New Britain Herald Newspaper, September 1, 1922, Page 15

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ARAB GIRL LEADER NEW BRITAIN DAILY PLEADS FOR PEOPLE flSSORTED DROPS Says French Mandate Is Unpopu- PURE SUGAR C An assortment of delicious sweetness selected to suit your taste L Wherever good try from complete decay and ferred upon its people innumerable | benefits, no word of censure was ut- tered SERIOUSLY ACCUSED = ql Korean youngsters have rebelled.” ANDY fbgaa. "o candy isI :bld con- by the missionary quarter gainst their conduct. The tables are It is the missionary which hot-headed uvarter against The movement started in the Pai- lar in the Near East Haifa, Palentine, Sept. 1.—Nazel al Abed, an Arab girl, who played a prominent part in fomenting the re- volt against French rule in Syria last May, and who later managed to es- cape from prison where she was serving a life sentence, gave the rep- resentative of The Associated Press an interview in whiih she set forth her reasons for the unpopularity of the I'rench mandate in the Near East. “The French press,” she said, * cused Charles R. Crane, former American minister to China, of be- ing the cause of the disorders of last May. This is absolutely false. The disorders were direct result of the cppressive and offensive rule of the mandatory power in Syria. “We Syrian people,” she continued, “are liberty loving. We pride our- selves on the fact that we are the in- tellectual and moral leaders of all the Arabs. In welcoming the French Army in 1918, we had hoped that France would help us realize our as- pirations for self government. We have been deceived. Instead of just HERALD, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1922, ARE NOW FOR RENT American.and European Million- ires Occupy Turkish Buildings MAKING" You must have GOOD COFFEE o glart with’ ) ‘*Igucm*fl etter ICOFFEE \\ LIPTON'S YELLOW LABEL COFEEEE plied: “Those who know anything of Syrian polities will admit that so far the mandate system has proven an absolute fallure. On the one hand it introduced fresh encroachments on the sovereignty of our beloved coun- try in favor of an imperialistic pow- er, and on the other hand {t brought Constantinople, Sept. 1.—The Sub- lime Porte is considering the note from the Allied High Com- missloner regarding the reduction of government employes, and it {8 ex- pected that action will be taken which will make good the monthly deficit of £00,000 Turkish pounds in the wages to government servants. In addition the Sublime Porte has decided to abolish the Legations and Consulates in various neutral coun- tries. Orders have already gone out for the closing down of Legations and consulated in Madrid, Berne, The Ha- gue, Stockholm. Gogernment build- ing of secondary importance will be evacuated and rented to private con- cerns. Some palaces on the Bos- phorus will be rented million- aires. The economy measures provide al- so for the reductions in the salaries of schoolmasters, hospital nurses, and ioffice boys ;the abolition of superflu- ous government offices and the retire- ment of a large number of army and navy officers. seriously to Prolessor Henry Ward Makes Sensational Charges Yellowstone Park, Wyo., Sept. 1— Excitment is rife in the wild animal community of the park scandal public quacking about it, the squirrels chattering it and the bob-cats scattering it broadcast in their shrill voices. since about Mr. Pelican attention. The ducks the received chal Haktang, a boy school directed by the American Methodist mission, the students agitating for the removal of the Rev. H. D. Appenzeller, the principal, on the ground that it was disgraceful for a foreigner to conduct a Korean school. Mr. Appenzeller, taking a firm stand, the students, or a majority of them, made a series of These ds- mands were: 1—Morning service should be abol- ished. demands, which not being complied | 4refwith, they went on strike. are are Throughout all the whispers nudges of neighbors as he passes, Mr. Pelican maintains his stately mien, |, seemingly unconsclous of the jibes of [yre fgnorant of educational methods fitting conditions in the Orient. the multitude. His action would in- dicate he still holds his valued place in the community. those graduating His trouble started with the charge|janan ana Korea. by Prof. Henry B. Ward, head of the department of zoology of the Uni-|teachers should be made equal. versity of Illinofs, that he is a trout “hog" and violator of all the tenets of good sportsmanship. Proof of |} these charges probably will mean that Mr. Pelican will become an outcast with everyone's door closed to and everyone's hand against him. o Professor Ward is conducting an|, exhaustive investigation for the fed- eral bureau of fisheries at Lake Yel- lowstone in Yellowstone National park is to their relationship between the pelican and the trout supply. His investigation, which has heen pro- gressing several weeks, will continue through the present season. The flock of pelicans that live and breed on Lake Yellowstone numbers about 400. They ‘“summer” aristo- cratically at the lake, feasting on the test the land affords from spring un- il September, then go to their win- ter resorts along the Gulf of Mexico. The bird diets almost exclusively on fish, and, so far as the Yellow- stone and other Rocky Mountain lakes and streams are concerned, this means exclusively on trout. He estimates that the 400 pelicans con- pume more trout than are taken dur- ing an entire season by sportsmen. The pelican is no respecter of size limits or open seasons, Professor ‘Ward charges. He declared he had seen a platoon of 36 pelicans ranged across a stream in regular fornation, praying on the trout as they swam up to spawn. Hitherto, the stream had yiéelded trout eggs by the millions but hatchery men this year could gather only a fraction of the normal amount. The fact is granted that Mr. Peli- can's home life is above reproach. He is a good provider, a good hus- hand and father and is strictly mono- gamous. For the 400 birds in the lake flock, there are just 200 uests; one for each couple and one mate for each bird. There are no “trian- gies” in the Yellowstone *'400". If further investigations justify it, Professor Ward will ask the federal government to bar the pelicans as summer visitors from the park. DEMAND CHANGE IN MISSION TEACHERS Korean Students Said fo Be In- fluenced by “Hidden Hand” Seoul, Korea, Sept. 1. (By the As- sociated Press)—Korean students be- friended by principals of the mission gchools during the suppression of the independence movement, are demand- ing changes in teachers and curricul- um, which some belleve will force the mission schools out of the field. Sides are being sharply taken in the controversy. One school of thought, eritical of the Japanese government declared that the “impudent de- mands” of the students are being in- spired by a “Hidden Hand,” in order, “that the missionaries may be de- prived of their last shred of influence and either be content with complete subservience, or will clear out alto- gether, leaving the colleges they have founded as going concerns convenient for the occupation of their successors in the educational field.” On the other hand, a writer in the| Seoul press says: ‘It is a fact that teachers and equipments in mission schools are very much inferior to those of government and public schools. It is quite natural that stu- dents of mission schools should want, as they %o, improvements in these regpects so that after graduation they may not be handicapped in their fu- ture career. It is not fair to call their demands impudent. Nor is it just to say that they receive benefits for nothing, for as a matter of fact they pay comparatively high tuition fees. “It is interesting to note that dur- ing the independence agitation, when hot-headed Korean young men ad- vanced Impudent demands without|| thowing any sense of gratifude to al government which saved thelr coun- andlaway with, years much had been done to bring| government ous instruction had been limited and him | the principal asked until autumn has spread private schools. | i ~ 2—Bible teaching should be done 83—Teachers educated in foreign ountries should be dismissed as they 4—Teachers should exclusively be | from schools in 5—=Salaries of Japanese and Korean It was pointed out that in recent| he schools into line with. Japanese schools and that religi- to| onsider the demands. But the boys emained obdurate and the movement to other mission and e S/#e for ForInfants, Invalidsand Growing Children The Original Food-Drink For All Ages T Opening Announcement N T O | tlons in Syria. } R 3 treatment, we find that our country {s occupied by black troops, who are our inferiors; our government turned over to inexperienced French officials, who try to govern by force, and our leaders lodged in jalls. “In the face of all these abuses, she declared, “a nation can do no less than revolt and rid itself of the yoke of the oppressor.” About 30 Years Old. Nazel al Abed is about 30 years of age, of commanding personality and with a great charm of manner. She was born in Damascus of a wealthy and influential family. A mission school provided her with an -educa- tion which seems to have instilled into her heart the love of country |and of independence. During the war she served in the Red Crescent, a Turkish organization similar to the American Red Cross. Since 1919 she has been the accredit- ed leader of all the women organiza- Because of the part she played in organizing the demon- strations in Damacus last May, which resulted in great disorders and blood- shed, she was arrested and con- demned to life imprisonment. She remained in prison, however, but a short time, soon making her escape. Asked if Syria is prepared as yet for independence, Nazel al Abed re- INFANTS asa INVALIDS ASK FOR & Horlick’s e - the Original 5~ W) Avoid Imitations and Substitutes Richmilk, malted grain extract in Powder to us great social as well as com- mercigl suffering, due to the separa- tion of Syrla from her sister coun- try, Palestine.” Nazel al Abed complained that the world, and especlally America, is so iil informed about Syria. “The French occupation,” she asserted, “has been a curse instead of a bless- ing. We Syrian people today are treated like slaves We are forced to accept French habits, French cus- toms, a Freneh civilization and even a French language, in spite of our- {25 plastre The finance ministry has decided to withdraw worn paper money notes from circulation. The government, together with two delegates of the Ottoman Public Debt, is devising a plan to this end. Worn paper money of one, two and a half, five, 20 and notes will be withdrawn tfrom circulatien and replaced by metal pleces of equivalent value. No more metal money than the amount of paper money withdrawn will be struck. No Cooking = Nourishing — Digestible CLOTHES SHOP at and furnishings. be carried. Edwards Clothes Shop 298 Main Street EW Britain’s newest store for men will have its formal opening Saturday when the EDWARDS North of the Commercial Trust Co. makes its bow to the public of this city and vicinity. HIS store will make a specialty of men’s clothing High class merchandise in- cluding some of the finest makes of clothing will Suits made to fit every form at prices that will fit any purse will be carried. PENING with an entirely new stock, the public will have an opportunity on Saturday of looking over Fall goods of the latest designs. Men who like to be well dressed will find this store an ex- cellent place to trade. We promise a fine grade of merchandise, prices that will appeal and the most courteous of service. E extend a cordial invitation to the public of New Britain to attend our opening tomorrow. EMEMBER the place—298 Main St.—4 doors North of the Commercial Trust Co. selves. Is it any wonder that we re- volted last May? “All we ask now is to be left alone, free to .rebuild our country in undis- turbed quiet; free to live our life in our own way, and to solve our prob- lems after our own manners. We still hope that America will not fail to help us realize our aspirations.” WIFE BOBS HAIR, HE QUITS Woman, Afraid To Go Home, Begs Police To Help Her Sergt. Wren was on duty in Mount Vernon police headquarters yesterday afternoon when a stylishly dressed With your skin? young woman said to him: 1t I # yo o im- “My husband has left me because oAy EIcezemay Hingworm on sim i ilar itching, burni: | I l:ohbed my hair. Will you help skin-eruption, try Resinol Oi me Resinol Soap and sce how Bliedaciined togs ya:ber name, savaliianing slopsr;nd the trouble disappe ing she feared publicity. She finally St i PP that she was afraid to go there and| Resiool, Baltimore, Md, A get her clothes. “If I go home,” she said, “I fear my husband will come back and at- tack me. He was awful mad over my having my hair bobbed.” Sergt. Wren told the young woman to go to the Tuckahoe police. 298 Main street, four doors WOMANS JAPPAREL SPECIALTIES MIDOLETOWN == NEW BRITAIN Q/Za’jaf)ce% ii :% ,; AWAIT YOUR INSPECTION N Just A Few Words About the NEW FALL SILK FROCKS Note the new style features ‘so different’'—also, the new low prices this season. Canton Crepe—the favored material and black and n‘vy; the colors in these forerunners of “what's fashionable for Fall.’ Skirt lengths are longer—panels and side drapes are a big feature—sleeves too are different. Pay a visit and let us show you these new frocks. Cozy Topcoats for Crisp Fall Winds Swagger Coats of two face materials in plain ocolors and smart plaid effects—some belted—many without belts— then there are the more dressy coats with rich fur collars— materials and colorings are wonderful this season. The prices are much more reasonable than a year ago. Improvement of your figure lines instantaneously follows the first try-on of “Stylish Stout” Let our corsetiere fit you to a pair of these corsets and see the result. You will share our enthusiasm after a glimpse in our fitting-room mirror. Priced $6.50 and §9.00 a Pair. Do You Own A String of ‘“‘Betty Beads’’? If Not—You Should We have just received a new assortment of styles and colors. $l.00 § Costume Sli of navy or black satinette; 20 inch hems; the ideal gar- ment to wear with silk frocks $2.98 ™" Special Offerings of Dainty Neckwear 89c each formerly sold at 98c, $1.50, $1.98, $2.98 See them on bargain table in aisle,

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