New Britain Herald Newspaper, January 19, 1923, Page 23

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, JANUARY 19, 1923, [ —— | ' an important contaet with Spain. One investigation in that eountry. ‘ ' 'A o:'u- ln;‘nt r:'rul :umtuu consists |A 0w "PEN Bishop Nuelson tells of a recent in- | effipanish-speaking Jews whese an- ferview with the archbishep of Mes- | Y z O N flF H'smulc Nm | & "l;lll.lfl Chidren | qostorn were ‘d\::ulnm Spain by |cow and the whole governing body of { “ll | Columbus' roy ons the new Russian chureh He was | . " ! “M”M “One must not think of Saloniki u-‘ m REmR" nR'vE asked many questions regarding the ! HAK | N G 7'()W [H R *gb | American ehureh in geperal IIN' a new Grecian aequisition far from Methodism in particular, the heart of Greece, One could lu Fuum mt. M m Oguaiurs of maintain, that it is the very heart of 80 B Nlflfll ol Im The bishop says: “They told me, |8 - - — —————an | (760081 (0r just across the bay, ever| 'Our aim is to purge the ehurch of | ;3 “eoverning"hady of the Gaus v 1 amples of mosaics of this W in sight from its hills, towers Mt, the elements of heathenism and lead | poodia to the Methodist Episcopal Ym won m' m save in Constantinople nn-’l"l‘ut:::: Olympus, inspiration of the life and | dl“ flllll'ch in M cfllllll'! the chureh hack to the gospel of lopypon to send fraternal messages to The finest of mosaics in Saloniki, and literature of old Greece " 2 L Jdesus Christ, and to rid 1t of the| e noxt conference which will mees one of the finest in the world, Is in monkish idea', in February, 1923, in order to advise Washington, Jan, 19 \ “f dome of the Church of 81, Goorsn. Chicago, Jan, 19.—8oviet Russia is Bishop Nuelson queted the "l:.\lfl‘“"d guide them in the building of safely outside both Eastern .|, ["Onee ruled and bullt by Rome, and | open (o & iarge evangelistio and re-|church dignitaries as sayin | their ehureh, The second Was one in- later by Venice, | form movement in the Russian ehurch | have to build a new ehureh, whieh is| 5 t chureh of ern Thrace, but near enough to those . and numbering | viting the Protestant churches " among Its inhabitants Greeks, Serh. | of head and outside of the Russian church, a free ehureh, and under a republi-| yo o B 0 Cond fraternal messages 10 troubled regions of Greek and Turk-|ians, ~ Albanians, Bulgarians, # according to Rishop John 1. Nuelson | can form of government; we want o o" o0 on " of Russia ish rivalry to be In easy reach of | Turks Saloniki's atmosphere m ".'“ of Zurich, fwitserland,whe is in|build on an evangelistic basis. You| .pTyoid of Rishops have wes refugees, has had a tremondous 1#9b- | kald Lo have heen compounded "" charge of the Methodist Fpiscopal | have had thia experience in Ameriea, oo 505 Thichans te attend lem thrust upon her, dispatehes state, | that of every adjacent nation, B :'1" church aetivities in Rusbia and who|you ean tell us how to do this thing.” | (5 0o loos in Russia and the by the tens of thousands of Greeks | reaches still farther afield, ; du k has recently arrived in the United| “I received two documents from(p.oqo 01 (hurches of Christ will also who flocked there both by land and " and has Ftates after extensive traveling and these men, one an invitation lssued by | (g couiornal messe sea. “Saloniki does not stand at a great world cross-roads, and its name, I_ I PTO N ¢ therefore, is not so familiar as that of Constantinople,” says a bulletin in 3 regard to the city, issued from the INSTANT Washington, D, C,, headquarters of the National Geographical society, “In c O c OA past and present importance, how- ’ ever, it is second only to its great 2 : sister of the straits. . Named for Alexander's Sister, “Balonikl, too, reaches far back in- ’ ” to the past. Cities rose and fell on vl its site more than half a millennium . before Christ; and the present town TRADE I8 STOPPED 2. el i Tk ko Ane three syllables in the name of Thes- : malonike, half sister of Alexander the M sundsfl" sm“ sovms 'I‘ook Great. It became a ‘Little Rome' during the height of that empire's $power; a free city, capital of the sur- o'er Admm[smflon rounding regton .and the home of roany Roman colonists. Cicero lived thera for a time in exile; Nero and Viadivostock, Siberia, Jan. 19.