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JEWS CONFIDENT OF DRIVE SUCCESS Rabbi Hadas and S. M. Davidson Urge Workers Onyard ‘The first meeting of the workers in the Jewish Community Chest drive for $35,000 was held last night at the synagogue of the Congrega- tion Sons of Israel in Elm ot The workers were all present and S. M. Davidson, chairman of the executive committee, presided. The committees reported that over 90 per cent of the individuals inter- viewed for contributions subscribed he amounts set for them by the committee on allotments. Approxi mately one fourth of the goal was reported as already ple $3,000. Every worker that the campalgn W goal within the ten days I reach its set for the SAMUEL M. DAVIDSON collection. A feature of the work is that all of the funds are being col- lacted in cash or by regu payable in not less than quarterly installments. Rabbl Hadas addressed the work- ers explained in detail the scope of the Jewish community ch plained that 57 different ins will be alded by the funds raised. Of these some are purely local, others of national interest, while still others are in Europe and in Palestine. Thus the local Hebrew school will receive funds to make up for {ts annual deficit as will also the Synagogue school. The New Britain General hospital will receive a share in the chest, and also, to a lesser degree Mt. Sinai hospital of Hartford. Other local charities that wil ghare in the chest will be the Hebrew Ladies ald which cares for all needy in the community, the Old Peoples Home and Home, both in Hartford, and a re- serve fund will be left for extraor- dinary charitable needs that uifght arise during the year. Of national institutions the chest will aid the work of the ational Consumptive hospital of Denver, Colo.,, as well as four or five other tubercular and consumptive hospi- tals and three convalescent homes. Of purely religious institutions the chest will support the work of the United Synagogue of America and one or two minor organizations. A number of orphanages that serve Jews all over America will reccive substantial aid from the chest. The two raobinical seminaries—The Rabbi Isaac Eichanan Yeshive and the Jewish Theological Seminary of America—that directly serve the local community will be aided. Funds wil also be available for a number of smaller educational in- stitutions including the Teachers' Institute of New York which sup- pites highly trained teachers for the religlous schools. In addition to aid in Europe the of the more to reltef work st will aid several educational in- suffered most upheaval in . urope. Finally tbe Community chest will care for etery Palestine and Zionist endeavor Including the Keren Haye- sod, the Jewish National Fund, the Mizrachl, the milk funds, the Ha- dassah Medical Work (Junior and Senfor Hadassah) as well as for a number of purely charity organiza- tions that maintain orphanages, hospitals and the like, Mr. Davidson, the chairman, pointed out that the local com- munity has been suporting the 57 institutions before now heen contributing over sear for all these causes, He nted out that in pol allotting $35,- “Handy Hardware” Store H. L. MILLS 336 MAIN TENNIS RACKETS TENNIS BALLS Handsomest Rackets in Town Reasonably Priced Fresh From Factory | 000 for this coming year ths local community would save over $15,000 while the institutions would re- ! cefve a larger support in view of the saving of the tremendous cost in- | voled in g periodic col- lection. In many cases the cost of col tion left very little for titutions in qu on, Mr. Davidson emphasized the fact that the Community chest will | eliminate the constant petty re- | quests for funds. All charities will be cared for in a sensible, reason able, fair way. He urged the work {ers to ma every effort to com- plete their work by April 2 NUNGFSSER TAKING GREAT PRECAUTION French Pilot Testing Plane fo: Transatlantic Trip e | ntic doing is carrying ble test’ on his plane ation a re. Tod closely bench t be subst the trial n und from nything pres out every with de- he was engine whic fli trans-Atlant 1t has 1 wh 1l carry. will be taken apart and every piece serutinized for signs of undue wear. It everything is satisfactory, the motor will be reassembled and then mounted on the plane. Nungesser's flight companion, | Major Coli, carefully mapped out course on a chart. It represents a curved line, ssing by Honfleur, near Havre, Cherbourg, Bray and Land’s End, the last point contact with land; and then goes slightly northward to 30 degrees lengitude and 53 or 54 latitude, to drop towards Cape Race (and Hali- fax, reaching the United States coast in the neighborhood of Boston. | Each change of course will be carefully checked by observations with a sextant designated by Major Coli. Tha plane will have a new ar- | rangement whereby Nungesser and | Coli will be able to sit side by side. | This will permit of easy communica- | tion and greatly facilitate accurate | navigation. MINIMUM WAGES - TABOD IN TTALY will run oline, Mussolini's Charter of Labor Is| | Considered Remarkable the Childrens’ | Rome, April 22 (A—Premfer Mus- | solini’s ideas of the propar relation- ship between employer and employe nd between labor and the state are °n concrete form in a “Charter of Labor” adopted by the 5 erand council in special session last night. The “charter” is a remarkable | document setting forth at the very which is a social property, which accom- s 8 function, are both under the guardianship cf the state, nce the state mu: control the hole body of production for the well being of its citizens znd the de- velopment of national strength. ! With this end in view, the char- ter provides for the organization of ed units 1o be known or syndicites, whose relations with each other are to be rrird on through collective . Acting as direct agents of the state will be other units to be known as corporations. These will be in di- | rect control of all the syndicates’ ac- tivities, while special labor courts will have the final decision In con- troversies, As for the relations ptween em- and employes, the eharter s the principles of a min- 1 , or general rules in wage ixing, advocating contracts bascd on living conditions and possibili- tles of production. Absolute equality ingle industry is ned on, the contention be- de that workers with unusual y shou gieater re- muneration ti ry workers. The worke ated over the » chart:r of a & provisions stipu- for ni , civil and reli- deemed pos- ty in proportion to the in of dis- to worke th and th in and con- ploy pay id holida , indem 1 of service indemnity in case position mily case of document ments vinst the al. ime initi luction is ac ational interesi s that when priv or la dictate control or com- a cor- t or- em- ir le by col- with fasei theic categories within charter of labor, ¥ . basis of was presented by finale to the joint cele labor day, ald the 2,681 fascist ot mirers des in a new role years ag Rome, READ HERALD CI FOR YOUR FIED ADS TS NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 1927. —Phato by Jo on & Peterson MISS LOUIS "] i BENNETT Prii M ncipal Tsracl Putnam School Lo ett is probab] ipal in Dritain =chool & ed the rvice thi: made principal of the &chool. Although she s a native Bridgehampton, Long Island, N. Y.. ind her present home is in that ce she reccived her normal school education at the New Britain te Normal school. graduated from High school. Before coming to this city she had of Pridgehampton | two years' experience at Colebroolk. At the last meeting of the school board Supt. S. H. Holmes of the of Miss Bennett and said it was un sk her to assume the dut of principal at a salary paid an ele- mentary school teacher. She also teaches grade six, the high elemen- tary grade fair to AMONG GREATESY Gardinal Picked by St. Bonaven- tare Students St. Bonaventure, N. April (P—The eight greatest figures in American history, in the opinion of Y., {reform of la Wwas |y | school department lauded the work D | ("our sctoots )| DENY PRIESTS HAD PART INOUTRAGES | e ' Episcopate of Mexico Resent Charge of Calles Aide Mexico City, April 22 (P—Cath- olfe circles in Mexico continue make denfal of the government charge the ath Catholic episcopate was behind the Jalisco train out- of Tuesday night and that holic pricsts were on the scene. The charge prompted Archbishop Ruiz Y Flores, to break his long silence last . when in a stat ment, in behalf of the Catholic epi copate, he declared that if Catholic pricsts participated in attack, the church had no know and had Wk that the § which dt attacked the ¢ the Catholic nent said. “The searchos | has been proot of Catholic rebellion. The m ch is not to over- throw government, but it will urge s which are violating the liherties of of President ating the church in the out terized as calumnious by ishop. sion of the National Association of College Deans of Men, he said today that “flaming youth” was an old folks expression for “youth adjust- ing itself to the advanced ideas and | progress of the world.” “It we old ones would flame a little more ourselves, we would not | be =0 worried about the younger | generation,” he satd. “As it is, the older people always have thought the younger folk were frivolous and about to go to the devil l to| | | NOW YOU | ASK ONE THE ROLLING SEA. has figured lerge in the nd the literaturs of all na- ding our own. Today we have a list of 10 questions with the sea and the men who Lave sailed on it. 1—What island town Cape Cod was, a century south of ago, a | of the whaling industry? 3—For what is Richard Henry Dana, Jr., remembered? old days of sailing ships, rimps”? —What did the old time sailors mean when they spoke of a seaman | taking the “Shanghai passage?” WORLD PEACE BASIS . S. Ambassador To England Says Cordiality Between England and America Is Essential. Manchester, Eng, A , happiness and world probably depend large- n sound and cordial under- n Great Britain and the United States, United States Am- bassador Alanson B. Houghton told the chamber of commerce ril 22 (UP) the futu: | speech today, but he warned that | | |1 22 students of St. Bonaventure college ! here, have been selected in a contest *h closed today. Those chosen > Christopher Columbus, George hington, Benjamin Franklin, Jetferson, Abraham Lincoln ¢ W. Longfellow, Junipero Ser- ra, ranciscan missionary and Cali- fornia pioncer, and Cardinal G bons. The two latter men were fncluded in the list of scores of names sub- mitted by reason of the fact that the colleze is Catholic. Many other ecclesiastical figures were mentioned, among them a num- ber of early missionaries to the new world, names of those selected wi be ribed on plaques to be placed at the entrance to Devereaux hall, a new dormitory now under const tion at the college. Winners of the contest, from whose papers the names are chosen, were: James M. Powers, Oil City Pa.; Philip McCool, Paterson, N. J. Vv w fin, Olean, N. ing, Oil City, selected by a comn ulty m laymen. INVADED BY ANTS Destructive Pests Attacking Resl- The names were ittee of nbers both clergymen and dential Section of Kansas City— | How to combat Them. Kansas City, Mo., April 22 (UP)— Millions of white ants, the kind that | cat hous barns and telephone posts have arrived in Kansas City and were at work today on a re dential district in the south side. City health officers reccived re- ports of house sagging in - their foundations and restng ot peculiar s disclosed the weakened, after | hungry ants hollow2d out the rafters. Iloors had been ¢aten awa 00. Health known said the destroying a solu- officers of lions is to u north N B Fur In one 8 of houst e wood borers, through floors ifter floorings had Army Xntl Aircraft Units | Will Move on Own Power n ircraft I units in st jst coast @ va.,, will make battery of Fort Monroc, trip. e unit Monroe will travellir from Fort start about May th t Wilmingte ton, Roc and The Jort bout M. Providence, ford. The manew ., Ne stamford, Haven to N Totten units will start 8 via New London Newport and New Bed cers will be dle, w w London v 16 to 21 while the fleet is Inl North Atlantic ers. the * these natural and helpful Anglo- American relations must not be d veloped “into anything like an alli- ance.” Houghton said that “to bring the ish speaking nations togeth into an armed, exclusi“e group pr pared if need be, to enforce its col- will by force, would tend ce nor to as- ecti nef sure mutual securit; Such an Anglo-Saxon alliance would provoke another war, Hough- ton said. Flaming Youth Not So Bad, Old Teac}her Says Atlanta, Ga., 22 (A—Dr. nley Coulter, dean emeritus of Purdue university, has a war mspot heart for the “young today with her cute bobbed h her short skirt,”” and thin lot of things the loes is no worse than his participat- in a dance at a prayer meeting rs ago. ng his views at a ses- ALIKE—UNCOMPARABLE FROM. WEAR. HATS FOR SPORT, DRESS | 4| | | 6—To what did the expression, ‘Rounding the Horn,” refer? 7 1 vessels nowadays are 1 gray. What wais the pre- | vious color for American naval ves- | | | | —What American playwright has written a number of dramas dealing with the sea and sailors? 10—Who is Willlam McFee- |Plenty of Politics But | Little Legislation Seen Manchester, N. H., April 22 (P— | “The 70th congress will produce scanty legislation and plenty of pol- s,” United States Senator George senjor scnator from New | Hampshire, told the Men's clubs of |the Universalist church here last night. “There will be a variety of legis- lation before the members, includ- ing further measures of tax relief and the tariff question, Lut the ap- | proaching presidential elcction will cause the usual jockeying on both sides of the aisles,” he said. “I can foresee more investigations !similar to those which confronted the country in the winter of 1924, | with a result that political affairs thrown into confusion and many an innocent man will be pil- |loried through no fault of his own.” CONVICTS ESCAPE. Altoona, Pa., April 22 (#—Cutting passage through a wire stockade round the prison yard with tools stained in some unknown manner, three convicts escaped from Rock- | view penitentiarw at Bellefonte, last | nignt. i 177 MAIN STREET WA @) ale SMART NEW HATS NEW IN STYLE AND COLOR—NO TWO MODELS DISPLAY TO SELECT HATS FOR STREET, SPORT AND DRESS FORMERLY PRICED $10—$12.50 NOW $6.00 150 TRIMMED HATS OUR REMAINING STOCK OF SMART TRIMMED AND STREET WEAR. ALL THE NEWEST STYLES AND SHADES. FORMERLY PRICED $4.95—$5.95 NOW $3.00 ANDREWS SUGGESTS LIQUOR HONOPOLY | Wants Good Whiskeg, Reason- able Price, for Sick New York, April 22 (P—Forma- | tlon by bonded liquor warehouse | owners of a national whiskey mo- nopoly with the object of providing “good whiskey at a reasonable | price” for persons who are fll, is| being considered by the government, Brigadier General Lincoln C. An-| drews, assistant secretary of the treasury in charge of prohibition en- torcement, said today. 1 The monopoly, he sald, was belng | formed at his suggestion and de- | clared that if the plan is perfected |it should accomplish what the me- dicinal whiskey bill migit have done had it been passed by congress. The plan was recently broached to the warehouse owners in Washing- { ton, he said. A tentative plan was | submitted five days ago but found unsuitable, he said, and yesterday a | substitute plan was submitted for | his inspection. While neither plan has been ac- | cepted by the governmeat, he said, progress was being made The plan provides for the forma- tion of a holding corporation to pur- chase all available boaded liquor and concentrate it in no more than | six warehouses to be operated un- der government supervision. Control of distribution ol me- dicinal whiskey in about thirty warchouses throughout the country is difficult, said General Andrews, | and one of the results is sale of im- | pure whiskey to sick persons who are unable to obtain legitimate li- | quor from their drugglsts. P! t h: | The Burritt Gift Shop, Inc. 85 W. MAIN ST. At the Professional Bldg. Wedding Gifts Special Values At $5.00 See Our Window Tonight g Yo &Y, i Ns Sketched~ Patent with check- ered Kid trim of Black and Blonde --Also all Patent and all Black Satin Al ONE Price Open Saturday M’ql ts Begin Distribution of city directory tributed_here today by representa- ) ti ing the number of names In the di- rectory and estimating oYD ©Y0 OYY _©V0 Vo _(ova &Y. JOHN IRVING. Presents 2 B ]| BT ) o) e 2 e A new department in the directory A e includes a list of county, state and City Directory for 1927 | tcaeral officials in addition to the First coples of the New Britain |Customary list of city officials. for 1927 were dis-| Publication of the directory this year was delayed because the city *w Haven, | was renaming streets and renumbere The practice of check- [ ing houses. ves of Price & Lee Co.,, N ublishers. READ HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS FOR YOUR WANTS the popula- on of the city from those statistics as been abandoned. @3 DRESDEN & HATS COATS SUITS DRESSES HOSIERY NOVELTIES Exclusive But Not Expensive Royal Portable See the new Royal Portable Standard Keyboard, two eolor ribbon and all other features. Price $60.00. :New Britain Typewriter Exchange 96 WEST MAIN ST. CRANNCTGIN ¢ O MY O NG (O I & O 9 | R | PP | B | ) | On'ginal]q introduced at Sparta, (reece, in 1104.B.C. by Helen of Troy--- for comfort. Reintroduced by Miss 1927 forits trim lines and the sharp contrast it lends to light hosiery Sandals are “the thing for sum- mer and IONE sets the pace! Scores of other equally smart’ John Irving styles ---- All quality-built - --- - All one economica.l_price;--fs