New Britain Herald Newspaper, March 8, 1924, Page 2

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SWANSON DESCRIBES| JAPANESE "QUAKES New Britain Sailor Was in Tokio at Yokobama LARGE QUANTITY of TOILET SOAP As Long as It Lasts o and Mrs, cake e Meadow — THE — DICKINSON Drug Co. Mot 169-171 MAIN ST. One tions of carthquake thousands of Yokghoma accurate deserip- « foliowing th silled hundreds of in both Tokio is told by second elass . 8. 8. Ten- son of Mr. 111 Shut-! . this city, and is ainder of a nine-! his home here. H: of New York, and 11 go to Seattle to do navy on the west coast 1 most people Ja . board t n=on of ave the a will leave from there 1 ‘\|\ with the tion, L witness of the 1s of the carth- hip was ordered 1o its station tn M rs aboard were and other du- city for three . uv‘..vu Decanse f-mn n- vork the s ort time hefore strs two Japan Swanson was in Tokio vis- | fow days, and at the time * his ship was stationed ahout § This was in the nd the first of ' iting for {of fhe t ay ter part o feptember, The comma M\r\h..u. ed orders to proceed to stricken area and sarted for the city of Yoko- hama. After a Ten- nesee put in Cheefn, China, to put an coal, stores and medical supplies with | which te aid thr ms. Then leav- ing that port the p proceeded up | I the towa the earthquake Angust SATURDAY SPECIAL One Group of SHIRTS Values to $5 Special $2.65 coast ja trip, the ship en- elements which from the effects of vi the ship was mile an hour gale, had started on Bat- a4 until Monday, vers from the " 1o v Throughonut countered the running w {the earthquak foreed to bhuck a ¢ The earthquake | nrday and had 1 and although ¢ fleet were dispatehs to the scene with first aid supplies, the Tennesses did not reach the vort of Yokohama until the Friday cvening following, A rge thing in conpection with the movement of the American ships to the stricken ports, was the fact that their arrival there was met with great suspiclon by the Japanese and only a short time afte helr advent, the | entire Japanesa fleet had them sur- rounded. waiting for nest move Japanese anthorities soon found however, that the Americans there to nelp and their aid was olved with gratitude Finds Consul’s 1 A short time afte Leen droppud, th nf she ship as divided into working parties and | dispatehed to shore Swanson v ont with a party that ordered 1o ruing of the American consulate and he was among the sailors who dug the bodies of the Ameriean con- sil, his wife and thelr ebild from the rulns, Other the strieken for a long time oxplosives and { money and documents from the ruins Swanson deseribed the condition of the strects a8 something frightful, They were littered with and dving. Animals of all deseriptions dogs and beasts, wer with the bodies of vies wore HORSFALLS 93-99 \dsylum Street " Hartford. “It Pays 1o Buy Our Kind” o wol rec nily Dead. anchors had S Wik Advance Spring Showing o datest *shades—Blue Gray, sl Gray—also a nomber sher shades of Pine Worst Tweeds, Casstmeres and We invite your pectio Ye London Shop Tailors 13 MAIN STREET “Let Us Cinthe You We Know How.” rtics were sent {n to meet | Ameriean businessmen fn - the area and they were engaged in opening safes with Fing papers e reeay horses, cats, ntormingled tima, The and the d to re- masks wteneh was unbearable wen of the parties were fore patr to their ship and sceure they conld continue with their T entire ety was Jeveled, being redveed to ashes and clogging the strevts and pas sigeways making them almost im pass. tefore worl, bl remated ors sl about the and recovering iy Americans they this time, the Japan nd setlors were engaged in gathering bodies of their dead and placing them in piles sometimes | t0 feet high, These were then sut urated with gasoline and cremated In the of their work, the Americah unearthed and 1o covered the of about 80 Amerd cans who lives in the cremuted or place i down and fires and many ured the Piles of Bodi American sail search for DR. COOMBS The Naturcopathic Physician and Chiropractor has MOVED Into His Nature O Institute 19 S. HIGH ST. Opposite the Post Office, where he has installed the new Biological Blood Wash TR 11 - % - I Voice Culture EAR TRAINING SIGHT READING James D. Donahue’ MBI Beoth's Mileck The tusk of the conll bodies nd. woldiers ¢ : Al conrue sailors bodies lost These we there was Walis were further injury nd ther i i had dienstor re fime prlied for buri and line of ) his party the ruins that time, orritied by albout the s the the carth agninst conntry eing e na 1 Sefton Specinl inr v 1ol protest ' it Jayp demt ir hid Vike he Jov ™ ough to ping exee ron MURE COUKING MILS har The to cook 1 Hee More United Milk Co.’s