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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD. SATURDAY AUGUST 24, 1929. HONOR POPE PIUS 'WOMEN CARRY INMATIVE DO Home Town Erects Monument o Its Most Famous Son Italy, Aug. 24 monument to native of Deslo, cess of erection in the torio Emanuele ere habitants of the —in the pope’s boyhood it wa a tow expe Desio. imposing X son Plazzu Wealt newly create ip—are pontift sitting will bron on toria, of his imparting low will resenting wise in Canzo marble reli depicting XTI's cares the conci state. Th com borne and benediction servitors be gorical th cardinal The vir will have one ion be sculpto been ssioned project Another near the ment squar will i born Th he was 128 an orphan votive cha statue, the mation of vided asylu funds is birt local ( the advancement by TO ACQUIRE MORE CHARM IN WALKING BOOKS ON THEIR HEADS i L Church Activities | Swedish Bethany ‘ Morning worship in Swedish ut The male chorus direction of Walter L. will render the music. srvice in Swedish at 7:30 by Miss Helen | 10:45 o'clock | under the | Magnuson | Evening | o'clock edberg Rev. C. J Fredeen, pastor of the church has returned from a trip to | the mildle pulpit at both servi (T e Singing Science 11 Sunday sub- at a. m., school lay evening meeting at & o'clock. International Bible Students Assn. 11:30 a, m., volunteor | service; 8 p. m. Bible study at 19 Howard street Wednesday, § p. m and testimony service Iriday, 8 p m. Bible 15th Watch Tower. prayer, praise study. July Sung munion; and mon B ring. o m 11 a. m. morning pra by the Rev. Benjamin assistant rector Matthew's Lutheran in Inglish at 9 a G 1an, with hol comt 10:45 o'clock; confessio at 10 a. m On Weddesday, 5 to nd Thursday. 3 to 9 pastor will meet members 1 St. Serviee m., in union, at service m the 7:30 p. o'clock, townsman Pope Pius 1921, w after Benedic and was bishopric of the city last ne abbey a pilgrimage preparing to Milan still rec chanted church came out the evening compan for news of Aughi Desio hopes most famou time soon for FIVE-POWER NAVAL PACT IS PROBABLE Washington Feels Anglo-Ameri- where he into the son will Aug. 24 seems Washington, this country to 1 and more foreign affairs first few months of the admin- | T stration have found enough of them tial Ve ) on the griddle to call for frequeat State WAL, L conferences bet n President touch with de Hoover and Secretary of State we! Stil son. mson 1 But as far ent can learn, to worry about international situatic cerned, Uncle Sam getting his feet wet Negotiations with disarmament, carried on mier Ramsay MacDonald, Presidc Hoover, Secretary Stimson and Am- bassador Dawes ever since Dawes reached London, appear to he p gressing favorably rhaps to the firm policy tained by both governments, avail able reports of their progress hay alternated between hot and coll But lately these reports have b all to the good and there reason to believe that the ed determination of both and MacDonald to reduce ments is going to bear fruit w out any undue hitches or unneccs- sary procrastination Parity Seems Closer SEALS CONSERVED VST TORLADIES' WEAR size and in numbers of capital ships GO\]el*mne'i‘ Pm?fic{i% PU]ICy or first-line battlest and tha mo Hoover dire not heen close clopms in Chi de fed Stim- wis 100 1o g as your correspond- for ndonr i« v we have very lent sol An Insofar L hasy gland o by Pre-|Uup ex wo! whe is th owir of secrecy main- ed new 1 1epa senate nee commit is every annd Hoo arma and England will be brov to parity. We have our cruiser progr England will reduce she will not plan placement as her reach the limit The state department nothing to say which France being kept advised of t of negotiations, but it that they are let in on any developments ther some taik of a conference, of the five tory to the ference, ference was for ence proba London and it discussed in adheres to his visiting Hoove Our gove out of the ed by British Ch chequer Philip for a read hers on compls existing cr age about th Japan and coneret: For form early naval Wast armament as embier paratiol 1stin other power attitude purely European the A debt ied nations payment retary Edmund ( in P observer at ly rench embissy unoffici and thoroug The for of th thoug! 1l has i the present Mellon-Ber: raise ma Thar did 34 nouncing for by having students walk with books on thelr heads 1ng Sunday determined, lenzth of skirt is by Memorial Baptist Sunday, 9°30 a. m. church schoo'; 30 a. m. English worship; 11:45 m. German worship Wednesday to Sunday. Atlantic of the German Baptist tative dancing, now coaches Lssig's pupils in what to do with the IForzet ‘em, the until r charm candidate that t hould I wrist right k. and he sees to complete international hands. | 1 but not knows is axiom 1 slump 50 and 8o, and the pavement with thumb s nt conference oul- | t flecked just Shicoh p drops poised. et ind ban 1 L nose rose’—that's how and spitcurls in “clothes- means the student yorts clothes con- an BOWN appre 1 bathing suit sense. Long rides are for sports wear, rides Length of t off wom- » i docided the motion low tip the against a sle when it gl Emanuel Gospel wi Sunday. 10:45 o'clock, preaching conducted 1 dward Ha student of National Bible New York: 2:15 o'clock Bible school; T o'clock. preaching Ly B rd Hanson, music Monday. 7 o'clock, S o'clock, official i graceful. is s like a ctions read e tiff legged swing alor ssig's wife i That have i walk They The nd in wa 1y women sinted lder hiy suld son, stitute, ructs center of hould be ste and sciousn vening w special ciation, or trustees’ meet- the books in board meet- A book balanced i hip wave come for chiffon Al articular shorter i to o Thursday. 745 o'clock and praise service, the week pray candidates theis = pictures. St. Johw's German Lutheran Sunday the pastor will preach on benefits that the congregation its organization on sh service at | Sunday school man service at 11 Tni rpre- who taught coeds int ceived since 28, 18 o'clock Point, high Between A t Is the S:45 beach and ma- | 9:45 o'clock o'clock Tue o Wed of the bury. nd on Monrovia the the dyed, and Then they cocds tur made v are auction- oval P 1y A over I - ey 2065 10 ‘ to Japar r the pelagic | forc ealing right trHm The Pribiloft in ¢ Bering S nd sun round of palms. ount cause of the bar m.. Friendship steamers are mor oting esday. 50 guild of m d chor a or the s w md freight are landed in is landing is an exciting ex- and the passenger alwag: | marvels at the canny judgment of South Congregational the native dman’ in chossing ummer union the will be the longest Baptist Trinity, and ‘ride in on.' South Con to o'clock, at ore passe located re surtboats. Southbury cdir spot Often rounds ¢ nly to to perience, services of the Methodist, First ational churcites be held at South church e ow at 10:45 a. m. Rev. H. W 1, of Needham, Mass., will be preacher that to i will safeet comes h is disappointing. TR T e LIBE 22N 5 well paved, and none too clean. | {]1’ The busi premises, most of [mzricans Teel at Home ‘ with the nding Kiml the Tnion AL L. school s rorning worship by the pastor. Christ 6:30 p. m. I Bvening rervies pastor. Church non ndeavor hillin: Rich t 7 p. m., Ocdles of ('Iuihimz Save Milkman 24. (UP) make a man. advantages. first floor usualy of ce and the roof cf 1 iron. Water street could wily b ably with the main busi- of Frectown or Daka the hill, two or three | es to Ashman street, thoroughfare, in the poor built corr howe son ment rmon by ladinston B C made to compare the Unite inve ness center latter country, pluns *limbi announced | blocks, adds one chief record- 1 il ine | The Executive 1 | legations Department Natlonal | sentatives Jortance on a ! Aug. 24 o tion of s with ria in the tion of labor San Francisco, Au: Clothes do not always But they have other Harry Mitchell, aged 57, rosna fOrCiEn | ipig out for Mimself the other =y the Warl (pen he was thrown 30 feet tato | the ReR-| o qir from a milk-wagon when It 1S IM-Feonided with another cx Mitchell landed on his ne. was taken to the hospital doctors bewildered that man had sustained no Injur They were not long kept in doubt When Mitchell was disrobed for amination it found that wore an overcout. three sults clothes and two sets of heavy 1: derwear. When he landed on the pavement he mercly bounced and came down lightly 113 and 36 Are Lucky, According to Oil Men Oklahoma City, Aug. 24. (P— To oil men t is nothing \bout the number 13. They is lucky. So is 36. In the oil fraternity there s a superstition that land sections heav ing either of those numbers likely to contain oil. Walter Hart, secretary homa's school land commission, higher bids on sections numbered 13 Bz an one con residential very we State re Department, nor the many ng the extended reat American Republic in Africa. recently by the | is pleasing e Mansion and ulates building Hall lend On this street several of the best A 20 natructed of brick, chapter to tanc hy to its sma. gal and he to based Yiar traveled Republic A bulletin - from G graphic B are k. He ! where | il residence after th houses of columns along of communication from ho has Literia were “he and its American with ion of Colonial days the front At H Literian world ther Americans Peel me hite Heuse” has Loom™ Mansion is structur - st ks he the o can in writes The 13 la white and it has its ‘Bast Room.' “Liberia occupics that corner of W Africa uts out into the Atlantic 1o reach across to the on the South Only a few it to comprise a he foun the 17 ive a 50 like three lan L country it story history age, vernmont African in Dritish Portugu. « ¢ decidedly African ind Ameri- slow ond form Wi ports nd h ar Woest which if er traveli b the coast, touct endeavor oloni ing as in an Belgian Brazilian shoie, Continent the large area, to ographers place Liberia’s in- 1l of whic American oreign, distinetly nd erent years ago maps owed extending th noge | themselve - ldetinite heavy terfor fronti “Then came by toget dif ch experic ere ominc think 1t wtward almost the in nor when the Sahara; b t (‘oast er to Manrovis much turns its were feeling of lines for dr L European the mapmakers to the dwindle Afri- nations, les which actually th ams of can and little ed by il m of Oni by area acred- weak 1 uniil 0 miles farthest miles the records show for e se Republic or 36 {5 coustline and its s only frontier r Pigs From Houses, Plea of Manila Official Manila, Aug. 24 (P—Dr. Jacobo Fajardo, director h it is unsanitary for pigs an to only ) eincoast 1 tot third what Its present arca the Liberi- nd e of live under the same roof and he is trying to obtain legislation to stop it powers which time immemorial families, the pigs have 1rters on the ground floor nily its quarters up ajardo wants the pi the back yard Sinee coast had their and the Dr. confined to freed- | g found settlem They ricia back to the stairs HUNT EVOLUTION LINK Chicago, Aug. 4. (B—Iossils vhich they hope will show the shift from reptilian to mammal forms of sailivg | life, under the evolution theory, ire Ameri- | being sought 6,000 feet (i (e from | Nieuweveld mountains Sontn lAfrica by two Un i azo valeoriologists Prof Alfred Panl Miller several specinens Jlonization Society Mo were s President othe ment hegan in the forth up of ersity The Romer ady ndred home of seten and hive vhere (he Capital Named for President Monrvoe I'rof found alre GREEK REPLY Athens, Aug. 24 (1'P) reply to the Turkish note was to e dispatched today to Angora accept- ing the principal of arbitration by neutral mixed comi of outstanding Greco-Turkish economis ind political differences. If the offer IAD HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS s will submit (he FOR BEST RESULTS of Nations EXPLECTED I'he Greol Jamestown and ith Rock. Finaily ertain lands vho to Ission purch native chiefs.” Greece the Le refused uestion o st and will occupy the | holy com- | | communion the follow- | Ia- | Life ' d people | a the | | | | | | | | | te=o RS, 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 avenie, Washington. D. C.. enclosing two cents in stamps for reply. Medical, legal and marital | advise cannot be given, nor can ev- |tended research »s undertaken. All | other questions will receive a per- | sonal reply. Unsigned requests can- |not be answered. All letters are | confidential.— Editor. Q. What is the derivation of the | word limousine? | A The name has been applied {in the automobile trade to a cer- | tain type of body. There seems fo be no connection between it and the | French word limousin, which mean | a coarse mantle or rough masonry. Q. Why is it casier to swim in | salt water than in fresh water? | A Because water is more buoyant and less effort is require | to keep afloat Q. To belong? A what race do Egyptians They are classified the Lybyan family of the white race. | Q. When was Col. Lindbergh | born, and how old was he when he flew to Paris? A. He was born Februar 5 | 1902, and left for Paris by airplane on May 20, 1927 | Q. On what d | September 10, 187 A. Sunday. Q. How long has Alice White been playing in motion pictures? A hree years, Q. What is the ew York city? A he 1928 e tion is 6,017,000, | Q What is the | the motion picture e pirs™ ? A, “Love's First K Q. What does the mean | A as of the week did 6 fall? population of imated popula- theme “A Woman of of song name Mayle It is a variant spelling of the | Trish family name Mayall, meaning “bald Tonsured” (like a priest). It originated as a nickname. Q. What is the value of a Unit- States twenty-f cent picce 1564 and a half dollar dated a od dated |18 | Ined half The quarter dollar is v it from 25 to 50 cents and the dollar commands no premium. Q. What does Placebo mean? AT term used in Roman church for the of the vespers is a holic opening antiphone for the dead. Q. What is A. A term on plarts Q. Do turtles make any a noise? A, When startled, such as the wood turtle, gi akelike hiss. The males lary laparos tortoises, according to Darwin, bellow or roar at ‘he breeding season. The common paint- o turtles utter a piping note, par- tienlarlv in the spring. What is the mame and rd- 'ss of the owner of Rin Tin Tin? A. Col. Leland Duncan, Warner Brothers Studios, 5542 Sunsct Boule- ard, Hollywood, California. Q. What is the definition vegetable and frait? A. A vegetable in sense is any part of plant commonly used purposes, and may consist of root (heet and furnip): the (asparagus, celery rhubarb); what is botanically the fruit ma and eggplant) | tomato is both a fruit and a vege table, thongh for table use and in the garden and market it ranks as a vegetable only, The same is true of cucumbers. The pumpkin and | squash, which are botanically fruits, lare classed as vegetables, while melon which is of the same fami'y, snake spit? for a form of a'gac kind of of the of the popular a herbaceous for culinary stem or The some turtles, | e a loud | | Catholies the | (to- | is termed a fruit. Watermelons classed as vegetables by the partment of Agriculture. | Q. Why does salt smother | fire? A. Because it cuts off the sup- ply of oxygen. Q. What is the address of the | American Society for the Preven- | tion of Cruelty to Animals? | A. Madison avenue and street, New York city. Q. When did the famous meteor- 1 ower known as “the falling of | the stars” occur? are De- a 26t h A. The meteoric shower which occurced in the early morning of | November 13, 1838, is thought fo be the most brilliant on record, and is usually referred to as the falling of the stars.” It began about midnight and lasted until dawn, and was visible more or less { over half the earth, including North | America, but not Europe; the num- | ber of meteors was estimated at ,000 or more. No sound was heard, nor was any particle kno to reach the earth. The U. S. !al Observatory state that this stream of meteors was supposed to be the result of the distintegration of Tempel's comet, which was not seen when last due in 1900. DUTCH BALLOTING BRINGS NO UPSETS TGoali[ion Undisturbed by Elec- tion—Seven Women Elected Amsterdam, Aug. 24 (A—The gen- | eral elections just concluded in Hol land failed to shake the coalition government. * Voting was compulsory for all men and women more than 25 years old. hose who failed to perform this elementary civic duty were subject- ed to fine Radio w used ely after the fashion of the American and British general elections campai 3 and seven women were elected to the lower hous exten A remarkable feature about cetion was the large numbe iniature parties, there being the field as compared with ties four years ago. ber of electors on the Dutch roll | just under 4,000,000, and they cifered 644 candidates for the *ats in the second chamber of ates-general as the parliament is called. This meant that there was an average of six candidates for each t. The resto not p is 100 vote proved clearly that the ition of a party cabinet w sible at this time with many small partics advocating such a dive ty of intere: Therefore the coalition government continued in office, there having been a change of only two or three in parlia nient as « result of the election. An examination of the composition of the lower house parties and the number of seats they hold now compared with the 1 election, well as the diversity of intere which apparent in their name will ome governme thought in the country. The composition follows. 1929 1 30 The total num- were | the | idea of the cross-currents | | Social Democrats IS Revolutionatier | s ) Mistoricais | Liberals | 1iber: Retormed roissiaints Comim riste | Peasanta .......... | Popular Cathoiic Par | Executive power Nather- lands is vested exci + io the sovereign Queer Wilhe!mina while the legislativ authority a zeld jointly by the sovereign 2ad parlte nent. The upper house consists of 50 members clected by provineiai states, the lower nouse ot 100 mem- | bers elected ditectly by universai suffrage. | In November, 19 during the debate on the foreign affairs bud- | get, the 1ower house. with the kelp of the Christian Historicals, rejected the expense money for the Dutci: | gation at the Vatican. The Right coalition collapsed and a lengthy | ministerial crisis ensued. In March 1926, after many attempts a coalition cabinet was formed under the lead- crship of Jonkheer Dr. de Greer. It l‘mh aced Anti - Revolutionaries. Christian Historicals, Catholics and | Libe This group has 61 votes in | the new parliament, exactly the same |as in the old. | But under the system of propor- | tional representation existing in Hol- | land, there is no joint policy of the coalition. Instead each party acts independently in propagating its own particular creed. Another result of proportional rep- yesentation has been the elimination of by-elections. If a member dies, or resigns, his place is simply taken by the next candidate on the par- ticular political list. It is impossible, however, for a candidate to obtain tion on a minority of the total votes cast as is often the case in the United States and Great Britain. Another peculiar feature of Dutch procedure is that members of the cabinet need not necessarily be dep- s—in fact most of the ministers are not members of the chamber. Dinioe Sugar Cane Makes Board early as Hard as Oak York, Aug. 24. (P—Syn. boards harder than nataal pine, although made of cornsta ks and sugar cane, are credited to inventive genius of a group young New Yorkers in a report the New York Testing lahoratories. The report says that the corn- stalk boards have a hardness 685 compared with 490, the h ne: of pine. boards rate at is 965 | New thetic of ame scale The merman, Lichtenberg developers are M. Al Hawerlande and Nathaniel Sin Rat Killing Secret | Dies With Inventor | Houston, Tex., Aug (U — | The secret of exterminating rats vy the hundreds has been | the grave by the Pie Houston Andrew Schroeder, time of his death was employed as the official rat killer of Houstor, won worldwide recognition a few vears ago when he exterminated thousands of rats during the New Orleans bubonic plague scare. Schroeder has a special method by which the rats were driven from buildings 1nto the street to aie, and he never told tne secret of his art. of 1, who at tne CAN YOU e day rable [ must be bo often a laige part of the officinl sources discussing 1} It contains ase and how for 1t: mes are nt with 1 nts in som total cutlay interesting le question the info moncy just pure the 18 send - — — — — =CLIP COC |1u. 13 FINANCING EDITOR, New Yurk Avenue. to everybody paid out of the and of borr tion bor Washington Washington, SWING own needs e hon attaining this nancial assistance, The amount W tively small, but ton Bureau has compiled bulletin on Home Financ- money for purchase of a on 1 go about the out the coupon below and % de- Very ses a1 Washin or Our valual Fill you rowed PON HERE — — — — Bureau, New Britain Heral 7. W ' l I want a copy of the bulletin HOME FINANCING, and enclose herewith five cents in coin or loose, and handling costs: uncan; postige NAME | STREET AND NUMBER I Ty 1 am a reader of the NEW the | thinks | in Filipino | | (‘Fontaine Fox. 1929 | West Toonerville News Item ‘ ABE WORTLE INVITEP A FEW FRIENDS OVER To BE | PRESENT WHEN HE PASSED UP To THE AITY FELLER THE FoRKFUL OF HAY WITH THE BEES NEST IN IT. elled U. S. po: mps, to cover