New Britain Herald Newspaper, June 16, 1927, Page 16

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ROTARIANS ANGRY AT RED SPEAKER Tater Discover He Is J. R 0'Brien in Disguise Fooled by a man who fooled them in much the same manner once before, members of the New Brit- ain Rotary club today are enjoying a hearty laugh at their own ex- Ppense. The cause of the merriment was J. Robert O'Brien of Milford, Conn., who formerly represented the Na- tional Security League. Under the auspices of the league he came here once before and by giving the Ro- tarians both sides of a bolshevik argument had a lot of fun. Today was the first day for the| new president, O. F. Parker, fto| . preside. John C. Loomis, president i of the Commercial Trust Co., was selected to provide the stunt. Mr. Parker announced that for | various reasons the stunt would not take place, but that the club would be addressed by Professor Martin| | J. Merritt of the bureau of eco-| . . nomics of New York university. i i i | The “professor” began by ster(ling | . i and amazing his hearcrs; he con-| tinued by antagonizing them and wound up by actually infuriating them to the point where at least | two men said they were on the point of offering physical violence. He started by saying missionaries e brought confusion to the minds of the people in China. He continued by lauding the soviet government of Russia. He denounc- ed capital. He tore’ constitution of the United States to shreds and ac- cysed the government of being a failure. He referred to Colonel Lindbergh and said his activity in favor of aviation was propaganda ftér more weapons of war and his ambitions to continue to kill. He accused Great Britain of exploiting smaller nations for her own ma- terial gain. He recommended that a committee of prominent socialists from Russia be invited to rewrite the constitu- tion of the United States. His talk was brimful of “Red” propaganda. It ran over with anarchy. He advo- cated the overthrow of the govern- ment and a “true democracy” such s is found in Russia. Then he offcred to answer ques- tions. During his talk his audience | Dbegan, to get restless. Then the Ro- tarians began to lose their temper. Some very pointed side remarks were | made. Several prominent manufa Fame’s fleetmg, and, although Just a few months ago the whole American continent rang with the praises of George Young, the Toronto youngster of 17 who won the Catalina Channel swim, when Young returned to Santa Monica to train for the $50,000 | race-to be held at Tomnw, which William. Wrigley, Jr., is sponsor- ing, nobody recognized him. So ::e““ fishing, and very wise, City Items There will be a regular meeting of Court Columba, Catholic Daughters of America, this evening at 8 o'clock |in Red Men's hall. Willlam Rybaczewski of 109 Hart- | ford avenue was arrested today by Ofticer Axel Carlson on the charge of breach of the peace. It is al- leged he was making a disturbance at his home. Officer David Doty, who was shot | suit and stood | splendor of his evening clothes. "and turers and businessmen showed e: pressions on their faces which indi. cated that they thought somebody ought to take the speaker out and shoot him. Others'looked as though they were about ready to start a tar and feather game of thair own. One well known insurance man openly challengeg a statement made by the speaker. Another man who supplies building materials demand- ed in tone of indignatign, “What's the matter with the cohstitution?” He Interrupted with an cxclamation of disgust when told it should be re- written by a committee of Commun- ists. The speaker sat down. There way &n atmosphere of hostility in the air. The situation was tense. Several Men Went Out Then President Parker “broke the fce.” As the speaker removed a dis-| xulle Mr. Parker introduced him as | J. Robert O'Brien, who would gnc “The other side of the question.” “I was just ready to brain you,” ealled a Rotarian. “Yes, and 1 was teking aim with this chair,” said a man at the speaker’s tabl>. Mr. O'Brien proceeded as his real selt to show the fallacy of the argu- ments he had propounded before. He showed how the American working- man is better off than any other working class in the world. “A Chinese workingman lives on three bowls of rice and a fish in a day. The American worker isn't that kind of a fish,” he said. He said the old socialistic soap box orator has passed out of Ameri- can life. The old I. W. W, has practically