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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 16, 1927. | keep awake for about 30 hours at & | stretch. There Is no doubt that the | colonel keeps awake while making a New Britain Heral HERALD PUBLISHING COMPANY |long non-stop flight, but son we @ bit inced as to the is said to ha Issued Dally (Sunday inc At Herald Bldg., Ch epted) Exc hurch followed £ tor the ordeal SUBSCR $1.00 & Year. $2.00 Three Montha. e, a TION 28 s said to have Entered at the Post O ain as Second Clise M colonel did coatuse he de- 1w of the is able to knowl- portance of the tr cause of the oclated Press is e uso for credited to it in this paper nber Member Audit Bureau Tie A B. which tisers y honeet ana treulation. Our circulation stativ based upon this au tection gl tribution fgur h to do, local advertisers. 1 to and too mu ago a m experinfent The Herald s on sl York at Hotaling's Newsstard. R e Square, Schultz's ewsst 2 Grand Central, 4Ind of OF BELIEL 5 to take cog- have DIFFICU Torged documents frequently palmed off lie that “documentary has come to mean little of moment One need only to think of the forged Russian documents which Henry |~ Ford's magazine publishers uscd in their alleged expose of Jewisli en- deavors at world dominion, and the fake letters which were used in a comparatively recent British clec- tion to come to the conclusion that all that is “documented” is not true. The public has coma to realize that, all things considered, it is easicr to forge a state document than forge a twenty dollar bill. | When Mr. Hearst, comes forward with alleged docu- ments sald to have been filched from the archives of the Mexican gov- ernment gome proof is necded that they are the real thing. The publi er himself is in no position to prove they are. The trend of the evidence in Washington so far is that they arc rank forgerics. The general public will not q arrive at the conclusion tk; tor Borah, for instance, Mexican slush money, or money for an ulterior Senator Heflin seems to hs mitted he allowed his e be paid during a lectur by certain Protestant c Ku KI only feats ing the late drive without-slc asantness, n a was under scarcely anyone pt for deys time, ' came out in York while he was in Mexico n he pooh-poh well as any he it 1s nec hears of it he prob- 11 when the idea. ne th flight merely etays to do our knowledge no long-dis- aviator has as yet falle t the controls. therctore, | THE CARNAGE IN CANTON The war and insurrection busine in Canton, Chi 1 out L . disps This may tu estimate. Canton s no pla vous bystander, howe has before, in the hands of revolutionary Communists long. happened has not remained T ts, though t may be T and in €ome ¢ idify the throughout all of China, still remain ctions unable to cos r than the com- ai- considerably stronge munistic element undoubtedly rected from Russia. With Kai-Shek nouncing the Soviets there x 3 I ! e h » honor and diznit Chiang strong the enough, as no enator regard for t his office would money for pro But the Alabaman ed as & windbag long befor ac DROPPING BASERALL to concen- his acceptance of moncy from Ku Klux Klan many of watching his ¢ despite thelr | will those who roer., Senators garded lican have been regards independ an Ame as hor will not acce mos t part is pl sincere. The publi aspersions aguinst (i tegrity off! Before auch docum: doubt at all Ilearst bring al for son A TALI A few m from t a scl dren 1 death to will ample of 1o liv o saved, sacrificed t such a rgen 13 conf it only KEEPING Lindi let us in on a little scer AWAK] Colonel g lenable the city to keep the surface | mea ns of a windlass when the bot- |tom dropped out of the box and the mortar fell on his head. sent to the police ion for by &mooth, In tha days w tomobiling enthusiasts skating was as upon they 1 und took hospltal Martin, who has V 1 in this coun ter park will |, i e But Construction of skates. o the uises ut no broken “Dot lLeetle ( Britain a v rked that t} d not been park a and to ma th paid pond to k will the h an cvident park Iy the midst of band played “In the mer T and coll New Britain lodg held its clection last ¢ Mrs. J At the the Good Old Sum- vice to the tULiof y of com- rtment for its too, that i cting g to the sk 5 cluded ompleted before ght, of That 1t o bad to cxperience one 16 New find the following: sets in. is necessary. England cold sk ar- balf erything should be endent G it upport will sell 150 tickets park only in The promoter. when Boreas calls. for six lectur The final report of the smallpox it ows that the epidemic cost 5,000, in addition to ted the $10,000 TAMMANY ON MOVE . almost everyonc that T con city § be coun 1dition knows Hall is its h mu rar tal son of M. m the Uniy anit D. Co. I defeated star 1 ord indoor bhaschail t last 1 14-6 Hartford pls 2-int e hiere o we tes pitched w AT th time New Dirita Gaffney en appointed it 0od have b on the High sc| If it ho as long as it w0l com of downtown 17th street 14th t, and th hore blocks toward the it will take it to reac park. And vicinity remains on has by on stree er nearly neigh- | — i s growing toward ntral BY ROBERT QUILLEN 1880: He took his pen in He his typewrite urms, York north ¢ toul iring that time as it has during the 100 enter of the city will be ty of Yonkert his it doin past will b be itenant, ‘The univ or being a however, e it is a guestion | Saying to a « a young means ild, “you to understan L am too < business with it. That's the uty of a political organization 1SSk Give Japan crec e thinks ¢ WE 0 PROGRESS IN GARBAGE DISPOSAL tant the b advertise females one is knit- | seven perhaps, mily, and not of Ith has decided to r of he Iroom slippers. for bids for the disposal of garbage coming year. It liad been hoped ! after the pr i the city wou it sent contr pir 14 be well on the way toward constructing an incir t the spirit of economy has » civic administration, and the 1l ¢ period, w will hav a now is to let v ough alone n an in- to 1 1uip- W. Tul 1ted repeatedly that 1 at hand when it ssible o dispose The bui of city outlying up; towns can the par- opposin continuation in it vou of being ing wis overlooked for many become clear to 1[m for : 1 aléo ies ashes dispo s as vour more i look favor upon some eystem that 2 insure a general disposal of ail | Three cattle 0 ithout co: the ease in faxcs that might & tailure, now, | ioned cold z, they ¢ 101 system, than the under the present Londs or payments on an inciner Most families, it | tor | ost yea ¢ mentioned, produce more | iter time than ive number 1 the city would ns long ago reduction love such rid of ashes, n expensive only thing that can the present sy ed thro 1 there As condi- in, many the that he e as Aulo iges Into River N. Y., De Lidit) Wil h \ 10bile Three Di X money, 25 Years Ago Today 1 o lier curre the icate . indicated that the sbile struck the rail of the i 1 t | bridge and plunged into the water. inred while at work at I'he voung women had been vigit- tholic church today z in Elmira and were being driven vas hoisting a box of mortar by |home by the young men. was the line | Investigation the council. ntor T W e Substituting Mar hoss cautioned would Se shop aln Br w acts and Fancies ... B Car me looked h }nm flapper daughter of mine for | Christmas.” | Rewis: “Why don't you give her something she really needs?” Clarke: “I am afrald she wouldn't |like a spanking Johnson. | | Luck is Still With Him!? . Dear Editor: | Lest night I tink wott I'll gonna _ elope witt my swittie wott shizz from crafe, and oyour WCHEr | A ledder I put opp de house witt A O et ITia0 y riotl Miis 1T s an e I gradually down. Gradually it bruck de top runk wott it comes down witt |a cresh witt a beng my ewittie. ars I see it. Knocked down T got Dolink,” T esks, “wott's dot vou caryyink wott hitts me a wallop like |a rullink pin, ha?" “Hmm,” gradually she enswers, e with “so maybe it would be my wooden , Folks J1agt” — | ¥, v, it His Chance! IT COUNQN'T BE A LUCKIER ph took DAY! =% propo nd all communications to Fun be ol -War Stuff! s not the t makes flame, pudding, stuffed with cheer's good ou up in ¢ while Walter J. Goldsmith. ght, 1927, Reproduction Forbidden) (Cppyri on-pop When Black is Read You say It son for BAD little Morai cir ways and be good, | mmas around the | should. are out of minded t Us to the 1 such nice v 'rouy CAN eir 1 boys the whole be any better! Mother I, QUESTIONS ANSWERED You can get an answer to any question of fact or information by writing to the Question Editor, New ain Herald, Washington Bureau, New York avenue, Washington, | D. C., enclosing two cents in stamps | for reply. Medical, legal and marital advice cannot be glven, nor can ex- tended rescarch be undertaken. All | ether questious will receive a per- {sonal reply. Unsigned requests can- | | not be answered. All letters are con- | .fidential,—Lditor. | Q. Can you give me for Scotch shortcake? A | butter Awful? ns 8 1t really sems to me 1t kless life. 1 so hard to do my best, riven to be nt, htub for Agner. Awfully? rent? Then you ? the recipe anks for deciding for know whether to stay ) a movie!"” | 1L Villaverde. ugar B hone long, a inch bake Q. made? A {ing sligh Cream a half-pound of fresh with one-quarter pound | and work into it with the s one pound of flour. Knead then turn upon pasiry board press into a flat shect half an thick. Cnt into squares ,and untit light brown and crisp. How i3 pressed or loaf sugar Do These Solve 1t? the Ni C. Potc Out of The cubes are made by forc- | ¥ moistened granulated sugar into cubical holes in the upper face of revolving horizontal cylinders from which t cal lumps are pressed out by in- | ternal plungers, operating when the (holes pass to the bottom. The | cubes are caught on iron plates and {on these they pass to ovens to dry Q. Does sleeping in bright moon- light affect the mind? A, The ancients believed that ping in the moonlight was one cause of insanit nd many popular legends have grown out of the idea. | Atodern sefence has proved the ah- solute fallacy of that conception Q. What is a “superiority com- plex”? A, owled and screamed LI 3 face of an old along the | below zero rer's strength was al- arose with difficulty rozen form on, on, tening drifts. his hot hreath pering hands to | wreadbare coat he | his frail shelter any- zh the blind- light hope ahea crawled nd knees, loc 1 window A state of mind in which a on believes himself superior in | ality, capability, rank and dignity and pre-eminent to tl around | | him. | Q. Would it be possible for an embalmed body to come to life? The blood is pumped out of | larger blood vesscls in embalm- | and the body filled with formal- de and other embalming fluids that life could not possibly be, sustained under the operation. | What is a “sand-hog"? term is colloquial in the {Tnited States and applies to work- | men who work In ons or drive | shafts through the sand of the river | A “hog” is noted for “hur- rowing” or “rooting’ ‘in the ground ! hence the analogy. | Jrorim [ Q. 18 Frahk Goteh, the famons “When the old guy o lsing | window it gave him He died ¢ poisoning. | ‘0 what natfonality was Luke, companion of Paul, in the ed through — GREAT e leaped away and dashed off shrick window N HI TH RUN > man in the ‘v forecaster 1t it wasn't going to “Thie old man waiting within for heds, “The man had heen *in the gulch and his ing v Juster nto the December 16, 1617, “Inside the > girl was man was a inn Goldsmith: g & the wae a g 1d the | Bible? A Q. | Jerusalem recently? A. An earthquake Jerusalem July 11, after 3 o'clock p. m. A. It is that point at which a He was a Greek. .| body would be wholly deprived of Was there an carthquake in | heat, and at which a perfect gas | would exert no pressure. From occurred at | the standpoint of the kinotic theory 1927, shortly | this would be the temperature at The reports [ which all motions of the hydrogen | received are meager and indicate | molecules would cease. It is sup- | that between 200 and 300 were | poscd to be 273 degrees below zero killed, about 1,000 persons were in- | centigrade. {{ured and the property damage| Q. Who are the premiers amounted to around $2,000,000. | England, Spain and Rumanta? | Q. What is “Mountain sickness"? | A, The premier of England ia | _A. Itoccursin the rarified air at| Sir Stanley Baldwin; of Spain, high altitudes. It is characterized | Prince de Rivera; of Rumania, Vin- by hemorrhages of the nose, nausea | tila Bratiano, who succeeded his | and some! bleeding at the ears. | brother upon his death on November | Q. How much nicotine is con-| 24tk of this vear. | tained in tobacco? | Q. On what date 414 Holy Thurs- A The quantity varies from 2 day fall in 19087 to 8 per cent, the coarser kinds con-| A, April 16th. taining the larger quantity, while the best Havana cigars seldom con- tain more than 2 per cent and some- | times less. Turkish tobacco con- | tains scarcely any, Q. From what did the St. nard dog develop? of Observations On The Weather A. The breed developed from :m} Wi origin at the hospice of Washington, Dec. 16.—Forecast Bernard in the Alpine pass of | for Southern New England: Rain that name. tonight and probably Saturday (- Who composed the music for | morning. Slightly colder Saturday Silver Slipper”? in south and west portions. Strong foh bF pldte Wlesa tha 1t b Forecast for Eastern New York: A. In 1926 the production was Cloudy with rain tonight and prob- 165,350,000 square foet, Bolished | ADIV in central and north portions wlass totalled 117.368000 Saturday morning: colder Saturday L i and in extreme south portion to- o from what is the word avia. | MEht; strong southeast shifting to tion derived? | meztiyinds, Trom Conditions favor for this vicinity rain and warmer followed by fafr ana colder. Warnings fr high winds are dis- ayed on the coast. Temperatires yesterday: High 64 Ber- | | “avis” meaning “a! at 1s the lowest and high t temperature ever recorded ? A, The lowest temperature re- corded is 18 degrees below zere centigrade, which wa attained by Professor Kamerlings Omnes of the University of Levden in an unsuc- cessful attempt to solidify liquid { helium, The U. §. Bureau of Stan- | | dards says that the highest tempera- | ture attained is about 5,600 degrees centigrade by carbon arc under pressure. | Q. What is th | temperature? Atlanta Atlantic City Detroit . | New Haven New Orleans | New York . absolute zero of CURISTMAS CANDIES AND CAKES which contains packet neady for you of CAKES AND tested, rocipes all kind NUTS ~ AND CARAMELS, FONDANTS 70 HARD CiNDIES AND TAFFIES, for 1 you want thiy packet, fill out the coupon has o our Wa on Turcau ting telling how to mal CANDIED 1 AND CE s Holid; mail as below and CLIP COUPON DERE ,—-———— Bureau, lally Herald, ington, D. €. bulleting on CAKES and enclose henwith ips for same: York Avenur, t containing AT HOMI AND COOKIES, and 15 cents in loose, FACTS— CONNECTICy " CONNECTICUT CHAMBER OF COMMERCE Connecticut Women Also Werk than one-fourth of the women and girs of Connecticut zed in some gainful occupation. Of the 540,073 femalea L 10 years of age at the last census, 146252 or 27.1 per working. Only five other states, thre of which are New England states, have more working women They are New upshire, M: chusetts, Rhode Isiand, Soutr Carolina and Mississippi. The pe average for the ctire country is 21.1 and for New England 2 cent were age 9 A study of the age period shows that 17,498 ofthe total num- ng were between 10 and 17 vears old; (4,791 between 914 between 20 and 2 nd 78,249 between 28 total numbtr working, 35,91 wen foreign born wtive white, of whon 45,876 were remaining number f foreign or ber worl 18 and 19 and 64. Of the white women, and 106,464 of native parentage and mixed parentage. largest number. The distribution follc Agriculturé, forestry and husbandry, 1,695 extraction of minerals 1; manufacturing and nrechanical indusvries 60,350; transportation ; trade ¢,413; public service (no elsewhers classified) 182; profcssional service 14,792; domesti and pere sonal service 26,043; cierical occupations 31,506, Manufacturing claimed the Back in 1990, §5,639 women were working, as follow: Agrl. cultural pursuits 1,549; professional servic i42; donvstic and personal 30, trade and transportation 10,038; manuncturing and mechanical pursuits 40,0 ‘Pofore entering the © old man was melting snow 10t frightened him from within Wi he i Family Stuff, '\'\k“u “H":vh' la old June when ¢ was going ¢ clean he old man came back December—to see 1 1 finished. S| udell: 1 away man his JusT BRFORE CALA this is ol The old man had rom his job and the | m that the next him doing that he | diccharge him, When he 1 into the cabin window, he is wife sitting on the boss' lap ! s he did not want the boss to he cang 1 look, Mamma! All ready for 1 in the morning so I won't be r anything. Neediest Need! 1 don't know what to give WHEN GRANDMA BREAKS HER ONLY PAIR OF GLASSES CHRISTMAS , THERES A REAL MITY FoRr You |