New Britain Herald Newspaper, June 3, 1922, Page 14

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NEWSPAPER LIFE A PLEASURE IN ENG. Editors Will Work for Four Days | a Week Herealter Lord Northeliffe | that hereafter the vening News, which ! staff who on work as London, June has announced editors of the F include the members would be termed “copy an American newspaper four days a week instead of five heretofore Since 1804, sa1d Lord Northeliffe when making the announcement, "‘the pace evening newspaper produc tion has been intensified and is going to increase still further Wireless telephony is beginning and is going to affect the publication of news." Editor Is Honored The occasion was the retirement of H. Evans, the editor-in-chief of Evening News who has been for 28 years on one or another of Lord Northeliffe's papers Lord North- eliffte gave him a banquet, prfis»n!ev‘l him with a cheque for 10,000 pmmds and awarded him a pension of 2 pounds a year for the next 10 y and afterwards, for the remainder of | his life, a pension of 1,000 pounds a year. According to the testimony of newspaper men who have worked on both New York and London afternoon newspapers, the work on the latter i{s much the easier. The New York| afternoon papers nse on an average | thrice as much news as do their Lon- don contemporaries and do much harder hustling to get it of the readers will in w the CO-OPERATIVE PLAN SHOWED HUCH GAIN Last Year These Societies Flour-' ished While Business Was Dull Stockholm, June 3 operative societies flourished last year as they have never done within the history of the Cooperative Union of Sweden, which was founded in 1899, says the annual report of that organ- ization just issued. In the same period Swedish busi- | ness, commerce and industry suffered heavy losses or at the best shmwd\ small profits. Whether the coopera- | tives succeeded in spite of the world- | wide depression or because of it is| hard to say, but the fact remains that the dismal year of 1921 was for them a banner year. About 1.000 Stores. Sweden at present has about 1,000 cooperative stores, besides many var- feties of other ventures such as co- operative dwelling and building asso- ciations, purchasing societies, ldrg(» number of cooperative dairies, farm- ers' societies, seventy egg selling or- ganizations, cattle breeding societies and fruit and vegetable growers' co- | operativess. | Last year's report shows that a net surplus of about $125,000 has been made by these non-profit making so- cieties, while the cash on hand has increased from §1,250,000 to $1,850,- 000 | Deposits with different branches of cooperative unions, which conduct limit savings bank activities, in-| creased to the equivalent of $3,350,000 representing small savings of coopera- tive society members. Producing Plants. The central union has started its| own producing plants in several| places. The report states that mem- | bers of the cooperative societies are | enabled to purchase practically all| necsesities at the lowest —S8wedish co-| prices ob- | tainable, as well as sell their products| on most favorable terms through their | own joint organizations. The greatest number of cooperative | enterprises, the report shows, are to| be found in the big industrial cen- ters where the bulk of membership is drawn from the ranks of workmen and their familits. Marriage Licenses | Issued by Town Clerk | The following marriage licenses have been taken out at the office of City Clerk A. L. Thompson Luigi Angelo Francesco Marinelli of 471 Meadow street, and Francesco Marin- elli of 185 Tremon street; George Adazuinas of 169 Winter street and Helen Praspalaushite of the same address; Samuel Eshoo of 42 Broad street and Sarrey Baba of 12 Mable | street; Giovanni Del Cegno of 100 Daly avenue, and Giovanni D'Agostino | of 124 Willow street A CHILD’S AFFEC- TION Every child likes plen- ty of Seibert Pasteur- ized milk. They in- stinctively realize that it plays an impogtant part in building up their happiness and ) health. (ESEIBERT & SON! “Your Milkman" PAR’e STRELT PHONT 1720 7Y jl"hx. | colonizers will | government | family hopes to receive a loan equiv- WALL STREET HUMBLED New York Bankers Who Went to| Chicago to Witness Athletic Contest | Decide to Stay, Chicago, June 3 -—Wall street lay humbled today before La Salle street money mart of Chicago ew York bankers who came to| ago yesterday to witness the an athletic contest between Wall street for the sil- nual street and La Salle ver cup offered by the house of J, P, Morgan and Co. réemained today to tell the losers' story of the Chicagoans S to 4 victory In the annual baseball same La Salle street also demonstrated its prowess in fleld events, Panl Wilder of the Federal Security Co captured | the golf championship and Thomas! Hough of the firm of Halsey, Stewart and Co, took tennis honors. The baseball game was no burleque Tormer diamopd stars of Yale, Har- vard, Princeton and other big univer. sities were in the )|nm|p SWEDEN WILL GIVE ~ UNEMPLOYED LAND Jobless Persons Will Be Sent to Till Soil June 3.