—~The| Trajan decorated the city; and it was timber trade of the Primoria, one of | the temporary home of the Emperors & its greatest assets, bringing an_an-|Galerius, Licinius and Thedosius. Ma’l nval revenue of one million gold “Under the Byzantines, Saloniki rubles to previous governments. has|was the second city of the empire; come to a standstill since the soviet| and it has remained ever since the orden took over the administration of this| rival of the City of the Straits wheth- ovince. As a result of concession|er the latter has been called Byzan- o :ven to forelgn firms, chiely Jap-|tium, Stamboul, or Constantinople. 5 filled P Saloniki might be called ‘the exten- sion university of the Near East' for from there went forth St. Cyril, who carried to the Slavic world to the north the Cyrilic alphabet in which its literature has been wrought. - B 355 0 it anese, there being no Russian edpital avallable, exports of timber reached 14,000,000 feet in 1921 and promised to be even greater this year when the government cancelled all conces- vions and imposed taxes and condi- tions which made ecxport impossible Efiu;tfil?:fi;lm":':f:;:flm and unurofitable, The concessions covering over a|a city should contain interesting rel- miltion acres which have been can-|ics of its past. What is surprising is celled were confined to the Straits of ":":h:"v::“rl:"hwm be so little known Tartary. ! Not}rym]y has the soviet annulled the| “The oldest and most accessible! concessions but it has derhanded that| °f Sa.lnc'!kln un?lqumu is the street the concessionaires shall pay to it ::v """ t::d.l‘;n:‘m‘r‘h!t:ml:ll:he lc'"f in stumpage on cut timber, which they pa:t :r hesia Rnoman NiEhway lrson‘: :::m?"r:.ud";:Tdr;:u:;‘fl:‘r:{':;u:lfi;; the Adriatic to the Bosporus, which and mills have closed down, and there ;;LI:I:; :“: g ‘:ho Royal Way of the were no bidders for concessions re- ,,Th:q-' “pf‘:‘q sr;ot partlonlanly. im C':"i'ln‘;f":;’:‘:é,:’n';bl"g,:c“f!‘;i“:“ o oosind LThete 15 1ite to orind the situation said: “The nearest markets ::3012;‘{ (;;‘O::;nh:.:k::i?es {;Ir'yegt‘:_‘;- for the sale of timber are China and| "0 ‘“d"gand' R Japan, and these countries take from tals % < AR ‘0! whom trod “‘; 70X 80 mfllion cubic feet a year from | o & W % America, which naturally fixes the|gpoco mare ts of the past you must :’“:‘T;’t nice ,"‘n“;nh“‘"' dIn‘atead :f do so to ‘tHe' somewhat incongruous *eloping export by reducing the| ..o ¢ an American electric car, price for felling and for railway tran-|riven by a modern Greek or a Bpans siti iustead of the abolishment of eX-|ip jow upder the Roman Arch poft taxes and reducing for 10ading| which spans the street of the Vardar. i for the cheapening of Russian One of World's Finest Mosaics, tim@r in order to compete with Am- “The fizest remains of the city mre erjca, the actions of the local author- i 4na twenfy-two churches which some- ities are direoted in raising its price. Ihow survived the turbulent Middle First the price for felling timber,| pAgag. There they stand, turned back which was_already high, has been|into churches after five hundred years ingreased By 10 to 12 per cent, for|of uge as mosques. They fllustrate the purpose of clearing areas over|the story of Byzantine architecfre | ’ d if you would dream of Wwhich the timber has been cut. A more beautifully in certain ways than a yesult of this and the increased de-| 4o those of Constantinople. One es- mands of labor the cost of = laying| pecially interesting fact in connection down a log in Kobe is 803 sen. This| with these churches is that they log sells in -Kobe from 70 te 80 yen.| make among them a museum of the The same applies to fishing conces-|lost Byzantine art of mosaic. No. sions.” where else are such, beautiful ex A Now In Progress The Great Sale of ‘““Waldorf’’* House Frocks $1.17 FOX’S: Monday—Tuesday—Wednesday Values to $3.98 Zw PRODUCTION The Most Tremendous Values We Have Ever Offered The Manufacturer of the “Waldorf” House Frocks sold us his entire year-end surplus at a big sacrifice in price. Therefore this great sale. There are over 100 styles and patterns in fine ging- Mother used tO make- ham, percale, chambray, crepe, Indian head and linene in sizes 36 to 46, and extra sizes to 54, in checks, stripes, plaids, figures and novelties. The values are really amazing. We have been wait- ing a long tinre to get just such a bargain as this to make a hig noise in our House Dress Depart- Tbat means —— ment in the Down Stairs Garment Store. No woman in New Britain should miss this wonderful opportunity. Just think of it, four dresses for only $4.63, less than $5.00. NONE SUCH ' OVER 100 STYLES AND PATTERNS TO CHOOSE FROM MINCE MEAT s ey ool |7 * Steiger’s Down Stairs Garment Store

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