New Britain Herald Newspaper, January 2, 1922, Page 2

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e WRITING PAPER Every box of paper at half price Stationery Dept. The Dickinson Drug Co. 169-171 Main Street DON’T FORGET— Our Clearance Sale of Men’s Apparel offers DURABILITY " DESIGN COMFORT as well as - extreme value in price. HORE Hartford “It Pays To Buy Our Kind.” DECEASED KING FEARED NO. 13 Serbia’s Yenerable Ruler Had an Aversion for Tha@ Number Belgrade, Jan. 2.—Interesting de- talls have come to light respecting the late King Peter, Serbia's vener- able ruler and the ‘“grand old man” “.of Europe, who passed away in this city a short time ago. During his last illness the King| asked frequently for his son Alexan- der, who found it impossible to be with him because of his own serious {llness in Paris. He yas much at- tached to the Prince Regent and re- ferred to him as “my little Aleck.” He had the fullest confldence in him and during the last years of his life left the affairs of state entirely in his hands. He had been especlally anxious that his son should marry Princess Olga, daughter of the Czar of Rus- sla, but whatever prospect there was for the match disappeared in the murder of the beautiful Princess by the Bolsheviki. The King dled a poor man. What- ever personal possessions he had were lost during the traglc retreat to Corfu in the grim days of 1915 when the German hordes overran the little Siav state. When the correspondent asked one of the late monarch's old triends if the king had left any legacies, he replied: “Yes, a wooden grunk, a bedstead, a few ikons, a gregt character and an undying :*cryf' In the years preceding his il health it was one of the king's most cher-| ished hopes that might America. He was a great adm of the energy, industry and of the people of the United ¢ He felt that Serbia ow: to America for its che the rights of the smaller natic especlally for its support o Blavia's claims Conterence. T former President Wilson high | esteem. ' years King Peter ple -+ in remony Throughout hi was uitra-democratic and sir his tastes. e disliked and had a contempt for flattery and | compliments. He insisted that his meals consist of only one dish. his servants were His home in Re gardens Like most Siavs, superstitions He humber ‘13" fatal and begin a pr asked to explain his = pointed out that if the each of the great years destiny were counted up, they would | total 13" In ex cnse The Kking felt sure he was going to die in 1921, because the numerals 1, 9, 2, 1 totalled "'13 His prediction eame true. he considered was extremel the | uld never | When | serstition, he To Cure a Cold in One Day Take Laxative BROMO QUININ tablets. The genuina hears the nature of E. W. Grove. (Be sure get BROMO.) 30c. ‘ Women Beyond Pale Are Pivots Of Dramas 1 : (By James W York, from Dean New One | surmise rent ( allke—that the womar loves beyond the [1s a casual, |the contemporary life of Some might nary of the cur and fallure who lives and f convention pale common occurrence in Ameriea of these p point a moral ==that the w | In others, ¢ disrupte It {the final s of 8in is death nedy is fashioned from and broken he this upon a4 woman 1 home Arts in most curtal the of ease plays of species 0t another by embracing hushand o [and a 1ire [qualms of consclence But its very title, | Pleld,"” proclnims | play. Maric | Others of similar nAture introduces this season on Droadway or other for road unmarred Lillies of the itself such a oro is featured revived from tours |are “Buck Pay,” Hurst's 1 rring Helen MacKellar with Mrs, Leslie Car. Winwood, porteaying leave their husbands for sensONs Fannie first iy The Circle," ter and | women who other men “Ambush,” Theuter pro- duction with Florence Bldredge pliy- ing the part of a daughter who solves her father's financial difficultie through the aid of her paramour “Daddy's Gone A-Hunting," which Marjorie Rambeau is & who leaves her husband to live witi mother man and finds happin when he gives her a divorce ye lnter t he may live within con- vention, “The Iasiest Way," hy Kugene Walter, the t American suc- of such plays, has been revived nt on tour ith Frances Starr. he Gold Diggers,” in which Ina Claire was featured last season, is an ery Hopwood comedy on tour this Il Guild Varying Shore,” Elsie IFer- guson's newest vehicle. 1S 00T OF LOCK Roll:ad Money in Gun, Which Is Later Dischargcd Parfs, Jan. 2.—The ingenuity French peasants in hiding money has surpassed itself in the case of a man near Lorient who received a 1,000 500 franc note in He hid them of franc note and a payment for produce, fn the muzzles of his double-barreled shotgun, belleving that would be the last place thieves would search for money. He made a mistake, however, in not taking his wife into the et. A neighbor called a few days later, in the absence of the man of the housc and asked for the loan of the gun to get a hare. The hare escaped and peasant came in that eve wife remarked that the must be a very bad shot. int asked hoth ciar without when the g his neighbor ges ol hitting “Becanse he u your gun on a hare ik “My shot gun? ant with a gas making for the weapon hung. The civil court of the department of Morbihan will have to decide the delicate point of law whether the neighbor is responsible for the loss of the 1,500 francs, inquired the peas- it the same time corner where the WEIGHING PERSPIRATION Delicate Scales to be Used in ¥ndea- Able to Mecasure vor—To Be Within 1,200 of a Pound. Pittsburgh, Jan. 2.—Weighing the sweat of a man's brow for the United 8 ation in Pit . Tieldner and supery will be undertaken by Aly adjusted that the ed to within v pound cording to A uperintender The wor station ing chem c has approximately 1,200 of weights in - lifting jected to various d ture, humidity, which would then be exactly controli- ed with instruments un | the constant observation of phys and phys IFanciful seientific it 5 an in- Tor in ce, In the a copper mines gh temperatures ave frequently en- countered where it must he known | what temperature the men may w in safety. The same proble | in the steel mills where t rather high temperat provided there i air, 11 the rapid the tem danger- n work with fairly rapid air move- in safety, movement ment is not rapidly Lo&v"suéAR"c'Rop Reports From Hawalian Islands Say of sufficiently may hecome Thet Labor Shortage Has Great 1 feet on Harvesting. H., Jan of the Haw crop year b 1920, and endin , totalled only & owest in the past ten 1 on Bishop, retiring preside the Hawaiian Sugar Plante ciation, told the annual meeting inization here rtage and dela are + to the shortage for harvesting and other operations,” “The outstanding ‘s work ha nder-efficiency of affecting the 1921 crop, ts banetul influence progress and rotation of " future crops remains Honol gar produ tor in harvesting of labor, both cature heen the sh also on planting future crops serions will be the t on to b “The also has been price for raw sugar in 1921 disastrously low, to] dell- | it 5 N -~ Ran%buu. ©Op Iy Helen. Meigllar ket has resulted ort of chaotic,not cane in a situ only in H growing coun WJiJh Methiod How Used Places Them in Dilferent Groups in cvery o world.” Tl &:‘ rgflg LA LA Uil Kan Jan, 2.—As development of Lawrence, H 3 entonmology 5, heen tor of toin o v of insect National Museum ra group of in hinch of {his 5 which alfect ¢r was made heen a classiti- or Hun- internal Origt come frot conntry Increased Servica New York to Savannah Thies Sailings Weekly First Class Passenger Fares, NewYork To Savannah To Jacksonville $30.38 | {I5 $36.54 You Want, Then — Go To — HONISS’S 20-30 State Street Hartford Telephone ! 3 375 I The RN TV T AT . 0 1922 lovakia The United Btates s push. |l her trade with effect doubled it during year, 11 it were not value of the America probubly would b the exports to this kingdom One the obstacles to vel ient of the country's commerce has heen the lack of adequate rails road tra It is short of loco- | motives and freight cars, But a large loan recently raised within the coun try fon the improvement of transport | tacitities y bly will have a far reaching effect Iriends of Jugoslavia are confldent thut in time the unfavorable eles ments will be overcome and that the triune kingdom will achleve a fore most place in the industry and com- meree of southeastern Europe, SURROUNDINGS MAKE HUSIG Be ing and has nlmost th b the last the high SERBIA SLOWLY | RECUPERATING ‘Wiccked Cities Being Built Again ~-hmazing Sight to Behold Maonastir, countries grenter for dollar, among leaders i her te the ol de Jugo 8 of Europe recuperative rhia Although rava war, famine and disea orfy the of nearly o third of the country is hing complete lity, ew have shown power than a4 by years nd suf avia, Jan, It nale. population v rapldly appr restoration and stah tr: 8 la ne clties like Monastir, Nish and e, where the cnemy wrought createst havoe in property de- ction, are now like cities resur. vected and reincarnated very- vhere dwelling hon schools and iness buildings have arisen from crumbled ruins of their former oundatior To the foreign visitor the sight is truly amazing, ruction work country has made such crful strides, Throughout the kingdom the thrifty peasantry have wen hard at work on the farms, in the vineyards, in the mills, tanneries nd forests, And the product of their toil has heen sent across the cven and Serbia has received in return the much-needed currency v merchandise of other nations. While, lik other Enrope countries, Serbia’s imports exceed sxports hy a considerable margin, it is believed that by 1922 the country vill have reached a orable trade 13¢ the Hawaiian Melodies Cannot I'ro- duced Amid the Noise of New York tr =To Preserve Old Island Legends, \ n [ H., Dee 8 (By Mail) to be effective, In Hawail and not in the Greenwich Village section of New York, nor in the of Chicago, it was decided a8t wie fa meeting of the Hawallan Legends and Music commisgion, appointed recently by Governor Whallace R, Farrington to perpetuate the istand fables and native meles or melodies, The smooth arrangement of notes so familiar in local compositions |Is possible only in Hawaii and can not be produced “amid the rumble of elevated railroads, sul trains, and other discordant noises of large cities on the mainland,” one speaker de- el 1 'he committee decided to take im- mediate action toward preserving se- lected native legends that already have been written, to be followed Honoluly, . Hawaiian musie, should he compe a in ta | sr | sy seas, most At present the nation's trade I turning to countries which have a favorable exchange, mainly to Germany, Ttaly and Czecho- | Aust 1 a Happy Ne wish for a Happy New Year, the greeting duced. Moxie enjoyed its usual growth into greater and greater popular favor during 1921 and had a wonderful year. But we be- lieve that everybody should do everything within his power to spread the prosperity so that 1922 will be a bigger and hetter year for everybody. At the beginning of a New Year, we helieve, is the best of times to reduce prices, whenever possible, in order to encourage and stimulate sales and, through that manu- facture and distribution that there may be the resultant increase in employment, in- come, prosperity, and material happiness among the greatest numbenr. With the New Year the 109 War Tax is removed, but in its place comes a new tax for us on gas and syrup. We shall, how- ever, absorb this so that Moxie will be sold with the War Tax paid by us. There still remain the greatly increased costs (over pre-war years) in transportation, labor, and many materials. However, there has been a reduction in price in some of the important materials used in Moxie and we hasten to pass the savings along to all concerned, in a price reduction of Moxie. Only the price of Moxie changes— Moxie itself never changes. For nearly half a century we have made but one product— Moxie, and through all these years we have held resolutely to an unchanging standard of 100% purity. Year after year our con- stant endeavor has been the development of ingenious and automatic machines which would, if possible, safeguard more the purity of Moxie materials and the immacu- late cleanliness of its manufacturing processes. Boston, Jan. 1, 1922 yet unwritten, he lost unless carly steps TRAVEL BY AIR TR IR W slowest of trains, The alrplane will play a most im-. portant part in the Red Cross work of future wars, Alr operating rooms with full equipment and air ambu- lances for less urgent cases are a practical reality, Several unusual machines were shown to prove this, one a complete aero hospital, ac- | commodating two patients on streteh- ers, a doctor and an assistant with complete operating necessities In- cluding a table, The newest stabil- izing appllances permit the surgeon |to operate while the machine goes through space at 100 mlles an hour, There were several alr ambulances with space for two or four wounded soldlers. The last word in de luxe air travel Is a tremendous machine bullt to carry 24 passcngers at a speed of 130 miles an hour, It is a veritable “alr limited,” with all the features of an American trans-continental express except the observation platform, It contains & hathroom, a smoking room with card tables, comfortable lounge chairs which are made into beds for night travel, card tables, a kitchen- ette, icebox and stove. Room is also provided for a crew of three, Increased size in wings I8 provided on all late machines as means of in- creasing stabllity. Some of the passengor machines have lookout noother vel through the air at|cahins for observers and one machine peed of miles an hour than is[has two tail scats for experienced air jle to experience on even theltravellers. for INFANTS ana INVALIDS ASK FOR Horlick’s the Original Avoid Imitations ad Substitutes I in Powder Forlnfants, Invalidsand Growing Chfldren | Richmilk, malted gn!_n extract The Original Food-Drink For All Ages [No Cooking = Nourishing = Digestible wter by the publication of legends, as which have come down wrough generations of the Hawallans y word of mouth, It was pointed ut that some of these latter might are taken b have them written and published, IS COMFORTABLE Has Reached the Stage ol Convenience Paris, Jan Ample proof that avel by air has now reached the une luxurious standards as travel by nd was given in the seventh annual ra salon held here. No longer need prospective avellers hesitate for lack of con- ymforg and, experts say, it Danger from fire and \gine trouble has been reduced to minimum by the latest inventions aviation Promoters of continen- 1 air transportation guarantee air 80 TRADE MARK PP, US. PAT OFFICE. Moxie Wishes Every Blessed One w Year— . and Announces a Reduction in Price What is more fitting on the eve of the New Year—when everybody, filled with the spirdt of the holidays, is sending to their friends happy messages and good wishes—than that Moxie should send to its millions of friends, with the that the price of Moxie has been re- Come to Moxie-Land—come to the big white laboratory-home in which Moxie is made. You will enjoy it. For a quarter of a century Moxie-Land has been keeping open house to all visitors. Moxie-Land has had, during the time, the pleasure of conducting many distinguished personages, food au- thorities, health officers, experts in bever- age making—and last, but best of all, thous- ands upon thousands of life-long Moxie friends. Come any time—no appointment is necessary. The unnumbered compliments we have received from visitors have been taken in the right spirit—that the great public appreciates the many measures we take to keep their favorite, Moxie, the standard for all time in beverages of re- freshing purity. We accept it as a pledge to continue to deserve this confidence by maintaining unfalteringly the wholesome purity of Moxie. The secure place that Moxie occupies in the home as a family beverage—as a re- freshing, safe drink for the youngest kid- dies—is an honor place we are most proud of. In wishing you a year of happiness and prosperity for 1922, each and everyone in the Moxie company joins in the hearty mes- sage, from office hoy to president. For in moxie-Land there are no “employees”, no “help”, no “luborers”. Moxie is just one big family of associates, everyone happy in doing, to the very hest of their earnest abil- ity, their important part in making every glass of Moxie a sparkling, satisfying mes- sage of pleasure-giving purity and refresh- ment. Once more from Moxie-Land goes the wish from all of us that the coming year will be filled with happy days, good health and much prosperity. THE MOXIE COMPANY / By F. M. Archer. y

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