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Q. KFC A. It is owned and operated by the Alaska Consolidated Canneries at Pybus Bay, Alaska, Q. What American ambasssdors and ministers, now in service, wero appointed from Ohio? were made in Verona, Italy, and| Unexcelled stews. N. B. Dairy being shipped ostensibly to | lunch. Poland, although in reality believed | mg"'::‘ JomeasRorspt 17 1ex: intended for Hungary. | nesdays in February. If this i5 the cuse it would be a| The Stanley Rule & Level Co. fiagrant violation of the treaty of |has let the contract for its new peace, un arming of one of the de- | PUilding on Beglin avenue to O. F. to | the for the prevalling npnodu;m In/in the future, in order Spain there are at least two dis- | be one, must possess possibly more, | goods, must be able to act parts who are much higher regarded than | ter than the average, must work Ibanez. But they have written no | himself or herself to the top, as all | books on war topics that were trans- | the great actors and actresses had to |lated into many forelgn tongues. do in a . former generation. That's Who operates radlo station were ? creasing Temperatures yesterday Atlanta Atlantic City Boston Curtis. _ Architect W. H. Cadwell | They are plain novelists, artists who | ! did not woo foreign acclaim. | Little, perhaps, would have becn | | known of Ibanez had he not written ‘war books which were eagerly seiz- ed by the foreign populace at a | | moment when the theme was in- ! ternational fodder. Ibanez became a | foe to the present regime in Spain | |and had to banish himself from his | | native land. Which yielded more in- | rlm‘::c.-:fl ‘:-mnly en- ' ternational renown. His pamphleln‘ Utled to the o o T herwive | A8InSt the king and against General | credited Am this - paper snd alse l-uliano de Rivera swelled his repute | newy e |as a swashbuckling republican andi : e democrat. The government in Spain, n.’.":‘i‘.!':':'.':'u.-'l- myflg ‘w however, has not been weakcned by | e oty nuneet analysie of | the bombehells he threw at it. ! ctreutat! This probably fs due to the fact | circulstion. Our lom statistics are sased o e R 1a ‘mewrever ds | that the grand average of Spanish rribation to both natlonal 284 | Gjeizenry understands little about the | local @dvertisers. { democracy Ibanez talked about, and | ald s on sale dally in \Kew‘is not keenly interested to Ie;\rn.i .\.'md..:‘d.h !Tn';g:i Ibanez was several generations | p ahead of his time, so far as his | [ native land was concerned. The peo- S5e. P u}pla look upon the king as a pro- | tection against inefficient parlla- | mentary rule such as took place on | | & few occasions. In the eyes of en- | Let the President, as commander- | yppioneq nations Alfonso may be a | in-chief of the army and navy, OFder | Loy yoo 0o ate of the ancient | the annual football game between | the two services to be played and‘v the eligibility rules will take carc of thcmselves. The Her: York at_ Hotaling's Square; _@chuits's Newsstan Grand Cemtral, ¢3nd Street. Lindbergh, poet - of ) writing an epic in the southern skies. school, but for the present genera- tion of Spaniards he is good enough | | considering that they don't care | | about running things themselves and | have less confidence in politicians GREAT FOR THE KIDS than enlightened folk have. | It was a great day for the Young- | Ibanez's work for Spain largely | sters—the first day of the Winter | went for naught in his native land, with a real blanket of snow. And|while meeting with serious response here January is nearly over! Who | elsewhere. In Spain he was regarded would have thought that & Con-|py the ruling classes as an agitator; necticut winter could ever be so de- | elsewhere as a herolc figure in the | linquent as not to provide a mantle | cause of democracy. The more he for sleds until 6o late in the season. | agitated the better the sale for his Looking about yesterday one| found that the youngsters were good snow shovelers. They rolled in it; | threw snowballs at the unwary; did | about” everything the fond mamas did not want them_to do. Watching them for a spell made one feel young agiin. As they grow older, however, tht'.l desire to shovel snow decreases. We noticed that the sidewalks were swept clean by the older folks in | front of nearly every home, ! ORIGIN OF JOKES The boxed humor in the form of & news story from Liverpool, which appearcd on the front page of the Herald Saturday, showed how jok: are born. And it was a dandy, tell- ing how a Scot appeared in court with his face bandaged, whereas the day before he did not wear a ban- dage. The reason, he explained, was because he wanted to save the nice | clean bandage for the day in court. | Innumerable jokes are born| spontaneously in that manner. They are being manufactured upon this terrestrial sphere every day, and| some of them get into the pape: usnally the local papers. Wandering | minatréls” in_the form of stage folk | pick' them: up; ultimately the best of them' flow from the lips of the star | comedians of the stage, tickling the bilities of sophisticated city audi- cnces and making their progenitors famous. There have been around 1,000 spontaneous jokes made about the old Ford car, and about a million | about ‘our dear mothers-in-law we all love. Domestic life as lived be- | tween happy married couples, with- | out the jars, is good for a million | more; the jars included total about | 5,000,000, Almost everybody spontaneous splash of humor once in | can a while, The hard work in the joke What we are getting is less star dust to manufacture spon- and more drama. At least, that i | business is taneous humor and not be spon-| taneous about it—if such a thing be ! possible; yes, it is just barely pos- sible; yes, it is just barely possible. | | prohibition days, | For what was the usc of working up books—in other lands, PRETZELS Time was wheh pretzels were con- sidered rather low-brow fare. They were found in profusion at certain caravansaries of drink during pre- the self-evident object being to help stimulate a thirst for amber brew. When the brew went the way of many a good thing the pretzels disappeared also. a thirst with pretzels nothing handy thirst? The manufacturers of pretzels, however, were not so casily discour- aged, according to current reports from the pretzel industry, which the esteemed Assoclated Press thinks important enough to chronicle. The pretzel makers have made of pret- zels a high-brow institution; they come in various forms, nowadays, and no well-regulated bridge party is | now complete without lunch in which some form of pretzel may or may not be prominent. The snappy food is now sold to the extent of 27,000,000 pounds annually—which beats the output during the days when pretzels were chiefly low-brow munching entertainment. The man who invented pretzels was a henefactor to humanity. Un- fortunately, his name is not known, 80 that no memorials can be erected to his honor. In this country they originated in the wilds of Pennsyl- vania, where numerous progeny of Hollanders taught native Americans how to like them. The lessons were easily learned. if there was to work off the STABILIZING THE MOVIES The moving picture induetry, like | {the sun 2nd its puny satellites, “do | spring 2 | move.” That is by way of saying that | the findustry is being stabilized. what the moguls claim. It may be a little hara on the stars, who were of the opinion a lit- of the industry | on the board objecting to the sale | cated nations in the great war by one of the victorious allies. And what mess of diplomatic wire | pulling has ensued! Czechoslovakia and Yugoslavia, eager to maintain the purity of‘the peace treaty, are | demanding an investigation by the League; Rumania, also a member of the Little Eutente, is holding back, being influenced no doubt by Italy. reat Britain and Germany are will- ing to hush it up. France is pressing for an inquiry. Logically and honestly, there can + be no two sides to a violation of a treaty. The incident should be in- vestigated and responsibility fixed. the exact meaning of stabilization. The moving picture magnates through paying princely sala: without reason. Meanwhile they have discovered that good drama has an even better drawing quality than poor stars and indifferent drama. No pictures in the future will be built around stars, is the edict. Pictures will be produced around good stories. For it has been found | that the good yarn has real drawing power, while the public was getting tired of big names and folderol to go with it. From this standpoint stabilization | looks like progress. The movies have | badly needed less hokum. | ONE MAN CONTROL F f d F 2 OF SHIPPING BOARD acts and rancies President Coclidge continues hav- —_— ing difficulties with the ShIDPINE Moderns wouldn't look at Lady | Board, and considering the Pres- | Godiva, either. They'd just think it | ident's adamant attitude, this is not | 2 Publicity stunt. i surprising, Congress Victory is sweet, but oh how bit- | to pass the Jones merchant marine | ter to buy a senate seat and then | Country editors say, ’ bill with a view toward checkmating | not get ‘er. the President, a portion of the bill | providing that before government|yy;qy gocs, heing similarly situated; | ships could be sold to private firms | but it's the pay roll that keeps them the decision of the board would | up in the air. have to be unanimous. | i 5 | Couldn't Oklahoma save money he Presldent wants no such | :ng cnergy by just buying a tack for troublesome situation. He favors get- | the governor's chair? ting rid of the ships, and by a mere | | : : o B aapy, | AD “aggressive. war® s oge in | majority of the board {f necessary. | (il o little®vountry possesced of For a constderable time the plan has | oil jumps on a big country that isn’t is threatening | we,” just as with men who agree with the Pres- ident, the trouble being, however, that they have not “staved put.” | o & | When they get on the board they - i ‘ quickly find that the inside view I);1 different from that easily acquired on the outside, It the Jones act is passed one man | ‘Traffic congestion on the street | | doesn't impress anybody who has of ships can block the plans. That is |lived in a boarding house with only | what Congress wants in view of the | one bath room. i tendency of the chicf exccutive to load the board with men who will carry out his wishes. The President says the Jones act contemplates | % “one man rule” of the Shipping | DON't Worry about another war. Bl . & | War never comes to American until rd; Congress claims that the .1 of her ships are ready for the presidential system amounts to the | junk pile. same thing, with the President be- | gt i | An educated man ing the man ruling it. o Tt As we see it, the Shipping Board, [the return of and not the President, was to run, | benefit the nav: operate, sell, or retain, the govern-| T R % ¢ 2 mericanisn oasting that you ment ships, We rather think the|,ro o req blooded Amorican; proud- | chict executive would do well to ex- |ly tracing your ancestry to a mythi- press his opinion when occasion de- | ¢al blue blood., manded, and if the Shipping Bo: A sesEat Sna e S Board | ik less and do more and reform £3 o ferently, that is | will triumph. Women who oppose their business. That was the original | war can stop bearing cannon fod- object of Congress. Whatever blame | der. is to be attached to the shipping business devolves upon the board and Congress. The President is in- eisting upon too much in this mat- | iNE Mad at somebody, they want the ter, and 18 too much desirous of run- | *1° % Ebpreseot & Ao ning the board’s business. It it is & Wait. Henry's rubber plantation question of one-man control, that|Will come in bearing soon, and then might as well be on the board and [I€'}} EIVe You @ car with each set in the interest of conscrvative dis- | A posal and operation of ehips, rather than in the White House. The federal shipping situation of- Jers less to worry about as the years | pass. Opcrating losses are consistent- | ly diminishing. The losses of the Merchant Fleet Corporation, the name adopted a year ago when the Emergency Fleet Corporation was changed, werc less than $16,000,000, although approximately 2,200,000 more freight tons were carried 1hat| Note to faction leaders: Thosc | year than the year before. In 1924 | Who led political partics in the old | {the losses were $41,000,000. 1t fs|d2¥s were rail splitters — not hair splitter: probable that within a few more| " | years the losses will entirely disap-| Two-pants suits are a democratic | pear. At such a time the President |iDstitution. It no longer sounds ar- | AR alle e | TOBANt when you say you left the| and the administration gencrally 38 | i luts in your other pants, trying to force a too-rapid disposal | of the ships, usually at ridiculous {low prices to private firms. Such | action practically would amount to | 2 a subsidy to the firms buying the| The French army is to wear olive. ships for the proverbial song. | | Of course the south may bolt the party; but bolts never stay in place very long without nuts. is one¢ who nd why and when Teapot Dome will Big Bill Thompson doesn't un- derstand patriotism. - When Ameri- cans pay $10 for the privilege of be- ity doesn’t always breed contempt, but youmo longer sec | men stop to watch a woman get on a street car Don't sit around waiting for an | opening. Jonah did that and he| got in the hole. | will also be included in the budget. John's ! Now how lovely it will be when It is unfair to charge the grand | each high explosive shell bears the |drew the plans for the bullding, which will be three stories in height. Oiffcer Lamber will be day police- man during February, succeeding Officer Bamforth, who will rejoin the night force. Harold T. Sloper attended the an- nual meetting and dinner of the graduates of Willlams college held {last evening. City Clerk Thompson says that the finances of the city are in very satisfactory condition, there being & balance in each department. The receipts from taxation, ete, exceed- the appropriation by $5,000, and more money will come in before April 1 and be added to the present surplus. The only department which is likely to need more money is the street department, which puts in lits bills after April L. NEWINGTON CENTER DISTRICT 70 MEET 'Adoptibn of Tax Rafe May Be Delayed Till February Newington, Jan, 80 -— Chairman Richard H. Erwin has announced that the annual meeting of the Cen- ter fire district will be held Thurs- day evening in the Grange hall, Re- ports of the officers for the year will |be read and officers for the new | Sir Arthur Conan Doyle in 1912, and | year will be elected. No change in the personnel is expected. The board | of commissioners will present the been to load up the Shipping Board | doing a thing but stealing the oil. | yyaget for 1928. The call for the maeting Includes the fixing of the tax rate but it is | expected that no action will be taken on that matter at this time. Although the board of relief, which holds its first meeting on February 1, is not expected to make many changes is assessments, the district board plans to wait until this work is completed. The tax rate will be set at a meeting of the district in February. The budget will provide for & payment of $3,000 interest on the bond issue of $120,000, which is due January 1, 1929. Expenses of about $1,000 expended for the lowering of water mains on New Britain avenue | This work was done because of the lowering of the grade of the highway | which exposed the mains. Death of L. H. Bomba Louis Henry Bomba, 41, of Haw-{ |ley street died at the New Britain | General hospital Saturday afternoon after an illness of about a week. Mr. Bomba was born in New Britain | but had been a resident of Newing- ton for the past several years. He was cmployed by the Colt's P‘Ilel\ti Tire Arms Mfg. Co. of Hartford.| He was u member of the Modern Woodmen of America. He leaves his mother, Mrs, Cath- erine Bomba of this town; three sisters, Mrs. George Bancroft of| Northampton, Mass.; Mrs. August | Peters, and Miss Emma Bomba of this town and five brothers, Charles Bomba of Newington; William | Bomba of New Britain; Otto and| Paul Bomba of West Hartford, and Alfred Bomba of Northampton, The funeral will be held tomor-| row afternoon at 2 o'clock at the| Erwin Chapel, New Britain, Rev. | Lrwin Chapel far arff Martin W. Gaudian, pastor of the 8t, German Lutheran church, will officiate. Burial will be in Fairview cemetery. Fire Destroys Kamez Home A fire which started about 2 a. m. | #unday morning, destroyed the home of John Kamez in the Home Gar- dens section of this town, The fam- ily was away over the week-end and the origin of the fire is unknown. The loss is estimated to be about $5,000, The blaze was discovered by rand Juror Harold G. Lucas and a call was sent in for the Newirgton fire de ment. The fire had ob- tained such a headway that the de- rtment could do little. he house is situated mnear the mill pond. The loss 18 understood to be.covered by insurance. Gr | ger steamers between the United | tions are that there has been little QUESTIONS ANSWERED Tou can get an answer to any question of fact or information by writing to the Question Editor, New Britain Herald, Washington Bureau, 1322 New York avenue, Washington, D, C., enciosing two cents in stanfps for reply. Medical, legal and marital -advice cannot be given, nor can. ex- tended research be undertaken. All other questious will receive a per- sonal reply. Unsigned requests can- | aot be answercd. All letters are con- fidential.—Editd¥. Q. Who invented the magnetic compass and what is a magnet? A. The name magnet is given to | any body or substance which posses- | 5a8 tho power of attracting pieces of iron, There are certain natural ores | which have this power, but all mag- nets actually in use are artificial. The origin of the use of & magnetic compass &s a means of obtalning approximately the direction of the geographical North Pole of the earth {18 unknown, but the first sclentific | work on the laws of magnets was | done by William Gilbert (1540-1603) . Is the movie “The Lost World” founded on fact? A. The “Lost World” is fiction. | It is the name of a book written by | the moving picture is adapted from it - Q. What is the address of Judge Ben Lindsey? A. 1343 Ogden street, Denver, | Colorado. | Q. What railrcad is designated | by the initials C. B, and Q.? | A. Chicago, Burlington Quiney. Q. What is the value of & Lin. coln penny dated 1922? How many of those coins were minted? A. The 1922 penny is worth only one cent. The Government minted 7,160,000, of them, Q. Of what are briquettes made? A. They are composed of coal or coke dust mixed with a binder of pitch, tar or other substances ana pressed or melded into blocks, ovoida or other forms. Q. Is n wrist watch affected by the electric current of a telephone switchboard ? A. Tho United Ftates Bureau of 8tandards says that wrist watches are not precision time keepers as a rule, but it is doubtful if one could be affected by the elcctric current on a telephone switchboard. Prob- ubly any noticeable change in pre- cision of the watch {s due to the vi- bration and motion of plugging into the board. Even with high grade watches it is doubtful if any notice- able change would result from elec- trical influences of this magnitude. Q. Did the eighteenth amend- ment to the comstitution change the wording of the rest of the docu- | ment? A. There was no change in the existing text of the Constitution. Q. How does the passenger traf- fic on trans-Atlantic vessels in the last years compare with the years just preceding the World War? A. In 1925 about 1,000,000 less | passengers were carried by passen- | and States and European ports than the annual average during the five years just prior to the war. Indica- change in the figures during the past two years. Q. What is a liquid ounce? A. It is neither an ounce nor n weight, but a measure of capacity, 128 of which make a gallon, or 32 @ quart. In metric terms it is 30 ml or .030 thousandths, or .03 hune dredths of a liter or world quart. Q. Arc there sny women in the U. 8. 8enate now? A. There has only been one wo- man U. 8. Senator. he was Mrs. W, B. Fel‘on of Georgia who was ap- pointed by Gorernor Hardwick and sat for two days. There are no wo- A. Myron T. Herrick, Ambama- dor to France; Robert P. Skinner, Minister to Greece, and Arthur H. Gelssler, Minister to Guatemala. Q. What is Al Jolson's real name and where was he born? A. His rea] name is Am Yoelson. He was born in Washington, D. C., May 26, 1886, Q. What is the address of Rich- ard Barthelmeas? A. Beverly Hilla, California. Observations On The Weather ‘Washington, Jan. 30.—Forecast for Southern New England: Gen- erally fair tonight; Tuesday increas- ing cloudiness probably followed by snow at night; not much change in temperature; moderate variable winds becoming easterly. Forecast for Eastern New York: Increasing cloudiness; somewhat | warmer in north portion tonight; | Tuesday possibly snow; variable winds becoming east. Conditions: Areas of high pre-lr sure overspread the Atlantic coast states and the northern plains| states while disturbance centers | prevail gver the north Atlantic, the | upper lake region, the north Pacific coast states and:- the far southwest. Precipitation of the past 24 hours has been confined to the northern | districts and has been mostly in the | form of snow flurries. Tempera- tures are generally below the sea- | sonal normals in all districts east of | the Rocky mountains. Northfield, ‘Vermont, reported 12 degrees helow zero this morning. At New Haven the minimum was 10 degrees above Los Angeles . Miami ... Minneapolis ........ Nantucket . New Haven . New Orleans New York . Norfolk . Northfield .. Pittsburgh . Portland, Me. .. 8t. Louis ‘Washington . Strange Visitor Insists He’s Going to a Dance A young man wearing a sheep- skin lined coat and acting in a pecu- lar manner called at the home of Dr. Vincent Mendillo, 28 Andrews street, Saturday evening. and after asking Mrs. Mendillo whether or not the manager of a .dance hall lived there, persisted in talking to her, aeking what time the dance would start, after she had told him there was no dance hall manager in the neighborhood. Officer John O'Brien, who was de- tafled by Lieutenant Bamforth at 7:55 o'clock to investigate the inci- dent, learned from a clerk in the Monroe Pharmacy that a man an- swering the description furnished by Mrs. Mendillo, had asked him for directions to Foot Guard hall, after which he hailed an automobile at Arch and Wallace streets and was zero, which is the lowest thus far for the present winter season. Con- | driven away. The clerk told the offi~ cer the man acted strangely. TEA CAKES AND PARTY PASTRIES Recipes and full directions for making the most delicious array of tes cakes, daintles, pastries and tarts of all kinds to bo served at bridge luncheons, teas, rezeptions, late suppers and large and small affairs of all kinde, aro contained fn our Washington Bureau's fatest bulletin, Fill out the coupon below and send for it: CLIP COTPON HERE | ENTERTAINING EDITOR, Washington Bureau, New Britain Herald, 1322 New York Avepue, Waehington, D. C. ¥ want & copy of the bulletin TEA CAKES A! and enclose herewith five cents in loose, uncancelled, stamnps, or colu to cover postage and handiing costs: NAME 323 STREET AND NUMBE cITY .. T am & reader of tie Daily New Britain Herald, - e = - - = o - e - ND PARTY PASTRIES U. 8. postage — ABOUT FACTS — CONNECTICy . CONNECTICUT CHAMBER OF COMMERCE Connecticut’s Phonograph Industry. The manufacture of phonographs, with which Connccticut has long been identified, is on the decline in this state and also in the United States, according to latest statistics on this indus- try. Connccticut, however, is increasing her percenage of the total for the United Slates. Connecticut, ranking third among all states in the value of phonographs turned out during 1925, had a product worth £6,156,053, This was 10.08¢% of the total valuc for the country, \v\'hich was $61,057,147. New Jersey led all the states with an output worth $25,796,166. Michigan was second and 1llinois fourth, During 1921 five Connecticut factories manufactured phono- graphs worth $8,992,061. The combined value of the output of factorics in all states that made phonographs that ycar was $98,212,784. Connectlcuts’ share was 99 of the total, There was an upward trend in the value of this product the next two ycars for the United States, the total value during 1923 heing $107,811,265. Connecticut’s output showed a decrease, however, being worth $8,658,900, Despite the increzse of 1923, the 1925 figures shows that the value of thig product in all states had decreased 37.8¢( from 1921, and that Connecticut's value had decreased 81.5¢5 in the four-year interval. During 1925 nearly 1,000 wage earners in this industry in Connecticut carned $1,158,704. Materials cost $1,837,981.. Tomorrow—Agricnlture Once Principal Occupation. men in the Scnate now, DEMPSEY NEVER T0 FIGHT AGAIN High Spots in the Life of Little Stanley. By Fontaine Fox, ESTELLF 1S CAVGRT ON )| THAT BAKS WIKE FENCE SUT LITYLE STANLEY Just barely, we said; that’s why pro- | tle while back that the entire mov- fessional humorists o frequently are | ing picture industry was made to | crahm, - | move around thelr illustrious names. v Perhaps there may be fewer gay | design of a dove {Former Champion’s Eges Pre- spree of shipbuilding during the | war, and its amazing costs, against | Arizona, §s slyly adver- the federal ship policy. The net ap- | USIng an “oasis”—meaning you can A REAL AIR FLEET For an airplane to alight upon the deck ©of an airplane carrier is no great feat. For.a dirigible like the | 1os Angeles to do it—that is some- | thing else again! Well, the Los| Angeles did it, and officials of the | navy, who became convulsed with pleasure at-the event, are justified in their glec. The Los Angeles did it by hopping-to Newport and glid- ing to the deck of the airplane car- vier Saratoga, the first time in his- tory that the-feat had been accom- dlished. 3 The is a reat dirigible, and what is even more im- portant, it is competently handled; | Los Angeles area its crew has had the experience; 1t | usually goes and returns from every | trip in safety. The fll-fated Shenan- | doah was less fortunate. It takes a dirigible crew at least three years of training to becom clent. thoroughly effi- TBANE Tlasco Thanez was Vin cnte one world’s best known novelists | who was more disting 1interna tignally Th or thinking than in his native countr general reader may be g rdo Thanez Sp: 1cad Spaniss, and that may account novelist; everybody cannot parties in Hollywood, and perhaps fewer palatial castles masquerading as residences for the stars; and per- haps the average movie celebrity will have to be satisfied with three | propriations from 1916 to 1023 get a drink over the line in Mexico, ‘ | And magazines that wouldn't print | amount to the grand and impressive | liquor are printing this |total of $3,583,772,762. As General | New mol It isn't wrong if you Dawes told a congressional commit- | 497t 49 it frankly and onenly. tee, the price of winning a waris no | Correct this sentence: “Yes.” said high-powered automobiles formerly six were a nec locomotion. But mov moving to better things—to stabili- zation; take the word of the grand exalted rulers for - the information Anyway, they have been possessing less use for high-priced stars when they had good drama. The folk who have been led to be- lieve a picture show could he no £00d unless some star of the first magnitude enjoyed a dozen cfosc- ups in the gripping drama have been noticing the change. The mere title of the show, rather than the name of some titled star, has been gaining the v. Manifestly hody has been saving sala and there is a gritting of among the divorees in the wood colony. There drama—but the kind of stars in de- mand in the will be stars, not manufactured products. It is getting increasingly difficult for a good-looker to arrive in Hollywood whereas ity of the s are ndancy. as teeth Holly- always will be stars in the real future great A one fine morning and be 4 the week. following ar some- | fair estimate of efficicncy, or words [the man, “I'm always glad to lend 'to that effect. knows | Ty fountain pen | that y was wasted; but there| (aguon e ToonT o wasn't time Boadidier) | minor details. This period has been = still is large | Everybody mon to haggle over such .ars Ago Today m Taper of 1 over for nine have a merchant flect 1 enough for the demunds of t July 1 we still had S22 commission, 6,452,865 | weight tons, and 70 ausiliary « The Shipping Board functioning eficiently; bilities have been enormous. It does | from | strect armory to b years, we 25 c. On | Is in | dend it Date) of At been | Uhion the works ther 1 annual ing of & e ha to 5 os in the Main tomorrow will be the held there by St Mary's ok e ot 1 the W will be nd wsses will he k pel is almost e organ has 1 for im- scats for propos its responsi- s Zast {not require constant tinkering the administration tomo: MACHINE GUNS is a pretty diplomatic hrew 4 11 Atten dedicated colebrat complete ¢ i i That which has heen i J !ween Ttaly and Hun to hush up the affai and it is like League of iry. ipts a h r have fail 1he b the allow to come befor ard to prete N J tions the 1o its vater from the Five freight 1 ile will be gub- s we nitte statior Tr diplomats are work nt this development The facte are sinpl rcars loaded with mac ve irles F. Smith and A, J. Sloper tors of Landers, sterda found at a railroad i P ire_among the diree Austre-Hungarian border i‘rary, & Clark 1 ye vent His Entering Ring ago. Jan. 30 (P—The Herald aminer in a copyrighted arti. cle today said that Jack Dempsey, former world’s heavyweight cham- pion, has been forbidden by his phy- sician ever to enter the ring again. The newspaper said the information was contained in a message received {from Miami Beach, Fla., Dempsey having notified Tex Rickard, the pronioter, who is there, of his decl- | sion. The Dempsey telegram informed Rickard that Dempsey’s eyes had gonc back on him and that doctor's orders prohibited further fighting, the account added. The Herald and Examiner said had been unable to corrohorate » facts from Dempsey, efforts to ocate him in California proving un- iling. newspaper's Miami Beach in- formant understood that owing to former cl has finally abandoned hope of re- niatching Dempsey with Gene Tune ney, titicholder, and is_ looking around for another challenger. Continuing, the Herald and Ex- ner account said: The former champlon's an- nouncegnent, which upsets all Rick- ard’s plans as well as those of Chi- ©p S it an for inney-Dempsey bout, was ¥ unexpected. Not even those ciose o Dempsey in Los Angeles had knowlcdge of it. Jt was only two weeks ago that Jack stated he was planning to go to New York to discuss a Yankee stadium bout with Rickard.” hampion's decision Rickard | NOW WHATS “THF FI1Q YFLi. moters who were dickering | | | {