New Britain Herald Newspaper, April 10, 1930, Page 6

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New Britain Herald HERALD PUBLISHING COMPANY New Britain, Connecticut Tssusd Dally (Sunday Excepted) At Herald Bidg., €7 Church Stree BUBSCRIPTION RATES 35.00 & Year $2.00 Three Months 6. & Month Entered at the Post Office at New Britain a» Second Clam Mall Matter. TELEPHONE CALLS Rusiness OMce . 325 Editorial Rooms .... 926 The only profitable acdvertising meditm in the City. Circulation books and press room always open to mdvertisers. Member of the Associated Press The Asmsociated Press {s exclumv titled to the nse for re-publication of all mews credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and alwo local news published therein. Member Audit Burean of Circulation The A. B. C. 1s a national organization which furnishes newspapers and adver- tisera with a strictly honest analysis of circulation. Our circulation statistics are based upon this audit. This insures pro- | tection againat fraud In newspaper dis- tribution figures to both national and loca) advertisers, The Herald is on sale daily York &t Hotaling’s Newestand, Square; Bchultz's Newsstand, Grand Central, 42nd Btreet. n New | Times i Entrance Mr. Coolidge scems to have suc- cceded in writing a 500-word history of the United States. But a 500-word history of the Donough battle tion. recent Quigley-Me- is out of the ques- | Spring will not hiousecleaning in this city | be confined to the homes. | There is City Hall, for inst e, due to undergo personnel repairs of the most exlended nature, with the Democratic chairmen, efc., hurry- | ing to rush out of the building be- | fore th goes tepublican vacuum into clean- | er action From what we t this | M McDonough's trousers didn't help | him any, time, that well-pressed crease on Whenr all is said that can be ut- | tered, Mr. Quigley at heart is some- | thing of a Democrat in his political ; philosophy. He not officiaily subseribe to the teachings of | fersonian principles, but el the Republican organization doesn’t deceive 1tself thinking Mr Quigley has become a hide-bound hard-shelled Republican. Tn somé re- does we hop = | | spects he is as good a Republican as | Senator Norris of Nebraska The prohibition returns from Mid dietown, Conn., are esceptionally | interesting. Here is a Connecticut | like | no exceptionally proportipn of forcign population in | i, and with a prohibition newspaper strongly entrenched in Yet the Digest city which, is not others, some of the with large its regard. poll in the r 18 375 for repeal, 237 f cation for retention of the | | amendment | city so | or modifi- | and 196 THE SCHOOL- EXHIBIT ENGENDERS PRIDE The education exhibit of the N« Britain publ way. Fri week, ening, public unique oppor- tunity to gauge the manifold activi- w : schools is now under m now until the end of the | afternoon and the will have a ties of modern youth in the schools. to judge the product of their and to mentally note the educationa | advantages of today—from the mentary grades skill up—with the more crude methods of The exiibit, which is shown in the two large gymnasiums of the Senior high school, and which also includes a generation ago. exercises in the auditorium each afternoon and evening, is truly o re- markable ymposium of youthful en- deavor. Ten year o hibit was held; today, a smaller ey with incre: fecilities for projecting such an ex- hibition, 1t into of astounding proportions. has grown a thing One cannot help concluding passing through modern oducational superior to the old. The imagination of the child has This s self-evident kindergarten, of the exhibit, tha: methods much freer play even in the te ideas | where the cute toddiers is cxpressed in visuai form; and in the lower grades where study is intertwined with play, and in which arts and crafts becom integral part of the advanci i riculum. The veioped ng ¢ educat into o bett inculcatios human knowle sub-normal, the those who for & fered a carlier years, are looke understanding ar And the glows in the enthusi the voungsters face of who recognize in he school ex- ty lemonstrate hibit an opportu | to admiring parents ay ihlic | generally : It cellences that the ance at the buildi pride of the just how smart is a gratifying tribute of army of children versal in them loyalty the child matehes £ the zbounding the ne o collegian. Ther, prid hy their pare And such entertainment auditoriumm programs! ‘What wealth of talent there is in this city. Not only in young players of musical instruments, who make up in en- thusiasm and energy what ma lacking from the standpoint, but in the dramatics, craft work, clogging clubs, gymnas- tic tumbling, the harmonica club, health plays, glee clubs, a|or so ago was busy trying to keep King George's snout out of the Chicago school books,” is said to have given Mrs. McCormick whole- hearted support; and in addition to Mrs. McCormick's late husband's paper—the Tribune—she the unstinted suppoit of the Hearst pgper in Chicago. y ve highly artistic Chicago had handicraft | Incidentally, these two newspapers dripping wet. Mrs. McCormick. onally and political- {1v dry,” evidently not agreeing with late husband publisher to the slightest degree on clubs, pageants, drills, folk dancing |are and a myriad of other matters that would take paragraphs to enumer- ate. These however, i ther activities develop good this question. | Also, a goodly proportion of the Re- | publicans of Tllinois who nominated | ner must be among those who have voted the citizenship, sound morality, idealism pride in the city and its advantag and than do more for Americanism reams of tall for repeal or modification in | Digest it v | peculiar situation there Literary The but Every year should be such poll is @ an be themsely exhibit work entaile great, the results spe he prohibition question. however, s In is likely to form an important issue coming senatorial election in Mrs. McCormick is Senate truth the can i peated that more the public [in the knows about its schools the more | Hlinois. not yet and to get there she to defeat James Hamilion veteran Democrat and an up- who already the efficient will the schools become, in the WETS SHOULD NO' “ENDANGER CONSTITUTION" Some wet of | wilt nav Lewis | standing wet never straddles | Mr. | make prohibition Lewis is preparing to main World Court. re so incensed at the presence of the 15th Amendment in issue the Constitution that t to Mrs. e in favor of a movement to call a | McCormick’s late husband's paper, the Tribune, will not change its op- rather than the ley appear constitutional that historic convention to revise s position to prohibition. MR. TINKHAM IN ACTION rescntative Tinkham of Massa- chusetts, Republican, wet and pic- Constitution, | turesque in demcanor, has an easy largely following the draft of James |time of it in denouncing the Metho- | Fortunately i Whenever idea has been | brought forward in responsible wet | quarters it has been frowned down. Article V of their number are few. the the | | it is beginning to have that effect.| | that has been | The opponents claim {invalid | memorials to it Madison, provides: The Congress of the several shall call a convention for proposing amend- ments (to this Constitution), which iail be valid fied by the legislatures fourths of the conventions in three-fourths there- states. whe of several states n three- or by o But From the time the has never been done adopted to the present day, the mosi about changing to add done the Constitution has been amendments without the formalities of a convention. To call a constitu- tional convention and perchance 1e- has never met at write the instrument with any The enough popular approval one time the idea ove is that 10 pu would in fear such action put the entive Constitution jeopardy Yet the legislatures of 35 states, or more than two-thirds, have at on time or another memorialized gress to call such a convention proponents of that all a convention memorials ave valid. that obsolete claim these most Also, are because purposes of many such as popular election of senators and woman suff e, have been met rag (ongress usually considers that lapse with the Con- gress fo which they are presented. “The Supreme Court has not ruled di- ut rectly on the question in v. Gloss neld that Article V implies that ameadments to the Constitution must be ratified within a rea: nable time after they have been proposed s pre emand for Once, after the Tilden-Ha idential controversy, the a constitutional convention was strong, and no less a personage than the Senator of Kan- in Con- which the state legislatures famous Inga sas introduced a resolution gress by were urged to apply for a constitu- tional convention. Each state was to elect two delegates at large and one from each of its congressional dis tricts*No federal or state office-hold- er was to be The, eligible held Chief conven- tion was to be in Columbus, Ohio, and Justice of the side. provide the ipreme Court was 10 pu The did not be counted Ingalis resolution how votes were 10 but in the Constitutional Convention of the state delegations voted as units and each state had one vote Today, as a comcomitant of the 18th has controversy over the Amend- similar been Dby ment, a idei safed the wl disaifecte is only practical way to out of the Con- 13 in mendnient it Leing possible for tes to block its removal manner it was there. la put a September, it will be remember sislature of Wisconsin memo- ed (Congress for sucn an ndment it it is not clear whether a constitutional convention could e lin to consideration of & 15th t. The Associa Amendmen tion Opposed 1o Prohtbition cndment would not support a olution in the Now York Legisi nstitutional con the entire docu- gitation con- populous tvet that the Wis- consin i (] ILUINOIS “DRY" YOTE leCormi most con publicans Nations, azainst lon Con o Ihomp | a year Constitution was | Con- | The | the | of the memorials, | Dillon | al | dist Board of Temperance, Prohibl- tion and Public Morals and the Fed- on the applica- | ora) Council of Churches. tion of the legislatures of two-thirds | Mr. Tinkham is not likely to lose | | votes in his district because of his It verbal activities. he were to do s0, and despite |;m ardent believer in personal libes- | ty. he would be more discragt. Now, if Mr. Tinkham, instead of Leing from a Massachusetts district three out of four| {in which every | persons agree asith from, him, were &/ | congressman Ohio, | overwhelmingly say, Columbus, Methodists the where the are | in ! majority, or it he were from some other district where there were continual doubts as | to whether the drys or the wets were | predominan: | i would Mr. {ham do about it? He would straddle the fence and take care not to what Tin i 1 | i utter a word that | his | might churehly hurt the feelings of constituents. { 1 R GULATING HOURS OF LABOR | A question such as introduced for | discussion by tepresentative Gif- | ford of Massachusetis in Congress |the other day | avility of regarding the advis- a federal law te regulate of labor in industry, was certain {o materialize | the state |and confrol the hours in face of wide divergencies of Jaws affecting industry | | A few Mr. Gifford's | [thesis would have been considered | | radical. Today it is at 1e | ted vears ago st admit- | that there is a possibility of some such action being taken in nearby | Under vears | stales | least | present with modern, labor conditions laws—at | more or less modern—are at a dis- | with | |states which avoid “heckling” in-| |tinct disadvantage compared {dustry in order to attract manufac- turing plants. hat is one of the reasons why so many textile plants have moved from New England to the South. One needs oniy to read ments the advertise- of southern municipalities to the states and that one of rveliances to attract north- ern industries is the promise of an of learn main labor laws which are supposed to “hamper North industry in | Bug- | hard hit | the ! Massachusetts. of New especially the land sta from this species of competition. The state's 45-hour law for women | |and minors. and the prohibition of | night work for women, laws and | Were conceived {o safeguard women children from exploitation, cspecialiy m the textile industry. This indus i try for vears has heen endeavoring | [to secure the repeal of these laws; {and being unsuccesstul, many plants | been removed to the South, | here are no limits to the | working hours of women chil- dren | The and strain upon industy having cnlightened labor laws | ¥ : | grows continually in the face of competition in states lacking such laws. Just now the gr atest strain is| in the testile industry: but there is {no guarantee that as the hoad- vances mdustrially North ot indus- | tri the 1 not share the | ederal Government were | mpowered to set a labor standard | workers it would be| for for ot bic to do so 11 labor. Although | 1nufaciurers not at present suffer- itense competition from indus- | 1 states lacking adequate abor | hot feel inclined to favor | power re are some manufacturers in h business who are not atly cd at such a prospect hat newly-made indus- in the South gradually {will adopt higher labor standards I but there are Union d there will aways be some. witiin the ntury Jhold rorth sped competition in order | 0 | Sunday. him in some place. lits | evenine. dustricg Rep. Gifford thinks that only federal regulation can achieve the purpose he believes necessary to stabilize the working conditions of the people. We are not prepared at this mo- ment to agree or disagree, but that the question he has raised will grow in importance as the years pass we have no doubt. Facts and Fancies PR 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, Washing- ton, D. C.. enclosing two cents in stamps for reply. Medical, legal and marital advice cannot be given, nor can extended research be under- taken. All other questions will re- ceive a personal reply. Unsigned re- quests cannot be answered. All let- ters are confidential.—Editor. Q. What causes Do they occur in all parts world ? A. An carthquake is a vibration, or sudden undulation of a portion of the earth’s crust, a shaking of the ground. The vibration advances in a series of waves from one Or more deeply situated central points, called foci, where it may arise from the splitting of a mass of rock, due to contraction of fhe earth’s crust, or from volcanic or other causes. The disturbance may consist of a single shock iasting a few seconds, or of a iseries of shocks, which may con- tinue for days or even weeks. No part of the globe is entirely free | from earthquakes but they are more | frequent near volcanic regions. Q. Did President with the Pope? A. When he went to Rome, at the time of the Peacd Conference, President Wilson called on the Pope t the Vatican. By Robert Quillen First twin beds, then a two-car! garage, then two-timing. Liquor may be depressing. as Lhe doctors say. Even the discussion of An educated man is one who can | nzme the other Senator from Idahn. 1t should be recarded in common fairness that some of fhe othes Amendments haven't 4orked in years. earthquakes? of the Cussing the Digest because peopla don’t vote right is at least as sensi- ble as blaming the president for crop surplus. If there isn't anything in tele. pathy, how does a committee of club women know which morning you didn't have time to shave? Still, so long as one can hang a jury, the cost of a mistrial isn't ba- vond the reach of our sturdy middle class. Propaganda. The other side pre- | sented so convincingly it makes yon mad. ‘Wilson visit Some modern kids are rude, course, but there are others that are careful not to correct their par-| Q. On what day did the 25th of ents in public. July 1902, fall? = | A, Monday Americanism: A growing tenden-| Q. What countries of cy to give the little fellow a break | have negro rulers? —even to giye the farmer relief — A. The Republic of Haiti, the ecause vou can't clip wool if yo1|Republic of Liberia and the Empire don't feed the sheep. of Abyssinia in Africa. S Q. Why is Pennsylvania called will regret abolishing the Kevstone State? The best citizens backslide| A. Because it is the central state when they have no reason o dress|of the original thirteen, which may Uloncols vk {be iikened to an arch, of which the center or keystone holds all the rest {in place. Q. Ts it possible for a Chinaman to be a citizen of the United States? A. Chinese cannot become natural- ized American citizens, but those who are born in the United States are citizens, and as such they enjoy that the world | | | | Don't worry. Vending machines may in time do all of the sellin but they can't replace men as col- lectors. Then there's a more charitabls school that thinks Menclien may at | ! : q cxen may &b 121l the rights and privileges that way because a pin is stickiug| %/ (8 PELER ANC PV Q. What form of does Ukrainia have? A. Tt is one of the constituent republics of the Union of Socialist Soviet Republics (Russig The Soviet Socialist Republic of Ukrainia was former after the Soviet revolu- tion ¢f November 7. 1917. Q. Did the United States own Mexico?, A. No. Q. Has Germany a king? . A, Germany is a republic like the United States, and at the head of the state is a president. The president of the German Republic is Paul von Hindenburg. Q. Has President Hoover sisters or brothers? A. He has one brother Q. How s one billion written in the system of numeration in the United States? A, 1.000,000,000 Q. Do deep sca fishes burst tolerant. Then what of officials Drousht suddenly to the surface? who favor Prohibition and don't| A. The air bladder will burst if S e S the fish is raised rapidly to the surface. They may be drawn up slowly with success. Q. What is personal property? A. Tt is property which may at- tend the person of the owner, mov- ables such as household furniture, jewelry, cash, notes, bonds, mort- sages. automobiles; practically everything except real estate, Q. What is the value of a United States. two-cent piece dated 18647 A. 2 to 10 cents. Q. Was Lindbergh the first cross the ocean in an airplane? A. The first crossing in an air- plane was made in 1919. Lindbergh was the first person to cross the ocean with a single motored plane. the first to cross alone, the first to make a flight from New York to| fighter, was a visitor in town foday. | Paris, and the first to make a non- He Tas fought 14 times since latt|stop flight from the United States to June. : 5 . | During the year 1 ar- What do the names Elms, rests were made in this city. accord- | Bonnie and Merritt mean? ing to the annual report of Chixt| A. Flms living at the William Rawlings Jonnie, gay or beautiful; The baseball scason will reward od up on Good Friday at Q. ler's park. The A, 0. H. nounce the Knights of government Still, if our ancestors didn't hany from a limb by their feet, why do men enjoy sitting with their fest higher than their heads? A New York banker paid a for- {une for an ancient paper. Othar bankers who nad too much investel i antique paper are looking fo: jobs, ever Parents who permit their infant ta drive the might make it| casier by giving him the dictionary | ta sit on if they had a dictionary. an The Governcr of IMlorida instruc- ted sheriffs to force Capone out of the state. He won't tolerate any- body who doesn't respect the order- 1 processes of law. sister and one but say doesi't he It he favors liquor use it personally, they if | is Correct this straw vote isn't going my way." sail the an. “but I still believe it's on the level.” . sentence “That Copyright. 1950, Publishers ndicate 25 Years jgé Today e The first annual report of the milk inspector shows that this city consumes 10,000 quarts of mili Gaily. There are 112 parties whe have permits to peddle milk Tommy Connelley, tamous priza 30, to past 0 cims; Merritt be open- Rentsch- team wil the Golden How does Itudy Vallee his name? Val-ley, accent syllable. Q. How old is Mary Pickford? A. She was born April §, 1893 pro- | meet lagle. The German Rifle club formally opened the shooting scuson vester- on first |lers, the Dunlaps | house pain so convincingly | | per publisher and | tion New York, April 10.—Once an aristocratic driveway | connecting Central Park with Riverside Drive, West Seventy-Second street has be- come publicized as The Street of Scandals. Fifteen years ago it shal- tered the Nathan Strauses, the Huy- and qhers of wealth, known for their philanthro- pics While here and there it retains tcuches of former Opulence, th> character of its four-block length has greatly changed. Among iis fading glories the fashionable Da- kota apartment house remains — the only one in town with an ex- pansive sweep of lawn and a tun- nelled arcade of private shops un- derneath. i Innumerable brown stone fronts and grilled mansions have been tora away to make room for towering and ornate apartment hotels. Seven have arisen in one block in four years. Table d’hote cafes, quick lunches, beau‘y salons, tea rooms and such are in profusion. Several cheaper apartment houses are filled with high flying chorus girls, gigolos and those neglig=: ladies known as tkeptces. In the area are also several apartmenis listed as “houses of call.” Broad- way's professional gamblers hold forth there, too- One apartment building on West 724 street—whnich changed its nam: since the murder—was owned U the late Arnold Rothstein and was his home before the assassin's bul- let laid him low. Another apartmer! was the scene of the Irank Tinney-Imogene Wilson cp:- sode, which spread the first pages E. W. Browring. the gray-hair millionaire Romco, had his real cs tate offices on 72d and lived there during the exziting