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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1925, ‘Wednesday Only—-Besse-Leland’s—Wednesday Only SPECIAL LOT 380 SILK KNIT TIES 3 for $1.00 MEN'S MERINO SOX Black—Medium \\'cizhl—('rcv Heel and Toe 3 pair $1.00 NEGRO ARISTOCRATS IN DARKEST AFRICA Seven Feet Not Extreme Height Tor Watussi Hale 30, —"Great telginm a that the State Oct. sl to | Washington, D, C., Britain has just ced mid-Africa area larger of Connecticut which of the most densely populated, fnter esting, and le known parts of thut continent,” sy bulletin from the Washington, 1) Jqu of the National Geo fe Hoclel [ s om ot e vler i i ueation k wart ot which volennie Ta and “outh of peaks often lie within a cquator, i1 Ry of the Wa Watussi giants cratic of all of the last to nolds absoluiy property, and ngan, Lake oric, a range whose lofty with spow though hundred miles of t Where Sultan “Ruanda is the i butti pyg: el the the latter the ‘most negro tribes’ aml onc retain a Sultan who sway over the lives lands of his subject “A medinm stands five fes stockingless feet; extreme he'ght. are well-proportiont It some of thein were ateur athletic competitior lized nation: d records toppling. An cxplover Jjump he measured of 8 ft ! Though he had U deviees the cam the opinion (hat overtake traincd B " man in his not an 1mitted o ar umong cly- would go sports o t, & inche 1rate timi oserver expresse Watussi men can athletes of the west- no ern world in both sprint and distance | runs, A Lend of Milk and Hon he Watussi lives mest of miik and honey ttle and ‘The hillsides I of their aititudinous, temperate, equa- torial home abound in big-horned o calves, shecp and goats, grass is burned ol these tender juicy gr shoot forth in a urprising short ti “When the Wuat shalie hands, they clasp cacn s elbows, and onc will say, '1 ou cattle,’ His friend replies, )\ you women. “The pastoral people of the Ruan- da-Urundi region are the Wahutu, and they have neither the prowess nor the their giant neighbors. is who ruled this area be- fore the war us a part of German East Africa, tried them out on rail- road building. Some them died; the rest ran away with as much wirc as they could carry them # Hy in al 4 hees t meet they do net of of to make If Ruptured Try This Free Apply it o Any Rupture, Large or Small and You are on the Road That Has Convinced Thousands. _Sent Free to Prove Thls‘ Anyotie ruptured ahouid write Main St.. Ad his wonderful stin pat it on the rupture in to tighten; begin to #0 that the epen naturall need of a support or truss or applian then done away with. Dow't neglect to wend for this free trial en If your rap ture doesn't bother you what is the use of wearing supports all your life? Why suffer this nuisance? Why run the risk of gangrene and such dangers fro mocent little rupture, tl tures do not hurt n getting around. W free trial, as thing and has tures that were Try and write Tow alded as big as 2 man's t at once, using the Free for Rupture L Riee, Tne., € Main S, Adam sample Treatmen application for T Addre. They ! Dricd | slopes and | Old or Recent, | Ruular )'Sc ( -rude Regular 10¢c Grade e m 3 Barbaric But Dignificd \\ hile the Germans were in control he vast territory which has been yamed Tanganyika they were active in nearly all parts of it except In this fur novthwest corner. ‘They feit that to depose the sultans of the Ruanda pidd the an anarchy which vast sums to quell, witans held sway over popula- tmated at a million and a 0 for would have tions « "he court of the coal-black sultan the nified. When it was visited by a Gei mun explorer, |Iml dignitary, known the anguin, a sort of stretcher with its poles resting on the shoulders of four men, and he was surrounded by @ guard ol 500 spear-beaving soldie His comrticrs wore no clothes but were bedecked with ornaments, I'rom their spended gtrings of 1l hide ound their necks cirelt banana hemp on e hung an assortment of or- their bushy hair To this string were ts of which w naments, and acro: n troi ear to car, anchored a pearl that lay a w their foreheads, “Phe recept.on was similar to that accorded the sultan's chiefs who find (requent opportunity (o bring him gitts, and upon all such occasions the native banana beer flows most freely and the beating of drums summons the court to festivities which grow ever more riotious and until the wn of another day marks their cessation.” 1/ORK WEEK 0BSERVED [i BULGARIAN SCHOOLS 4 vomb comb w Boys and Girls Go To School But Do instead Uscrul. Work of Studying. . Oct. \\Hl\ in all the garia was observed recently and an- other week will be simillarly devoted in the spring. The boys and girls went to school as usual, cmployed the school rming useful tasks. The gitls knitted stockings and made night clothing for the children in the orphanages, while the goys cleaned up the school properties, ap- plying paint where needed, digging up the school yards and paveiment in front of the buildings. This work is part of the labor leg- listation by conscription, put into the atute book under the late premier, aaboulisky. It constitutes the one reform of the previous regime that the Tsankoff administration has re- tained. | orts are being made, however, to make the cofigeript labor more effec- tive by a more intelligent and system- atic application. One memorial of | conseript labor as worked out by the | #tamboulisky regime is the long lines of holes which were dug on either de of the street by conscript laborers {and never filled with the trees which | they were designed to hold, on one of the principal streets of the capital, | Ulitsa Rakov 30.