milk will not only improve the qual- ity and flavor of the food you serve hut will make it more nourishing. Drink M« Build tp the Your Baby's HWealth Our Grade A Nur<ery United Milk Co. 19 “"ondla;;;lfl;‘i(:"(-m. "Phone 1610. § With Mtk inglde witk ilding T 1 Neroes Neal Brenery " Lrewe 1po ‘ mained sla 1 was wti 10 wnd | .,,“ question as it working a smile | found searching for \ DAILY HERALD, Scenes of Earthquake Ruins Snapped by David R. Swanson RUINED CUSTOM HOUSE, YOKOHAMA strict about pillagihg and robhery and it was worth a man's lite to bend down and pick up something. The scntries who were cverywhere, had orders to shoot to kill and many cnscs were eited by the local hoy of thedmmediate death of some of those valuables Swanson has served th six months of his enlis and will be dischurged De Mo thinks he will reenlist. HITS AY SLANDERERS somator Willls Says Those Who Seek lic Men “Whise t period mpor next w0 njure P by the pers” Overstep Themselves, March colleagues “lo S Asserting in the condemn New York, that some of senute were men by mere rumors and whisper- ings” Senator Frank P, Wills, Ohio, in a speech to members of the 1 Jeague for industrial rights last nl).'d‘ deciared that “the maligners of charaeter” had overstepped them- | selves when they attempted to bring the name of President Coolidge into the Teagot Dome Tifvestigntion, There 18 no truth in rumors that at- tempts havg been made (o preveat a | thorough investigation, said, add- ing that he was disposed to believe there had beea wrongdotng in one two instances, but was disposed “walt untll the facts come out before coeusing or condemning anyho “I' has been said that the is 4 jes of hysteria in Washington at he went do not whether that is the right char acterization, but 1 do know that there | has been a steady effort through in- | pwendo and suspicion to drag down those who have and still possess spotiess characters “The Jatet thing has been to read a telegram of the president—purely | formal and simnilar hundreds others that have been sent in acknow fedgment of congratulations That tetegram is lngged into the investiga- tion with the idea to convey, through this Whispering campaign assi that the president is mised up s He will not be| There will be no minimize wrongdoing, cabin any- his disposed ! of present,” on. know Posses to of of nation in this busine wwept off t attempt ther to or body ¢lse Geological Survey Party Civilization | survey Smith, large intetior de- daparture .wmi civitization The number of kskimo which square region | Leaves Mare L] by med Washington Viers of geologica Philip 8 the me party iwaded e d to the the of party ast ontpost hae taken a into the ion, e approxim h 1 o=t inaccessibile Hotel Burritt Will Serve A Tabled’ Hote from 12 noon to 8 p. m. in the Main Dining Room and Coffee Shop every Sunday. Reservations, il desired, may he made prior to that time. £1.50 a Plate Music | Fromier the irlurllnu or | © | by the regent, GRECIAN CABINBT HAS DECIDED T0 RESIGN Ministey Pormed on Janvary 11, of Dynasty, cabinet of esigned. Crashes Following Debate On Mareh 8.-Th Kafandaris has The Katandaris cabinet was formed n Junuary 11 last to sucgeed that of Fleutherios Venizelos, who retired be- cause of 11l health, It has been under fire on the question of proclaiming the downtall of thg Glucksburg dynasty, Immediate representatives of which, King George and Queen Eliza- beth e exiled in Rumania. M 1darts has held out in, favor faref ndum to decide the fate of dynasty, while the opposition, in- the republican deputies and W large faction in the army, demands abolition of the dynasty and proela- mation of a republie in the national assembly, ‘The opposition has cone tended tifat grave consequences would thr of a referendum be unfavorable to the Athens, {estublishment of a republie, The premicr on Thursday of this week refused to receive a deputation | reprosenting the military group, de- ring it was impossible to hold poli liscugsions with army officérs, offcers, however, were recelved who subscquently sum woned the premier to the palace, Re- Hef was expressed in the Athens dis. patches at the time that the military roup was tryifg to force the govern. tical The {ment’s hand and bring about its resig- vation. . e e i is In The pulse of a new-born intant from 130 td 140 beats & minute, adults it is 70 to Singer Mo Halst He prob- ician in the when he following W graduation ansylvania University. Lex- Ky When Civil War s tempted 1 nion bt said was Tomplt ad Lenhridz i" phy r e ably world He n was from ington broke to gt iting old.” the 1 st ead b officers too en the country should the result | SATURDAY, MARCH 8, 1924. |62 APPLICATIONS FOR CITIZENSHIP GRANTED Witness in Case of One Petitioner Reprimanded For Descrepancy ' ‘in His Testimony l | | | At a meeting of the naturalization | court yesterday afterncon in the | chamber council 62 applicants were | | mamitted to citizenship, Judge B.'W. | Alling presided and the gevernment | was ropumnul by Comiissioner Al- |lan * Church. One of the first ap- | plicants to be rejected was Michael | Rotzlaf, whose case was dismissed be- | | cause of. an incompetent witness. | | Commissioner Chutch reprimanded | { Daniel Kild one of the witnesses for Rotzlaf, whose statement as to the length of time fie had known the | |applicant differed widely from a| | similar statement sworn to by him. | previousl; The cases of Joseph Sar- | gis and Mooshie and Tony Barone ! were continued for investigation of | | their draft record. Meikonian Yeg- { heshen was dismissed as the applicant j imed exemption from the draft| during the war. The application of Jan Kochanow- | ski and Michael Boyke wer ‘llsmisnml' onuccount of lack of knowledg case of Sabatowicz Spridon was con- tinued because of the nee of the }npplivum‘s family from the United | States, e following applicants had their s held over fom further investiga- tion: Angelo Berti, Joseph Todziach, | Wiadislaw Kulas, Sebastiano Stella, Cesare Merline, Stanley Kanelunas, anciszck Olezowy, Joseph Plochar- | cavk and Jflwph Rybay. WOOD SAYS OIL MEN WANTED IS FATHER Claims General Could Have Thus, Secured 1920 Nomination I | | Maggh 8.—The senate oil committee had not finished today with the references in some of Fd-| ward B. MclLean's telegrams to “the principal.” It had, howeyer opened | up the possibility of a new line of in- | quiry through the issuance ofqa sub- poena last night for Leonard Wood, !Jr,, on the bfisis of a published fl-th- | ment in which he sald his father, now | governor general of the .. Philippines | had been offered support for the presidential nemination by certain oil interests during the 19820 republican national convention, In addition to the testimony of 8en- ator Curtis and Bennett today, the committee had before it the presi- | dent’s nomination of Samwel Knight | of San Francisco, to act as special | counsel in proceedings loking to re-| covery to the federal government of | the two sections of the EIK Hills re- sorve now operated by the Standard Ofl Co. of California, Some opposi- tion to the appointment has been ex- | pressed on the gruond that the at.| torney has served as counsel for the | Equitable Trust Co. of New York,! which, Senator Walsh, democrat, Mon- tana has been told is * a Standard | Ol bunk.” | In connection with the Wood state- | ment the committee is planning to | summon nbt only the son of Major | Gen. Wood, but Mrs, John W. Gor. | man, formerly Clara Smith Hamon, and John Hamon, Jr,, son of the late | Jake Hamon who was the republh-un‘ ! national committeeman from Okla- | home in 1920, The statement of Leonard Wood, Jr. as published here, sald Jake Hamon, who had large oil interests, ap- | proached his father during a dead- llock in the Chicago convention with an offer of support for the presiden« tial nomination on condition that he be appointed secretary of the interdor, | I'he younger Wood also expressed the opinion that,"if General Wood had not “turned down the offer flatly,” he would have received the nomination. Exiled Caliph Expected To Visit Paris Shortly Paris, March 8.~=The exiled Caliph Abdul Medjid, whose arrival in Switz- erland was announced today, is ex- pected to come to Paris shortly al- though thus far there has been noth- ing official from him as to his inten- tions, The French government's policy, it was stated, will be Lo leavé questions | coucerning the caliphate entirely to the Mussuimans, avolding any action | that may be intérpreted as opposition | | to British policy in supporting the caliphate of Hussein, king of the Hed- Jjaz, proclalmed caliph by the Arabian Mosler \ hington, PRUNING SAWS PRUNING SHEARS GRAFTING WAX Seasonable Hardware Herbert L. Mills HARDWARE MAIN ST. an BB e ‘THE TREAT 9F THEWEEK NEW HAVEN DAIRY “SUNDAY SPECIAL SOLD AT THE SPECIAL PRICE: 30° PINT-60/QUART A New Flavor Combination Weekly. .. This week is Butterscotch Ice Cream and Lemon Sherbet, Sold Only by New Haven Dairy Dealers. Say It With Your Eyes I Buy in New Britain — at CSTAR ™e 85 West Main St. OPTICIANS Established and Maintained in Reliable Service Photographic Optical Supplies Appliances For Quick Returns Use Herald Classified Advts. on’t Fail to See ROLLIN WHITE'S SENSATIONAL ROLLIN AT OPENING OF OUR SHOW ROOMS TONIGHT norato Motor Co. 18 MAIN STREET

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