New Britain Herald Newspaper, November 23, 1927, Page 10

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City Items LOVER, 80, 10 WED WOMAN, 70 Card Table Romance fo Culmi- nate Thanksgiving St. Louis, A six-mor between an in Mo, N Pressy had 21 vears wh trumped his ac last May Mrs. Le with whom years, die On Pre: ber 20, they announce tion to enjo fonship for th Both are r and Mrs, Lo “I am not ma money, and he is for mine. We have want—except each other HUB BOOK BAN [AURELS U?E‘i[ll] who | nd dom- | A HALF MILLION Late Railroad President Leaves Trusts for Children Concord, N, H., Nov. 23 (P—Crea- Hon of trust funds for his children and bequests of stated sums for ek persons not blood relatives are con- w. tained in the will of Charle Mel- f B len, former railroad president, who dra died here on November 17. The will, flled today, indicates that the estate 18 approximately a half million dol- lars, Trust lemacies are left to his sons Greham K. Mel of Brooklyn, Amory Mellen of Tampa, Fla., R mond Mellen of Utica, N. Y., and to the daughters, Marion I. Mecllen of New Haven, ™ Mellen, Candace K. Mellen a cilla Mellen, all of this city C. M. Abbot of t Mr. Mellen, is subst hered. Lesser beq Joseph G. Schillin s Mass., and James McGregan and Or- ma’ Wenzell of this The widow will a quarter- ly allowance in accordance with an agreement entered into by the terms of a legal separation several ago. Mr. Mellen's fortune was at on: time several his associates. U. S. Populatmn to Be 124,000,000 in 1930 Washington, Nov. (United States will have of about 124,000,000 about Census Director Steuart pre itoday {n his annual report to Se itary Hoover, He outlined detalled preparations that his orzanization is now making ifor the next cou tdentally that sing iin 1790 the country's inhabi had Increased thirty times. The 1 Mr. ‘added popul 105 contir Almost everyt Ly N n eve that nott coul tall sceive a popul 103 ants Steuart | ion of 1 United indicated a 20 for the <A In addition to counting people, \census bureau now undertak varfety of national relating to manufacty tion, mortali Dyring t bureau reported items dealing 1jects of inqgr st PHONE - 684 = ©35 EAST MAIN ST, e Answer & the Burn OFFI ¢ USE & GOLDEN RULE/ juare-coal- cal to all our custom- rvice, ‘STUBBORI SORES and mmations yield to the | Resinol - quickly healing power of By the D &K Coal Co. millons, according to Lll! G]rI_B)G Nfllse NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, 'SCIENTISTS SAY NEOLITHIC MAN OF | o4t WIMBER 10,000 YEARS AGO KNEW HIS A B C’s ott NEA Serviee lers, & n who 1 on is written ich have of the was a series of pe private life Saunders Writer former has e continent ral sy articles He most re Paris, tory be lent of are Nov rewritten? ‘I famot rel making a. minute examin the relics found in th field of Death G & Auvergne 15 from Vichy. The el by the Ir 1 Society ologists of ed on 1} moo i Already th overies and wding 10 1 telligence 15 bee hic tion ante 100 years w heretofore tho ad and write. 6000 more t n could rea s of the ening more I and sution proceed mor The COMPANION BRIDE_ o CONTINUES STUDIES .. Hushand Will Return to Cullege: Next Semes e 1 cotnpani lilk their Girard, Ka The honeymoon of mir ipparently is which 1l iple tuke for Haldemann-Julius, Josephine year old di lisher, who ecluded Clay F esterday onds who fol i old el vin honeymo: secluded it even th other couple i counselid when \cn etary Rockefeller F oundat)on it READ HERALD CLASSIFIE FOR BLST RESULTS He en ir work is spon 1 Archacolo- £0, Glozel discove I nal rald in since hii the prob- who ion e go- lozel, mil hsor- lates or ries e as orig P)— at i Vov osells ha lowed on could a fald their pub- which he- o ould That see- 5 who ) ADS R A ~dod g‘.h Some of the archacological finds on the “Field of Death,” are pictured above. At the lower left, Dr. Paul Morlet examines a speciment which he belleves is evidence that Neolithic man could read and write. Inset are Henri Fradin and his grandson, who made the first Glozel discoverie: Many Specimens Mundreds of bricks and vases scribed with perfectly clear abetical signs have The sign Te of the Phoenician alpha- het, thoug! if they are genuine, they must predate the Phoenician pveriod by thousands of years. Two theorics have been put for- ward, opposed to that ot Dr. Mor- let and M. Salomon Reinach, the inguished historian and archae- ologist. both of whom hold that Glozel finds have proved that historic man knew how to write, “amille Julian of the French Academy maintains that on a pre- Nstoric ficld some Gallo-Roman sorcerer had built his hutment and that the clay idols and the engrav- cd bricks were merely talismans or curios, roughly made to he sold to credulous Roman soldicrs or Gallic farmers. 1o says some of the tablos can be read and has himself ventured to trunslate them. and been Inisce fou m- finds were farmer. Henri ¥r nary plot of ground. While plowing ond planting he found picces of stone and bricks containing mysteri- | signs and skete The C. of C. Takes Notice They became a local curiosity and finally attracted the attention of citizens of Vichy and the Cham- ber of Commere At | length scientist of interest in crs only hogan His conter were from thade by a humble , din. in an ordi- Iy Dr. Vicel the ground, three or four acres, and L ntific investigation. tion that the discoveries the Neolithis perlod at were greeted with ridicule, hut gradually attracted more and attention until an interna- commission of seven scien- appointed to investigate excavations on the spot. . then have moved rap- hittercst scientific con- Paul Morlet, a bought a half which cov- A Gigartie Hoax? The second school of the heads of which are th Breuil, prominent ar st ‘Toulouse University, and M. ud, member of the French Insti- tute, maintains that practically | cverything found is false and that the bricks and engravings have Leen forged and that the whole discovery is a gigantic hoax. The controver as becomd’ 8¢ serious that the present investiga- tors are conducting {heir examina- tions with all possible thorough- . In the main they with- Tolding their opinions, mutual cment, but enough 1dy has heen discovered and passed upon to indicate that the findings may Le the richest from the archaeo- logical point of view cver m criticism, Abbe more ke Ivents sin fdly in fhe erey The Uy ries \tors are now prac- ne that the Glozel dis- nuine and Viehy, prominence of Glo- zel, in anticipation of hecoming a great center . of tourist travel, i ALLEGED" IN' SOCIALIST TRIUMPH Ly alr ain are in jub cove gre hasking the | g e 'Blood-Stained Axe Seen as Murder Clue Buifalo, N. Y., Nov. 3 blood ined axe, a carving ‘4u1d a4 mason’s hammer Errors In | police today a probable clues in | their hunt for the murderer of a | negro woman, her daughter and her nisce. The hodies of Mrs, John 23 (A—Many i 26, her daughter Mabel, 1 at the niece, Marie Miller, 6, were found S0C by the woman's husband in their home at Lackawanna late last night on his return £ The vietims battered and the pons were found The bhodles were in separate rooms. Police believe robbery was th motive as $40, Clark said was in his knife ere held by teveals Many Reading, T Election—All Returns to Be Rechecked, ‘lark, teading, P and in tabul ent clection at ticket, e mnp Nov n vote the Henry J. pt inte through ballots second o cas st board recinet wed and Dblood ned wea- near the bodi of of the was or dem defeat o clty v Willlam €. Hoverter, had filed: a petition alleg- fraud and error” had committed. inct |Japanese Aviator in yeen When th ad r shner rom to Judge ordercd that the ward all attle, Wash., light Lieutenant Yoskitake istant Japanese naval attache ashington, D. C. was here toda make a prelimir survey of planc landing . e tion with a propo: flight next summe purse offered by this city. The county commissioncrs i Lieutenant Miwa was told, have propriated $500,000 for the chase of a munici airport which 1l be the castern terminus of the projected air journe In Japan, Licutenant Miwa National Arronautical T ng & L000 to finance " | the flight from Tokyo to Seattlc. slight set- ) recount cut Hoverte in the pr Paul N. vote of the en offices be 1 ove Kr at t0 ir- i for checked, that he 5 only a year tre which with approximately - $20,000 nevd $6,000 rion hud anne alary S pays mually as eity asurer, liere, ap- (ardinal Bonanzo Ha' Slight Setbatk‘ ® — Cardinal sl assa ihe Bonzano, who operation tom lisorder i last night The wind RAIN IN V St. Albans, Vt, Nov. 23 Rain has fallen s for more than 24 hours in northrwestern Vermont, and this forcnoon there was little sign {of its abating. Brooks and rivers are reported exceptionally high RMONT 18 due chicfly to a | P which lashed Rome and itendants close all his apartment. A his temperature but thismorn- to ase’ in noted Al was and pulse s ing the card Iy resting quiet- The cardinal's no bulletin at @t they would physicians issur noon toduy and ~.n be unable to pro- Actinitely on his condition | they had hn\,' q. Spread CAMPHOROLE over throut and cheat. = pentrates quickly, as it sodthes and heals the flamed membranes, and_easily loosens up & stubborn coura, or coll in throat or chest. Always havé a jar of CAMPHOROLE handy. You never know when vour precious one will awaken at night with fliat croupy cougly, which imost sets you frantic. Hard to get a doctor at night. Then yuull be glud you have a friend on hand like CAMPHOROLE. opening up the air passages, enabling your dear one to breathe easily and with safety. What a relief for antious mothers! ening drugs to upset and weaken their stomaghs, It is far better than Camphorated 0il, and does not Ktain. Once you try CAM- PHOROLE, you'll then realize how good it ia for Croup, Cough, Colds, Bronchitis, Tonsilitis, Sore Throat, Asthma and Catarrh. e s At Al of Druggists 35/ Substitutes | CAMPHOROLE, Inc, ATLANTIC CITY, N. J ' For Children’s Croupy Coughs and Colds MOTHERS, DO THIS! tonight as Probes Egyptian Diseases Cairo, Egypt. Nov. 23.—P—By | angement with t yptian gov- ment, the Rockefeller institute is sending experts to Egypt to investi- | gate the diseases of bilharzia, in- | flamation of the badder, and anky- lostor an aemi ondition. A lurge percentage of the yptian population are subject to these dis- which are due 1o parasitic worms imvading the human system. No sick- Bewars wden’s orchest A. B, Hall st Adm Les John* 1'air, ladvt. vife's poseession, could not be found. Flight Landing Survey | pur- | 23, 1927. |FLASHES OF LIFE: MINNEAPOLIS FINDS POIRET POOR DRAWING CARD New York—Extra, genuine chance |to see for nothing a long run Broad- way play., Beginning tomorrow night, there will be no charge to |“The Ladder” which deals with re- incarnation. Theatrical critics esti- mate that four hundreds perform- ances have already cost Edgar B. Davis, oil and rubber man, who is ba me $700,000." | Minneapolis—Paul Poiret, Parls fashion designer, who believes that woman's charms are revealed too much by the present modes, is far from popular with the Women's club. Characterizing his tecent lecture here as “the biggest farce yet put over on the American [people,” members of the club malled him a $2.000 check labelled mm under ;.ruwu " There was a hox. deficit of $60 | s e e S of war compared with the fights of bulls and bears? Captain Jerome B Sullivan was unscathed by German guns while serving with the sccond division. But he slipped on the floor of the Curb Exchange while exccut- ling an order for a customer and broke an arm. Reno—Lots of unhappily married folks come to Reno. Ernest Leroy Smith who flew to Hawaii and Miss Norine Harper of San Francisco came to be happily married. It was ter of sentiment, Smith He was born in Reno Marrlages axe on the among the socially elect. t compendium of the four plus shows 1,022 weddings compared with 8§74 last vlains, New this year year. Wing Michael has fine time with his irst snow of the Bucharest been hay America winter has come. load of dolls Five armed men in Brooklyn and ¢ L0060 worth of things that would gladden the hearts of Kiddies at Christu It was a mis- take. They thought it was a load of somet that would warm the ! stomachs of thirsty adults. hiladelphia —The donkey is un- sightly and does not represent the virtues of democracy, in the opinion the Women's Democratic club. refore it has resolved that the symbol should be abolished. w York—J. up a gara, off with P. Morgan has been The text follo 1 have nothing Buitalo, N. Y.—Hiawatha C: is a charming Indian maid. Such was her beauty that the braves doing snake and bear dances at a powwow, of descendants of the Iro- quois contributed lots of wampum to | help persuade the white father to do as the tribes wish. uga New York—IFrancis Howard, son of the British ambassador, is ve busy at Broad and Wall strects daily, from 9 a. m. to 5 p. m. He is employed by J. P. Morgan and company. Brusscls, Belgium—A new cabinet containing no socialists has been formed by Henri Jaspar. King Al- {bert approved it last night, | =i Managua, Nic. — Three bandlts ,were killed six miles northeast of Telpaneca Monday afternoon in an (P—a | cngagement with a joint patrol of | Zeic “hic take off at San Francisco. United States marines and national guards. There were no casualties among the marines or guards. | New Haven -— Bruce Caldwell, barred from Harvard and Princeton | games because of previous football service with Brown university, awarded “Y" and gold footbali Yale Athletic on. by Bridgeport — Former Moore, of Greenwich, now duchess of Torlonia, presents passport by | which she gained entrance to United | ates last July in her divorce suit | against her husband, Duke Harino | Torlonia. ! Marie Elsie Woodbridgg — John TRaccio ar-| vested at his home when federal | agents find 100 gallon still in oper- | ation there, Held in §1,000 bonds. Middlctown Frederick La-| mairne, 41, of Meriden, suffers pos- | sible fracture of skull when pile of lumber falls on him. | | — | | PBridgeport — Dead for {wo weeks, lnn\hu;o\vrml while his wife was | away on visit, body of William Hou- | Thanksgiving W you pay in small monthl will also give you a liber your old cleaner. give you, safeguarded b Minneapolis | | the direction of the is | | enough to give every person in the If you knew how much cleaner “Positive Agitation” would keep your rugs, if you *realized how much longer wear they would 75-81 CHURCH STREET DOCTOR'S WIDOW " VIEWS SUSPECTS illed room | licide. (lihan, discovered in of home. Believed to be Harttord — serving a e sentence | MIS, Lilliendahl Fails to Iden- for slaying his sweetheart, James | : tily Negroes gas Napoleon Bonaparte O"Mahoney | made a dash for freedom throuzh | broken bars of cell window. Wounded in side and overpowered | after hand to hand struggle with two | (g prison guards. Made attempt oncc o Yy o before in 1926, ; N 1 Nov (- Nk the Mrs. Mar- Willis Beach v5 ‘of s Ty William Lilliendah hrough the identify Hami woma ford — Arre mark in campaign by Commissioner Huriey to ¢ highways of automobiles fective equipment. CAPT. GILES READY FOR THIRD ATTEMPT Britisher Not Discouraged by Two Failures | police state 1wo with en al- be- as With Willis nd o awaiting of having maintains slain by with lonely here last September 1 With eig ne the Jenkinton prisoners were Iup in t dor of the jail After looking them over for several Mrs. Lilliendahl said she the cyes one of husband. hysician mot roud od near s she rom At Tos Angeles, Nov. (P —Two defeats in his advance upon treachcrous air ways of the Pacific have failed to crack the determi- nation of Capt. Frederick A. Gil British war ace, to wing his way | from America to Australia. Scarcely had he landed yes atternoon on the William Randolph Hearst ranch at San Simeon. Cal., after an almost mirac did Giles voice his the Pacific, “I'm going to try ag: he said laughingly. “I'm going to fix the ship and fly her back to San Francisco and then as soon as the moon's fuli and I can get new charts I'll be off again. I've started to fly 1o At and, by George I'm going to do it.” Giles' from death came about 500 mils . He had hopped off at 5 yes ¥ morn- ing from Mills ficld, San Fran for Honoluly, his first stop in long ocean flight. Four hundred miles at sea and in an “air A the fiier's term for a variation in air density, he went spinning down, his biplane entirely out of control. HMis center bracing wires snapped under the strain of the heavy gasoline load, as the plane turned upside down. His charts, food and instrumer were hurled into the ocean. Then the British avatior brought his plane right side yp, guessed as to mainland and | fio | minutes had enkinton all but had 1 the clothing Atlantic seen of two n led fror hers corridor and mged outer of the man seen haud picked out on negroes said as the had City s she she lia narrow ape ages of the are inflamed from a (’!ld the inflammation will remain until the Cold is gone. To work off the Cold and to fortify the system against Grip and Influenza, poo foblets i It is easy to get rid of a Cold if youdon't neglect it too ]Ong Get a box of BROMO QUININE. 80c. The box beara é- %er this signature Proven Merit since 1889: TITTTETPITTD started ehoreward. He sighted shore 60 miles north of his landing place on the Hearst ranch 50 miles north of San Luis Obispo. “I think that my experience solves definitely the myetery of what ha pened to the lost Dole race (contestants in the ill-fated air race !to Honolulu), Giles said. “I had a | biplane and it was only by the sheerest luck that I survived what I went through. monoplane is | much less stable than a biplane; it | wouldn't have had a chance in the| weagher that turned me over Giles declared the weather wa |good until he encountered clouds and squalls 360 miles out. At 450 ! miles off the mainland he ran fnto “utterly foul weather,” he said, and | | nis plane turned upside down in a | twisted air current. His charts, food | and signal flares were lost when the plane turned upside down and Giles| said he made a wild guess at he .«l-‘ ing back to land. He landed at Sanj Simeon approximately eight hours Look *Inside” Your Shoes! UTWARD appearance is necessary, of course, in your shoes. But it is not enough. Look “inside” for the qualities which keep feet healthy, com- fortable and on the job. Arch Preserver Shoes have good style on the outside, and perfect foot happiness inside. Try a pair., He declared he would return to| San Francisco today and await fair weather and a full moon before “amng off again, | Imagine a cone-shaped pile of ict cream, a city block wide at the has and 3,800 feet high. That is the m consumed in the This is | volume of ice cr | United States cach year. country 80 dishes. —_————————————————— Inet ucticns in P_inting end Wax Mod:ling ARTIST SUPP) S, ARCHN T SHAD SCARFS AND PILLOW IMPORTE] DV TIES Make Your Christmas Presents Handicraft Studio 99 WEST MAIN STRE TOPS Slean’s Smart Shoes 64 WEST MAIN STREET | BB BEBDDBED Be ‘Ghankful for the Hoover HY not make your after cleaning sim- pler—by getting a Hoover? Why not know year-round thankfulness for the release it gives you from heavy cleaning duties? 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