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: (The following article has been ‘contributed by Prof.’ A. Guilliane, {irettor of the Spanish department at New Brituin High school.) Jhe American people have, until now, been grieviously indifferent to the Latin American republics; It is not. strange: that the United States, with its peculiar physical situation and exceptional historical back- &round, should be inclined to fail to thipk internationally, Although prob- ably no race in the world is better informed about the facts in any end €very the world, it is never- theless true that in Interpreting these ficts, the -Americans are generaily uhinterested ‘and inaccurate to an OF. A. GUILLIANO degree. In fact, interna- s are a luxury .im the Ftates. This nation is so geo- ly logated that it can di- \Rself from the rest of the Without peril to its economic 'always found forelgn trade 'y, not a necessity, differing k yéspect from England, and ¥ for example, to which for- de is their very breath of life. The;fesult has been the develop- ment i the United States of critical attituap ; fowards Latin Americans. Becausg‘the people south of the Rio nde ape different in ideas as well as in specch from us, the assumption has bden made that they are not in- tellectyally 'and morally our equals, F Uniited States Aggression On the other hand, the pespls of Latin ;America have not Sany too fi:emu- in their judgment of the ericans. Contertiplating map 6f the new world, they have been impressed by the fact that the frontiets lof the Anglo-Saxon, nation have been systematicallj:pvanced during, twg centuries at xpenge. of pedples of Latin specphi#nd th has ajgrmed Latin American think ers, apd made them fearfulof the urgy and there exists a large and growli literature on the subject, Thejlatin Americans are different from Anglo-S8axon peoples, The world {jyould be distinctly poorer if there iwere but one race, but one culturg, but one temperament, but one form of self-expression. It is] indefinitely better that there should be diversity and variety. We have a right to be glad for the American genlus, with its inventions, its sky- scrapers, its quantity-production fac- tories, and: all the other astonishing thngs, which are, in their totality, the expression of our national tem- peraments . But we should also be glad for the Latin American culture, precisely because it is different, Comtributions of Latin Culture Life .i8 richer because the genius of the peoples who live south of the Rio Grande finds its normal expres- sion in muysic, painting, poetry, and the theater. Some day, as the two branches of the ..merican people— for after all, the Americdns are oné —get to know each other better, we., will comg to realize the: pregnant fact of their one-ness. We will see that what: one has not, the other has; and, that the two, together, make up: the most marvellously complete ; soclal organisr that the world has ever seen. y It is a great mission, this of in- terpreting the nations to one anoth- er. It is that way that the true T.eagus of Nations lies. People who Iike aid @ppreciate one another, do not wish' to shoot and stab each other.'s Of course, the possibilities of war hetween the great republic of the north and lesser republics of the south are unthinkable, but that on both sides there is room for a deeper. understandng and a sincerer and franker relationship ‘is undeni- able. Whatever makes in that direc- | d Sniversities in the United Before and immediately after the Worid War, of course, the greater part of the college students set out for France and England, tut during the past three or four years the tide has changed and‘ the University of Washington, the University of Soutn- ern California and others now at- tract practically all who wish a higher education. ASK JURY PROBE IN HILK WRANGLE Declare Strike Mesaoes Chi- g i iy Sy Chicago, Jan. 21 UP—City health authorities today demanded a grand jury investigation of the “dairy- men's strike" that menaces Chicago's milk supply. There were several reports of vi- olence by armed men: of the dump- ing of thousands of pounds of milk; and of the mixing of kerosene with milk. Dr, Arnold Kegel, Chicago health conua’sioner, has asked the state’s attorney’'s office to institute grand jury action; leaders of the striking milk farmers said they would welcome it. Chicago's milk supply ycsterdas was 400 000 qua:is under normal, yet distributors said they had been able to supply all demands. A short age as g °at, or greater, was pre- dic’ ° for today. Dr. Kegel asked Mayor Thompson | for - $15,000 emergency appropria- tion 3 ° used in employing chem- icts for the testing of milk. Kerosene in Milk | Almost the entire supply of one | large déaler was found polluted by Kerosene, " This was blamed by dis- | tributors on the strikers who are de- manding $2.85 & hundredweight in- |stead of the $2.50 distributors are paying. Additional producers joined the strikers' ranks yesterday as violence became more widespread. John E. Stancyk was set upon by seven men, armed with shotguns, near Lake Forest yesterday, He was pulled from his truck, beaten un- conscious and his load of almost 1,000 pounds of milk dumped into | a ditch. About 30,000 pounds of milk were destroyed yesterday; 2,600 pounds dumped from two trucks at Union Grove, Wis.; 19,000 psunds poured from two trucks between Cary and spoiled with kerosepe at Lake Zu- rich, IlIl. One humdren men seized 6,500 pounds of mflk from a train at McHenry, I, and poured it on the ground, Ten automobile loads-. of men alted two trucks beloning to the lodern Dairy Co, of Chicagt’at Fox River grove and dumped the wiilk. Farmers living néar Waikegan, | 10, have restorted to house-to-house peddling among residents of the dairy belt. One creamery at Waukegan ef- fected a compromise with the dairy men agreeing to pay $2.756 a hun- dredweight. Broken china, collected over a | period of 20 years, forms the ma- terial of a wonderful grotto, five feet high, in a cottage garden at Felt- ham Middlesex, England, A CLEAR COMPLEXION: Edwards for 20 years treated scores of women for liver and bowel ail- ments. During these years he gave his patients a substitute for calomc! made of a few well-known vegetable Ingredients mixed with olive oil, naming them Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets. Know them by their olive color. These tablets are wonder-workers on the liver and bowels, which cause a normal action, carrying offt the waste and polsonous matter in one’s system. If you have a pale face, sallow) look, dull eyes, pimples, coated tongue, headaches, a listless, no-good feeling, all out of sorts, inactive bowels, you take one of Dr, E4- wards’ Olive Tablets nightly for a time and note the pleasing results. Thousands of women and men: take Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets—! now and then to keep fit. 15¢, 30¢ and 60c. Crystal Lake, TIL.; and 1,000 pounds | o Higher Tariff Rates Advocated By Connecticut Manufacturers dustries Represented at, Hearings by Ways Means Committee. By GEORGE H. MANNING (Washington Corrempondedt. N B. Herald) Wazshington, D. C., Jan. 21 — Spokesmen for Connecticut indus- tries made out strong cases for in- creased tarift protection for virtuallv every major business in the state when they appeared before the ways and means committee of the housc of representatives to testify in the hearings the committee is~ conduct- ing with & view to enactment of a new tariff act in the special semslon of congress. ‘While but a handful of Connec- ticut representatives was able to give oral testimony, as compared with the hundred or more who at- tended the hearings, those who were granted time before the com- mittee in each case represcnted and spoke for whole clamses of industry. With but one exception all thos appearing before the committee from Connecticut requested m: terial increases for the tariff rates now prevailing on their commodi- tles. The exception was David 8 Day of Bridgeport, speaking for the National Welded Chmin association, which is asking merely that presen: rates on imported chain be kept without reduction. Day, representing 15 or the 17 chain-making companies of the country, many of them located throughout Connecticut, told the members of the committee that elimination of the macHine chain the trade, diameter of the material from Which it is made” he said, “with or machine chain, which comes in | on ad valorem rate.’ ‘ He referred to the court decision | of 1927 which upheld the classifi- cation, pomted out the huge in-| creass in imports of this chain' when - the treasury department | abandoned the.ad valorem rate prior ‘ [to the ruling, and said that there- fore the classification is “meaning- | less.” | ‘Wood Screw Industry | In different case is the wood | screw industry, according-to Ralph ' C. Farrell, also of Bridgeport, pres- ident of the Bridgeport Screw Co., okesman for 16 other firma. Ve are asking for a change in rate of 25 per cent ad valorem to rt..t e ia specific duty of 10 cents on sizes N“fl’ Al [mm In 2 inches and up; ¥ cents on sizes of 1 inch and not over 3 inches; § cents on sizes half-inch to 1 inch: and 3 cents on sizes under one-half inch. *|The present of 25 per cent ad Va-|aprey compiled, he sald, by 90 per lorem is the same rate that was es- oon¢ of the woodworking chisw tablished in the Underwood tariff. act in 1913, and we believe that the rate at present is inadequate.” * This-would mean approximately a . 70 per cent ad valorem charge, he under cross-questioning. He |granted the statement of Represent- |ative Garner, democrat, Texas, that imports represent but 1-10th of 1 per cent of the consumption here, but sald that keen domestic cem- petition and not protection was re- sponsible for keeping out foreign g00ds, As for the further contention of members of the committee that his labor costs were not high be-! cause he could use unskilled labor, {Farrell said that unskilled labor costs nearly as much in this indus- said, try as skilled, Sjfver Plated Hollow Ware Through George P. Byrne of lingford, the ware silver-plated hollow industry requested clarifica- tion of the sections of the tariff act relative to it, although it made mno demand for higher duties. Virtually Wightman asked no specific :duty cratic committee members, E. H.|to haye them at a high production He merely desires “adequate pro- Davis of Waterbury, speaking for point in the case of an “emergency.” tection,” he said. His argumeni|four firms near that city, asked a|related how the condition ef Ger- been fought in the courts without real gain. From 1923 to 1936, he sald, the nails carried 40 per ocent ad valorem, about eight times the present rate. At that time they were admitted under “basket paragraph 3 providing the higher duty. Woodworking Chiacls J. A. Norton of Winsted presented firms of the country, He declared that the present paragraph of the itarlff act covering these articles is not specific enough, and asked a ;duty of 28 cents each apecific, and 160 per cent ad valorem. The part of the paragraph under which most chisels are now imported levies a rate of 40 per cent, “lf a duty of 70 per cent wers imposed upon gimlet bits, rose and snail * countersinks, and gimlets of foreign importation, it is reasonable ito asume that the volume of pro duction in our plants would be in- creased 50 per cent and in all probability much more.” maid E. W. Deuse of Chester, representing th- ' J. 8. Deuse Co. at Chester and th James Swann Co. at Seymour, mal ers of the three articles named. He pointed to the distress occa isloned in the business since itr prosperity 10 years ago. and pointed | out that higher labor costs are the ‘chief cause, since the industry de. ! pends largely on skilled handwork gross for imported metal buttons He cited the present rate on pear! buttons, . which is higher than that on metal. Changed conditions and heavy foreign competition were given as the rcasons. Tarift on Small Arms E. M. Btome of Hartford, as the pleader for the small-arms manu- facturers, asked an increage in rates on these articles to $2 per arm “and over the whole an ad valorem of 60 per cent.” The present rates call for a cific duty in three classes—3$1'25. 2.60 and $3.50—and an ad valorem over all of 55 per cent. Btone stressed the necessity for alding these manufacturers in order showed how the classification had|duty of 3 1.2 cents per ligne per man arms factories had amsisted that country, and showed that im- portation of cheap Spanish pistols constitutes the chief foreign menace. ATTORNEYS ASK Atlanta, Ga,, Jan ‘21 (UP)—As George Harsh, “thrill slayer,” st in Lis Fulton Tower ocell today sen- |tenced to die in the electric chair March 15, his attorneys were pre- paring pleas for a new trial. The former Oglethorpe university student received no callers Sunday and apparently was still indifferent to his fate. Harsh, son of a wealthy Milwan- of the murder of Willard H. 8mith, shot during an attempted holdup last kee family, was convicted Saturday | [ ber. Harsh confesasd and fmpli. cated his friend, Richard Galtogly.: of Atlanta. whose trial has besn ot for Jan. 29. The most important of all rules at the A & P is the one which states “Quality must never be sacrificed to make a lower The next most important rule states “A & P prices must be the lowest ” price. |the same result would be attained, however, if the request were grant- ed, since the change from a classi- fication of base-metal hollow ware The present rate on these articles; iis 40 per cent ad valorem. ’ Argument possible.” The fine values listed below are further proofs that both these rules are to that of other silver-plated ware, “Likewise,” he continued, point out the necessity for plated hollow ware base-metal hollow ware, ad valorem. 40 per cent o} Wightman Speaks E. M, E. M. Wightman of New Britain rate of clasaification is highly important to 1 1.2 cents a pound on nails com- . !ing in under the “basket paragraph | “All chain is classified under the 331" of the tariff act is virtually the present tariff act according to the same as placing them on the free declared that the present list. Speaking for eight what most Resinol the rate of duty from the present The Most VITAL NEW in this paper e lver- aving a tarift rate of €0 per cent.”” The rate on in which classification this trade now is, is ufacturers the exception of the single classifi- of nails, tagks and chair glides, five cation of what is known as sprocket of which are located in Connecticut, Itching Quickly Relieved *Almost instantly the itching stopped.” That' people H i s 1 B Bip & chafing, etc. Abell druggiots. In addition to the almost ‘"""l “trously lower production costs of | foreign clocks, especially in Ger- many and Switzerland, there are an- nual concealed imports of “at least five or six million dollars,” R. H. Whitehead of New Haven, represent. | ing most of the lockmakers of the country, told the committee. He cited a number of methods of “eva- slon” which he charged importers' with practicing, and urged sufficient protection to equalize prices here and abroad. Finally, he asked fur- ther ‘restrictions in classification to check the “evasions.” Metal Buttons Under a scattering fire from Rep- resentatives Hull and Garner, demo- after they have used M?&{nhmtwwufld cleanses and refreshes it to receive the ointment heals. Men liks the 1 Soap for the bath is foz cuts, #0 All ready to fry OAKITE CRISCO MAPLEINE QUAKER ¢ - GUBST IV PAINE' CLEARANCE DINING AND BEDROOM SUITES > & SINGLE PIECES REWIABLE FLOUR abeolutely obeyed. To keep your schoolgirl complesion! Palmolive Soap — delicious fisvor! - Gorton's Govis canes DIAMOND CRYSTAL — the salt that’s a! Shaker Salt Dsale! FRANCO AMERICAN SPAGHETTI MAZOLA OIL GRAPEFRUIT, Hearts WHEATENA POST TOASTIES MINUTE JELLY RN MEAL Y SOAP g « Igey pkg. 39¢ HARO SYRUP Orange Label 1); cn 16c;Red Label 17; cn 15¢, BRER RABBITT MOLASSES' GINGER ALE, C. & C. Imperial Pale Dry BAKER'S CHOCOLATE ; MY-T-FINE PUDDING, Chocolate or Nut D. & C. LEMON PIE FILLER KIBBIE'S CRYSTAL CREAMS, Wintergreen FAMOUS WAFER ASSORTMENT, N. B, C. GRANDMOTHER’S DOUGHNUTS BUY ONE CAN OF DRANO Always fresh at your A& P S Grandmother'’s Bread SPECIAL OFFER At any A & P store Jan. 21st to Jan. 26th AND GET A CAN OF DAWN FREE! 3=1¢ Gold Label 1'; can 17¢ 225" 3~2§' 3 cans 25¢ pkg. 13¢ pint can can Ib. can pkg. bottle 3 phgs. 2 bottle pkg. cake small pkg. 23¢ 25¢ 33c 20¢ 25¢ 10e Se 20¢ dozen $1.49 Y 1b, cake 20e 2 pkgs. 25e 3 pkgs. 25¢ Ib. 21e pkg. 29¢ Y, doz, 10e LARGE LOAF AR LAD,« WHAT PEACE COMES o oNES SouL,w AD WHAT o APfER Doidé YOOR FELLOW MAN A 600D TORM,~EGAD!: <« AT FRIEAD WHOM'T HAD HERE, WAS PEMNILESS AMD O Missus ONES MIND, yrg \ES, ~APTER Youl PAY -TH' Room HERE 7~ T DoM'T ® MIND -TELLING YoUl, SHES BURNT LIKE A BRIDE'S FIRST WAFFLE, ABouT You -Towila -HAT WRECK (4 ol HER!. //////// YoR HIS BOARD s 2r0s/ INII1Y), w40 o . Stomach Troubles' -HE VERGE OF STARVATION, “ae |F YOU EVER PULL “THAT Headache and Dizziness ,If your stomach is sick, you are sick all over. If you can't digest your food, you lose strength, get nervous and feel as tired utnpnwbenyonvmuhrm For 10 years Tanlac has restored to health and activity many thou- sands who suffered just as do. l(a;l.(:. ‘Jnvin.oin‘::fial 8t., 1d, Mass, says: “Thres years | suffered agonies with my stomach. Reading about Tanlae was the beginning of my returr to health. It put 25 Ibs. on me and I know it saved mv }ile!" Let Tanlac do for you what it did for this sufferer. It corects | most obstinate digr s relieves gas, pains in the stomach and bowels. It restores appetite, vigor.and sound slo- ~ Tanlac is mace ¢ -, bai and herbs. The cost is less tha 2 cents a'dose. Get a bottle fron our d it today. Your mone) luklfit‘flm’the’lpnp. Tanlac; 52 MILLION ROTTLES USE “Herc's a picture entitled, ‘Love's Young Dream’! Now;, if he drinks plenty of Ferndale milk and use plenty of milk in their cook- ing. It adds to the flavor and nutritive qualities.” DALE v 3890 l n Mow Ergland 3-pc. bedroom suites that were $285 now 195 9-pe. dining suites that were 375 bureass that were 95 printed linons that were $10 w12 yd. now Oriental rugs ou» that were 5300 new $225 All items suljoct to prior sale e Furnirure Co. 81 Arlington St., Boston Opon Wodnesday Evenings Duriag Sale Usti! § P.M. w $45 9 Paymonts over § pevied srranged s APTER SHECTERING HIM YR A WEEK, [ -THeEA GoT HiM A J0B! e DORT e, Vo FANCY. I WILL GET, AGAIN, Nou'LL BE oUT ol -’ SIDEWALK Wi A - cuP AN’ PEMCILS! -y RENGRD N