New Britain Herald Newspaper, June 14, 1928, Page 5

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NEW BRITAIN CONNECTICUT, THURSDAY, JUNE 14, 1928. | souri; Hanfora Mac) ‘ others were atill in the'running. | . | Senator Cartls wrvsaly. mas siven . OF COUNTY T0 MEET HERE Py { 2 VI[;E_PRES“)ENT word that, with his state still be- { N p hind him for the presidency, he will X s 'no! be a vice presidential candidate. New Britain Branch Will Act A nno ave —_— Se——— [ William J. Donovan, assistant to the ® » TO THE § |attorney general, and close friend i il et Moo Towm Ao ! Moses of New Hampshire I oS Soncres, and ciose eriend Gooducted Terrorist Campaign chice Aot LAST _ 4 . | word to his friends here that he 15 . P | i f Also lfl]t]om {not a candidate. n shnghu m Mfl' | The Hartford county division ot UN"” 3 | However, there seemed to be no | the French-American clubs of Con % { doubt of the availability of Vice necticut will mect at republice: oes o . Kansas City, June 14 (®—Deter- | President Dawes, Senator Deneen | Peking, June 14 P—General Pai | headquarters here next Tuesda h mined 4 get at least one kick out ;’_"dasrfi"c'?";'“:‘"_“lm"::f ‘U‘e‘;:'l‘; Chung-Hsi, leader of a campaign of {night. ! of the convention with the presiden. |, ToCUIPATRE In any way in thelr |y pog terrorism in Shanghal and S Flaetar th sathering were ma« tial race virtually settled, repablican |solutely he would not run. Hackel tafiers.cte. exsaniad meaily (o0 W2 L 21 2 macng o0 dacalie) delegates were making the most of Dawes Will Accept 2000 persous, was lnstalled in’' the | Ny Britain members tootise e ee erson an ar s their opportunity today to wrangle| The big question has been about Yang Yu Ting palace in Peking to- [to be present Th,{ New ,Y;m.,,, over & vice presidential candidate, Mr. Dawes, but his friends, inclading | geor b branch of the club is one of th and Dawes, Moses and Deneen Ed Clifford of Illinois, believe he General Pai is a member of the | jargest and most active in th K :leem;si to be uppermost in the!wiil lc;ept if “drafted.” It 18 un-|iCwangsi military clique which con- | county. Romeo A. Grise is presider iscussion. |derstood some of the leaders of the | (rols Kwangsi, Kwangtung, Hupen | apq sl Pl s . - Y p riv o el Put 1t was all n the discussion arm sroup sent word 1o Dawes hat | Hunan provimeas ats s roa oy | *7 ATHUT Bornier 1t secretary. Every pound of coal that arrives at our yards e onlYy Proccedings moved they were against him going on the | the groums in the Kuomintang or|a. . . must measure up to certain rigid vequirements. slowly toward selection of theticket with Hoover and that Dawes |nationalist movement. Two thoneand | NOrwich Ho pital Inmate presidential nominee and until Her- | indicated he would await any de- |Hunan troops formed his bodyguard | Is S ide in Ri‘-e i i bert Ht:ov‘e(r myfi in on hls win- cision until informed of details of | when he marched into PeKing. B et e The high quality of Berson coal has heen set- ; ning stack of delegates there ap- |the party's platform. | The general announced that he | Norwich. - June »—Frar . g S S e amack peared to be little likelihood of a| Senator Deneen's candidacy put|was bringine into the Peking and |Fiskio, #7. New Haven, an inm ting a standard by which others are judged. | crystallization of sentiment on one!tpe prohlem directly up to IHnois. | Tienfsin regions. 120,000 more of his | ©f v"n \‘»,\mlh;.\un hospital n;r tl man for second place. !which probably will caucus, but soldiers. This, he stated, would |PASt ¥ear and a half, committed su - e ’ 2 2 Banners Carried | there were signs that he would have |swell the number of nationalist | Cid® by 1% at Poguetanno That standard must he maintained. i Almost every state banner “I"“‘di'hat state's support if his name was troops in the district fo more than Cove. a = stance from the ho { the flag of a vice presidential can-|presented. The Tilinois senator voted |half » million. Rital Sen: suissing: g - custe : 1w its 0 ‘i i didate, and some states were Wor- 5ot only for the McNary-Haugen| General Pai asserted that Marshal | Monday and the body fou! Our customers know its henefits thers will i ried with two or three on their b put to pass it over the veto of | Feng Yu-Hsiang, who holds a na- vesterday morning by s. Mal learn. i hands. While (he mass of delegates president Coolidge. However, Mr. |tionalist commission but whose | Kamanski of Ledyard eet we ¥ was in 2 mood to go ahead and have | Dawes has been regarded also as|amenability to the Nanking nation- |lied with a handkerchief and h : % & good round of balloting on the friendly to this measure, at least in (alist government has been question- | hands were tied hehind his barh The prices ave still at their lowest—2,000 Ibs. { Vice presidency there were a num- favor of the controversal equaliza- | cd, had 140,000 troops. piece of cord. It was at fir for $15.00 ber of leaders anxious to wait and|tion fee provision. | General Yen Hsi-Shan, known as t that he had met foul play 0 12.UY. find out Hoover's position. Senator Edge's New Jersey friends | the model” governor of Shansi and {but this theory was discounted owing “Strictly neutral.” was the word |yere amons the most active in the |first of the nationalist allies to oc- [to the fact that the cord which hound which went out from Hoover head-|fq1q today and they were confident | cupy Peking. was claimed to have hi: left wrist was tied with a shp quarters. Hope was held out. how-|of winning as much support in the |more than 250,000, This figure, |knot and the cord which hound the ever, that he might indicate a|aact as any other candidate from | howevaer, was regarded by some for- [hands together hehind his back was choice once his nomifation is re-|that section, but they frankly ad- | egn observers as an overestimate. |lnose, EGG corded. For that reason. New York |mitted that the delegates sremed fo | d $ 00 t slong with many other tates Was|favor a middle western candidate . STOVE waiting. 1 = = NUT Some Hoover folks bslieved tha o Zgpie strategy demanded a middle west. |0 VCMC: ;\a(d ‘1\‘) Be Sk THE DISTINCT | ern candidate. Vice President ertain to Name Smi s | Dawes was the first name to be| New York, June 14 (UP)—Eighty- COMPLIMENT « + $ 50 PEA heard after the presidential con-| five votes, the source of which is be- sdtal g . ik test appeared settled and today he|ing kept fecret. will assure Governor -of imitatig® has been extended FLY-TOX. There #till was in the minds of conven-|Alfred E. Smith's nomination on the % . - C ientifie tion leaders of many factions. third ballot at the democratic na- is or@ one genuine FLY-TOX. It was scientifi 2,000 lbs. However, the name of Senator | tional convention, his supporters said | > i i discase- i Dencen, of Lllinols, from the same | today. cally developed and is now destroying To EVERY $ 50 BUCK- #tate as Mr. Dawes, had popped up | Smith’s strength is put at 732 carrying insects the world over. FLY- < ' WHEAT with a good deal of force and there | votes, which is 1 1-3 short of the “ TON wers indications that the Hoover | number required for nomination. TOX fragrants stainless, harmless and people closest to the secretary would | His backers insist, however, that the look With more faver on Deneen as North Carolina delegation will fur- easy touse. Every bottle is guaranteed. #gainst Dawes. | nish the necessary strensth to put 4 5 | Reed For Moses | him across | Weanwhile, the east was heard| The 85 secret votes are figures in|* i - from with a roar as Senator Reed | the total of 732 That estimate, of the powerful Pennsylvania group. Smith workers said, was conserva- : - | came out for Senator Moses ©f tive and one of them went so far as | New Hampshire. the permanent|to cay the governor would enfer the | = | chairman. = Reed's announcement | convention with 740 delegates plede- | “DEVELOPED 4T MELLON INSTITUTE OF INDUSTRIAL - N ® followed by a statement from (i“’"'md to him. | RESEARCH BY REX RESEARCY FELLOWSNHIP | ernor Spaulding of New Hampshire | e e k et a et B0 s e b W | Printers’ Pilgrimage Coal - Fuel Oil - Gasoline for Moses. : But there were actually a score Gets Big Send-Ofl"! of candidates still in the running| Cologne, Germany, June 14 (P— |8 today, with the east also proposing|The American printers’ pilgrimage | Eenator Edge of New Jersey; Gov-to the press .exposition, headed by ° ernor Fuller of Massachusetts; Rep-|judge Clyde Oswald of New Yorn, th sesentative Tilson of Connecticut, | was ceremoniously received at the| ome lng and Representative Hamilton Fish, |town hail yesterday by Lord Mayor | Theodore Roosevelt. Jr., and Wil-|Ardenauer. ham J. Donovan, all of New York.| The lord mayor paid tribute to h ld d Many Mentioned America's leadership in “the long. | you s ou o In the west, the name of Sam R.|thorny road te the reconciliation of | ; McKelvie, former governor of Ne-|peoples after the World w‘ar.'w > = braska; Senator Curtis of Kansas; | President Eilert of the American | th | Henry J. Allen, former Sovernor of | Printers' association presented the ' 18 mornin 1 Kansas; Gevernor Baker of Mis-|mayor with an American flag. | | by | 3 . . NNAN NG I ° ° L -—r-o;:—" > | L i’ 7 3 “ ide in Town” | T ANSE | g . afest Ride in lown . : y: 5 I When you go out in the moming ) | to rub up the nickel, or wash the June bugs off i the windshield, just pause for a minute before 5 | you back out of the garage. » z | . . I or t.he % eddlng Look at those tires! 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