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SEES SUSPIION OF U, S IN CHINA Rev. A. D. Heininger Describes Conditions in Land of Dragon The attitude of the United States toward China is regarded in some circles in China with & slight degree of suspicion, according to Rev. Al- tred D. Heininger, who returned to this city Saturday from China. Mr. Heininger was principal of the Por- ter Middle school at Techow in the northern part of the Chantung prov- irce and was recalled to America P) the American board of foreign mis- sions. The resolution recently sdopted by | congress in which this ccuntry did | 1ot obligate itself to recognize thci Chinese government until a more stable government is established | there, is not accepted with the | grace in some prominent Chinese queraters, where it is feit that lhe‘, United States could be of vast as-| cistance In establishing such a gov- ernment. 3 Mr. Heininger does mot think | (hina ever will have a government oxactly like that of America, but thinks it will be a government of | occupational representation, where- | in each vocational group has its rep- | entative. He says that with 99 per | -ent of China still illiterate, a stable sovernment there is a long way off. Education has made great strides within the past 10 years, however, | and the minister predicts even more vapid progress in the future. The war situation there greatly handi-| caps more rapid progress in educa-‘ tion because of the diverting of | sunds and resources to military pur- | v Joses. | : The hope of China seems to be in General Chiang Kai Shek, who was | . pupil and protege of tbe late Dr. 1 Yat Sen. Dr. Sun is regarded as the Washington and Lincoln of China. General Chiang, according to | \Mr. Heininger, 18 an unassuming voung man, entirely devoid of selfish interests and is fighting only for the general good of his country. The minister says he saw no hor- | vors of war in Techow and suffered | ne privation. He will succi:(jd lL(‘\'.}} Warren M. Blodgett as minister of | religious education at the First Con- gregational church here, but hopes eventually to return to China. Mr. Heininger says: “On the sixth of April consular | instructions reached us by telegraph 10 the effect that all Americans were | to leave Techow (our station) by April 9th, There had been a pre. _vious telegram, (sent just two days | after the Nanking incdent) advising | all women and children should with- | draw to Tientsin. Telegrams and lotters from other mission stations‘. advised of the action that was being | taken elsewhere. On the 8th and 10th most of the members of our station left, going by train to Tient- | «sin. Four of us remained a few days to complete the transfer of our work to the Chinese Christian lead- ers. “There was no reason whatever for us to withdraw from Techow as tar as local conditions were con- cerned at that time. The whole at- Our ha best | © fout a vigorous titude of the people (Chriastians and | non-Christians) was one of friend- ship and courtesy toward the mis- sionaries,—a friendship which has been increasingly manifested | through recent years. Not one indi- cation of hostility or anything anti- | OONSHINE HANIAC S iew OEATS SHANGER ‘s;nnd no danger for us, though ‘lflfliSiaflfl ViSiml' A[mks P GfleS' they did reluctantly admit that it| [riafl while in szy might be advisable for us to follow | | consular instructions so as to avoid | even the possibility of International | complications. So we had ample | ™ . 5 fimo #to R ithAre= s nack: tore, ||, L Bolicesoaust yeterday oD |or give away our belongings; we !N Judge Hungerford imposed a had also the genuine good will of fine of $10 and {the Chinese communty. We have yfoore, a transient, who claims to | no tales of horror, no harrowing ex- |jave come from Louisiana, and | perieces to relate. “By the time we reached Ticntsin the situation throughout the north had become much easicr. The mill- tary autRorities had raided the headquarters of the military at- |tache connected with the Russian embassy in Peking. in which were | 104 sullivan or anyone else had seized documenta allesed to have |\ 0 =0 L fo, avidenee of red propaganda in Pe-| M UREE T A TEN SOk king. Tn the south. the right wing ' '\ "0} on “Noore attacked him, ? the nationalist party had carrled [y pim about the head and dical 1 aul‘:,‘;pf:;w&.-"fino,f‘m- so severely that he was taken e omemt of the mationalist |to New Britain General hospital for A ¢ |treatment. He was able to leave r:-run:dua’zwfiton;:zl\‘inocf\sms‘o::}:cgfd’vslcnla}u but he might have been 4 . {obliged to remain under treatmeat e g "war is not over. The | Indefinitely but for the timely in- | tervention of seven men who res- self-secking war-lords of the north otill hold five or six provinces. The cued him and turned Moore over nationalist armies are even now |to Detective Sergeant Lllinger an pressing northward, and it is hardly | Officer Hayes. S tonceivable (if only forelgn nations Alex Marinczyk, aged 19. of 37 Wil re‘rain from meddling) that |Horace street, was fined $10 and these armies will be stopped until |costs for violation of the rules of all of China, or at least all south |the road. He was arrested Sunday of the great wall, is under natlon- |night at the corner of Silver and alist control. Tn fact, from late ad- Broad streets by Supernumerary vices, seems fmminent. !Officer Willlam Sullivan after his “The extension of nationalist