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HERALD, THURSDAY, JANUARY ‘12, 1928 mpm L Ell RETURNS WITH AL'S CHANCES o &=t L T Title to the property of the ¥. M. R et Sleared| or Fioal Disposttion, Items e hooEe OF e VEIL ENJDYSOWN HONE —_— m Mmfl “fim ]t m in eity court through action on & Benton Harbor, Mich., Jan. 12 UP Smith's Opportuity New York, Jan. 12 (YP)—The en- ning at § o'clock. cyelical issued by Pope Pius XI this |corvaq at 6:30 o'clock. week was described by leading mem- bers of the Protestant clergy here motion of the Judge William F. Mangan, Sophie Warren et als. Unity -Rebekah lodge will hold its {1ess ruler. He died December 1 installation of officers Friday eve- | His return last night to the col- will be igny he ruled for 26 years was &s & through |—Benjamin Purnell was back in his against | Houge of David realm today, not as a resurrected “king” but as a life- mummified corpse and only his re- gal raiment of snowy white distin- today as aching and of vital R”SSIAN REFUEEE !fuli:hed him es the leader of his 't 5 Several rominent L [istirs, - : ‘Without pomp or ceremony Pur- inisters, however, saw it as a de- {riment to political anl religious pro- gress. Rev. Charles Francis Potter, minister-clcet of the Church of the Divine Paternity, saw as one of its nell’s body was carried back to his colony in & hearse from an under- |{taking establishment and was placed in his diamond house to await com- pletion of an elaborate mausoleum effects the destruetion of vamor:cameutcr Also Pmmmt in & ;:efln’:;ll«;;!e:::;u;‘wheu it is Al Smith's chances for election to the presidency. “The deciding votes,” he explained re heid iy hitherto friendly Pro- testants who will think themsclves insulted by this letter, Every rural Protestant church in America will be agitated next Sunday.” Dr. Potter said the encyclical would strengthen liberal rcligious movements throughout the world, because its “uncompromising ortho- site extreme.” “Finally and most important,” Dr. Potter concluded, “the encyclical will result in the weakening of all | Insurance company, funds amounting to $175,000,000, other is Abraham Drapkin, Russian refugee, balf-pound of tobacco started firm of Milhoff Christianity, because it destroys any basis of Christian unity whateve: Cardinal Hayes was sought for his |2 views on the papal document, but it ‘was said by his secretary that “His would not wish to make any com- ment at this time.” Bishop W. Manning of the cathe- {as a carpenter. @ra) of St. John the Divine, had no |and frugal, statement to make, his secretary | enough money to go to London. He said. worked as a carpenter in London The Rev. Christian F. Reisner, |three years, and returned to Guern- pastor of the Chelsea Methodist | sey Eplacopal church, believed that “no- | Rachel Rose. young couple tion taken by the Pope, although it | lodger a young man named Hurry, does dlscourage any hope for an ul- |an insurance agent, who was vis- ited often by {ive friends, also in- seven insurance body can find fault with the yosi- timats one church of the world. “But I doubt that one church |surance agents. would be good for the world,” |young men Be added. “It might be = mistake cught to be arranged for the work- ar all Catholic or all |ing classes.- e e In 1563 each of them and Moul- | fect on a small gasoline or kero- by d $500 and subscribed $500 and e €M~ |, the lne. The line is dropped tinued with the company until he | through thick ice into the rendes- vas 87, retiring with a fortune, Abraham Drapkin came to Eng- pies and pickerel are easiest to Protestant churches.” Has Social at Armory ! Members of A. G. Hammond camp suxiliary held a Christmas social [land 45 years ago at the age of 20, | and entertainment last night at the | State armory. The following pro- { with a small group of friends. gram was carried out: piano selec- (bOUEHE With his last penples a half- pound of tobacco tion, Master John Valentine; dance, English Commerce UP—From the |(aker's parlors to the colony. It was life-stories of two wealthy English- |placed in a simple casket built by lately terminated by their [colony workers to remain until Horatio Alger might have tuken the materiai for