New Britain Herald Newspaper, January 3, 1923, Page 2

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WRITING PAPER - at 1/, PRICE Stationery Dept. The Dickinson Drug Co. 169-171° MAIN STREET HORSFALL-MADE OVERCOATS FOR MEN Fashioned of imported plaid- back fleeces and hand-tailored Into characterful garments with- out equal in ready-to-wear clothes, HORSFALL-MADE SUITS FOR MEN Hand-made ments ready to be put on—in fit, fabric and finish, the best clothes made at their prices. “custom” gar- Fownes and Mark Cross Gloves Welch Margetson Pajamas Allen Solly Golf Hose Knox Hats for Men W etmrin Hartford. City Items The ladies of the Bohemian Eagles will hold their monthly meeting at Bardeck’s hall, Thursday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock. Radlo sets and supplies at Morans' ~—advt. A daughter, Dorothy, has born to Mr. and Mrs. Max Reinholdt of 38 Woodland street. Meet me at Schmarr’s for dinner.— advt. Adjutant General George M. and federal officers inspected the newly organized national guard com- pany in this city last evening. Exclusive millinery. French Hat Shoppe, Professional Bldg.—advt. Mr. and Mrs. James Glynn of Hartford, are receiving congratula- tions on the birth of a son, at St, Prancis’ hospital. Mrs. Glynn was formerly Miss Ann Marshall of this city. Lavicy S. Moore Tent, No. 12, D. of V., will hold a public installation Thursday evening. Department Presi- dent Mrs. Atterbury of Norwich will install the officers. Important! See our fore you buy a Player Piano Pierce & Co.—advt. Mr, and Mrs. August will leave Saturday for Miami, ida, where they will pass the mainder of the winter. Ofticers of Stanley Post, G. A. R., and Stanley Woman's Relief corps, were installed at G. A. R. hall this afternoon, Drum Corps Dance, Saturday night, Tabs' hall, Jan. 6. Admission 40c, including tax.—advt. Mrs, Eben Strong of Parkmore street, has filed a claim with the city for injuries sustained when she fell on an icy sidewalk last week. been window be- C L Burckhardt Flor- re- The next best thing to using fres) fruits for flavorinz is to use Baker's Flavoring Extracts—just like pure fruits bottled up.—advt. Jilted Suitor Shoots Sweetheart and Self Atlantle City, N. J., Jan. 3.—Said by the police to have been enraged when Millicent Tszard, 18, of Somers Point near here, repulsed his Ieroy Smith, 29, formerly a driver here, shot her three through the head at her home killing her instantly. turned the gun on himself, two bullets through his body just be low the heart. He is reported dying at the City hospital here. J. K. Is- vard father of the “girl, reached home from Miami, Fla, two hours after the #ragedy. jitney THE HERALD The A-B-C Paper with the A-B-C Want Ads Cole | attentions, | times | NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, INDIANS RALLY TO THEIR WOMAN CHIEF: K Trie Elerats s, Eds (o O MisMgome Jan 3 The have given the vote, but Ponea City, Okla Kaw Indians not only women the right clevated one of their number highest office in the tribe, that ef eleetive chief. The woman is Mrs Luey Tayiah ¥ s, now Chief Lucy to all her trihesmen Chief Lucy the first Kaw Indians have had when Chief Washung® Was frozen to leath Bhe 18 th John R Eads, a white man two with their ehildren live new chief's allotment, inheritance cight hundred acres, They are among the few who have not disposed of any of their property. They raise livestoek Kinds, are thrifty and send their children to the white schools, best material for the job," 18 the Indians describe Chief | have to the to the 1908 head wife of The “The the way Luey, And John Eads, who is a cousin | James Buchanan Eads, who built ads bridge across the Mississippi Louis, proudly takes his | chief, "She mother, the the river at St place as hushand of the is an excellent wife, a fine best nurse living and understands the \eeds of her people,' says Lucy Tayiuh with her brother, Em- mett, were adopted years ago by old | Washunga, who led the Kaw Indians from their lands in Xansas in 1873 to a new allotment 1 Oklahoma ter- ritory, He sent them to Haskell in- | stitute, after they had completed the | tribal schools. Here Lucy distinguish- ed herself as a student and became int d in nursing. After her xrudu-} om Haskell, she went to New | Y i city and became a graduate | Hurse She remained there several years and then returned to her own Her brother also ilves in the | near the little village of | amed after the old triba people Kaw countr; The Kaws, like many other Indians, | have sold and dissipated their hold- | ings and are now reduced to poverty Although their lands join those of the rich Osage, and oil derricks can be seen rising in the distance, the Kaws | have reaped no mineral benefit as yet. A number of tests have gone down, but oil in paying quantities has not | been found. Chief Lucy has announced that the principal task of her administration | will be pressing a claim of her tribe | against the government for $15,000,- 000, which the Kaws alleged is due | them as payment for lands they own- ed in Jegnsas before their mig to the Oklahoma territory. The Kaws declare the government offered them $1.25 an acre for the land, which was | near Topeka, but that they re only ten cents an acre. The § 000 they claim represents the differ- ence. Their friendly neighbors, the Osages, have offered to advance | cnough money to the Kaws to en-! able them to send a delegation to Washington to piess their claims. All Kaw Indians possess a strain of French blood, running back to the early trappers and voyagers who set- tled among the Indians in the day | of Marquette. The most prominent member of the tribe today is Senator | Charles Curtis of Kansas, who, with | his children today hty allotments in | the Kaw reservation. At the recent election of Chief Lucy an old tribal custom of having a barbecue was revived. Chiet made and served the considered a great delicacy Indians. Tt is made lik dough with the shortening omitted, rollefl flat and cut into strips. These are dropped into large kettles of lard and cooked thoroughly After the feast, Chief Lucy called her council together. She made her maiden speech, thanked her people | for the great honor they had given | her, the first woman to occupy so high a position in her tribe, and as- sured the Kaws that she would work for their interests. The new chief spoke in English and some of the younger generations interpreted the s h for the older Indians. So-Jum-Wah, who is ahout seventy-thr ars old and the only member of the tribe now living who came from the Kansas reservation, replied for them. His remarks were also interpreted for those who did not understand the Kaw language. ALBERT VISITS MILLERAND. Paris, Jan. 3.—King Albert of Bel- gium accompanied by the Duke of 3rabant visited President Millerand before the cabinet meeting today. A great crowd around the Elysee palace gave the king an enthusiastic recep- tion PALACE Starting Sunday Night Better Than ‘Smilin’ Through’ | form, |erowds THE DANGER OF How You Can Avoid It When you have a cold and neglect it you are in great danger of pneumonia, The pure . food ele- ments in Father John's |M e d icine build en- ergy to re- sist cold and grip germs, The gentle laxative effect |of Father John's Medicine {helps to drive out impurities, Father John's Medicine soothes und heals the lning of the breathing passages, Youn are safe when you take Father John's Medicine beeause it s gnaranteed free from aleehol or dangerous drugs in any Sixty-seven years in use, SEEK LIQUOR SOURCE Federal Agents Trying to Find Out From Whence Came New York's Supply For New Year's, New York, Jan, §—Determined to find the source of the liquor which they allege was consumed in hotels and cafes New Year's eve federal offi- clals have directed the proprietors of more than a score of the leading hotels and restaurants to produce for examination by a federal grand jury their reservation lists. It is under- stood that the persons shown on the lists will be called before the grand jury to explain where they got the liquor. The government desives simply to run down the source, one federal offi- rial explained. He said the idea of 1sing reservation lists was that of Col. William Hayward, U. 8. attorney for [this district. Freight Train Is Wrecked In Vicinity of Haverstraw Haverstraw, N, Y., Jan. 8.—Seven- teen cars were derailed some of them plunging into the Hudson river, when a westbound freight train on the West Shore railroad left the tracks at Tompkins Cove, three miles west of here,;at 5:15 p. m. yesterd No in- juries were reported. Several cars were thrown across the cast bound tracks and all trains including the heavy passenger traffic of inaugural bound from Albany to New York city were delayed. Officials of the road said late tonight they ex- pected to have the wreck cleared away and resume use of the tracks before daybreak. Texas Orphans’ Home Is Destroyed by Fierce Fire Dallas, Tex., Jan, 3.—A boys’ dor- mitory at the Buckner's Orphans’ home, eight miles east of Dallas, was destroyed by fire about midnight. Two hundred and fifty boys, inmates of the home, were sleeping in the building but all were gotten out safely. “Deserted at the Altar” Eaaae—e——————1 | EA E AND YOUTH IN LEAPS TO ETERNITY |-unl Woman Jumps From 14th Story | And Youth From 18th Ploor New York, Jan, 8.