New Britain Herald Newspaper, February 11, 1928, Page 2

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iy bl Rl o oy oNEY cne'color? C. 3 Mass, .t A. Thereare two kinds, jadelto| Cambridse Mass. Feb 11 (UP) (Lake o Wit Sorliee and nephrite. Varleties of jadeite [T" ¥ .,;dm“ i i 4 are white, pale green. apple green [SMONE thom nominated yestorday d . N t : and emerald green. Nephrite ia dark of ‘overseers and directors of the or pale green sometimes approach- te. Harvard Alumni assoclation. 2 tog white Nathanicl Horton Batcheldes ' of [in the world. It was bullt about 540 . Vi h 14 Q. What wan e e ot "™ Windsor, Conn.. and John Ander- . C. ahd s about 100 miles long. Shugrue, the lightweight boxer? B He was born Sept. 11, 1884 WHAT THE POST OFFICE DEPARTMENT DOES LONDON Two Human Projectiles Are Mjured After Being Fired From Cannons in Circuses. French People Resent Books Which They Say Slander " Women of the Nation. | London, Feb. 11. P—Two sensa- | Employment By Prince phraseology with references to laws | tional acts—the firing of a person | Is Letter Of Credit and decrees which to be looked up |from a great cannon—in rival Lon- Employment by the Prince of to make the text intelligible. don circuses have ended in injury | Wales is regarded as an *open ses- ame” in certain social and financial Paria, Feb. 11. M—France, it is admitted regretfully, is reaping the whirlwind her novelists have sowed with their immoralities. Iceng-winded and usually in legal at Jersey City, N. J., and began his career as a fighter in 1910 being to the two human projectiles. forced to retire in 1915 when he was The “Parisienne,” long pictured as a plaything in babylonic Paris, real- ly is a good woman, mother and wife, say the French, but her repu- tation abroad too often rests ou the frivolity and sin that entice and en- A summary in plain language is now required by the president be- fore he will sign anything. This that submits a document is written in red ink. It gives the president in short digest made by each ministry ! The stunt, which has been widely head-lined in circus publicity, s exe- cuted by the discharge of a tremend- |ous cannon as big as a siege gun which roars mightily as the per- circlea, Ralph Thornton, 29, a mechanic, needed a little pocket money. He made himself acquainted with a young woman, posing as the chauf- - QUESTIONS ANSWERED You can get an answer to any question of fact or information by stricken practically blind by an ac- cident in the ring. During the six years he fought about 90 battles, meeting all the best fighters in his class. Q. What are the nicknames for The Department of the U. §. Government that comes most clossly in touch with every man, woman and child in the U. 8. !s the Pest Ofice De- partinent. The story of the postal service is as interesting 88 & ®evel. How it started In colonial days, how it was developed unier the Cemititution, when postage stamps were first usd, how it got its name, the story ef the “Peny Express;" present postage rates, the Universsl Postal Unien, what te do about postal losses and Irregularities, protecting and expediting mall, the air mail service, and cther interesting Information 8 all contsined In ewr Washington Burcau's latest bulletin. Fill out the coupon below snl send for it: feur of the Prince of Wales. When suggested that the girl marry him, she agreed and lent him a couple of pounds as evidence of her good faith. Then together they visited the girl's parents and the masquerading suitor borrowed ten pounds from the “old man.” Thornton next introduced himself to a taxi driver as the Prince’s trusted chauffeur and persuaded the man to cash a check for five pounds. writing to the Queetion Editor, New Britain Herald, Washington Bureau, 1322 New York avenue, Washington, D. C., enclosing two cents in stamps 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- not be answered. Al letters are con- fidential.—Editor. the following cities: S8avannah, Ga.; New Haven, Conn.; Birmingham, Ala.; Dayton, Ohio; Balt Lake City, Utah and Hartford, Conn.? A. BSavannah—"“Forest city of] the south”; New Haven—*City of Elms”; Birmingham—*City Beauti. ful”; Dayton—"The Gem City"”; Salt Lake City ity of the Saints"; Hartford—*Charter Oak Cit: Q. What is the difference a minute a knowledge of the subject and greatly shortens the time the | chief executive has to spend with Lis fountain pen. former is hurled from its mouth and across the arenma into a net — a “range” of about 80 feet, The man-bullet at the Olympia | circus, after many successful per- formances, landed in the net with a cry-of anguish. A bone in one leg v.as broken. | A few days later, the girl in a similar act at the Crystal Palace ended her high flight with an awk- tértain in story and play. In Berlin, the Lokal Anzeiger, French papers report, all but held up the French woman, recently, as the model for her sex. This pleases Clement Vautel, a well known writ- er, and others, but it calls from them confessions that French books, | Returning travelers who come | dramas and magazines, dealing al- |buck here and write books and most invariably with the froth of |plays about the United States are vice, have given the world a picture | giving America a fantastic reputa- Freach Find U. 8, A Queer And Wicked CLIP COUPON HERE rms'tonY EDITOR, Washington Bureau, New Britain Hered, 1222 New York Avenue, Washingtop, D. C. | Y want & copy of the bulletin, THE UNITED STATES POSTAL SERV- of the women of France which justi- fies critics fn thinking of them too lightly. “How 1s the world to know there is a virtuous France,” asks one, “if best scllers and even the Comedie Francaise always present the under- world and social dross.” Paris Chorus Girls Put On Winter Garb They are putting lots of clothes on the chorus girls in all the big rausie halls of Paris this winter. Fven the dancing troupes—most of tion. They describe it a land of boot- {leggers, hen-pecked husbands, wildly {modern women who have queer | standards of morals and a danger- | ous place for flirtations. | “Cocktail,” the dramatic reaction of Alfred Savoir to the country | where he went recently to gather in some Hollywood dollars, has inter- changeable husbands and wives, lots of hard liquor and Infidelity. “If at the movies your knee | touches that of the lady next door, | you get five years penal servitude,” ward landing and strained a leg ligament. Substitutes were placed for both injured performers. | Caonsolidation To Make | British Grocery Trust Plans are under way for the for- mation of a great British grocery trust through the consolidation of six firms which have chain grocery | stores throughout the British Isles. | This consolidation is looked upon as the beginning of a price war be. | tween the tiust stores and co-opera- tive societies. It is intimated that “He said he was the Prince's chauffeur and I thought that was; gilt-edged securit; said the taxi driver at the trial. “I suppose you expected to be in- | vited to court,” replied the judge, before sending Thornton to prison. Printing Presses Busy Where Dunlop Worked Strabane, Ireland, P—In a shop in Main Street in this Tyrone Coun- ty town the printing presses still clatter where Captain John Dunlop, printer of the American Declaration Q. How wide river? is the Amazon where it enters Brazil, gradually in- creasing to & width of 50 miles at its main mouth, and where it en. ters the sea the distance across, from headland to headland is fully 150 | miles. Q. At what temperature does al- cohol freeze? A. 150 degrees below zero Fah- renheit. Q. Who played the Prince Seti in the motion part of A. Between one and two miles | tween a republic and a limited mon- archy? A. The fundamental difference is that in a limited monarchy the duly constituted head of the State is a King or Queen whose office and title pass to his or her heirs at de- mise and is principally determined by right of blood; while in a repub- lic the sovereign or head of the | through their duly constituted repre- sentatives. Q. What kind of treatment i» physiotherapy? State is generally & President elect- | lea by the people, either directly or be- l NAME ... STREET A CITY L ND NUMBER 1 am a reader of the Herald. — ABOUT ICE, and enclose herewith five cents in loose, uncancelled, U. 8. postage stamps or coin to cover postage and handling costs: them English—wear stockings in ad- | VS = | Lt dition lo‘opnqu:‘ shorts and hlouses ACcompany 8 YOUDE @irh’ ex jd 40 mven fasoler, heavier costumes {20488 Yerrh Plsaal, in “Leve iy In the summer time, when tourists | America,” tell her.she is pretty and fill more than half the seats in all | 70U Tisk & breach of promise suit the .'big: Parisian. girl-and-music |tPat Will cost you $10,000/ shows, the scores of women who fill the stage in many of the scencs are, for the most part, nude to the walst. But this winter the music halls are most modest and, all the critics & mmore beautiful, splendid and artistic of Independence, learned his trade. The printing firm “in 1760 was known as John Gray, Printef. It is now known as E. R. Gray and Sons, but ft is still at the same old loca- tion. Dunlop was born in Meeting- house Street here. A. The treatment of disease by | A. Adelqui Miller. physical means as opposed to dr. gs. | Q. What is the address of Mrs.| Q Why does smoke settle on the | Wallace Reid? |ground? A. 904 Guaranty Building, Holly- | A. Because it is composed of, wood, Calif. | carbon and other substances heavier | Q. Does Cuba belong to the Unit- | than air. fed States? Q. What is the Jewish population | A. Cuba is an independent re- | of New York City? | | public but a protectorate of the U. A. Tt is estimated at 1,643,012, ! | 8. Its sovereignty is limited by the Q. .Who is the author of the the proposed trust will effect such a reduction of overhead charges | | that the swres of this organization | will be able to reduce prices below those of co-operative societies, even | after allowance has been made for the co-operative dividend to pur-| chasers. | | | | “Moon of Israel”? Compiled by the CONNECTICUT CHAMBER OF COMMERCE " CONNECTICy ¢ Tobacco Is Important Crop. The raising of tobacco in Connecticut is one of her oldest and most important agricultural industries, especially in the Connec- ticut river valley. The most extenaive tobacco plantations are between Middletown and the Massachusetts state line. Some tobacco is grown in sheltered lowlands along the Farmington Crowded Cemeteries Bring Motor Honarses | Paris bracing herself to motorized | | funerals. No one seems really to want fast gasoline service at such Unemployment Situation Hard On The Job Seeker | Aged Dancers Find London. (M—England’s unemploy- sSupport In Glasgow than ever befere. Opera Uscs Movies For Stage Setting The movies have gone into grand ceremonics but the city cemeteries are about full and new ones | Leing opened several miles outside [ the city limits. The Prefect of the Selne Depart- are | Glasgow, Scotland, P—Protests | against old men dancing with young | women in the public dancing halls | | has brought out the dancing teach- | | ers in favor of men as well as wo- ment situation is hard on the job- secker even when he has a decent 1ccord. When the searcher for work has a criminal record, his chance is virtually hopeless. An Old Bailey judge was astoun- | Platt Amendment to its constitution which was imposed as a condition | precedent to granting independence to the Cubans. By this amgndment, Cuba recognizes the right of the | novel “Wild Geese'? A. Martha Ostenso. | Q. What is meant by “Davy Jones Locker'? | A. Davy * Jones according to| Sailors' lore is their friend who pre- and Housatonic rivers. Because of its fine quality, most Con- necticut grown tobacco is used for wrappers and binders. Connecticut tobacco in 1926 averaged 1,340 pounds to the acre, more than any other state, and with the exception of Lou- isiana brought the best price per pound of tobacco grown in United States to intervene for the :prem-nuuon of Cuban indepdndence to supervise foreign loans and es- tablish & naval base and coaling sta- tion in the Island. Q. Where was the motion ture “Stark Love” filmed? A. In the Smoky Mountains North Carolina. Q. 1s Mary J. Holmes, author of | “English Orphans” still living? A. She died in 1907, Q. Does a pound of coal more than a pound of gold? ment finally has brought himself to | /78 W0 REEE O El B8 CE A eial o r{:":run::‘m;l;‘:wl:’““j;‘hc;‘r{‘ °§,’s‘: affairs just so long as they are able cials a spape e | to get around. cussing the measure. | It was contended in the younger c | Distance from burial grounds| the Opera, “The Tower of Fire,” b¥ | poyiv will be the deciding factor | ¢ircles that the old men—"bald heads” they are called—should con- | Sylvio Lazzarh. It was a scene 4 | 50 ype Jrench are loath to modern- | vossible to stage adequately 50 the ;.. yaqitions that they hold sacred. | fine themselves to bridge and “pa- producers went to Cherbourg and |go . “however, long have argued | tience” leaving the fox trots and waited for bad weather which came | (i, WOTCHCR TOUR I SRENNS | other quick atepa to the girls and along with such violence they had [;yert *HL % LONT essions | POYS. 7 a hard time taking the picture. afoot in bad weather. Doctors say| J. R. McEwan, teacher bf danc- The screen action comes in the ', oh jiiness follows winter funcrals | ing, has come out strongly in defense third act and caused a ensatlon |} 0 g0 it is the custom for rela-|ot elderly men and women dancing among critics, most of whom 2greed | yivoc 4 walk barcheaded behind {and in this he is backed up not _it is a new adventure in stagccraft | (o porse-drawn hearse and to stand | cnly by the dancing teachers but by that “will have incalculable effect|ynoovered at the burial ceremony, |the managers of the dance halls. on the theater of the future.” | often long. McEwen contends that many eof any state—37 cents. The estimated average yield per acre for the United States was 795 pounds, and the average price per pound was 18.5 cents. In 1926, 21,900 acres in Connecticut yielded 29,346,000 pounds of tobacco. Some of this was shade grown which brought from Q. How many Germans did Ser- 60 to 90 cents a pound. During 1921, 31,000 acres produced | geant York kill and how many ma- | 45,074,000 pounds. The largest yield was in 1919 when 30,000 chine guns did he put out of come acres produced 46,950,000 pounds. During 1899, 16,042 acres on ? produced 16,930,770 pounds. During 1889, 471,657 pounds were A. He is officially credited with grown. having killed 25 Germans and the A year or two ago there were 184 cigar factories in Connect!- capture of 132, including a majot cut and 13 factories which produced smoking tobacco and snuff. fand 3 licutenants; he put 35 ma- | Connecticut, where cigars were first made in this country, to- | chine guns out of commission. | day plays a very small part in thelr manufacture. During 1925, Q. What is the address of {le | 37,537,291 cigars were made in this state, and 57,986 pounds of American Socicty for the Control of | smoking tobacco were produced. ancer? | Internal revenue collected on tobacco amounted to $237,676 ded recently when u former convict brought before him asked that he be treated as an habitual criminal, in sides over the evil spirits of the | decp. Davy Jones' locker 1. the | name given to the bed of the ocean {as the last resting place of persons | drowned at sea. opera, A storm at sea. great waves dashing against a lighthouse, were shown in the latest production of order that his sentence might be longer. The convict, Arthur Edwin | ‘Wood, who had a record for bur- | plea | | i lo- glarly, explained his strange from the dock. i “A man cannot live on fresh air,” he suid, “even if he is an old con- viet. A man like me, 54 years old, homeless and fricndless, cannot get work when there are thousands of vounger men tramping the country | 3 ‘oo G MU 0 U - who have no criminal record. When | [ e COL 18 FESROC By SRORTS I gave mysel? up I had not tasted | woignt, A avoirdupois pound con fopintor 26 Manen. tains 7,000 grains and the troy of | mi weigh | | for Connecticut a year ago. | French President ts Down Ris Work President Gaston Doumergue has won his strike for less work. One of hi# dally. jobs is to sign two or thres hundred documents, Frequently sobbing women fairt- stagger along, supported on either side, at funerals. It is quite proper | for aged or ill persons to take a carriage but it the walking behind | the hearse that truly fulfills the old often tradition of mourning. — | BERLIN German Woman Has Been | Janitress in Same Banking ! House For Fifty-Five Years. Berlin, Feb. 11. (M—The record of continuous “ @me-place service in Berlin is clatmed by a woman, Frau Katherine Bellau, who has been a junitress In the Deutsche Bank for | #5 years, Her husband, a messen- ger in the same bank, died in 1872, since when she has turned up regu- larly at 5 o'clock every morning to vield broom and duster in the gen- +ral manager's room. Frau Behlau 1% hale and hearty at 55, enjoys an excellent appetite and Fas only had one day's illness in Jier life. She attributes her good *calth tg gvoiding doctors and auto- irobiles, §he has had a few rides in the offide car but complained that the cushions were too soft for her. “And there is no one in all Ber- lin who ean brew a better cup of (offee than T can,” she annotnced proudly. BeforegMentay Suggestion For interfering with the r through mental ion, Fraulein Schorman, a pro- essional dancer in a Hamburg cabaret was summarily discharged. Her grime had consisted in playing the practical joke on the sober saxo- phonist' by catehing his eye and then inserting half a lemon into her mouth and going through the mo- tion of eucking it. The result proved the musician who, imagining the taste of found himself nnable ing. The eivil court of Hambura, fore which Franlein Schorm trought her claim for a mo tice or the equivalent in par ed fn her favor on the gro the saxophonist alo responsible for exhihiti sensitiveness to sax0- sug- Aiss cid fruit., to o on pl nd that as tohe held Sons Follow Lines Not Picked For Them That the sons of members do not the eareers picked out for the their minieterial rs h been fllustrated in the case Koehler, fath of the forcign m ler was dest He studieq jurispru Heidelherg, sities. But while St dreams of hee poser, Heini his talents stage ma ment onvince his fath ewitched over tn | cializing fn literary studies of the drar He began his critie for the “Ra 2 dally of Karler appointed theater and Renhachter, Soon he was for the elvie opera at Mayence The young stage manager sel / / er jeehe fed Heinrich von Kleist’ drama, “Kaetchen von Heilbronn,” for his i tirst larger effort to prove his met- | tle. Critics generally took favorabla notice of his conception of this classie, Paris Fashion Hou: To Have Berlin Branch How far Franco-German reconcil ation has advanced since the wa may be judged by the fact that the large tashion house, “Galeries La- fayette” of Paris, Is about to estab- lish a branch in Berlin. A Franco-German consortium has | Leen formed, which has purchased the Bellevue Hotel on one of the Lusiest square of the metropolis, viz,’ the Potsdamer Platz. The hotel fs familiar to Americans as the head- i rs of the Interallied Military Mission which camo te Berlin after the signing of the Treaty of V sailles and remained until the Dawes Plan was put into effect in 1924, “Geleries Lafayette” and their German partners plan to tear down the hotel and erect a modern, up-to- store. Wagner's Widow Given Plenty Of Champagne ¥rau Cosima Wagner, widow of hard Wagner, who recently cel ited her nineticth birthday, h Licome the owner of cnough cham- pagne to last her probably the rest of her life Among the thousands who deliver- ratulation on her a1 birthday anniversary there Iso a depu from her me town of Ba . headed by two hurgon and the com- mittee of clders of the city council. These not only brought her a gor- »us bouguet of flowers, but also an rrangement of ninety bottles of champagn: The city fathers had learned from I'rau Cosima's physician that a sip of champagne daily would he a de- irahte stimulant Vicnna Yoush Gets Joh By Radio-Telegraph Bid The introduction of a regular ra- lio-telegraphic photo service be- tween Berlin 1nd Vierna has helped . cierk in a Vienna to cecurs a much vith a similar firm Karl Schumn dry goods store Fetter position in Berlin The firm the vaeane weekly, the « in stion advertiscd + Berlin {llustrated editions of which » other cities In time < sale with the dis- “ad.” decided ized that the only application, which i must be in hand- Writing. to Perlin ahead of his com- petitors was to have 1t radio-tele- graphed. He acted accordingly. The Berlin firm was £o pleased vith his fnitiative that ft awarded | him the post, A |the elder men and women have | grace and agility which few young | people can surpass, | |~ “One of my most successtul pu- | | pils this season is & man 72 years | | of age who can beat all the young | | men’in the performances of the Igt- | | eat dances,” he said, pxplmmngfi; tand. Fat and stout people, he a are very light footed and ushi- | lly exceptionally good dancers. | “You do get soap and water | roung 5760, grains. prison, something to eat and some- | where to sleep. “I am a very poor thief and a worse beggarman, hut unless you | can get me work it is no use my | being outside.” The judge, declaring he had never known a like case, granted the ex- convict's request and sentenced him to a long term. ULTRA VIOLET RAY " BEING USED HERE Tncreases Vitality and Resit- | ance to Disease Germs Students at Cornell university, who are learning that exposure to | the ultra violet rays as obtained by | means of a mercury vapor lamp will | cure or prevent the common cold, | are making no mew discovery, ac- cording to Dr. Frank Zwick of this | city, | Dr. Zwick, who Is a former rlmln‘ | man of the board of health and was | | chairman of the committee which | | founded the dental clinic, was inter- viewed in connection with an Asso- iated Press dispatch from Ithaca, N. Y., which stated that 25 freshmen | {in Cornell had increased their fm- munity to common colds at least 50 | per cent by the ultra violet ray | treatment, which is a concentrated | sunlight. | | The experiments at Cornell were | | started a year and a half ago by | | Dr. George M. Maughan and Dr. D. | 1. Smiley to test the theory that since people suffer - from colds in | | winter more than they do in sum- | ,mer, sunlight must have something | | to do with it. The old fashioned idea | of colds being due to the weather is ' | being discarded by physicians ef modern days. i\ Dr. Zwick has been giving the | !same treatments in New Britain for | i more than a year and reports that | people who have submitted to ex- | | posure to these rays agree that their | resistance 18 raised to the point where they are practically immune | ito colds, “Ultra violet rays are but coneen- trated sunshine and should not be | confused with the so-called violet | rays, which are of no benefit,” Dr.| Zwick says. In cooperation with John Reeves and William Abbe, Dr. | Zwick has conducted an experiment | on a farm near Portland, where a number of chickens have been raised | in a coop having window covering of a material which permits the ultra violet rays of the sun to pene- trate, something common glass does not do. The smallest chicken in the group weights nine pounds which, accord- ing to a statement made 10 a news- paperman by Mr. Reeves, are the health 't‘hl(‘k('ns he cver saw. Rignificant in the experiment was . the fact that it was noticcd the chickens always grouped themselves nearer the windows covered with the | quartz clo’h than they did the win- Gows covered with glass sun’'s heat will pass thro ultra violet rays will not penetrate, Physician’s Child Treated. Among the persons who have benefited is the physician’s two year old daughter, who took the treat- ment when eight months old, while | her baly brother, a vear vounger is being given the treatment by his lmOUlCr by being exposcd to the di- |is the scashore, | rays, how rect rays of the sun. In his daily sun bath it is necessary for the boy to appear in his birthday clothes. The ultra violet rays, his profession- al father says, will not penctrate | clothing. i From April until October it is pos- sible to get enough ultra violet rays outdoora, the physician says. One | of the best places for this purpose because there the | quartz in the sand exerts a chemical influence when combined with the rays of the sun. Only those parts of | the'body which are exposed without covering can absorb the life-giving ! ver. While Dr. Zwick says soclety las | rot yet reached the point where he | could safely recommend the com- | plete discarding of clothing, thers is no doubt, he said, that would be the healthiest way for people to live, especialiy in the summe: Exposure to these rays, he say makes the skin harder and tougher and increases the blood circlation to the skin. By means of this added contact of the blood with the skinw ace certain immunity develops. That immunity is similar to immun- ity towards certain cold germs, This action he says, greatly increases the | resisting powers and fmmunity in the blood stream of.the individual. Uuseful in Hair Culture. Asked the result of his expericnce on the subject of bald heads, after | treatment by the ultra violet rays, a | matter which has had much seien- tific discussion recently, the ph: cian, whose own head admits of less that its full share of hair, says he | has never brought hair to a heaa| totally bald, but he has started hair | growing on a partially haid he and has stopped falling hair on others. He hopes to be able to ex- periment upon himself if it can be arranged. | Continuing his discussion of the | action of the ultra violet rays, he says “tie white blood cells of the tlood stream are the fighters of dis- case germs, After an exposure to ultra violet it has been found that these cclls were increased in the Llood strcam. The red blood cells nre found 1o be increased also, after a certain number of treatments. | The treatment raises the quality of the blood in anemia cases. “An analysis of the ultra violet | rays in the mercury vapor lzmp' contains 52 per cent infra red rays, 20 per cent of light and 28 per cent | of ultra violet rays. The infra red ray is a penetrating ray, and a burn- | ing ray. The ultra violet ray cannot be felt. The sun's rays contain §0 per cent of Infra red rays, 13 per cent light and seven per cent ulira | violet rays.” | The ultra violet rays have heen feund to be the best possible treat- | | ment for children with rickets, ac- | cording to Dr. Robert Buol, also of this city, who is specializing in this | type of work Glass which permits the pases of ultra violet rays is used in tas | windows of one classroom at the | open air school and it is said that pupils in the classroom show more physical improvement than pupils n a room in which ordinary glass fs A. 25 West 43d street, New York | Q. 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