New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 28, 1922, Page 20

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 CO SPECIAL PRICE ON 30x3'2 GUARANTEED TUBES—$1.25 £ACH. BICYCLE TIRES, PRICES — $1.98, $2.25, $2.65 AND $3.00. BATHING CAPS AND SUITS AT REDUCED PRICES — AUTOMOBILE SUPPLIES OF ALL KINDS — REVERE TIRES AND TUBES, SUPERIOR CORDS, GUARANTEED 10,000 MILES. GENUINE LEATHER TRAVELING BAGS AND SUIT CASES, 209 OFF SATURDAY. TENNIS SHOES FOR THE WHOLE FAMILY—DON'T WAIT AS YOU WILL NEED THEM ON YOUR VACATION ALL KINDS OF SPORTING GOODS — TENNIS RACKETS AND BALLS — BASEBALL GOODS — FISHING TACKLE — ETC. DESERTING WIFE CAN GO, BUT MAN WANTS HIS LITTLE SON RETURNED John Yurkunas of 28 Conne Aid Him in Getting Trace of Youngster, Taken When Mother Left. ' where- | locate ot In an effort to the abouts sty about his wife, with A John street, Herald and re might have kno ments of with him Thursday, a kunas discovered wife had suddenly left taking her what was far worse to the father was of his little s , and, tally believed, 1 summ ineic who, it 1s ¥ the aid t anyone move- communicate who of the the couple week ago, Mr. Yur that his me MRS. JOHN YURKUNAS , clothes and some $80 in cash But ' what was worse to the father ! was the fact that she seemed to hav * | taken with her also one of the sons | of the couple, Edward, whose sturdy { little body and sunny disposition had particularly endeared him to his male { parent. Heart-broken he made « quiries and could not suceed in gleam ¢ dng any facts beyond that the spo ! ehild, and, it is thought, Albin minski left this city at about i He is continuing the ! hopes that he will be able to find the child, whom he by his side ! The mother gives him little concern, | he states. There is another son, John | of the couple, who is somewhat older | i and who was left at home | The Yurkunas came to from Waterbury last | make their home here { were married in Ne { years ago. Married ¢ pressed serenely ¢ pride was taken ir search in the desires this city| November to| although they | Britain several | life had pro-| gh and great off-spring, by | MEDIUM BARRED IN STATE OF OKLAHOMA Thought Sleuth Lovelorn Girl- Gave Romantic Advice Oklahoma City, Okla., July Mrs. L. D. McMaster, a Oklahoma City medium, has been barred from ; further practice of her profession ' this state { Bessie Jones, a clerk in the office of the county attorney, arranged for a "reading,” and though Mrs, Mc Masters received a spirit message| from Minnehaha to the following ef tect: “You are going to fellow—a blond-headed also a black-headed fellow, blond headed fellow will come youw and the black-headed fellow are going to marry a wealthy The attorney for Mrs. Mo pought to save her from co on the ground that the state prohibits interference with the free exercise of religious beliefs and practices, and that she is a member of the Nation Bpiritualist association, inc., and had a license to give spiritus to others, but Justice Bess eriminal court of appeals refused gake that view of it What is Religion? | “¥Ve admit our inability to decide jeonclusively whether this is a reli glon, or whether it is a philosophy or 4 systern of metaphysical specuia- &lon," said the justice. “We arc in- ined o lean toward the latter view we are not suffiiciently advised to meet a blond fellow — and and this hetweer You man fetion ice the | to | of rton Street Asks Herald to the father and, judging from her actions toward one of the children, the mother also. The father believes that the disturbing element was furnished by Alb! Kalminski resulting, finally, in the alleged escapade of last week Kalminski is known to have lived in Mount Carmel, Pennsylvania and Isomn bad." over any spirits except those banned by the prohibitory law, such as ‘Bour- bon," ‘Mountain Dew,’' ‘Forked Light- ning,' and like distillates—Ilike those in the spirit world, some good and No Jail Sentence, While the court found authority to place a ban on the medium, it recom- mended clemency to the woman—"at least to the setting aside of the jall sentence” imposed by the lower court “l made no pretense of communi- cating with the spirit of the poet's Minnehaha,” says Mrs. McMaster. "I did communicate with a little Indian girl whom her parents called Laugh- ing Water. Laughing Water lived in the flesh, and she was killed in the Mountain Meadow massacre which all students of American history must have read about. The spirit of Laugh- ing Water frequently comes to me It is most useful in finding lost arti- cles or lost individuals. No one who knows me would accuse me of at- tempting to communicate with the spirit of a mythical character.” Mrs. McMaster {s pastor of the