patriotism— they don't know what it is—but out of sheer love of looting, burning and killing. Lawlessness, arson and robbery, with utter lack of control or un- willingness to control by the govern- ment are the order of the day. roops commit armed thefts and London, forcign office as well as the nister are powerless agalnst the unions and the army. “The unions dre absolutely su- preme, organized and controiled by the argus-eyed political bureau which is filled with Russian bol- shevik advisers whose = representa- tives are at all street corners, “There are probably, more Rus- sians at Hankow than all the for- eign residents combined. They dominate the political bureau, the labor unions and the public depart- | ments, and will eventually devastate the city if they are allowed to pro- ceed unchecked. “All decent Chinese and foreigners are praying for foreign intervention, or anything which will rid us of-this all-destroying Russian incubus." Vermont Forest Fire Situation Is Serious Montpeller, Vt., April 15 (#®) — The forest fire si ion in Vermont is becoming very serious, according to the commissioner of forestry, R. M. Ross. To date the forest service Henryetta, Okla, April 15 (P NEW BRITAIN DAICY HERALD, FRIDAY, APRID 15, 1927. TENTS REPLACING ™ Fpieioa’ic s FORD-SAPIR | Had Narrow Escapes 5 ! 5 P— I]EM[][ISHE" HflMES | Death came closer than was gener- 1uny realized to the 19 miners trapped by flood waters for eight hours in r—— the old Wise coal mine near here | headed by Clarence Darrow. the affairs of the country have gone “4 0UT OF § HAD IT” The cable read: iram bad to worse” “Premier Count Bethlen: The labor party in England, he EVEN 25,000 YEARS AGO| ~rv™ Srese reports Sranto and | said. has become ereatly ssemathens |30 other Hungarian workers now | €d in the last twelve months, and {betora the criminal court for dis- | English public opinion, augmented agreeing with your government. We | by the extension of suffrage to LAWYERS ACTIVE Ancient Records Show Pyorrhea o s ask that you Intervene for a fuil | women will hasten the return of the 4 " V. & raze s Not e of - . | labor party to power. has received official reports of 39 R k g yesterday | = M U] impartial trial and lenfency. 0 | Ocksprings, Texas, Ono of the miners related today | PIEPAIING 0 “Clean-n| dse “Clarence Darrow, U si The former premier, who was fire V] a B! 2 o larence a e pton Sin- | » e e PriDgs, , Virtually LT R e d L b G Blplontitioce; [ciatr, Prof. Robert Morse Lovett, | head of the first British labor gov- e i | wall, built to control air circulation {fires have occurred in the southern |and central parts of the state. | The chief causes have been |brush burning and sparks from [railroad locomotives. Commissioner {Toss urges the public to be ex- |tremely careful with fire in or ad- jJoining woodlands during this dry department assisted by volunteers !, {pertod. The last legislature passed |were rapidly clearing and sorting a law which allows the governor [the debris of Tuesday's tornado to prohibit the kindling of fires in |which took 47 lives. jor adjoining forest lands during| The survivors met this morning |periods of excessive drought. This |with Morris Reddy, assistant n. has not yet been invoked. tional director of the Red Cro! | disaster relief. He arrived by ai |Dr. Wade Not Worried {plane from San Antonio last nigh | S o & - |and assumed charge of the situ Over Conditions in China |tion. Mr. Reddy said it would tai Chicago, April 15 (P—There is no|nine months for the town to re- | Mavpnfvy : s d of discouragement over the|5ain its feet and cost not less than {Tw em." On,e Fmes‘t Fire uation In China, Dr. R. J. Wade, |3200.000 to repair the damage. | Being Fought in Jersey Ganvas City {from Coal Creek. This wall Rockspring, Texas, April 15 (#) —A tent occupied the site of evel demolished home here today ar 200 employes of the state highway | mitted drainage to lower parts of th shaft, this saving the men who had taken refuge on a higher level, he surface late yesterday through the shaft of another mine. They were rescued by a veteran miner of {the district, who vaguely remember- ing that there was a connecting pas- sage between the two min went down the shaft alone and wandered about in the dark underground chan- nels until he found the imprisoned men, n | executive secretary of the world| Survivors are being fed at one of | Trenton, N. J., Aprl 15 (I'P) | srvice commission of the Methodist |three kitchens maintained by the | Twenty-one forest fires are bein: Episcopal church, said today. army and Red Cross. Water 's|‘ought in New Jersey reports fr Missionary work In China has not|pumped from a well into a single | fire wardens reaching here said [becn a fallure and the Methodist {main which has three or four pub-| The largest is believed to be t1 {church is not withdrawing its mis-|lic hydrants, | near Mt. Gretna, Burlington cot | stonaries in large numbers, he de-| The majority of the dead have |ty, where already soveral thousand clared in a statement issued to|been buried. Some bodies, however, | acres of timberland has been buri- counteract an erroneous impression |are being held until the arrival of | ed over, {that missionary work in that coun- |relatives, while others have been| Eighteen square miles of forest ltry is being given up entirely. sent elsewhere for burial, /land had been burned near T | | Every one of the 91 injured sur- |erton, and convergence of two o o vivors in San Antonio’ hospitals has | several miles south of that New H?}en Carpcnters a chance to live, it was announced |threatened the hamlet of Will Get 89 Per Dav |there this morning. Three, how- |son last might. New Haven, April 15 (R—Nea ver, are in very critical condition| All residents were turned out ftc |a thousand union carpenters will be- |and may di Fi n others arc | fight back the flame | gin receiving §9 a day on May 1 un- | listed as being In serious condition. | |der terms of an agreemeant between| The six hospitals at San Antonio | plac Mathew- FAIRFIELD BOY SHOT. |carpenters and builders announced j were the scenes of many joyous| Fairfield, Conn., April i5 (Pr—1¥ |today. The new wage is a dollar in- |reunions today as physicians ar- |liam Cook, 8, was shot, seriously it |crease over the present scale. The|ranged to have relatives moved to ' is belleved, at 1 o'clock today by |carpenters had asked for a whole adjacent co day off on Saturdays in addition to | the Increase, but the day off was not | allowed. | Tames Dufty, 17. The shooting is be- e |1ieved to have been an accident. Re Parisian fashion designers never | ports of the case, which are meagr: | shorten the skirt without bringing say that Duffy had gone huntins |up the waist line to approportion- The Injured boy was taken to ti SIFIED ADS |ate lovel. Bridgeport hospital. |READ HERALD CLA Albert Steiger, Ine, “The Store of Specialty Shops” HARTFORD ' Fashion-Right Apparel Awaits You Here Silk Over the Knee ; $1.50 Full fashioned of purc thread silk with 23-inch sfk boot. In a semi- sheer weight. Sawdust, i grain, aloma, maplewood, { alesan, evenglow, gun metal, dove, gray and French nude. Stelger's—Main Floor Imported ‘Kidskin | $2.95 | Faultlessly tailored | French makes in blonde, mode, gray, black and white and white with black. With fashionable flare or turn back cufts. ! Others up to $6.50. Stelger's—Main Floor | Washable Suede $3.50 One style is a Tailored Slip-on of mode, natural or gray suede, $3.50. Another style of the im- ported “Kislav” make is of washable doeskin, handsewn, at $5.25. In fashionable shades. Stelger's—Main Floor | 1 | $ A | Important Coat Fashions Ready in Complete Assortments at il $59.75 | Black Kasha Coats with monkey fur, in slender wrap-around models. $ageL Black and White Kashmir-weave | Navy Blue Twill Coats with squir- Coats with erminette or ombre lnpi_n_, rel—tucked and pleated, $59.75 § Coats of twill or kasha, notable for their geometric stitching. furred, fur, and slenderizing tuckings, $59.75 7D Beige Kasha Coats with ombre lapin collars that frame the face, $59.75 Smartly $59.75 . Silk Bengaline Coats in black or Coats with bows of silk, kasha or beige tones, trimmed with fur, fur at shoulder and hip, $59.75 $59.75 Other Distinctive Coats, $35.00 to $159.50 ‘ SHOES | | | | Black Sutin Coats with monkey ’ | Chic Oxford in pat- | A cleverly designed ! Another version of ent with waterlily kid one-strap pump fash- | the one-strap is this | 4 ioned in gray or | new tailored pump of | back, or in rose blush bei sray : | parchment or grav kid with parchment. cige, genwine snake- | Lij with contrasting | .skin. pipings. $12.50 $13.50 $12.50 = Main Floor Matn Floor Main Floor |stopped the rise of the floor water gave way under the rising water and per- The trapped men were brought 1o i Very Soon Columbus, Ohio, April 15 (UP)— [Theodore Debs (brother of Eugene | €rhment, was accompanied by his 4 s ono |V, Debsy Congressman Victor L | daughter Ishbel, and announced to —_— Polr ouk of o Ted I s6o0 ‘I'-"r'n-r )rmr. oW L. DPana, of reporis that he was going to try to Detroit, April 15 (UP)—With | JreGropar. ccording to Prot. J. H. 1y vy university, Bishop William | avoid political interviews and dis- zoology depart- ment of Columbia university, who has made it his business to try to 10 out who was the first one to wre the pyorrhea craze. | 7 Prof. McGregor, who knows al ro, who sued Henry Ford for | 200Ut the idiosyncrasies of th anderthal man and others who | needed good teeth for self-protec- | ion, lecturcd at Ohio State uni- | Ma- | cussions while on his #sit to New York, Washington and Boston. Brown, William Col Charles arl Huessler, Rob- | 3 = Eaward W, Went- | Defending Champion Is Put Out of Tournament White Sulphur Springs, Va., April | Montgomery honey, Minneag ine Wood n and million dollar libel suit tod. paring ; ; | 15 P—Thomas F. McWalters of inglons Sitkde 4y Foed | Newark, N. J., defending champton, S n. o soeng vas eliminated in the second round ublished here, is expected to remain | 1O 1ect! venth annual Mason and s ST or e | While the ancient ancestors suf- amateur golf champlonship Lt red with gum troubles it weak moderns, indication of WITH CRITICISM - just like | today, of Gr osing to Irving T. Smith, Jr., there was no Conn.. 5 and 4. tooth ailments, Prof. { George Voight of \\'A.s;;h;flom Dl ror told his aundienee. Teeth {C., north and south titleholder, W BT ool Me andlence Teeth Nays Fngland Has BunglediS: et o it . . . s tomorrow. Turning in H’('on- Chinese Situation soub ity S AEE a, former Princeton and Uni- v of Georgia golfer, 6 and 4. er semi-final will bring to- erson of Chicago and an of Toledo. The former today won over James Lewis, Jr., of Ann Arbor, Mich.,, 6 and 5, while the latter defeated C. C. Ron- | alds of Montreal, 3 and ation for 13 d in 50 sound that they wore right down the gums . under the u which they were put, ge to nuch lo viro on the st s not nearly t PREPARING TO LEAVE Santo Domingo, Dominican Re- public, April 15.—(UP)—The United States army's Pan-American flight squadron was here today preparing i1, has failed because it i3 | to take off on the next homeward and he vowed that| stage of thelr flight through Central s a ‘“class, and under it | and South America. % aneg -%[[211 & (En ; & ’ L) i INC. A HARTFORD " LAST MINUTE SUGGESTIONS FOR THE SMART | . EASTER WARDROBE AND ITS ACCESSORIES ! e ensive troops form a service that been handled in a po- in the trial of 3 en cabled to Bud it was announced here toda am was signed by a of prominent Americans, e present government in Eng- land, he | incompet It represe % Ghildren’s - ECaster Hats $1.00 70 $3.50 Simple, charming little hats of straw in a y number of bright Spring colors. Some models for gitls 6 to 10 years, others for misses of 12 to 16. New Hats To Wear Easter and Later Priced from $5.00 New SPr ing Miss and matron can choose from one of the 1 most varied collections we have ever shown. Goat gashions INCLUDING MADELON AND SHAGMOOR COATS—! EXCLUSIVE WITH US Priced for Easter Saturday Stunning sports coats for motoring and general wear throughout the season. Colors are smart and varied from tan, beige, cocoabrown, grays and greens to the Dressy coats, straight and wrappy models, all-occasion coats for Spring and summer 3o . éllk %OSIery wear. darker blues and black. ? : < TWILL SILK FAILLE $1'17 ]]{1[" e TWEED HOMESPUN Plain and Fur-trimmed 3 Pairs for $3.40 . Second Floor Full-fashioned service weight silk hose, w:tlg 4 inch lisle top and foot. Hosiery of fine juality with very slight irregularities in the weave— but no dropped stitcl es ot pulled threads. A wonderful special at this price. Regularly $2.00. _-_— b Easter Candies All the best known makes of chocolates—Russell's— Page & FLEGHIRIDE GHAMRSGHE SEA Shaw's— Maillard’s—Wallace's— Apollo—Cynthia Sweets== ALOMA GRAIN SHELL GRAY Repetti's, Foss. DRIcE ELORDE (ERar Marshmallow Eggs, 39c b Pcppcrmdint Pmlies, 39 Assorted Chocolates, Jelly Eggs, 25¢ 1b = Ry NI *" | Chocolate Pebbles, 49c Ib 39c, 49c, 59¢, 79¢ b Peanut Brittle, 39%cb

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