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— PARIS l France's Great Soldiers of the World War to Rest Near || Tomb of Paris, April 30. (P—France's great soldiers of the war are to rest near Napoleon in the Inva- lides. General Mangin and sixteen other army commanders are to be dlsinterred and their bodies in sealed caskets placed in niches in the stone crypt. General Gallieni defender of Paris, will be left in the Riviera cemetery, where he 2sked especfally that he be bLurled and Jeft. Twenty-eight leaders still living, marshals and commanding gener- also, eventually, will be placed | heside those now dead. Foch, Joffre and Petain naturally will be among them. A general ccremony §s planned for later this year after the sepa- rate services in the presence of cach family as the bodies are taken to the Invalides one by one. French Army Cats Get Wages Raised Army cats have had thelr wages raised. As food is their chief ex- pense, there Is going to be a lot of liver consumed. Paul Prudent Painleve, Minister of War, raised the official allow- ince of the cats from four to ten centimes a day., Of course that means only from about one cent a week to three cents a week, but tha cats ars well satisfied. There was some objection to this 150 per cent increase in these diffi- | cult times of economy because the cats’ job is to run rats and mice out of army storehouses, and there were those who thought they ought to provide for themselves. However, the cats’ landlords, jan- itors of the warehouses, put in a 7004 word, and the deed is done. Snails And Caviare At Paris Food Show Persons who have naver ssen caviare nor tasted truffles can at least look at all the finest foods that France can gather at the first Cnlinary Exposition just opened in Paris. Eminent echets, Laurin and Foucou, instruct the nome cook how to do better cook- inz for less money and make their points by doing it in the open Kitchew in the restaurant, where those with fat pockethooks may lunch for from $1.30 up without wine. Wine Paul Bouillard, and sausages take much space iIn the French food show. There 2re more kinds of cham- pagne and more varieties of sau- «age The sausages start with a rich va- riety from Arles and go on the alphabet, varying from a scant inch to a foot and a half in diame- of course, have thelr ca in the show, and one Belgian ibltor than of any other products, | down | brought {n some cheese | Napoleon. E that caused his booth to be moved near a door. —_— “Sou Is A Sou” Again To French Industry imy by hard times. Industrial leaders are preaching thrift to their engineering staffs and cconomists are aiding in arows- {ing all ranks from post-war extrav- | agance. The most important prob- |lem of the day is said to be reduc- ]llm\ of expenses, The French grandmother who put everybody to bed early to save | candles is the oft mentioned model |and one manufacturer has been telling of the amazement umong his factory engineers when they learned how much could be saved simply on wasted eclectric light. | cent recently, while miners’ wages { were cut only 6 per eent, 8o the mine owners in vparticular are | eager students of thrift. The re- | duction in this baslc industry nat- | urally is encouraging talk of gen- | eral fall in prices ail alofig the line. | | Fiest A1 Stations Along Auto Highway | The Paris-Deauvilla road, well |marked with automobile wrecks | every summer, {s to have regular | hospita service. First aid stations are to be estab- lished along the 140 miles ot the | speedway to the seashore Touring Club of France. | At each 100 points, or every mile and a half, there will be equipment | for emergency medical attention. | At certain points there will be pro- {viston for summoning doctors and ambulances. The road is the most popular out of Parls, and as it leads to the ;coumry's most fashionable and {most expensive rcsort, there al- ways are many fast cars. | Telegraph Monopoly | May Lose Immunity monopoly is likely soon to he held | responsible for damages caused hy | its errors, as is the rule in all busi ness. Back In 1960, when telograph Kkeys were stuttering with some fr- | regularity, the government pro- ftected ftself from damage claims | by a specific exemption. | "For years chambers of com- merce, newspapers and business | men ernment be held responsibls for its |errors. A bill to change the old Passai i expected soon. | Aside from the argument that | justice requires such responsibllity, 'it 15 contended the government wil | 4o the work bettér if it has to pay for its mistakes. “'A sou is a sou” is the watchword | of I'rench industry, driven to econo- 1 Coal prices were reduced 12 per | by the The French government telegraph | have demanded that the gov- | vow has such support that its | NEW BRITA BERLIN [—— Hindenburg's Meniory Surprises Diplomat Who Has ‘ Interesting Chat With Him. Berlin, April a0, von Hindenburg's fabulous mem- ory for scenes and places was | strikingly ealed to the new | Czecho-Slovak minister to Ger- many, Dr. Frantisek Chvalkovsky, when he presented his credentials | to the soldicr-president. Von Hindenburg asked him