—Age and youth hoth tired of living—ended it all yesterday with leaps from Manhattan | skyscrapers. Age dramatically seleoted the teem Ing nooen hour, at ene of the city | busiest spots, Youth plunged to death alone, down an inside court, The 22.story munieipal building pposite City Hall park in the downs town business section, was disgorg- {ing its luneheon-hour erowd of stenographers, and thousands of persons were hurrying in and out of the Brooklyn bridge terminal when a woman's body came whirling down through space, Falling from the fourteenth story, |1t struek with a thud a few inches in front of two young women steno- graphers, The body was taken to the morgue, where It still lay, unidentified, to- night, Physlelans said it was the body of a woman of about sixty.five, |1t was attired from head to foot in {threadbare black, A little later, another ambulance 'was summoned to the McAlpin hotel, |34th street and Broadway. It took laway the body of Daniel Paul Jordan L2, of Yonkers, who had leaped from a window of his eighteenth-floor room [in an inside gourt far below, Jordan, a former seaman in the United States navy, had been em- ployed until recently as a bell-boy at the Ansonia, POINCARE EXPLAINS French Premier Insists That Propos- ed Pack Would Not His Country of all Uncasincss, Relleve | Paris, Jan. 3, — (Iy Assoclated Press)—Premier Poincare in relating to the reparations conference yester- |day what had taken place in Wash- ingtom respecting Chancellor Cuno's proposed peace agreement said that |Secretary Hughes did not seem to |make clear in his conversations with | Ambassador Jusserand the possibility of an Anglo-American guarantee for I Such a guarantee M. Poin- are d, even though it was duly | ratified by the American senate and |assured France of defensive military |cooperation within a fixed period | would not be sufficient to relieve her |of all uneasiness, Children Are Injured In Blaze at School Lanet, Ala, Jan. 3.—Twelve small children suffercd serious injuries in {escaping from a fire that destroyed the Lanet school building yesterday afternoon. Several hundred pupils were in the building when the blaze |was discovered, according to school |authorities. The fire originated in the | basement of the building. 1t was only the Wodl-headed work | of Superintendent C. E. Lunsford, and | others, that the children were saved WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 3, 1023, l | FORWLNNGISTION ELLANS #5¢ and 75¢ Packages Everywhers COMES VIA STEERAGE Alexander Tvanoff, Former in Seattle General Czar Leader, From Russia, Heattle, Jan, 8.—~General Alexander Ivanoft who in 1917 commanded the armies of the Caar of Russia on the eve of the revolution was here today a8 a steerage passenger on the Iyo Maru, He announced by the aid of an English Russian-dictionary his inten- tion of staying in Seattle learning Eng- lish and deing something to make a living, Gen, Ivanoff, apparently of middie age, declared that through he had little money he was not discouraged, He said his_wife had reached Shang- hal.and would come to Seattle as soon as he could earn money enough to bring her, . SENATE RECONVENES Arrives Shipping Bill Is One of Mcasures That Is Scheduled to Come Up for Elrly’ Consideration, 1 Washington, Jan, 3.—Ending their holiday adjournment today the sen- ate was prepared to take up the ad- ministration shipping blll and the house to go ahead on appropriation bills of which three more carrying nearly a billion dollars had been put in shape for a final vote before the adjournment last Saturday. These are the post office bill the last com- pleted and the agricultural and in- terior measures, ‘While the shipping bill was again before the senate prospects of its re- ceiving actual consideration before disposition of the farmers legislation wh is not expected from commit- tee until the latter part of this week at the earliest apparently were not considered hopeful by administration leaders. JANUARY SALE —OF— FURS AT j!rom being trampled to death, when || those in the lower grades became panicky upon 8eeing the smoke pour- ing into the class rooms. In the stampede that followed, many of the children suffered brok- en limbs and other serious injuries from which some of them may dje. MESHKIN’S Loan furnished on request. The Famous Stage Success We will loan through our INDUSTRIAL LOAN DEPARTMENT, on satisfactory en- dorsements or collateral, amounis of $25.00 and upwards, payable by the week or month. Detailed information regarding this plan Open Saturday Evening 7-9 Sure Relief | W Wallace Reid Agnes Ayre Moy McAvoy Adelph Zukor presents » WILLIAM de MILLE Production arence —PALACE— Thursday - Friday - Saturday — B, EVERYONE WHO JOINS THE CHRISTMAS CLUB BECOMES A SYSTEMATIC SAVER There is a specific amount due each week. Payments are made with such ease that the wonder is how quickly pennies, dimes and dollars grow in such a short 50 weeks. Select: the Club you wish to join. The first payment makes you a member. The table below explains the plan fully Increasing Club Plan 24 week, Deposit 2¢ 1st week, 4¢ 2nd week. 3 week-~in 50 25.50 63.75 Deposit 5c 1st week, 10c Ind week. Increase 5c each ~in 50 weeks you : o' Deposit 10c weel,, 20c 2nd week, Increase 10c - In 50 weeks you have . Decreasing Club Plan You hegin with the LARGIST payment and cah weel. Even Amount Club Plan 25¢ Clubyor e ", 2 ')Oc (‘lubp,.y,un" 50c each week—in 50 1 posit §1 $1 Clublerot $2 Cluplsop f $5 Cl‘m} ou have . $10 Clupiereie #10 $20 ClubDoosit vou have DECREASE $ 1250 500,00 1,000.00 Fine Vaudeville:Program Featuring 6—JOLLY JESTERS—-6 The Greatest Jazz Musical Act in Vaudeville

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