New Britain Herald Newspaper, August 22, 1922, Page 3

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Always fresh and crisp in . any weather! Ideal as a de- @ licious summer confection. Life Savers sweeten the breathandcoolthethroat. SUGAR CANE AREA Department of Agriculture Figures That There Are About 524,200 Acres for Crops. Washington, Aug. 21.—(By the As- sociated cane, not {fcluding sorghum cane, in the eight principal states producing sugar cane, is estimated by the U. 8. Department of Agriculture to be 524,- 200 acres, or about 90 per cent of the harvested cane acreage of 1921, This is a preliminary estimate and in- cludes the acreage intended to be harvested for seed and syrup, as well as for sugar. The acreage that will be harvested r seed can not be satisfactorily es- timated at this time, it was sald, as it depends largely on the price received for syrup and on other factors not yet operative. Louisiana has 295,500 acres planted to cane this year, according to the preliminary estimate, or more ‘than one-half the total acreage of the eight states. Alabama has 79,000 acres, Georgia 55,000, Mississippi 37,- 200, Florida 29,003, Texas 17,500, and Arkansas 2,500, Crevasses in levees along the Miss- issippl river and other rivers are re- ported to have destroyd 9,760 acres| of cane in Louisiana, and flood in the Rio Grande valley destroyed a large part of the cane in that part of Texas. A Hkn'§hand contains 25,000 pores. Thé sea urchif, Has five jaws, each with b singlé tooth, I’M THE MAN OU ought to have faith in the doctor if you expect to get well. be trusted implicitly with his prescription. This drug store is the Halfway House on the road to Wellville. HERE'S MY HEADQUARTERS CROWELL'S DRUG STORE 83 W.M PROFESSIONAL BUILDING TALKING MACHINES AND RECORDS See Victor Advertisement Opposite C. L. PIERCE & CO. 246 MAIN STREET OPPOSITE THE MONUMENT Prpss.)—The area of sugar. SNUGGLE DANCETS- UPTO THE fiIRLS{ iE)(per[s Meet, Decree Tango, Fox| Trot and Waltz the Thing New York, Aug. 22—Women in 80, per cent of the cased are responsible for vulgar dancing, according to Ma- jor Ned Gaynor, eighty-two-year-old dancing master and instructor in de- portment, who 18 a delegate to the| National American Assoclation of Dancing Masters, which opened ” | convention yesterday in the west ball- | room of the Hotel Commodore, It's | the reaction of the war, says Miss Marguerite Walz, of the Internation- ' jal Assoclation, Masters of Dancing, a +rival organization, meeting in the op-| hotel, | i posite ballroom of the eame Both assogfations agreed that the tendency of dancing is away from the jazz steps und that the tapngo, fox { trot and straight waltz, with varia- tions such as the canter and hesita- tiog steps, would be this ®eason's vogue, “I firmly believe that 80 per cent o( the faults of posftion on the danc- Ing floor are chargeable to the gi! " leald Major Gayvor. ‘It seems as if the girl of today cannot dance un-| less she has a death grip on the . neck of the man with whom she is daneing. The trouble is, the average | young girl doesn’t know how to dance, | { She learns to dance at schools run| by promoters who have no mnrep-l tloh of the art of terpsichore,' | {80 Years Old, But He'll Show Them. | Lewis H.. Kretlow, 80 years old,| who has taught young people in Chi-| | cago for sixty years, nodded in ac- | Gaynor. Mr. Kretlow, a waltz-fox trot for the approval of the association today, illustrated with a partner the proper way for a young lady to degort herself on the floor. Instead of ‘putting her arm the nock of the man, it should. rest| about three inches from the der, with the thumb extended The thumb provides a way for in. the | ure over the way her partner dances | If he holds her tob close, Kretlow ex- plained, the girl can simply thumb sharply in the arm of her es- “I notice an increasing tendency | among young people to improve the | dance themselves,” Kretlow “They are taking more interest in| dancing gracefully. Jazz music has| had a marked effect in degenerating the dance, in my opinion. The tan- | go fox trot, danced to four-four time! but with different accent, has had the cbjectionable features of the pres- ent trot removed. The side-long drag has been eliminated.” Major Gaynor, who said he was a| Methodist in good .standing, believes| his church made a grave mistake in 1872 againet dancing, card He had passed in nlaying and theatér going. all three ‘“vices" he said. , “The Methodists are standing in their owh light,"” he assérted. “'‘They | are driving their young people i other churches which do not take — 3 He knows that we can AIN ST, i room | soclation frowned quiescence to the statements of Major | who will show | around | shoul- 4 young woman to show her displeas- | press the | cort. i said.