New Britain Herald Newspaper, September 25, 1922, Page 5

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)

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,

Other pages from this issue: