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WADOO REPORTED AS 00T OF RACE ; ing o, Rev. W. H. Alderson Tells, Drys s:]ll[)iflefl‘i tl;fi Smlflg 0 What Goes on “Behind the Scenes” Where Joys Feature (UP)—The democratic Washington, May 11 Willlam G. McAdoo forces have definitely abandoned work te make the son-in-law of the late President Wilson the party nom- and are now naming | Rev. William H. Alderson, pastor Governor Al [of Trinity M. I. church, speaking |before the Exchange Club at lts cgular meeting at the Hotel Bur- {ritt last evening, departed from the jusual top of the day and cxplain- ¢ his job as he stated he had heard otk professional men explain | theirs, the curtain cast isteq by AbOUt ministers of the city he gave B WAS SUEgeStel b [the members of the Exchange Club MleAdioo in A Specch |2 ACurate idea of the trials and irgh. | Merodith | TecomPenses of the average mins- 3 { ter, MeAdoo's closest adviser in the | g0 throughout the address 924 convention fight “i".“n" Smith, were many stories of the minister's but his personal popularity in the | col TECD S e O pulpit party has as yet been insufficient 104 5. i hig private conversation— cnable him to MeAdOOS | gioriog which enlightened the gath- strength, although McAdoo casily | uring to a slight extent on the as- avors him. sion of the speaker that the min- First - the has more to do than preach talking Jout on Sunday. Walsh, a leader Man Unjustly in Prison wing of the part The first example of a minister's But that m work, told in the form of an actual o aceopta happening, was a_story concerning trotted out A man in Wethersfield prison, found and comes from |in the penitentiary by Rev. Mr. Al- cloctoral vole | derson on one of hs visits to the in- for a s stitution. According to the local according to old po- minister, the man is lodged in his litical traditions. He has long buen [cell on a false charge. His two sons allied with £ r Governor Cox of | joined the army and navy during the Jemocratic nominee, | war and nothing has been heard nd undoubtrdly could get the Ohio | from them since. The man has paid lelegation at the next convention |every cent of his money to a lawyer with other support from McAdoo in | located, as Rev. Mr. Alderson stated, e 35at and Sotth. | "not a million miles from this city” Present indications ars that Me-|Who, as far as the minister has been Adoo is definitely out of it. The [able to tain, has not done any- U'nited Press poll of strongth over | thing in regard to investigating the the country revcaled that not ajCircumstances of the maw's arrest. single state delegation at this time s abiy MGbrion i, RE would be pledged to him, including | knowledse of the case, spent count- his doubtful home state of Cali- | eSS hours, trying to locate the two ling | sons and aiding the man in promot- R !ing an investigation of the charge : which lodged him in prison. Jalioichs Bl Finds Girl Addicted to Drugs and Sorrows Life’s Drama. inee for 192§ drys to pit against Smith of New York. Newton D. Ba in the Wilson Thomas J. Walsh, dem., B T f lowa, rtary of wa Senator Mont., a were b en 1o ta was s Mcadoo men started | jre swingin b nd of the progressive nd an crdent dry. ement having reached e climax, t have now | Raker sermo; a dry . Ohio, th cssary McAdoo is setting np Washington and he off-stage in | MINISTER LIFTS CURTAIN _ON LIFE OF CLERGYMAN ADMIRAL’S MESSAGE {same faces are before m> ¢very Sun- | T — saying who will be the 1ext nomi- ree. Meantime the vatican again has let it be known it is not interestec in the coming presidential cam- paign. Archbishop Fumasoni-Brondi, | apostolic delegate to tle United | States, issued the following: v n a communication the cardinal |golved etary of state notes that some | rewspapers have been Governor Alfred S$mith of Yoi as the ‘candidate of the Holy while others declare his candida deplored by the Holy Se: Ilis emi- nence deemed it superfluons t vt that the Holy Sce is not interested or coneerned in any way in the coming | yresidential campaign, and this by ason of her principle of remaining | 1 aloof from the int in the political circles of | with tion se- v 18 line 1 expor vatican' homas B, an, United | Press correspondent a President Angell of Yale Highly Pleased New Haven, May 11 (R—TPresident James R. Angell of Yale was greatly pleased with the success of the stu- dent councils in the m nance of decorum at the Derby regatta last Saturday. In statement to the Yale News he said that he was par- | ticularly pleased that the student o ganization had shown itself so “tho oughly competent to deal with a ! problem which some persons felt to | he bevond its control similar sentiments were expressed | by Dean C. W. Mendell of Yale col- [t “The able army of glooms who predicted horrible things for Deghy day was so thoroughly routed there is little to do but write epitaph.” he said. “The undergr uate hody is to he heartily congrat- ulated on a day marred by no un- fortunate accidents or incidents.” JRTH TO SPEAR Romeyn Danforth of | «w London will speak at the New Britain Rotary club luncheon to- morrow. r. Danforth spoke in New Dritain when the 30th district con- ference was held here. | Dispose Of this new hygienic pad as easily as tissue —no laundry By ELLEN ] BUCKLAND Roqutersd Nuroe OUNTLESS women have dis- carded old-time “sanitary” pads for a new and better way. A way that offers far greater pro- tection. way, too, that banishes the old-time problem of dispo Eight in 10 better-class wo now use "KOT Discards as easily as laundry. No e Five times as nary cotton pad Deodorizes, thus ending all dan- ger of offending Obtainable at all partment stores *ROTEX,” Yc hesitancy drug and de- ply by sa ask for it wit Be sure to get the gennine nlv Kotex itself is Kotex. Proves oid ways a needless risk, In faire ness 1o yourself, try it. KOTE X No laundry—discard like tissue | Another and more 1o the highest ideals today. of that shocking case is that of a slip of a girl who called on the pastor one night and was found to be, among other things, an Imost hopeless addict to the drug habit. Riddled with all the vises of this modern world, she presented a problem to the pastor which only ra of constant endeavor ha Now, according to the min- ister, she is on the high road to use- referring 10/ ful citizenship and he thinks the day is not far off when he will stand hefore her to marry her to some de- cent young man who has fallen in love with her. To him, the fact that his work has made a decent woman out of what was once a low creature, is sufficient recompense to make up for any small salary or the hard work connected with his occupa- tion “No one ever knows a minister,” Rev. Mr. Alderson stated. “In the movies he is a bent over person in a faded frock coat with a stove pipe hat and an umbrella_and prayer book under his arm. Everyone rec- ognizes the character as soon as he arrives on the screen. Ministers Human Beings “Your minister was human before he became a minister and he's hu- {man now. Tickle him and he laughs; | cut him and he bleeds and hurt him and he feels as hurt as any other man. Here is the difference be- tween the minister and the average | man, son who did not choose the vocation lin which he is located. He is probably the only per- He was call- 1 to his profession by a power be- yond his own strength and now like aul, he fears to stop preaching the word of God. “To of you men, a minister aptizes bahies and conducts mar- ges and funerals, Let us consider ihese points alone, without ac- knowledging that a minister does iing but those three things. The aptism of a baby is a solemn ac- tion. To the minister alone is en- trusted the deed of dedicating the tiny mite of humanity in his arms nown to man ' He 13 the only person capable | action—no other person is dered for the baptizing of & most Marriage Time of Happiness. S5 2 BRIDES, NOTE THIS A new wedding ring — more beautiful, lovelier than any you have seen before! IF you would oe correct, note these new developments in choice of wed- ding rings: First, the bride-to-be should assist Second, there is a wholly new and erquisite design—a ring of such loveliness as has never before been known, We are at our store, design chosen fo hibiting these rings today. The very many of the M. C. Jeweler & Diamond Dealer UP 1 FLIGHT NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD. WEDNESDAY, MAY 1f, 1927 ° ’lofare open to men from other in. 8T river instead of being retar could be turned to good usage in 'PLANES TO0 DROP | “Marriages means happiness and | we love to conduct them. We arrive with a smile on our face and we| conduct the service with a smile on | our face and we leave with a smile | on our face. We wish w2 had more | of them, and yet they take up only a small part of our time, “The funerals are the worst of all. The service itself is a minor part of the circumstances surrounding a funeral. Before the death we have Nicaraguans Will Thus Be Ad- vised of Situation | Managua, Nic., May 11 (®—Plans | | were under way today to drop from airplanes and otherwise distribute | thousands of copies of a proclama- | worn paths to the home of the sick. | lon drawn up by Rear Admiral We have made daily calls to the per- | Latimer, commander of United son lying ill. At the funeral one | States naval forces in Nicaraguan | must enter a house fuil of heart | waters, saying he had been d,m‘,d; broken friends and relatives and say, | by the United States government to in a short time, some words which | accept the custody of the arms and | will in part comfort the occupants | ammunition of those willing to give | of that home and will not in any way | them up, including the government | jar upon the sensibilities of their | forces, and to disarm forcibly those | hearts. Every funeral takes some- | who do not peaceably deliver up thing out of a man that other oc- | their arms. cupations do not take. \ “The United States government,” 300 Speeches in 10 Months. | the proclamation declares, “having | “The outside speaking end of the!accepted the request of the Nicara- | minister’s life is no small part of his | guan government to supervise the duties. I have estimated that I have | clectlons in 1928, belleves general | spoken some 300 times within the | disarmament necessary for the last 10 months. If I published my | proper and successful conduct of | addresses, both in church and out of | sych elections.” | church, 1 would have issued a full | Tt is stated that the Nicaraguan sized novel every 12 days. What | government has extended amnesty der would stand for such over- | to all political and armed oppon- production on the part of his or her | nets, and that to facilitate the re favorite author? You men must turn to peaceful occupations of those realize that I speak year in and year | heretofore opposing the Nicaraguan | out to the same group of people. The | government, that government would pay ten cordobas ($10) each to day. I cannot repeat to any great ex- | individual who turned over to the tent. Do you realize what a strain it | United States forces a serviceable is upon the speaking powers of & machine gun or rifle. man to accomplish that?” Eight hundred conservatives Rev. Mr. Alderson estimated that|came into Managua last night for he has approximately 2,500 persons | the purpose of laying down their to deal with, from babies to Incalid | arms, Arrivals from Matagalpa, old ladies, to each he must appear | however, reported that the lberals | agreeable, ! along the route declared they would | Many Confessions Heard. [ not turn in thelr arms as there was | “We Protestant ministcrs do not | not a sufficlent number of marines liold regular confessions which are|in the Matagalpa section to enforce a part of the Catholic priest'’s work. | the order of Admiral Latimer. { And yet we have countlers confes-| The first antagonistic act since sions laid at our feet for comfort and | the truce in the civil warfare be- lelp. In closing let me cite one in- | twen the conservative and liberal cident which happened to me not | factions occurred yesterday at Chin- long ago. I received a phone call | andega. A band of former troops hegging me to come to a certain ad- | under General Cabulla, who calls | dress as soon as possible. Arriving | himselt a liberal, but who is de- there I found a hubbub. In one of | scribed by the liberals as a bandit, the meanest tenements In the city, | entered the outskirts of Chinandega | cveryone was drunk. The men were | killing a half dozen natives, wound- | ing a few others and engaging in an the children were crying and evl- | orgy of plundering. The miscreants | dence of sickness and flith was ev- | fled before the arrlval of marines (rywhere. The first words I heard | concentrated near the railway. when I entered the doo: were, ‘We didn't know whether to rall the chiet | Yale Law School Class of police or the minister—so we | T 7 'o Be Limited to 100 called the minister.” Now I have suc- | cceded in straightening out lhat} New Haven, May 11 (#—The class place until I am glad to 1eport that entering the Yale law school next fall it is running fairly smoothly. Some | will be limited to 100, Dean R. M. fighting, the women were drunk, Oriental Ruzs Cloth Coats, in fact all clothes, rugs, etc., that are subject to loss by moths can be stored in our Modern Storage Vault. We Call For and Deliver. Hudson Fur Shop 13 FRANKLIN SQ. 770 — 2 Phones — 4773 of the occupants have sworn oft | Hutchins says in an article in to- liquor—the family quarrvels have |day's Yale News. This number wilt Licen avertad and the placs has been | be exclusive of Yale undergraduates cleansd up. But remember the words | taking the combined course. Enroll- I was greeted with, ‘We didn’t know |ment in the latter, however, is open whether to call the chief of police or |only to Yale seniors who have an | the minister—so we called the min- |average of at least 75 for the three ister. Think then, of ths minister, | vears of college work or for junior | subjected to every call for every |year, according to the dean. | e alian i | “Yale undergraduates electing the | combined course will form the only | Toot 3 . exception next year to the rule that New Haven Man Fined | 57"utents must be graduates of | For Not Having License iapproved coliege,” Dean Hutchins Meriden, May 11 (®) — A care- Sa¥%. “The four year course here- | tul checkup by the department of | motor vehicles resulted in Herman | Roseman of 68 Sylvan avenue, New F R Haven, being fined $5 and costs in | ur Lgs the police court today on a charg= of driving without a license. | Six weeks ago Roseman reported an auto accident in which he ad- | mitted driving under another per- son's license. The motor vehicle de- | partment in checking back the re- | port found that Roseman had a license in 192 eory that a man who drove a car last year should know | how to drive and would not be learning under instruction the ar- rest followed. | CITY COURT JUDGMENTS The following judgments have | heen rendered by Judge William C. | Hungerford of the city court: Mary Straker against Orville Gibbs, for the plaintiff to recover damages of $12.25, J. G. Woods for the plaintiff; Adam Tumanowlez | against Joseph Zajkowski, for the | plaintiff to recover damages of $50, 1. J. Golon for the plaintiff; Wac- | law Stokarski against Charles Dem- ski. for the plaintiff to recover dam- ages of $57.30, L. J. Golon and M. S. Gordon for the plaintiff. selling so many of at $ most brilliant, recen weddings. Leading artists designed this ring and it is made by BOWDEN. Bowden Wedding Rings, standard since 1843. Each ring, each fairy detail of the ex- quisite tracery, is precisely carved by skilled fingers. So they have unex- pected beauty. Appropriately, it is named after the greatest of all lovers . . . Juliet. Re- member that name, Miss Bride-to-be! Ask to see it, foday. LEWITT Foot-Craft S| 299 MAIN ST.‘ stitutions having three years of col- | lege credit has been abolished.” D’Ausilio’s Case Will | Again Be Postponed New Haven, May 11 (P—Glovanni B. D'Ausilio, charged with assault with intent to murder in connectiol with his attack on Pasquale De | Cicco, Italian vice consul, here last | month, will be brought up for trial | {in city court tomorrow instead of ' today as had heen announced. It is expected that the case will again be continued, pending further | developments in De Clcco's condition. Although the vice consul has been discharged from the hospital, his wounds are not healing as rapldly as had been expected, it was said. | D'Ausilio is being held at the county jail. i GETS PRISON TERM | Springfield, Mass., May 11 (P—| Morrls Pearl, alias Nathan Pearl- | man, of Bayonne, N. J, who was| arrested in New York city for the | heft of $6,000 from three Spring- | field business men, was this morn- ing sentenced by Judge Callahan in superior court to serve from four to five years in state prison. DERBY FAVORITE WINS Newmarket, Eng., May 11 (® — Frank Curzon's Call Boy, which is the favorite for the Derby, won the Newmarket stakes of 1,000 pounds here today. DEMONSTRATION Tomorrow Afternoon of the Famous Chambers g COOKS with the GAS Women of New Britain Interested in This Scientific Should In This Demonstration We Will Show I—How to cook with the gas turned off. 2—How to prevent loss of food and flavor through shrinkage. 3—How to save and gas. 4—How to increase the appetite appeal of the food you cook. 5—How to cook a meal while attending a matinee or after- noon tea. Special Terms During Demonstration J. M. CURTIN CO. 404 MAIN STREET WOMEN’S SHOE SALE To introduce to more new customers the very unusual shoes we have been 6.75 and $8.50. $5.95 a pair Sales includes new shoes in most wanted materials. colored Kid and Calfskin are trimmed with the newest reptile leathers. In cluded also are shoes of Patent Leather—Black Kid and Black Satin Sale Ends Saturday, May 14 MANNING BROS. 211 MAIN STREET hoes Walk-Over Shoes T00 MANY LEVEES BUILT NEAR RIVER This Is One Reason lor Flood, Says Expert . Cambridge, Mass, May 11 (P— Floods which have wrought de- struction in the Mississippl Valley are attributable to the construction of too many levees along the banks of the lower river and its tributar- ies, according to Prof. Kirtley F. Mather of the department of geolo- ! gy at Harvard University. i “The blame for the present great : flood,” Prof. Mather said, “should | fall upon man and not upon na- ture. The Mississippl has risen to such great heights as it has in this | most recent flood because all the water of its tributaries has been im- mediately concentrated into one |TCHING in any form is usually relieved at once by a touch of soothing Resino} TURNED OFF! Cooking Method Attend money on food The light shades of ed in the wide river beds and bot- toms of smaller streams. “By the ever increasing number of levees each flood will be greater than the preceding one unless definite steps are taken to handle the problem. “The most logical plan seems to me to be to construct a large num- ber of amall reservoirs on the tribu- tary streams. These will make it possible to spread the flow through the year. Irrigation work will also be greatly benefited by a system of reservoirs, and the surplus water sacrifice. OQur Sash and Door fashion White Pine. If you want to build you will fall. Kitchenette Furniture Garage of yours? and a cat ran by him, Use Rock Lath for a Wet 25 lbs 75¢ Thursday power plants, “These advantages, great as they] are, however, should be held sec- ondary to the primary object of providing the Mississippl with an even flow of water every month of | the year in order to make inunda- | tions like the present one impos- sible.” A flavor of cooling herbs, ths healthful zippy taste of yeast, ail in one drink made at home with Williams’ Root Beer Extract. tractive. Look us over. sashes are made from genuine Michigan old NEW BRITAIN LUMBERETTES All things of real value are bought with self We are agents for Trimpak in New Britain. Success is not made by lying awake nights but by keeping awake in the daytime. Department is very at- Our modern up-to-date The City of Happiness is in the State of Mind. a warm house and save fuel, build with Celotex. 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