t€bloid exp ures of his vdtious marital differ- | ences with the now famous| “Peaches.” Browning owns several buildings along the strip. A private house on the thorough fare is reputed the location of onc of the most select from beer o cointreau spcak-casies in all the tewn. Not even the bona-fide “members” are permitted o pass through its portals unless in formai cress. Drug addicts, driven to desperd- tion by craving. often execute whx the underworld calls “wing dings That they simulate epileptic seizures along the street in hope that arriving ambulance doctors will administer hypodermic injec- tions as first aid. Some of the *'wing ding” artists ave able to portray they fool ex- peris, The late Harry Tammen, newspa- circus man of Texas Guinan, in- “Hello Sucl- roni s Denver, and vented the i Tammen was greefing « in this fashion long before York had a night club. Mary Deriens, one of own women fiction, w resigned a magazine post 1o wril. | Miss Dericux won unusual distin:- | tion in the editing ficld as an expert | “blue penciler.” She could cut fic- to suit any space requirement without sacrificing its rhythm. not salutation the by i iters, has released all over the land do their own plugging. To the gentleman back of me who hummed all the tunes while they were being sung in a revue last night: I'm simply furious at you! “It occurs to me," writes R. D. “that you column lads are af- flicted with an cgoistic malady that breaks out in a rash of I's. After reading so many of you for so long I am unable 10 taix about anybody but myselt. What do you take fo: b 4 What are you offering? (Copyright, 1930, McNaught Syndicate, Inc.) CONTRIBUTED (Contributed by Charles F. Con- lon on the golden wedding anniver- sary of Mr. and Mrs. Willlam Simp- somy April 7, 1930.) FIY YEARS AGO the s As I it tonight, My thoughts they stray away, Over the ocean dark and blue, in shadows alone To ‘bless you till you die. A light that shines down through the years, Through sorrow, weal and woe, To make you lovers just the same, As fifty years ago. And when at last the trail reached, When the work for the day is o'er, May an angel come and beckon you. To cross to the further shore. May you walk hand in hand, and side by side, With never a thought of woe, To finish a journey you started then, Just fifty years ago. Observations On The Weather ‘Washington, April 10.—Forecast for Southern New England: Fair topight and Friday, rising tempera- ture; gentle variable winds becom- ing moderate to fresh southeast. Forccast for Eastern New York: Fair; warmer tonight; Friday partly cloudy, warmer in uth portion; moderate to fresh south and south- west winds. ‘orecast for New Haven and vicinit; Fair and warmer tonight and Friday. Conditions: High pressure covers the Atlantic coast states. An oval shaped depression is central over Minnesota. Pressure is high over the Pacific Northwest. Temperatures are rising rapidly over the upper Mississippi and Ohio valleys and the Lake region. A few light showers were reported from scattered stations. Conditions favor for this vicinity fair weather with slowly rising tem- perature. | With measurcd steps and slow, | Just fifty years | But in its place a blessing comes, Those pale piano pounders who | sat all day cross-legged and with a| drooping cigarette sagging from the | cerner of the mouth have almost | been méchanized out of existence in | the cubicle song sheet shops dotting Broadway. The radio now squawis | the sidewalk ballyhoo Song plugging, too. is dying cf slow strangulation. The talkic is blamed. Big song hits are now talk- ie theme songs, and when they ar. Temperatures vesterday: High D) b6 38 42 w0 64 i 0 62 70 8 50 10 46 8 Back to your wedding day. And T sec a church on a little knoll, Bathed in a hallowed glow, he spot where both of you wed, Just fifty vears ago. Low Atlanta ...... 