Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, JUNE 30, 1922, |. GLOBE CLOTHING HOUSE . HALF YEARLY SALE — OF — CLOTHING | AND SHOES| SEE OUR WINDOW FOR PRICES—UNUSUAL OFFERINGS % Hart Schaffner & Marx Clothing Are Included—Unusual Values. We Have Only Two Sales a Year—January and July. MEN’S SUITS BOYS’ SUITS AND TROUSERS Remarkable Offerings in Our Golf Suits—Coat, Vest and 2 Pairs of Trousers. You Cannot Afford to Miss This Sale. Palm Beach Suits, Trousers and Tropical Suits are Excepted in This Sale. Vi W ) i i I o (5 | f [ 3 2] ) I Copyright 1923 Hart Schaffner & Marx Bookman that every form of religion |Private self instruction in this great|air keeps them well, but it is not the should have its able defender in the |Subject. We can let people know|air which does so. When a man is quhnc library. The thougHt at the |What other people are thinking and |ill, he goes to a physician, who writes bottom of the suggestion is a com- |f€eling about God and Christian ethics | a prescription. The patient takes this mon thought with ug, namely that the jand the soul of man and the here- | prescription to a druggist, who com- ry is an open forum, free, not after.” | pounds the drugs for which it calls,; [libra | [only in the sense of costing you noth- | e jand when the man takes this prescripés | tion his ailment is cured. |ing: unless you keep the book more SGIENTISTS NOTE iwr;;::::::l::d I;ES‘::YP};:.;“.::,;::Z than two weeks, not only in the sense t | | have. These plants are used by the |that one is as free to go out as to| |come in, and to stay out as to do| | Aroma of | Whte man to make drugs, many of said that the to the solution of the present difficulty of population question in Japan lies in the emigra- tion of the Japanese people to that country. “As a matter of fact, emigration te South America has long been going | on, as is seen in the presence of many Japanese in Brazil and in neighbor- ing countries, but it has hitherto been RELIGIOUS HATTER WANTED INLIERARY Al Denominations” Literature gium showed increases in their reports for 1921 to this country over those of the preceding year. At the present time there are very few Belgian business houses in this country, yet the trade continues to grew and the object of the mission in visiting this country is to get first hand information as to actual con- ditions so that future business may MUNICIPAL THEATER PROVES A SUCCESS Norway Government Finds Excel- lent Profits in New Plan Christiania, Norway, May 30, (By Mail).—Feor several years municipal governments of a number of Norwe- g'l?n cities have owned and operated their meotion picture theaters. When they were taken over by the munici- palities, the municipal boards decided’ the net profits should be used for the promotion of cultural purpose in the home localities. Reports of Profits. A survey of how Christiania, has spent this income during the last year was published recently by the local press. The city has a population of about 260,000. The net profit of the operation in 1921 amounted to 1,349,- 000 krener, (about $350,000 at par).| This sum was awarded to various cul- tural aims, namely 700,000 kroner to a studio building for the Norwegian sculptor Gustav Vigeland, 400,000/ kroner to a ‘“people’s theater” on the city's "east side,” 100,000 kroner to a| new concert hall, 100,000 kroner to | a fund for the support of science and 49,000 kroner to a new musie pavil- ion. In previous years the studio of Mr. Vigeland has been awarded 700,- 000 Kroner, the ‘‘people’s theater” 1,- 400,000 kroner and the concert hall 400000 kroner from the same source. The city of Trondhjem in northern Norway, with a population ot about 45,000 inhabitants, has a net profit| of 322,000 kroner (about $90,000) from its municipal motion picture the- aters in 1921. Of this surplus 100.- 000 kroner was awarded to the city theater and the rest in minor allot- ments to other cultural institutions and organizations. In a similar man-| ner other Norwegian cities of late years have supported their cultural in- stitutions and created new cultural enterprises. { BELGIANS WILL VISIT JAPANESE INDUSTRIES Invited By Ambassador Places Where Trading is Most Active With Germany. , May 2¢ (By mail)—A small Beigian businessmen’s delegation, con- sisting of probably six persons, is planning to visit this country some- time in thé autumn. The mission will represent about six of the differ- ent industries of Belgium mely steal and iron, paper, giass and tex- tiles and will aiso visit China, the Philipp!as Islands and 8lam. Durtog June 1st Ambassador de Bassompierre advised his home gov- ernment that he thought a party of Belgian businessmen should come to Japan ané sce trada conditions fer themmelves. Thiv the Belgian diplemat zaid was duc tc the fact that since tiz> war the trade of his country with | | Mainichi says emigration is the only to l.nspact' be handled more intelligently. JAPANESEISLANDS ARE OVERPOPULATED Flowery Kingdom Lacks Re-| sources and Living Space Osaka, Japan, May 22.—(By Mail) —The English edition of the Osaka Mainichi, the only ,reign newspaper in Japan, conducted exclusively by Japanese claiming that the latest statistics show that there are 429 Japanese to every square mile of Japan proper and that the population is increasing at the rate of 14.6 per thousand, says it is a grave problem for Japan to find an outlet for her people. Japan lacks natural resources and is already overpopulated, so the solution and suggests South America as the place to send the overflow. “‘Both the United States and Can- ada keep their doors shut against the Japanese people, and it would be im- possible for the Japanese to amigrate into those countries,’” says the Main- ichi. “It {s true that there are Man- churia and Siberia left for Japanese emigrants, but these are rather places for capitalists to exploit than for la- borers. Under present circumstances it seems that South America offers the most promising future for the Japanese people, both politically and economically. It may therefore be carried on in a very The majority of the Japan- | ese emigrants to South America were poor laborers without without any capable leaders, and the | result was that they did not succeed, |and led miserable lives there. | therefore be seen, that the present | method of emigration to South Am- | erica should be radically as to make it a success. manner. half capital Several parties of Japanese, the repor hearted and It will, improved o going |to the centennial exhibition at Rio ! Janeiro are to look into the possibil- ity of Japanese settling in Brazil but the government denies that this movement is to receive offi- cial support. Should Be Found in Institutes Detroit, Mich,, June 30.—Whether or not the bible is to be placed in the should give the public access to the literature of all religious; Paul M | Paine of the Syracuse (N. Y.) public library told the meeting of the Am- erican Library association here to- |night. “Nothing illustrates more plain- ly,”" said Mr. Paine, ‘the difference )hetwenn school advantages and pub- lic library advantages than the rec- ommendation which was made in Dr. ts schools, the library already may.and | either, but free also in the sense | ‘\(')uch Milton meant in his great es- | ‘!sa_v on Freedom of Print, free for the | |other side, full of the raw material |of public opinion, free for opposing and contrasting views. | “While we are waiting and it may | be a long wait—for the common schools to find some way to get the |bible into’ the schools or to keep it out, to restore religion to its former lpmra in education or to prevent any threatened approach of church and |state, we can at least keep on doing |in the library what cannot be done at | | present in the schools, that is, we can | Indian Says Air Absorbs Wild Herbs and Plants |them the same plants which the Ine Which | dian knows. God has scattered these plants everywhere in the woods out-: Keep Men Well. Menominee Indian Reservation, opinion of an American Indian Chief residing here, is an element of infin- ygen, nitrogen, carbon water vapor of which science has found it composed. The Chief is Reg- | inald Oshkosh, descendant of the fa- | mous Chief Oshkosh | “People say,"” said Oshkosh doors, when he lives in the fresh atr, | he is taking in through the air the? | aroma. of these plants, so t! - Neopit, Wis, July 1.—Fresh air, in the | tem 7 WA keep him free from ailments, just as the physician's itely more properties than the ox-|same drugs would cure him. dioxide and |air, nature gives him the proper drugs in time to prevent illness.” ex- [kp Bostwick’s lucid article in a recent|Bive to the public an opportunity for plaining his theory of air, “that fresh |sified ads. | absorbs their effects, and the of th In the” prescription A well informed person always eps in touch with the Herald elas.’ '$ALESMAN $AM SAY SAM, THE ONLY WAY WELL GET RID OF THE BLACKHANDERS 1S TO GO ouT AND * \c&vma;_ 'EM ‘Guzz Plays Absolutely Safe 500D IDER! WHEN YOU GONNA .STA/_/ | RT ® s WELL BO™ GO OH NO, WE'LL FLIP A COIN - IE IT COMES WERDS COMES TAILS' You D & T STANDS ON END I'LL =T POLLY AND HER PALS Japan had grown cousiderably. As a R V' KNOW THAT MA A DIAMOND BROP! Coes BY ¢ CONTRARIES ! | 1 See! THEN YOU'L GWE MA THE WRIST WATCH AND ME “THE DROP' == 7