New Britain Herald Newspaper, January 19, 1928, Page 9

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, JANUARY 19, 1928 MORROW RETURNS [ ssostieeudiz | FLASHES OF LIFE: NAVAL OFFICERS oo, v et = kil rt of mmittee's work. ! great-grandfathe: v & LR SRt | ALSO MUST QUALIFY AS GOLF PLAYERS ©aisy il s it Delegates arriving at the univer- sity buildings today regarded the |who became the wite of the oft, future outlook of the conferenec | mentioned Gad Stanley. » with great optimism because of the Annapolis, Md.—Naval ofifcers Hartford—Requisition signed on —_— S— spirit of cooperation displayed by | must be golfers. Ability in the sport , Governor Smith, of New York, for 350 000 FOR YIOLI ! N ly Hu l 'm to m htose who participated in the first | is now a requirement for a commis- the return to this state of Thomas y | Plenary session of the conference. |sion. The explanation is that the |Justice wanted for non-support. Jus- | Public Utility H‘ The nature of the opening speech- | navy develops men, mot wall-flow- | tice is now under arrest in Buffalo, Havana, Cuba, Jan. 19 P — Dwight W. Morrow, American am- bassador to Mexico, will leave the sesslons of the Pan-American con- ference Monday afternoon and re. turn to Mexico City where he “Bas important work to do.” This announcement caused great surprise among the delegates today as Morrow was regarded as one of the United States' strategic advan- tages at the conference, It was be- lieved his presence hers would coun- teract any possibility of controvers- ial or reactionary matters being brought up and also any movement agwinst the United States which might be proposed by any Mexican delegate, Mr. Morrow explained to the cor- respondents that he originally ac- cepted the offer to become a United States delegate with the understand- ing he would not be forced to remain longer than the short time necessary to participate in the organization of the congress and to get his delega. tion on a favorable footing. He sald " his departure was not caused by the urgencies of the political situation in Mexico but in fulfillment of the agreement reached when he became a delegate. American-Mexican cordiality was visibly emphasised in the eyes of Gelegates when Ambassador Morrow cntertained the entire United States and Mexican representatives at din- ner last night. All ceremony was definitely behind the conference today and the dele- Bates were bent on immediate con- sideration of the agenda. Charles Evans Hughes, chairman of the American delegation, worked out his committee assignments with his colleagues. The distribution sub- mitted by them to the conference was: Pan-American unlon: Ambassador Henry P. Fletcher, Hughes and Leo 8. Rowe, director general of the Pan- American union. Public international low: Hughes, Fletcher, former Senator Oscar W. Underwood of Alabama and James Brown Scott, president of the Amer- ican Institute of International Law, Private international law: Judge Morgan J. O'Brien of New York, and Scott. Communications: Underwood and Fletcher, Intellectual cooperation: Ray Ly- man Wilbur, president of Stanford university, and Rowe, Economic problems: Morrow, Am- bassador Noble Brandon Judah and Judge O'Brien, Social problems: Scott and Wilbur. Since each delegation has only one vote in committee meetings the number of delegates from a country is arbitrary, The quarters provided by the Cu- ban government for the committee meetings are no less sumptuous than the great Unversity hall in which the plenary sessions are held. They are mostly classrooms but exquisite in decoration and furnishing, as a rule with beautiful wooden desks for the children and heavy leather brass studded chairs for the committee- men. An adequate force of steno- es, delegates said, had been most helptul in producing a good atmos- | phere for the initiation of commit- tee work. The optimistic but sober | tone of those addresses, based on the consideration of results already achieved and of the gradual attain- ment of distant ideals, without arousing impossible hopes or dash- ing helpful ideas, appealed to com- | mitteemen as likely to prevent pre- judiced and unfruitful discussions in committees, A short conference of United States delegates was called by Chair- man Hughes before the convening of | the first committee today. The Amer- | !ican delegates said that this would | |initlate a practice of daily discus- | sions by them of questions requiring | common counsel. | Satisfaction with the progress so far | was voiced unanimously by the Americans. Calling attention to the | courteous attention received from | |other delegates, they said that this | was probably due to a desire to sct | at rest reports heard before the con- vening of the conference that the | | United States would encounter hos- tile atmosphere. | DEMOCRACY OF QUALITY Miss Robinson Accuses Mrs. derbilt and Miss Aristocratic Views, New York, Jan. 19 (®-—A group headed by Miss Anne Morgan and | 1 Mrs. W. K. Vanderbilt are charged |by Miss Gertrude Robinson Smith |with trying to establish a “demo- | cracy of quallty” in the American ‘Woman's association, which she said was founded as a democratic, self- supporting and unsubsidized organ- | ization. Miss Smith’s statement was in connection with her resignation as the association’s president. A com- mittee headed by Mrs. Vanderbilt she sald, has taken it upon itself to pass upon applicants for member- !ship, excluding all who h: |qualities of potential leader: faid the association origin: open to any woman who was sel supporting. N | Van- | Morgan of | i | = S | MISSIONARY MEETING | A meetig of the Home Mission- | ary department of the Women's as- | sociation will be held at the South 'church chapel Friday, Januar |at 3 p. m. Ms. H. T. Burr wilt speak on “A Trip through our| Southern Schools and Colleges.” [The women of the First, South, Methodist and Baptist churches are | cordially invited to attend this meeting. | INDIAN FIGHTER PENSIONED Blackburn, England, Jan. 19.—(&) {—Jacob Haworth, of this has | |been granted a pension of §$50 a | {month by the American government | I for his services in fighting the Sioux | Indians in the 70's. Haworth was a | sergeant in the eleventh int | the American army and fo numerable campaigns in Dakota. | READ HERALD CLASSIFIED .»\.I)S1 | here.” Then a wallop or so. Ted said | | music hath sufficient | mental strain of mid-years in chap- REW governor g ers, and cfficers ghould know their N. Y. golt for social reasons because they | will associate with men who play the game. ' Hartford—Forest fires cost the |state $98,593, in 1927, says State Forester Hawe's report. Damage Chicago—The Beau Brummel of |done to 17,838 acres of property the links is thinking of going into |with Fairfield county the largest the movies. Walter Hagen is bound | sufferer. for Hollywood to talk it over, He has plenty of nifty togs ready. | Hartford—Forty-one nurses from | Hartford county hospitals given ex New York—Ted Lewls, jazz band | aminations by state board of exam- leader, has a different version from |ination and registration of nurses. Mauric Rubens, composer, in regard to a TFriday the thirteenth fracas in | Bridgeport—Predicted that Me a theater. Maurie says that he was | Kinley association dinner may de his orchestra velop into boom for Hoover for | butted in with the remark. | president. the great Ted Lewis. Get out in court he protested because | m'y”“‘““;“‘“f invites 82,000} Maurie was interfering with the | {laules “fy“_l;“’d 15th annyal wis orchestra, and that Maurie LS Sannmiy Say et struek first. The court matinee wa f"f’ . lining oument ¢ sy pments in institution prominent speakers. New Brunswick, N. J.—Whether General ohaxs do . liaison officer on th banish worry during examinations is the late Governor General I to be determined at Rutgers. The | W00d, prepares to leave for Philip- | organ is to be played during the | Pines post under Henry L. al of the ol el | | At v Haven—Russell L. §. Diaz, | New York—DMr. Levine intends to arrested in Stamford and brought!| Lorn in on Lindbergh. He plans to Ntre to embezzlement | his Columbia to Havana to look | 2 with stock | over the conference next weck. and security gransactions claims he oo S vic £ £ up. Held in $15,- London—"Macheth” s to be court. rluyed in modern dress, but this will | mean an old-fashioned flowing | 'n for Lady Macbeth in the i . The producer an of the lady's position would not wear pajamas today. Manchester — Clarence Mikol , thought he cone him several days ago. X-ray |show it, however. Later found he had appendicitis doctors New York—Myron C. Taylor, new hairman of the finance committee of the United States Steel corpora- n, is using the late E. H. Gary's Mr. Gary's motto, “it can be done,” remains on the wall. imford—Tou for w York police on cf and larceny. | New Haven—Joseph McNamara, | inford, hangs himselt in ir his home. Medical ex- | S due to oubles said to for his act, ‘ London—E. A. Hallwood, wealthy \anufacturer, who thinks it would | not pay the United States to capture |3 England because of England’s b debt, will run for parliament, cost = o what it may. Already he has for- Revolutionary Houses feited $1500 for failing to poll the | nti - fews | required percentage in two by-elee-| Id‘n"fie,d by \ndIE\\S tions, but he is now an independent | Charles Andrews of Stanley strect conservative candiaate in Faver- el o sham, Dlaeas in what is now known as St 1 to- day related an ory relative to the land wihich W Stanley has g |tor park m Mr. Andrew house now popular pposed 1o 1 the Gad Stanley house and in |in Mr. Stanley's gift, is in realit the John Stanley house, while the New York—Raus mit the long- | &enuine Gad Stunley house Is the haired men and short-haired wdmen dence next north and now occu- trom Greeawich Village! The lower Pied by Olaf 1. Manhattan industrial association il¥. . however, date back would drive out the nboyant |0 revolutionary days. that attract tourists. It would | Accord to Mr. Andre welcome agartment houses of the |count, borne out by family Vetter type and legitimate cultural |the real Gad Stanley home, en to the one now more ular London—RBing! The man who first banged the Germans with tanks has banged the t S n an encounter with his pockethook. When m iscount, Byng of Vimy refus f mounting to over on the ground that politicians got patents of nobility for nothing. Now the fees have been cancelled. Safaaant In cold—rain—snow—always at his post 295 of New York’s Honor Police ORE dangerous to the policeman than the gun- having been out on the beach all day in rainy weather or a damp day, I come man and the gangster is his con- stant exposure to wet and cold. While other people are scuttling to shelter, or snug in the shelter of their homes, the policeman has to stand and face the rain, the blizzard, the biting winds of winter. Yet where do you find such splendid examples of physical fit- ness as on the police force? A policeman keeps in the pink of condition when other men would be down with rheumatism or the “fly.” How New York’s finest treat muscular pain We made a canvass of the Honor Police of New York City—the men who wear above their badges the colored stripe that tells of courageous and distinguished service—to find out what they use to overcome the effects of exposure. 295 whom we asked said, “We One of New York’s Honer Police. 295 told us that Siean's is their best defense against espesure home with my body aching all over with muscular rheumatism. But as soon as I apply Sloan’s Liniment, the pain goes away. It gives me the quick- est relief of any medicine I know. I also find it good for a rub-down after a long swim or a rescue, and I always carry a bottle of Sloan’s in my first-aid kit Walter C. Menyhart, 918 Gravesend Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y, Sloan’s is sure—quick Sloan’s Liniment is scientific. It doesn’t just deaden the nerves so that you don’t feel the pain. It stirs up the body’s own forces to throw off the cause of the trouble. The pain stops because the cause is removed. If you've got wet or chilled, Sloan’s wards off rheumatism, prevents colds and keeps your muscles from getting stiff and sore. If your muscles ache from over- strain, Sloan’s takes out the pain and limbers them up as nothing else can. Never be without it. Ggt a bottle to- day and have it on hafld for the first emergency. All druggists—35 cents. Use it for: Rheymatism Lame muscles use Sloan’s.” Everywhere people ‘Whose them to damp and cold or to muscular Sciatica the sake of humanity to recommend it to others, It gives me great pleasure to recom- work exposes Lumbago Neuralgia Stiff neck Colds and congestions Former East Side Youth, Befriended by Auer, Purchases Rare Old In- strument. New York, Jan. 18 (#—An East ide youth whom Leopold Auer, not- ed violinist, recently assisted in a Carnegie hall concert to provide unds for his m 1 career, was an- 1ced today as the purchaser of a , the youth, con- 1,000 a month for lition to an initial payment of §2,000. The violin, sent from London for his inspection, vas once used by Li a Polish appointed in charge of the German need this : Double- N RuBBED on I\ 4 the throat, Vicks relieves in two direct ways: (1) Its vapors, rekeased by the body heat, are in- haled direct to the air pas- sages; and (2) At the same time Vicks “draws out” the soreness like an old-fash- ioned poultice. ways atonce OvER R MiLLION JiRs UseD Yearey Preferred Stocks For January Investment Annual Dividend Rate Price to Payable Quarterly Yield Connecticut Light & Power Co. 54%% (March) 5.39 Connecticut Light & Power Co. %% (March) 5.65 Connecticut Light & Power Co. % (March) 5.83 Connecticut Light & Power Co. % (March) 6.45 Rochester Gas & Electric Co. % (March) 5.61 Greenwich Water and Gas Co. % (January) 5.88 Birmingham Electric Co. % (January) 6.31 Alabama Power Company % (January) 6.09 Georgia Power Co. % (January) 5.74 Connecticut Electric Service Co. $4. Conv. (January) 4.21 American Water Works and Electric Co. $6. Hartford Gas Co. 8% Connecticut Gas & Coke Securities Co. $3.(Guar.) (January) 5.46 New York Water Service Corp. 6% (March) 6.06 Offered subject to sale and change in price. Particulars upon request. PUTNAM & CO. Members New York and Hartford Stock Exchanges (January) 5.83 (January) 2.83 6 Central Row, Hartford, Conn. Telephone 2-1141 31 West Main Street, New Britain, Conn. Telephone 2040 B. C. PORTER SONS WINTER wd ALTERATION SALE BIG COMBINED SWING AND ALREADY MANY HAVE TAKEN ADVANTAGE OF THE BIG REDUCTIONS luding all makes and sizes k 1> : v L Axminsters, Velvets, Brus- f] L - "’"l s and Whittall's drop pat- rns of fine Wiltons. - REDUCED LIVING ROOM SUITES Which Are Well Made in Attractive Covers $129.50 $169.50 $189.50 BUY YOUR DINING SUITE THIS WEEK AT PORTER’S BIG SALE 3 AND SAVE $50.00 $100.00 or $200.00 BEUROCM SUITES of the Best and Newest Designs $18950 $197.00 $210.00 INNUMERABLE ODD PIECES AT GREATLY REDUCED PRICES mend Sloan’s for all pains in the back and legs, as I do a lot of walking and am exposed to all kinds of weather.” William R. Christy, Sr., 1933 Master Street, Philadelphia, Pa. And this from a man whose work means even more exposure—even more muscular strain: “I have been a life-guard for the City of New York for many years. Sometimes after b Endorsed universally by those who do the world’s hard work strain, swear by Sloan’s Liniment. It saves them hours of suffering—days of lost time. Read this statement from a policeman who has served on the Philadelphia police force for twenty-scven years: “As I have used a considerable quantity of Sloan’s Lini- ment in the last few months and received almost instant relicf, I think it my duty for SLOAN Sprains and bruises A compeny physician who cares for kundreds of work ers every year says: ‘‘ People whose work exposes them to strain or to damp and cold usually suffer from agosddeal ofimuscw lar soremess. Wefind that Sloan’s tives them quick, positive relicf.” B. C. POR TER “CONNECTICUT'S BEST FURNITURE STORE” 5

Other pages from this issue: