New Britain Herald Newspaper, May 4, 1923, Page 22

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)

P NS S A 55 175 " tral portion are two of the three prin- | their harmful effects. ! put up Bi-a-lin in convenient tablet . vigor arrives. Sold by all good drug- UTE INDIANS LIVE IN DESOLATE AREA Few White Men Have Penctarted 10 Redskins' Fastnesses May News Indian ‘war’' in Utah may come 88 something of a shoek to these whe think there no longer is an American, frontier,” says a bulletin from 1t Washingten, D, C., headquarters of the National Geographic Beclety which goes on to deseribe the sout eastern corner of U'tah, where repe gade Ute Indians have beepn resisting the authorities, A Country Larger Than New Jdersey “It is logical enough that solitude- Joving Indians, breaking with eiviliza. tlon, should choose the desolate, un fphabited portions of this almest un- known region as a scenw for their ad. venture, The few men who have traversed and written about the out. lying sections of San Juan county which, incidentally is larger than the Btate of New Jersey—estimate thut probably only a few hundred white men really know its remote sections, even superficially, “This is a part of the United States which can perhaps be understood by outsiders if they have gazed over the depths and crags of the Grand Cq yon and tried to imagine what lles beyond. 8an Juan County does not lie immediately north of the canyon; it is in a broad way a kindred land to that moated region—sect off from the beat. en path, largely a land of rock and canyons and desolation. Washington, D. C | alrplane which made the the N panse ved 1 ARy s ont Where 1 brush b s and sage - h there is grass alleys it mueh of the ness | s Dis» reds of square mi vithout settiements, yOns ar red by white which t anim fe 16 3 pnd some ¢ helieved never te have & ¥ mer Utah's southeast Comer over this count the rly d but even they | mu f the re. gion inhogpltable and had their perm anent headquarters in more favored st oand 5 e sout ar Natural Bridees Recontly Found In Ran Juan Cou re the most famous of the natural bridges of 1'ta) which have been made into Natioan Monuments, and which deserve 1 clased among the v theworld The iso tien of "tah is em the fact that first inkling of theexistence of t gr by ot reach white n the first of then whites as late as 3 "Because of the extreme difficulty of reaching the bridges, relatively few people have visited them even yet,” BRITISH INVENTOR REWARDED London, May 4.—The Royal Com. mission on Awards to Inventors and the American Commissicn for the ad- ust ment of Forelgn Claims, award- ed £1,260 “in respect to the future by the American Government, of a direction finding system for alr- planes” invented by Major Robinson, R. A, F, Also {100 ters of use James |culture must was basis if it is to live NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, MAY OF FARMERS BY LAW British Premier Tells Them He Gan Do Nothing for Them Lon May 4.—Dritish agriculture Is going through hard times. A depus tation Hritish alled re. cently on Prime M or Ronar Law. They cor led thelr troubles to him and a ad what the governm t would fo for them I ar Law told them ernment could de has not yet learped to meaning when he has He just calls lets it go at camouflage his asant truths to tell spade, and riends say he a8 prime mir unple spade His has not yet had enough experience ister to mas the office, and make unpalatable pleasant B Subsidy Or Protection In his talk to the farmers Bonar Law said “You ask that something be done by the government to pre- fall in the price of foodstufis. seems to me it can be done in only one of two ways, Either by a aubsidy *was tried and found {niprace one ean foresee, or by protection, ' subesfly was tried and found impr tical gards proteetion, 1 t} you know well as T do that public is not ready for it, and we could not get a majority for it. Agri- get on an economic It caunot be truths tuste the awarded to Major Robinson in respect supported by the state invention on the Amerlcan to the “‘use of the Second Reading to Bill, But the house of commons did “The district is marked out by ll" trans-Atlantic flight to Europe, vie the Something for the farmers in a mat- own canyons. To the west lies the north-and-south gorge of the Colora- do river, not yet the tremendous gash that it becomes farther south and west in Arizona, but still a huge cleft in the | earth that can be crossed only at a few widely separated points. To the| south lies the canyon of the San Juon river, minor beside the Grand Canyon, but a deep difficult chasm for all that. To the north the Grand River, im-| portant tributary of the Colorado, runs in asdeep channel, making the third canyon boundary to this isolated | county. The west line of the state of Colorado marks the fourth boundary. 100 Miles From Railroad “The northern portion of San Juan County 18 in reasonably each reach of a railroad ,and there are in the cen. cipal towns of this vast division. Nelther has a population of 1000, Not | far from the southeastern corner of the county and the state, a hundred | miles from a railroad, is Blanding, | around which the recent Ute uprins. ing took place. “The country HEADACHES! SIGN POSTS OF DANGER- OUS CONDITIONS Headaches are generally symptoms of more dangerous troubles. They often mean that the blood pressure 1s high to a degres that might prove fatal. Beware of them, especially if accompanied by occasional dizzy| spells, labored breathing, nflensh‘e‘. breath or general weakness, ringing in ears. However, since the discovery of Bi-2-lin, high blood pressure can be overcome, for it successfully reaches the cause. It helps Nature herself to reduce the high blood pressure by thoroughly cleaning out the polsons ‘which have caused the heart to over- tax itself in its efforts to overcome south and west of BSuch remarkable results were re- ported even in obstinate and long- g cases, that it was declded to form. Get it today and see how rap- idly your distress vanishes and a wonderful new feeling of power and such as The Clark & Brainerd | The Dickinson Drug Co, City Drug Btores. SOAKS RIGHT IN Azores in May, 1919, OoLDS of head or chest are more easily \oived in this bill, or the treated externally with— VICKS Over 17 Million Jars Used Yearly fimfl‘ ter in which the government allowed its supporters to vote as they pleased, It gave second reading to the Mer- chandise ks Bill by 183 votes to 100. There was no great e in- govern- ment might not have given its fol. lowers a free hand. It provides that fmported food products, including eggs, shall be marked to show the country of their origin, It imposes ino tariff on such imports, the idea | being to permit an appeal to patriot- {ism in favor of the competing home products, | It is prescribed in the bill that |eges are to be indelibly marked on the shell; meat in such a manner as | may be preseribed by regulation; raw on the packages, dairy products. on and poultry and [the box or tin. RELIEVES CONSTIPATION 9 KELLOGG'S B gives permanent because itis ALL, BRAN! ments—it is a blood maker and bone With the most dangerous diseases and tissue-builder! = AIDDENIEDGROUP TOOPERATE RIVER |:5sie i, ™S BOATS IN ALASHA Will Be One More Step in “Open- ing Up" on Part of Government | Washington, D, C, May 4~—One more step in “epening up" Alaska will be taken when the government begins operation of river boats on the| Yuhkon and Tanana this summer, “Thus Fairbanks, interior metropos is of Alaska, becomes officially the place where rails and rivers meet," says a bulletin from the Washington headquarters of the National Geo- graphic soejety, ‘airbanks marks the apex of a traffic triangle with! one leg planted at B rd, southern torminus of the Alaska railway, and the cther on Mering Sea where flow the waters of the Tanana and the Yukon. Yukon a Great River, Yukon is one of the world's rivers, If its mouth were at York city its source would br near Salt Lake city, “The pana, the less familiar por- tion of e new government boat route, is the Yukon's chief southern tributary. 1t drains the vast Tanana Valley, rich In gold, other minerals, and virgin farm lands, “This Imperial valley of the far north, as large as West Virginia, now has a white population of less than 7,000, In a dozen years after the! first substantial gold output, in 1903, yellow ore worth $66,000,000, A Town of Flowers and Bird-Houses. | “Steaming up the Yukon in sum-! mer time the visitor will reach a| town of many flowers, where numer- ous homes have hothouses, some have bird boxes on their peaks, and prac- tically all have vegetable gardens, Wild roses and Scotch blue-bells grow in the flelds, “He rubs his eyes and ‘This can't be Alaska!' But it fs,| and Alaskans would have their fel-| low-Americans recover from the idea ‘due to misleading textbooks of gen- erations gone' that their is a ‘forbid- | ding, ice-covered, glacier-crowned ! land of dog teams and polar bears./ | The quotation is from the most re-| cent report of the territorial govern-| | ment, and it is repcated at every op- | | portunity. | “The Alaskans are not denying marked climatic differences from the | states. Anovelist recently sent proof of a serial story he was writ- ing to a uative. This writer had the pitch-dark of a Fourth of July night| the 1028, y fireworks Th e th Alaskan but A Reputation— for unvaryin uality is the Greatest MarK of Distinction. l!SAL An All o XA e has given Matchless Quality for 81 years. So Delicious! Just Try It. lny}nomeu are reputed to bhe the mest modishly dressed in the territory, “The electrig lighting plant is used for the chicken houses as well as homes in the dark inter, small farms and diaries are springing up around the city and their eelery, growers insist, is on Fairbanks tables before that of Massachusetts reaches Boston consumers “Fairbanks has its slogan, too, like its sister cities back in the states, It wants more roads and railroads, and capital for development of its sur. rounding coal fields, Therefore its appeal about to be realized in part, ‘Give us the railway and motive pow- we will pay the nation's war is no night in July Corfew Rings at 10 0, M had to pass a curfew ghildren must be put to bed summer evenings by 10 o'cloek lest the youngsters gef inadequate rest, After your host has tucked the children to hed and takes you to & lance or to the ‘movies’ it is a queer sensation te walk home in daylight "The town of flowers and birds and gardens in Tanana Turning inte the river of that name the visitor is ase salled by less pleasant evidences that Alaska is no all winter, Moquitoes moosefiies abound 'The Tanana is broad and placid, Green willows and poplars push out over the water's edge, for the earth banks are soft and the dirt melts away as in many places the water digs 2 cave beneath "Often turning and twisting, your boat will pass Tolovana where, on &/ clear day Mt, McKinley, a hundred miles away, is visible, Farther on s Nenana, now the terminus of the vd-gaug: aska rallroad from o) . hicl " from Seward, Today passengers Electric Lighted Chicken Coops, must change here to the narrow|_ ' Then Fairbanks! Here, as In gauge line to Fairbanks, With the Pawson, sandwiches once cost a dol- opening of the T700.foot, single-span lar aplece, fortunes were dug up and bridge across the river at this point, #auaudered, and the hilarity of a big the narrow gauge will ba converted €/t¥'s night life extended through the to the standard track width ang 24-daylight hours. ns will run through, “Today Fairbanks retains little The government rallway made | trace of a mining town, It has eme- Nenana a busy little town of neat|tric lights, stores, telephones, an bulldings and up-to.date stores, 8o agricultural college, jitneys run out|er, a anxious are ‘its citizens for a ‘spotiess | to nearby towns and camps, and its debt," SAGE, ALLEN & CO. 3-1090 (INC) 3-1090 Hartford Conn. ther “"Fairbanks law that a town' ideal that they prohibit log within a mile of their commu- nity, "The next town is Chena, which hopes to wrest future laurels from Fairbanks as the St. Louis of inland Alaska. exclaims | g Two and Three Piece Costume Suits —FOR— WOMEN —AND— MISSES’ $25.00 Up Two and three piece suits of Poiret Twill or Twill Cord, in mandarin, box and Separate blouses Tie at the side strictly tailored styles, of figured or plain silks. or front fastenings and trimmings of em- broideries in self or contrasting color. AND SPORT COATS $19.75 When summer days or evening turn cool, one has need of a cape or coat. Fashion emphasizes particularly the sport coat andthe twill cape. Twill capes are trimmed with braid and stitchings, and are shown in the much wanted full sweep style, with large crush collars, Coats are of imported tweed and herringbone materials in swagger and mannish tailored models. Colors are navy, tan, gray and mixtures. Sizes 16 to 44. FUR SCARFS AT SPECIALLY LOW PRICES Fur Scarfs are particularly smart right now, and we are offering some very special values, all of Sage-Allen quality. Silver Iceland Fox .. $8.69 to $10.50 Mink, 1 Skin ..... veeeees $11,95 CAPES Jap Marten, 2 skin scarf, deep furred $49.50 tlose on the trail of sufferers fr s LARRIe Sa O Taupe and Brown Fox .... .. $25.00 Squirrel Chokers .. $8.69 AND LIMBERS UP STIFF JOINTS Pbarmacists call it “Joint Ease” be- cause it's for Swollen, Sore Pain- ful, Creaky Joints Only. It took a good many years to get| together a combination of pain sub- | duing and swelling reducing agents| declared to be the one remedy that almost instantly penetrates through! the skin and flesh and starts right in' to make swollen, inflamed, creaky,’ pain racked joints as good as new. They call this new and wonderful preparation “'Joint Ease” because the medical man who turned the trick,| worked for years to perfect some low- priced remedy that would really bene- fit the millions of people who have one or more joints that need helpful attention, 8o “Joint Ease" is prepared only for people who have a swollen, pain- ful, creaky, distorted or stiff joint, whether it be in knee, elbow, shoul- der, ankle, neck or finger and wheth- | er it is caused by rheumatism or something elsc Of course, it can't help but quickly| put an end to such superficial ail-| ments as lumbago, neuralgia, neuritis, aching muscles, stitch in the erick in the neck or sore feet bec of its penetrating action, but wh i8 really recommended for is joint ail- ments of any nature whatever, Ask for a tube of “Joint Ease.™ You can use it several times in on evening for quick results, because it #oes right throagh the skin with only a few seconds’ rubbing. It surely is a swift penetrator and when it gots under the skin, it starts right in to clean up all joint trouble, All druggists dispense it daily for about 60 cents a tube, as do first class druggists everywhere. constipation, there’s no time to waste on foods with a low bran content! The one answer to constipation is BRAN that is ALL BRAN! That’s why you should eat Kellogg’s—and cat it regularly; at least two table- spoonfuls daily; as much with each meal in chronic cases! KELLOGG’S BRAN IS SCIENTIFICALLY PREPARED TO RELIEVE SUF- FERING HUMANITY AS NO OTHER FOOD CAN! Don’t delay a minute! Get started on Kellogg’s Bran to-day and your health will steadily improve and bowel conditions return to normal, no matter how long you have suffered with constipation, mild or chronic. Remember that Kellogg’s Bran is not an artificial laxative, but nature’s own bulk food that acts as sweeper, cleanser and purifier. Its work for health is wonderful! Besides, bran contains the most valuable mineral salts and other life-sustaining ele- Kellogg’s Bran, being cooked and krumbled, is delicious eaten as a cereal, or sprinkled on hot or cold cereals. Another happy way to serve Kellogg’s Bran is to cook it with your favorite hot cereal. In preparation, add two tablespoonfuls of bran for each person, cooking the cereal as usual. You can make the most delightful muffins, raisin bread, pancakes, maca- roons, etc, with Kellogg’s Bran— and it’s fine in gravies, soups and purees, The big thing is to get started on Kellogg’s Bran quickly—for the sake of the health of your entire family—AND SERVE IT REGU- LARLY! First-class hotels and clubs serve Kellogg’s Bran in individual packages. Ask for it at your res. taurant! All grocers sell Kellogg’s Bran. THE SMARTEST SKIRTS $10.75 The quality and colors of these skirts are unusually fine, and they are especially de- sirable for sports and general summer wear. Included in the group are fine pleated wool Canton crepe skirts in cocoa, gray, caramel, beige, navy, black and almond green. SPECIALS IN MEN’S FURNISHINGS Eagle Shirts $2.45, $2.95 and $5.95 English Broadcloth Shirts $2.65, $3.25 and $3.95 Eagle Shirts, All the Latest and Best ........... $4.95, $5.95, $6.95 500 WHITE OXFORD SHIRTS, regularly $2.00 300 B. V. D. UNION SUITS ... 300 SEALPAX UNION SUITS .... We are headquarters for men’s irts. gle shirts are known .. $1.69 .. 8119 99¢ real for . everywhere for quality and style. The English broadcloth shirts are in a class by themselves. Saturday Candies 2 lb. boxes of Assorted Chocolates—T79¢ Social Sweets and Assorted Chocolates ~A49¢ 1b. ’ Kewpie Kandics—15¢ box. Jars of Assorted Hard Candies in sticks and drops—25¢, Spiced Strings and Drops—39c Ib. Gum Drops in several flavors—29c b, Canada Mints—25¢ Ib. Old FFashioned Molasses Cocoanut Hay Stacks—59¢ 1b. We have a complete stock of Apollo, Durand, Page and Shaw, Wenz, Maillard and Foss Candies, in 1-2 Ib.,, 1 lb,, 2 1b. boxes and more. May Sale Prices For Housedresses and Aprons New Tub Dresses in an endless variety of styles for every type of figure. Sizes 16 to 56—$1.95 to $10.95. Extra sizes—$§1.95 to $7.95. Percale Bungalow Aprons of gdod qual- ity in dainty patterns, 50 or more styles. Priced from—98¢ to $2.25. Sizes 36 to 52. Mary Pickford Aprons of good quality gingham, special at—T79¢.

Other pages from this issue: