New Britain Herald Newspaper, September 26, 1922, Page 5

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HATS and CAPS and you will be sure of Correct Style - and utmost in wear. Sold by Ashley-Babcock Co. BOARDTO DISCUSS WORLD GONDITIONS Affairs in Turkey Ocoupy Atten- tion of Commissioners Chicago, Sept. 26.—Unsettled condi- tions in Turkey as they affect the colleges, hospital and missions found- ed by the congregational churches of America, will occupy the attention of the American board of commission- ers for Foreign Missions at their Paris Women Reported Cutting OffLittle Toe It's a sad commentary on the shoe business when women consider the amputation of the fifth toe in order to wear a smaller size shoe, as report- ed from Paris. Later newspaper re- ports spoke of some Chicago girls who were going to “follow this new fad" instead of bobbing their hair. We be- lieve the American woman {s too sen- sible .and too fond of her physical perfection to fall for anything like this. COMFORT IS BETTER How much better to wear shoes that really fit and allow room for all five toes and give wonderful comfort while affording that trim neatness of appearance for which American wom- en are noted the world over. The Cantilever Shne ' - this for you. Flexible and ligut, well-shaped and modish, the Cantilever BShoe makes you feel younger, increases your cn- durance, stimulates your out-of-door activity and lessens the fatigue of your household duties. QUALITY AND STYLE Cantilevers are made in black kid, brown kid, tan calf, white fabric and can be ordered in any material of which shoes can be made, They are quality shoes sold at reasoniable prices. Cantilever comfort has brought a new joy in living to thousands of well- dressed American women. Come and see the styles in our new Autumn stock. We are exclusive Can- tilever agents for this city. For men and women. Sloan Bros. IT'S A GOOD NIGHT DRINK quality puts you into a sleepy, pleasant nod mind if you drink a glass or two before re- ? y tiring. Try it. 'ESEIBERT & SONK “Your Milkman' ARK STRELT, P PNONE, I'IZO.‘."‘“ jare assisted b 113th annual meeting to be held” at Evanston, October 24 to 26. Conditions in India, China, the Philippines and Africa also will recelve serious consideration. In all of these countries opportunities for advance work will be considered in the reports of the officers of the board and by missionaries from their continents. The board, which derives its sup- port principally from the Congrega- tional church in America, maintains schools, hospitals, churches and mis- slonary stations under 14 national flags with a force of 800 clergymen, physicians, teachers, nurses and other American wérkers in charge. They by 6,000 pald native Japan, workers. The report of the treasurer will show disbursements for the mainte- nance of this work in 1921 of more than $2,000,000. During 1811, the total expenditures for missions to- taled $999.52. It has expended ap- proximately $60,000,000 in fts 113 years of work. Plans have been made for holding several rallies for the constituencies of the Congregational church of the Middle Western states. These rallies will be held both in Evanston and in Chicago and will be addressed by missionaries, prominent clergymen and laymen from all sections of the world. WILL EXTEND HOLDINGS Fngineers Buy 16 Story Building and Announce Completion of Plans for Another in Cleveland. Cleveland, O., Sept. 25—The Broth- erhood of Locomotive Engineers has announced simultaneously the pur- chase of a sixteen-story bank building in the heart of this city and the com- pletion of plans to erect a twenty-one story bank building. The latter, ac- cording to the announcement, will be the permanent, the former, the tem- porary quarters of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers' Co-operative National bank. The bank, which started less than two yvears ago with paid-in stock of §653,000, reported assets of $17,532,- 487.13. The first three floors are fitted for banking rooms, the upper floors for offices. The sub-floors con- tain vaults, and can be flooded in case | of emergency. The reported price was $2,5650,000. JUNIOR KILLED. DAME NOTRE Dies When Gun With Which Fellow Student Was Toying Is Discharged. | South Bend, Ind., Sept. 26.—John | Herbert Culhane, 20 years old, junior | Hartford A Estublished 1877 by the An old school under mew equipment and a Staff of competent inst a frat-class Art considerably lower cost? home, and pay less DAY CLASSES—F Study under OFFICE NOW OPEN FOR RI and next Thursday TiHE HARTFORI 280 Collin: Hartford, | city, even up to this day. SYoull see its, superiority | just as the experts did | management School near vour home offers the same VENING CLASSES—SATURDAY CLASSES Instruction Begins Monday, and Pridi Complete Circular of Information Sent on Request Address JOSEPH WISELT! " NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBFR 26, 1 DOES NOT HAVETO TAKE PHYSIC “Fruit-a-ives” Brought Complete Rellef Asurorp, New Yorr, I tried several kinds of physic for over three years and, of course, while T took it every night my bowels would move; but as soon as I stopped taking physic, I would be Constipa- ¢ ' 'nd would have Piles terribly, 1ght one box of “‘Fruit-a-tives" sok them. Now I am not led any more with Constipation Jes, “Fruit-a-tives” or “Fruit Laxo « ublets” left no after-effects and now I do not have to use physic”. Mrs. JOHN CAPOZZI. 50¢ a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size 25 At dealers or from FRUIT-A-TIVES Limited, OGDENSBURG, N.Y, at Notre Dame University, was shot and klilled yesterday afternoon when a gun with which a fellow-student | was toying was discharged accident- ally. The accldent occurred in Walsh Hall at the university. Culhane, whose home was in Chi- | cago, was the son of Michael Culhane, a La Salle street broker. RUSSIA QUIETEST COUNTRY IN WORLD Seems Land of Peace in Compari- son With Other Nations 26.—American and corre- Moscow, Sept western European newspaper spondents who have been in Moscow luring the period of the railway and coal mine strikes in the United States; the reciewed fighting in Ire- land; the political crisis in Ttaly, and the troubles in Germany incidental to the fall in the value of the mark, reached the conclusion that Soviet Russia was the most tranquil country in the world. Under the iron hand of the prole- tarian dictatorship, strikes and dis- turbances such as the cables reported daily from abroad are impossible in Russia. So, while their colleagues in other countries were actively engaged in reporting wars, strikes and near- revolutionary demonstrations, the Moscow correspondents found little or nothing to do. The court trials and death sentences on the counter-revo- lutionists seemed mild in comparison with the news coming into Russia. This tranquility was particularly surprising to the first French news- paper correspondents visiting Russia since the early days of the revolution. American newspapers for more than a year have had direct relations with Russia, but the French press has ob- tained its ‘“‘news” of Russia by wa of the “grapevine’ route, printing ob- vious fabricationa indicating that bloodshed and horrors were continu- ous performances in every Russian One French correspondent was so surprised to find Moscow calm and even attaining the gaiety of a metrop- olis—with brilllant cafes, crowded race courses and flower bedecked parks and plazas full of smiling and well dressed promenaders—that he | feared his Parisian readers, accus- tomed to a different brand of Rus- | sian news, would not believe what he wrote. rt School Art Soclety, of Hartford in a new bullding with new Why go far from home when opportunities at .a Hartford, live at ructors. Ideal conditions in October 2d. TRATION 2 to 5 P. M. evening from 7 to 0. JGL! Director ART SCHOOL s Mtreet, Connecticat | phonograph records 1 ENDURING RECORDS BUILT BY RAMESES Tablet Setting Forth Conquest of the Land Still Visible Jerusalem, Sept, 26.—On the face of a4 cliff in the Lebanon hills Rame- ees 11, King of Egypt, well over 3,- 000 years ago ordered his stone cary ers to inscribe a tablet setting forth his conquest of the land. The figures of the ancient Egyptian rules and his men still are visible, A few feet away one may see, carved in the same rock by a British stone cutter, a record of the coming in itember, 1918, of Field Marshal Sir Edmund H. H. Allenby, G. C. B, commander of the Allied forces in Asia Minor, And the passage of the centuries from I3, C. 1300 to A. D. 1618 is rec- orded by various other carving: in all not less than 12 and each describ- Ing the march of a victorions army, The cliff selected for the carving of these historlc records is at the| mouth of the Dog ri 10 miles | northeast of Beirut, in Syria. This strip of country lying between the Ie- banons and Egypt has been the Lridge between the anclent empires of the Valley of the Nile and Mesopo- tamfa and over it has passed arm- fes of the anclent, medievale; mod- ern worlds. The narrowest point is where the Lebanon mountains come close to the sea, and at this place Rameses II set the precedent of commemorating his conquests by hewing out a panel on the tace of the cliff. His example has been followed by others through the centuries un- til now there are a dozen of them. They are all cut about four or five inches deep, from five to nine feet high, and from two to four and a half feet in width. The storms of more than 3,000 years have beaten upon some of them, but still the fig- ures of the anclent Egyptian con- querors are easily discernible as they stand with their right arms uplifted in an attitude of victory. The hiero- glyphics have long sinced disappeared except to the trained eye of the archaeologist. Several Assyrian conquerors their armies through this pas cluding the great Sennacherib, who threatened Jerusalem, but whose army was smitten by ‘“‘the breath of the Lord,” and for a century and a quarter the city was saved from its foes. Alexander the Great led his con- quering hosts through the same de- file on his way to Egypt, and Greek and Latin tablets tell of the conquests of the great kingdoms of southern Europe when the march of empire passed from Asia to Europe Coming down to recent history a tablet tells of the coming of the army of Louis Napoleon in 1860, when the massacres in the Lebanons called for uropean interference and France first set her foot in Syria. Nearly 60 years passed hy, and then the English army led by General Al- lenby and @ssisted by the French, swept up like a whirlwind from the south four years ago and ended the | rule of the Turk in the southern part of the T.evant A panel has been cut in the cliff near those of the ancient Egyptians, telling of this great victory and bring- ing this wonderful cliff record of his- tory up to date. ACCUSES FATHER. Complains That He Is Kept Out of | School. New York, Sept. 26.-——Harry Haff- ner, 15, a native of Poland, went to the Adams street court, DBrooklyn, yesterday, and said his father, I-‘rnn\\‘ Haffner, of 352 Wallabout street, had | kept him from going to school. “I want to be a doctor,” he said, “but my father recently bought a dry goods store and wants me to deliver orders. I want to get an education. I went to school for a while in Poland, but what education I have T got from studying at home. T could get along better if I went to school." The boy came into court to look for a policeman, he said, to make his father send him to school His case was described to Magistrate Brown by the court interpreter and the magis trate communicated with the Chil- dren's society led | in- e: hY t h MUSIC COVERS ROBBERY. Incessant Playing of Phonograph Rec- ords Drowned Sound of Drilling. New Orleans, La., Sept. 26.—Mrs A. Remington yesterday found ont why her young roomer nourished such a passion for the strains of his two He played them incessantly for 30 days, This morning some policemen | crawled through a hole in the room- | er's wall, which Mrs. Remington did not know was there, and showed her a blow torch and a trail from there | through the wall of an adjoining | clothing store. The clothing safe was half drilled through 8 a E son of the were [ raigned Kochendorter Court on charge tired system anightof refreshingrestandabright w,is the work of N tablets. Nature’s Remedykeeps body functionsregular, improves appetite, relleves comg;-don. c " ( 15 y B a h MR JUNIORS — a Little NRs One-third the regu- far dose. Made ot same ingredients, then candy coated. For chil dren and adules. a ‘ ! 1 Noveck's rrescrption Drug stores. .‘d SIAM'’S KIN ARE IN MARRYING | he king became engaged to Princess Lak- for trate street New 0929 Drawn from actual photograph of Mary Josephine Murray, daughter of Mrs. R. Bruce Murray, 6220 Limekiln Pike, Philadelphia, Pa. It was her Doctor’s idea RY Josephine Murray gained A M only three-quarters of a round the first three months she ived in this world. - Then her doc- tor recommended Borden's Eagle Brand Milk. ‘‘She commenced to gain at once'' Mrs. Murray reports, and six months later she had be- come a normal, healthy child. On her first birthday she weighed 23 1bs., 5 oz. *‘Our doctor always speaks of her as a fine, healthy specimen of baby- hood'’ writes Mary's mother. ‘‘She is such a good, hapPy baby and sleeps all night long.’ Naturally, her doctor’s sensible ad- vice as well as her mother's care haye contributed largely to Mary’'s wonderful health, even though her mother feels that she owes it all to Eagle Brand. But many thousands of other mothers have found Eagle Brand the best food for their babies. And a great many doctors recommend it—just as Mary's doc- tor did—in difficult feeding cases where the child was underweight or not gaining as it should. A child’s health is so largely de- pendent on its food, that no mother can afford to experiment. Nurse your baby, if you can, of course, but if for any reason mother's milk fails, don't risk foods of which you are not sure. Borden's Eagle Brand Milk has been the standard for a great many years. For it is npthing but milk—pure country milk com- bined with sugar. It is the natural food when mother's milk is not available. Your grocer has Eagle Brand. You'll find it always pure and uniform. THE BORDEN COMPANY Borden Building New York Makers also of Borden’s Evaporated Milk, Borden's Chocolate Malted Milk and Borden’s Confectionery. %"/ Trade Mark of Tye, BorpEN CONPANY Rey. U. & Pot. OF. by, o e eh their Presgxven Mix will D%, ufi';‘l'm: and for additional P""u,,‘m M”Rpmuan. each label will it THEBRDEN coMPANY NEW YORK, U. S A P — Ruler Is Thrifty And Proves It When | He Weds No F London, Sept Siam is thrifty to the question of taking a wife and|changes in venue and many adjourn he contemplated the great cost of the clahorate ceremonies the people would married his wife by xpect, he proclamation, thus saving is an old Siamese custom which make such action proper and is just as much married by this meth 1, accordin y other. Last year his new queen’s half sister, but clared annulled That was a queer document majesty's stated, “firmly and definitely to ensure ‘allatha, “His he sugcess satisfactorily compatibility of temperament hetween is majesty which may disposition hronic whose nervous system leaves much to desired.” hmi His majes honorary gener He came to England when he was 13 nd was ed Sandhurst. tached to the fe speaks versant with customs, including its various methods of tying and untying the nuptial knot TWO DET ‘hree Seeki Case Tak New Yor etectives s pending divorce proceedings, and the couple said to be held xamination William ¥ nan avenue four mo from that ompanied ted 11 Jaum of “reeport, I 9 East B ork, hoth aged by h gainst Mrs ntered the ouples The . 1eged, nd his son IPrancis MeFadden of 19 ¢ Newa Jersey Karrick althoug! rk revealed Young I amaica pol rrested the ty is 42 years old and an| English vesterday his wife, by went to his wife's honse two men on charges brought Justice A. H. Seeger McFadden Green. The were removed to Jamaica and were treated for | the scalp. by two hospital lacerations of Supreme Court in Carmel Mrs. O'Neill recently alleged ker husband had SHOWS and Kausey ad last that patterned his legal papers in his divorce action after the the Stillman divor ind said she believed O'Neill" iarity with the Stillman case gave him the idea of suing. O'Neill took the testimony in the Stillman suit. John 5. Mack, guardian of “Baby Guy” Stillman, is counsel for O'Neill. O'Neill named a Yale student at a beach in Connecticut. | Although the suit was started a vear ago, the couple have been living apartment, although not on speaking terms. O'Neill explained that she wished to be near the chil- dren, live where they can visit hoth defendant. e —— of STILLMAN “ECHO" SUIT, Woman, Prefering | Stenographer, Seeking Divored With Wife Without Speak York, Royal Ceremonies, 26. — The King of| : i Hence, when it came New Sept. 26.—After two ments, the suit of James O'Neill of Lincoln Terrace, Yonkers, a Supreme i tne same roya Daily Mail, | Court stenographer, against his wife, " There | Annie O'Neill, which has been called of the Stillman divorce to trial srday hefore the of money Ays a lot who plaintiff and “echo" binding. He | ¢ase, went g to Siamese law, as by| the king was engaged to Princess that betrothal was de- by a royal decree noble desire,” it on to the throne cannot be met owing to the in- Princess Vallatha, accounted for by the of the princess, and he Shortly afterward the | of the British army ucated at Oxford and| Afterwards he was at- Durham light infantry well and is manners and| CThree-fold Protection HE more particular you are, the more our Meadow Gold methods will appeal to you. Examine the package—see the triple wrapper—notice the seal. That seal is the last thing put on at the creamery, and— western [IECTIVES ARRESTED. | | | | | | ng Divorce en in Woman's Home. Evidence in 26.—Two evidence It Guarantees the Purity and Goodness of Meadow Gold Butter Butter is a perfect food, and we who make Meadow Gold butter want you to have it as pure, fresh and clean as Nature intended. We guard the product as we guard the name—and the name, Meadow Gold, is our greatest asset and your positive protection. Note the flavor—delicate, delicious and always uniform. Sold ONLY in the original yellow cartons—at all dealers. If your dealer does not handle Meadow Gold write us. We will see that you are supplied. BEATRICE CREAMERY CO., Successor to A [LL-OP‘J & DOUGLAS, Inc. private im- Sept <ing for involved, bail each for when before Magistrate in the Jamaica Police & of felonious assault Karrick Herri Jamaica, who said that nths he had heen separé told jthe Magis Sunday night, Kenneth, with East Milton and George Kausey of New $500 ay, der Thu .13 ac- e Jerome aite on his son, 101 stroet I, ighty-fourth letoctive ther He and streot private to o New Haven, Conn. Sprinfield, Mase. . Hartford, Conn, Ll ‘Worcester, Masa, evidence gaid they found two Karrick house the detectives they mth Fourth of the club, New the wom were found house ttacked They in the id were rk, and Max Antomohile knew names oen said he h their not rick t the o station younger lephoned to and the Karrick, police Baum

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