New Britain Herald Newspaper, March 4, 1922, Page 14

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERAULD, SATURDAY, MARCH 4, 1022, o SA Y fiftoen 1,143 married; and § fifteer APPROPRIATION MADE [i: v, 5 of whom or were and ove per years or i were miarri Ln the proportion married is much larger ¥ males, but nfter t the proportion Mail Service and N. Y. Pncumatic carlier vears of adult life ’ostal Tube System Provided For, females than (or forty-five 1 men ¢ Washington, March 4.1 to continue the transcontinental air mail service and to restore the New York city pneumatic postal tube service is to be provided in the annual office appropriation bill, under ngree- ments reached by senate committee members in charge of the measure. In passing the hill, the house re- tused to provide for either of these services ,and former Postmaster Gen- 5 e real 1 s recently appeared before ghe senate commitiee in their behalf nds age of marrie cent ugair There Ne¢ widowers, [ waomen 64 ny 14,06 per cent | York eity widows, 4 (b A divorced womer The populatic [torty. five years of age and over i cluded 62,902 single men and 63,3 were in post 8,000 divorced men, men New York, March 4. — The ac IN CITY condition of the clearing house The Bureay |and trust companies for Ihe that the Js)m\\.v deficit of $12,054,030, belc Jegal requirements. This is a d 63341 “OLD MAIDS” Washington, March 4. of the Census announces population of New York city, & 045, on January 1, 1820, comprised | After the Fire Phone 805 We Specialize On Appraisals And Repairing Of Fire Damages, Remember the A B C of Building—Allen Builds Cheaper WM. H. ALLEN CO., INC. Hungerford Court FOR SALE 3 Family House and 3 car garage on South Burritt strect. ¢ Room Cottage, new, on Somerset Drive. Good Lots on Linwood, Hawley, Hart and Lenox Place. H. D. HUMPHREY TEL. OFFICE 141—RESIDENCE 1828-3. National Bank Bollding. Fine 2-Family House with 127 feet front in excellent location at west end. Extra lot is worth $5,000 alone. This is a proposition which will ap- peal to a man who wants a good sensible home where he can cut down the price by selling off some land. CAMP REAL ESTATE CO. 272 Main Street fi . For Quick Returns Use Herald Classified Advts. THE OLD HOME TOWN HOLD ER ) NEWT SHES 5% ¢ AREARIN 258 AR /\TLL BE NICE YoU SAY SPRING (7@ 1S NEAR | gt S JIM HARDY BUILT ANCTHER LEAN-TO ON HIS POTflEE STREET HOME - 22, nurrie ind 6, week Omn Satorday Evenings Phone 343 Rooms 305-6 Bank Bldg. ~ WOMEN FOR LETTERS Athietes of the v, ot | Peminine OKlahoma Will Enter Field in the Tuture for Competition I*eminine Normin, thietes of the 1 of Okla,, Mareh 4 niversity o who 1 Ve ne nter the homa past particls re love eld in 1ettors W oy | pAted the game, in Jame I B future o Miss 1 | has 1] mural wrts for the co-eds, of which will he awarded weaters embelligshed with {6} o | i director for program of intera winners women annonneed the covet- | ed SCOFEFS AT JAZZ 4 That fear of Roston, Marech there is more danger in the jnzz than in gazz itself was the declaration of Henry 1 Boston “musician == | and lecturer, is conducting a ! course in the appre of music lat the public library | He nrged parents “to point out to | children that al) they really enjoy in jazz, 18 taken, often hodily, from good music and to show them in a simple, plain manner, that they can get more fun out of worth-while compositions,” “In my opinion,” he added, “many of the sentimental waltzes of form generations were far worse than jazz, |and it is strange that no one objects to the extreme sensuousness of cer- tain operatic music.” W Gideon whno ition Whale's skin is so thick that it can be split into several layers. DR.LASCH Removed Dental Office from 141 Main street to 353 MAIN STREET Y ——————— CROWLEY BROS. IN PAINTERS AND DECORATORS 267 Chapman S$treet TEL. 755-12 Estimates cheerfully given on all iobs' THERE THEY GO All our Ranges. Parlor Stoves and Heaters, both new and second hand, have been marked down 20%. ‘We'll get your stove repairs. A. LIPMAN 34 Lafayette St. . BY STANLEY Tel. 1329-2 For Quick Reta;t;: Use Herald Classified Advts. University | i, A honorary i weight championship lost | | according Medical Missionary Is Murdered by Robbe uls, Mo, March 4 The Rey Shelton, medical missionary Disciples of Christ (Christian n Thibet, was murdered by tung, "ebruary 17, to a cahle Shelton eseaped from a bhrigand of 1920, nd hekl I | of the churceh) rohbers near | Iy camp, In China in January having Kidnapped & ransom for gisty aftey her Strangler Lewis Will 1 Wrestle Petroff March 9 | Nashville,, Mareh 4 Ed (Stran Lewis, who regained the heavy night at | mateh with gler) Wichita, Koansas, in his Stanisiaus Zbyszko, will wrestle Jor Petroff here, March 8, in defense of the title, it was announced today. SMOKE MOONSHINE IN PIPE Waukeganites Mix It With Waukegan, Uk, Mareh 4.