New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 6, 1928, Page 11

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NEW -BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, JULY 6, 1928, mony, instead of the tribal rites, stopping construction of the church |derson were summoned to explain It was expected there would be a HELD FOR RENTUOKY | ussier to brave which he described as being similar had been heard throughout the{why they should not also be ad- Y counference between the big four of New Haven, July ¢ (UP)- 1 to “companionate marriage.” country. in Falls Once More ked n {indged contempt of court, but the natjonalist forces—including | Evans, 25, said to be of Leul Asked for Woman m staying here 1o protest [the twelve who appeared were dis- Buffale, N. Y.. July € UP—Suc-|General Chiang Kai-Bhek and Feng| Ky. was held in §5,000 bonds heore Il feeling against the agent had tagainst alien influences eking to missed when they said they had no | cesstul in his first challenge to the | Yu-Hsiang—on the gradual disband- | today pending word from Leuisvifle its inception some time age when | control our courts,” he said. “l‘mlknm\ledgu of the injunction. An at-| mighty Niagura, Jean A. Lussier, |[ment of the nationalist forces. police who requested his arrest in a Piute Indian named Askame, the first baptist preacher I ecver tachment order was issued ng..nwt'sm-mgnfld. Mass, who went over The bodv of Dr. Sun Yat Sen, late | connection with the murdep of his whose wife, Rosy, was a Goshute, Reard of who was put in Jjail for|the six who failed 1o appear. A hear- | the Horseshoe falls Indcpendence |leader of the nationallst cause, was| wife. Evans was arrested as he was coo“d v m . . dw\ms killed by gunshot wounds, sup- w (] P 9 m m. Itrying to build a church.” l'"'" to determine whether the !nJ‘hy in a specially constructed rub. |displayed at the ceremoniwi and| about to testify in a local liquer ge aca lllllg m ll posedly in a drunken brawl, Bri-| 0“[ ay Ile 01‘ y |ct Informed of the action of Mr. An-|junction shall be made permanent,|ber ball, will defy th cataract | General Chiang Kai-Shek wept. case, . gance said. The white authorities de- derson, the Rev. Dr. J. Frank Nor-|was set for next Wednesday | ugain. He announced last night his; General Feng comforted his na- . | a8 3! : . - Weahhy in Lore cided that Askame had committed of Court . Widely known evangelist and - |intention of employing an entirely | tionalist colleague. READ HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS |suicide, but the Piute Indians tor of the First Babtist church of | 93 Pjlots Resume Air different type of conveyance on the charged Rosy and her sister, Alice {Fort Worth, hastened to the jail Tour of United S | occasion of his second venture, but = Buperior, Wis., July 6 (P—Itieh in | Buker, with causing Askame's death, | Dallas, Tex, July § UP—Diligent | Where he announced work on the| Tour of United States | T\ 0" (0 reveal detalls of his | For Emm 8 S0 Indian legend, well as fish ang{2nd demanded that the Goshutes tabernacle would contine. Fort Worth. Texas, July § (UP) | jlung > . surrender the women so they could S = —Twenty-three pilots competing for game, are the North Woods where |+ oo o i b1 |the night that a tabernacle might| . "hirty Women Working |the 1928 national onetoad o he dealth with according to tribal Thirty women are working out|the 192 ional air tour trophy | o . .o , Pre: l:‘JeM Coolidge is spending his | custom. zp;‘m:xliy rlsell?]d:lyflound one V- ind T donble dog dure the | FeSted here today preparatory to v | Christian General vacation. The Goshutes agreed and the |8list I custody of a women sher- e L S sumption of their 6,000 mile relia- | o 5 . i Here it was that powerfud spirit | om0 0 e ageney for pro- |iff and another pastor threatening 1! LD utte o 30 Do Nars g5 e Enters Peking Today | Winneboujou ruled supreme and | ooion, Brigance said, Fleven Pinte |19 Jefy an injunction. {735 a8l G eive dum BLR000 M6 o rrow e our wil) continne | PEKINE Ching, . uly 6 (p)— zuarded the Brule river against pos- | oo (HEEREG R JUATE PR e Teew, Farl Anderson. pastor of | PU! them in gl The Judge ean go | QWA (e onr Wil oniine neral Feng Yu-Hsiang, Christian | sible escape to the gulf of the spiAt | manded the women but the agent|the Dallas fundamentalist church, | W1ere the fives dow't stop burning. | B0 TG (0T ENE (SR AN | gencral who s allicd with the na- of water, Armik. | drove them off at the peint of 4 gun, |WeNt to jail vesterday rather than| The lort Worth pastor then an-| . inained in fird place fonay wirn | 1ONANSE avmies, entered Peking un- | Called Winnehoujou dded. *|pay a $100 fine and turnish f §1000 | NOUCed he would attempt to oh- expectedly toda rticipate in he a total of 4.903 points, 3 5 S The little station in “hc heart of bond yhen Judge Towne Young lain 100 women and zirls 10 Work | sic flights completec #uiniprassive Bun Yok fen mamerial the forest, some six miles from Ce- found him guilty of contempt of [ON the tabe cle today. “No oneljart petroit 5 | service at the Buddhist temple, B o o S Eomces | OBWENSTEN A POLIGIES (o o™t St 125, U Sheme, ‘i e o st b 7" 07 | i st e B e alighted from the presidential train, injunction ordering work on the tab-| DPr. Norris then set about arrang- | petroiter junor mor Oplane, droppea | VIS @rmics outside Peking ever since | bears the name of the sinister spirit S ernacle stopped. |ing a rodio hook-up to permit Mr.| from (1 &roup of five . | the nationals took over the cfl‘mr.l of land, Winneboujou. Life To~ ‘e on Pinancicr Ran to Issues Injunction {Anderson to preach all day Sunday | tepday when he SRR zovernment aiter the late Chang | Winneboujou (the wind) and Judge Towne issued the injune-{from lis cell. Mrs. A e erably behind schedule so-Lin had fled the city. Ahmik (the beaver), were supreme| $2,000,000—Suicide Included 0 liion and fined the pastor after resj-|{Woman sheriff of Dy county, | Charl Meyers, flving another In the world of spirits, sald the ) 5 : dents of the neighberhood com-'Stid there would be no obj:ction 0| Wiaco entr was in second plaes Uhippewas whose hunting and fish-| Peath Payment of Some. Iplained that saws and hammers kept | 1his : t P e e ing grounds thesc were hefore ad-| jongon, July 6.—4@—Newspapers |them awake at night, and that spe-| Judse said he had no in- | Hawks in a Ford tri-motor mono. | vent of the white man. Winnchou- | oq.¢ saia t o anee |Cifications of thie pro, failed t ntion of persecuting - anyone oflplane went into third place with | Quick, safe, sure relief from jou and Ahmik, however, failed of | o1ilies had he aced in London |conform fo city ordinances. | preventing the building of a church, | g oinle painful callouses on the fest. amicable relations, and the spirit of | ocontly to cover the event of Al-| While Mr. Anderson said he could|buf that he intended to enforce the | RoEX water threatened to leave mfim,, e make bond quickly if he chose, he | injunction | Ta Salle, the first explorer of the stronghold at IFond Du Lac. on the | jye cytimates of the total amount | -d to go fo juil until his pro-| sippi-river, was assassinated by 8. Louis river and fulfill the fears|yyy 4y) the way from £40,000 ta[I°st Againet action of the court in| Kightien perso oe A | ik e 1ran ) > the land spirit by taking thelsan 00, 1t was stated that some of waters of the Brule to the Gulf of | pou. policien specifically included | Mexico by way of the St. Croix and | (iiciqe [ use of hammers and saws through | mong the risks covercd, the Mississippi. |"there was no information as to who s Up Plan placed the policies, but in some So i sly and zealously, hOW-jquarters it was believed that per- ever, did Winneboujou watch the|gons holding stock in companies portage between the headwaters of | wtin which the Belgian financier the river on which the president 18! wug jdentified had placed them to tishing, and St. Croix Luke, thati,oyver possible losses in event of his Ahmik gave up his plan for that|geath, route and started to the shore of | Those newspapers which regard- liake Superior. Great were the fears| oq his death as enicide sought for a of Winneboujou that the spirit ‘M‘,,m”\.\ in vain. The Daily Lxpress = 4 water was leaving forcver, and helgaid that although Loewenstein had v : strode along the shore, his hcels|iet financial reverses in recent Extraordlnaw throwing up great hills of loam as|monthis he was still at the time of YOU‘RE’ DAN(:ED e 1 besceched Ahmik to return. |t et Eorid b S I een e End : S o ' The Chippewas point to the pres-|million pounds at the present price D ng ont hills along the south shore of | of his sh P! : ) RIGHT 1 0 ! ] avl '8 the “Father of the Great akes,” | | north of Codar Island Lodge, as| [yapuohi Amhaséifiior to | 1 DA SSENY Do Summer is the time when you wse Ihose made by Winneboujou. v : To the despair of the ruter of the | This Country From Japan v NOTHIN? ELSE WHEN ; lots of towels. “]?,l’"“,"'“‘“ Brule, Ahmik, who had been keep-| Tokio, July (UP)—Premier e € - ones on hand by laying in & supply, ng to the shore in his flight, turneil | Baron Tanaka announced foduy PARDON ME TH? TANK'S FILLED 5 at these attractive prices. loward the middle of the lake, and | that Foreign Vice Minister Debuchi > WiTH . Winneboujou to stop him scooped | would succeed Tsuneo Matsudaira as ¥ up & handful of earth and flung it | the Japanese ambassador to the NEIGHBOR , TRAFF[C TYDOL at the heaver. The water flowed in | United States. Do You KNow OLINE §] where the wind had dug up tht| Matsudaira, whose daughter soon ) R 131 e NOURE DRIVIN? GAS carth and formed Chequamegon Chichibu, will in Bay and the earth, falling around | turn succeed Baron K. Matsui as | £ » Ahmik, formed the Apostlc Islands. | Jipancss ambassador to Great Brit- YOUR CAR IN 4 ol ] . 2 spivit Hurt ain. % P.? 6, D Big, thick, doubl‘:'t.hru_ towels that Tha spirit of water was struck and | The appointments could not be Low GEA! g will give splendid service. Colored z SIZE 22" x 44" Injured, and failed in his flight, 50 | confirmed at the foreign office but A . y - i borders. Others slightly smaller with he returned to the haunts of the | the cretary of the cabinet inform- N 3} 7 ) colored hem and attractive checker- Chippew «d the press of the appointments BN d border. saved were the fishing grounds| and said the names would be sub- 3 ot : ; X boar where the “Great White her” in | mitted to London and Washington 3 days to come was to catch two trout | immediatel < S Y ; l° ' 'l‘o on one cast, to the joy of the spirits | e . p ’ § c° r‘d tflp. w.‘. P bzem aud; songen. !.K“ Kluxers Carry Only | ; B ¢ ! ’ . ; Lengthwise stripes in color give the much-desired emart | Wooden Pistols Paper Says ; A . ; | 4 touch to these excellent quality towels. BH.IEVE IN[]!ANS fih e et ; ; ‘ ' 3 Also, double thread towels in 20° x 40° I [ ork Times today says the large | 5 - 3 ) 3 5 Sl v s | ¢ « > § i : N ¢ size with colored border only. of the Ku Klux Klan carried prom- ¢ ; . o "BTAININE LIUU[]R inently in holsters at a Long Island o ¢ S : X : U“’“l m‘ rally on July 4th were made of wood and ‘carried merely for “psy- Soraae Lo o | chological efiect.” 