New Britain Herald Newspaper, January 28, 1921, Page 10

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“~TSTATE OFFICES =) ) "For tion eonstipation 8, physics. 80 a laxative pep. g aromatics last an aver- the largest REE and address trial bottle of s me Dr, Washington now and it is mhardt, tho overed a &y rgeon’s knife pe from tho because you W treatment rdt's HEM- At is Internal. yoars he dis- of piles and compounded remove the every suffer- overy and so abting or delay. all druggists HEM-ROID N do as stat- s every suf- ckage of Dr. today BAG See How ieves in briskly, and n delicious, th u.kel its place. te ointmen Use i innnz not blister. es use Muster their patients, u 'hl! relief il theater) ow, Sat- . partments to WILL BE COMBINED| Plan to Have Eleven Branches Instead ol 92 | Hartford, Jan. 2 A commission appuinted by the general assembly of 1919 to draw up a new civil adminis- trative code In order to bring about | a consolidation of state departments reported to the present general assem- bly today a bill for a new code. It provides for the creation of 11 de- replace the present 92 state commissions, departments and boards, Governor Lake in message recommended that the state rdministration 1eorganized in the rest of efficiency and economy. Un- der a proposed code the departments would be those of agriculture, bank- ing, education., highways, insurance, labor and industries, public health, public welfare, public works and buildings, revenue and taxation, and motor vehicles, each under a commis- sioner All other commissions or boards would be abolished or trans- formed into “adviscry and non-execu- tive boards” of the 11 departments. The commission report a bill to carry the changes into effect in de- tail, making provision also for the period during which the new depart- ments wotlld be organized. In pre- vious general assemblies there have becn efforts made to consolldate. de- partments but with little success. The commission report goes to a special committee of the present assembly | for consideration. / his inaugural Question Arises In Los Angeles As to | { Whether Church Rules Are Violated. Los Angeles, Jan. 28.-—The ques- tion of whether a canon of the Pro- testant Episcopal church had been violated in the marriage of Dupont of Wilmington, Del, and Miss Jessie D. Ball of Los Anxdcl last Saturday may not be decided for several weeks Bishop Joseph H. John- son of the dioecese of J.os Angeles, sald last night. The Rev. Baker P. Leé, who per- | formed the ceremony, said he was prepared to defend his action before an ecclesiastical tribunal. He declared he had made inquiries and had a sworn statement concerning the al- leged circumstances of Mr. Dupont’s divorce in the light of which he felt Justified in performing the marriage. Fresh eggs, 76c doz. Russell Bros. —advt, TURKS GET INVITATION. Will Consider Sending Representa- tives to Conference in London. Constantinople, Jan. 28.-—Accept- ance of the invitation from the su- preme Allled council to send Turkish representatives to a conference in London beginning February 21 at which a revision of the Sevres treaty | will be considered, was announced by | the sultan's government today. | The government also promised to | transmit a most urgent invitation to Angora asking Mustapha Kemal Pa- sha, or some other representative of the Turkish nationalist government to pnrm-umtv in the conference. Campaign for Mcmbers Bring Total to 1,000 By The New Britain Aerie of Eagles, at their meeting last night. had as their guests State Vice-Prasident Mar- tin Johnson of Hartford and tate Trustee J. Moran of ' Meriden. On February 12 Judge A. B. Duncan of St. Joseph, Mo., will speak at Tur- ner hall under the auspices of the lodge. The May July 1. local aerie is growing rapidly and members are campaigning for enough new members to touch the 1,000 mark by July 1. III\SE—D\IH»WI'“O\I The marriage of Miss Beda Dahl- strom and Willlam Hesse took place at the home of the bride’s sister, Mrs. George Comstock of Maple Hill on Thursday evening. The ceremony was