New Britain Herald Newspaper, August 23, 1922, Page 14

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“travelo” — SWEATERS — Our store is where you will find “Travelo” Jackets and Vests IMPORTED SLIP-ONS AND VESTS Camel Hair and Brown Heather AUTO ROBES AND GOLF HOSE FITCH-JONES CO. City Hall 18 (.K‘,\ (b (‘1 or anywear anytime anywhere | Copyrighty {5~ Peckham. " Foreman, Inc.1922 |kans are progressing, a group of busi- | that the late-moulters’ progeny excel, \ness men have acquired a number of the department report continues, but |oil leases in the Anchorage fleld and | also in the value of the product as |hold them subject to the advent of | the distribution was more even, a |capital in sufficient volume to drill| much larger propostion of the eggs |one or more complete well, the prop- | being laid during the winter months erty being turned over on a low ray-|In the last seven months the daugh- by o iy alty basis, all amolument being su I ters of the late-moulters not only av- ject to striking oil eraged two dozen eggs per bird more Anchorage recently jointly financed | than the original flock, but the value ReadIUS[ment OI wages Brings; cannery plant by escrowing all sub- | Of their product was, figuring at the AbOlll Normalcy Tl]el‘e ‘Zfrmnrms Tt susiciast capital was|same prices, about $1.04 per bird MINING ACTIVITIES START IN ALASHA raised The cannery was launched more during the same period. It is and this season is operating success- | ©Xpected that this margin will in- il | crease . Aug | Tt is the policy of Ala tal adjustment !to pool with outside capita! on all wages bringing a close approach to jegitimate enterprises and in this normaley as applied to mining has the public, as well as legi- USE MIN”TE NEE"[E resulted in a return of the pendulum |timate developers, are protected | IN EMBR"”]ERINE toward greater mining activity than against buccaneers of finance ‘Finest Work in the World From 23 (By the of 1 skan capita’ Assoclated manner has been experienced the history | FOOD GIVNG COVS building it was impossible to obtain E i help for mining operations owing to the good wages in railroad construc-| Some of the Animals Give Enough Milk to Suffice 80 Children ‘ needle much ller than ever seen | now, was on exhibition in Washing- tion. Even now there is a general| shortage of miners throughout the Associ- | ton recently. So fine is the worl est details of the features of territory and every man of experience who care to be is employed. Min ures represented were clear the men's beards, Washington, ated Press)— | broidery work |est of the pre must have been done w Aug. (By Associ- cient Chinese em- far surpacsing the fin- 23 takes on an entirely different com- . ple n than of a few years ago; at- tention being given to gaini cess to known placer deposits able for hydraulic and dredges, aside from this phase of the placer| situation there tle sa n‘t where old-timers of ground from which they sice |that will give er out a grubstake for the winter, and | nijdren a day, vho do not care to take out a for-|ine capacity one of the feats of the has been accomplished by department of agriculture, and whirh fect that proper feeding and |declared On its experi through Md and | doing o 15 1 Washington piece | a¢eq more h Quartz Mined. the U. § of the renaissance 5 e they appreciated, had to powerful mi allest Needl cows, the| The smallest needle in the world that have which is itself much finer than more thanifi judging by the encouraging eries, the apparent per bodies and abi to mine economic- ally, the outlook for quartz is excel- lent Additional prospectin 1 low Creek district has a | This little h elds enough mil more extended area, and apidly as|+o provide a quart a day to 170 chil trails and roadways are extended the|dren. | prospector bringing commercial | Ordinary Cows. | properties into being i or scrub produces ( So great has become the lure of|anly enough milk to feed 5 children he hills that almost all the populous a quart a day a good cow|zinovich, wife of Sir Vincent Vizen- centers along the railroad are under ields enough to give 20 children a|zinovi senior judege of the interna- going a mid-summer quietude, eve quart a day. The supercow, as thejtional court at Shanghai. The prize one who has a grubstake and many department calls her, and there are|pjece of the large collection consist- engaged other lines of business|more and more of them in this class|ed of eight Pah Hsien embroidercd taking advantage of the ideal condi-| enough milk FO:panP!F representing the eight Chinese tions in the hills to combine a plets. t a small herd might easily supp!y[immortals, which included the mi- ure trip with prospecting this quantity to the small fh”-!n_uw work described. They were made ‘““How much does it go to the pan” dren in a small town sometime during the Ming dynasty, has been supplanted by “What does| Profit For Dairymen more than 400 years ago. it run to the ton” and “how is the| The improvement of dairy Fast Colors. crop looking?" means more than increased profits M; of the old Chinese art Even when a big cleanup come in|the dairyman, the there is no excitement, as these things clares, it means cheaper and more|enzinovich's collection i the way in are becoming every-day occurrences. milk, the best bone and muscle mak- | which the colors remain, assist in pre- Alaska Needs Capital. er for children Good breeding an?|serving the silk fibres and retain thei Alaska at present needs more inter- [good feeding have made the differ- |freshness through the ages Lady est in quartz mining, especially from |ence. What this means i8 brought|Vizenzinovich is credited with being outside capital, 1t is stated, for local | out forcibly in a poster prepared by foremost authority on Chinese ar- capital is carrying the peak of de- the department which is available to |tistry and her collection is one of the velopment and the lack of larger all those interested in the subject. |most remarkable in the world. It capital is retarding rapid develop-| In the same connection, the de- ment | partment shows that culling the poul- | Geological survey engineers are now | try flock to get rid of all birds except making recognizances along the rail- the vigorous, prolific ldyers, results| road belt and the resuit of their find- | in noticeable improvement ings is expected to have a tremend- |progeny well ous effect upon all classes of mining, | €g8S. and a boom is looked for as soon as| Hens and Fags these reports are made known Recent experiments with the poul- Alaska is no place for the wildcat- |try at the Beltsville farm showed ter, for the communities are arrayed |that the late moulters selected from | o edit State's Attorney Crowe pre- against spurious promotions, and all|a flock of 100 Rhode Island Reds in | . g vegterday to push pending crim efforts to float such enterprises arelthe fall of 1520 laid seven more €ggs|i .1 caces to immediate trial balked by the public and press |per bird during their second year| 4 pumper of leading Chicago attor As an illustration of how the Alas- [than the original flock pullets. | Lovg have been picked to aid |They were used as breeders the fol-| nrowe and his assistants in the pre- lowing spring and the first red: pul- | cecutions lets to commence laying in the fall | lof 1821 were found to be the off | spring of these late moulting hens, Their pullets in a period of seven months have already averaged about | two dozen eggs per bi | the original flock Value of Product It is not alone in number of eggs FOR SALE All improvements. 1 acre land Price $6.800. | partmen S result of breedi produced 000 pounds of g in the Wil- disclosed et the experts said |the Chinese work must have been |done with a needle slim enough to pass through the eye of that needle Large Collectio The exhibit was a portion of the collection of Lady Georgiana Vizen- An ordinary cow while in ves cows A beauty PUSH CHICAGO LABOR CASES Aug. in Chicago, 2 | gers and jury fixers in | convicted since May 1, and with con- victions in 380 out of 450 cases of murder, robbery and other crimes to cases of these crooked labor leaders land agents We now have building boom FOX’S—Sun., Mon., Tues. “NANOOK OF THE NORTH” The Most Thrilling Story of the Snow Lands unprecedented in an gOing on | throttled the huilding industry in Chi- cago so busy . defending they will have no chance to kill build JACKIE COOGAN IS IN “TROUBLE” Starting Sunday —PALACE — Fruit, barn and gar- $1,200 cash. 8 room cottage. One cow, 30 chickens. H. J. FOIREN 140 MAIN STREET age. Balance on casy terms. PHONF R ———————— - W TED—REPAIRING BY CONTRACTOR AND BUILDER Are Yon Going to Build? We have special plans for new line of bungalows, 5, 6 and 7 rooms, also for houses, 1. 2, 3 and 4 family, with modemn improve: ments, construction of latest design, and a number of Summer cot- tages, very artistic. D’rices reasonable. We also have different styles of fireproof shingles, best grades and guaranteed for fifteen years and a special line of single and double garages. With our experfence of 33 years, we can furnish all information. All quotations free. We will be pleased to receive a call or a letter from you. Our low prices will appeal to you. P. HA MAKOWSKI 54 CONCORD ST. Opp Miller St. Off Farmington Ave. BARGAIN WEEK A= BESSE - LELANDS LET US SERVE YOU ELECTRICALLY —THE— COWLES ELECTRIC CO. 392 STANLEY ST. TEL. 2229-4 New Britain Royal Cleaners. China Exhibited in Washington | . | thel the | department de- | which was pointed out in Lady Viz- | takes just 150 trunks to transport it. | | —~With 40 labor as in an increase of | leaders, conspirators, hombers, slug- | labor cases Mr. | “There will be no slacking up in the | Prosecutor Crowe said. | the city | rd more than|,ng I'm going to keep these men who | themselves ! | Kallgren RULING WILL AID CIVIL WAR WIDOWS Secretary of Interior Clears Up Several Controversies Washington, August 23 (By the As- soclated Press)—The secretary of the interfor has just rendered a very in- teresting opinion relating to former widows of veterans of the civil war, Under the act of May 1, 1920, such a widow must show that all subse- quent marrjages have been dissolved and, in case of divorce, that the same was obtained without default on her part. The records of the courts of the various states, both under the act of 1920, and prior legislation, have been accepted by the Bureau of Pen- sions and conclusive where the hus- band obtained the divorce from the wife, as showing fault on the part of the wife. The secretary now rules, that where the husband moved into some other state than that where the wife resided and obtained service by publication, and there is nothing in the record to show actual service on the wife, the wife would be entitled to make a showing that she was not at fault and that such showing could be made in the Pension Bureau fit- self, The case in which the decision was rendered fs that of Mary M., as for- |mer widow of William Keaton, who died in 1879, Several years after- ward the widow married a man named Irvin, in Missouri. Irvin sub- sequently moved to Oklahoma, and in 1804 obtained a divorce without knowledge on the part of his wife. Under the former practice, the widow would be denied the pension | because the husband obtained the di- vorce. Under the present ruling, the widow will be entitled to make a showing, as a matter of fact, that she was not at fault Another interesting opinion of the secretary is in the reversal of a de- cisfon of the Bureau of Pensions and the permission of a pension to Clai- borne Beaty, of Captain David Beaty's independent company of scouts. Captain David Reaty organized his scouts in 1862 and the company ren- dered service under the command of the army of Tennessee through the Civil war . The troops. however, ‘were nstered into the regular mili- ed States, and consequently the scouts had no status under the pension laws In 1870, however, an act was passed for the relief of Beaty's scouts, giv- ing them the same statug as other soldiers. The pension bureau, never- held for ma s that this permit of ons to the outs, except as to prior legisln- tion. Secretary Fall has now decided that under the language of that act the benefits of the pensions laws, whether passed prior to that time or since, come within the purview of jthat act and that the scouts are en- titled to relief ereunder. PERSONALS, @f “the: X however, d4id not pen s Helen M. Bradley, returned left for Atlantic € will spend the nainder of the month. party of journeyed to Indian ning where they were served with a fried at the Hart- ford Cottage, the hosts of the eve- ning being J. Franklyn Conners and Charle Hart, in whose cars the trip was made. The party consisted | of Siene Kallberg, Alma Stromquist Kitty Kerin, Olive Scheuy, Jennie Elsie Loomis, Vera Heslin, Madeline Clough, Mary Callahan and Mrs. Frances Oliver. chicken dinner Jolson’s Bride Al Jolson, stage comedia., iecent- ly confirmed the report that he had married Miss Alma Osborne, known on the stage as Ethel Delmar. — EVERYTHING IN FURNITURE we can outfit it completely. a full line of Furniture, Stoves and F surely please. 34 Lafayette St. G Fox & Jompany fc Hartford Store Closed Wednesdays At Noon Hartford 'THE GREATEST SHOE CLEARANCE We’ve Ever Held Is Now In Progress On the Second Floor Every pair is absolutely smart, perfect and up to the minute; the closing prices are but a fraction of the true worth of the Shoes. ODD LOTS OF WHITE OXFORDS AND PUMPS, high and low heels, also patent and dull leather, Louis heels Oxfords, narrow widths. To Close ....... $l¢00 ONE LOT OF WHITE CANVAS, 2-STRAP PUMPS, junior heels, also Sport Pumps and Oxfords, trimmed with black and tan; sizes incomplete. Value up to $9. $l 9 5 To Close » WOMEN’S WHITE REGENT KEDS OXFORDS, rubber soles, white leather trimmed, sold formerly for $5.00. $3 45 . “w Special at ........... e 3 e WOMEN’S TAN AND BROWN STRAP PUMPS, low, medium and Baby Louis heels, welt and turn soles, good assortment of sizes. Values up to $9. D PUMPS with low, Cuban and Louis heels, Special at ..... ONE LOT OF WOMEN'S OXFORDS leathers of patent, dull calf, gray suede, and the new Beige color, styles up to the minute. Sizes incomplete. Values to $12. Special at X, ? $4095 GRAY CALF OXFORDS witlh b]agk trimming, rubber or leather soles, newest sport Values $7.75. $4.95 lasts; coplete range of sizes. Something New; A Demonstration of the Beautiful FAIRIE ART YARNS In Progress on the Second Floor—Under the Supervision of MRS. FRANCIS A. HARRIS OF NEW YORK Mrs. Harris is one of the country’s leading crochet and knitting designers; she will be with us only a limite‘d time supervising the Fairie Art Yarn demonstration. This new varn is a'combination of fibre silk and cotton; combined in such a way as to give it all the richness of real silk with the durability and working qualities of cotton. Particularly adapted to knitting and crocheting dainty sweaters, capes, caps and trimmings and comes in eight delicate shades. Several finished hand made models are on display in this department. D S S T T S P TS S S o AP S S ST S S Py Cottage on Barnett street at a low price; good big piece of land; several stores for sale about the city. If you want to go in business, it will pay you to see us. We’ll start you right; money to loan on second mortgages. : CAMP REAL ESTATE CO. 272 Main Street Phone 343 Rooms 305-6 Bank Bldg; \FIRE INSURANCE and REAL ESTATE We are prepared to do all tite business you can give us at lowest rates. Good loans negotiated. H. D. HUMPHREY ROOM 208 NATIONAL BANK BUILD VISIT OUR DINING ROOM WHEN IN HARTFORD Call At 24-30 STATE ST. Live and Boiled Lobsters Soft Shell Crabs Fresh Crab Meat Shrimps Steaming Clams Chowder Clams HONISS’S If you are about to furnish a home ‘We carry loor Coverings at prices that will A. LIPMAN New and Second-Hand Furniture Tel. 1329-2 For Quick Returns Use Herald Classified Advts. THE OLD HOME TOWN BY STANLEY NRA OTEY WALKER, THE BACHELOR Tow, MARSHAL -HELPED THE NEW ] DRESSMAKER UNPACK A = LO OF GOODS TODA

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