New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 31, 1923, Page 18

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IRUNCORPS PRE MAY GOME TO N.. T. A. B. Musicians Said to Have Designs Upon State Meet Trophies to be One or more of the prizes awarded at the convention of the Con- | necticut Fifers' and Drummers' asso elation, which will he held at New Haven, August 17 and 18 are expected to be on display in New Britain short- ly after the convention according to| the expectations of members of the local T. A. B. drum corps, who expect | to compete for several of the trophies. The 38th annual field day and par- ade of the association will be held in New Haven under the auspices of the Irish and American drum corps of that city. On the 17th a reception| and parade and dance will be held at | Bavin Rpck and on the 18th the big| parade will be held in New Haven, | The. prize competition will bhe at Savin Rock and will be held rain or| shine, The list of prizes is as follow.: Silver Loving Cups, In State | 1—Ancient, 1st, 2nd and 3rd r\r!zen.{ 23—Modern, 1st, 2nd and 3rd prizes. | 8—Plccolo and flute, 1st and 2nd | prizes. 4—Fite, drum and bugle, 2nd priges. 6—Drum and bugle, 1st prize, | 8—Piccolo corps, 1st. | T—Kiltle, 1st. | ‘8—Longest distance, 1st prize. 9—Largest corps, 1st prize. 10—Best appearance, modern, prize. Anclent, 1st prize. 11—Fanoy drill, 1st prize. Gold and Silver Medals, In State 12—Individual snare drum, 1st gold, 2nd silver. 18—Individual bass drum, 1st gold, 2nd siiver, 14—Individual fifing, 18t and | 15t | ancient, 1st | ping maple trees gold, 2nd silver. 15~—Individual gold, 2nd silver, 16—Individual piccolo,*1st gold silver, 17—Flute, 1st gold, 2nd silver. 18—Individual bugle, 1st gold, silver. 19-—RBest gold. 20-—Baton swinging, silver, 3rd silver. Loving Cups, Out of State 21—Ancient, 1st and 2nd prizes. 22-~Modern, 1st and second prizes, 28-Piccolo and flute, 1st prize. 24—Fife, drum and bugle, 1st and 2nd prizes. 25—Combination, 1st prize. 26—ILongest distance, 1st prize 27—Best appearance, 1st prize. 28—Largest corps, 1st prize, 29—Kiltia band, 1st prize, Gold Medals, Out of State Best appearing major, 1st prize 1st prize. drums, fifing, modern, y 2nd 2nd appearance major, 1sf 1st gold, 30~ 31—Baton swinging, 32—Individual snare gold, 2nd silver 1st FRUIT IN AUSTRALIA, Records Show a Big Increase From 1918 to 1922, Sydney, Australia, July 31.—The annual fruit production of Australia has increased from about 1,000,000 bushels in 1918 to 4,762,876, the fig- ures for last year. The fruit finds a ready market in| England, where it has already served to lower the price on all classes of fruit. John Burroughs, famous naturalist, obtained money to buy books hy tap- and selling the sugar, in h THE NEN BRITAIN'T ETC0- ~ MARK / NUALITY GODDS AT: ECONOMY PRICES LEAN SMOKED SHOULDER FRESH CUT HAMBURG . ..vvvvooonniol BEEF LIVER .......... SUGAR CURED BACON ROAST PORK ; BEST FRANKFORTS LAMB CHOPS . .......... LAMB FORES ..... LEAN CORNED BEEF . W31 318-MAIN 5T, : 4 12¢ 18¢ 10¢ 28¢ 20c 18¢ 35¢ 22¢ 10c h h b b h b 1h h h Domino Granulated SUGAR .....5 Ib Packag-e— 48¢ 25¢ 17¢ Powder .... 1b 29(: Melg'rtznes waiB 113250 Pork and Beans 3cans .... Baker’s Cocoa | Not-a-seed Raisins 2 packages . ... Premier Salad 25¢ % Qrisiing I\ bot. 33 C | Crackers .. 21 2D C Campbhell’s Soups 2 5(: 3 cans . Wedgwood Creamery BUTTER .. 1b 41c—2 b 8lc Best Pure Lard LARGE, SWEET, JUICY Best No. 1 Potatoes, Native Beets Bunch Native Tomatoes . . . ; F;:;i'hes, 2 quarts 25 C | 25¢ Native Carrots Bunch Green and Wax Beans . 4 quarts {in return it asks that every | man got to camp with an earnest de- |and planos, | vides a daily ration of nearly T0c and | formerly had the largest foreign col- NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, JULY 31, 1923, DRAW 30 THOUSAND Many Civilians to Enjoy Lile Under the Canvas Chicago, July 81.—In the last days of July some 30,000 young men left their homes to spend a month in one or another of the 25 Citizens' military camps, which the government has or- ganized for this summer, according to the announcement made by the Military Training Camps association here recently. Health in mind, body'and character is the primary aim of the Citizens' camps to which young men between 17 and 24 are admitted for a month of training at government expense, and these camps are located at care- fully selected sites in various parts of the country, so that no one need travel more than two or three hundreds miles from his own home. In making the announcement, George T. James, the executive sec- retary of the association says: “The camps are conducted by the most competent officers of the Regular Army, the National Guard and the Organized Reserves, and no pains are spared to make the month of train- ing an enjoyment and a profit to all who attend. Applicants are accepted tion and with the endorsement of good character from reliable citizens, and in every detall the camps live up to the highest standards of American home life. “All expenses, including transporta- tion, are paid by the government, but young sire to return a better citizen. No finer education ideal can be found in all history since the days of ancient Greece than underlies the Citizen's camps of 1923. The dally program is devised to interest and strengthen young men in every possible way. The morning hours are given to a careful- ly graduated coutse of military train- ing from ordinary iInfantry drlll through a succession of four years in the speclalized work of other branches of the service, the cavalry, engineers, fleld and coast artillery, signal corps and alr service. The afternoons are devoted to all forms of physical train- ing and athletics, including baseball, handball, volley ball, tennis, swim- ming, boxing, wrestling and track work, all under expert direction and conducted with a view to physical health and good sportsmanship. Am- ple entertainment is arranged for the evening hours. “Religious life is not neglected, since provision is made for voluntary worship on appropriate occasions for men of all faiths. Army chaplains look after the moral welfare of the men enrolled and army hostesses ar- range their social gatherings. Com- modious and well arranged quarters are provided with libraries, reading roms, cards, checkers and chess tables The government pro- competent cooks prepare meals which compare most favorably with the best family or hotel tables. The men are quartered either in permanent barracks or in tent cities, carefully laid out in eompany street; not more tent on comfortable cots, every tent with substantial board flooring." The Military Training Camps asso- clation of the U'nited States is promot- ing the summer camps and securing through its nation-wide organization the interest and co-operation of prom- fnent citizens in every part of the country. AMFERICAN COLONIES GROW. Records Show That Many From This Country Are in Japan. Tokio, 31.—Britishers, | July who cny in Japan with the exception of the Chinese, now are being given a close run by the Americans. Returns just {issued show that there are 2,562 Britishers resident in Japan and 2,549 Americans. Thera | has also heen an increase in the num- | ber of Russians, composed largely of political refugees. | There are just under 30,000 eigners resident in the islands, whom nearly 20,000 are Chinese. Smoked salmon 60c Ih, only. Cooked Food Shop. for- of | tomorrow | advt only after careful physical examina- | than six men to ea¢h large eize army |- RADIATOR STETHOSCOPE T0 SAVE TONS OF COAL Device Invented by Research Com- mittee of the National Association of Building Owners and Managers. Chicago, July 81, — The leaky ra- dlator and the radiator that sounds like a strike in a boller factory inust BO. ‘he reasearch committee of the National Association of Building Owners and Managers declares it has discovered means of saving thou- sands of tons of coal a year by pre- venting wastage of steam. The committee has invented a stethoscope. It works quite like the one the doctor uses when he tests your lungs or your heart. The es- cape of steam in the radiator traps can be gauged the way the doctor finds out ahout a malfunctioning heart. The stethoscope 1is placed against the radiator trap and the operator listans to the music of the steam, Whether it murmurs, gurgles or pounds, the radiator trap doctor knows immediately what the matter is by using his stethoscope, it is claimed. The committee in charge of the work was headed by Col. "Gordon Strong ,of Chicago, assisted by pro- fessors "and students of Lewis Insti- tute, where the actual testing was done CELEBRATE FOUNDING OF NORMAL SCHOOL e of Town And Three Hundred Residents Will Participate in Pageant Unveiling of Monument, Concord, Vt, July 31. — The cen- tennial of the founding of what is be- leved to have heen the first normal school in this country will be cele- brated in this little Vermont town August 14 and 15, A pageant of edu- cation, in which three hundred resi- dents of the town will participate, will be glven on the evenings of both days, and in the afternoon of the second cday a monument will be unveiled at Concord Corner on the site of the shool. Rev. Samuel Read Hall, who was born in Croydon, N. H., in 1795, was called to the pastorate of the Congre- gational Church at Concord Corner in 1823. He accepted on condition that he be allowed to establish and main- tain an institution for the training of teachers for the common schools. In the same year he opened what was variously known as Concord Academy and Columbla Academy, and latter as the Essex County Grammar School, with the principal object of training men to be teachers. In 1829 Dr. Hall published a treatise on education said to have been the first printed work on pedagogy in this country. He also in- troduced the use of blackboards in schools. The Name- Plate Means Much! It pays to be sure of the name on the battery you select—sure that it stands for the kind of concern you can have confidence in. The Willard name- plate on a battery—no matter the price you pay—marks that bat- tery as a well-built bat- tery on which you fhay rely. Simmons Storage Battery Co. 167 ARCH STREET PHONE 2245 WHEN DAD SAYS “I WANT A DRINK” * He's asking that mother bring forth from the ice box the bottle of Seibert’s milk and pour him out a glass. He says it's a real health builder, "MAKE SURE ITS SEIBERTS =.E SEIBERTsSON/ 3-’"3/0141’?)71’//?7/1011" PARK ST. PHONE:17201% ¥ NEW BRITAIN.CONN. Norick the straight inside line, conforming to the natural foot shape. SoME models have a built-in arch prop. All ¢ models have a firm and snugly fitted arch, HOT WEATHER SPECIALS Refrigerators, all kinds Oil Stoves, Gas Plates. Etc. A. LIPMAN 34 Lafayette St. Tel. 1328-3 CLAMS FOR CHOWDER CLAMS FOR STEAMING SHRIMPS—CRAB MEAT SOFT SHELL CRABS LOBSTERS Dining Room Connection HONISS’S 24-30 STATE STREET Hartford JRINK — AYERS’ SODA WATER Take home a hotde of cream soda —Something you will like—it's deli- cious. 2 Three size bottles—3c, 10c, 15c. Shoe Store 272 Main Street is built into this “stylish shoe 'PRINCESS PAT, the Walk- Over wonder shoe for women, is now shown in fine white cloth, It is strictly tailoved, a style that brings out all the beauty of the Princess Pat natural foot shape. e THE heel is narrower than usual as shown by the solid black line, TrEheel height is just right; not too high for comfort, nor too low for ankle beauty. PRINCESS PAT HEEL PRINCESS PAT is an uncopyable Walk-Over origina- tion, imitated but never equalled. It is shown here in white cloth for summer wear, but comes in other leathers and fabrics. It can be made to your order in any fabric, brocades, satins, or metal cloths, and in any style of deco- ration. It is not merely one shoe, but a last upon which are made all styles and types of shoes. David Manning'’s Uitk Crer CROWLEY BROS. INC. PAINTERS AND DECORATORS 267 Chapman Street TEL. 2018. Estimates cheerfully given on all jobs A Fine Location at West End. Large family house for sale on Russell street, right near the center, and in a neighborhood par excellence. We want to buy second mortgages. 211 Main Street | CINDERS FOR SALE A. H. Harris — General 1rucking— 99 WEST ST. TEL. 1233.3. two CAMP REAL ESTATE CO. . — FOR SALE 97 BARNEIT ST.—6 ROOM HOUSE, FRONTAGE, 150 FT. DEEP. Phone 343 Rooms 305-6, Bank Bldg, BARN AND FRUIT, 350 FT. GET PARTICULARS FROM H. DAYTON HUMPHREY 272 MAIN STREET NATIONAL BANK BLDt s NSS o :\\\\\\ N SN S 'THE OLD HOME TOWN Vi BY STANLEY / g A N S N\ R AR, RENERY STANLEY ™\ NEA SERVICE, PORTER RASTUS JEFFERSON JACKSON "AND THE BIG MAPLE TREE, AMONG OTHER THINGS, WERE WHITE WASHED % AT THE CENTRAL. HOTEL TODAY -

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