New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 5, 1924, Page 16

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‘ | I | f | f ! 16 FLAMING CROSS ON PEAK NEAR BREWER Name of Westom Sate De. | EI E dR d M H E eived Prom Indian Word Means | 51 t0d Resldents ‘y ave L g Here We st | fertained K. K. K. Unawares | »roweon o0 aw dun serom e 1 Ahiina * rinslated e v othe dribal Indian tongue mesns, | Bugies | “An Here We Hest us heen dealt a | sung an & Maming cross, symbol of “' ‘ ," the ight of whilelogical | the Ku Klux Kian, burned on T i AR R o TR, uE prak’ near the Cremo brewery about | o S0 ST S asne of the Alie | midnight Thursday might, and s tatma OMsial and sikafisiionl Rasister ’ dents of the vast end of the city who 0 CE R araiiated surne | N floched 1o that section by the Iy the \rly fifties and . mwined wides | dreds are satisfied that the Knights govcad popularity through the weits | of the Ku Kiux Kian held an ontdoor jnes of dudge A, 1 Mook | “honklive” on top of the hill A fnbiaiaa a8 the name of & hoted The men ave said 1o have gathered soutiern i of 1ndiuns, whese habis | on the hill, shortly after by 1k 140 was in what is now eontral A Ing & route through the furma from jums, the registor says, The largest | the Newington side of the peak, Noth= piver of this tervitory wis named after INg was noticed out of the ordinary in | Alabims Indians and the state de the neighborhood wnich is rather & pived its pame from this river dwsorted spot until people in thet ace Jeeent investigations huve brought | tion were startied shortly botore 11 forth an agreemert hetween (wo pros o'elock by the sound of two hugles | different localitics in the neighbor hood blowing "taps As the bugles blew, the hig cros on top of the hill burst into Names, which would be socn for mites wround, pounded from “Alba," meaning A Shortly before the blowing of the hicket, oy muss of vegetation, and | bugles, Mr, and Mrs, George Vune, “#mo meuning to clear, or to gather who reside on the brewery property, U Mr. Vane heing the night watehman H, & Huibort, unother student there, heard the singing of “Ameriea” 101 dialeetn concurn In® this helicf, by & group of men on the hilltop, “NINE @ slightly diferent translation, After which a number of men cume VPECtation-gatherers down the hill and disuppesred in the durk strects, Y cgiste this latest % Words of the moecting sprend vap the |I "': E voRarded & i roug ‘ v afte e nay be o " fdiy thr ughoyt the cit after 11 St Wt It rensonx, it more nearly | lighting of the cross and within a il hour hundreds of visitors flocked f tod and of the past, who have ¥ Ml l , 4 % e g Belden street to watch the binzing o SSOER AT LIRS S T | their troubles, Take this family for instance. The roof is off symbol, Only the more couragcous | their home and the front wall is gone. undertook to elimb the hill, the place deserted, but fount The police department was notified Feeney who went to the gcene is reported to have and Policeman Thomas J. received a very discburteous recep- | yor, July 5.—The alleged negi tion. Motorcyele policemen were tive atiltude of the government to- | digpatched to the acene later, but as ward the Portuguese air force, and its the affair 0ok place Iy saw the man assemble, although the + burning eross stood on top of the hill The cross was about for all to sea 20 feet high and was made of 2x4 lum ber. The main post was sunk into a hole in the ground and sccurely held in place by stone wedged arcund it in the hole and a four foot brace in the rear. The flames were caused by rags and bwrlap which had been soaked in oll previously and wrapped around the cross. Durifig tie first few moment after the cross was lighted the air was penetrated with a seriea of car split- ting explosions, and the ground as afterwards examined by a reportor was eovered with wrappings from July Fourth explosiyes. That previous arrangemgnts been made for the spectacular sion is indicated by statements from Mr. and Mrs. Vane that they saw strange lights on the hill top about had €P8- midnight for the two preceding nights, Knots of people stood around on Belden street evidently afraid to ap- proach closer, while a woman in the neighborhood is said to have de- clared that she was going right back and look over her clothes lipe 1o see if any of the bed sheets were missing. Personals Miss Helen Schilling of Mapie street will spend next week at Saybrook. Mr. and Mrs. Edward E. Linke the nation playing a mouth organ was | dents of the Yukon river are receiving | and Mr. and Mrs, Ossian 8. Bennett the spectacle afforded visitors to the Usiliod Btal N e Vet a weekly mail snr\_ue- for the flmi are spending the week-end at fair at Linz the other day. Dr.| ed States Coast and Geodetic {ime since 1895, during the great gold | Narragansett Pier. | Michael Hainisch, president of the Ship is Equipped With | Fush of the Yukon. The Alaska rail- Landis is at Ocean | for the summer, Mrs. Harry 8. Grove, N. J,, Mr. and Mrs. John Vos of 131] 1o on the Newing- ton sige thers was nothing to he done, Nobody could be found who actual- 'of a musical instrument maker. While EW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, SA PHILOLOGIST FINDS NEW Downhearted? Far From It! y MEANING FOR “ALABAMA" 0 ominent stadents of Indian dialects, the hooks says. 1tev, Allen Wright, a | 1ghly cduectod Chootaw, translates g the wond to signify “thicket-clearers,” His opinion is that the word is com ompared with the heretofore vead- pted teansintion of “Here We | £ ve prose m« the character of Alnbamuns | Residents of tornado-stricken Lorvain, 0., ave smiling through But they are complacent- e [ 1y sitting in their living room, reading their newspapers, unmind- I’mtuzucse Army An-man [ ful of the erowds on the street below. Many apartments, above , ' | stores on Broadway, were dealt with similarly by the tervific Voice Protest by Mutiny | wind as it swept through the city. soil for lvelihand 1 - to any great cxtent in the recent failure to assist the officers engaged flight from Lighon to Macao, is de- clared to have been the cause of a ent mutiny of 24 aviation officers, cse men entrenched themselves in the Amadora aviation Mp, near Lisbon, and for several days refused to surrender, although they were sur- rounded by nearly 4,000 troops. The immediate cause of the mu- tiny was the dismissal of Major Duar- te as army aviation chiet and the ap- in his stead of Colonel whom the officers refused to recognize on the ground that his appointment had not beeny sanctioned by parliament and was therefore illegal, The minister of war, Major Olavo, whose decree had vemoved Major Duarte, ordered the dizaffected officers to present them- gelves to Colonel Sarmento, but this they refused to do, and. with the men ‘under their command, entrenched themselves and refised to surrender uniess Major Olave resigned. Later the enlisted men were sent from the camp, the officers not wishing to in- volve them in responsibility for the mutiny. o R TR e This Lorain family returned from an automobile trip only to (;‘,,,,,\,.;,, ';L,‘,“.m'" de Lima with other | ind their home in ruins, They gathered up their few remaining officers finally entered the camp un- | possessions and moved into this frame garage. It had escaped armed and persuaded the mutineers the “twister.” This picture shows W, I, Loftus (seated) and his to surrender, They were imprisoned | wife and daughter Marian, (standing). nt Plays Mouth RADID DEVICE HELPS WEAN WAPPIKG SHP pointment Morais Sarmento, was [Mails Now Move Weekly Into Remotest Alaska Anchorage, Alaska, July 5.—Resi- President Plays Mouth | Organ at Austrian Fair; Linz, All!(rm July 6.--The head of TURDAY, JULY 5, 1924, Val ter P Chrysler Says- ‘ There is little or nothing in the ordinary four by which ' to measure Maxwell riding and driving results of today. Vibration literally ceases to exist, so far as those in the car are concerned. The car rides with the ease of one twice as heavy. There is no four in Amer- ica today at anything like its price to equal the good Max- well—and you can find that . out for yourself in 30 min- utes by calling on the near- est Maxwell dealer. President and Chairman of the Board Maxwell Motor Sales Corporation ETT MOTOR SALES (CO. 98 Arch St. — Tel. 2952 For Quick Returns Use Herald Classified Aduts. CINDERS FOR SALE A. H. HARRIS —General Trncking— ¥9 WES1 8T, TEL. 2979 | r. " ' kelso, rpti yician Annos s the Opening of his Office at the v Britain National Bank Blde. Room 310 Telephone., Hrs. 10 to 12—2 to 5, Mon.-Wed.-Fri. Eves, 7 to 8. Sat. 10-1 p. m. and by appointment. Scientific Chiropractic Adjustments Mean Henlth.” CROWLEY BRGS. IN PAINTERS AND DECORATORS | 267 Chapman Street Estimates cheertully given on all fobs | TEL. 2913 Fine Cottage for sale in Belvidere, This is one of the best and we know that you will like it, Good 3-Family House in best location you can find on Church street. 2 CAMP REAL ESTATE CO. We Are Now Temporarily road has made this possible. A train leaves Seward, on the Guif | of Al of the Pacific ocean, and | winds its way to Nenana, 400 m||.><‘ gonic | north in the interior, At Nenana the Austrian republie, was a guest at the | | survey fair and stopped before the exhibit | Latest Radio Appiiances | Secattle, July 5.— KEquipped with a the young man in _ charge demon- strated various instriments, someone radio position finder and a No. 25 Central Row | Located At 272 Malin Street Phone 343 Rooms 305-6, Bank Bldg. | LEY ME WRITE YOUR FIRFE, LIFE, ACCIDENT, BURGLARY, AUTOMO- Maple atreet will spend the coming | asked the president what instrument | ¢ easurer, the steamer Guide of |Mail is transferred to nmmnmnm 4 4 2 e : ! i L ot O e et "'i,,,‘,,,'a_,.,',,l, L i t‘(i,::\:',‘::::‘ ‘:;'.l;'.lhm.«lq ‘;‘:n; t;:.?«uz|ll amers which run - on a weekly | OpPposite Parsons’ Theater | BiLE AND PLATE GLASS INSURANCE IN RELIABLE COMPANIES. s The president, in genuine Viennese % 3 o hedule down the Tanana river to | Halfl()ld ALL LO Kendall Mills, son of Mr. and Mrs. | dialect, replied jokingly, “I play noth- | SUFVeY: Which has """"”!’ entorag ;"‘” ‘"]""m' on the Yukon river, | SINGLE HOUSE TO RE Herbert Mills of. Curtis street, is ing hut fotzhobel” (a Viennese local- | UPON the task of mapping the waters | From there the hoats ply the Yukon | Seentiol visiting his sister, Mrs. Bdwin W. | ism for mouth argan). No sooner had | off the Pacific const to a depth of 1,- |10 Holy “rn;s. 400 miles from the | H. DAYTON HUMPHREY’ Agent Pavis, in Cloquet, Minnesota. | the remark escaped his lips, than the | 000 fathoms, was pronounced in the river's mouth, 05 i 4 e | attentive ,\‘n\mzl man brought forth |offices of the Survey here the most | ¥rom Holy Cross the Northern HONISS’S FoRalal AT RANRIBIEG, il Cable Lines to Connect |2 box of mouth organs which he of- | up-to-date vessel for her work in the "n;‘l;\r":vn"m‘\ rompany eperatgs a floet | 4 | tered to the president and his escorts | world, nehes to Nome and StMichael | Alaska and Seattle ' nq souvenivs. A fow minutes ter | The devices on the Gaiide grew out | On the Tering Sea coast, and Inno- THE OLD HOME TOWN BY STANLEY Ketchikan, Alaska, July” 5.—With ' the gaping crowd ohserved President of cooperative efforts to combat the ko and Tditarod on the Innoko and the completion of a new cable he- | Hain enthusiastically playing away | submarine in the world war, These |Iditarod rvivers in the interior, | tween Seattle and Seward, Alaska, | at his “fotzhobel.” efforts engaged the army, the navy - GIT FER FOLPING next fall by the United States army, | — and many American cibilian electri- ‘“hm'r of h'lsh Island HOME PIE PLATES —= Ketchikan will be one of the largest | clans, The study las been continued 5 BRUNO' JACK KNIV cable stations in the world, according | R0ast Chicken and Lemon sltice the war, partieniarly by the Jailed as Moonshiner WASH BAE to officials handling the laying of the | Cost hqual in Russla | Coast Artillgry corps of the bublin, July 5.—Innigmurray, an “h'; first f Berlin, July A.—Roast chicken, [ 1h¢ Sount Lahoratory of the Bur pleie x:.wl R b he first scction of the new cable | o Sl ) 0 dards develope e appara coast of Wligo, and describ | | which links Scattle and ;\'v*"‘\-l:ILRH cRgs, Dbinck bread and cakes and y.'u.:|“ll‘v'\“\’|y]: l]'lr\hl’v* I;..].:,'m:fnlnj’ l‘wr next pars lllln .\Ancvul-x-i(i» l:!n:"lui‘r:\ l:lhqf‘ was finished May 31 by the cableship [O0°T edibles produced tocally, are | 154 DY 4 covered to he an active home of the | Dellwood. . The Dellwood then went | '7asonable in price in Russia, but |F Knéwledge of the transmission of |trade fn fllfcit: whibkey: The ohicf to London to load cable for.a mecond | WNen 1t comen to frult, toilet arti- | /00" L Ll et and ap- | &mards raided it and found eight bar- | gection which will conneet Ketehikan | C1°% OF anything else which hds heen e H""w‘( tHie (,“m" enables her | rels of poteen and large quantities of and Seward, Another new line fs to | \Mported, they usualty are mearty PUEC SEERE IS TS ST posi- | material with the necessary stills, lnk Cuneau, Wrangell and Poters- ¥ 0!l thetr welght In gold, Recording | 0 % aie dopth of the water in her | The island, iike onte otfiers: off the burg with this city. Kotchikan win 10 Dr Wilbur K. Thomas of Philadel- | ff " Gihout Ieaving hor radio (rish coast, has a “king”, in the per- | then be a relay office for four lipes, | P excentive sceretary of the Amer- | VIO son of Michael Waters, Me was sen- two going into southeastern Alasgka, | €21 'riends society. | o et tie position of the Guide a |tenced to three months' imprison- one to Seward and one to ecaftle, Al ||V~|"’.(’4{Ifi“|”-"“ rr;r:fl\l_\ .n"nn\u!n!;rl ;;vv smail TNT bohb is exploded astern Ment with hard tabor and a fine of | teet cables will be uned commerelals CUECL istriete e i e e | 20 feot under the surface of the water, | 250 Two of his associates got the | o ;,-lr vn'i‘?’HM;| is s\m”-u id‘]‘u ‘11’,‘:"': | This is done clectrically. The sound {$2me jail scafences with fines of $125. The new cahle will be equipped for Bl ST asssting The - qave set in motion by the explosion Firm suplex operation, enabling six timew as Mabitants, At the raflroad stations | ' (0 By Tl et S el When i TOWN mueh traffic to be handled as on the °N different routes he noted that an | L5 L0 SE hydrophons (a | San Iiancis Instead of | Une from Seattie to Sitha entire roast chicken sold for approxi- device 60 feot under the surface of | & Club housc, the Delevan Club has | “::y’«'im\? i3 :yrnnvlv;”«.x'v.\. L ::'«”;‘\ i I: the water abont half a mile from | POUSNE a whole town. It is the village | People of Hahm’o\sl\ Decry | [ been iy ost as much a% ciore, to which a cable runs) the ot "“"; Sl "‘“'-“;‘ "‘”'”'-‘;4 " the bl ) rive fields, The purchase includes 72 hydrowhone scnds a signal ashe : : Being Made Capital City | e [and a shorc station automaticaliy [CfS of buildings and town lots and Harbin, July 5.-—Citizens of Haha- T} y : S 2,000 neres of fields, which have 3 aha y - sends a radio signal to the Guide, N o H rovsk. in castern Sivenia on the Amor, Subsidies to Trish Not efe radto stgnal to th Qulde. Hieen fiooded for duek: Hunting. The are unhappy over the removal of the | Approved by Commission o e o, e commander o the 1087 nclies a fotel. a wamber of o apoat Of Eoverument from Chita| publin, July 5.—The commistion of [Guide quickly detcrmines his distance | o750 by Bbat o L Bl B raushaikalia to thelr city, The lyyoujey inte Trish agriculture, in 18 | fpo fthe shore station. Ands detere S ol MAANRT sy TR | change decided 1upon some months g0y o Ands & i B b o el 4 inal report. finds a scrious depression | mining his distance frem two stations 4 ago i8 baing carricd into effect et p ¢ : ; consists of sports and diversions the The firat stin tesary oeona) wae M farming. The farmer, the report he knows his position s * Y% Jeclares, reevives for his produce 40| The task taken up by the Guide the publication of an order forbidding e | sivabe oitle 2 per cont higher than before the war, | and on which she is to work in the T — 1 private citizens entering the city, ex- ! Pt POt SEUER (TG elon i y ceptions being madd only in special DUt RIS ¢ AN et erher e i L e TR RE Y SRbIDERON ‘ cases where citizens are able to show PET CONt and his trade cxpenses in land in winter off California, was documents proving necessity. Viola- [90Me cases by over 100 per cent dropped in 1922 by the Lydonia & Education and organization are the tions are punishable by a fine o ; TR Wy rubles or three months at hard labor, WO ¢hiel remedies suggested by the IRELAND TO GROW BEETS Five Family House on The explanation given by the ay. Commission. and the statc is urged to Dublin, July 5. — A comnittee of S e v thotities is that it Is necessary to pro. | 16Vote considerable sums to these | Irish farmers has begun negotiations Clark sty eet. (IOOd con- | vide 1iving quarters for officials of the | PUrposes. Thecommission is opposed | with Holland for establishment of the i 500, varions zovernment departments, | 10 Subgidies or bountic, which in an |sugar bect industry in the Free State d tl()l'l. l rice $9 -4 fhere is much bitterness among resi- | agricultural country wonld, they It is declared that promises to grow | dents over the cortesponding redic- | SIMplY mean transferving the i sugar bects on 5,000 Trish acres could tien in ce allotted to them. The ' from one pocket of the nier to the be obtained in hort time committes in charg: of ol'aimonts has other. Tteduction of railway freights 8 right to depsrt such citizens as and development of water transport | London has a epun-glass prove refractory, e RO VST AU YRy e g lare recommended, OO 8 DU 2 MAIN ST, vogue, o e e —+—OH BY ‘IH “WAY |__\OTEY-|F You SEE CHET TELL HIM NOT ToO SHAVE HIS NECK FOR A FEW DAYS! "(WELL Doc ) FOUND TH’ RAM ROD THAT FLEW OVER BACK oF HENRYS CANDY STORE, AND WITH THESE, | GUESS, ALL PIECES ARE ACCOUNTED FoRr You SAY - )T WAS TH WORST EXPLOSION IN YEARS? WONDER |F “THEY FOUND THE MISSING PIECES FROM THE TANNON THAT BURSTED DURING THE 4 oF JuLY — CELEBRATION WERE FOUND TODAY IMBEDDED IN THE NECK OF CHE T SHAW FORMERLY OF HOOTSTOWN -

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