performed by Rev. Willlam Ross in the presenco of the :mmediate rela- tives and friends, Mr. and Mrs. Hesse will reside on Homecrest avenue, Ma- ple HIIL SOCOIAL AT CHURCH. The Young People’'s department of the Methodist church Sunday school will have a soc this evening, the feature of which will be a pageant entitled *“Crossroads House.” There are 12 people in the cast. Later a varied program will be carried out and r«{rv-hml-nl« served. CASTORIA For Infants and Children In Use For Over 30 Years Alny-bo-n d / m-_...,, Alfred l\ GONFESSES T0 MURDER ‘ 24-year-old Negro Admits He Killed [ in New | i York Last February. 5 f New York, Jan. resumed examination rawn, negro, who is alleged to have | confessed last night to the killing af | 18-year-old Ream Constance Hoxle.| in her home here in February, 1920. | | | | Ream Constance Hoxie 28.—Police today of James After having been positively identi- fled as the assailant of Mrs. Loretta | Smith, 24, who was attacked and stabbed in her home several weeks | ago, Brown, who was arrested on a | charge of burglary, told the police, they said, that he committed the Hoxie murder, Police said Brown was Incorrect as to details in describing the Hoxie murder, and for this reason they were inclined to disbelieve his story, GAME IS CANCELLED Bristol West Ends Call Off Tonight's Game and Management Secures X. Y. Team of Hartford. The West Ends of Bristol this morning cancelled the basketball game, scheduled for this city tonight under the auspices of the American Legion. At such short notice, the manage- ment was unable to secure a team from further away than Hartford and the X. Y., under the leadership of Hap Harmon, will take the floor against the locals when the whistle Wholesale Business in Fake Slips Is joing on in Greece. Athens, Jan. (By Associated Wholesale frauds in passports arried on by Greek subjects emigrat- ing to the United States have been dis- covered by W. L. Lowrie, American consul generai here. More than 50 passports were submitted at ‘he con- ulate today for American vises and 25 Wwere found to bear forged signatures and false seals of the Greek immigra- tion authorities. It has been found that a small clique of Greeks has carried on a regular traffic in bogus passports, their clents | being youths wishing to evade military service and others desiring to go to America. Steamers bound for New York from Greek ports are being held pending an inquiry. 27, ‘ress.) DE VELERA RETURNING. Will Be Back In Ireland Within Next 24 Hour's, Is Report. Paris, Jan. 28 (By Associated Press) —Eamonn De Valera, who has been making a brief visit to France will be back in Ireland within 24 hours, it was declared here today by Sean O'Ceallaigh, who is representative in France of the Irish republican move- ment. He said De Valera was expect- ed to arrive in Dublin today or at the latest by tomorrow forenoon. No effort had been made by the Irish republican leader while he was in France to see Premier Lioyd George, declared O'Ceallaigh nor had any attempt been made to bring the Irish question before the supreme council. MOONSHINERS BOOMING. During Past Year 9,401 Tllicit Sulls Were Raided in Southern District. Louisville, Jan. 28.—A total of 9,- 401 fllicit stills were captured and 5,- 328 arrests were made during the year 1920 in the southern prohibition district which comprises the states of Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Kentucky and Tennessee, according to figures made public to- day by S. R. Brame, supervising agent of the district. Of the arrests Kentucky had 1,182. Prosecutions, the report said, re- sulted in fines aggregating $288,585 and imprisonments totalling 2,378 months. Fresh eggs, —advt. 76c doz. Russell Bros: MISSING VASE FOUND. New York, Jan. 28.—The $5,000 Sevres vase, lost in transit after its presentation by the President of France to James A. Flaherty, su- preme knight of the Knights of Co- lumbus, has been found in Constan- tinople, a message received here to- day sald. It had been placed by mistake in a shipment of furnishings for the knights club there. 69TH REGIMENT BAND HERE SUNDAY AFTERNOON Due, doubtless, to the self-repressing influences of her earlier Irish ancestry, Hazel Moore, the young American | soprano, whose songs will be heard here Sunday afternoon at the Lyceum theater with the 69th Regiment band | is an excellent exponent of the Gospel of Restraint. p Tickets for this great treat are now on sale at Pierce’s music store and at the box office after 1:30 tomorrow. T. & H. ANNUAL. The annual meeting of the stock- holders of the Traut & Hine manufac- | turing company will be held at the | office of the company on Tuesday, Feb- | ruary Stlg 2 p. m., for the election | of directors and to transact any other business proper to come before this meeting. Eggs are lower, Russell Bros. —4dv; e cm— WHITE MAN TALKS WITH DALAI LAMA " Engineer Spends Two Months in Forbidden Land of Tibet Calcutta, Jan. 28.—The first Euro- pean who has had an audience of the Dalai Lama of Tibet at Lhasa since Manning in 1811 has just returned here after two months' residence in the ‘“‘forbidden land.” He is J. Fairley, a telegraph engi- neer in the service of the government of India, who reports that the Tib- etan government is apparently anxi- ous for the country to be linked up by telegraph with India, and there are also faint signs, he thinks, of a desire for industrial advance on Eu- ropean lines. “A visit to Lhasa,” he says, *‘trans- ports one straight back to the mid- dle ages. There is no sanif&tion or drainage in Lhasa today and if it were not for its low temperature, owing to the fact that it is built on a plateau 11,000 feet high, its 20,000 inhabitants would quickly die of ty- phoid fever. “The audience of the Dalai Lama took place in the Norbulinga palace three miles outside the city. The re- ception hall was gorgeously decorat- ed in red and gold, with a magnificent silk canopy over ‘the throne on which the Lama was seated in European fashion. His Holiness wore an Ori- ental yellow-brown robe, and his hair was done in the familiar plaited } fashion of the Lamas. His galutation took the form of placing over my | arms extended in front of me a long silk 'shawl, which courtesy I returned by placing a silk shawl over the arm of His Holiness. “The Dalai Lama’s first question | concerned my age, and the second my wife’s age, and he showed great interest in my experiences on my journey. His Holiness gave me the same impression of gentle kindliness which T derived from all my contact with the Tibetans.” Mr. Fairley also visited the Coun- cil of Shapes, as Lhe Tibetan cabinet is called. “The Shapes,” he says, inquired anxiously if the war were now over and BEurope at peace again. After- ward, they invited me to a 24-course lunch. The only mishap was that my interpreter was so overcome with nervousness that he spilled the tea in the lap of one of the Shapes as he poured it.” Mr. Fairley also visited the Jo Kang, the Buddhist cathedral, where he found a bell left behind by the Capuchin fathers in 1745 when they abandoned their attempt to found a mission in Lhasa. “In front of the main altar,” Mr. i Fairley says, “stands 27 butter lamps of solid gold, 10 inches high. The figure of the Buddha is finely gilded and ornamented with gold and tur- —— Certain Relief From Rreaciaal | Asthn: Simple Home Treatment Makes Breathing Easy. Just because you start the day tired. life- ' less, worn-out from loss of rest and the diffi- cult breathing of miscrable Asthma—do not think you have to stay this way long. Be strong and well, breathe clearly and easily again by using this simple treatment known as Oxidaze, the prescription of a ‘Worcester, Mass., physician. For aany form of Asthma where the bronchial tubes are irritated, the breathing short and difficult, its healing, relieving ac- tion is really wonderful. Sufferers who can't breathe at night and who gasp for a good, clear brecath willi appreciate the relief and comfort Oxidaze gives. Oxidaze is a tablet made from essential oils. which, when the patient dissolves in the mouth, almost immediately soothes the irritation, clears out the choked up air passages and enables the sufferer to breathe easily and get a real comfortable night's sleep. It is sold by The Dickiason Co. and lead- Ing druggists who agree to refund the full purchase price of the first package to any sufferer who does not obtain lief. Asthmatic sufferers sl daze a trial. It is harmless and inexpensive. k quojse. In a corner close to the door , there is a large butter lamp of soltd silver, about two. feet in diameter and hree feet -in height. This' lamp (is| literally plastered to the wall by the filth left by millions of pilgrims, who have been in the habit for centuries of touching it in the course of their de- votions.” HER LOVE IS WANING. Pigmy Hippopotamus at New York Zoo Showing Dislike for Offspring. New York, Jan. 28.—The mother love of Geida, one of the six pigmy hippopotami in captivity is waning, and as a result her ten pound son who cam? into’ the world yesterday at Bronx Zoological park may ‘become the adapted child of Mrs. Baa, moun- tain goat, If Geida continues indifferent to her babe, officials at the park announced today they would place it in the loving care of Mrs. Baa who has proved a good mother to many goatlings. . MANY UNCLAIMED CHECKS. More Than 60,000 Naval Reservists . Have Failed to Get Their Pay. Washington, Jan. 60,000 checks on the national treas- | {ury for retainer pay due naval res- | ervists are unclaimed at the navy de- 28.—More than ! | i partment because of the failure of the * reservists to keep the department in- formed of their correct address, it was announced today. Numerous com- plaints have reached the department from men alleging failure to receive retainer pay, it was said, and in most cases the fallure was due to an in- correct address. —_— PLOW WORKS REOPEN. Racine, Wis,, Jan. 28.—The J. I. Case Plow Works, announced today that its plant would be reopened on a three day a week schedule effec- tive February 1. Five hundred men are affected. Eggs are lower, Russell Bros.—advt. Saturday Morning Savers for the Public THE CITY South Main, 3,000 POUNDS SMOKED SHOULDERS ..... 2,500 POUNDS FRESH SHOULDERS ....... 3,500 POUNDS LEAN PORK LOINS ....... MARKET Cor. Ash and Roberts Sts. w20C »18¢ w27¢C RIB ROAST BEEF LEAN PLATE BEEF »22¢C »10cC Loast.... »18¢ rowis ... ndDe 35¢ Round, Short, Sir- loin STEAKS, 1b Pure White LARD 21bs ™19¢ w 23C 25¢ 29¢ New Meaty PRUNES FRESH CcUT SPINACH, 4 qts. HEAVY GRAPE- FRUIT ... 4 for SUNKIST ORANGES, doz. 20,000 Ibs. Granulated 35¢| FRESH HAMS LOIN LAMB 15270 L IF&R'll;%fi b 180 e D L FORK ... m%(S)C, STEAK .... 1 C Creamery soereRbS S_C BALDWIN APPLES . YSuRNIPS, 4 e 1D NRRISINS . phe. 20C Fne Sugar Sl 44c PREMIER sALAD DRESSING ... 19€ anp 39¢€ FRESH CRACKERS .. *25¢ Vesoors 3 .‘.".'.‘ 25¢ BROKEN 4 Ibs 25 e Evaporated 2 cans MILK .o 3 » 50c > 35¢ = 25¢ 19¢ FANCY TOMATOES KARO SYRUP .. ..., Large Pea 2 ibs BEANS “TWO WEEKLY DELIVERIES TO BERLIN. PLENTY OF PARKING SPACE. TEL. 1118-3 NATIONALMEAT STORESCo. Better Meats . At Lower Prices 70 West Main St. Big Specials In Country Pork PORK SPECIALS —ALL DAY SPECIALS— BEEF SPECIALS PORK LOINS ............... 25c Ib | SIRLOIN, PORTERHOUSE, PORK SHOULDERS ........ 20c Ib FRESH SAUSAGE .......... 28 b | PRIME RIB ROASTS ROUND STEAK ........ 35c Ib 28¢ Ib | PRIME POT ROAST . 20c 1b 35¢ Ib LAMP SPECIALS SHOULDER LAMB ......... 25c Ib | VEAL ROASTS ....... 38c b [VEAL CHOPS ............... 3 5 C CHOICE YOUN G LAMB CHQPS .............. CHOICE FRICASSEE 38¢c Ib VEAL SPECIALS LEGS OF VEAL . .... 3¢ b 28¢ 1b 39c 1b »49c¢ l l i These Are a Few of thé” Values Your Cash Saturday -‘ t . Ashley’s ser il Sheep Lined: Coats $65 to $75 NOW $3 $60 to. $64 NOW 83 $55t0$58 NQO¥Y 80 t~3Hd NOW $ $46 to $48 NOW "'$40 to. $45 NOW Blne and Tair' WORKING SH $l 00 $4.00 and $4.50 - Domet Flannel .. $1.00 $1.50 and $2.00 { WOOL: HOSE } $1.00- $3.00 'FLANNEL SE $1.95 $2.00 and $2; SOFT CUFF S ‘ $1.00 $3.00 and $3.50 SOFT CUFF SH $2.15 $3.50 WHITE SOFT COLLAR SHIR $1.75 $3.00 RIBBED UNIO!

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