disappeared, he explain- ed. He said the “red” agitator is not getting any encouragement in America. Even the American Fed- eration of Labor has denounced those whe “were boring from within.” He sald in America there is no @uch thing as a distinction between capital and labor. The American Telephone and Telegraph company, which he said was the largest of its kind in existence, had 300,000 stock- holders and no indlvidual owned more than two per cent. “This has been accomplished without the aid of the red flag,” he said. “Labor is rising to a position of wealth and influence today. The American working class in the cloth- ing business would be known as cap- ftalists in Russia, because the work- ers own the business.” He showed how - American workers own almost 60 banks in the country. Speaking of the constitution he #aid Central America has e great progress under the protectorate of the United States constitution. He said he was with the marines for 10 yvears. He saw service in China, Haitl, Nicaragua and ofher places, and he knows the 1 ate of America ha= heon (i tion of many situations Mr. O'Brien was conur only on his talk, but to so completely fuol for the second tim Michigan Alumni Body Honors Mvs. Liadbor Indianapolis Jvne 16 (1) group of Univ Mic alumnl preserit Lindbergh with ers today wiin f! Louls, Pennsyl senger train, pis napolis en rout The traln arriv station at 8:25 i reity o A4 M a hou 1o St in the back by a youthful gunman several weeks ago, conferred today with Chiet Hart and expects to re- sume duty next Monday. Richard Clough of 48 Greenwood street reported to the police today that his b le was stolen. Mr. and Mrs. Casimir Blogoslow- ski and three daughters have re turned from Washington, D. C. where they attended the commence- ment exercises at Georggtown uni- versity. Walter Blogoslowski was { 1a member of the graduating class of | the Georgetdwn school of medicine. Chosen Marshal for N. B. H. S. Graduation | ‘Miss Margaret. Burke, daughter of Mrs. J. L. Burke of 72 Garden street. and Miss Natalle Wolski. daughter | of L. V. Wolskl of 237 Rocky Hill avenue were chosen by a committee ot junior and senior class repre- sentatives to be the marshals at the graduation exercises next I riday afternoon, June 24. Both girls are memhers of the junior class. Miss Wolski is a sis- ter of Miss Helen Wolski, a teacher of commercial English at the school. The committee follows: 2 lie G. McAuley, chairman: 1. Harvey, Miss Adrienne Raby. Mrs. Amy C. Guilford, Miss Mildred Weld, ss Bertha Waddell, Miss Dorothy Wright and Miss Betty Barker. Bridgeport Considers > Plane Landing Field Bridgeport, Conn., June 16 (UP) —The members of the city aviation commission here, which is faced with the task of selecting a suitable site for an airport will soon take to| the air to solve their problem. Tax Attorney Edward L. Kelly, execu- tive secretary to Gov. Trumbull, heads the commission. The only sites known to he feasible at this timo are Seaside Park and Lord- ship Meadow! Gun Fails, Noose Ends New Bedford Man’s Life New Bedford, Mass, June 16 (UP)—After shooting himself in an | unsuccessful attempt to take his | own life, Robert N, Negu mitted suicide by hanging in the cellar of his home here today. A brother of the victim discover- ed the holy after following a trail | of blood from a spot near the house to_the cellar, Negus had long heen regarded an eccentric, | as ¢ | DUNLEAVY LEAVES HOSPITAL | Francis Dunleavy Hartford omobile o was injur ident in Berlin on May released from New Britain | | today, and was acc ord by a police off rial on the charge of the Ferguson of | Dunieavy, | | stand {an automobile. F | Hartford. who was with {died of injuries sustained when the | car struck a pole. Dunleavy is said to elaim tha ‘ rguson took the car and that he | id not know it was sto | accepted F {ride. nost I RIDER'S L viding a bicycle on Grove at $:40 Jast night, John Bolsic of $9 Broad street, utomobile driven hy | = | | | mik | While Hill 156 lxm]rl\ hy an | from there, NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, JUNE 16, 1927. LINDBERGH FLIES T0 WASHINGTON field, and shed his borrowed flying revealed in all the Lindbergh arrived over the fleld with the planes of Lieut. Command- s Wick and Miles of the navy, who accompanied him from Washington, escorting him on each side. Lieut. Sinclair Street, who accompanied Lindbergh on the round trip, arriv- ed at the field about 20 mlnulm' carlier although he had taken off from Bolling field, Washington, five minutes later than Lindbergh. Street sald he had not sighted Lindbergh anywhere along the route. The arrival of the young fller was practically unheralded, there heing only a few newspaper men, photographers and officials at the tield. Lindbergh had a breakfast of some toast, two cups of coffce and two fried eggs at the commandant's home and then accompanied by Captain Bluthe and a police escort he proceeded in an automobile to | the Park avenue apartment to pre- pare for his reception in Brooklyn. Greeted in Brooklyn New York, June 16 (F)—Charles Lindbergh, happy in the thought' other half of his ‘*‘we'— “The Spirit of St. Louis"—is again close hand, arrived at Harry Frazee's Park avenue apartment at | ) a. m. today from Mitchel field | in an automobile. | He doffed his evening clothes which he wore on his unheralded dash to Washington and back, and donned his street clothes for the | parade in Brooklyn. | As usual, great crowds assembled | in front of the apartment and cheer- ed the young aviator lustily. Despite his lack of sleep, he appeared fresh his face, usually stern, was wreathed in smiles. Lindbergh was accompanied from his apartment by Grover Whalen of the mayor's committee of welcome and Richard Blythe, his personal representative. At the Brooklyn end of the bridge they were joined by Borough President James J. Byrne and Brigadier General George A. Wingate, chairman of the Brook- Iyn welcome committee. At the end of the bridge the wait- ing crowd was held in check by po- lice lines which jammed them into the shape of a great heart. A mighty roar went up as Lindbergh appeared and a storm of paper and ticker tape fell from the windows of near- by buildings. Lindbergh smiled at the crowd with no trace of fatigue. There were ten automobiles in the parade, Colonel Lindbergh's car be- ing at the head of the line. The parade was preceded by 100 motor | cycle policemen. The line moved along the crowded route, at a speed of about 20 miles per hour, Lind- bergh waving to the thousands who lined {he way and cheered inces- santly. One yoman was trampled on in the rush for seats at Prospect Park where the formal ceremony of wel- come was scheduled. She was sent to a hospital. After a brief visit to police head- quarters today where Lindbergh thanked Commisisoner Warren for the police protection given him he | went to the offices of the New York Sun where he was presented with a scroll on which was inscribed an edi- torial printed while Lindbergh was over the Atlantic on his way to France and which has been widely quoted. With a motorcycle escort clearing the way with shrieking sirens Lind- bergh's car left the Sun office and swept across Manhattan bridge. It was greeted at the Brooklyn end by the shrill cheers of the nearest of the 150,000 school children who were spread along the line of| march. Thirty-two hundred police had | been assigned to handle the crowds in Brooklyn as they found they had their hands full. Prospect park was | crowded with thousands and there was considerable confusion when the grand stands to which tickets had been issued were overrun and preempted by the unlicensed. Before leaving his apartment for the tour of Brooklyn Lindbergh had accorded reporters a brief interview concerning his flight to Washington. Pleased With Ship “I'm well pleased the way my ship behaved,” he sald, and made no at- tempt to hide the joy he felt at be- | ing once more reunited with his| partner in the famous “we.” “The motor worked 100 per cent. I got down to Washington in an| hour and 40 minutes, in the fast army pursuit plane, but I was favor- | ed by strong tail winds. Coming| back, it took two hours and 45 min- | utes, making against the same | winds. Of course the army plane i It has a maximum speed of miles an hour against a possible 135 for my ship. “I'm not very tired. T hope to get a good night's slecp tonight, but even if I don't, I can fly to St. Louis | tomorrow just the sam The exact time of his hop off for Louis, he sald, would not be set until he had received a wire He has planned tenta- tively to he there by six o'clock to- | morrow night or earlier. U'nder good conditions, he said, he could make the trip in nine hours, but another our would have to be allowed if here were winds, vh. Sun editorial presented Lind- on a scroll was headed: indbergh Flies Alone,” and reads: “Alone? “Is he alone at whose right side | m les courage, with skill within a cockpit and faith upon the left? | Does solitude surround the brave when adventure leads the way and mbition reads the dials? Is there ¥ wich him for whom the ir is cleft by daring and the dark- light by empri fougile bodies of his not weight down his true, the fretful minds of | weaker men are lacking from his crowded cabin: but as his airship keeps hier course he holds commun- | Al that the a | | cllows do plan v engine trouble. arrival and hop-off. which was sharp contrast to the clamor which accompanied ! Sinclair Street, of the army air cor) and on the return itselt when Lindbergh arrived and | during the ! for him to penetrate the darkness. jand scores of blue ground lights. | precious, Lindy merely kept his mo- lacress the | friends in Paris, {tour of New appeared roaring thousands | assoc |state Chamber of Commerce. l.uun-axod at a Nungess | was virtualiy a rep York today, jumped into the cock-} pit of his famous trans-Atlantic air- plane, the Spirit of St. Louls, threw wide open her throttle and darted away toward New York. The unannounced and wuncere- monial visit required only 25 min- utes, merely time enough for the flier to change from the army plane which he boarded two hours before at Mitchel fleld, 1. 1., to his own plane which was left here after his home coming welcome because of Only a few newspapermen, a scat- téring group of speely-eyed specta- tors and the personnel of naval and army air fields witnessed the quiet in home- his Lindbergh's coming here on Saturday and departure on’ Monday. Lindbergh was preceded a few minutes before his arrival by Lieut. trip to New York Lieut. Commanders Wick and Miles of the navy, joined the escort. They flew ahead of the trans-Atlan- tic flier. Although the sun had not shown departed flood lights from the na- val station made Bowling Field as bright as day, and threw “The Spirit of St. Louis” into sharp outline as she winged away. Lindbergh flew down from New York in 1 hour and 59 minutes! carly morning hours to tuke the Spirit of St. Louis back to New York so that he can fly the craft from there to St. Louls tomor- row. Flight Without Incident As an air mail flier it was no feat He landed perfectly amid the artifi- cial illumination of the beacon light “The flight was without incident” | was the laconic comment of Licut. | Street. When he landed at 3:48 a. m. Lindbergh conversed briefly with | newspapermen and had his photo- graph taken while he remained in the army plane. But he Kept his motor running and virtually nothing he sald could be heard. He then went to “The Spirit of St. Louis” with a flashlight and went Wwith Lieut. Commander Wick into a hangar for a short conference on the plans for the return trip. Finally jumping into the trans-At- lantic plane at 4:05 o'clock the! famous pilot taxied about 500 yard: down the fleld and swinging sharp- ly around he turned the throttle on ! full and took off at 4:09 a. m. | He circled the fleld once and then | pointed the plane toward New York, ; disappearing quickly from the gazc' of the observers on the ground. The army plane in which Lind- * bergh flew from New York was th Curtiss single-scater pursuit ship of the number one type that he usc Monday on the trip to that city. Lindbergh apparently was perfect- Iy satisfied with the condition of the | “Spirit of St. Louis” which sincc Monday had been tested several times by naval aviation officers. Its motor roared without any semblance of a defect. The flight In the ecarly morning, hours disappointed thousands of Lindbergh's admirers in Washing- ton who had expected to see him on his alr return here. For the past| two days newspaper offices here | have been besieged with telephonc | calls concerning his fiight plans. He played a trick on Washing- tonians who tried to obtain a few| words from him. The witnesses of his landing want- ed to know why he chose such an hour to rejoin his “The Spirit of St. Louis,” so they lost no time in gath- ering about the cockpit of his speedy army pursuit plane as he taxied up to the hangar where “we" lay ready. Army and navy officers also join- ed the crowd about the flyer, but| apparently sensing that time was tor running as bystanders directed query after query into hls ears. He shouted a few greetings to the crowd, but the spinning engine | drowned all other sound and this continued until the motor in “The Spirlt of St. Louis” was warmed up sufficiently to allow him a few mo- ments with air station officers be- fore taking off for New York. Nassau County Greeting Nassau county grects the colonel at 3:30 o'clock on Roosevelt field from where the “Spirit of St. Louis” soared on May 20 on its voyage sea. Colonel Theodore Roosevelt, who gave the modest young hero letters of introduction to was scheduled as the principal speaker at the exer- cises, {river where he boarded the y [committeo (sented a pair {gloves. Real High Jump Balloon ~vaulting; they ca]l 1, and it’s the latest thrill in Eng- lish outdoor sports. Attached ta a hydrogen-filled ‘bag “which al- ‘most, but not quite,” lifts his Weight, the intrepid balloon jump- er léaps houses, .and -even tall trées” without difficulty, -as this picture of Captain John Davidson shows. Especially handy, . this stunt, for crossing traffic-crowded treets.’ was hurried across town to the East cht LRogman Wana- the projected Richard E. and reception accompanied i vned by maker, sponsor of tight of Commander Byrd. Mayor Walker members him. Dinner was enjoyed aboard the cht while it cruised up the east river and entered the Harlem where Colonel Lindbergh left to visit the fights at the Polo Grounds. Thous- ands of fans cheered him as he was introduced from the ring and pre- of golden boxing He spent 30 minutes at the fight show and was then escorted down- town to the Ziegfeld theater to be the guest of honor at a special per- formance of “Rio Rita.” Thousands of persons, prominent in the social and business life of the city, rose and greeted the youth as he entered the theater. After fighting his way from the Ziegfeld theater Colonel Lindbergh was carried into the midst of a still larger throng at the Nungesser-Coli benefit at the Roxy. Hundreds of policemen fought al- most in vain to control the sway ing and cheering thousands in the strects as the Lindbergh car, carry- ing the flicr, Mayor Walker and city's reception committee, slowly up to the theater behind a licemen, evening dress, holding tickets for the performance were mixed about with wie crowd as police attempted to keep lines to the theater open. Richard E. Enright, former police commissioner, attired in evening clothes, was pulled from the lobby {but was readmitted when he showed his ticket to a patrolman who had recognized him. BYRD MUST AWAIT (GOOD FLYING WEATHER Arrangement; were made for 100,- 000 participants in the welcome. After bldding farewell to the spot (Continued from First Page) that marks his start to glory, Lind-, crgh returns to Manhattan for the | Orteig tea. The check presentation reception of the alumni of the Uni versity of Wisconsin, where he was once a student, His day in public ends at 7:30 p. at the Acronautical Chamber of Commerce dinper at the Waldorf As- | toria. While Mrs, Evangeline L. Lind- bergh, his mother, left for St. Louis rday afternoon to await his ap- pearance there tomorrow, (olonel Lindbergh continued his triumphal York. Everywhere he and crushed to see him, Lindbergh opened his program yesterday at the Hotel Astor where he was the guest of the Merchants From then on he was rushed about through strects lined with cheering throngs until early this morning when he r-Coli benefit Roxy theater. Astor luncheon ition of his pre- vious pleas for developuient of avia- I performance at the His address at the 1 the hotel he visited the New limes building. In the streets er he moved he was forced fo | milled | the impression that I am planning ‘sllch a venture,” he said. “My | ceremonies have been limited to one | plans other than the flight to Parls |hour after which Lindbergh will be | are indefinite.” |the guest of honor at an informal While visiting at the home of his [ mother in Winchester, Va., last night prior to his departure for New York, Commander Byrd spent several hours with Albert Bumetead {of the National Geographical Socfe- ty of Washington in studying a large detailed map of western Eu- rope which was prepared especially | for him by the societ | Commande= and Mrs. Byrd arriv- I'ed from Virginia at the Pennsylvan- lia terminal this morning and hur- I riedly boarded a train for Long Is- land. The commander did not pause to falk with anyone according to the train conductor, the couple studp:d I charts during the trip. on-Stop Flier Black Carries His Own Valet Tondon, June 16 (M—Rudapest dispatches say the airplane charter- ed by Van Lear Black of Baltimore for a flight from Amsterdam, Tlol- land, to the Fast Ind rrived in the Hungarian capital at 5:30 o'clock vesterday afternoon, on sehedule time, Mr. Black is accompanied by his valet and two Dutch pilots, Scholte tion of New York city and the | COOLIDGE RINALLY INVACATION SITE Party Reaches Camp Which Will House President Rapid City, 8. D., June 16 (A— | I'ar from the centers of population, Pregjdent Coolidge turned to a new ife today in the Black Hills of | South Dakota, | mountains and wild game almost ihedged him from the outside world. In the center of 36 square miles of forests he has set up the summer | White House in the state game lodge where for the next two months or so he will live in a region skirting the | | great farming regions of the north- west, It was the farthest west Mr. Cool- idge has come since he became pres. tdent, und no chief executive befor him had traveled this far from | Washington to live for such an ex- tended period. In the quiet retreat which will be his home he has an ideal setting for rest and relaxation Within a stone's throw of the game lodge mountain streams abounding i spirited trout awaited him should he care to angle and for both him- self and Mrs. Coolidge shaded paths carpeted with the fallen pine needles of many years gave a promise of many pleasant hours of walking. Solitude charm and distinction enclosed them from all sides. Temporary Offices Set Up While Mr. where pine-covered | RUBBER MARKET BREAKS Poor Showing of Reccnt Months Improved by Spurt in Early Hours of Trading. New York, June 16 (® — An- cther sensational break of 130 to 140 points occurred in the local rubber market this morning under | continued heavy liquidation prompt- ed by a break in London. Since May 6, July position in the !local market has declined eight cents per pound and, according to rubber merchants here, the action of the market was due to the sell- ing of rubber which has been held for a long period and owing to dis- appointing developments in the statistical position which resulted | in an accumulation of supplies in jexcess of requirements. On this |morning’s decline, however, the market encountered resistance in the form of covering by previous sellers and buying by several large | houses and before the end of the| and natural scenery of | Coolidge acclimated . himself to his new surroundings and | rested from the fatiguing two day journey from Washington which ne- | cessitated many public appearances, his secretary, Everett Sanders, and {the White House staff moved rapidly | |to perfect arrangements for carry- !ing on the executive end of the na- !tion's business. Space in the Rapid City High school had been set aside for their use and Mr. Sanders and Cdward 1 Clark, the president's private secretary, will be stationed there to keep Mr. Coolidge in con- |stant touch with the national cap- ital. Plans of President Coolidge ' had not been definitely worked out, | but it was expected he would motor [the 32 miles from the game lodge [three or four times a week to meet [visitors and transact business in the exccutive oftices. Several truck | loads of files which came west with him on his special train already were in their places in the offices. Instant communication has been provided by the lodge and the offices in Rapid City over private wires and another wire connects the office with | | 66% of all babies suffer with Urea Imitation ON'T resign yourself to the idea that it is just “‘temper”” | when your little one starts to cry. | More than half the time, physi- | cians tell us, there is another cause—much more serious— that is responsible. Yet how few mothers are really aware of it. Grover A. Whalen, chairman of the| drove | screeching escort of motorcycle po- Thousands of men and women in | Washington. Although the trip to the game lodge is a good hour's ride, it is over a fine graveled road and is easy motoring. Welcomed At Rapid City The president and Mrs. Coolidge reached Rapid City at 5:30 vester- day afternoon and as was the case elsewhere in South Dakota, received a warm welcome from the people who will be their hosts for the sum- mer. As the president alighted, a | cannon hoomed out presidential salute of 21 guns and the crowds waved and clapped thelr hands along the line of parade to the edge of the city. Col. Edward W. Starling, who preceded the president to Rapid City to make arrangements, directed the procession toward Hermosa, where nearly 100 full fledged cowboys gave | The next time your infant cries— heed the warning. If the child is healthy, if his little body is pro- | tected from such things as stick- ing pins—the trouble can most likely be traced to Urea irrita- tion. For this is something you cannot see—and Baby cannot tell you! Here’s Real Danger The stinging acids in the urine crystallize almost immediately into tiny, gritty particles—so small they are invisible, yet so harsh as to tumn the sensitive | Mr. Coolidge an exhibition of rough | S | riding in proof of the fact that he | {had come to the west. | Soldiers who are attending an en- S ° ° Fine for Baby’s Body — {campment of the South Dakota Na- llonnl Guard lined both sides of the ! streets along the president’s path and were stationed at halt mile intervals [to give him a salute on his way to the game lodge. ETHEL: WE MAY COPY THE *SAPANESE, KIMONAG -2— ~MD e SANGES' * JEWeLRY* first hour of trading values were up 8 to 120 points from the lowest. Wooden Bowl on Boyle’s Acres Being Torn Down Jersey City, N. J.. June 16 (UP) —The big wooden bowl on Boyle's | Thirty Acres, scene of the Dempsey- Carpentier fight in 1921 and many other prize fights, has ended (its- public career. Workmen for the Weehawken Wrecking Co. Hoboken, today start- ed tearing it down. The company will receive $6,000 and salvaged lumber for wrecking the bowl. More than 100,000 persons paid over a million dollars for seats ‘cr the Dempsey-Carpentier fight. SENIOR CLASS PICKS MOTTO | “Always to Excel” is the motts l chosen by the members of the Senior class at the Senior High school as they graduate. This was choscn from several others presented to the motto committee of the class. The committee is as follows: Joseph Jacksina, Phillp Bessoff, and Doris Cohn. It isn’t always “Temper” skin into a raw, inflamed surface. Nor is frequent diaper-changing a remedy. The only positive pre- ventive of Urea irritation is to keep the torturous acid crystals from contact with the body. A New Method of Relief A remarkable baby powder has now been perfected for exactly this type of irritation. Whereas talcum powders dust off almost as soon as ap- plied, Z.B.T. contains a special ingredi- ent which adheres so closely to the skin as to make it almost completely mois- ture-proof. Thus a delicate, protective coating is formed inst dangerous acids, irritation and chafing. Yet the powder does not cake, and allows the free, normal flow of perspiration. In addition, Z.B.T. contains a mild an- tiseptic that counteracts the slightest infection and soothes the skin back toa healthy velvet-like texture. Get a can of Z.B.T. today. At all drug- ;un—m three sizes: Jumor. 10c.; Nun-d ery size, 25c.; De Luxe Package with puff, $1.00. Made, under a physician's formula, by Crystal Chemical Co., New York, N. Y. Fine for Every Body! Originality ! halt hours bifo: E time, and plans of city officials and ] e COOLIE COATS others for & reception werc disrupt- | 6t ed. New Hrita Mrs. Lindbergh appeared on the | ¥ piatform and showed hersel to the |3 R B0 T T 25 or 30 persons who were able 1o | oyeront g (2T RE T get past the guards at the gates. laouthorly dircction and stesred ¢ towards the ecenter of the street in READ HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS |an aftort 1o avold striking the bicy- JOR YOUR WANTS ! elist. E and Geysendorff. Before leaving Amsterdam yesterday he sald no records would be attempted. R0 1 suffered a fracture of the 1 of 108 Tincon [ion with those rarer spirits that in. |fght his way. One fem.nine admirer | spire to intrepidity and by their sus- | Who had tirown lier arms about him | tainine co strength to arm, ' near the theatrical district missed a | resource to mind, content to soul chance to be the first American girl > With what other com- |to kiss the hero when a policeman ranions would that man fly to whom |pulled her from his path. the choice yere siven? Guest of Hearst {will present a series of violin solos ; 16 (®—Charies| After his tour of the Times build- this eveni 5:30 o'clock A. Lindbergh swooped down upon|ing, Lindbergh was a guest at the |siation Vit at .'l[:m:;;l::!k f\rfim: Washington out of the darkness of | Riverside Drive home of Willlam [Ruth Renson will accompany mn the early morning hours from New'Randolph Hearst. From there he |on the piano. RRERESY 5 near the ankle He is at General hospital under re. to the police, Dr. TO PLAY FROM WTIC Adolph Sundell of 22 Vega streot | 'S ¢ AR oRiGINAL

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