—The | - | caNapa ) | Ottawa, Ont, Oct. —~Heavy in- crease in the exportation of dairy products, partienlavly cream, from | Canada to the United States is shown by figures prepared by the Dominion Bureau of Statistics. In July, 1923, Canada, according to the report, shipped to the United States 437,670 gallons of fresh cream valued at $6 339,620 gallons in June and 245 gallons in July of the preceding year. 30 D86 Many Thrills On Circus Day Escaping from its cage in a cir wing at Willaura, Victoria, re- cently, a lion so frightencd horses at- tached to a lorry on which were a caged lioness and panther, that down the main street 1sed consternation among the residents, Altendants stopped the horses and captured the fugitive be- the people recovered from the cus sh equines bolte and cs excitement of a circus 4 runaway and a jungle hunt all in one day. Seaplancs Are Catapulted Paris, Oct. 30.—The light cruiser, Duguay Trouin, was recently lannched trivane w new which o1 ¢ for launching two method The sful the birth of the viane 4 catapnlt 118 have e or represents navy. Urundi regions would make | For these | Watussi was barbaric but dig- | borne on a pal- | tumultuous | autumn work | public schools of Bul- | but instead | repairing the | 146 as compared with | the | French SPECIAL LOT OF PARKER SHIRTS Soft Collar Attached—Plain Colors and Stripes Regular $3.00-83.50 Grade $2.45 MEN'S LISLE SOX in Black—Navy—Brown—Grey—White 5 pair $1.00 Regular 25¢ Grade Neckband Style Sizes 13'; to 18'; Parker Shirts Included ~ $145-~ Mens Furnishing Dept.—Main Floor DINERS KISS THE HAND THAT SERVES THEM Restaurant That Has Members of De- ! | posed Nobility Employed As Wait- resses Goes Big in Sofia, | Sofia, Oct. 30.—There are not many restaurants in the world where & | diner kisses the waitress' hand be- fore he proceeds to ‘order his dinner. But there is such a public restaurant | In this city, and it is probably the only i one of its kind in the world. This restaurant called the “Russki | Restorant,” is kept, walted on and cooked for by Russian women of the | nobility, some of whom used to have | “salons” in Petrograd under the em- | pire,/to which princes, generals, diplo- | matd and savants regarded it an honor | to be admitted. | Driven to the ends of the earth by | Bolshevik persecution, these particu- lar “prinzesses comtessen, serene Englisch altessen"—as Svengali called | them in “Trilby"—settled down to the | ! buginess of their wrecked lives in this little corner almost beneath the shadow of the beautiful equestrian statue of the “Czar Liberator,” Alex- ander 1I. 1t is somewhat disconcerting to American cyes to see a tall Russiani who scems to have seen better days rise from his table when the wait- ss comes to take his order, salute madame's hand with his lips in the best manner of a courtier, then re-| sume his seat and address himself | to the prosaic business of ordering | his meal, And the food— served in the open air under the trees in the summer— | suggests enough of an approach to American ideas of what is good to eat that Americans and Englishmen, to say nothing of other “Europeans,” |‘are among the best patrons of the “Russki Restorant.” | The prices are cnough above the | average to make the place rather x- ciusive, and the waitresses are pro- | nounced, by Americans at least, to be entirely satisfactory. THE UNIVERSAL CAR - o l‘ vl f M"fl ”” Ww ”\J | rmmy b L U}lfi{!"”\ ‘u W L !WW! e i M, il) : i | ”,W i il lm’ 1 Ml 1 d‘ “\ ul’ !]["l': ‘f«‘éi}l“"u i IIIM m p i 'ww i bl Y ' h “w, (W "fl' l \‘1‘ M’lu b | \m mr 4, . L ‘I‘uy M “‘J/,,\ e e iy T il T |uw A g @y M “\ lfll ?I i “f . e hml i rvv Eanah b oh o 2h ob o0 2 Gh o e oo u { Gt e a British Labor Party in | Power by 1926 Predicted Wallsend, Ingland, Oct. 30.—There | will be a Labor government in this | country in 1926 and Ransay Mac- | Donald® will be prime minister, said Putrick Hastings, King's counsel and Labor member of Parliament, in the course of a speech to his constituents here recently. He deduced this from | the fact that before 1910 Labor votes could be counted by a few thousands, but in 1918 the number was two and a quarter millions, while last year it was four and one-half millions. At that vate of progress, he said, there would be a Labor government in power by | 1926, Business men—with whom the runabout has always been very popular—are well pleased with the changes embodied in this model. Always rugged, the car has been made decidedly trimmer and more comfortable. This result is obtained by raising the radiator and enlarging the cowl; making a decided improvement in looks and providing more leg room. A well designed top and slanting windshield do their share toward adding a finished, clean-cut appearance. Make it a point to see the other new models also on display in the ne'r -t Tord dealer's show room, SELI WINDING WATCH fondon, Oct. 30.—Rritish inventors have perfected a self-winding wrist wateh, The eone t movement of the hand of the wearer offects the | winding by means of an llating slide in the movement, fitt with bearings which, it is claimed, pre- vent overwinding. The wateh, the inventors say, stand the hardest day's golf. 1 These cars can be obtained throu:gh the Ford Weekly Purchase Plan. Automotive Sales & Service Co. Elmer Automobile Company will s | [Young Girls Clear Away Pimples With Cuticura Gently emear the pimples with Cuti- cura Ointment on the end of the finger. w ot Brest has a | water and continae b.x"\'nl for some minutes. This treatment is bast on rising and ratiring. o Freo by et 4 D -,‘(‘ curs ‘“u shvuvfl.w-n-n I