number of interesting questions {about Prague and referred to va- rious historical buildings and land- marks with such accurate knowl- | edge that the minister could not re- | frain from observing, “You Execl- |lency is evidently intimately a { auainted with Prague.” | “Yes, I know it rather well,” the president s rcported to have re- plied. R “And may T ask when you last visited our capits the diplomat | continued. “Well, () —President that's some little the rejoinder, time “I saw German Price For Special Train $25 Soon any patron of the German rallways will be able, at least theo- { retically, to indulge in the luxury {of a special train for $2 To encourage week-end travel {the railway administration fs ahout to announce far-going concossions to the public. One of these pro- vides that the minimum guarantee {demands for surnishing a special Uin is only 160 marks, or ahout §25. Another provision is | cial t | purchasers of second class, or 160 of third class, or 150 of fourth | class tickets so demand. This is [to accommodate the countless “vereins” with which Germany abounds and which are in the habit | of arranging excurs | membership, that a spe- Dutch Ambassadar Leaving Berlin The diplomatic colony is ahout to | lose its oldest member, Baron Wil- helm Gevers of Holland, for e accredited to the German cap- al. | Baron Gevers was {noted for his fndepen showing royal honors bers of the Hohenzollern fan even after their fall from jpowe He gave a big dinner to the former {erown prince on his return | banishment in Wicingen. The : it os ne to the ecially in mem- sts. The forelgn minister « revented a row, however, by 1 ing the dinner had been giv: Baroness Gevers, “who is a persor.” | Wher ollern | siated verly ver even A young Holen inco visited him, upon cecorting him Ny to the outsida deor—an honor ——[LONDON]——, J Prince of Wales and Younger Brother Are Rivals For Latest Dancing Step Honors, " BAFFLES POLICE Killing of Film Gowbay Remains London, Aril 30. P — The|nearly every other form, excepting | Mystery Prince Wales and his younger brother, Prince George, vie with one another for the honor of being the best dancers in the Royal fam- of that of a bottle, all designed for thirsty individuals who desire to carry refreshments concealed from any eagle eyed sleuths who might Los Angeles, Cal., April 80 (Pr— The fatal shooting of Tom Kerrick, an can be run whenever 70 | ons for their | * | Rohert Koch, the discoverer of tu HOLLYWOOD CASE {he showed only to royality, Village Protests | Castno Opening | 2mpts to make a Monte Carlo | |of the North out of the renownad | former Hohenzollern summer resort !of Zoppot near Danzig are meet- ing with vigorous opposition from the fashionable residents, | A petition with more than 1,000 | | slgnatures, demanding the closing of the Zoppot casino has been pre. | sented to the Danzig city council, | The petition says that the exist. | | ence of the “gambling hell hole prevents “thousands of decent vigi- | tors from coming to the beach | resort.” | | _Former Crown Prince Frederick | Wiliam niaintatned a luxurious | palace in Zoppot. Thousands o {the German nobiliry cong | gate there in the summer, | Lost Goethe Art Collection Found rkable collection of his own 8¢ k and white dratw- ings and water colors, which tha | Goethe Muscum at Weimar sought, | throuzhout Germany for 25 years, | is now in the m ms as a re- sult of a curions coincidence. | The drawings, largely German | and Bohemian landscapes, known to have heen presented ioethe in 1507 to Princess Carolf of Saxe-Weimar with a note ling: “This is how T while away my lefsure moments during my tra- | were by vears Princess willed the cotlection her intimate friend, Christiane | Reitzenstein, Her descendants | evidently thought as little of thae | drawings as did Germany's great | est poet, who virtually apologized for dabbling in such foolishness, | A short time ago a distant rela- [tive of the von Reitzenstein family | submitted the drawings te Prof, | Hans Wahl, director of the Goethe museun, who had been conducting | | tha search, and asked {f they were | | genuine. He said ho found them in |an ol trunk of family relies. Dr. | Wl Immediately recognized his | sought, p. and pur T to | von | \]fl — Gift Microscope To | Institute Director Professor Rernhard Nocht, di jtor of the Tnstit z, has been 0.000th micro- scope turned out hy the optical | | works of Ernst Leitz at Wetzl | The 50,000th microscope-of this | firm was accorded to the German | health resort at Davos, Switzer- land, the 100.000th to Professor berculine, sor Paul the 150.000th to Profes- | rlich, the discoverer of | and the 2 th to or Martin Heldenhain, the famous anatomist at Tuebingen + University. Jos Hunt, former cowboy, who is being held on suspicion of murder { could offer no n osures of the shooting. | Hunt 4 alleged to have owned th, {gun which made the fatal wor | Isabelle, Miss Davis and | Burns are held material nesses. | The grand jurv investigation | which was halted Thursday witn [ the actor's widow collapsed in the {grand jury room will be resumed | Monday. e Mi as wit- All Russians Are to i | | | DAILY HERALD. SATURDAY, APRIL 30, 1927. Hold Back Your Resources! —safeguard them, conserve them and make them work for you even as the mighty river works when its limitless power is securely har- nessed. YOUR resources—surplus funds, savings—will be conserved and they will become steadily more valuable to NEW BRITAIN NATIONAL 4¢ a wall of protection for your funds. 7 vou if deposited in a Savings Account—it serves as Deposits made on or before May 3rd eam interest for the full month. This * Marvelous and Gent's Suits $1 aOO ; v Cleaned and Pressed $1.28 i Some o Bl Ladies' Coats $l ,25 Suits Sponged and Pressed . 30c $1.00 $1.25 and up fly. The Duke of York only dances | have a weakness for spotting bulg- | Work Called For St fairly well, and admits it, but he |ing pockets. holds the palm so far as the tennis | court is concerned, as none of his | High State Jobs film cowboy, which climaxed an all | night gin party in his Hollywood | home early Wednesday officially be- came a mystery today as the district Be Pensioned at 52 Moscow, April 30 (UP)—At the age of 52 a pe n's useful life is Dries in 20 Minutes brothers has ever been able to fathom his left hand deliveries. Prince Henry, the third son of ths King, who has just celebrated his|always to be found occupying high | twenty-geventh birthday, is easily the best ericketer of the fami Prince Henry, too, is fond of hunt- ing and often rides with the Prince of Walcs, but frankly confesses that the heir to the throne fs a much better rider than he. “I fall, or am thrown, nearly as much as Edward,” the Prince sald to some of his friends after a re- cent hunt, “but the public doesn’t hear of 1t Master of King's Horse Abolished The ancient offica of the King's Master of the Horse is to be abol- | ished in the interest of economy. The office at present is held by arl of Beatrice M{ daughter of the late Ogden Mills, of New York, in 1909, Reports in Court elircles have it that the Earl will be the last holder of this title. Since been effected at Court to the extent of more than £20,000 annually, without any loss of effictency. The King makes no sccret of the fact that he is entirely in accord with persons who have been strict economy. The Master of the Horse s the third ranking dignitary of the Sov- | ereign’s household, all questions of the King's Horses and hounds as well as the stables and coaches be- ing under his jurisdiction. Hip Flasks Indicate U. S. London Visitors Hip flasks displayed in the Lon- don novelty shops are an indication of the number of American visitors in town. During the winter, when there are few Americans here, there are no hip flaska in the show windows, But with the beginning of April, as the tourist husiness starts, the flat liquor containers appear over night, like spring blossoms, in the Regent strcet, Strand and Plccadilly stores which cater to Americans. As the epring tourist rush gets under way there are flasks in half the city shops, with: cocktail shakers and other wet goods paraphernalia. There are slzes and shapes for all tastes and purses. There are silver flasks for vest pockets, as well as the hip, for coat pocket and of nickel and aluminum for overcoats and automoblles, There are flasks in the shape of eane and umbrella handles, flasks dlsguised books and, in fact, Granard, who married | the war economics have | urging | | fant mor Held By Scots One of the standing jokes of Eng- | land s the great number of Scots | positions in state, church and indy trial life, Scotsmen never turn back | —to Scotland, say the English. | “When I held a certain office in | England not so long ago.” said Ramsay MacDonald recently at a { dinner of the Scot's Labor Club fn | London, “we Scotchmen in England | have scooped the pool. The two | archbishops, the lord chancellor {and the prime minister all were | Scotehmen. We had eversthing worth having in Church and State.” Birkenhead’s Income Discussed By Press Lord Birkenhead and other mem- | bers of the government have been | under fire for some time becauso the: office. Tn a recent speech Lord Birkenhead said he took to journal- ism to supplement ‘flagging re- sources.” | This statement was taken up by a writer in The Star who com- putes that during the last twelve | years Lord Birkenhead, as solicl- [tor general, attorney general, Lord | Chaneellor and Secretary for Indla, | has received “something lke £130.- 000" from the government. That is nearfy $650,000, or more |$50.000 a The writer in The Star remarks | that this does not take into ac- count. Lord Birkenhead's earnings through private legal practice, which ars supposed to be enormous. Windsor Castle | Monuments Restored Heraldic stone beasts that adorn the pinnacles of §t. George's Chap- el at Windsor Castle, have been re- | stored but a slight mistake on the part of the renovators has not es- caped the eagle eye of a certain member of parliament. He raised the question in the House of Commons as to why a cer- {ain heraldic bheast is now repre- sented with its horns both facing | the same way, whereas the correct | design is for one horn to point | fgrward and one backwards. These stonc beasts, lons, bulls, and fabulous monsters, were first set up in Tudor times to fllustrate | the claim of the Tudors to unite the | houses of York and Tancaster, the white rose and the red. Although the birth rate in Eng- land during 1926 was lower than the I previous year, the decrsase in in- ¢ more than made up for the deficit. engage in journalism while in | than | {attorney’s office rencwed at- | tempts to penetrate the hazo which has clouded the facts relating to the affair. | After considering police charge | that Mrs. Sarah Kerrick, held on charge of murder, shot her husband in a jealous frenzy, a coroner's jury | vesterday returned an open verdict. | The jury recommended that the pro- |secutor's office make another at- tempt to obtain a “straght story" from the witnesses, The testimony of the five persons present agreed n few instances ex- cept that there was no shortage of laquor at the party. Mrs. Kerrick declared the acto was accidentally shot when one o {the women guests attempted to | wrest the pistol from her (Mrs, Ker- | rick) hana | Anatis Davis, film “extra’ told of having tried to take the gun aw. | from Mrs. Kerrick, and admitted ! that she had been posing as the wife | of Henry Isabelle, another guest at the Kerrick party. { Iris Burns, alleged recipient of | Kerrick’s attention during the party [denied she was present when the | shots were firad. Tsabells sald he fook a | trom Mrs. Kerriek's hands hut [ not recall that any shots were RULES pistol sould Rudy these' pictures ecarefully, marble shooters. They show yon Just how the game of ringer is pla ed. You must play ringer to enter the Herald-Junior Achievement Marble Tournament. One New Brit- ain boy or girl is going to Atlantic City in June to play in the National Marble Tournament finals. officlally finished in the Soviet | Union. So says the state insurance | and social pension statute, whieh | makes work« : for a state penston when they have passed thelr nd birthday, if they have already | completed at least years of work. + The pension applics to workers of every Kind. Every employer, wheth- ¢ a housewife hiring a servant or the state employing thousands of | officc workers and factory hands, must. pay a monthly social insurance | premium ranging upward from six- tecn per cent of the salary each | month. The so-called old age pen- slon hecoming effvetive at the ay | 2 applies to everybod a wage. The pensiol on the salary ecarned year, seven YANKEE JUNIORS WIN The Yaukee Juniors won their I ninth game in 12 starts last night | by swamping the Alden Streets by a9 to 9 score. The Yankees line up as follows: Durbas c, Luzictti p, Chinick! 3b, Roman If, Negri cf, of. Anthony 2h, Melichinski s, Rin- i rf, and Stanlgy 1h. The' e 5 100king for zames with any raging 14 years For ga dress (g B o Luzietti, | Belmont street, or phone 1115-6 FOR NATIONAL MARBLE SHO New, quick easy way to refinish old furniture and wood- work vourself. Can be used in any home, by any man or woman. ‘Turns old furniture into new, puts new color into wood- work, The finish lasts and does not mar. Demonstration starts Monday and runs all week. PEACOOK LACQUER as Beautiful as the Name Implies. PLACING 1S DUCK(S, ONCROSS IN RING LAGGING ACROSS THE RING | 1. Lagging— [ ot the ring th Standing on one side | players piteh or toss their shooters to a parallel line across the ring. The shooter com Ing nearest wing for its owner the right to play first 2. Preparation—Tlhe ducks. called mibs, dakes, hoodles commiss are placed in the also and exant YO SHOOT center of the ring in the form of a | cross. One duck is at the outer sec- | tion and the others are laid three on each arm of the cross. The ducks must be three inches apart Knuckling down—On every shot except the lag the player must have one knuckle of his shooting OTING CONTEST TO BE HELD IN THIS CITY GEYS DUCKS HE KNOCKS OuT Star Cleaning Co. Office 234 NORTH TEL. 1075 Branch Office 293 MAIN ST. New Britain S M. J. KENNEY & CO. 563 Main St. (Opp. St. Mary’s Church) Telephone 314 and 36 Connecticut’s Most Complete Religious Store Medals, Pictures, Statues, Beads, Crucifixes, Little Flower Novelties Statues delivered to any part of the city. FUNERAL PARLOR Tel. 314 ight Service 36 NNOCKS OPPONTNTS SHOOTER FROM QNG ANO WINS GAME _ € HITS OPPONENTS SMOO"EE hand tonching the ground. 4. Scoring — When a t a duck, he shooter knocks ou wins it, picks it up and is credited with it by the referen 5. Hitting Shoot When a play- er hits another player's shooters in tha ring but does not knock it out AND GETS DUCK he gains one mih, ny mib he chos another shot. H 1 He may pick up | from the ring the opponent v kill« and is entitled to TR b S L out of the game. The player oppone shooters again un- the shooter out is il e Tias won another mib in a gif- credited with all the ducks previ- ferent way or until his turn comes ously won by the apponent. If the to shoot again opponent has not won any ducks the 6. Knockout — When & player player is not entitled to pick up & shooter of an opponent | duck on this shot, who knocks knocks the