| upholding at this.day the resolution| into | | glven credit, NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERAL such a narrow minded view." Close Dancing a Product of Cities, Miss Walgz, of the International As sociation, who arranged a dance in Philadelphia recently, which was at tended by 86,000 persons, said that the hope of eliminating the “flapper’ and the "flipper” Mances lay in edu- cation. Close Adancing, a product of the cities, was due to the crowded ball and dance hall, where it was impossible to spread out, she said,! Too much time was lost teaching new dances and not enough in teaching grace and poise, she believed One of the great needs among the young was instruction in posture in the opinfon of Miss Walz. “In standing, it should be heel to instep—that Menotes social equality,” she explained. “Heel to heel denotes Inferfority., Legs spread apart, either standing or sitting, spells vulgarity. Siouching should be avoided by hold- ing the dilaphragm in. If these things weére kept in mind, vulgar dancing would soon be forgotten.' Miss Walz sald she and her assoc)- ates had no ohjection to the '‘Scan- dal," a walking sort of a dance, pro- vided it was done correctly. The as- on the “Camel," “Shimmy,"” she “Chicago” and suid, the Ohlo s Healthiest Alice Miller, of Youngstown, has | heen selected by three doctors and tfwo nurses from among 1100 babies as the healthiest in Ohio. She is 26 months old, weighs 27 pounds, is 33 1-2 mrh‘s tall and has 16 teeth. COMMIT MURDEROUS ASSAULTS IN CAIRO 1 | | Sixteenth Attack Made by Egyptians Was on Colonel Piggot of England. Alexandria, Egypt, Aug. 22. — The recent attack in this city on Lieuten- ant Colonel Arthur Frederick Hamil- ton Piggot was the 16th case in the ceries of murderous assaults upon British subjects in Egypt. It called again to mind the threat of the na-| tionalists that an Engiishman would | be shot daily until the return of Said Zagloul Pasha, the nationalist leader who was deported by the DBritish last December, and it is the latest addition to the extended, chain of anti-British political outrages. Lieutenant Colonel Piggot, of the royal army pay corps, was shot and gravely wounded in Kadl el Fadl by unknown assailants while walking to his office. He was taken immediately into the house of an Egyptian doctor, M. Abdel Meguid, at 1 Kadi el Fadl street and was given first aid, being afterwards transported to the officers’ hospital at Abbassieh where one of the three bullets which had hit him was extracted Hopes are entertained of his re- covery but this new crime has arous- ed great indignation among the Eu- ropean populmon in Fg)pt GRIPPLE CAN RUN Caught Between Tracks As Train Ap- proaches, He Grabs Crutches and Sprints For Safety. Parfs, Aug. 22.—A miracle for which Lourdes, in some quarters, is is reported fromeMacon. A pllgrim train bound for Lourdes was waiting in the station at Dijon and several pilgrims had crossed the tracks to the refreshment room when VICTOR th the whistle called them back them was a could ‘only with the aid of two crutches, was between hack an express train was seen to be entering the station went dangerous position, had hobbled half way across with his crutches, arm and ran for safety, escaping what seemed certain I'wo Arrests in Drunkenness Charges | time the anti-saloon league ing action to determine the the liguor traffic here ESDAY, AUGUST 22, 1922 -i‘_—— Ll Yard wide, all degirable shades, 15¢ Yard. . Parowax Full 1 Lb. cake. 9¢ In the Rasement. | Genuine Keep Clean Hair Bruqhes Made by Florence Mfg. Co. Several 51.00 Grades 45¢ Mellin’s Food Large Size Jar. 54c Limit—2 to Each Custgmer. Organdy Dresses For 2 to 6 Years, Our entire stock up to $2.49 | —White and colors. . $1.00 “Pal”—The National Penci!!\ Gold and Sllver Finish. 10c+ucn Ruy Now for School. | —_—— Rick Rack Braid | For Trimming Dresses and | | | | Frocks. All colors, lc Yard Bed Sheets Made of good quality muslin. Size 72x 90. 73c In the Basement,, Wednesday Morning Opportunities At the nghland Lmen Staticnery White and full rm" | quire box. Lowest 29 c price ever, | Limit—1 box to each Customer, | colors, Liquid Veneer Pohsh . 17¢| 60c Size Bottle 1 350\ Limit—2 Bottles to Customer. 30c Size Bottle. Turkish Bath Towels 19c‘ | Large sfze, good welight, doubie loop In the Basement. French Lamb Gloves Beautiful fall shades. made of | | soft pliable sclected skins—em- broidered $1.59 backs Men’s Hose Good quality Cotton — Black | cordovan, navy—All sizes. 7€ rar Children's School | Handkerchiefs | Good grade cotton, with (‘nl-‘ | ored picot edges. 5 ror 10C Limit—5 to Each Customer. Children’s Silk Lisle Hose | First quality white, cordovan. hose — Black, | 340 Pair | Pequot ' " Tubing | Bleachea, inch width, p m———— Octagon Soap Powder 2 i 11e |In the Basement. Challies Ihe new fall patterns—Yard Wide, 150 Yard Women’s Full Fashioned Silk Hose of pure silk~Cordovan and grey only. 490 Pair | Seconds, Black Sateen Yard wide—Good quality. 23 C vyara Mavis Talcumt Powder Limit—2 Cans to Customer. Another lot of Genuine Boyshform Brassieres White and pink— Sizes to 44, . Wearwell Crib Blankets Large 36x54 size, extra huur pink or blue borders. 79c | | | | — | Silkine Mercerized C rochet | Cotton Al Numbers. 13¢ I Dish Toweling With red border — 18 inches | wide. | 7% c Yard | In the Basement. Ca R R ORI —_—_— ' Children’s Bloomer | Dresses | | Made of finest grade plain | | gingham with trimming of hand | needlework. Attractive colors. |S 206, Madeto mQ Sty e el L)) © Long Cloth | Thousands of yards of good | quality long cloth. l 1 l%c Yard Men’s Silk ’\eck“ear Hundreds of ties — Extraor- dinary value. 25¢ Plain Curtain Marquisette | Extraordinary Value. l 2%’ Cryard In the Basement, Kayser’s Silk Gloves Genuine Kayser's - (lnsm silks, absolutely perfec tA white | and all shades. ‘l 59¢Crur Cretonne Yard wide—Value to 49c. 1 50 Yard WOMEN’S Handkerchiefs | Colored woven border Madras | Handkerchiefs. Absolutely nm} quality. [ Nursing Bottles 8 Ounce graduated — Round | and flat, first grade nursers. " Kleinert's Bathing Caps | All 59c, 68c, 79c Styles. Among who | even | As he! way paralyzed man move with difficulty the rails on his A cry of horror those who saw his but the man who up from now put them under his THE JOHNSTOW FLOOD | Is Extent of Inundation, " | Johnstown, Pa. Aug. 22.—Two ar- rests on charges of drunkenness in the t two days indicated that the Johnstown flood of beer had subsided | today, but Mayor | iesued a proclamation that real beer must be sold, isfled with the fire he drew from the | dry entorcement Jeseph Cauftiel, who was not altogether sat- agents | Today he threatened to invoke a | ity ordinance which would give him anthority those he believes guilty to personally prosecute | violating the same was tak- extent of | of e prohibition laws. At of the llama Flesh is regarded as | very wholesome in South America. “NANOOK OF THE NORTH” FOX'S—Saun., Mon., Tues. Human As a Weman's Heart Ped qhe(>t< Made of quality muslin, ‘ess—81x00 size. seam- $1.25 In the Basement. Ribbed Hose des and Children’s Good quality—All 3 o 25¢ Jack Lockett, blind painter of Dallas, Tex., i eyele to Rochester, Minn., a distance of 1700 miles, with his son, |Chestel. 13, in the front seat as guide. I told Lockett they could not restore his sight, so father and son; rode a tandem b1~ Specialists at Rochester! are on their 1700-mile return journey. Fali Petticoats | Excellent cotton taffeta, tn | fall shades, made with full deep ‘floun(‘e and adjustable 65 Cc elastic waistband. | New Fall Sateen Bloomers in fall . 69¢c Extra grade sateen, colors, full cut, proper fitting bloomers. Carter’s Silk and Wool Vests For infants—Sizes 1 to 6 — | Strictly First 79c | Quality 1000 Cans of Skat Hand Soap The Regular Apron Gingham Various Size Checks. QC\'AM —_— e Galvanized Iron Garbage Cans | Heavy Guage Stock. | Large size. 986 In the Basement. | PROFESSOR SENTENCED Tokio, Aug. 22.—Dr. Tetsuji Aoki, & former professor in the Tokio Ime perial university, has been sentenced to four month’'s imprisonment be- an article in the Oriental Current Review, which laid him open to the accusation of having been dis- respectful to the Imperlal court The dector had appealed to higher court, but was unsuccesstul cause of the two one The Greek church employs rings in the wedding ceremony, geld, the other silver Lifebuoy awakes the sleeping beauty of your skin, Wake up Yyour skin/! LIFEBUC HEALTH SOAP,

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