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TR 0o s Y : ':inmumu T5c. & Memth * Watered st the Pest Ofice at New Rritala 0 Second Clate Mail Matter. TELEPHONS CALLS Business Ofice ..... 915 Bditerial Rooms ... 926 The enly preftadle advertising medium a the Oity. Circulation beoks and press Toom 8lways opea to advertisers. Momber of the Agsoclated Precs The Amociated Press is exclusively en- titled te the um for 3 all news credited to it eredited in this paper mewe published therein. d also local ot Circulation The A. B. C. is a national organization which furaishes newspapers and tisere with a strictly honest ma circulation. Our circulation statistics besed upom this audit. This insures tection against fraud in nmewspaper tribution figures te both astionmal lecsl sdvertisers. ant ssle daily 1n New York at Hotalil Newsstand, Times Square; Bchuljs’ ywastands, Eatrance Grand Contral, ¢:nd Street. s BEAUTIFYING CENTRAL PARK Gardeners have been busy at the Central triangle and the net result is a feast for the eyes, The feast will be even better when the shrubs and flowers have had time to grow and flower. The job done this year sur- passes anything of the kind in the past. The park department is to be congratulated upon its effort; under the direction of Superintendent Ellingwood a high example in flowery adornment is being set to citizens generally. ‘The shrubs at the triangle this year seem to be in much greater profusion than in former years; in- deed, the plants virtually extend all around the southern half of the park, with flower beds where they will look sweet; and around the monument there have been placed a profusion of growths which by mid- summer should be a beautiful sight for all beholders. New Britain this summer is certain to have a more at- tractive downtown than ever before by dint of the work expended upon the triangle. 1t would seem to some that cer- tain risks are taken in beautifying the triangle; there are bad boys, for instance, who may find it funny to destroy some of the precious planta. ‘The experience of past years, how- ever, has been that there is very lit- tle of this sabotage or sacrilege in the ecity. The flowers at the Central triangle invariably are left alone, and 80 are the shrubs. We do not duffer from the acts of foolish nugnur- unnb!e to appreciate ty; one hundred per cent of the “'population, old and young. joins L3 appreciating Ame beautification nfl this downtown breathing spot. The Herald e OUR CHANGING CLIMATE Amateur weather observers who used to claim a belief that the climate is changing, it is being done by mature in such imperceptible de- grees that nobody could notice it, they were toid. Being unable to stand foursquare in with science they took their places at the foot of the class. Now it is discovered by those who spend some_of their spare time in reading instead of cruising around in autemobiles that even scientists are beginning to tell startled folks that the climate is altering. No less an authority than Charles F. Marvin, chief of the U. 8, weather bureau in ‘Washington, is amiong those who point out that changes have taken place. “8pring weather, particularly dur- ing the last five or six years” he says “has been cooler. And there are charts, graphs, reports and maps {o prove it. Furthermore, winters have been generally milder and have been later in their arrival. How long this may keep up is problematical. There is no actual way of teling, unless one ‘wishes to resort to guesswork. And that is not done in government circles.” Another is scientific bon mot more cheerless. This is one to the | effect that in 20,000 years there will be another ice age on the American continent. “Putlting two and two to- gether,” one might come to the con- clusion that the slight changes in climate already noted by the weath- er bureau may be an indication that this ice age is already en route. Walter Prichard Eaton, writing in the Boston Herald, reminded his readers that at no time is the ice age fearfully distant. He held that only a slight drop in temperature in the temperate zones would complete- ly alter living conditions. A drop of twe degrees in the mean temperature in southern California would elim- inate the orange crop, already but- tresged by thousands of smudge pots; a drop of two degrees in