Spiritualist church in Oklahoma City. She says she has been a medium for twenty years. Blames ‘‘Stool Pigeon.” | The case against her, she said, was | weaith, | old {pervert it into evil chann | instigated through misrepresentation, ! “through a stool pigeon who did not | tell the facts.” ! “It happened at a time when our association was seeking to get a bill ! through the legislature. We planned I to give a demonstration of the prac- | tices of a medium as proof that we were entitied to better representation | under the law. The demonstration was given in good faith, but misrep- | resentation turned the affair to our | disadvantage.” Mrs. McMaster declared that what e told Bessie Jones about men | came true. There was no misrepre- sensation or fraud on her part. REFUSE U. §. ORDERS Acting Soviet Premier Declines to Agree to American Terms for Dis- tributing Relief to Sufferers. Moscow, July 28 (By Associated Press).—After a month's negotiation Leon Kameneff, acting premier, has lefinitely refused the American relief 1dministration’s conditions for feed-| ng the Russian intellectuals as a >lass, The commonwealth tund offered to| nd food packages to the value of | 'proximately $250,000 to Russia for stribution by the relief administra- 'n among professors, teachers, doc- rs, scientists and others selected by relief authorities The latter A YURKUNAS ived at 11 street while in this co-operate but insisted that Oak the final city. He might have returned to|decision as to what persons should Mount Carmel. The wife's home is in|receive the packets should rest with Waterbury where Yurkunas also has'the relief administration. relatives, The government, according to M The search has not broadened Kameneff, is willing to permit the re- reat extent as vet I it|lief administration to veto any of the the father states, the |government's selections of beneficlar- ward and his future home, lies but is not willing that any out- " |side organizatioh be permitted to as- |sist persons despite a soviet veto. out to any wi sake of soon for lecide that point. We do affiirm that this record tends to show that, wheth- er religious in its nature or not, it is' of speculative osoph WEATHER REPORT system attended with and in the instant case, tinged with hypocrisy. The spiritualist associa- | 1's principles of philanthrophy and its belief in the golden rule would ap- to the the Elks, Rota or the Boy Scouts like organizations, none of which Fair Tonight and Saturday With Lit- tle Change in Temperature. New Haven, July 25—For Con- Inecticut: Fair tonight and Saturday; liftle change in temperature moderate to fresh northwest winds. Conditions & considered peliglons orpanisatinng, | O DAFIS Yester is now passing out s S-{the St. Lawrence valley. It has caused Even if the purposes of this organiza 2 tion a religious in theig nature, 1”1nral TLOWEIS IRy 0 a6 ot is difficult to see how tha practice of | giving ‘seadings’ or telling fortunes| concerning the mating inclinations of men and women could be religious in Gave “Pleasing” “This mediun, and iming to speak ha, told Bessie Jo posed to be a lov would meet boy and that late brunette would | supplant him in he affections that she would eventually marry a man of All of which sounds to this court. It seems| fortune-te or the! Springfleld, I, July 28.—Robert M ng of the palm by some wrinkled | Medill, director of mines and hag. or the interpretations of a minerals, was appointed temporary gazer in a freak sideshow. state fuel administrator for Illinois to- Doubtless it was this species of (day by acting Governor Sterling hypoecrisy and Jegerdemain that the statute intended to suppress. An tice or entertainment religious nature may be regulated or suppressed where tender tem superstitions credu onic order, the club, | gion and New England. Pleasant weather prevails this morning in sections east of the Rocky mountains The temperature is rising slowly east |of the Mississippi river and is slight- above normal in Connecticut for Minneha.| Conditions favor for this es, whom she sup. | [air weather with slightly higher tem- rn girl, that she Perature attractive blond | Advice in a trance|'’ while GOVERNOR STERLING soon ACTS. Acting Chief Executive of Illinois Ap- points Fuel Administrator. very like read peculiar a Gypsy er, state crystal CATHOLIC LDITORS MEET. innocent prac whether of a or not, Publishers and Business Managers in to Session at Cleveland, Ohio. ations s are mani is likely to Phantaatie the cies and 28 Editors, managers pub- of Cleveland, July the good lishers and vusiness philosophers and religious zelots, like Catholic newspapers and other people, must conform to whole- | from all over the United States began some police regulations |a two-days’ conventinn here, today, “Appeals to the spirit world might| of the Catholic Press Assoclation at have availed before the case resches! which all phases of Catholic news de- us, but here we bave uo )uns;.cuonl velopment will be discmssed. fect, and where the evi overbalance were ready to have the government! - LOCAL HIKERS REFUSED Three New Britain Young Men Find Utica, N. Y. a Hard Place to Get Help During Their Trip. John Pinches, Leland Brown and Philadelphia, July 28.—Frank Far- Dudley Bacon, local travellers, who |rington, president of the Iilinois min- are on their way by foot to San ers, has been summoned to Philadel- Francisco, did not meet with a good | phia for a conference with John L. reception at Utica, N. Y. according | Lewis, president of the United Mine to an article in the Utica paper. The | Workers, and will arrive here tomor- young men left this city last week |row. Tuesday and have been aided greatly His presence will complete the rep- by autoists on the way. However,;resentation here of district presidents their streak of good luck did not come |of the central competitive soft coal in Utica as they were refused every |flelds, time they asked help. This was so President Lewis today reiterated especially in the night as the autoists that he had every reason to helieve had a fear they might be thieves. !that an interstate joint conference The young men are attired in whlle;wlll be called within a few days. He and. carry United States Army kits| Went a iittle further and sald that containing all their supplies. They|powerful influences are at work to are taking the Niagara Falls route and | end the soft coal strike. will stop off at Buffalo. In Utica, The country wants the strike to end they were questioned by a newspapsr‘the miners are ready to go to work reporter who wanted to know if they |and there is every indication, he said, were representing an advertising | that a wage conference is not far off, scheme. . ey MINE LEADERS MEET Flrripmon Is Called To Philadelphia For Conference With John L. Lewis President of Union. MENACE OF ILLITERACY Educator Warns Boys Must Not | slipped from fits saddle was the cause The storm central over | in the eastern portion of the Lake re- | all| vicinity | magazines | WANT FEDERAL SUPERVISION Governor Cox of Massachusetts Would Have Government Prevent Specu- lation in Coal. Boston, July 28.—Governor Cox to- day suggested to Secretary of Com- merce Hoover that federal authority be used to prevent a repetition of the speculation among coal brokers that occurred in 1920, The governor in a letter to the sec- retary sald he had been advised that re-sales of coal within the trade “ac- centuated the apparent coal shortage in 1920." He suggested that total commissions and brokerage between | the original sale at the mine and to the retailer or consumer be fixed by the government. TROOPERS ACT AT ERIE Run | Pennsylvania Strike Rioters Afoul of Famous Mounted Con- | stabulary—Four Arrested. Erie, Pa., July 28 —=§State troopers brought here in connection with dis- orders growing out of the rail strike | went into action early today when the homes of several workers were stoned. Order soon was restored. The troopers arrived at the request of Sheriff Willlam Brown. Four strikers have been arrested on charges of assault and battery. CABLE SLIPS FROM SADDLE Commissioner Whalen Wants New York To Rebuild Brooklyn Bridge Following Accident. New York, July 28.—Discovery that one of four huge cables supporting the famous old Brooklyn bridge had issuance of an order last month removing motor traffic from the bridge, Grover A. Whalen, com- missioner of plant and structures an- nounced today in making public a letter to Mayor Hylan stating that he would agk soon for a meeting of city officials to consider rebuilding the bridge. for the VIOLATION REPORTED. U. S. District Attorney Investigating Hartford Complaint. Hartford, July 28-—The first case of an alleged violation of the federal restraining order issued against the striking raflroad ,ehopmen . by the United States district court came be- fore Assistant District Attorney George H. Cohen today for investi- gation In the complaint it is alleged that James J. Graham of 42 Hazel street, one of the strikers, called upon Mrs G. L. Booth, 64 Washington street, July 21, while her husband was work- ing at the East Hartford shops and, in an attempt to persuade her to pre- | vent her husband from continuing nis work, threatened that he might be thd subject of violence. Spegific- ally, Mre. Booth claims that Graham gald her husband migh be brought home finjured or possibly locked up | in a boiler or firebox of a locomo- tive After hearing the complaint and | the defense, it was decided to present | the case directly to Judge Edwin | Thomas of the U". 8§ district court, | who issued the restraining order. | We welcome your Classified Ad mi ]lhe Heraid. “So think Babe Ruth man school teachers or itend a prize fight, but ! tention to education, |is in danger,” deciared Dr. Tigert, of education Rutgers college here. Think Babe Ruth Greatest Man. New Brunswick, N. J., July 28— long as the boys of America is the greatest America ar neglect their 000 people at- pay no at- this country John J. commissioner address in United States in an “If there {s any danger to the na- tion it comes from lack of education on the part of our rulers—the peo- ple—and than {s generally wealthier than ourselves, lies like a great lack of education,” he added. there {s more {lliteracy realized. Russia, jellyfish today because of The corn crop 1in Arkansas last year, Dr. Tigert declared, would have been worth average farmer had known as much as the teachers who are now being sent out on extension work. $5,000,000 more if the Commissioner of Education John | Enright of New Jersey, also spoke, 1c Hosier Sale [ —— On or about August 1st we move to our new store, 267 Main St. In the meantime we are offering some wonderful bargains to reduce our stock, at the at | 1" HIKERS T0 HAVE - WALKCOF 211 MILES To Follow Long Trail Through Green Mountains A hike of 211 miles, from start to finish, through the Green Mountains of Vermont, will be taken next month by Joseph G. Hergstrom, physical di- rector of the Y. M. C. A, and three members of the senior leaders corps, JOSEPH G. HERGSTROM composed of Lloyd Reaney, William Tancred, and Howard Rehm, The Long Trail The trip will be made over what {s known as “The Long Trail,” which starts at Johnson, Vermont, and runs south to North Adams, Mass. The local hikers will take the train to Johnson and travel from there down the trail on foot. Interesting points about the trip are the cabins of shelters, maintained un- 240 MAIN STREET ALLING RUBBER CO. 240 MAIN STREET der the system of the old west. Camp- ing parties put up at night in cabins where they find supplies of food and fuel, After using what they want, they leave enough there to replace what was used and proceed to the next place, Equipment Carried. As the trip will be made afoot and jmost of it over rough country as- | cending and descending the numerous mountains along the trail the hikers have selected their equipment care- fully, strong hiking boots, khaki clothing, woolen underwear and uten- sils, etc. Very few farm houses and hotels are encountered south of Mt. Sterling, Vermont, so the men will be forced to carry several days' rations at times. Each hiker will be equip- ped with the regular army knapsack canteen, blankets, poncho, axe and | utensils weighing approximately 30 | pounds. How It rted. The Long Trail has its existence through the efforts of the Green Mouggain club. The club originally | starting with 23 members in 1910, {now has a membership of over 1100, five hundred of whom reside in sec- tions along the Trail. Each section assumes the care of the Long Trail and its camps in their assigned ter- ritory. The remaining members are | classed as unattached. The season of 1921 opened «°ith the last link of the | trail from Killington Peak to Pros- pect Rock completed and the trail open from Massachusetts to Johnson, Vermont. Cross 25 Monntains. Approximately 25 mountains will have to be climbed and crossed before the hikers complete their trip. Many points of interest will be visited such as "The Smugglers’ Caves and Notch,” Summit House on Mount Mansfield, | Mt. Sterling, Lake of the Clouds, Rock ofs Terror, Cave of the Winds, Camel's Hump, Crouching Lion, Mt. Champlain Panorama, Monroe Sky- line Trail, Deer Leap Caves, Claren- don Gorge, Somerset Dam, second largest earth dam in the world, Hells Hollow and many others. The hikers will start on their trip on August 12th, The Herald Classified columns are a daily busin dlrectory. There is a Herald Ad file for the use of our patrons in our office. ONE CENT SHOE SALE Saturda_y Is the Last Day Ladies’ PUMPS AND OXFORDS Men’s OXFORDS AND .. 94.98 BaiE s 7y i v 1C SHOES $1.98 RN | Second BRIE odmas vesnss PUMPS AND OXFORDS All this year’s styles $4.98 oy AR Children’s PUMPS AND OXFORDS $2.98 .. le Second Pair . Second AP i Boys’ SCHOOL SHOES Brown or Black $3.98 Second 1 c Pair . Boys’ Red Trimmed “GYM” TENNIS SHOES $2.49 o Second Pair Ladies’ Full Fashioned PURE SILK HOSIERY $2.29 Second Pair ... lc CHILDREN’S SOCKS Fine Quality g, i o 4G Pair ... PRIFLSIA e ¢ s Don’t Forget the Address 413 MAIN STREET

Other pages from this issue: