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- NEW BRITAIN DAICY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, MAY 25, 1927 —_—————— e WANTS BRITONS T0 BE RA THREATE S , |as thought centering on sky rald’:rs[MRSl EHAP[ mfl RIGmous GITIZENS ltrom over the seas. 1In time of ; . | “ t The demonstration was given by | B—— . i s Dita Entangered a5 S0 s Ol Wants Publ HOAg=WI ™ oo e o 4 ; * nc. city on a return to Fort Tollen, New | | . Flood Waters Rise | ori rom the coast near Xewon| Name Soven WomeD | tonton. May 55 tP—an appesi to DEPARTMENT STORE AFMy-navy maneuvers. IS Ry {ull Britons to help make the empire B Utacs a0y ey 15 P—Fi00a-| Los Angeles, May 25 (P—The ight | great force for righteousness in| % TO CALL US WI'i'HOUT CHARGE—CALL 3590 ; ! i | the world, and a plea for unity were B coemeHolayRineatanel dom- 1 of Lita Grey Chaplin to get before |\ ;). premier Stanley Baldwin age in several sections of New York the public her story of her life as| n an empire day address broadcas ’ iate milon moro than a day con the wife of ( harles Chaplin, ;vnd 'he}throughouz e adtivie lash might. tinued rain. film comedian's determination to/| Gewe! muat dexola lgun best ancrs R J Burdened with an abnormal flo\\i" prevent the airing of her sensational | ioy' 1 the years to come—tory, | ° ©f water, Bittarmilic Oresk Strainec charges threatcned today to engulf |liberal and labor allke” he de- | at the dams along its cour: the names of seven women, four of | clared, “to make our unity such a| H menace the Ithaca delta. ) ' Rtacks Texas Beau[y (00Dtest | tnem “prominent fiim nctresses”, in | reality that men and women will re- | other streams flowing into the ithe divorce battle. zard the empire as one, and it may| §! to Cayuga lake were bankful and ds l 0 | Such was the result of develop- hecome possible for them to move | f dangerously close to an overflow. al] il ar l]&S Iments in the proceedings yesterday. | within its bounds, to' New Zealand,| = Cornell university's oarsmen, how- — when Mrs. Chaplin refused to answer | Australia, South Africa and Canada, , \ ever, continued daily practice, using e ! questions for a deposition In the case | ag easily and freely as from Glasgow | the inlet as usual, | Rome, May 25 (UP)—A bitter at-' ¢\ 0 (ohapermen had been barred | 1o Tondon, or from Bristol to New- Navigation on the Mohawk divi- by Pope Pius XI on the Gal-|p i 1o hearing at which she had | eastle, slon of the Erie Canal was at a|ves ., international beauty|, ... 05 In another part of his speech he standstill, and gates wero up in scv-| contest and all - similar bathing| PN PG gupertor Judge E. F.|sald: | ~The British ® empire Is | en locks where high water from | beach pageaits is contalned amons |y ;."ovorruled a demurrer filed by | spiritual inheritance which we hold | Schoharie creek and streams east of | th icial pronouncements of the|cyapiin in an attempt to have the i trust, not only for its members, Fort Plain had caused apprehensio servatore Romano. case thrown out of court. He also ! hut for all the nations which sur- Navigation on the Champlain d g to the girls Who WiIn| ohiog Chaplin’s motion to strike | round ft. Let us see to it that we sion was not interrupted, but lev ntests, the pronountement|s.oy, yjs wie's petition some of the |hand it on to our successors with were high. Reports from Roche t is a bitter life wherefrom|;,,r0 gensational charges. Chaplin | untarished glory." ter, made to Commissioner of Canals they can only emerge at a great|, . oo hut ten days in which to | Farrell, said canal crs were at| price in bitter disappointment, and|;ngwer the charges or lose the suit | flood stage. Tw ive ¥ vere| perha andoned on the thres- |,y jofault, unless further legal tac- 9 tied up in the Mohawk d hold of their careers. tics are successfully employed, P ng-| 3 young | ! Two rivers flov The threat to make public the hamton—the Sus a 2 irl su ances into artificial|names of the seven women was made | nango—were well above r eral world fame,” it ‘eon- Ly [yndol L. Young, Mrs. Chaplin's | stages and a forecast of more T ler existence floats to a aitorney, after the film comedian's | today was looked upon Wwith alarm. |t osphere in a new light mak- | yife appeared in answer to a sub- | Streams and creeks feeding these|ing her dazzlingly dizzy. |poena for a deposition by her. Her rivers were barely able to carry the| “If this warning will disconcert{attorneys insisted that the taking of F“e Dl‘y Age]]ts Al‘e Abollt 0 water choking them and several had those who exploit human lev sition be open to newspaper ‘broken bounds. commercially as did Mephistopheles| ropresentatives while the coniedian’s Workmen cleared a landslidc from on the foolishness of the decrepit|ounsel demanded a elosed session. ngn Posmons the Elmira-Binghamton road n epicure of Mannheim it may put an| TRe hearing broke up when Mrs. miles east of Elmira. The dirt,| end in movies to ‘beauty queens’ Chaplin, asked but one question as loosened by rain, slid into the road|and we can return to those realities|a matter of record, refused to an-| Washington, May 25 (UP)—The and blocked traffic. which our mothers knew how to swer it. The %aking of the deposi- first break in the prohibition ma- | practice as queens of virtue.” Ition then was postponed a week. chine built up by Assistant Secre- | —_— The presiding judge of the superior tary of the Treasury L. C. Andrews | |Surrenders and Admits court will be asked to declde whethier lis ~ expected to come soon when | | s TNy the deposition will be taken publicly | five or more of his chief fleld liew. | He’s Wanted in Stamford Young declared ,or privately. 4 that ltonants resign from the dry office. y | “Stamford, May 25 (P—Tha stam-lif the deposition were taken he ! mpo"oionnioneion wuilt up over a | | W ¥ F . U 5 ARE ]]EM“NSTRATEI]“’” polico received word Jast night | would ask Mrs. Chaplin to name the o vear poriod, today seemed to| i ere Formerly Up to $39.7 |from Harrisburg, Penn., that ajseven women. If taken privately,\yo o umbling, while Andrews fought | | voung man who gave the name of | Youns said, he tmmediately would | o 1T /8 TS ATCRERS TOUEAS {James Herbert 1 Ssurrendererl, j asicthal icihe madelaimatterloCnuba)as 4ot (oo iz Wt D orand e Women. . . .misses. .. .here's a coat and Bridgeport People $6¢ Anfi- riane thac v was manted inStam- o vocora. e T e e o | S e S g Z . | M. 0. Dunning, chiet dry coordi- i 2 : 3 b b Ae]'ial [llumination ‘rg;l ‘;Tvr\‘v‘:fi“?a“‘: L,: '\y:rar.m:fli w,o:r‘b.l,}r_:‘ I;?;? '.";nmll:'ivm"rofi ! paLo ";" x’“{'}“e";“::“ i dollars. And this selling comes right ‘at the - !leged he was fnvolvéd in the serious |papers were served here yesterday :;: sbo:t :o:;:lcled‘:md] SM ?’:: height of the season when every woman 4 AT AT S fl{':;:::?r;,avkne."I'\":x!\"fll:}*l:;‘.r'::s{!\:-c.o‘:f‘Sirod to resume his duties as col- - needs several dresses for immediate and searchlights each with a beam of $00 | with the assault, is at liberty under |oner in connection with the slaying | B A% of 45 Chatsla lc%f;,:: fi:;m‘z, a(f, 'rtl?g"nm;::'fl;,l',, summer wear. Every garment shown was million candle power, placed along bonds of $5,000. The police are of Stanley Gruzas, 47 o atfield s ex sis | Z o R lork . in a line of two miles at Seaside looking for a third man. lavenue Thursday morning. ~Deputy (J- D. Pennington, administrator at | & formerly much higher priced, and a sensa- Park, last night demonstrated to a — | Sheriff John W. Jenusaitis served the | Pittsburgh: Chester P. Mills, New | tional value at $19.75! large crowd how they would go AN CHIR DIES papers for Attorney Albert J. Brons- | York; O. D. Jackson, New Orleans; mbout detecting enemy bombing | May 25 (P—Rev. Charles | ky, counsel for Mrs. Turlas. ~ The (Roscoe F. Harper, Buffalo; J. F. planes which in time of war would , rector emeritus of St.ipapers charge Intemperance and |Vivian, Denver, and F. V. Wright, & scek to demonish the many fac-| Matthew's church, Wilton, died last|cruelty, according to the sheriff and i Texas. T]’lll’d FIOOI' tories and important communica- | night at his home here, after having | the attorney. These men came into the serv- tion points in this city. s he las years as a min-| Police have falled to break down |ice at Andrews' personal request Coordinating their beams to that |ister in the Protestant Fpiscopal|the alibis of either Turlas or Michael and they were expected to leave be- of the central light manipulated church. He had been ill since!Lennox. 42, of Grand Hotel, who is!fore the assistant secretary retires under the orders of the also held for the coroner. {August 1. . Cross these 'bridges for a quarter and be ahead gf the crowd ONE oF THE most foolish adages is “Don’t cross a bridge until you come to it.” All the big winners have crossed their bridges mentally a long time before they came to them. Gary saw the future of steel. Rockefeller saw the future of oil. Ford saw the future of the automobile. They were over the bridges long before the crowd arrived. The most valuable thing that can happen to you is to be able to look soundly and confidently into the future. You can do this tonight. For twenty-five cents you can do it. Buy the June number of The American Magazine. Read the interview with Dr. J. Russell Smith of Columbia Uni- versity, on page 18. Exactly where, geographically, should a young man, just starting out, look for most certain success? Where could ; The Mother you move to gain the greatest opportunity for your children or your children’s children—ten, twenty, fifty years hence? S | What’s coming in agriculture, in industry, in the fast- “M S ) S h (X} growing cities? What'’s going to happen to the South, to : Ay ‘A’ t t New England? Where must the peak oftAmerican civiliza- - y on s ) ee ear s tion be reached? ) is the story of a mother, seared by the memory of her ox\vn blasted romance, and her Look forward withithic great, practical Scer: Lay your y only son to whom she has consecrated her life. plans now to cross these important bridges that are surely spanning the present into the future lands of richer, more The mother had not wanted to be burdened with the responsibility of a child, feel- rewarding LIFE. ing that it would somehow take from her the undivided affection and love of her husband. ° Bridgeport, May 25 (P —Bright George Gallo arrested in connection ! On the eve of his birgh, his father had been killed in an automobile accident, in company with a woman whom his wife did not know. The tragic death of her husband changed all this, and to the child, whose coming she had regretted, she now completely devoted herself. : To think for him, to live for him, fo ‘choose for him became her self-appointed right. The hoy reaches’the age of eighteen, ready for college and in love with a nice girl, § but his mother does not approve of his choice. g In her attempt to safeguard him in his love affairs she—but read this epochal story | - GINg Magazine Mer o 2200000 “MY SON’S SWEETHEARTS” By Idah McGlone Gibson circulation It is the story of Amefican youth, plainly and truthfully told. Not simply fiction but largely fact. Begin it Saturday, exclusively in The Herald.