the mean temperature of Massachusetts weuld annihilate the peach crop of menths in New England. mw. on May 30, an ice sheet foot thick and several hundred fest leng hung on the upper slopes of the Hopper on Greylock, and the entire top thousand feet of the mountain didn't show a leaf. As late as the Fourth of July that year,climbers ‘were warned to keeép out of Tucker- man’s ravine because of the snow on the head wall, and at least one party, ignoring the warning, came to grief. That year, in the last week in August, there was still snow on the north side of Katahdin. Three months of drop did . that. Thirty years of it would doubtless start a live glacier out of Tuckerman' poking its cold, inquisitive nose down the Saco valley.” Working conversely, a mean rise of less than one degree in the temperature of Lake Ontario would keep the port of Montreal open two months longer in the year. “The line between the climate we now enjoywsometimes—and the climate of the ice age is really very much less than the ordinary man supposes till he stops to think about it. Because of the glaciers of old, our Yankee ancestors had to pick up a terrible lot of rocks and pile them into stone walls. Perhaps our descendants may yet have to do it all over again.” Which sounds rather uncheerful; yet it may be true. In 20,000 years the earth will be densely populated, and if an ice age comes along and an iexodus is forced from northern climes into southern regions, North America will be most fortunate, There is very little land in the center of this hemisphere. Perhaps Africa will turn into the continent of light {and civilization at that time. THE SPIRIT OF FORT WORTH ‘What adds zest to popular interest in the feat of C. L. Robbins and James Kelly at Fort Worth, Tex., in keeping the plane named after that city in the air for a record-break- ing trip, is that both airmen are vir- |tual amateurs. Robbins, the pilot, has been self-taught; Kelly until recently was a cow-puncher, taking to flying because he thought there was excitement in it, now that the only real cowboys left are in the movies. These amateurs, buying a second- hand plane and operating it for 500 hours before finally deciding to menace the army's feat with the Question Mark, did so without im- mediate hope of gain. It is a pleasure to read, however, that the wide- awake Chamber of Commerce of the Texas city did not long hesitate to provide, financial remuneration, Naming the plane the Fort Worth doubtless pleased them greatly; and now at one swoop the city has more advertising than ever came to it from any other incident. The open season for airplane publicity is at hand. This has been a good start. Others are under way, projected, or planned. Every alrman cannot be a Lindbergh, but there are many minor roles to fill, and the candidates appear to be numerous. SANITY IN ELIZABETHTON By a peculiar coincidence, it was a New England woman who settled the strike at the American Bemberg & an argument |Glunnwll Corporation in Elizabeth- |ton, Tenn., the huge rayon plant in the new South. To Miss Anna Wein- stock of Boston, the 28-year-old representative from the U. 8. De- partment of Labor goes the credit for the feat, accomplished under the usual difficulties incident to head- | strong proclivities on both sides. The strikers, of course, were tired of the turmoil; and in truth, so were the members of the board of di- rectors, seeing that the trouble was costing the corporation $40,000 a day. Without the determination, in- sistence and diplomacy of Miss Wein- stock, however, the strike unques- tionably would have continued much longer. She brought abowt a settle- ment “satisfactory to both sides,” which must mean something in the nature of a compromise. Dr. Mothwurf. the German gener- alissimo of the Elizabethton works, of course spat inuch fire before ac- ceding to the reasonable suggestions of Miss Weinstock. Perhaps he was {astonighcd when the woman told him | | I his first letter of conciliation to the |strikers was too harsh and would have to e rewritten. He did it. how- ever, and by this time is heartily ' g1ad of it. Acceptance of E. T. Wilson as the new personnel ofcer who will have complete charge of the workers at |the great plant means that the strikers, who with the exception of { their leaders will be taken back, are |to secure the benefits of one of most fair-minded liberally disposed labor America’s and experts. It ago brought order out of chaos in the Passaic, N. J., textile situation; and ')u- main reason why the strikers in Elizabethton considered Miss Wein- stock’s efforts favorably was because they realized Mr. Wilson was in the background as the new personnel Massachusetts. Lasting any consid- erable length of time, such a drop in the mean temperature, if it spread to the north of New England also. weould bring back the ice cap. How easy this change takea place is indicated by the following fact hy Mr. Eaton: , “Three or four yearg age there ac- tually was a drop of two degrees in manager-and that with him on the s premises all would be well ' Dr. Mothwurf {the intercession of Mr. Wilson as I personnel manager through a reali- zation that human nature would be ¥ better served by having an impartial dministrator of employment in the plant. It was something of a con- was Mr. Wilson who several years | doubtless accepted it means the corporstion will have nothing whatever to do Wwith the employment of its hands, this being completely in the hands of the labor expert. The outcome, as was the case at Passalc, virtually means that an out- sider takes over the busineas of em- ployment. This is in contrast to the old-established custom whereby ‘the employer abrogates to himself this important function.” But In a case such as at Elisabethton, where daily dynamitings, barn and house burn. ings, and shoeting characterized the economic warfare, it was a logical | method to crawl out from under a critical situation, one that amelior- ates the hard feellng op both sides. EMBASSY LIQUOR The prohibition worker in Vir- ginia who wrote letters to the British embassy seems to have been greatly cheered at the replies. 8ir Esme Howard or his secretary appeared willing, in principle, to forego the use of embaasy liquors, and their cheerful letters naturally reached the attention of President Hoover. Anyone, however, finding grains of comfort in these letters originating in the British embassy is easy to please on the prohibition question. The embassies are allowed tq eat and drink anything they desire ac- cording to the principles of interna- tional law. Under this all-embracing concordat recognized by civilized nations they even can import what they wish to eat and drink. There was no possible likelihood that the other embassies would fall in line it the British embassy proposed & plan to place American domestic law above the rights of those oper- ating under the other. The situation is no whit different from that existing among nations as to postal rates. These ratea are fixed through agreements reached under the International Postal Union, and Uncle S8am has to abide by the rates regardless of his sovereign preferences. Uncle Sam's domestic rates apply to points under his flag; the rates to other nations are fixed through international co- operation. The foreign embassies in Wash- ington are under foreign flags, just a8 our embassies are in foreign lands. Our laws do not apply. The Virginia lumber dealer wWho started the rumpus has an idea that cannot be executed. RUNNING THE HOUSE The House of Representatives again has given evidence that it is a well-oiled machine, operated by its leaders with a minimum of fric- tion and devoid of serious debate. Speaker Longworth and Majority Leadeér Tilson tell the boys what Is to be done and it is done—as rapidly as happens on the hill in Hartferd when the Legislature meets. The tariff measure is a case in point. The peurile debate upon the various achedules was caused by a few minor voices on the floor, by a few Democrats, here and there a farm bloc adherent, and by such fiery fcllows as La Guardia of New York. These were so in the minor- ity, however, that the only reason for popping off the firecrackers was in order to let their constituents know they were still alive in Wash- ington. When the tariff bill finally emerged it was just the sort of bill the leaders wanted—after numerous interests had had an epportunity to increase the projected duties upon | mooted issucs that at first did net satisfy. The real debate on the tariff bill will come in the Scnate. The upper house has been subjected to criti- cism aplenty, but no one can claim with a show of logic that it isn't at least ten times as democratic in its tendencics to debate a subject as the | House. The Senate is too evenly di- vided to stand being driven by the ,type of leaders that function in the | House. When the Senate gets into ;\»rhal action on V\helhvr it is now or after a vaca- |tion—the interest will be consider- |able. Even it House and Senate in conference agree upon something, it \is sure to go through a terrific bar- rage when it reaches the floor. Facts and Fancies The bhest highway is the shortest distance hetween two points Another good reducing exercise consists in lowering and lifting the junder jaw forty times on each i mouthful. If all peddlers were placed end to cnd, they would reach your house just when Friend Wife is husiest. Prize beauty: The prettiest those who weren't above a contest of that kind of entering If the Flood came in the Spring. {the two angle worms on the Ark |must have “rembled when Noah looked their way. Modern office furniture offers levery convenience except a cushion- ed place on the desk for the feet. The chicf objection fo capital punishment is that it doesn't apply to those who have capital. | ©ne objection to peace and free- the tarift bill— | our mesn temperature for the spring |cession to make, too, considering that | dom trom disssters i3 that we get [behind with our mr»gy. Blessed are the poor. Their chil- dren inherit the earth because the rich don’t have any children. Americaniam: Beginning to fight for a principle; forgetting principles in a wild frensy to lick the other crowd. Parents never get old enough to become a muisance if they haven't divided the property. *When daughter marries a poor boy, what an outrage it seems to a milllonaire dad who was digging ditches at $1.25 a day when he was twenty. Then. too, maybe the power trust | \ould finance you in bucking the stock market. That would use up a lot of paper for ticker tape. No wond®r theaters are losing money. Un the street you can see legs without listening to nasal ac- companiment, Perhaps Americans are dollar chasers, as Europe charges. But you must chase the things if there is no easy mark who will lend them to you. Funny people! Scorning religion because its truths can't be demon- strated in a test tube; worshipping a popular hero made great by head- lines. Wets who tell ug how much the Government loses in revenue from saleon Mcenses should deduct the fines paid@ by bootleggers. *“Father falled for whipping school teacher.”” The teacher punished the boy; the father punished the teach- er; the State punishes the father. Moral: Be the boss dog. Correct this sentence: “I picked up a golf club and tapped a ball said the unitiated. “but I had no de- sire to see how far I could knock it. Copyright, 1929, Publishers Syndicate $tr Ha CREDIT AND DEBIT Auld Jeems McNab, was at the roint of dissolution. His wife and family, the doctor and one or two of the neighbours were in the room, “Dinna forget, Maggle,” the dying man said to his spouse, “that Peter McDoodle o us forty pounds!” “I'll no forget, Jeems, sald the sobbing wife. “And that Farmer Robertson h na paid his bH-for the new atable I bullt for him last summe; “I'll mind that too,” remarked his spouse, who, turning to the company round the bedside gearfully com. mended them to noJdce that was sensible to the last—yes, sensi- ble to the very last!" “Of course, on the ither hand, Maggie, ye'll no forget that we're owing ten pounds to Bailie Foggic | end twenty sax pounds to the Laird ‘or wood,” went on the dying man. On hearing this Maggie's change- about was sudden and to the point —*"Dinna listen to him folks,” she broke out, “thc poor man's ravin'!" Observations On The Weather Washington, May 27.—Forecast for Southern New England: Partly cloudy tonight and Tuesd slightly warmer tonight; moderate south to southwest winds. Forecast for Eastern New York: Partly cloudy tonight and Tuesday; probably local thunder showers Tuesday afternoon in north and cen- tral portions; somewhat warmer to- night, except in extreme north por- tion; moderate south or southwest i winds. Conditions: Pressure is high over the Atlantic states. The plains states and Mississippl valley are overspread by a long trough of low pressure which extends from the Canadian provinces of Manitoba southwestward to New Mexico. Showery weather prevails in por- tions of the Mississippi valley. Tem- peraturcs range to 70 this morning in the plains states from Texas northward to Manitoba. Conditions favor for this vicinity partly cloudy weather with slowly rising temperature. ‘Temperatures yesterday: High S ] . 64 . 78 . TR .80 478 .80 . 62 . R0 . 68 . 82 T .6 S8 S . 58 LT e LT 4 L0 0 52 Low 66 58 Atlanta y Atlantic City . Roston Buffalo . Chicago . Cincinnati Denver . Duluth . Hatteras ... l.os Angeles Miami Minneapolis Nantucket Nashville .. New Haven |New Orleans .. New York Ya i Northfield, Vt. . | Pittsburgh . ... Portland. Me. . £t Louis ... .. Washington . Nearly $2.000.900 worth of Amer! can cremes. rouges. and other cos. metics were used in foreign countriss last year. Norfolk. %4 26 a6 50 70 L1} Try The Fun 8hop Fountain Drinks ' These thirsty days, for “Humor Twinks,” “Joke Fizzes" or Shake” Will set you up, Folks, no mis- take! a real “Mirth Up-to-Date! Jack: “Dearest, it doesn't seem like the same old smile you used to give me.” Murlel: “Oh no, Jack, that i new one. I'm using a different kind of toothpaste now!™ AS TO CHEMISTS By Roland Baillie The chemist is a person Who speaks in weighty terms He puts the Cossack cyrse on Bacteria and germs, In mystic laboratories, With tubes, retorts, and sinks, He wins undying glories By making stunning stinks. Bome newly figured datum He used to disclose The secrets of the atom, The ways of cellulose. He can make soup from &yrup, Perfume from mutton fat; His job's to sit and stir up Synthetic-this-and-that. ‘When he, in finest frenzy, Makes something sour and green He calls it Parabenzy— disulphoethylene. Of chemistry my knowledge Is but a hollow shell; I took the course at college, But only learned one smell! Harder Sole! Btaylate: h, I have the soul of & poet before me.” Dorothy: “And you're going to have the sole of a boiler-maker bes hind you if you wake up Papa!” —C. R. Allen IF SOME OF OUR OLD FRIENDS HAD TO ENDURE MODERN her stuff! The duty of every man is to take a wife, Some men carry this principle al- together too far! SOMLETHING WORTH TELLING! By Harry Leary He was pleased with her beauty and her gracefulness, and he exert- ed himself to please her. He was versatile of mind and tongue, and he talked to her of the symbolism of Ibsen and the oymbal- ism of Paul Whiteman; of the maj- esty of Miiton and of the mush of Edgar Cuest: of the sagacity of Shakespeare and of the droolings of “The Strange Interlude”; of the mu- sic of Bchumann and of the things which bear the name of Irving Ber- lin; of Raphael's grandiositics in the Vatican and of the futurists’ curi- osities in the present; of Rodins' marble regalitics and of the cutenees of the Kewples; of dramatists, such as Bhaw and Galsworthy, and of the Americans. zuch’ 28 Thomas and Anne Nichols; of the patriotism of Lincoln and of the cohanism of men who doff their hats at the national colors on barber poles; of Nature and of the pecople who say, “Ain't Nature wonderful!" And he bored her. 8he showed no intarest whatever, Contrarily. she displayed a desire | for a change. And final She yawned . And she didn't try to hide it. Then he realized that she cared for neither one nor the other of the many extremes he had brought forth for her. He was bewildered. She smiled, exhibiting white, bhut sharp teeth “And now.” she said, frankly. cruelly, “you must tell me something interesting—something really worth 'tolllnt and re-telling.” “And what shall it be?” he asked, still anxious to please her. “Something you promised on your honor not to {ell!” she answered. | Place for Them! Catherine: “Where did Madge get I"!l' handsome, wealthy husband 7" Alice: “In Bermuda,™ Catherine: “That girl certainly knows her onions. doesn’t she?” —Mrs. C. T. Sterner Rhapsody in Bluct 8he wished for masculine admira- tion, but she was homely and got none of it. She realized that she ! must attract some nan's attention. | With this enq in view she stood on a strect corner for twe hours waiting for a man to come up and spcak to her. 8he was ready to give up in despair when her heart was suddenly made glad by the sound | of heavy masculine foststeps behind her. She waited eagerly for him to #peak. MONDAY, MAY 71, 108 “Move on,” he sild gruffly as he twirled his club! The Slogan! Mrs. Scott: “I wonder what your father tukes Mr. Dennis down in the cellar for every time he comes here Junior: “Oh, Dad is teaching him how to do something. S Mrs. Scott: “Do what?" . Juni “I don't know, but every 20 often I .hear Dad say' Here's how. —Alleen Richman (Copyright, 1929, Reproduction Forbldden) QUESTIONS ANSWERED You 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,, enclosing two cents in stamps for reply. Medical, legal and martial advice cannot be given, nor can ex- tended research be undertaken. All other questions will receive a pere sonal reply. Unsigned requests can. not be answered. All letters are confidential. —Editor. Q. How old is Lon Chaney? A. Forty-six years. Q. Are there fish in the sea as deep as forty fathoms? A. Many kinds of fish frequent waters 40 fathoms or 240 feet deep. Tish have been taken from a depth of over a mile. Q. How can maple syrup be made from maple sugar? A. Add one third of a pound of water to each pound of sugar and boil until it is dissolved. Q. Who wrote “The Professor's Love Story"? A. Bir James M. Barrie. Q. Can an alien residing America, who was drafted for the World War, and went abroad to avoid service, become an American citizen? A. No, and if he comes back to the United States and is apprehend- ed and convicted, he may be de. ported. Q. When was the U, 8. 8. Atlanta first put In commission? A. July 19, 1887, at York Navy Yard. Q. Should o'clock be spelled with a small or large “0"? A. Unless it begins a secntence, o'clock is spelled with small letters, not capitals. Q. What is th the word ‘“square’ A. It has no comparative. A thing that is square cannot be “gquarer.” One could say “This box is more nearly square than the other.” Q. Ts a “swale” the same as a “gwamp”? % A. A swale is a plece of low marshy ground, as in a rolling prairle, commonly wet at scasons. A swamp is a tract or region of low spongy land, uusually situated re- motely from the shore, so saturated with water as to he unfit for tillage, commonly abounding with certain species of trecs and coarser grass Q. Did the British statesman William E. Gladstone, favor the south during the Civil War and did he declare that Jefferson Davis had “made a nation”? A. Gladstone favored the cause of the south, and in 1862, when the Confederate agmics had a number of victories to their credit, he made the statement at Newcastle, that President Jefferson Davis, of the Confederacy had made a nation. Is it correct to say the “sit- in the New omparative of A ctting hen” is correct. Q. Has Jackie (‘oogan retired from motion pictures? A. He is now appearing in vaude- ville. Q. What is the order of the four vanks ot Generals in the Army? A. From highest to lowest they are: General, Lieutenant General, Family Stuff (FFontame Pox. 1920 Q. What is the meaning of the uame Dominick? Born on Sunday. > What is the value of Am \van waney of the “thirty pleces o silver” paid to Judas fer betraying Jesua? A. Probably the pleces referred to were shekels, and ameunted to the price of a alave's life, approxi- mately fifteen or tweaty dollars in our money. Spain Q Was Iberia? A. Spain is from the Green word “Hispania” meaning “western land.” It was also written Hesperia and Iberia. Hesperus was the evening star (In the west) and the Garden of the Hesperides, -with ita golden appley, forms the theme of many interesting stories in Greek myth- ology. Q. Did Babe Ruth hit more home runs in 1927 than in 19287 A. During the regular playing season of 1927 he hit 60 home runs; in 1928 he hit 54 home runs, ex- clusive of those in the world series and exhibition games. New Hampshire Alumni Has Spring Meeting Here The Connecticut alumni of the University of New Hampahire held its spring meeting at Burritt hotel on Saturday evening. Following the dinner and an address by the presi- dent, H. R. Merrill of the Connecti- cut State Agricultural college, the meeting adjourned and dancing and cards were enjoyed. Thirty-three members of the organization, repre- senting nearly as many sections of the atate, were present. The local committee in charge of the evening consisted of L. R. Nixon chairman, Regina Connor, Rachel Colby, Mrs. A. R. Grant and H. Rand. s Station Petition To Be Heard Tomorrow The question of whether the ban on gasoline filling stations in indus- trial zones constitutes an unreason- able * exercise of police powers will be determined tomorrow in superior court when the Btandard Oil Co. will be heard on its petition for an order to Inspector A. N. Rutherford for is- suance of a permit for that type of ever called | business at Franklin and Pearl street. The petitioner, through Don- ald Gaffney, makes the clai mthat imposition of a greater restriction in an industrial zone than in a resi- dence district s contrary to the principles of zoning and that the company's property is the only plot affected. WELL BABY CONFERENCES The schedule for the Well Baby conferences conducted by the Visit- ing Nurse association for the week will be as follows: Tuesday—47 Ellis street, North- end school. Volunteer assistant, Mrs. Willlam 1. Kaplan; nurses in attendance, Miss Anna Ahern and Mrs. Hattie Recknagel. Wednesday—b2 Center street. Vol- unteer assistant, Miss Florence Bently: nurses in attendance, Miss Anna Ahern and Miss Anna Miskey. Thursday—Conference omitted. Friday—East street schaol. Vol- unteer assistant, Mrs. k. M. Hayden: nurses in attendance, Miss Anna Ahern and Miss Anna O'Connell. O ibizs 490 Digais Ay Som—Roges T Dalias, Tex, May 27 (M=Dallas | became the capital of the Retary International today. with the opens ing of Rotary's twentieth intérpa- tional convention. More than 5,0 delegates were here and 7,000 more were expected. o A preliminary assembly of veting delegates this afternoon and a pro- of welcome tonight had been arranged. The first businesg session and the adoption of a convention program are planned for tomerrow. The convention will centinue 8 week. Greetings to America from 15,000 British and Irish Rotarians was ex- pressed at Rotary headquarters . by, Arthur Chadwick of London, presi- dent of the Rotary International as« soclation of Great Britain and Ire. land. - The formal welcome tonight is to be featured by addresses by Gever- nor Dan Moody, Mayor J. Waddy Tate of Dallas, and Pres. 1. B.'Sut. ton, of Rotary International. T™he Indlana club of Dallas ane nounced an outdoor chicken dinner for Wednesday evening as special entertainment for - Heosier state Rotarians and their families. Visiting Rotarians filled Dallas pulpits yesterday. Last night » sacred concert by a chorus of 300 Dallas voicss was given at Fair Park auditorium for the visitors. George C. Rogers of this city in representing the New Britain Rotary club at the conference. 25 Vears Ago Today Ten parties were arrested by Deputy Sherifft Cowles and Officer O'Keefe yesterday afternoon for rupning their automobiles faster than the law permits. William F. O'Dell received the degree of tonsure at the hands of Archbishop Williams Saturday. He is studying for the priesthood at Brighton, Mass, According to Manager George Q. Pattee of the Russwin hetel, there are possibilities of the riveval of & hotelkeepers’ association in the state. It was announced at all the masses in 8t. Mary's church yesterday that the new school will be dedicated on the last Bunday in June by Bishop ‘Tierney: The annual ball game between Chamberlain council, Junior 0. U. A. M., and Buckingham council of Hartford was played at Rentschier's park this morning. The local team won by a 24 to ¢ score. H. C. Brown of this city was chosen as the delegate to the na- tional convention at the sixth annual convention of the Connecticut Post Oftice Clerks' association held in Hartford today. READ RERALD CLASSIFIED ADS FOR REST RESULTS D — FAMOUS ASSASSINS OF NISTORY From Julius Caesar down to Alvare Obregon, history have met death viclently at t! mies. Our Wasl many famous figures of he hands of fanatics snd political eme- ton Bureau has gathered the interesting facts in tem of the principal crimes of this nature and included them in interesting bule letin called Some Famous Assassinations. You will find it Werth while read- ing. Fill out the coupon below and send for ft: = = == == == =CLIP COUPON NERE= == == == == History Editor, close herewith five cents in coin, stamps to cover postage and handling costs: NAME . BTREET AND NUMBER ‘ cITY Washington Bureau, 1322 New York Ave, Washington, D. C. I want a copy of the bulletin Some Famoul New Britain Herald, or laose, 1 | | | STATE . 1 am a reader of the. New Britain Herald, Rt e s o G A =) F® 2 DY © up