53 Atlantic City . Boston ...... Buffalo ...... Chicago Cincinnati ... Denver Duluth 3 Hatteras ... Los Angeles Miami Minneapolis Nantucket Nashville ew Haven New Orleans New York . Norfolk, Va. .. Northfield, Vt. were And I heard the song of the meadow | * ldk, In the field beside the way, For the sun shone bright' and sky was blue, To bless your wedding day. And T watched you enter the little thur the To plight your wite, troth as man and ago. And now today in your little home, That nestles on the plain, Portland, Me. Surrounded by friends you love the |St. Louis best, | Washington ... The scene comes back again. | And T sec you smile a happy smile, Though tears unbidden flow, Bucharest, April 10 (P—Queen When you think of-the day, when|yfarie, it was announced today, will o wed. {arrive shortly from Istambul. Prin- LN YRV RIS da | cess Ileana remained at Cairo, from s bt clings around the pas, | e She Will visit Palestine dur- : 2 '|ing the Holy Week with the Ru- To the youthful days of yore, | 3 When iife: Sag vourEan | ‘mm\s(er to Egypt, Philips light, atcvery. That never come no more. Ior age creeps on with steady tread, 1“]";’;‘5::\*(':“ "x;i:;:h“;ad”:‘:r'::"i It's not a friend—but foe & A Rl e |there incognito. Queen Marie and L A S G |the princess previousty were under- | stood to have cancelied their Holy |Land trip upon. representations of the British government that condi- lmms there were not yet safe. 34 38 74 38 QUEEN RETURNING HOME spirits ou had, From Ged who reigns on high, A beacon light of love and faith, CHICKENS o the urge to poultry start & small you want all the information on the can get. Our Weshington Bureau has time condensed bulletin on the subject that gives the fundamentals of chicken raising and cgg production. Al about peultry houses and fixtures, hatching and breoding. chicken feeding, faticning pouliry, killing, dressing and packing, marketing, poultry dis- easce. and other facts, including a lMst ot literature on the subject. If you are interestec in chicken raising Al the coupen below and send for this hulletin: vou raise farm for subject poultry a comprehensive get you do, that yeu and at the same profit? 1t raising out — = e = =CLIP COUPON HERE === == o o fi POULTRY EDITOR 1322 New York Washington Bureay, New Britain Herald, Avenue, Washington, D. C. < of the bulletin POULTRY FARMING, to cover return postage and T want with & cop and enclose here- five cents handling costs: NAME STREET L NUMBER GEPERS At STATE l I am a reader of the New Britain Herald, - —— — —————— -/ JIMMY COULPN'T UNDERSTAND, WHY HIS DAD SHELLED OUT SO CHEERFULLY - === REV, €. W. ABEL DEAD Tondon. April 10 (P—Rev., Charles William Abel, widely known indus- trial missionary whose work at Kwato, Papua. in the south s largely supported by the Guinea Evangelization society 156 Fifth avenue, New York, at Woolwich last night as a of a motor accident monthz, | Abel arrived in England only a i e A few weeks agd from a \isit to the T y \ e United States. He was born in Lon- Upsala Glee Club Will don in 1862 and went to New| Give Concert in Church |Guinea for a London missionary so- | Under the auspices of the Luther |ciety in 1880. Besides introducing | league the Upsala Glee club will |industries Abel was a greatl sports-| give a goncert in the Iirst Luther-|man and trained native football | an church, Monday night, April 21.[cricket teams which often Deat | The last time the glee club pre- [ white visiting teams. | sented a concert prograni in this| His wife is an Austra city the audience was so well pleas- |sons and daughters are ed that it requested a return cn- | Kwato. zagement. Three New Britain boys are members of the chorus. BIRTHS AT HOSPITAL A daughter was born to Mr. and | Mrs. Joseph Rubenstein of 42 Vance strcet at New Britain General hos- pital today. A son was Raymond 7. pital day .afternoon. A number of good scores were recorded. The Stanley Rule & Lev pany is building an addition steel shed on Whiting street The Business Men's club will hold annual election of this com- to its seas New of | died | sult The building that' many new residences ard erected during inspector buildin; actoric the coming repor:y both for will bhe an. now el Two | at Husband at Hollywood Hollywood. April 10 (UP)—John| McCormick today confirmed the re- Gy that he and his wife, Colleen Moore, film star, have scparated Mr and Mrs.| "It is true that have scparat of 903 Tast!ed.” he said. “but I feel that Mrs.| General hos- [McCormick should make any state- ments that are to be made.” Miss Moore could not be reached She and McCormick worked cessfully together for several ‘Hc was her business manager. born to Grasser Britain we w today. United per cent of the virgin tin it con- umes, Th of 1 Statez produces 1-20 | sue CFontaine Fox, 1930 £y

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