his tales of | o WINTER ISHERHEN One is Thomas Moullin, and errand boy, who became a founder of the Great Pearl firm with men, death, the poor boy doxy will drive many to the oppo- | to heights. ter's helper who with & 4 batt-po e | Thousands of Them Flocking to Eminence has not seen the text and | and Drapkin. Thomas Moullin was the son of & Guernsey farmer and began work was shrewd and at 23 had saved sweetheart, took as a lin com- Hammond Camp Auxiliary rany sot under way. Only one of his followers, Frank Wyland, a guard at the diamond house while Purnell Uved, accom- panied the body from the under- ispring when it will be sealed in hia | massive shrine. UP IN INNESOTA State's Lakes Minneapolis, Jan. 7. UP—Minne- sota’s far-famed ten thousand lakes, aithough under from two to three feet of ice in winter, have become fertile fields of sport for thousands of fishermen, Winter fishing layouts have be- come standard equipment with an- glers who- like a little sub-zero weather with their sport. Protect2d from the wind and snow by tiny huts, now offered in convenient collapsible form, the modern winter fisherman toasts his sene heater as he waits for a tug vous of hungry thousands, Crap- catch, but bass and wall-eyed pike from Russia, together | &rab the hook accasionally. He Like all other fishing, winter an- gling is supervised by the state, and he and his | The usual limit of catches pervails. Rita Cayer, accompanied by Mrs. M. friends rolled cigarettes by hand at | Certain lakes are closed to fishing F. Valentine; solo, Ethel Staubley; violin selection, Master John Valen- tine accompanied by Mrs M. F.|England. The young Russians worked with H the door lock=d, for they had to 15 Chorus G‘fls mee glue to the table a pieee of parch- ment in which they rolled the to- Union City, N. J., Jan. 12 P— and they feared the land- |Fifteen chorus girls connected with The landlord at |a travelling burlesque company, last became suspicious of a Rus- [were forced to flee in their night sian conspiracy and summoned two |clothes early today when fire de- open the |stroyed Maxim's restaurant building Valentine; piano _selection, Ernest | Johnson; solo, Margaret Btaubley; recitation, Master George Anderson; | recitation, Master George Coleman | Becvar; violin duet, Fred Guenther and Gerald Flood, accompanied by Mary Flood; dance, Hazel McNa- mara. Games were played by the chil- dren and later the members of the ehildren’s auxiliary and camp com- rades held a grand march around the Christmas tree, all recelving ifts. Meyer Likely Choice for Bridgeport’s Postmaster | Bridgeport, Jan. 2 (P—Acting Postmaster Willam T. Meyer will be endorsed by the republican town a time when the lord would object. any more tobacco, largest in Britain, “ready-made” |and the season lasts only until Feb- was almost unknown {n |ruary 1. Fire in Night Clothes at Thirty-Sixth street and Bergen- Once, when the firm had only 16 |line avenue. Driven by a brisk cents on hand, not enough to pay |northwest wind, the flames spread Drapkin [to and partly burned two adjoining ! bought tea with it, tied it into neat |buildings operated as a bakeshop packets, and sold it at a profit. Wih a friend and a workshop by Maxim's and & started | fourth building in.which was a deli- the firm which became one of the |catessen. and played a All four bulldings were of three large part in popularizing the ciga- |stories with the upper stories ten- rette. anted. Damage was estimated at | 860,000 W AN B MORe COACEALING~ THAN il REVEALING> ~ 'C1c A SEWICE WE. years ago Dr. Lt moved her cen-|from all classes of soclety, from HlNESE H"a’lTAI‘ ter to the latter place, factory hands and farm laborers to Her fame praceded her and she |titled aristocrats and including. has been busy to the limit of her | clergy as well as laymen, strength since coming to Futsing.{ The choristers make many. ex- Last year the Lucie F. Harrison 'cursions to the big towns of Spain memorial hospital was begun and and rarely abroad, and they have P completed at a cost of $50,000. won a large number of prizes. They l wtd t l l “ [i Before the rooms were finished | bave taken part in nine interna- s 0 emOl'! 0 l “ patients began to occupy them. tional competitions. Competition, ity When Bishop Brown arrived for the | however, is not their chief aim. Woman Physlclm dedication : the rooms were filled. | After the encouragement of sing- The day after the dedication a pho- | ing for its own sake, they devote e e tographer was called to photograph themselves to beneficient work and Foochow, Fukien Province, China, | 24 new-born babies, the largest|to participation in the interpreta- Jan. 12, UP—A hospital, built in |number that Dr, Ii had at a |tion of great musical works by the memory of an American woman, | hospital at any one time during her | best coniposers. but at the same time a monument | score o;l yu‘rllln med;cnllwdork. 5 to a Chinese woman physician, has| The hospital 15 conducted under been dedicated in Futsing, 35 miles | the auspices of the Women's For- Nobel Prize Winner south of here, by Bishop Wallace | cign Misslonany msociety of ~the | Successful Home Maker E. Brown of the Methodist Epis- | Methodist Episcopal church, tut| Paris, Jan. 12. UP—Feminine ar- copal church. 211 the control is in the hands of |tistic or literary genjus can flourish | Dr. L{ Bi Cu, daughter of @ |[the Chinese woman whose work | as well {f not better at the domestle Methodist preacher. at an early | has made It a reality. Dr. Li {8 hearth as in worldly haunts. age ventured across the Pacific to | well-known in Methodist circles | Such, believe women writers the United States for higher edu- | throughout the castern and central | here, is the lesson of the award of cation. This was in the days when | United States, {the 1926 Nobel Prize for Litera- even Chinese men students wers o | ture |ls° Grazia Deledda, the Italian comparatively few in America end novelist. ‘he‘; only two or three women Smis“ Choristers Signora Deledda, it 1is asserted, _Wellington, New Zealand, Jan. 13 More thaw 50 hours overdue, Hood snd Lieutenant Montcrieff, New Zealand aviators, missing on a flight from Sydney to New, Zealand, today were sought by land and sea. . Parties “have been sent to the Tararua mountains on the slim chance that the men may have been forced to descend in the moun. tainous region. At the time a cruis- er was dispatched to the spot iIn the sea where it is estimated the plane was when her wireless signals ceased, While the search is going on ac- tively, observers feel that there is little hope for the safety of the NODERNWONANTS | AT HONE IN FFICE Wile of Lonisiana Governor| Expresses Views MRS, 0. H. SIMPSON + New Orleans, La., Jan. 12. (P~ ! The modern woman fits as aptly | into the busineas office as she does | the' drawing room, believes Mrs. O. H. S8impson, wife of Louisiana's gov- ernor, who has been too buky to move to Baton Rouge to occupy the executive mansion. A business woman for-18 years Mrs. Simpson, secretary of a home- stead amsoclation, remained witn | her job here when Yer husband be- came governor. 8he makes oc- casional visits to Baton Rouge, but even now, while Governor Bimpson 1s engaged in a campaign for re- election, she doubta if her business will germit her to move, should her husband be returned to the capitol. “Business broadens a woman’s viewpoint and mal her more adaptable to the extigencies of | modern home life,”” she gays. | “Some members of my family were horritied when I began working downtown with my husband. But women are working mnow because they have fallen in love with their work.” Novelist Sees Era Marguerite Clark Now It Wile of Wealthy MNaa Patterson, La., Jan. 13. UP—Far from the _bright lights, it house at the end.of !l‘:l:'fl::t in this little Acadian town, one of America’s most popular actremses of a decade wugo s “just Hving along,” taking care of her husband and growing old Ty. 8She {3 Marguerite Clark, now the wife of Harry P, Williama, wealthy louisiaoa lumber man, end the ' “happiest woman in the world.” 8he retired) from motion pictures and the atage when she married ten years ago. . “I enjoyed my work: very much and have many pleasant memories,” she says. *But I do not miss it, as I am supremely happy with my hue- band. My returning to the screen is possible but not probable.” 8till possessed of the beauty and charm which brought her fame, “Miss Marguerite,” as she is known by alinost everyone here, does mot find heraelf worried over thought: of mounting years, . “What do I think of women who are starving, themselves - ‘on foolish diets trying to keep the figure o 16 whea they are forty?” &de re- peats. “Do ' they fool anyone? It they fool anyone, it's themselves, And often I doubt that even, “Don’t think for a minute, how- cver, T believe wonien should fet down and become fat and dowdy as the years advance., If a woman of 40 can look Hke she is 30 by taking proper care of herself and taking pains with her appearance, of course, she ought to. But it 4 simply foolish for a woman of 30 oy 40 to try to keep the figure of 16 or 18. “Why ecan’t they be sensible and grow old gracefully along with their husbands? Middle age.and old age leach has a heauty all its own, T think it would be horrible to he eternally young with ~all your friends and those you love grow- ing old around you. “How do I keep slim? T don't know. I'm just living along. That's all T am doing.” “Living along” with “Miss Mar- pguerite” means a beautiful garden in which she spends many hours, 1,500 prize-winning chickens, 14 fine { hunting dogs, blooded cows and e great mansion that {s the show o Of Greater Feminism Berlin, Jan, 12, (M—Claude Anet, French novelist end student of ! feminine psychology, has issued & prophecy here that the woman of | the future woald represent the | most feminine type history has ever known. - | Moreover, he asserted. this new | type would emanate from Russia. | In the Russian woman, he said, | that smouldering longing for con- | summate feminism was most clear- | Iy typified. Despite the Russian | woman's manifest predilection for | masculine homage, he declared, ! there was always the lurking de- sire that sponer or later even the | most humble of her admirers might | prove her master, “For all intzrcourse hetween the sexes may be likened to a duel,” he sald, “with the pecullarity that the | woman, consciously or subcon- sciously, hopes to be conquered by her adversary, whom she will fol- place of 8t. Mary's parish. Prominent in New Orleans so- clety, she goes there frequently and only a few days ago was sponsor for Tulane at a ‘football game. ‘When she 15 in Ne® York, theaters claim moet of her time. TPere it was she played Prunella, Peter Pan and Baby Mine, her favorite stage productions. “I think the present day plcturea are splendid,” she says. “Especial- ly are they improved as to photog- taphy, the carrying out of detalt and in stories for the stars. As for my own pictures, T look back on Seven Bwans, Snow White and the Bab stories by Mary Roberts Rine- hart as those T liked best. Mr. and Mrs, Willlams have kept 12 children {in college. Mrs. 1- liams has six girls at a Louisiana school, while her husband has six boys at the University of the Soutw, Bewanee, Tenn. They selected the children personally for aptness and willingness to study. ::: :‘:‘l‘lt:; ;:rhb;::;:;etl:l:: ;:T::- Wesleyan Musical Clubs GIRL IS UNDER ARREST. |had risked the imagined dangers. Achieving Success | has showa the question of home or “°" ";“ ‘e'}‘l':m““;‘c“;":e‘:,"v “';";': —— ¥ onething untorescen mow inter-| TO Give Concert Tonight | A telegram was received by the |Li Bi Cu_obtained & " college edu-| Pamplona, Spain, Jan. 12. UP— carcer to_be groundless. In addi. |from hfin whot snt has Janqilsh- | Tho Pope of Rome goes to con- venes. Mr. Meyer rated first in & Qne of the musical features of the local police today giving notice of [cation and later her medical de- | Success every time more triumphal |lion to being one of the foremoat S ot ibbaaT fession every Friday. His confeasor recent examinsfion. The republican|pregent year will be presented to- the arrest of Miss Dorothy Markow- gree. attends, the performances of the figures in contemporary world lit- is Father Allsardi, a Jesuit. organization had another candidate|night at the State Normal school ski, alias Markus, in New York. No| On her return to China she struck | pamplona Choral Soclety, perhaps e'nture. she has been for many FALL RIVER STRIKE VOTE in view but he was not certified 88|y hen the Wesleyan musical clubs, mention was made of the details.|away from the big citics where | the oldest and the most artistic of | vears a succeasful wife and mother. Tt Boiver Vlnu San, Ap M o an eligible. | composed of more than 60 college The telegram was signed by Blanche | fortune pointed and went, instead, | the many bodjes of local singers in e The Fall River-textils souncil Tast The committee has been called 10 | sordents, presents o program of in. |5 Beardsley of 125 Bixth avenue, [to & windswept town on the Fukien | gpain, BIG SURPLUS INCREASE night voted to call speclal meetings discuss Mr. Meyer and endorsing ac- | gt umental and vocal numbers under | ew York, a probation officer. Ac- | province coast mear Futsing where| All musical Madrid turned out to| Springfield, Mass., Jan. 12 UP—An | "0 ) iong Friday night to act tion is expected to be taken. cording fo the local police, the|she began her practice. Later & |hear the 250 singers—men, women |approximate increase of $2,000.000 4y the question of declaring a strike young woman, who is about 22|hospital was erected in the viflage |and children—on thelr latest visit. | in surplus during 1927 {s reported | 3¢ the plants of the American Print. | years of age,was arrested in thiscity [but the trend of things in the| The Pamplona Choral Bociety ex. | by the Springfield Fire gnd Marine |jng Co., which yesterday announced once. It is sald she went to New | neighborhood seemed to be toward |isted in some Yorm as far back as | Insurance company, & sain of 26 per |q w.‘,' reduction of 10 per cent ef- York some time ago. .| Futsing, the county seat, and a few | 1862, The members are amateurs |cent, fective n-xt Monday. the auspices of the senior class of the normal school. The clubs are di- rected and coached by Edward F. Laubin, former organist and choir director at the First Congregational Chureh in this city and now director e ne eam Gonr- Merely Margy, An Awfully Sweet Girl | gational church in Hartford. - |an instrument trio and a quartet BEEN ROOMIES FOR roliows: 2 WOULD WERK o i s The clubs include a glee club of | known as the “Jibers.” (OMPANIONATE = i First group: “Campus Son 4 7 36 volces, an eight-piece orchestra, KEN Sw Am SHARE ALIKE, 1 DONT THINK | The program to be rendered, is as MARRIAGE THING Magee: “Land-Sighting,” Grieg; by OR ‘M the Glee Club with L. P. Gallivan as L7-_ i soloist; second group; “Second Noc- i ‘turne,” Behr; *“Pastorale,” Hillman, by the trio; third group: “Thou Art Repose,” Shubert; “Shadow March,” Protheroe; “From the Land of Sky- blue Water,” Cadman, by the glee club; fourth grou “Prelude,” Rachmaninoff; “Valse Brillante, Godard, by M. D. Casner, pianist; fifth group: “Where'er You Walk, | Handel; “Amici,” by the glee club; intermission. Sixth group: “Twilight Song” Waite; “It is the Lord’s Own Day.” Kreutzer; “The Broken Melody,” Sibelius, by the glee club; seventh group: Selections by the Jibers; cighth group: “The Long Day Sullivan; “Gipsy John,” by the glee club; selections by the Serenaders and “Alma Mater” e — L e Ly the glee club. o — o —— e O i ke e M SR | From Automobile Injury Southington, Jan. 12 UP—Marco Rees died at the Meriden hospital last night from injuries received on | the night of December 22nd when | struck by an automobile driven by | Thomas Freeman, 19, of this town. | Coroner Eli Mix came from New | Haven today to make an inquiry. Freeman was held in bonds on a technical charge of reckless driving. Rees had a broken leg and inter- nal hurts but at the time he w 1 n to the hospital a fatal out- ome was not thought likely. Ress Service, Wash surcau) | was crossing at Hobart and North Two officers of the American high | Main streets when struck. He was command who have been called to |55 years old. Managua by the Nicaraguan dis- turbances are Major General John A.| PROWLER MAKES ESCAPE. Lejeune, U. 8. M. C., (above) and| Report was made to Officer James Brig. Gen. Frank R. McCoy, U. & M McCue about 11:50 last night A. Lejeune, chief of the Devillthat the as a prowler about the Dogs, 18 to inspect onr field forees lhome Attorney Alfred LeWitt, 79 and McCoy is {0 supervise the 1625 [ Mason Drive, but thie officer was un- national elactions, able to find any trace of the man. t