New Britain Herald Newspaper, June 20, 1922, Page 23

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

ALLING RUBBER 240 MAIN STREE ednesday, June 21 Willbe Real Bargain Day 20 Per Cent Discount From All Goods in Stock wees ALLING RUBBER CO. s g G 240 MAIN STREET s | Bicycles Traveling Bags ALL SALES CASH Garden Hose DEDUCT DIFFERENCE, | A¥GELL MAKES RDDRESS \ENTAL HYGIENE ON INMAKING RETURNS "=z 22 v CITY PLAYGROUNDS DISABLED VETERANS | CHILE TRADE REGOVERS Ready Buyers. 9 : : o S Congratulates Old Grads. Convention Will Demand [mmedi-| ronson, sune 20—the rapia re. Equipment Purchased DUring| wew saven, sune 20—eresicene| WOIk Started in Schools to Be covery of German trade with Chile ames Rowland Angell of Yale made ate Corrective Retion |5 S bharineni o rereras War May Not Be Taved High Rate s "ot omretemoct o= o) Continued AL Summer Trade. e ' . o Dls e [l body today. President Angell spoke of the success of the “common fresh- i New York, June 20.—Where equip- 5 e The dental clinic work, i j man year” system, pc z n ¢ rk, inaugurated g R, and capital its position as a factor in ment purchased during the War at a |{ne ooeenge weneiarinin ot 1ot Sea.| i the public schools a few weeks ago, Natiénal Commander, the Disabled|ihe world's markets today. f cost of $5,000, can now be obtained|iampers entering class was ap-| Wil be carried out on the city play- American Veterans of the The first British firm was establish- ek 4 ial K W % i for $3,000, the taxpayer has a right to \u-pmmiy higher hth:m that of any|&70unds, which opened this morning s ol vo: there Sthise-quarters of a_century ; : A ! fior;v;rt the difference a5 AMOFiZtiON | jreliou, year, He emphasized the | "CCOTUing to an agreement hetween ; a“o and way.fol vu..a.] sho.rtly by many i i 3 3 ”‘lr] sxmlx xl-t\)rl}s and IY\(A]\‘(‘.(‘]HIvH\ rn‘r great embarrassment of the university :hl\1 Euhlm amusement commission Cinctnnati, June 20.—The tcabled |t 1tc-1rlsin: mdn;x were not long : ot 5 g . s “"\"v:’_"":";g'“" "‘é';fi;"""“““ in in coping with oversize entering class- | 70 ® "l’l“‘“‘“l“’]"d"":mea!nlley Holmes, X X 2 ak bW decond posit g Seidman & Seidman, and|eg and the & = A )f the school departme : American veterans of the World Warffe\q forlogedifn: very r‘r‘:en:.()::m‘x:;‘g; : chairman of the committee of tax |, m:’ i F?H{Tqm(";rda':t{”':’ et Meet With n:w:;: Ses 2 j , fol v recent years Bd 2 AX | vertaxing of the staff, with the effec =5 pxlitly ; will hold their second national con-[the Unitg @i"s' Some years Be consultants of the committee of [or roniqly diminishing the actual ef-| 1€ commission met last evening American business men. ficiency of the teaching. WIth'S,, M., Brewster, supervisor,. t ventien at San Francisco, June 26 to|fore the; Germany became' a o ] Ratios have just been published by | precident Angell reviewed the edu. | VOrk out more definite details in con- rection with the playgrounds pro- strong (‘Mr of Great Britain, fi v it " g | and the af States steadily gained b 4 f s the commissioner of internal revenue,|cational events of the year and com- ThiRymentive “fil“dbel the greatest| ground, éom the outbreak of the o, LY i : ¢ Mr. Seidman added. to enable tax-|mented on the change. in deanships | STAM this summer. A series of ball ga erln; oh\\lolu!m CA dgv' sabled | oy howe r, everything went4n fa payers to readily compute the amor-|,¢ three of the university's nine mes to be played every Saturday af- ""E’s 9";" b“l *'; ~l'“‘?”;“- bringing | F °F the Tnited States and from 19 tization that they could deduct. These [gnools, ternoon will begin this coming Satur- At it will be lakd plans for bringlng |, 1919 they secured all Germany's ratios glve the estimated post war| ' rn conclusion he paid a tribute t v-when the P. and F. Corbin' téam real social service and relief to Amer- Bl 2 n:congluaions hesn paldia- SriON et ) 58 b : isiti lost trade, plus about 10 per cent. of costs of replacement and serve as a|yale alumni saying: y cross bats with a visiting team at fca's wounded arfd disabled veterans, & \eeme g, 8 ale alumni saying: i t #hat ot a singl i chs B eh, basis for amortization claims. NIt Hag hen: o egy ikddie o MYalnuE HIllinark: to the end that not a single man who “There is every indlcation,” con- Amortization Deductions. ¢ 2 < i e Band Concerts 3 meet so many of these men who have ¥ 3 _ Sunday night the first band concert i Chile like many other countries, the By Judge Robert S. Marx. report says, owes to British enterprise I TR B T A e v gave his most priceless possession—| .1 qes the report, ** i “The & T Fay 3 y duri ROl thaty they British The amortization deduction,” Mr.|prought to Yale her high repute and = hehalfih;tflo 2 Co}’";’,") during the manufacturer has now much more S Tirect . i hlh ik aheldEapnas park when the Waq[h: ioni‘:n:i'd‘:’“:fi" demand im. | L0 fear from German competition thin o “[from American. German imports to S : ; : = 7 o'clocl mediate actionfto get our mentally| -y, d 7 P 3 % 5 i ¢ i the commission will t ; Y| Chile increased from only i 4 % duction of the war. Heretofore the Y = ssion will meet again and disabled comrgdes out of contract > : ; ; . s MANY WOMEN ARE vill arrange a program for fi r 1919 to £1,580,000 in 1920 and a very ; : amount that could be deducted was|IMAL MEN / program for fireworks asylums, like Longview, near Cincin- marked ' 3 3 % i % 3 2 n July 4th 2 : progress will probably be @ S . not definitely outlined. Furthermore, 3 phlss sfdiers are mited With]noticeable in German trade with Chile ; . : o it was doubtful whether a deduction GOOD BOOTLEGGERS |~ office In City Hall gmld?:;s:'; U\':‘r‘:rgv'::d Fhat more|¥hen figures as available for the pres- could have been made merely on the ; ‘irr‘fi:‘p]::rtf\é i.u}gff.}‘,iefio:'e’ 3:;:‘ : ent year.” . decrease of prices after the termina- ol 218 - than 200 patients sleep on the floor tion of the war. The situation was| . ; 5 bureau in city hall and will have _every night. . cleared up by the Revenue Act of Capture One, They Announce, Who regular schedule of office hours, Immediate rellef for men who lost MANY SEEK REWARD B Wil et . ing which time he can be located 21, ded that t} t & their lungs in the war and are now-— ] BrOYQ: t " he amount | pccumulated $15,000 From Liquor here in person or by phone. At oth- to be deducted for amortization should : : hundreds of them—walking the — r times he will be on the various & be in accordance with the ratios pub- She Made in Her Home. ; streets ot Western cities in search of | 1, 3 8 . | 3 ) vlaygrounds. Mr. Brewster {s worke ur Men Appear Be > - : & - : 8 lished by the Commissionér of In- proper hospitalization, will PP fore Judge Malt i 8 i ! Washington, June 20.—Prohibition | & on an elaborate program for the be de- . e - i ) . { 8 S : i : ternal Revenue. These ratios are the manded. bie Seeking $2,000 For The Capture - " ; L . : ones just published and clearly outline |oficers throughout the United States | ummer and Is confering with the in- The convention will demand that - - sl tRe BasiE Tor tax ratund eport to headquarters that womes al playground directors on de- the program of vocational training be of Slayers of Policeman Madden. Walter 8. Ward, mililonaire (left), headed for jail at White Plains, A hootleggers are becoming expert. The | e o o % carried out to such a point that real ¢ v, N & * 2 hance to make money cau: daring ‘hairman Harry C. Jackson, of the v | Hartford, June 20— imants N. Y., after he pleaded not guilty to a murder indictment. Though he . “F | chanc Mok e i rehabilitation will regult in the dis-| ¢, "4y0 vewarq of $2 u?r:"og:::im:f; may be jailed three months without bail before his case is called, Ward WALL ST. MESSENGER | (71005 (6 take the risk, and some of ominladion: atd ioday tha tha e abled veteran being’able to secure|,;. goove for information leading fo Is smiling. - i them “get by” with it, officials as | Vork display exceeding anything seen employment at a living wage. e A th‘o v A0, 20; g TO “ EAR BRI(:HT RED wrein a long time, will be one of ths Measures will ‘be taken to secure |2 COMNEON 0 W Turierers of 17 Mrs. Rebecea Goldburg of Whecl- | 'vatures of the July 4th program. adequate compensation for men who | (0REE TR PV e TRAGAER RO | —_— ling, W. Va, is now serving six e ?::q;:fi;‘l‘e‘:fi'd ‘i‘:j':ls‘l‘;o:“’;‘f(‘;;“ clinging to the running board of an THREE PERSONS KILLED. THREE YALE PROFS. ILL Brokers Will Try to Foil Bandits h:‘,;““””"‘ ’“"‘”' '“"r:":,"";:"’; 3 el . kil ia ation ratings. automobile containing a gang of silk L < New Haven, June 20.—Three mem- fo e [anor. e nt. She was | Chicagn Physician Reports Tt Succssse pensa 8. robbers, testified hefore the superior | Express T Crashes Into R ¢ ¥ Dressing Thedr Carriers in | this before she was caught. She was 6 3 Extension of time for filing claims | .ourt today. The men who aspire to Apress AR FAILS of bers of the Yale facuities, Prof. A. F. I ot only a good business manager but| ful With Some Forms of Disease ::“::1:'5?1-]:?0:'rl,;:\l:r(‘ular and mental|, " 1ortion of the reward are: Clifton Another at Cuneo—20 Injured. ””,I',p"»\r'y A\lbm—[r nnhwnflr Crawford Conspicuous Clothes. very mw\mz'm .~.«y.<|]m‘ detection. Chicago, June 20.—Some forms. of s . VleCumber, special policeman in the i <D Dh 68 DEXEOHA and Prof. James Crosby Chapman are O o ity < o vark {«| Our agents raided her premises, T I Turin, June Three persons were New York, June 20.—New York is| ik S8 s O nounced today Preference// for disabled veterans|g % . 5 Il with typhoid feve it was - mploy of Cheney Bros, at South R sy s ; |1 with typhoi iy as an : wijl be demanded of the government ‘\mfiflw,”r, Chester B Smifl\‘ ol killed and 20 seriously injured yes-|,ounced today, The Yale health de- |E0ing to try something new today to|«and found in the yard a rope leading [ have at last surrendered to science, in giving employment to men and Stratford, Peter Barnes, Meriden, and terday near Cuneo when an P\pr“ss‘partm?m had not determined the|foil its bandits who prey on \\'a\i;rn a pile of dirt and rubbish. On the[according to Dr. T. Howard Plank of women In gublic positions, Jay D. McKernan, of Hartford, train struck the rear of a local which |source of the infection. street messengers hastening through | Other end they found a five gallon JUE(Chicago. Its external manifestations bl | hine 1 5 IR A nile of th of moonshine liquor. In a pile of rags The convention also will urge the o decision. in k ! sior je case was filed [ had halted to pick up a passenger — - s R naiaT s id Faiee expenditure of millons of dollars al- |t Judge Maltbie remarked tha i | e e the financlal district each day withje . ) found thirty-four quarts of réady appropriated for new hospitals | enoe to. ciit the e ed that he who had fallen out. HARDING'S TRIP IS OFT. vast sums in securities, i e Bt iy Th tire fore the National society of Phy- Sy £ € proposed to split the reward among| Most of the casualties occurred in| Washington, June 20.—President| Abandoning the old theory that a RIS s g [ aiide R and will vigorously condemn past de-|the claimants as soon as he had 4 “ ? 1 Y upstairs, they found a com- |sical Therapeutics, at the annual con- lay and inefficiency in providing these Sl . e had | the three carriages of the local train | farding's tentatively projected Alas-|messenger should look as inconspic- ekt Y 5 i _ S¢| reached a conciusion with regard to|which were smashed. The passengers|kan trip. this summer has been aban- [uous and unplutocratic as possible, | PIEt¢ Stll veution of the Ameriin JMEHHINEGE | homeopathy, Dr. Plank promised to itals. Lo 4 e BERRRA hesp a Jjustly proportional division of thelon the express escaped with a severe | doned its was definitely announced |several brokerage houses have decided | BRIGKLAYER CHAMP]ON demonstrate his contention at a clinie Seidman said, “could be taken by all|{; gense by direct contact the vigor those concerns who had purchased |,nq sincerity of their support.” equipment during the war for the pro- Bl v s Philharmonic band will render a econ- ert. Tomorrow evening at 7 SAYS RADIO CURES CANCER ‘ancer, considered incurable for years can be cured by radio, he asserts. a availahie - Gl ; peliat LRI shaking. [today at the White House. to test the antithesis, by dressing their | messengers in the brightest of rec on Wednesday. Two sufferers from ~Labor Preacher | cancer have already been healed, he LABOR LEADER IS GUILTY- i) R R I B R et T P o Security owners decided the old| L Ui theory must be wrong, because hold-| Them Himself in Two Years on Ox-| “The electrical scalpel is run by Chicago Jury Brings In a Decision ¢ » up men never made a mistake in the N T 1i0," he explained. ‘'The machine identity of their victims and by fet.| ford Theater. uses the same current that is used in ¢ ting the whole world know a mes- London, June 20.—The champion- |S€nding radio messages. The treat. Fined And Imprisoned. ; senger when it saw one, it could run|ghip in bricklaying, from the stand- ment is an absolute and permanent Chicago, June 20, — TFred Mader, g # ::‘:;: nm tance if his head was being | point of amount of work ,h,,; by ,.Tn :-‘v;rx‘:n‘rwx’;.:;::J;h:re it can bé reach- president of the building trades coun- : 2 3 aten in. man, is claimed by a British work-|€d on the surface g eil was found gnilty by. a jury last % 3 And the safe has a trick to it, too.