New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 11, 1924, Page 3

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p— MENGLSISTEN, 5, TOURSTWVEAE Educate the Individual and Public in Errors of British Medical Saryi General, E. 4, Lidbetter Tells : i Thousand Dollare Their Sea Logs h B' F . . Vices [ —— National Parks Visited by Large cocuso. sun 11 The 1g Furniture Store Pl Sy BRI , b ""_ A " " "\ theimer's Epinard, fameus French onl m ondon, ¥ espite the fact N“mbfl- M s'ngGers ”““m: A ners. and Linaraughbred, and his stablemate that in Great Britain there is ted rog Hwdomeiay ~‘ "' ne i Satin Slipper, arvived on the Neren. one insane person In every 200, con — wih B8 SamBen & ey 'l“-q garia today and were taken immedi London, July 1l.==Lessons from |trasted with one in every 850 in 157 Washington, July 11,—The nation- |one year. in fail and pay a 3 ately to Melmont park to shake off sine of omission and otherwise, in there la no justification for the thee. al parks throughout the country are "“' by Vederal Judge Wilkerson for | ppinard '.‘u aceupy the stall that the medical services during the war, |r¥, 80 often expressed, that a process | heing visited by unpregedented num |Rontamps R oused Papyrus last year, The thor have been gompiled into an 1) vel- |of racial degeneration is under way, bers of sighiseers, some of whom | agent. accused eyl "\ anghbreds will remain at Belmont ume edition of the Ofticial Medical |In the opinion of E. J. Lidbetter, of |{ravel rom coast o coast by automos [beer from tha iandara’ haserass | o0, (07 (et eyl ickso gt Histery of the Great \\'A‘r. recently |the Kugenice Rociety, exprossed &t hyie tn get a glimpse of the natural |*OMPany plant, in steam pipes under | g ‘.’. :’., m:. .uuulf heen made % i th e 00 of h oot 10 Arage used f e " - ol Phey “sheuit Tilin tis |l:m.nfl:l'“":n’"‘l"::\:“:lhll:l"”m Nationsl | seenio wolidors of the great open :In\:‘m“ t 1o A Earag ] 10+ [ tor their care and fraining. prepars. basis for the reorganization. of the | e rofeasional and lnlm--”m." e s iy ry headquarters, 7T Plant had | 1ary 10 their appearance on American . medical staffs of the forces of the |LrIal Blind of Great Rritain reen padlocked by the court for a | \me ke oo ' g great powers on a level with medern | Pe8pite the Increase 1n the num Reports te the National Park Serv. previous eonvietion 5 £ 3 Balance on Easy science, say the editors of this vo. |Der of insane, Mr, Lidbettor said, na- ice of the Tnterior Department say — Z Y ans, wy 4 ture hermelf was conuantly ~Mriving | (hera , wera 4411 visitora (o Yellow VUNERAL OF GEN, LRWIN DIFLOMAT 18 DEAD The books deal frankly with the regain the norm average, even r. den f \ n July 11, Bare Mumm ven _ s 75 stone for the month ended June 15, a adadena, Calif, July 1 Funera eriin, Ju viip y tactieal and tegival errors of the |'n the highly erganized and complex e ; ; " ' " sarvices for Brigadier General James Schwarzenstein, diplomat and former eel or medieal viee in the war, netably }l"""""""l'l"l of the present day per cent. increase for the same | 5" Wrwin, retired, who disd here Loe. |ambasesder to Tokio, is dead on his in areas typical of middle eastern , \t:;fi of -f.t\ mentality, he satd at- ‘period last year when a record of | terday, will'he hoid Katurday Inter. [Italian estate at Portofino, near M thl P ym t conditions No attempt has heen (tracted each other, and eventually 135,952 for the season was estah. | ment will be in a Pa, metery, |G on y a ents made to gloss these errors. The DFOUEht about their own extinction in | jised lack of co-operation between the com. this way A big increase in the aitemabile batant and medical stafts i fre. | Discussing aterilization, which he travel te Yosemite in California is quently noted, and it Is in this that said had been 1aimed as a success shown, 8,550 of the 11,745 \.1:.,.“. the aditors find the greatest lenson, |In some portions of the United States, | visfting the park during Aas v Although In some respects faulty the speaker asserted that it did not | ing in 2,609 curs, an (neresse o oo | administration was a factor in IIm{lu'l'\a Ita purpose altogether, hecause |per cont. over May of last s o and breakdown of the medical services An [many insane parpnts had first heen a total Increase of 20 Der cont.. 6o the Dardanelles, Mesopotamin ~and [parents, thelr Inmanity appearing lnter, |sidering all menns of travel. - o 1o | East Africa, the chief lesson to be | Although he suggested that both ster. | 1 the total ned e A learned from the study of thess cam- | illzation and aegregation would pre. |than half of whom went n 4,200 au. paigns, say the editors, is the need of [ vent birth of many undesirables, he | tomobiles, 1923 season mark A close lialson between the medical 'advocated education, both of tha . | was 130,046 for Yosemite ; administration and the general staff [dividual and the publie in goneral, as Tha reports state that Crater Lake, paign Is begun to maet all possible H i (1 Aitrantlonn SRod At e oS UNTER RECOVERS to ba totally inadequate because the AT {ifors. trom 33 states, ineltging Mal: the possible extent of the campaign After Sloge With Septie Poisoning— | At this time last year, due to a later from the outset, and clear and defi- the final solution of the problem Oregon, has experienced a bhanner contingencies. Too often in the last | {18 et On T s oRes '1 ost. June otal of | medical staffs hadano clear idea of kL R | American Tennis Star Out of Hospital Vermont, New York, Washington, D, | 4n which they were engaged, | w g y " | opening, not a single: visitor had en- | | nite preparations bhefore the cam- —— | pre-season perind, dne prineipaily to prvica o | war the medical service was found \uu automobiles carrying 4,228 vis. what was to be expected of them, or ‘ ¢, and Texas, had toured the park. The Dardanelles operations was an |tered the park. The 1923 May Play Sunday, season example, It is shown, of the neces- | mark was 8,017, sty for large . general The spectacle of a native Ma hospitals near the scene of operations tA R eadle af N nalle «rqm-.-a"‘ and for providing a sufficient num- £ h Sea Isles rhapsodizing ber of steamers and small craft for the evacuation of sick and wounded when the fighting takes place on or near wates. In Macedonia the dominant feature was warfare in mountainous country or in river valleys, the hotheds of | malaria. Tn this sector the percent- | age of hospital beds to the numbers of troops reached the largest propor- tion, that of one in three. Malaria was rampant here and, while fhe medical service was handicapped by lack of scientific knowledge, it also failed to protect the troops by a lack of proper equipment on the spot. The medical administration in Mes- opotamia during the early period of the campaign was dulled by many vears of economy practicing in peace ined in the | auoia park, California, time in India, This explains why the ] t ambulance wagons and cars, hospital | C108ing days of the Wimbledon tour-| “General Sherman.” the | steamers and other equipment provid- | '@ment and is expected to reach the | oldest tree in the world, ed for the services in France were not | [INa8 where her opponent, as at Wim- | diameter, is located, Mo even asked for by the headquarters of | ledon, may be Miss Kathleen Me-| 46 pergons visited Sequeia in 1525, the Tndian Expeditionary Force, They | [¥ane, who now = that Mlle. Suzanne| General Grant National Park in were unaccustomed to their use. | Lenglen has withdrawn from the|California had received 11,030 tour- The most deplorable ineffiency was | Qlympics because of uncertain health, | ists in 315 automohiles up ro June 15, In the actions for the relief of Kut-e|- | 123 the hest prospects of any of the |a big increase for that #me of the Amara. At that action the medical | °ntrants in the lower half of the| Last year there weie 46,230 service found itself with only 14 sec- | 4raW. Miss Wills is in the upper half, s tions of field ambulances, instead of | the authorized 30. When the opera- | = A tions