New Britain Herald Newspaper, September 29, 1925, Page 12

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ENGLISH Ci AL S HISTORY BODY Both England and France Con- frol lts Waves ) tr of Sept to cross the have more sen wauter, ul It Washington, D, “When swimmers Englieh channel than twenty miles the width of the narrowest point, tu & bulletin from the ., headquarter Geographic society. to make the event a sporting onc¢ Iatker Neptune has asscmbled in ter wedge that separates Eugland and the Continent a continuous succession of tidul streams, cross currents, double tides, and vor. texes or whirlpools. Added to these handicaps are gales in the winter and spring. while fog and thick weather are common at all seasons, “England and France have an equal share in rullng the waves of what the king world calls the nnel and the I"rench (the sleeve). To judge from the gen- orally agitated character of its sur- face the pact is not a peaceful one. Geography, not statecraft, is the cause of this apparent discord Sickle-Shaped Bays “Along the south shore of Eng- land, for the channel s generally considered as extending from Scilly Islands or Strait of Dover, National years. el ({ iy e Lands End lo um‘thle days is a succession of William R. Davis, f\c!cnng, N NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER Says Prayer Restored Hls Slght Al farmor, was blind for seven Then he dreamed that his brother told him to pray for and then go to his pasture. He did so and recovered his snght, he says. Photo shows Davis, his wife, and the calf he wide sickle-shaped baya. the shores Was leading to pasture when his sight returned to him. of which run north nearly so. at their turning castward ruptly at their French side the and south, or | western sides, | somewhat ab- heads, On the arrangement is re- | the tidal stre cersed. The north and south sea. Although shores aro on the castern sides of the bays, gencrally speaking, while | the gentier trend is to the west. “These sickle-shaped bays, at ir- regular twist and retard the normal s and currents like | haffles in a steam boiler flue. Tides | coming from the Atlantic are found to be progressively slower at | cach headland until Portland Bill, opposite Cherbourg, is reached. From this point to Sclsey Bill, op- posite Havre, there are double tides. corresponding to approxi mately the time of low water in regular tidal progression. The re- | sult is two periods of low water in this region, sep ed by a slight e known as ‘gulder “To complicate more the double corresponds more tide, giving the effect of longed high tide in most places. Southampton, sheltered behind the Isle of Wight, has two periods of high tide. Battleground ot Tides “It is in the vicinity of the Stralt of Dover, however, that Neptune puts forth his hest efforts. To the tidal channel from the m responds meeting slack. Between North Foreland, the Somme riv third stream is tidal currents, mediute st with then with changes its length ort of surfa rive roughly and an - stream, the the its atmost water The had | streams gion, lish the some never still, winds, powerful and latter nnel offy mattcrs tide farther nearly with even st high | a pro- the chag surf: far influenee of the Bay of Bisca is set up acros: channel, known rent. Most of there is a slow tinuous current perhaps a m 1hrough The latier usnally chosen hy | best time to make {swim the not so spring and temperatire It's tides and | glven the English even amon M who mal de germ ! sucenmb the water distant, nd an branch th BEAUTIFY IT WITH “DIAMOND DYES" strong early of the s 5 It Just Dip to TFint or Beil ( |name. | zers Ny { mer on to D're Fach ent pack- age contains di tions so simple woman can tint soff, delicate shades o dye ri rmanent colors in lingerie silks, ribhons, mile run logne. the England ngland from Fol shortost d the it is almost inquire of from the pleasa any te amos firet rivin to skirts. dresses, stockings. i coats AANEAIATS, GOES ON Hay ¢ n Ruy tnd v the ool o1 ton or Plamond no and e It Dyes other wheth a jrwiera trial on the He } Il your druggist rial yvou to wish to color fa or whether it is linen, [ glary today niaed ge imes IPe vour own fault if you keer tha: cicess weight. Let Wa.laces Ercad aid vou. as 1t has countless thousands of cthers. Some report getting rid ot a pound a day— others tel! of ng three and four pounds a week 1 want, or sc good you o prefe 1 begin: 1 its go ke Never war hner bread baked pure. wholesome, shing, i 1n Havor, full of health-giving vi mines. Nc drugs, chemicals, medi- /e BREAD 5 reducing Fdr!flr Rucksy Beki ¢ T B:itain, Cona, it v and will hel Cally tell hin - 10 save you fay se unwanted pounds. the simply set Often, woster! a and cet curronts 1y maelstrom Atlantic is added from time coming together and departing cor- area he separation Jeachy the mouth Dunkirk, formed by known as the inter-| which, channel stream North sea stream, direetion likewise, on i being in | movements of | ( up the o is ey 1 thro simultancously, shuftle > beiween two conflicting sea | or hay th 1 th n by of the North f their of never and of a he two ad unning and oughout a friction [ the battery hatch from the torpedo | he his re- e Eng: winds from new time from ¢ part 1l gal the entrance as west of the North of summer swimmers as the empt 1 channel because as summer water is higher, ! have a o5 att uri a channel boat 14 have on 26-1 ke th mile escaped open sea tween Dover and Calais, or the stone t current of the Rennell’s cur- however, | almost con- east, ulf to is to tides the the nd long a passen- the be- 26- Rou- n o routes hetween Continent. a custom to all ant an voyngers ar- | they ob Continent ligation if crossing.' " TRIAL Sept. who thre w 1¢ m» a W charge Wilson brick recently of bur- as been in prison b more o8 each mesl. Toast it i either way of it, tresh lost each tart now to rid yourselt of — long | tidal | bad | Tn | that | DIVERS RECOVER TWO BODIES (Continued rom First Page) compartment the youth's body was found in, but indicated that the diver who entered the submarine may have gone in through the conning tower hatch ‘instead of the battery room hatch as first reported. The latter message said he was working toward room. Commander Paul Dessez of the Newport naval hospital said that he had sent word to the Chelsea, Mass., naval hospital to ship 20 caskets to his city. Only 17 caskets are stored. lommander Dessez aid he expected | that bodies recovered would be brought to the Newport hospital. Sea Too Rough Rough seas haie necessitated the wing of the Monareh and Cen- ury, eranes which were at work at the scene of the submerged § |Newport and diving operatior {been resumed, This information was liere early today in a message from |Rear Admiral H. H. Christy, com- mander control forces, aboard the U, Camden, This is the sccond time that the Monareh, the giant derrick from New York which reached the wreck early yesterday morning has been ready to lend her power to holsting the submarine §-51 and then called off. The Cenfury, 100 ton ecrane, and the Monarch spent yesterday after- noon off Block Island, away from ihe heavy seas at the scene of op- lerations, Diving will he continued {during day, which means that further efforts to kecp sufficient air lin the compartments where some of the 33 members of the crew of the undersea craft may be alive, will be | made. Diving was discontinued last night when it was impossible for the divers to get within the craft, strong undersea currents sweeping them oward the tangled wires of loop and radio antennae, The inability of the {to work to day and th moved to Newport will prolong the {final raising of the 1 and now Imakes it very impossible to rescue any of the men should they vet be ive. The distance to Newport from the scene of the wreck is about fif- toen miles, and the slowness with which the big erane ires several rip The Chewink received the two derricks - being re- hours to make the the mine sweeper hieh has been making trip to the {operating hoats, left here this morn- g shortly before 8 o'clock took out mail and 0 will return late today {1ime detafled information the day’s operations will be ob- 1 I n supplics at which concern- 3 Mrs, Gibson's Gib-on In Groton, wite suburh messag: |as to how his hody surface, ether t iefrate es in Groton, [The first gave ng indication was did it + divers had heen ~ indicate able to pe 1t to Jearn whether aay docrs to air tight 2l been closrd nossibility farther into the er: compartments g the ome of the 1 ship, mig) he alive. 1 that this might frue was nothing but a hope at the sub- today Comma us S " that men who W the yet hope he marine Lieut base A. Flani- the sub- evident- H officer at 1 the working ine hase div aft from hody thie r the Tt was hodics come search thro ry room where found, and tak- of others that across in thelr he under- Gibson's t mig v some prison Lis cha chool ler I W submarinc Scanlan bore Scanlan, training and Dr. the sad nd's fate to Mrs nt, Commander have made the and evening and relatives of lown on the 8-51 here from many conld get the their dear it. Commar the Mrs, Lond b T wife ternoon with New in € Jones of tiding Gi ., hn rounds v to visit | the m and w points the wives nt ho have that first word of the fate of ling her wrap it in a cloth, |dampened in vinegar. can he towed re- | London. { brought to | nt down ! cither forward | Tries Suicide; \Ti-dc irt Saves Her Life Sept, required SEES EARLY ENDT0 ANTHRACITE STRIKE President of New England Coal Dealers Explaing Situation New York, extra waidth styles of skirty () = The in atest today saved the life of Edith Johnson, 19, who was listed on police records as from Philadelphia. She was found floating in a Central Park lake, safcly buoyed up by her clothing to which she plnned a note announcing her Intended sufeld | When the striking mine in the anthracite fields savings gone, they will ir vacation a workers find terminate nd go back to work, a . Clark of Boston, president of the New England Coal Dealers' association, who addressed a meeting of the New Britain Lions' club today at noon. "I find the business man and gen- | oral consumer of domestic fuel hus, in the main, a wrong idea regarding the present shut down of the mincs and the causes. It is my job to put the cause of the retailer in the right light,” he explained. “In the present situation, the tail coal dealer, merchant if you please, the same as any other mer- chant in your eity, is confronted with a very serlous problem. If th imines are shut down for any great their “Anthracite small arca in coal {3 found In a castern Pennsylvania, The whole ter is only about 450 square mi and the normal output is about $0 million tons, of which only 51 milllon tons is class. cd as domestic size, There ure 158-, 000 emple whereas bituminous counl is mined in some 30 states said to cover an arca of about 500,000 square miles, “From this area iIs produced 500 million tons and there are over 600,- 000 men engaged in hituminous coal minin The anthracite mines are unionized 100 per cent. The bi- tuminous mines are unionized today on a tonnage basis of only about 30 1 per cent, that is to say, 70 per cent length of time, he will have no mel of the bituminous coal mined is by chandise to sell unless he sells sub- | 0 R e Ta stitutes, Just why th eauthoritics in [yt P 000 S vour state, and the representatives | ... ‘rovorng hoth anthracite and bi- of the fonnwtlcm Manufacturers' | 000 mines, that Is, the United assoctation, should imply, in a public |\ PRes FIEES T 8 - statement, that the retail coal mer- “The pros of this organiz (1,;m|vwnuhl be unwilling to handle tion, Mr, John Lewis, 1s an ef- Lituminous or other fuels, I cannot | o letonq"anio loader. He 18 n far- cxplain. The average retafl coal | ttn | \ dominant man. dealer hopes to get a living from | business. 1f lie cannot get anthr Itgnay e Inioreedng toolho cite, the fuel you really want, he|that under the laws of the state of will get something else, whether it is | Pennsylvania he would not be al- bituminons coal or some other fucl, [lowed to work in the anthracite coal “You may have read in {he news- | Mines as a miner. Notwithstanding papers that coal from the Pocahon-the fuct that he s an able leader, tas district of West Virginia could | therc is no question in my mind but be sold in Connecticut for $6.00 a|what this uncalled-for ton. This a most preposterous state- [enthracite coal fic lds was instituted ment. The Interstate Commerce|by him to henefit bituminous union Commission has given permission fo|mincs, and it is also my opinion that the railroads to Institute a freight|the strike should be called a bi- rate from the smokeless fields of Vir-|tuminous strike, rather than an an- ginia to New England noin acite strike. in this territory that rate Is | "The first real gross ton. This rate applies only to|conductcd by the screened or preparcd sizes, and not[the anthracite coal fields was to ‘run-of-mine’ or ‘slack.’ The pres- 1902, The leader at that time ent price quoted in the so-called|more of a conservative than is t smokeless district of West Virginia|present leader, In 1902, the oper is $5 per net ton, f.o.b. cars at the[tors refused to arbitrate, but the mines; and that means $5.60 a gross | leader of the union persisted and in- ton, or $11.18 with the freight|sisted, and he finally carricd his charge added a gross ton on the|point with the help of the president track. In round numbers that means | of the United State The $10.00 a net ton. went back to work. A commission, “You men, who are m appointed by President Roosevelt, other lines of business, recognize that |after due investigations and hear- you cannot do business unless you | recelve 25 per cent or better of your an selling price of your merchandise as | margin. This same schedule, applied | to the retafl coal business as it} should be, means that for West Vir-| union at that time won a great vic- ginla prepared size coal, the retail|{tory. He established the principle price would be upwards of $14.00 a|of arbitration for secttling disputes ton, really nearer $15.00. in the coal fields. Unfortunately for “Only last week 1 talking with | labor, this man died, He died 100 a mine inspector from the Pocahon-|Young, but his memory is vevercd | tas fleld, and 1 asked him what the [bY the anthracite coal miners of degradation loss would be to the re-|Pennsylvania. — There is a boliday tail coal merchant handling Poc hontas prepared lump direct from|N Scranton, Pa., the car. He said ‘15 per cent plus any | Ment (o commemorate his lite and loss that took place on the railroad | What e did for labor, a monument before the car reached ifs destina-|SUch as does not exist cisewhere in tion;’ therefore, T fail to see how the | the World as a memorial to a labor Manufacturers’ association, or the|[lcader. It is my personal opinion' state authorities can back up their|[he did more for the cause of lahor alleged statement, recently m,,,w‘,lumnns In the country than any other ed, that the coal could be sold for|Man, With the possible exception of $6.00 in Connecticut, Samucl Gompers, 1 refer “There are bituminous coals mined | Mitchell. in the state of Pennsylvania that arc| “Irom that time nntil 19 fully as sultable for domestic pur-|{DCen in cxistence in the coal fields poses as are the coals from the Of the anthracite district of gouthern districts, and the freight!s¥lvania, a standing commission to rate is at least $1.10 depending | Scttle disputes that may arise on the destination. between the men and their employes The miners of these preparcd | This commission was appointed with coals cannot be expected to sell them the idea fhat it would prevent at cost and therc is no question [Strikes. but it has not always whatever that these coals will cost|Plished this resuit. (the dealers, or any other purchased, [ “The coal mines fully $10.000 a ton throughout this territory. “One more thing about bituminous re- | | open shop of dent L. I | long strike in in suceessiul miners' union | rchants in increase in pay, and allowed labor conditions o0 the time of their return to work. The leader of the there is & monu- s there has are shut down. {lantic City between two committe jone representing the men and one coal for domestic purposes. There |representing the operators. To an is a vast difference in the amount|outsider, there were two decidedly of smoke, depending on the nature|peculiar things connected with m t of the coal and also on the exper-|conference. First, Mr. Lewis, ¢ jence of the man who is running the {Man of the employes’ committee n|‘. fire. There is no question that bi-!iected to the committee that repre- tuminous coal ean be used for heat- sented the operators. He insisted ing your house, and that it can be |that two men, who were not on the bought for less money under average |committee, he present at the conf conditfons than the luxury fuel, an-{ence. He ‘m that the committe thracite, Tf you would go to as|members had no power, and did not much frouble with the junior sizes|[represent the anthracite operato jof anthracite and try fo use them [or something to that effect. He in In your heater, you will save much 'sisted that Mr. Warriner, president more money, as compared with stove |of the Lehigh Coal and Navigation slze, than you can If you use bitum- | Co., be on the committee simply inous. NUTMEG SHOP Announce Their Opening September 30th We Will Carry a Full Line of Adolf Gobel’'s Famous Meat Products Our Own Make Home Cooked Baked Beans, Roast Meats, Roast Chickens, (1-2 or whole) Salads of All Kinds: Vegetable, Potato, Pimento, Chicken, Celery, Salmon Large Variety of Imported and Domestic Cheese, Sardines, Herring and Pickles A Few of Our Opening Week Specials g Fancy Creamery Butter, 1-4 Ib. prints . ..... 52¢ Ib. Fancy Selected Eggs . .. 42¢ doz. Fancy Mild Cheese 30c Ib. Fancy Domestic Swiss Cheese 38c Ib. FREE: A Very Useful Souvenir Will Be Given To All Visiting the Store There Will Be An Attractive List of Big Values— It Will Make It Worth Your While To Come To Our Store 5 DELICATESSEN & COOKED FOOD AIN STREET | | | | — e strike In the | was | men | ings on boih sides, granted the men ' that ! in October each year in his memory. ! to John Ienn- 1 ‘}T)\f re was a conference held at At- 20 1025, l | After being sold by alleged kidnapers for $1.50, two inner tubes and a few gallons of gasoline, little \Idnhd Emma Horton, 4 has been restored to her parents, Mr. and Mrs. William 'T. Hor ton, at Memphis, Tenn. The Hortons say that former neighbors stole the child from a Birmingham, Ala., hospital. The child was sold in Arkansas, but later placed in a Memphis orphans’ home. The arrest of the alleged kidnapers at Jasper, Ala., on other charges led to the narents finding Martha. WOMAN,EX-CONVICT GETS JAIL TERM t Judgment Is Suspended for Rosie Younberg 1 representative of larger inter to say, Mr. Ingalls, who was| rman of the employers’ commit s the head of a company which produces about cight million ton al; whereas Mr. Warriner is presi- Ldent of a company which produccs only about four million tons of coul year, Why was it that Mr, riner was go important, and vight had the conference commitice representing the employes, to dictate | the personnel of the committee who irepresent the employers? The other rather inferosiing is that at the Atlantic City confer ence the employers’ side of the story was never presented. The employes | A0 Who f alleged to have adjourned the pl mecting without having heard the ior court today to (he employers’ side, on the ground, that | ¢ 19, at the opening of the conference, 1 on probation, and claimed | a i Strange h understand, that he was | ot H ounberg, rifurd, 20 (P spent . -Rosie who most of he last 25 years behind prison bars quently has jumped her the super- theft of a 8350 1920, She was s bonds, pleaded guilty in ir coat on June given a suspended jail sentence of ,when preliminary statements were ide by both sides, the eniploye spokesnan sald In a speech, ‘that the employers could mot consider lany wages or conditions that womd increase the price of domestic an- thracite fo the public Tt Is lik going 1o court and having a lawyer make statements which the opposite side did not approve of, and having the opposite side therefore rofuse o g0 on with the case. “I personally recognize that union labor has been a benefit to the em- {ployes in the anthracite coal mines but what it past is past. The price of anthracite is more than double | and the largest percentage of that [eost to vou 18 going to lahor at the | mines, o route and lacally. You| are gefting more money for your merchand nd your services, than you did in 1913, and there is no veason why the retail coal merchant should nof he receiving more money for his merchandise than he did in T cannot believe that the con- tive anthracite miners have bullt np fremendous hanks accounts desire any ted elosing down of the inconie to satisfy the ambition of a labor leader.” | one placed | permitted to go to the home er in Brooklyn, N. Y. . Younberg was hound over to term of court, of a or when her at the time serving a five year tenee in Auburn prison, Brooklyn, N. Y. Since 1900 she ! been convicted four times in New Vork city for larceny, once each in Seranton, Ia., Baltimore, Md., and Hartford for shoplifting and in Brooklyn for larceny. Leciuse of her advanced years, and the fact that she has spent the better part of a quarter of a century in prison, exe- cution of her sentence was today sus- pended. BRITISH TOWN'S CENTER 1§ RAISED FIVE FEET All Baildings Have Been Jacked Up who satings protrac source of Without Any Stopping of Dafly Rot 1" | Johns, . The Greatest Body Builder Best for Colds Bronchvtls, Asthma o-d threat troubles. B.iilds new Strength NO DANGEROUS DRUGS, Over Seventy Years of Suceess Future Queen future rqueen of Norway proba- will be Princess Astrid, youngest daughter of the Duke of Vestergoet- land, Sweden. Announcement of her, engagement to Crown Prince Olaf of Norway is expeeted soon. |Clifford Guite Stll In New Britain Hospitsl Northwich, a1 ) miles, Eng., Louges b St 8 seve lily vards Las often been done, but ing Bole town five feet is som Lung new been of Malsden \\ ins Pomt in Madison Political Row ()~ “vel, New Haven. Sept. 29 The re- a { publican faction in M [ by Avthur W. Mars lto the name “republican hallots, Judge {in court tod faction may ent republican” factions of the ar of state pn " on their ba ctional flight 1n froquently, ied ght their fded irsde this re, omplished town in by the surveyoi der three The entire business portion of Northwich, including ten three banks, the county 200 stores and 1 to counte caused ch jus Wolfe anti- Isanc The the titic on their A “in co have b ot the cffect of su by the brine pimp- proceeds continnally in s21t mines under the iown. has heen no stoppas nd only eight huildings n ancient inn, demolished because be safely lifted. nising opers longer hrickwo small hydra Chemists’ fully that turbed. The town bridge was r | five feet at each end to bring it up to the new level of the fown | nd n b houses, | effort | The o busine Indin he not ‘In o of | in- have had fo they crops out LABOR DISPUTE SETTLED, Nuew York, Sept. 29 (A Wash- ington dispatch to the York | World today says that a peace pact | lias been reached between bricklay- ers and plasterers after a jurisdic- | tional dispute which has tied up $250,000,000 n new construction. tions, parts K were remove ic jacks inserted. litted so care- ! lis ew stores were not one hoftle was Wants Cabinet Officers To Control Bureaus Washiugton 20 (A —The dependent hureaus of the governmicnt in the opinion of President Coolidge shozld be placed | under the administration of cabinet | |cfticers. so far as possible, although ! he recognizes that there would be exceptions worthy of consideration rouping of 1l 8 is concerned, president favors some sy posed in the Smoot bill in the last con, hoping that the adopted. The president Dbelieve however, that unless some of bureaus should be abolished vir Iy the same personnel would | quired for their activities no how consolidated. From Berlin | | Sept in- of inde- | the pro- organization and may yet be he is t measur TROUBLE OVER NOTI C. Cianci of this city [for $500 damages by Morris Fried- man of Hartford, the plaintiff alleg- ing that a note for $400 remains un- paid. The writ, which is returnahie in the court of common pleas first Tuesday of November, ha served by Deputy i M Horwitz. who attached properts Lawlor street. Samuel Rosenthal congress [of Hartford is counsel for the plain- |t 18 been sued Baron von Rheinhaben, member of | |the German reichstag, is in America | as the principal man delegate to the interparliamentary which opens shortly. Sher rin H This is claimed to have | trects, | and commissions | condliion of Clifford Guite Wi reported New Britain Gen e Le has been un- since Sunday night ought the institu- from an injury to his was found in an un- ondition near Flood's. r in Stanley anarter and taken hospital, 1 police have the case in an ef- t n .reesived ve been unable fol s nt ring he ing ow ut ha vStery. 1o fearn injury Alright Avegetable ie adde vigor to tivi d appe- tite, relioves Sick Headache and Bil- ess,correets Canmnuuen the regular dose, Made me ingredients, then candy ¥or children and a treatment for corne, At 8rag b4 shae srerl Dz Scholl’s Zino-pads { r | Put one on- the pain is goo,

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