| man, Hotham Browne. Single-hand- Thert is no actual contact homaoa night of conspiring to defraud the K Ty | A steel chain encircling the mes-|ed he has just finished laying all the|the diseased tissues and the knife, women's exchange and of conspiring i e senger's waist under the coat, | bricks, 700,000 of them, in the Ox-[Dr. Plank went on. “As soon as the to halt construction on a hotel. His ¢ . N escapes through a hole on the left side | fcrd theater at Workington, Cumber- | instrument flm\rmr!ws the flesh »nf S y : and is padlocked inside the safe, of|land. The job took two years. Had |the infected part withers up and dis- he | appears. Against Fred Mader, And He Is punishment -was fixed by the jury at one year in prison and $1,000 fine, Mader also is facing trial with two other labor leaders in connection with whose combination the meesenger is|he worked under unions rule himself ignorant. So he has to come | woudl have laid only 450,000 bricks in back to get free, as the key to the|this same length of time padlock is kept in.the office The magnitude of this undertaking| The patient is placed under twilight sleep, the surgeon said. In four er five days he is out of bed and in ten or twelve days is on the street again. the slaying of two policemen. _‘ 8 3 4 : M i i <3 5 - — is shown by the fact that the building { H By R 2 D € 3 28 THOMPYSON TRIAI . SET is 150 4!:(":\ ind 50 reet wide and s Italians Lose Match a . ; R BRER ah, N, 0. Jure D0 acticl, Mk BOTOME s 1,400 people. Trowne| LATE ELECTION RETURNS. Azfll st British Isles - 2 g 5 cellus H. Thompson, vice-president of [1snored all trade union rules and | pyyblin, June 20 (By Associated : 4 g : i regulations and just went ahead 1 )——The positions of the various Roehampton, Eng., June ), (By the Auto Ordinance Corp., of New e X ociated Press).—The British Tsles York and son-in-law of Ambassador|ing brick v brick day after dav.|partios in the Irish parliamentary team won the doubies match today George Harvey, who was indicted | When he had laid th t 100,000} cjections so far as reported in ree in the Davis cup play with the Ital- with seven others for conspiracy to|DPeople christen a ._”“’ building | tyrns received up to 5 o'clock this af- fan team. Major Algernon R. I, ship arms to Ireland will be tried| Drowne's monument,” but it 18 now|ternoon were as follows; Coalition Ringscote and ank Risley defeated here during the September term of | KnOwn in t e town ‘the house that| pro-treaty, Coalition republicans Cesare Colombo and Count Di Robe- the federal court. Those indicted | Browne buijt. 25, Labor 10, independents 12, . . ondt coo 6-1, 6-4, 6-0. 5 > | with Thompson will be tricd with - . - S Rev. William Reeso was the only ) ! P o DL INDIA WINS PLACE CONTRAST IN WEATHER ordained minister at the American ¥ ; “ e & Beckenham, June 20 (Ily Associat-| Weather conditions of this week of- Federation of Labor conference in London, June 20.—-Chief Justice . R iy 4 pse o STATE BANKRUPTS ed Press).—-ndia has won the right|fer a direct contrast with those of the Cin¢innati. He gave up his church William H. Taft of the 1. 8. supreme N 2 % N ¢ New Haven, June 20.—Bankruptey|to enter the second round of the|same period last year. On June 19, ;. several years §go and is now flnan- court spent his second day in London N i AR, 4 - pétitions filed today were those of | Davis cup lawn tennis contests by de-| 1921, at St. Mary's church, prayers § cisl secretary of the Bullding Trades by visiting English law courts, grant- s AT i - Charles Marlow, orwalk drvgoods, | feating Rumania ‘Phe victory was|were offered for rain to aid the farm- { | Council of Néw Orleans, ing interviews to newspapermen and - with debts of $5,783 and ts of | etinched by the defeat of Nicholas|crs who were reporting heavy losses ',H being photographed by mo#on wn,' A choir boy stands on his head while portions of the will granting $2,100 and of John Cassamuti, Nor- [ Mishn of Rumania by A, H. Fyzee of [ from the dry season. Today is the properties at Leighton Buzzard, England, to charities is read. It must walk restaurant keeper debts $5,747[the Indiana team tod the 1mlian|fourth consecutive day upon which t ture operators by whom he was be- D 3 sieged. Le done once a year. The man who stipulated that died 300 years ago. and assets of $2,500. winning 4—6, 6—1, 6—1, T—5. there has been a rainfall.

Other pages from this issue: