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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, SEPTEMSER 25, 1922 ear For Amecan College At Constantinople '_ ’ i FOR AFTERNOON TEA "SALADA" T E A HE VAN HEUSEN s a testimonial to ; ey i 'the el arpieptints \ : i ‘ Delicious and Economical a man's'good taste and an outward and - .V::l:ll: e'clf:. ::‘hhls g:::)d sen;:;i and just i ; it assures satisfaction. ese two yvear round, in like mmngu;et:::rl.l thhl: i # y ; d AsK for SALADA—~Your grocer bas it. VAN HEUSEN three hundred and sixty- .4y ) mm——— — five days a year, “What makes this diserimination |ry the Indian far enough along cive A 2 against the American merchant flag|ilized ways, is the opinion of Dr. - 7 2 all the more vexatious and harmful | Eimer E. Higley, Chicago, superinten- No Rough Edges ; : 1+ Amoriean producers as well as to|dent of Indian Work of the Methodist . the shipowners and operators of this| Episcopal church Ong # that in some instance: Our schools for Indian children do SL e, iUy 48 Uh \ 80 ances e | ir schoo! or Indian children | foreign ships insist on frelght rates| not take them far enough,” he sald. 7 : : Saves Your Shirts Saves Your Tie higher than steamers. An American| “Open for them the high schools, af- A shinning company of New York late-| ford them the opportunity of college ly offered tonnage to the continent for!training and the problem of ‘golag . R i 8 ‘ . graln at the standard figure, but | back to the blanket' wil be solved. It ¥y ) (found that the continental interests|is estimated that not three p 4 eent of " 3 P i ‘conlruHmu shipments demanded that [those “eceiving high school education th W H' S CO ¥ i g 4 e g the grain be sent in European steam-|ever go back to their native cus- 3 i p i 3 ers at an advance of flve cents per|toms e Worlds Omartest LL 13 g a . I iR f | hundred pounds over the figure the| “Many object to tié evangelizing of PHILLIPS.JONES CORPORATION M. ; i § ’ - 3 L | American ships offered. A Continen- | Indian hecause of sentimental ahers, 1225 BROADWAY, NEW YORK | - b . - & [tal purchaser sending a cable inquiry|reasons. ‘The Inmwfi in his primitive ; RN il P % 4 e | for grain stipulated that ‘American dition is picturesque,’ they say. L ot Sy E f / |steamers are excluded’ Against an aive him alone against the back- 3 e ! {American offer of seventeen cents per | ground of his colorful paganism and Gravi i , e g SRy T 5 SO . 1100 pounds on heavy grain to North|kis untutored savagery.’ Grave fear is felt by Americans who have contributed thousands to the support of the A e e R 7 eien, purahRBers. Angld Gdrtats’ THATI A AV PEaanlat e !York city, Spanish-American Institute ¢ s at Gardena, Cal, Pittman Center|can college at Constantinople for the safety of the college and its staff and students. The Ameri-|ed that the grain be sent on a for.|intrusion of the white man's religlon, jschool at Emerts Cove, Tenn, Pueblo | can college at Smyrna was burned, If the Turks seize Constantinople, the same fate may befall jeign ship at twenty cents a hundred.|The cause of this resentment has not “These expericnces prove that it fs|been so much in the intuitive desire .Indian school, Pennsylvania settle- the college ther , . " SRS e e there. Below, the college; above a group of girl students, w 4 70 + Turk- GARDS FUR IHE ” S | ment schools, Porto Rican schools, & U ge; SHOUDHOE nts, who may be seized for Turk not only higher wages on shipboard|to hold to pagan rites as it has been o U AR pREhallbTeRas; American merchant marine. Many|and injusti which the red men hostile | have suffered at the hands of their | In each instance the cards will be (] ovalan ir lanagia ane d1Rnutis Foreign Missions Will Send Them | 5e oo tne chcoes e e o BEILISS IN NEW YORK e e sl Aaonn e o Al OB, O i int as these are|white men and the Christian religion 5 | The message will be in the way of a fact that such 10 Mell]()dlsl Sllbdall SGhOOIS DErscnalignpoal(rom e, childreh, Man Tried For Ritual Murder of His violently protesting against the Na-|was unfortunate. His opinions were who need help to the children who | |tional aid to American ships provid-|Pased largely upon what he saw of = | borders of our civilization. To {as 3 ish harems. | Hawallan schools and Wiley college ems that hamper the development of the|from hatred engendered by cruelties are helping them. Own Son, Nine Years Ago, Now in ed in the pending subsidy bill before | the these borders came the white traders, More than one-half million dollars congress." Printing Business. " - Sl |nsually a class having no scruples e fl:p;;r?w‘hp?qlnrh:::}:;:;’ senoolstadents to. missionary | UCH IS Claim Made by 'mlliafl New York, sent. 25—vendel mei- | POJESSIONAl Men Will TravelINfllAN—ED”GA““N |against taking advantage of the red November 15 there will be ma ([ : “ thela 000FNetHoalot E'p]l'smv:]”;:f:(h': MOnc 1 ERt YRt IllVCSllgaIOP liss, Jewish workman of Kiev, Russia, n. B schoois in the United States TD.nn}\i y whose trial in 1913 on the charge of A d w ld I E I t “The false impression has been and post cards from the twenty-four home | MAK[NG FEWER PISTOLS —— ritual murder, attracted -wide TOun| orid 1or Xpel‘lmel] S| is now rapldly undergoing change. and foreign mission school” centers of| 5 ¥ 2 attention, is a resident of New York, g | The educated among them especially TLSTERO - Rome, Sept. 25.—When all the |t wag learned today. He came to i are recognizing its superior merit. the world. 9 . world {5 complaining of what it costs | Amerjca in 1921 from Falestine where| Hamburs, Sept. “Two German | [ They know the old faiths are false | The board E v 8 | Reports P 1 i E i oard of Sunday schools is|Reports of Production’ In Private|to buy a good dinner, as compared to | ha went after his acquittal in Russia | sailboats of small dimensions are due | | and now are asking for preachers and teachers to direct them the way of taking this means of bringing the| the days before the w i 5 L Plants Shows Decrease in Compari- ays before the war, an Italian|anq js established in a small printing | to brave the furies of the Atlantic on : members of the Sunday schools in PAL | nvestigator, has come forward with | jmsines ‘ e i naenieetne A s Note(arniedéRan E[]Ol]gl] AlO[]g]n ‘Jesus Road'.” e tmy Tprional fouch with thel son With That of Last Lear. the statement that never before have | pailiss, the only Jew in a city of | within the coming year A ; - e Civilized Ways, Says Higley | xrmosexe pricr rarsen, Zfiififiin'3?'\h}l""‘\"-ni."d,m““"“‘" o) ook Hgtbu s enE s e e | 1oL RQUIST hesC agwell ited asRak 0D fpeopleliwas) errested in 1611} Tn onie ot them s party of 18 GSn| | S AR S s L s e Dresentae s, TR after the discovery of the hody of a|man artists and professional men | New York, Sept. 25.—The Standard SOTT ey il banalve alea Al tomN et | oGl a0 Bt e oAl et roass | BN ecrRgzollElas analyzedathie] 1stSeaniiclatboy wholad heen mur-|iplan: to ‘elrcumnavigate the' “globe. | il Co. of New York today advanced AentaPink Corear AT arhnin OhInali el et PR e e e e e '*““;‘Y"'Ol“s- In the writings, of theljered. Officials charged that he had | They have recently tested their craft| Chicago, Sept. 25.—The greatest|the price of kerosene in New York Phillppines, Malaysla, Indin, Africa, | 1921, as compared with 1919, accord. | Ml amer Couree hanguets of the mid-|killed the boy to obtain blood for re- |in a trip to Copenhagen, and are now | defect in the present Indian educa-|and New England one cent a gallon, 1 {BeHiR NGt A toloa; CantialBurepe. |lingi tb . Teport taday. by th dle ages, and the recitals of whole|jigious ritual purposes. He was kept | trying to complete arrangements for | tional program is that it does not car- | The new price is 14 cents. o 4 y Dby the census|cows prepared for the feusters. He|in'a qungeon for two years and then|leaving before the end of the year. Mexico and South America { bureau. The total value of the out-|finds undoubted exaggeration, and placed:on- trial,- “At, the end -of 30| The vessel is 58 feet. long, and. will Cards also will be sent from the|put of the 25 establishments operat- | ga; . i = ys that when such things did hap-|qdays the jury freed him after two|c three writers, three artists, and H a H ' ! . it al) eld For Slaying Aged Man domestic school centers located at|ing in 1910 was $30,181,370 against|pen g0 many people sat down to the | hours deliberations. The superstitious|a number of “movie” actors from | Boston, the frontier school in Mon-|a value of $12,510,302 Adia i aa | Fiata e s el Al oper'\:lflgjlusi ye;:’r the 18 meal that each individual portion was | pature of the charges gained the in-| Berlin, accompanied by a Munich doc- U I ettt 8 very small,_ Such dinners also were | terest of the entire world. tor. This tour is to be made by way given only in years of plenty, but [ of Holland, Spain, the Canary Ts- more numerous than thesze were the | lands, Cuba, Mexico, both coasts of . N l Offi w ld D ey H lean years. Then the people were South America, the South Sea fs-| ava cer vould Urvrce Iler thin and pale, and at this time orlg- TUXAPAN ATTACKED | i China, Japan. India and the nated the expression “tighten up your \'Sm—/ Canal. It is expected that three belt.” T weeks will be required in crossing the The XVII century was the golden | Vera Cruz Reports Garrison Forced | Atlantie, and the party plans to re- age for food. During these years po- | turn home in about two years. tatoes, tea, chocolate and coffee were| Rebels to Retreat in Friday Skir- For Experiment. Jlntrodurerl into Europe. Rome claims The other enterprise is to he con- to be the birthplace of “cafe au lait.” Jucted by three German sailors in a | Ambulant Greeks used to sell coffee Vera Cruz, Sept —(By Associat- | 43-foot sailboat of 12 tons, which | from buckets in the streets of Rome. [aq press)—The port of Tuxapan was|they themselves intend to build. They The Romans immediately used this|attaekea by rebels last Friday accord | wil lattempt to make the trip from for mixing with milk, and so popular | ing to advices just received here. The | Hamburg to New York, and.are plan- proved the drink that it soon spread | gmg)) federal garrison forced the at- | ning to sail under the auspces of the to the whole world. The first coffee | yookers to retreat. The rebels are | Imperial Yach club of Wuerttem- | house to be opened in Rome was, in|gaiq to he operating under the leader- | berg. Tt has heen reported that| |fact, called: "Il caffe greco” and it|cnip of Pelaez Rosales. American interests agreed to bear the | may still be seen, in the picturesque| Gen, Gaudalupe Sanchez, chief of | costs of the experiment if the boat Via Condotti. military operations in this district, | carried the American flag, but that! An idea of how bad was the food | hag gone to the capital to confer with | the offer was rejected. These seamen | in middle ages may be had from the| pregident Obregon and Sec ry of | do not expect to take to the water he- writings of Tassoni, in whose verse|\war Serrano as to the advisability of [ fore next spring. various menus are described. When | another military campaign to rid the the food was not of poor quality in|ojl regions of all rebels. | = itself, the predominant note in its | | preparation was not with regard to ! | taste, but to display. Spices also were ! | very much in evidence, and the dishes ] | I i o Ue often were so highly seasoned as to be mishes. neither healthful nor agreeable. Sig- nor Bedrazzoll prepared a dish accord- ing to an old recipe, but the result e saenty s | [ But Yet, Foreigners Discriminate, TEAR GAS CAPTURE ”. B | Against American Shipping | w o 2 | Man Who Barricaded Himself In g New York, Sept. 25.——~Winthrop L. ¥ Marvin, vice-president and general | Dwelling Succumbs To Latest Mode ? 3 v 0 nianager of the American Steamship | Of Police Attack, + | Owners' association, gave out a state- : o nient yesterday dealing with the al-| Jiserimination against ships flying the United States flag by for- | interests, which influenced ex- | when shipping goods abroad Reading, Kas, Sept. 25. — After . - leged barricading himself in a house near here and frustrating attempts to cap- / o p eign ture him for two days, Lester Duclo, % porte a plumber was overcome with tear y U | The, ement reads gas and arrested yesterday. Officers P . Demand on the part of certain said he had two guns and enough am- foreign purchasers of American mer-| munition and food supplies in the 4 i chandise that these goods be deliver- house to last three weeks. He shot g ki ed in foreign ships has been one| CLARA SKARIN WINBORN.. himself just before the capture, in- 3 % 4 . grave obstacle u;)vhr growth of for- OiklkAd: ¢ e ¢ e b A ¢ shvati 3 : fiicting a severe wound in the left . . cign shipping. This policy of dis anc or onenection with the year-olc 3 Lieutenant Braford Barnett, United States Navy, is said to ]‘“:lg,g . . crimination against the American flag | month Clara Skarin o became |Over the slaying of Ferdinand Hoch- : brunn ), wealthy recluse and realty have started suit for divorce in the New York courts against Julia’ Duclo had been n!nflnx' at th; home ; B peior o piward Wi .:m: a “dead man" and, rding to Sl ol LV g i .| of Frank Hagan, a relative, e was long before either the Jones Merchant | . i i of bt + th ¥ AL Seattle, Wash. Sanderson (akbove), stage beauty. She denies she has been serv. AT T R Ry _ ; ; B | hmine. act ‘of 1020 o the Shipping|'lct carried on t Clarn Winborn was arrested in ed with any notice. returned, drove him away. All at- g Subsidy bill of 1922 framed and | She i8 alleged to have slain Oakla She refuses to talk about tempts to enter the place were met . int ced into congress She wrote his letters, so the story | the se, saying simply, T will tell with shots. “Information has come to the | Boes; signed his name to them; ar-|m ry to the jury.” ranged his collecti and ttende Police, it s said, have a confes- to business in gener nsu ) e is purported to have signed (4 9 | American ships that this Buropean with his lawyer rwar s itting the shooting and a desire ¢ 0 2 | policy of discrimination against the |mail when = he Y ¢ ess (t sess the dead man's property, ; American flag is still continuing. But | trip.” All this [ t 1 that she shot to defend that progress has been A ! nor from the advances of the Marquis of Lansdowne Ignorant As To it is also true American Steamship Owners' assocla Whether Free Staters or Republi- | MIRAG I SCRUTRRINE. HME BYRGUCR and that gradually more business has been gained for American steamers cans Are Responsible. S . 3 e | by a firm and courteous insistence 3 London, Sept. 26.—The Marquis of j: X | that American ships have a right to a Lansdowne informs the Times that his | A proper share of the carrying trade of T " n & Ireland, has been looted and burned | 3 “However, foreign ships, thanks and the valuable plantations on his| Here are Arthur S M. Hutchinson |jargely to this long-standing policy of Qle estate destroyed. He says he is un-|(Delow) and his sister. They com- | giscrimination, are still carrying two- _tdsto dpplooved by mllllons aware whether the outrage was com- | Pose the most famous brother and | {hirds of the seaborne trade of the mitted by free staters or republicans. |Sister ‘literary couple in England. | { pited States. A Ilumber exporter of . s Hulv'hin,\ml is the author of “Tf Win- | {ne Southwest, for example, when o, sides holding several cabinet posts at | Freedom.”” His sister is heginning to | heing shipped in American vesse . o del' ht ln various times, has served as governor [crowd him for literary honors with | replied that he was compelled by ‘ex- " W b \ general of Canada and later, of India. | Several books of her own ternal thfGences” to tavor British o d t h l 0 NEW SWIMMING RECORD. Kingdom Aldershot, Sept. 26.—Miss Hart has Enter Feed Store at Night. “Diserimination against American ARBUGB BAT, OFY. broken the world’s swimming record | Bill Hartley writes, “Rats came up |vessels has been especially marked in for 100 meters breast stroke, accom- | from the swamps to my feed store!the flour export trade. These in plishing the distance 1in one minute | every night and did awful damage. |stances have heen reported to Wash thirty-three and two-fifth seconds.| Finally I heard about Royal Guaran- [ington, hut American flour exporters She swam in the Aldershot Command | teed Rat Paste, used it and haven't |are concertedly moving to insist Baths. The previous record was one | seen a rat since.” Royal Guaranteed |[that foreign purchasers must in fair- | minute thirty-seven and three-fifth [ Rat Paste positively DESTROYS rats! [ness allow a part of the product of seconds by Miss Van Bogaert, in Bel- | 25c & e tube Sold and guaran- {American farms to be sent abroad in gium, on July 22 last. e teed by Dickinson Drug Co.—advt. American services,