New Britain Herald Newspaper, August 18, 1922, Page 5

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R“YAL Exls RE g ' ) : THE STORE AHEAD I N NEW BRITAIN CONMON ON ISLANDS DA THE : { Y . e ! oLIP-ON ty in Uncrowned Monarchs ' e " . $1 2‘9 ¥ ,§i,,l;,,,9,,§and ; o] e . combinations — Washington, D. C., Aug. 18—"En- S i N Special F ’ A ‘n:u d shor syt o i o st |\ st J/ Raphael’s Départment Store e deira; it is beginning to be an indus- g try in the Beychelles Islands, where b ' ” Zaghloul Pasha is detained while [ certain factions in Egypt are agitat- galn ers ing for nis return, says a bulletin from the Washington, D. C., head- quarters of the Natlonal Geographic ‘ TR soclety. | | “First the dethroned king of | Ashant! was sent there and later the 5 re s ue 4 monarchs of Uganda and Unyoro were domicile? there for joining Rt » : ANOTHER SENSATIONAL PURCHASE Budan. i, ks the Repneies 2 P - 4 : 100 WOMEN'S SILK AND WOOL noteworthy for coral and cocoanuts. Approaching vessels steam through 1 3 coral reefs to approach Port Victoria, * 5 ¥, L $ chief town of the group on the ¥, 2 7 main {sland, Mahe. And the town . £ 3 ¢ itself lies glistening in the sun lke | v { a city of marble, for coral rocks are | 3 uged in building the neat, compact houses. E oy “Cocoanut products form the prin- s . 3 5 A . 9 . Bon, nmonts ot exporital i 5t : & This Fall's Newest Creations cocoanut which made the island fa- i 2 mous {s the coco-de-mer, which ) 4 - ‘: S 2 H 5 ,A values to 525'00 welghs forty pounds or so, requires seven years to ripen, and grows on trees that take thirty-five years to % ik o M * _ S v bear leaves. This ‘cocoanut of the : g 3 4 s¢a’ was known before the islands | : 3 Lo 5 > . i were discovered, because the great P % ¥ 55 Lt . double cocoanuts were cast up by 4 | the waves upon the shores of East Vincent Richards is the youngest member ever selécted for : [} :“‘g:f‘:-nnzhgi";:'zn"d"“e"';’i to ve of | the Davis Cup team, the highest honor that can come to a tennis 't the i player. His mother, Mrs. Gertrude Richards, of Yonkers, N. Y., medicine men made much of them. k i X ! D THland (Gems of \Indian Ocean® is responsible for his diet and here you see Richards, unable to “The Seychelles are the fsiana|Wait for dinner, trying his mother’s rice pudding. They Consist Of. gems of the Indian Ocean; an early| British resident nicknamed them an! Oceanic Garden of Eden. There UF'BIA[IEKAI]ES IN WEST | Fe at Cajon Pass, Calit, applied for | v 2 3 thirty or more of them, depending transportation ‘back to their jobs after upon whether one cares to enumer- they went on strike. Most of the men Sahn Brald TnmmEd &te as islands numero small reets were Mexicans. They said they had | . and rocks. With their dependencles been told by striking shopmen that Canton Crepe Beaded the Amirantes and many others, their | orders for a walkout had been issued | . administrative area comprises nearly to track workers, Taffeta Embrmdered 100 small {slands. =y * Jail Sentence Imposed. NEW FELT COMFY 5 5 ““The SeycheNes proper lie 750 . . Jail seatence of three months were 2 WOMEN’S HIGHLY miles directly northeast. of the north- | [ANSPOPLAtiON [MPrOYEd-DISOT- | inposes in the teterar distriot court SLIPPERS Crepe Back Satin Lace Trimmed MERCERIZED ern tip of Madagascar and almost | at Guthrle, Okla., on 13 striking rail- Ch P el L000 miles northeast of Zanzivar.| done Rronnd Countrv Conti roud shopmen charged with violence 9 C armeuse aneis LISLE HOSE The names of the individual islands els TOUH Olm ry OH lflllfl «gadnst men who took their places. {vabl P . T -“ S . frequently denote their outstandingi _— Every cg!‘lf(e“ql?e oiret 1wi Long klrt Eflects C Silk rib- Plorers such a5 Sithouetie. Cupense| _Chivaso, Aug. 15—y Assoctes| JIATED THE JAPANESE B e Fine Tricotine Flowing Sleeves g curious), La Digne (the dam), and Press.) -—Transportation blockades, | or bow Felicite (blessed). The name of the| particnlarly in the for west, caused | . . Seam back. group, however, fs not a varlation of | by train crew walkouts, virtually| Bomb Thrower Makes Statements in trimmed. - —All Sizes— ‘sea shells” as might be suspected,| were cleared away today as railroad | but was givendn honor of the finance: Wetds and leaders of the train service Court That He Intended to Assasin- minister under Louis XV. | unions remained in New York for an- 2 ate All Mi 5 “Its dense jungles, curious plant' other parley for peace 1n the shop- finistoryt n \State specimens, great trees fastnvonpd with | men's strike. % Rezte | Nagasaki, Aug. 18 —The first trial l)ag‘:;nrl::s‘ug:::}nfldsrnnr:? ::;1: ::: w:sn r;!l:;tfa:fi:‘;“!‘t?“c:;fmmz! E;":fi :fh;hsh)i::e:’n r;dlclalgstllgln lfl’;ki-!‘; ment. The agreement i& to become O\TE DRO“ ED T“O Kane of this city struck bottom in pan's great naval station there has 0 8 '€ v V] T ombs into e office o | 1 v P sus! P 1 N ¢ i : S 3 . operative within five months from the shallow water and sustained a frac- been a regular pilgrimage of Ameri- £ =bies apmate ol Bimakelithe sbey ol proved §orapldly) and: sallsond ofiiclals e governmmntygersrhl fana Taubss |ty pi(cotng | INJURED IN DIVING ture of the spine. His condition is|can residents and visitors to, that chelles group altogether as delight- | announced resumption of almost nor-| quently was caught at Shanghai in his s h ful as the South Sea Islands which| mal transportation. The Atchlson, | attempt to assasinate General Tanaka, ‘;"0': .::xm SRER AR e ReY, Ha"’";“'“mlffflmt._“'h!"h heretofore be- have been sought after and often de- Topeka and Santa Fe; Union Pacific, | 5ok place yesterday at the Nagasaki OSTRIGHES BY MAIL _— “P“ 5 e T cause of its inaccessibility has been scribed in recent years. One reason| Western Pacific and Southern Pacific S BT nnell, 27, is at the overlooked. The monument which local court. The woull be assassin | Three Accidents, One Fatal, H New Haven hospital with a fracture | has hee e i they have not ‘registered’ with globe | roported striking trainmen back on | made the following statement: - — { Thrce Accidentss Qe Eatal i Happshy L SN sl Ai0p BT 8t iaotinel Do heenwe i el oRyalicing HiEA ottefs and adventurous spirits 1s| their jobs and tralns making sched-| o wag subject to all sorts of dis- | Parcel Post Delivery of Uncle Sam| at Beaches in and Around the | shallow water while be e nan st o Bel G exd terloaistan R gL that they lack the picturesque na- | ule time. grace trom my childhood at the hands rVa,ll( ater while bathing at Savin |above high water mark on a sand tives of Tahiti or the Marquesas. Strikers Return. of the Japanese peopie and naturaly | Has Novel Shipment of Two Young | ity o1 Nevs Fb e jiiae km:h;:‘ nsont:ed..:mn}r_im,q:;pn?{rmx dune but is surrounded by a low Unique' in Being Uninhabited. The strike of crews on the Cum-|have grown up a curser of Japan. I 7 e 2 (R stone wall which protects it when the ; 2 Baby Birds. New Haven, Aug. 18.—Joseph Ma- | DaVing received a fracture of the|ges is running high. “When the Portuguese found them | berland Valley division of ":j K‘E‘ threw bombs into the government gen- L ¢ = ) AUE: B8 —J08sePh M-l apine in a similar manner, BE about the time America was discov-| Ville and Nashville at Corbin, Ky.|eral of Korea and attempted the life| washington, Aug. 18.—Every now | borc iy e ered they were uninhabited—almost Cnded. Switchmen in the L. and N.of Gegeral Tanaka, all With the in- |and then someone comes out with an | vesterday afternoon in the Omnmpnch M | ARE WRITING MEMOIRS. a unique condition for land units of [ Y&rds at Montgomery, Ala., returned ' tention of receiving the anti-Japanese | account of another freak shipment| river, east of the roundhouse of the |t €LY onument Is London, Aug. 18.—Winston Spencer their size and habitability. ElP\Pnrm work. The yard crews and other|gpirit among the Koreans. made across country via Uncle Sam's| New York, New Haven and Hart- Well Taken Care of |Churchill, secretary for the colonies years ‘before the Pllgrims set foot on| ¢MPloy2s of the Missourl Pacific who| "It was my intention to find my parcel post system, until there seems | ford railroad. Madala with several : {and former Premier Herbert Asquith Plymouth Rock an English \eusel struck at Van Buren, Ark, agreed to| way into the Japanese interior and |no end to the unusual things he is fellow workmen employed by the Tokio, Aug. 15.—Since Secretaryare the latest recruits to the memoir stopped there; but it was nearly a'EC back to work today. ~ Chicago. | attempt to assassinate every minister | willing to transport by mail, But now | railroad went swimming after eating Denby and the Annapolis class of |writing field. It is understood that that the| Milwaukee and St. Paul brotherhood | o¢ state after assassinating the gener- | comes word from the post office de- | @ hearty meal. It is believed that he|18S1 visited the Perry monument at Mr. Churchill will receive 20,000 French settled there and claimed| i*en ended the tle-up at Channing, | q), partment of what may be a new|Was seized with cramps. Kurihama park, a bleak fishing vil- |pounds and Mr. Asquith a lesser sum them. Mich. “My attempt proved a complete | thriller, in the shipment by mall, of | While diving from a pavilion at lage on the cost of the Miura pen-!for books to be published at about “Their population today consiats| Three Men Beaten. fallure in Shanghal as the bombs|two baby ostriches, over what is the Savin Rock late yesterday, Frank insular not far from Yokosuka. Ja-|the end of the year. largely of French Creoles, freed Disorders continued. Three work-|thrown at the General failed to ex- greatest distance in the whole coun- laves | ted from Africa and set-|crs emploved in railrcad shops at|plode. Had th actually exploded fen e Seorton, ' o Tafans| Ccinats mere aiacleh and tvere | ey o v Kiiss mose son 31| e asricher, avost ne sze ot +|H DN TN IS Ay s LIS Ea Y EEE tlers from Mauritius, dala, 22, of this city, was drowned century and a half after R @EIEIEI EIEIE]IEE]@ EEEEE@@E@E@EE@E@E} about 20,000 people, among whom, Thirty-five of 15 striking mainten-| 0.0 13" economie conditions in the | beaver and muskrat. This is said to| fewer than®1,000 are white. 008, DL MRy, B O IS, R al 016, tha " orBIN) " Dureai. 7ok |ite the fisat. tire the pRECRlN Rt has PHONE Nat[ona‘Meatstures cu \\T:T [ family budget and housekeeping book s SUMMER l OO I N N EAR 483 j MAIN ST. Q| free fo all applicants, and it encour- M | ages especially familles with yearly | premier Hughes Predicts Great In-| . 3 3 QIT 7 m Tomorrow we are offering some rare bargains in SUMMER FOOTWEAR. Here are i | prizes of $150,100 and 50 kronor will | capitalist system Australia is sup- e t 5 be presented to those showing the Fvide a8 Many people as 1d 3 Ave age 2 to 5. portige twice as many people i NOW as $2.98, all to go at from Malabar and a few Chinese. Be- |1y beaten. A roundhouse employe of | people at a time. full-grown brown chicken, were mail- | EI | statistics of Stockholm is endeavoring | been utilized for fur shipments in to set up a system of bookkeeping in | such large quantity. Largest Retailers of Quality Meats in Amor!ca incomes from 5,000 to 6,000 kronor | to adopt the plan. The bureau offers creasé of Inhabitants and Agricul- | some of the ba‘-gams: — Group No. 1 — | — Group No. 2 — | best kept books at the end of 12|10n Years ago, according to Prime | months. Minister Hughes, who in a recent Misses’ and Children's White Pumps .... | above the prices which prevailed in| 000 inhabitants will have grown: tol X . g b TN | July 1914, 100‘nr\r\,:nr\ : 2 j All other Misses' and Children’s Footwear $l 49 and $1 9 ginning with secret spice groves to|the Texas and Pacific rallroad at Dal- i ed from a point low in the Florida combat the existing Dutch monopoly, | las, Tex o was Injured by a bomb | Deinuln ko & tow 10 e Nebhe @ thelr economic development turned 1-,\‘.\ ch shattered the roof of the| SWEDEN FOR EGONOMY west corner of the state of Washing- recent years to vanilla, then to cocoa-' building. AT GATurrivel there In BardusLyons nuts, which still is the principal pro- | Tear Gas Used. [ Ry Tonas duct, and within the present century| A tear bomb used by police in dis- | Government to Encourage Savings,| another report from the Northwest experiments were begun with rubber. | persing a crowd of striking Shnnmsnl HiTHE tne atoryr of the arfIvRITAEsats On some of the smaller {slands the at Topeka, Kas., roufed thdn poh‘:e\ Arranges for System of Living of el ;:P;\pmv'\! gl ) ‘m"e;i Gt 5 natives eke out a living by hunting al!so. A third attempt to dynamite % 73 bt i i birds' eggs and 'scraping guano off | tracks of the Louisville and Nash- Average Family of Workers. ?:&:étm' f;_nhr: t}:ml;:.nl;::(“‘:\Dnm;:’— . the granite’to sell to the plantations| viile in Alabamai occurred at Grace| g opoin Aue 15.—To secure |of minety sacke anil included S families of the middle and working | mal sation, 0 5 a small compensation, about 40 kron ture Possibilities. includes all Ladies’ White Pumps and Ox- | includes all al.dies’ White Pumps and O\- | _The average food cost index figure [ survey of the condition of the Com- | C .. LD, (I | ducing country in the world,” said a COAL FOR ITALY ssicalbirs) poas — hsiion of Mahe. The islands now support!near Birmingham. exact and rellable data on living [of the red and white fox, martin, TELE. P s e i o). VL & AUSTRALIA RISE Extra Specia-NATIVE BROILERS. .Lb. 42¢ | i wrooio i i bty e postbies fords, formerly sold at S'i 98. $1 98 fords, formerly sold as high PRIME RIB ROASTS.... Lb. 28c to 35c [ o me tosmy in sweden wne re. NG EIE Mr. Hughes, “and i Py mmmm-h.mnMp'“MQQN.nqutj BOYS’ OXFORDS MEN’'S OXFORDS worked.” As an instance Mr. Hughes | [§] S Sovern grees 2 ha ras suited W Sport Oxfords, y N LEAN BONELESS POT ROASTS . Lb. 18C P b T ;’n:“;‘g:’:: 1 wfflf‘fn! :.:1:91“ H :Z:l *p to 5% Black or brown, mchld!ng Sport Oxfords, all [ Thousands of Tons in Exchange for | . norior staple to that of American Sizes 914 th2 broken lines, not all sizes $2 98 | Rolling Stock. cotton, -and he pointed out that Aus-| in every style 4 LEAN SHOULDER POT ROASTS. .Lb. 22¢ § 1o ave 1o asreement | oo maebie o7 2res, for e | for the export of Russian coal has|area devoted to it in gmerica. @ o ] | been signed by the Soviet representa- . i 0] — HOSIERY BARGAINS — [ Children’s Mercerized Socks, first quality LEAN FRESH PORK SHOULDER. .Lb. 18c [Jjsur," ™" ™ @7 fatn come| - SMALL TYPR HURTS EVES. | G Chikdren e Moo s ol Hose S L LhB:Boviel (gbvstnmEnt WS |y cage Japinese Studant it Néke [®] Ladies’ Full Fashioned Silk Hose (A gmde) — | undertaken to deliver in Italy 200,000 | tons of coal from the Don basin and Sightegl as Cause of This. Ladies’ Glove Silk Hose, Our Special . BEST BRANDS PR'NT BU’]TER Lb 44C 30,000 tons of mineral ofl, wille the| Tokio, Aug. 15--The marked in- ; >0 . Itallan company has agreed to supply | crease In the number of short-sight- | @] — 5K i N o the Soviet government with railroad |ed Japanese students of recent years O] DON'T FORGET OUR NEW ADDRESS rolling stock, other railroad materials, ({g due, in. the opinion of doctors, m @ VES LIVER Lb 45 | installation for coal mines, and agri- | the large circulation of children sl . > CAL R T T LR A C || cultural machinery. The Ifallan com- | magazines which are printed in very! (O] 267 MAIN ac1ng est ain t. | pany agrees to make its shipments be- [ small type and to the strong colors 0| » | fore receiving the Russlan coal and |used in their illustration. It is be- 5 " : : i ofl. Another clause of the agreement |ljeved that 60 per cent of the _\-mmg,’ n Same Prices—Nothing Over $4.98. ARMOUR’S STAR HAMS vessa s Lb 32'.‘ “:;*;";TM'C‘;M ::Phe 1::rz:;'d b‘i‘ ::e;er students ‘.hn w..r-fl:hltd.l A hrv\; tual agres. |as & remeay. o DI EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE | Italian company by mutual agree-|as a remedy. @E@@@EE@@@@@EE@E@@@E@@

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