—The advance unemployed has Stockholm, | guard of Sweden's been sent back to the soil, A small party of jobless industrial workers| from the city of Eskilstuna, home of | Sweden's steel products, passed | through Stockholm a few days ago bound for southern Swedish Lapland, where they hope to settle on tracts al- | lotted by the government. Will Receive Land. On reaching their destination the be met by a govern- ment representative who will appor- tion to each family head a plot of about 60 acres, half of which is for- est and half arable The colonists plan to settle in the district of Vilhelmina, and have formed a cooperative organization called The Vilhelmina Pioneers’ TUnion. During the first three years the pioneers plan to work on community basis, sharing all expenses and profits. They will build this summer a community dwelling under the super- vision of a government building mas- ter. All tools, implements, live stock | and other necessities will be the prop- erty of the Vilhelmina Pioneers' Union for the initial three years' per- iod. Thus the new colonization scheme possesses a deep sociological as well as empire building interest. Ask For Farms. It is only a short time ago that the Minister of Agriculture ordered an investigation to ascertain whether the cry of the unemployed for small farms could be favorably answered, and al- | though no definite action has been taken by the Riksdag to provide for the necessary luans to the pioneers the latter are so confident that the will see them through that they have started toward the re- gion where they believe they will find homesteads and state backing. Each alent to $1,500 repayable on easy terms. The pioneers have previously been agriculturists but, attracted by the large earnings offered during the re- cent war and post-war boom, left the farms and flocked toward the indus- trial centers. Then came the depres- | sion and unemployment, and in the | course of months of idleness, their savings were eaten up. ME \lORl-\l TO LI (C)L\' Parents of Martyr President be Honored by Tablet on Court House. Ky., June 5.—Plans here for the dedi- of a tablet on the court house in honor of the parents of Abraham Lincoln. The date mark$ the anniversary of the marriage in Washington county, | of Thomas Lincoln and Nancy Hanks, | to Elizabethtown, are being made cation June 12 Hardin county The Grand Announces the o ly right. provements. Lot 91 fect front. 242 Main St. | taken | were One of the best two-family homes on Fast street. Room to build another large house, H. N. LOCKWOOD Real Estate and Insurance First and Second Mortgage Loans Negotiated Schultz & Costello Inc. Tel. 24-41 EW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, who moved marriage The memorial is to be presented by Dr. W. A. Pusey, of Chicago Its erection was sponsored by the Wom- here shortly 'an’s club of this city NDIANS PROTEST ARREST OF GANDHI Take Oath Never to Wear Foreign Clothes Until Freed Ahmedabad, India, members of the in Zanzibar, British st Africa, the oath to wear (home-made) clothes as a protest against the imprisonment of Mohan- las K. Gandhi, the Indian non-coop- eration leader, according to received here, One of the meetings held in Zan- zibar to decide upon a method of pro- test was attended by a large number of Hindu and Mohammedan women More than 50 of them are reported to have taken the oath never again to wear foreign clothing. One Mo- hammedan woman whose principal business was to deal in foreign-made clothes for women took the vow to abandon that business altogether and to cease from wearing foreign-made clothing herself Many women are said to have burned clothes in their own homes. Although a number of meetings held and two hartals (suspen- sion of business) were declared, there was no suggestion of violence. Pub- lic prayers were said for Gandhi at the places of worship of all the In- dian communities, and Indians who attended a mass meeting adopted resolutions congratulating Gandhi on his passive resistance. The meeting also expressed by resolution its “sense of great concern for the present pol- icy of the government” in India and hoped for an early peace ‘‘compatible with the national dignity of India and the empire.” ARGENTINE PARK A PLACE OF BEAUTY New Public Place Has Nearly 2,000,000 Acres Buenos Aires, June 3.—Snow-cap- ped mountains, glaciers, azure lakes, tumbling rivers and foaming cascades are among the beauties of a great na- tional park which the Argentine gov- ernment has just set aside from pub- lic lands in Patagonia. The park has an area of nearly 2,000,000 acres. It is situated mostly in the territory of Neuquen, on the Chilean border and takes in foot hills and mountains of the Andes, includ- ing some of the volcanic peaks. A third of it has never been explored In the center of it lies a lake as large as lL.ake Champlain, called Na- hauel Huapi, over which tower ma- Jjestic mountains and offering a mar- velous panorama of scenery. Dozeus of other lakes, largé and small, lie cupped among the valleys, some of which have probably never been dis- turbed even by the paddle of an In- dian canoe. The rcgion has heen de- June 2 —Many Swadeshi s R ST VISIT OUR DINING ROOM WHEN IN HARTFORD Call At 24-30 STATE ST. Live and Boiled Lobsters Soft Shell Crabs Fresh Crab Meat Shrimps Steaming Clams Chowder Clams HONISS’S made from Pure Barley Malt For Sale By All Grocers H. BELKIN 49-53 Commercial St. Restaurant 25 MYRTLE STREET pening of its dining room appea]ing equally well to those that de- mand exceptional food and prices moderate- We solicit the patronage of those desir- ing something distinctly different; we offer our specialty of Italian dishes. — FOR SALE — 11 rooms, City Hall after their | Indian communities | have | advices | scribed as one of rhe most enchant- ing but little known parts of the world The park will soon be approachahle by a state railroad, almost completed, which will terminate at Bariloche. Already, however, the beauty of the scenery and the spirit of adventure have for some years l.cen attracting travelers to the region who have not been discouraged hy the long horse- back or rough automobile journey necessary to get there. Now, chalets, hotels, automobile roads and bridle paths are being plannel for the park to accommodate “he flow of tourists which is expected with the completion of the railroad. R i R s Your Sweetheart Your Best Friend? [ Jhe Lincoln Realfi "f- REA L ESTATE is a good buy now. That is, it is if you buy with discretion. Which is just another way of saying if you do business with us. all fm- Safety first—here. HONE > KRN 7150 fll[ LI)V[flbY REALIY (¢ R L 2[1 ”47 Dm.t“‘ Bman G Aoue l ounty Distributor T AND AGENTS Large manufacturing coneern wants |you for an auto necessity of unusual |merit, has no competition and sells sight Applicants must be in a position to deposit from $250-8500 on merchandise. Contracts are exclusive with guarantee. You owe it to your- e1f to investigate this wonderful op- portunity. Write or wire for furtner information, Mr. E. Sabo, 54 Pratt I street, Hartford, Conn | LET US SERVE YOU FLE(‘TR[(’AL Y COWLES FLECTRIC CO. [ 392 STANLEY TEL. 2220:4 New Britain SATURDAY, J(NE 38, 1922, Real NEW MEDICAL SCHOOL Shanghai, June 3.—Mission and ed- ucational bodies of east China have| set in motion a project to build in| Shanghai a Union Medical school at a| cost of $500,000 gold thus reviving an undertaking originally planned by the | Rockefeller oundation and laler[ abandoned by it | —DRINK — Ayres’ Soda Water Call for it by name and get the best. For Sale at Your Grocer’s Three Size Botties—5-10-15¢ CROWLEY BROS. I PAINTERS AND DECORATORS 267 Chapman Street TEL. 755-12 Estimates cheerfully given on all jobs SPRING .EDS SUPPLIED We can supply you with the latest thing in strollers and baby carriages at a very attractive price. A complete stock of linoleums and floor ‘~verings. A. LIPMAN New and Secondhand Furniture 34 LAFAYETTE ST. Tel. 13204 'THE OLD HOME TOWN Room 208, N. B. Bank Building. Parker & Deming tors We wish to call your attention to the following prop- erties for sale:—Four story brick building, 561 Main St. con- taining six apartments and two stores, with an annual rent- al of $7,000. A large piece of land adjoining with a front- age on Main St., of 89 feet and a depth of 148 feet with passway rights to Winter St. Four story brick building, 86 Arch St., containing one large store on the main floor and several mercantile es- tablishments on the other floors. $4,284. There is a large lot adjoining with a foundation all ready for a new building to be erected. This can be sold separately. Grasp the opportunity now to get a good investment. 193 MAIN STREET — TELEPHONE 2026 The annual income is 8t. John's University of 8hanghal is one of the institutions actively sup- porting the project. This school for more than a quarter of a century has had a medical department and its graduates are among the leading med- ical men of China. When the Peking Union Medical college was being erected by the Rockefeller Founda- tion a plan to expand St John's medi-| Miners who work in arsenic mines cal school into a Union college a‘lha\e to take every precaution to pre- Shanghai was proposed to the Foun- vent themselves becoming poisoned. dation and was approved, but the pur- pose was abandoned in 1920. It has now again been taken up. R. J. DIXON NAMED. R. J. Dixon has been appointed to the building commission to succeed Walter P. Crabtree, resigned. FOR SALE—A MODEL HOME Brown Stone, brick and shingle—135 Columbia street. 9-room cottage, all modern. lLarge corner lot and nice garage. HUMPHREY 272 MAIN ST, Owner leaving town and wishes to sell at once. For particulars, call on— H. DAYTON We want to buy a good two family house in the west end, also one on Bassett street, and one in the southwest section on Monroe, Madison or Winthrop street. If you have a house to sell see us. CAMP REAL ESTATE CO. 272 Main Street Phone 343 Rooms 305-6 Bank Bldg. BY STANLEY Royal Cleaners. | Reee——————— FELLERS -HAVE GOT TO NAGS AWAY FROM HERE HOLD ER ., NEWT snes AREARIN % THERE ONLY THE QUICK WORK OF MR ROBINSON SAVED THE PRIZE HANGING LAMP FROM SERIOUS INJURY TO DAY.

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