—Drinking] moonshine liquor is losing popularity here. Wankeganites smoke it in their pipes now, according to Thomas Tyr rell, assistant chief of police. Their method, he is to souR snuff in hooteh until thoroughly sat urated. Then they place dry tobacco in the hottom of the pipe, put in a heavy layer of hooze-soaked snuff and finish with a layer of dry tobacco When they light up and inhale the vapors of 1a0-proof moonshine the result is marvelous, it is declared. Soak Snuff in Rum, ‘fobacco, and Then— says, HELD CHILDREN VFOR RENT Said She Could Get $100 Asserts Father Landlady Apiece, Detroit, March 4.—Four children, all under 8 years of age, alleged fo have been held by Mrs. Roseline Rt as hostages for overdue rent, were returned to their father Albert Mozejko, today after he laid the case before Paul W. Voorhies, jMosecutor. Mozejko maintained the rent bill was $150. Mrs. Rusis insisted it was $540. The woman kept the children with the statement, T could get $100 for any one of them,” the father as- serted. MAN HORSEWHIPS WOMEN Party Of Madison, Wis,, Fair Complain Of Raw Hide Attack Madison, Wis,, March 4.— Women residents ol the university section of Madison reported to the police that an upindentified man with a rawhide whip had been assalling girls during the past few night The man was said to have ap- proached the girls alone on the streets and without warning to have struck them about the body. Screams of a girl last night brought a num- ber of persons to the scene where the whipping was said to have taken place, but the man had escaped. ————————— O RENT 4 and 6 room tenements at 441 West Main street. 4, 5 and 6 room tenements on North street. 6 and 7 room apart- ments with stcam heat, hot wa- ter. janitor scrvice on Main street, corner Flm, T'or particulars apply to Cohn's Coal Co. MAIN ST TEL. 681 Or Meal Times Call 2425 A TRIAL ORDER IOR OUR COAL WILL CONVINCE YOU. T TR RS Ty 5 BRING HOME THE OYSTERS FROM HONISS’S ALWAYS FRESH 20-30 State Street Hartfor'd Telephone 3374—3375 — PALACE — arting Sunday OL’S PARADISE” Keith Vaudeville PASTEUHIZE[J Raw, untreated milk is dangerous tor Baby for RAW MILK contains large numbers of germs that may wreck its life—germs that are ren- dered harmless by only ONE method, PASTISURIZATION. OUR PASTF\URIZED MILK Is sate for young and old—it 1§ really tafe because not alone does it come from heal'hy cows and handled with sanitary of % but it is ALSO PAS- TEURIZED, making it absolutely pure. GIVE US A TRIAL. ~ J. E. Seibert & Son A glimpse of the havoe wrought in Delfast in the outbreaks that followed the kidnaping of 42 Ulsterites. in Old Park Road were bombed. Miraculously, no lives wére lost. Troops in a “bird cage,” a steel truck with a screen protec- tion against thrown missiles, kept order at the t'\lnel'zll of William Waring, one of the victims in the recent Belfast riots. The funeral procession of William Waring, Loyalist, who was shot down during the recent riots in Belfast, Ireland. O R e TR AR PARKER & DEMING REALTORS Five Room Cottage On Francis Street. Must Be Sold At Once As Party Is Going West. Terms Can Be Arranged. PARKER & DEMING 193 MAIN STREET Mortgage Loans Price Is Very Reascnable And Tel. 2026 Insurance We can arrange permanent and temporary mortgages on your property. Consult us. Schultz & Costello, Inc. Pasteurized Milk & Cream No. 242 Main Street _ Tel. 24-4 Here three houses| SEYMOUR CALLY FOR MONEY FROM PEOPLE Butterworth Salary Restrained; No Funds for Expenses I"ollowing the approval of an In- junction restraining State Treasurer I'rank S, Butterworth from taking a salary from the state fund for the aid of needy war veterans by Judge Malt- ble, it has been found necessary for the American lLegion to appoint & committee which will seek funds from citizens of, the state through the cie- culation of subscription blanks, RBute terworth had indeed, it is said, a cer- tain portion of his alary' to defray the expenses of distributing the fund, conducting investigations into cases that were 1 to be needy, and 5o forth. Contention was made by Cap- tain Charles E. Lockhardt of New Haven and James, I, McKenna of this |city that it was not legal for Butter- | worth to withhold any of the income from the fund of $2,500,000 appro- | priated by the state for purposes of |paying his salary. This was sustained |in court. Arguments were made that lall of the income should go towards |aiding ‘the needy and nothing else. Legion Needs Money. | It is now found that the Legion, [which is in charge of the distribution of the state fund, is unable to handle it without getting money from some source to pay the inevitable prelim- expenses, Consequently indivi- have been named in ach town to solicit subscription to *carry on."” The expense of distributing of aid is much greater than it was at first [thought, which is probably one of the reasons that DButterworth wished a salary Opponents Named. State Commander Clarence W, Sey- mour, 'in naming the committee on solicitation chose Butterworth as well |as those who complained against his receiving a salary, Captain Lockhardt jand James McKenna, who wgre grant- ed the injunction. In addition John | Buckley of Hartford, and Comptroller Harvey P. Bissell, the former a law- yer for the plaintiffs and the latter who was made a party plaintiff in the litigation, were also named and will bhe asked to shoulder some of the dif- ficulties in raising the funds. The appointment of the “restraining |elements]’ as members of the commit- |tee may be regarded as an. astute move on ‘the part of the o com- mander. He has as much a aid to them, “You would not allow the treasurer to accept a salary for carry- ing on his office, now help us to raise [the money which we have to have in |order to administer the state fund.” |1t remains to be seen how active the individuals who blocked Butter- worth's salary may be in endeavoring to make up the fund. In uddition there are many members of the com- {mittee who have taken no active ;p:n-l"ilmliun in the litigation. The |committee as named, though all qf {them have not accepted are: hose Selected Philo . Calhoun, Bridgeport; gan G. Bulkeley, Jr., Hartford; William J. Malone, Bristol; | Butterworth, New Haven; Dr. W. P, S, Keating, Willimantic; Paige A. Seaton, Torrington; Neils L. Poulson, Ansonia; J. Albert Hughes, Green- wich; Oliver Ellsworth, Portland; Colonel Morris 3. Payne, New ILon- don; Justus J. Fennel, Stamford; Theodore V. Meyer, Waterbury; |George C. Lilley, Southington; Cap- tain Charles H. Alleg, Rockville; James D. McKenna, New Britain; Charles 15, Lockhart, New Haven; Robert €. Vance, New Britain; Har- vey I Bisscll, Ridgefield; Theodore C. Wallen, Hartford; Colonel Richard J. Goodman, Hartford; J. Henry Rora- back, North Canaan; Major John Buckley, Union. A letter was sent yesterday by Commander Seymour to each of those named informing him of his appoint- ment “with power, each in your par- ticular district, to add to your num- ber.” Mor- Judge Frank AVERTING RATE WAR Shipping Board is Making Every Ef- fort tu}'rm'(\m Irouble in European Trade Zones, | Washintgon, March 4.—The Ship- | ping Board was laying plans today to |avert if possible a threatened rate | war affecting continental European trade routes. Withdrawal of the United American lines from the North Atlantic freight rate conference has caused wpprehen: sion that another rate war such as followed the drastic cutting of ocean freight rates by Rear Admiral Benson when chairman of the board, and of which, the conference is an out- growth, would result unless certain fundamental changes were made on the Dbasis of districts of territory gerved. SHOOT BANDIT GIRL Are Angered Because Loot They Got Was Too Little Chicago, March 4. — Incensed be- cause their loot was smaller than they had expected, (wo negroes who robbed a real estate office shot down a 19 year old girl stenographer and a clerk in the office. The clerk, Frank Kleiner, cannot live, according to physicians. The condition of the girl, Marion Karlson, is serious. CLASSES IN WIRELESS Superintendent Of Chicago Schools Plans Innovation Chicago, March 4. — High school classes, conducted by wireless here are being planned, Peter A. Morten- son, superintendent, announced. Students now are busy making the radio sets and after they are com- pleted it is planned to have inatruc- tors give lectures. Subjects which can be covered entirely in a lecture course will be included in the wire. less curriculum. There are 233,104 Christian gregations in America. con-

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