toward Kut were started no| Building permits have been issued strenuous efforts had been made to|AS follows: Sebastiano Glozzo and . | S EEEEEENETEREEY TR reinforce the medical units or to y\re-r"OR"C““ six tenement brick block, ¢ pare a plan for the evacuation of the | 37x57 feet, 335 High street, estimated sick and wounded. The Dbattles of [€ost $20,500; Willlam H. Hall Con- Shaikh Saad, Wadi and Hanna still |struction company, brick garage, remain a nightmare to those who took | 180x71 fect, corner Wooster and West part in them. The wounded lay out | Main streets, estimated cost $16,000; over night and many died from ex- | William H. Allen Construction com- posure, Those collected could not|pany, alterations at the Ol State Nor- | be properly housed or treated, They |mal school building, estimated cost | wera evacuated to the base on any |$10,000, | available boat and arrangements at Basra for the disembarkation of the | reinforcing divisions were defective, | PL When the divisions arrived large con- | i " A< Pross. voys of sick and wounded were com- | Rome, July 11.—Lieutenant TLoca- ing down the Tigris. The steamers | telli, Ttalian airman, whose proposed met at Basra 8nd confusion prevailed, | flight to the North Pole was postponed Officers and men wandered about in | until next year, expects to leave Sun- mud trying to find their way to new | day from Pisa for England, Iceland, camps at Makina and Magil from |Greenland, Canada and the United vague directions given them by other | States. He will use the sames ma-! overworked officers. | chie he expectad to pilot toward the | | pole and will gather data for a future Polar flight. | Paris, July 11.—Francia' T. Hunter one of America's “big four” lawn ten- nis players for the Olympic games, was released from the hospital today | ¥h11® floundering about in the snow, | after u severe case of septic poisoning | th® Mt he had ever seon, js men. | Which resulted from a cut in the right | tioned in the Crater Lake report | | hand sustained in a fall during the| Travel to Mt. Ranier, Washington, | | Wimbledon tournament. For a time | Increased §2 per cent in May com. | | there were fears it might be necessary | pared with that month last | to amputate the lower arm. Four of | 175 of the tourists going in 1,52 the best surgeons in I'rance gave the | tomobiles compared with 3,246 in §54 patient their attention. By resting the | cars in May, 1923, On June 15 the | next few days Hunter hopes fo he | Eain was 1S3 per cent over last year, | able to go on the course Sunday for When the season mark was 123,708, | his first maten, One of the features of Mt. Ranier, | Save for colds which are slightly |as reported to the park service, 1s a | bothering Misy Eleanor Goss and Mrs, |1wo fo three mile drive through a | | Marion Z. Jessup, all the other mem- | channel in the snow five to ten feet | bers of the United States tennis dele- | deep, the tourists heing taken through | Bation are in tiptop condition and|a snow tunnel to enter Paradise Tnn, | practicing daily on the Colombes|one of the park's attractions. | course, Miss Helen Wills, the Ameri-| In one recent woek 430 oot carry- |can woman champion, is maintaining |ing 1,204 tourists passed through Se. ia, where the | the good form she than 30, ‘BUILDING PERMITS NS LONG FLIGHT. | Having your eyes examined here means that the right glasses are fitted—the first time. My Specialty— Comfortahle Vision Frank E. Goodwin Eyesight Speclalist 227 MAIN ST, Phone 1905 BLACK GOLD WINS Chicago, July 11.—With Jockey Johnny Mooney up, Black Gold, win- | ner of the $50,000 Kentucky Derby, | won the Derby rating handicap at one | mile at Hawthorne vesterday, finish- ing eight lengths ahead of King Gorin IT and pulling up in 1:45 3.5, Graeme finished third and Bourbon Boy the fourth starter, last. The price on the famous 3 year old son of Black Toneyuseeit, was 3 to 5. 'The ease | with which Black Gold won made the colt the choice for the $20,000 Chi- | cago Derby which will he decided Sat. | urday afternoon. | ¢ Feminine Beauty: CLAIMS HE FOUND CAR. Torrington, July 11.—Edward Fin- | ley of Torrington, arrested yesterday | by state policemen on a charge of stealing an automobile owned by the state highway department is still be- ing held at the Winsted lockup pend- ing further investigation of the case. In connection with it Harris McCall | of Waterbury was arrested for the | state police in Lenox, | night and is now being held in cus- tody at Canaan. Finley claims he found the car on a road in Kast Canaan, ad¥ording to the police. / ] / ¢ [ ] / / / / ¢ ! ; A French Formula / / / ¢/ / / /¢ il f/ / / / ] / / / / / / ] / / / / / / / / / ¢/ ’ / Mass., last lutely pure. You will love it. brunette and flesh. I"LFD(;RD TO LA FOLLETTE The Regula rt 75 cent size Great Talls, Mont,, July 11.—Presi- | dential electors chosen by the Mon- tana farmer-labor party at the May primary election were pledged to Senator La Follette of Wisconsin at a conference here last night of the ex- | ecutive committee of the party. at 29 cents % actual size NewFormofRa- dium In Tablets Restores Health and Strength to theSickand Affict- ed—In1oDaysTime rge sunouncement goon to ITM\' in paper. Doctors and Hospital Auther- 48 vl ay peopls whoRarauutured | | - , Introductory Sale limited to 1440 Boxes only [ aew Supiied b7 ol sood rappie /) - AT ETTTI T TN T T T T LT T T T TTT LI LI LI LU A AR AR BREAKS THE RECORD .. Must Serve Year and Pay Fine of A Priceless Gift Beauty isa priceless gift, and in our constant search for new and more desirable aids to beauty for Milady's dressing table, we have discovered this article of unusual merit— Mignonette de Minyunet Face Powder— Scented with a delightful combination of our own mign- onette and flowers grown 1n the valleys of southern France MIGNONETTE is really a different powder. Silky in its fineness; spreads evenly; adheres quickly; and is abso- In three shades—white, offered on introductory sale VEW BRITATN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, JULY 11, 1924, FINED A!WI_HSONED ' RACE HORSES ARRIVE Brewery Millic WIS Lpinard and Satin Slipper Once 10 Belmont Park to Shake OF AT 424 MAIN ST..BECLEY'S BLK, Al - Saturday Morning 9to11 A. M, Specials ;{l;:ost Leafi B SMOKED SHOULDER! POTATOES .......... GRANULATED SUGAR ........ 1“0':1; 69c — ALL DAY SPECIALS — . 12¢ LEAN FRESH SHOULDER .............. Ib 12¢ HAMBURG STEAK .................... 3 1h 25¢ cesmensnsons pock 430 faken at LEGS LAMB ... SHORT LEGS VEAL .. RUMP OF VEAL ............. SHOULDER ROAST .......... ROAST PORK ....... PORK CHOPS ...... . 1h 18¢c .. b 18¢c SAUSAGE MEAT LEAN RIB CORNED BEEF ..... BONELESS CORNED BEEF ... SALT PORK ... WE CARRY THE BEST OF HIGH GRADE BEEF BUTTER 2"’85; PURBLARD ... iiiieairnnneses S 10 960 FLOUR .. MAINE POTATOES - WE CARRY A FULL LINE OF FRUITS AND VEGETABLES P A A A A A A AR A A A A A A A N A AR S S NN \‘\\\\\‘\‘\‘\\\‘\‘\“\‘\\\“\\“' USE THE COUPON This Coupon entitles the holder to purchase one 75¢ box of Mignonette Face Powder for BOSTON STORE Donnelly-Mullen Co. Kot redesmable after Saturday, On Sale at BOSTON STORE DONNELLY MULLEN (0. Friday and Saturday This Week. 29 July 12, 1924 peck ! [ / / [ / / [ [ / ¢ / /¢ / /4 / / / / o [ [ / [ ’ ) [ | f f f / / / ! / : ; ’ : : : / : ; : ’ 2C . Ib 24c MID MONTH SPECIALS srw RECORDS FREE BRUNSWICK Hear The New Perkins Console FREE 12 RECORD SELECTIONS, 300 NEEDLES 1 RECORD BRUSH 1 YEAR FREE REPAIR 1 YEAR TO PAY SPECIAL VOCALION RED RECORDS | 3« $100 g 1 John A. Andrews & Co. Ing | 132 MAIN ST. New Britain, Conn. Phonograph Headquarters Incorporated 177 MAIN STREET SATURDAY LAST DAY 5%ors On Any Hat In the Store You Deduct 25 of What the Hat is Marked Every Hat in the Store is included in This Wonderful Sale FELT HATS—STRAW HATS SILK HAT e FOR SATURDAY $2.35 VENUS FULL FASHIONED SILK STOCKINGS; all colors but white $1.59 Q) We Are Distributors For GOTHAM GOLD STRIPE STOCKINGS $1.85 Regular weight silk and sheer silk cotton tops. 25 colors ...............

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