New Britain Herald Newspaper, September 2, 1922, Page 14

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)

PAN-PACIFIC CONGRESS BALLOON STATION NEARS COMPLETION Huge Hangar at Scott’s Field Being Finished Next Year—Scientists S, ‘Will Attend. Sydney, S. W, Sept. 2 (By the| Assoclated Press)—The Pan-Pacific | Scientific congress will be held in Aus- tralla next year, as the federal gov- ernment has agreed to the proposal, providing the cost to the common- Belleville, Ill, Sept. 2.—With the |wealth does not excced 5,000 pounds. recent arrival of the army airship | Eminent sclentists from the United | A-4 and large detachments of ofMicers gtates and all other Pacific countries and men from Ross field, Cal, and are expected to attend according to| Langley field, W. Va, at Scott field, the Australian National Research near here, the only army ‘“lighter-|council, which is sponsoring the con- than-air” training station in the coun- | gregs try rapidly is nearing completion { It was explained that the last con- Completion of the huge hangar be-terence, held in Honolulu, decided ing erected to house the balloons iS|that the next meeting should be held the only work of major importance in Australia in 1923 if the Common-| that remains to be done. The train- | wealth government would agree to act ing school, to be known as the Alrlas “host”. Sir Edgworth David urged Service, Balloon and Alrship school, strongly that advantage should be| 13 under the command of Col. G. C.itaken of this opportunity to enable Hall. Capt. Charles P. Clark is in ac- great American scientists to visit Aus- tive charge |tralia, and his appeal was successful Training Students Among the questions to be discussed Active t ng of student officers st the conference are the problems and cadets already has begun. The arising from pests in wheat and fruits, course of training mapped out for|diseases in sheep and cattle, the the stud covers a 1 of at plowfly, the tick, hookworm, malaria least two week Capt. Clark and other diseases of the trophies. announced, daily training flights will | R i e ey be made | 4 secentiy vrousnt vere are-| OJTPOSTS ARE ATTACKED reaking flight from M W. Va. in 40 hours and | of actual flying time, will National Army Soldiers in Ireland in Two Hour Skirmish Drive Off As- | N, for training pur- single motor air- man ft, and be used exclus poses. The A-4 is a ship known as a on is one of the blimps in the service. It is feet long, has capacity of 80,000 cubie feet of ras. when sailants. | Dub! Sept. 2 (By the Associated | Press ational army posts in vari-| ous parts of Dublin were attacked in| force by the irregulars at about 10 o'clock last night but without suc- cess. The fighting in some instances lasted for two hours. Among the points attacked were the City hall, the Four Courts hotel | and the technical schools. Revolvers, v |rifles and machine guns were freely used. In the battle at the Four Courts hotel the irregulars used machine guns placed on a roof of the opposi- ite of the river Liffey and the rain of bullets forced a suspension of tram service in the vicinity. One national- | ist was wounded. arrying its supply of gasoline, ac- It w, has been gull 30 hours’ t in 1019 and since active service. Recently a detachment of 149 en- listed men and 20 officers arrived from Langley field to augment two airship units which had arrived from Omaha. They followed a few days later by groups of officers and n from R field Cal. Two air from Brooks field, Te also are stationed here. There 721 enlisted men and 58 officers quartered here as compared with a total of offi- cers and 300 men a few weeks ago. The air school will teach the men how to pilot spherical balloons. taking flights, then observation balloons, ar- tillery fire, airship piloting, aerosta- tics and aerodynamics, navigation and advanced courses in much of the work given in ground schools. The field it was announced, will have as its normal equipment approximately 10 airships, 100 observation balloons and three or four airplanes. GREAT PAPER SUPPLY Japanese Mills, Overstocking Markets e now JAP CUSTOMS COSTLY Tokio, Sept. 2.—The Japanese peo- ple pay out thousands of yen yearly in the observation of customs which have long since lost their original meaning. In the spring it is the cherry blossom season which loosens the purse strings of the head of the household and every member there- | of who has earning capacity. About mid-July comes the Kawabiraka (opening of the river) festival, insti-| tuted 183 years ago to celebrate the| opening of the first bridge across thel Sumida river near Ryogoku, Tokio.| Half the thousands who gathered there on July 15, this year, in all probability did not know the origin | of the tival Holiday prices reign and sake, beer and tea flow lavishly, the people coming by gaily decorated B automobiles, jinrikisha Find That Output is Lessening Un- til Surplus is Used. 2.—The Japanese paper a few other in- enlarged their Tokio, Sept mills, in common wit dustries, have greatls manufacturing capacity during the last few years, and in consequenc the market is ering ' from over- BOLSHEVICK DECORATIONS. Moscow, Sept. 2.—Deportment dec- soldiers comnfended by their com- | CAMPAIGN AGAINST DISLOYALTY STARTS League of American Pen Women Have Program Outlined Chicago, Ill, Sept. 2.—A nation- wide campalgn against disloyalty to the country of whatever nature in the spoken or printed work has been In- |augurated by the League of American Pen women, which has sent out a call to its entire membership to join in the campaign, This actlon was taken by the national officers in Washington after information was received from gov- ernment officials that those who at- tempt to destroy American institu- tions and principles direct their ef- forts primarily to the women of the country and the students in colleges. Text Books Scored. This feature is being given particu- lar attention by a special committep appointed by Mrs. Louls N. Geldest, national president, and the national executive ‘board. The textbooks in schools and colleges are being given close scrutiny by this committee, Many extbooks, it is stated, through deletions, fail to instruct properly in American history, American tradi- tions and American ideals. “Opera companies, whose activities are for education as well as entertain- ment, who banish our language, our composers and our American-trained |singers, tend toward disloyalty in our estimation,” declared Eleanor Everest Freer, national chairman of music. "To stifle the progress of so large an asset as our musical art by such a system also seems disloyal to us.” League Mombers The league of American pen wom- en is composed of the professional writing women of the country, au- thors, editors, publishers, journalists, special features and syndicate writ- ers, dramatic writers, scenario writers, publicity and advertising experts and lecturers. It holds, because of the nature of its membership, a tremend- ous national power, Mrs. Geldert states. The eighteen branches of the or- ganization throughout the country and the 1,500 members of the na- tional body have been called upon to join actively in the campaign. Honor First Englishman To Reside in Japan Yokosuka, Japan, Sept. 2.—Ajin- suka (Pilot Hill), where the body of Will Adams, the first Englishman to come to Japan, and his wife, lie bur- ied, is to be turned into a public park as a memorial to the famous Englishman. There already is a monument to Adams at the foot of the hill, but Baron Sufa, commander of Tokio Bay and others who con- sider that Adams has not been suf- ficlently honored by his Japanese benefactors, have decided upon the park near the great naval base as a more fitting memorial to the first European to teach them something of the outside world. There is a me- morial service held at Adam’s tomb every year which is presided over by a score of Buddhist priests. supply despite the fact the manufac- tures are more or less restricting the output. In the summer last year, the stock of paper in the public ware- houses throughout the country to- taled 130,000,000 pounds but at the missar of War Trotsky to Bolshevik | soldiers commanded by their com- manders for good behavior. Addi-| tionally, the soldiers will be given two weeks' leave if there are no demerit | marks against them at the end of EYESTRAIN IS A SEVERE STRAIN From Wednesday noon, Nov. 29, 1922 To Monday Morning, Dec. 4, 1922. SAYS HUBBY, I SHOT Trial of Mrs. Cora Vinson I Expected Soon Atlanta, Ga., Sept. 2.—The case of Mrs. Cora Lou Vinson, sentenced to be hanged for the fatal shooting of her husband, W. D. Vinson, in his of- fice, March 30, 1922, which was ap- pealed to higher tribunals, is ex- pected to be decided sometime this fall. Vinson, an Atlanta physiclan, recelved one shot in his body as he sat at his office desk, and, after he had fallen to the floor with his face down, his wife shot him three more times. He died immediately. “He told me I was worn out and that he wanted a young and pretty woman,” Mrs. Vinson testified at her trial. She dld not intend to kill him, she sald. “I went to this office to talk over some matters with him, but he made me so mad I just couldn't keep from shooting him." The fatal shots were fired from a revolver which Mrs. Vinson sald was glven her by Louis Vinson, a son of Dr. Vinson by a former marriage, for her protection. Mrs. Vinson, a frail woman of 43 at the time of the shooting, had been separated from Dr. Vinson, her sec- ond husband, for sometime. ‘“He spurned my love,” she said, charging him with unfaithfulness. Following the shooting, counsel for the defense filed a special plea of in- sanity in Mrs. Vinson's behalf, al- leging that a disordered mental con- dition was responsible for the killing. After a hearing by a jury in Ordin- ary's Court, however, she was pro- nounced sane and placed on trial for her life. She was convicted on June 3 and sentenced to be hanged on July 28, the jury returning the verdict without recommendation for mercy after deliberating one hour and 45 minutes. Appeals to higher tribunals held up final disposition of the case. Mrs. Vinson'heard the verdict read and the sentence passed without any Galbraith & Pattison Carpenters, Builders and General Contractors Estimates Cheerfully Given— Jobbing Promptly Attended to. Tel. 092-3 OFFICIAL NOTICE SCHOOL DEPARTMENT New Britain, Connecticut SCHOOL CALENDAR 1922—1923 Schools Open Tuesday, Sept. 5, 1922 Schools Close Friday, June 15, 1923. THANKSGIVING RECESS CHRISTMAS RECESS EMBER 2, 1922. show of emotion. "I don't believe they will hang me,"” she sald the day afterward, “for what any woman would have done under the circum- stances." Mrs. Vinson, according to the rec- ords of the state historlan, is the fourth white woman to be given the death sentence in Georgla. Two of the others were hanged and the third pardoned after serving ten years, Polly Barclay was hanged in 1806 in Wilkes on conviction of paying a half brother $200 to murder her hus- band so she could marry another man. Susan! Eberhardt was hanged at Preston in 1873 after conviction, to- gether with Enoch F. Spann, of the murder of Spann's wife in Webater county. After serving ten years of a life sentence for stabbing Narcissi Cowart, a girlhood friend, to death for dancing with her husband of a few weeks, Kate Hamerick was pardoned by Governor Stephens in 1883. Gov-1 ernor Colquit had commuted a death sentence to life imprisonment upon learning that the young woman was to become a mother. High St. Property Seldom you are able to secure prop- crty within one minute walk of the Postoffice. We are offering one for sale with lot 150 feet frontage. Ideal location for an apartment, club or society. Price reasonable. Cox & Dunn MAIN ST.—Realtors 272 € TALIN TANINE _i'_7/1e Lincoln Re:z[fi (o The possession of a desir- able building lot always en- courages the building of a home. And it makes it pos- sible. Talk home owning with us and we’ll show you how. HONE N 7790 THE LINCOLN REALTY (@ P2 Ky Room 212 : ! \W Booth Block, 70 peves NeBwBrifag conz ||| ARE YOU LOOKING FOR A HOME? If So, Look At These Houses Before Buying 7-Room House on Parkmore streer—$6,500. 8-Room House. Belvidere, Everything Modern. 3-Family House, 15 Rooms, Newington Ave.—$9,500. 3-Family House, 15 Rooms, Chestnut St.—$11,000. 2-Family House in West End, 6 Rooms on a Floor, 3-Car Garage. WATSON & JONES Real Estate and Insurance Open Tonight TEL. 2450 294 MAIN ST. The Miller-Hanson Drug Company 30 CHURCH STREET For Your Vacation Get your Camera and Supplies at Our Store. For better results, let us develop and print your pictures. The Hartford College of Law Announces the Opening of Its Second Year September 18, 1922. Complete Law Courses Evening Classes. .....For Men and Women For Information Apply to George W. Lillard, Sec’y. Telephone: 2-3896—Post Office Box 1452, Office and Classrooms: Hartford-Connecticut Trust Co. Building. e ————————————— For Quick Returns Use Herald Classified Advis. We are going to sell this One Family House VISIT OUR DINING ROOM WHEN IN HARTFORD 24-30 STATE ST. Live and Boiled Lobsters at a loss to the owner. His loss will be your gain. Now if you want this, you will find it a Bargain. Itisin A No. 1 shape. Call At end of May, last, it was reduced to 18,000,000 pounds. The market still is unable to absorb the increasing output and a further restriction of production is thought inevitable | The consumption of print and other paper which in 1212 amounted to 318,542,000 pounds increased to 562,- 255,000 pounds in 1921. Of the for- mer, 251,337,000 was produced in| Japan while in the latter year 534, each year's service. GERMANY REGRETS SHOOTING Berlin, Sept. 2.—A semi-official statement made public today says the shooting yesterday of two Belgian soldiers at Ober-cassel, Rhenish Prus- sia, will be most severely condemned and that immediate clearing up of the affair is desirable in the interests| of Belgium as well as Germany. on the Vitality of any child, a heavy handicap to progress in school or at home work. We Specialize on Children’s Eyes A. PINKUS EYESIGHT SPECIALIST 300 Main St. Phone 570 450,000 was the output of Japaneses factories. Besides, Japan exported last year, 60,937,000 pounds compared with 13,462,000 in 1912, Her imports| in 1921 were 45,682,000 compared | with 77,214,000 in 1012 Japan re- ceives pulp from Norway, Sweden and Canad, but the latter is now in- creasing her sales here owing to the; shorter haul, which enables her to| sell at a sen a pound cheaper than her Scandinavian competitors. Two dure Ways to Get Bigger Milk Checks Make more milk— save more milk. Why not get all-that’s coming be bought right. A grocery business. and two six room apartments. A new building on the corner of Broad and North Burritt Streets, with two stores This can fine place to start a PARKER & DEMING REALTORS From Friday Night, Dec. 22, 1922 To Tuesday morning, Jan. 2, 1923, SPRING RECESS From Friday Night, March 23, 1923 To Tuesday Morning, April 3, 1923. m——————————————— CRACKERS AND— The baby’s milk is of the greatest import-/ ance. The doctor has told you to buy for it milk of the highest } quality. Order Sei- bert's Pasteurized milk—it’s pure. ESEIBERT & SON) “Your Milkman" $ PARK STRELT PHONE 1720 7 L2 e — MAZDA LAMPS NEW BRITAIN BIRD & FEED CO. 105 Arch Street 217 Shuttle Meadow Avenue Phones—1138" - 864-4 BUILDING LOTS FOR SALE Several in Belvidere, Rocky Hill avenuce, Shuttle Meadow avenuc and some very desirable ones at West End. | I have money (o loan on first and second mortgages. l | See me for rents. H. J. FOIREN 140 MAIN STREET PHONE 1790 | O RENT FOR TERM OF YEARS Store 40 ft. x 180 ft., with large vard on Arch street, the automobile | scction of New Britain. Also room 10 ft x 105 ft., for manufacturing. SCHULTZ & COSTELLO, INC. 242 MAIN ST., NEW BRITAIN. TEL. 24-4. | second, floor, with light and power; ruitable | | FREE DELIVERY —THE— COWLES ELECTRIC CO. 392 STANLEY ST. New Britain Electrically TEL. 2 Let Us Serve You CROWLEY BROS. IN PAINTERS AXD DECORATORS 267 Chapman Street TEL. 755-12 Estimates cheerfully given on all job~ — e e e e —DRINK — Ayers’ Soda Water Call for it by name and get the best, * For Sale at Your Grocer's Three Size Botties—5-10-15¢ Soft Shell Crabs Fresh Crab Meat Shrimps Steaming Clams Chowder Clams HONISS’S EVERYTHING IN FURNITURE If you are about to furnish a home we can outfit it completely. We carry a full line of Furniture, Stoves and Floor Coverings at prices that will surely please. A. LIPMAN New and Second-Hand Furniture 34 Lafayette St. Tel. 1329-2 THE t 272 Main Street m OLD HOME TOWN Two family house at east end with large piece of land, a veritable beauty spot with lots of fruit rees. CAMP REAL ESTATE CO. . Phone 343 Rooms 305-6 Bank Bldg, FOR SALE Some Extra Located Building Lots. See me about your Fire Insurance. Prompt settlement in case of fire, Auto Insurance”of all Kinds. H. D. HUMPHREY ROOM 208 NATIONAL BANK BUILDING BY STANLEY THIS 1S NO TIME FOR ANY FUNNY dE= 0 083 / (= 3 [/} = WHEN MARSHAL OTEY WALKER OFFERED To ESCORT THE NEW DRESS MAKER HOME HE FOUND //f/// SOME JOKER HAD SWITCHED UMBRELLAS 4 ON HIM—

Other pages from this issue: