New Britain Herald Newspaper, January 20, 1922, Page 20

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e S . g | . India. S e NEW BRITAIN T0 FILM HISTORY OF UNIED STATES Yale University Will Make 100 Regls for History Class | One hundred | New Haven, Jan, 20 reels of motion pletures depleting American history are o be made under supervision of Yale university press. | George Parmly Day, treasurer of Yale university and head of Yale uni versity press has been chosen presi dent of the corporation, organized ex pressly to film the historieal scenes The films, planned primarily as an | adjunct to teaching, are not designed | to supplant present methods of in-| struction the announcement sald, but to assist them and to inculeate ideals of good citizenship. Dr. Max Farrand, professor of Am- erlcan history at Yale, and Dr. Frank | Ellsworth Spaulding ling professor | of school administration and head of the department of education of the university have been appointed edi- tors-In-chief, Under the direction of Mr, Day Yale university press has been carrying on | research work for two years and many thousands of photographs, ori-| ginals and reproductions, constituting an unusual collection of Amerlcana, has been acquired. They will be used a8 a nucleus for drawing the plays for the motion picture history, Mr. Day sald, TAGORE DISLIKES FOUR POWER PACT India’s Poet-Dramatist Fears Paotec- tion From Weak is More Neces- sary Than ¥From the Strong. ‘Washington, Jan. 20.—Warning against the four power Pacific treaty drafted by the armament conference @nd similar pacts is being sounded in India by Sir Rabindranath Tagore, poet, damatist and Nobel prize win- ner according to the American com- mission to promote self government in In a communication received today by the commission the cele- brated writer sald: “Power has to be made secure not only against power but also against weakness; fog there lies the peril of its losing balance. The weak are as great a danger for the strong as quick- sands for an elephant. They do not assist progress because they do not resist; they only drag down. The peo- ple who grow accustomed to wield absolute power over others are not to forget that by doing so they gencrate an unseen force which some day rends ‘that power into pieces. “Politicians calculated wupon the number of mailed hands that are kept on the sword hilts; they do not possess that bird eye to see the great invisible hand that clasps in sllence the hand of the helpless and waits its time.” STUDENTS EARN $)8,860 Harvard Men Received Appreciable Sums For Labors. School Bureau's | Report Shows. Cambridge, Jan. 20.—Harvard stu- dents earned $96,860 last year to- ward their self support in jobs se- cured through official agencies ac- cording to the annual report of the college employment office made pub- lc today. The report shows that an average of 40 students a week were employed as waiters by the Harvard union, earning a total of over $22,000 and 252 men were employed by the Athle- tic assoclation as clerks, ticket takers, waiters, etc. Positions as monitor and proctor for the university were popular. The em- ployment office placed 74 students as tutors or tutor companions, 64 clerks and 36 as choremen. Typists, student guides, ushers, chauffeurs, salesmen and musicians were also re- oruited from self supporting students. TEACHERS MEET New London, Jan. 20.—Over 100 teachers of High schools in eastern Connecticut gathered at Vocational High school here today to discuss problems of teaching in secondary the Pro schools. The adc were given hy A [ tempor: George 8. Counts of Yale Washington school of education, and Je: high, is the tallest in the world. Davis, state supervisor of s a education. Round table mee! United States army in 1780 con- cupied the rvmuinrh.r of the session. | sisted of 8§40 men. City !tems Vietor RNecords reduced at Morans wlvt ¢ oft on all Men's Bhirts Con nors, Halloran vt There will he an important meeting of the Itev. William A. Harty Branch of the A, O, I this evening at 8§ o'elock in the old K. of C, hall on Maln street All members are re. jiested to attend, The dance com mittee will meet at 7:30 o'clock here will be a month's mind re. quiem mass tomorrow morning at the | ehureh of 8t John the Evangelist for Henry Willlams 168 pair Men's rson Shoes, The 8 W Lore she Vietor Records now 7be, at C L. Plerce Co advt The Parents and Teachers' Asso clation of the Emith school will meet this evening in the school at 7:30 o'clock Dancing will follow the business meeting, A cake and apron sule was held this aft oon Have your phonograph repaired right at John A. Andrews, Call 72, Ladies' Shoes and Oxfords, hoth | high and military heels, $1.98, The Rootery Shop.—advt, NEW SPORTS CLUB Iirst Meecting of Organization at the Y. W. C. A. Will Be held On Mon- day Fvening of Next Week. The first meeting of the Sport club of the Y. W. C. A, will be held on Monday at 7:30 o'clock In the eve- ning. The club has been ‘organized for all members of the gymnasium, Tanecing and swimming classes, It has been organized for the purpose of recreation sports and closer fellow- ship with the members of all classes. The pool will be closed all . morrow and Monday in order that it may be cleaned, Classes will be re- sumed in the pool on Tuesday morn- ing. Plans have been completed for the opening of the girls roller skating class in the gymnasium on Saturday afternoon. This new class has been formed on request and is for girls only. The usual Saturday evening roller skating will be held at the Y. W. C. A. tomorrow. PECULIAR WRECK Derailment of Freight Train at West- brook Causes Many Odd Incidents —No One Hurt. Junctfon, Jan, 20.—Sev- s were noticed in de- eight train at West- “ourteen cars went off the rails after a truck had broken on a coal car. Next to this car was one laden with limber and the lum- ber slid into the coal car as the coal slid out when the car tipped partly over. A oline tank car was not damaged. The rails were torn up for a considerable distance and the road- bed damaged, but it is understood that the loss will not he great. No one was hurt and the wrecking crews ex- pected to clear the line late this aft- ernoon. R R e B TO SPEAK AT Y. M. C. A, Sunday afternoon at the Y. M. C. A., Rev. Dr. Charles 8. Kemble, of the M. I. church at Trvington, N. J., will speak. Dr. Kemble will tell of James Whitcomb Riley and his poems, from a personal acruaintance with the Hoosier poet. The meeting is open to all men. It begins at 4 o'clock. BELIEVED DEAD Ralph Costa Returns to New Jersey Saybrook eral peculiaritie railment of a brook today. and States That He Thinks Mrs. A. H. Bull Killed Herself and Daughter New York, Jan. 20.—Belief that A. H. Bull, wife of an assistant * of the Harriman National bank, may have killed herself and her young daughter was expressed today by Ralph Costa, 17, who disappeared with the pair from their home in Ridgewood, N. J., two weeks ago. Costa accompanied by Bull and a private detective appeared today at a police station where he was examined. Costa, who drove the machine in which the three left did not make public the place they had gone, al- though he telegraphed Bull yesterday from Toronto that he was returning. The youth said he had left Mrs. Bull because she had threatened to Kill him, M tell 4 he considered his wife ily deranged. monument, 555 feet Qui-tting Dublin Castle This is the first picture received in America of Viscount Fitz- alan, Viceroy of Ireland, and his wife since they turned over Dub- lin Castle to Michael Collins of the new Iri ks\will establish headquarters of the new republic in the castle. h I'ree State. Col- e Oy riowmew pnd bis wile ave now in Landon. e Sy B e AR i vt 0 - INTEREST GROWS IN WILSON FOUNDATION Chairman Halloran, of Local Committee, Plans Definite Action S0 numerous have inquirles coming in to former mayor Joseph M, Halloran, who is chairman of the Wil- son Ifoundation fund, that it has been decided to perfect an organization here and make a systematic effort to ralse a certain quota from New Brit- taln, been This will not mean a personal solicitation, the purpose being some- what different than that, but it will give everyone who wishes to contrib- ute a chance to do so. At the present time, there {s no active organization here. The people who desire to add their “mite” to the fund huve been requested through the columns of The Herald, to send thelr money to the Commercial Trust com- pany, which is acting as treasurer of the fund. Mr. Halloran has been be. sieged with inquiries and phone calls from professional women and school teachers Within the past two days and he feels that it will be advisable to have a meecting and map out a cam- paign, simply to reach those who wish to contribute, The whole idea is that of a free will offering from those who are interest- ed in perpetuating the {deals and principles of the former president, Woodrow Wilson. The money to go into a fund, the interest of which will be awarded at speciied intervals for meritorious deeds. The national com- mittee says, “For unusval services to democracy, public welfare, liberal thought or peace through justice.” It is expressly emphasized that contributions of any amount, are re- quested. Dollar contributions are welcomed, but contributions of amounts as small as a nickel will be just as welcome. A meeting will be called early next week to discuss fu- ture plans. So non-partisan in its general na- ture is this fund, that Miss Mary Buckley of Hartford, chairman of this district, informed Mr. Halloran this morning that West Hartford had gone over the top and that two-thirds of its quota had been subscribed by re- publicans. There will be no request for con- tributions made to any individual, be- cause of economic conditions and the frequency of drives in this city, but the smallest amount will be welcomed at the Commercial Trust company. ANDERSON RELEASED Mother Asks President Harding to Re- lcase Son From the U. 8. Disciplin- ary Barracks at Fort Leavenworth. Leavenworth, Gas., Jan. 20—Joseph Anderson, whose release from prison was asked of President Harding by his mother Mrs. Mary Margaret And- erson is no longer an inmate of the United States disciplinary barracks at Fort Leavenworth, it was announced today by military prison officials. He was released last August, Anderson, according to Sheriff Wil- son of Leavenworth county was re-ar- rested at the prison gates and taken to Cheyenne, Wyo., where he was con- victed on a charge of having forged a post office money order and now is an inmate of the federal penitentiary here, Prison records, however, were not available early today and offi- cials could not say what sentence An- derson was serving. DAILY HERALD, 1922, FRIDAY. JANUARY 20, A REAL HONEST SALE $1 $2.50 WOOL (UNION SUITS| $1.45]$2.00§ $1.00 $2.50 3.00 and $3.50! $2.00 $3.00 White Oxford Domet Collar Flannel SHIRTS PAJAMAS $1.85]$1.59 This picture, just received in America, shows General Wood on the way to receive his sixteenth degree from an institution of learning. This was an “L.L.D.” given him when Dr. Guy Benton Potter was installed as president of the Philippine University. On Wood's right is Manuel Quezon, president of the Philippine Sen- ate, and on his left, Sergia Osmena, speaker of the House of Rep- resentatives. Commercial Market 424 MAIN STREET ; Opp. East Main Z Quality Corner BEEF M8 Sivloin Tip ...... Lb. 220 . 22C Lean Pot Roasts Fancy Rib Roasts Boncless Rumip Roast Lean Boiling Beef ....... Sagar Cured Corned Beef Tresh Ground Hamburg Morning Sale STEAKS Milk Fed Veal Lb. 250 w 19¢ PORK To Roast ....vsvs Lb. w. 20¢ Lb. Fancy Pork Chops . PORTERHOU I'resh Choice Hams ..... Lean Bacon Fresh Sliced Ham Home Made Sausage . Fancy Link Sausage RBlood Sausage .. 20c 30c 25¢ 23c 32¢ . Lb. Fancy Veal Chops Veal Cutlets Choice Shoulder Cuts .... Short Cut Legs Lb. w. 19¢ FANCY STEWING FOWL NCY CHICKENS .. 44c LB. Groceries Pke. 230 o 14¢ avis G .o 2DC 19 Lbs. Sugar for $1.00 with a purchase of tea or coffce. ftol1l A M Sun Maid Secded Raisins rancy Ripe Tomatoes Evap. Milk 3 Cans Sweet Corn Yellow Freestone Peaches Delicatessen w 20¢ | . 15¢ Fruits 15 Lb. Pk. 45¢ 25¢ fa e e 20 FExtra "pm):... e 250 39¢c 4lc 27c Best Maine Potatoes . . Kiln Dried Sweets Rich Potato Baked Brown Beans Doz. Italian Styled Spaghetti Fancy Chicken Salad = 60c Try Our Home Made Mayon- aise Salad ni Salad | i 25c Dressing gs Best Butter Lb. Whole Milk | Annual Sale uits and Overcoats 9.50$23.50$29.50$32 —SATURDAY SPECIALS — WORKING SHIRTS A REAL ST 1o SALE $10.00 BATH ROBES $5.00 $1.00 $1.50 Ribbed Shirts Domet and Flannel Drawers Night Shirts 65¢c | 89c For Quick .Returns Use Herald Classified Advts. 348 Main St. ROBIN’S Dress Goods Store 348 Main St. SILK 40-inch CREPE DE CHINE 40 shades to choose from. Best $2.00 value Special ...... $1025 $2.75 value $1.85 $1.50 value 59¢ SATURDAY SALE 36-inch SATIN Pure Silk—10 colors Including black, plum tan, sand, navy, brown, $2 value. $1.19 40-inch LK RADIUM SILK CHARMEUS SHIRTINGS A new creation. Black, Navy, Fafl;’sy_i:?;l’es All desirable Brown Nice patterns colors. .98 value. §1.98 30-inch VELVET Navy—black—brown $1.50 value SATURDAY ONLY 75¢ SILK POPLIN All colors and shades. A real bargain, $1.25 value o, g $3.00 value $1.98 SILK CHIFFON VELVET 42-inch wide. Black—navy-~brown $5.98 value $3.98 Saturday $2.50" e e e 58-inch 58-inch ALL WOOL Al s SKIRTINGS i All colors S S Navy, black Pure Wool All Wool Stripes g Tubing $4.50 value ’ 38-inch wool 59c GEORGETTES 40-inch wide—All shades All Wool 56-inch FLANNEL Navy, khaki, grey, brown Snectal §J0C CORDUROY Pink, navy, white and other colors. Special $1 7 ENGLISH TWEED gray or tan, ' A new material for spring 56-inch $1.98 value 5¢

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