pow- | machine had collided with a ma. or and the expulsion of the war- [chine driven by Frank Sosnowski Jords is an end earnestly longed for of 24 Nash strcet, New Haven. hy practically all of the educated | The case of Alex Kijewski, aged classes throughout the north. The (43, of 44 Albany avenue, who masses of ths peasantry long most |pleaded mot gullty to the charges of all for peace,—but they cordially of reckless driving and refusing to hate the war-lords who grlevously [show his operator's license when oppress them, and grind them down | requested to do so by an oficer. to the level where Mfe is hardly |was continued until tomorrow worth the living. | morning, to allow him time to re- “The traditional attitude of (I’lend-\laln counsel. He was arrested by <hip on the part of the Chinese to- [Detective Sergeant Eliinger on the ward America is in many quarters|New Dritain-West Hartford road giving place to an attitude of suspi- |Sunday afternoon following a col- clon. The adoption by the United ijjsion between his car and one States zovernment of a policy which | qriven by Richard Larson of 2§ make clear to the Chinese |\ain street. According to the po- America’s friendship s urgently |jice, Larson's car was not in mo- needed.—a policy independent if|tion when the other car struck :t. | noed be, of that followed by Euro- | judgment was suspended in the | pean and other powers. All of the | case of Benharth Wickstrom, aged schemes for internationalizing China | 35 ot 195 Roxbury road, charged must certainly fail, because they Will | with breach of the peace and certainly run counter to the des|rnsy‘dnmkenneu' of the great masses of the people | Jydgment was suspended on pay- of Chine.—and thus ‘forfeit theil | ment of costs in the cases of James good wi | Gill of New York, and Henry For- [to Danlel Sullivan of 320 Main |street early Sunday evening on Park street. Moore expressed re- |which, he said, must have driven will ¥ sell, aged 26, of 126 Fairview street, | T AT Y charged with assault. JUNIOR OUTLAWS WIN | .The case of Adolph Kupic, aged The Junior Outlaws scalped the | 40, of 85 Smith street, charged with Indians by a score of 25 to 2 Sat-| hreach of the peace and drunken- urday. The Outlaws have won 17| ness, was nolled, as was that of Al- straight games and are out for more | bert Mendes, aged 31, of 15 Willow victims among the junior team of | street, charged with breach of the | peace and assauiting Carl Bouzen- dere of 403 Arch street. | PLANS OWN FUNERAL | Charles Halter, aged 18, of Wall- | Belfast, Me., May 31 (P—Before ! ingford, was fined $15 and costs for | he committed suicide by shooting| driving an automobile without a li- |today Willis I. Pearson of " City| cense and registration. He and two | Point, wrote a note giving the exact| companions narrowly escaped death |time of the act and full instructions| early Monday mornjng when the car | for his funeral. His body was found driven by Halter, went over the in a stable at his home. o curbstone and hung in a perilous {the city. Business Office s been moved Our business office is today occupying new quarters at 17 Court Street, across the street from its former location. Please re calling at member this new address when our office on matters relating to applications for service, the payment of bills or other b THE S TELEPHONE g usiness. OUTHERN NEW ENGLAND COMPANY The true value of your telephone is measured ) not by what it costs but by what it does. ( costs on Bert R.| position on the brink of the—clift at Park and Cliff streets. Halter told the police he was unfamillar with the locality and did not realize the danger until the car bumped over the curbstone and the engine stalled. | Officer Grabeck arrested Halter. | OUR SCHOOLS | B | who administered a severe beating| | gret and blamed moonshine liqaor, ! him mad, as he would not have ds-| l —Photo by Johnson & Peterson MISS LORETTA T. GALLAGHER Roosevelt School | Miss Loretta T. Gallagher, room teacher for the fifth grade at the Roosevelt school, is one of the |graduates of last June's State Nor- mal school class who was assigned [to the elementary schools in this | city. | Born in Brooklyn, N. Y., she has made her home in Winsted most of Lher life. home at the State Normal school here. INVESTIGATES DUBRIN CASE Detective Sergeant George C. Tl- linger was in New York today in- vestigaling some phases of David Dubrin case, which will be |heard $a police court tomorrow | |morning. The charge is one of at- |tempt to obtain Landers, Frary |Clark stock valued at $14,000 un- |T. Hibbard of 22 Mason Drive. Assistant Prosecuting Attorney W. M. Greenstein will presen: state's case and Attorneys William Weinstein of New York and Israel Nair of this city brin. | | tists who study of the moon, that “gravity is one of the most im portant of the many factors which . must be taken into account in the for the the | consideration of geological prob- lems.” |der false pretenses, from Mrs. Rose | face, the T2 THE MOON AT LAST QUARTER SHOWING CRATERS. TAKEN WITH THE 100-INCH REFLECTOR AT THE MOUNT WILSON OBSERVATORY OF THE CARNEGIE INSTITUTION OF WASHINGTON ‘Washington, On the moon miles during May 27. (A — Dr.would be able to hit an object 2, She attended Gilbert high Ired E. Wright of the staff of the 4250 miles away. are making the gravitational | pull is only about one-sixth of that |canic in origin, but are caused by on the earth and is too weak even {to hold an atmosplicre to the sur- | force would still be a factor, since Under such conditions, explains, a 75 millimeter gun, which | permit |has a rangs of five to ecight miles |with unimpended speed and pene- the |on the earth, would shoot from 130 | trate to 280 miles on the moon, wh “Big Bertha,” will defend Du- | shells into Paris from a distance of | hound elastically and efect a quan- the World War, itity of material. This is the age of square-thinking and straight-talking. Never was honesty so popular as today. Modern® smokers praiée Reynolds Tobacco inston-Salem, N. C. is convinced which threw N N AN ¢ RN N he | the N school of that town before enrolling Carnegie Institution, chairman of a | commmittee of distinguished scien- | volcanic action with initial veloei- a special | ties = A\ \GRAVITY AFFECTS MOON |GIRI’S CONFESSION ABSOLVES NEGROES Colleyville Assanlt of Last March Being Cleared Up Coffeyville, Kas, May 31 (P—In- vestigation of a reported criminal assault on two white girls here last March that led to a racial distur- bance in which several were 1h- Jjured before state troops could dis- perse a mob seeking a ngreo sus- pect, has resulted in the arrest of & white man and one of the girls on the eve of her graduation from high school. Coffeyville, with upwards of 000 of its 20,000 population com- prised of negroes, became & seeth- ing center of mob activity March 17, last, when Julia Mooney, high school senior, and her friend, Mar- garet Akers, told authorities three negroes attacked them as they slept. With ths appearance of blood- hounds in an effort to trail the three suspects, a mob invaded the negro quarter. Although few had guns, sporadic firing started and when a youth was wounded the !mob stormed hardware stores for |arms and ammunition. The first of three national guard cavalry units |arrived at this juncture to find | part of the rioters at the jail where a negro was held. After stoning the jall and dam- aging other buildings, the mob was |broken up, but the city remained under military rule for several days while alleged leaders of the rioters continued agitation. Investigation by county and special officers opened while nearly 1,000 persons were reported to have signed petitions for a grand jury inquiry. Materials hurled into space b | P oct,| Yesterday officers revealed that Ira Kennedy, former automobile salesman here, had been arrested on a charge of assaulting Miss Akers. Miss Mooney was held as accessory before the fact. They were placed in jail at ‘Independence, the county seat, under bond of $20,000 each. Kennedy, who now lives at Wichita with his wife and four small children, denied that he was here at the time of the alleged as- sault. His wife supported this statement and told how she and her husband occupied the house in which the attack occurred. Miss Mooney was a roomer at her home, Mrs. Kennedy said, and Miss Akers, the younger of the girls, often spent the night with her school- comparable to those on the carth would be flung far out in- tead of falling back into the cra- This, he thinks, could account cleanly chiseled appear- |ance of some of the craters dis- | closed in photographs of the moon. Even if the cratery are not vol- Jneteors, as one theory explains absence of atmosphere would them to strike the moon the crust to a considerable depth, setting up an aureole of in- [tense compression which would re- SN THIS is the age of frankness and plain-speaking, and it rates Camel first among cigarettes, For Camel is that kind of a smoke. Camel is all quality and no false front orshow. Camelsare made of the choic- est Turkish and Domestic tobaccos grown—no substitutes. And the finest blending ever given a cigarette. It is Camel character that has won the smokers of today — such honesty of taste and fragrance as never was known in a cigarette before. You'll find all dreams of smoking pleasure realized in this modern, quality cigarette. “Have @ Camel!” NOW YOU ASK ONE HERE IS VARIETY Your knowledge of music, history, geography, English and science ir tested by this set of questions. 1—Who wrote the musical come position “Poet and Peasant”? 2—The eagle on the American seal holds a streamer saying “E Pluribus Unum.” What does this mean? 3—What part of the earth’s sur- face is covered by land? 4—What is the longest word in the English language? 5—Who spread out his coat that a queen might cross a mud puddle? 6—What is the average normal temperature the human body? 7—How much is the president of the United States, allowed for travel and entertainment? 8$—What state in the union has the longest ocean coastline? 9—What is the largest lake on the American continent? 10—What_ nickname was given to Robert Fulton's steamboat, the Clermont? mate. Authorities charge that Miss Mooney connived with the assail- ants, but that the Akers girl was an innocent victim.., Officers indi- cated that a refraction of the first story told by Miss Alkers caused the arrest of Kennedy and Miss Moon- ey. The sheriff's office also an- nounced that other arrests were ex- pected. A couple of gay, new house dress- jes or a bright orange or yellow apron will make housework more endurable for the housewife when spring fever thfeatens, ¢ “WHEN IN HARTFORD ‘DINE WITH US.” Everything we serve very best, If you don’t believe it come in for a test. Wholesale and Retail Depart. ment in Connection. THE HO OYSTER HOUSE 22 State St. Under Grant's HARTFORD is the