8 | 4 o < . Towel. lovestigatog Goshute Tre i 3 cte o onees s o | ‘ ey - A mdium beay towel, in St 7" 3 ", pood gade Eastem Umh will sea the butt of the pistol pro- i < . 3 . o . truding and If intent upon rowdyism S - s the convenient 19" x 38° Turkish towel that will give or troublo will change his mind.” z sy . » size, with atactive (WO crcelient service. Why nat Salt Lake City, Utah, July 6 — ] ) tone border in blue and lay in a supply for the chd- Efforts to determine whether alco- - 4 s dren’s use or for the man of Goshute Indians in eastern Utal By Edna Walluce Hopper Yol may have filtered into the camps | POWder Means Much to Me : 3 3 . ; B i gold. A huge value. to find expression in the throb of| The average woman considers the i . st the house who likes ® tom-toms, were under way today|act hope ly ahead of her in 3 ¢ % following reports that tribesmen had | the art of colancing matural boauty. o sz : N e : 5 tinker with 3 car, and mwe threatened one rescrvation official The reason for this advantagze is = 48 5 a : wear and tear on your betr and sought the removal of another.|that the actress makes a business - 2 5 3 7 S H An unofficial investigation of re-|of attracting and she must “know 3 s - { S ¢ 0 ter 1. All baid ports that the Indians were holding| how.” It is her bread and butter, ~ s w... c“m o e nightly councils to cxpress the op-| In the mat- 2 > o ; - ; K:h” wave pattern position to B. E. Brigance, agent at | ter of powder, : . o it g : s 7 with cr it o the Deep Creck rescrvation, Wasifor instance, é ! - 51w T 5 Bardir, ier 5° pink c started by prohibition officers. After | torty. o | A . { / e ,/ 5~/ 44 Ribiega O a tour of the reservation, the offi-| on the B ¢ - v L Y 7 : Lt cers announced they would make have ¥ every efforts to keep liquor from the | made e al- Indians. They expressed the belici|most unbelicv- that unless the tribesmen are rouscd |ably exacting. by alcohol, they would not make any |1 never con show of violence in their campaign | sidered the fn which they arc understood to|cost of my seek the removal of Brigance, to-| powder so gether with Dr. A. Farrow, su-!jong/ as sale Of Remnants . ] . . ] | perintendent of the secven Indian! pleased . Edua Wallace Hopper : ] agencics in Utah. After 3 33 ehe looks todey At Prices Lower Than the Average! Ignore Pleas of scarching I found in France the 4 ° ° ° The prohibition officers yesterday | powder that now adds the last \CH PERCALES— ; heard the Indians charge that Bri-|touch of my caveful toilsite, 1t sat- For the new house dress or apron you've been gance and Farrow had ignored their!isties me because it has the one T] 5 h | . e planning. l c leas f dical attention during | quality T have found in ther V| y M ; Specia - i T, Pleas for medical atiention during | uaiity 1 have found in no othor hat's what they call this new super-powered TRAFFIC pecial lot, per yard the lives of forty tribesmen lastiyy with the texture of my skin that ‘ i Snts e : ASSORTED REMNANTS— spring. From other sources 1 was e never looks. made up® TypoL Gasoline. In scientific tests made by leading Dovs. of dicent bigk. eived miiod bedridden for fiva wecks while: the | Because it fonds such matural motor transportation companies, TYpoL has proven in this lot. 190 epidemic was at its height. | bloom ¥ eall it my Youth Powder. Per Yard R Briga vas also charged with{In the ense qui o5 noW & 1 T Orit H . e e e that it has these five concrete superiorities . . . 1] Gives INCH GINGHAMS— ith h bou automobilc fmen at a low price. " of4 7 5 : ki 2 e e faster starting, 121 affords quicker pick-up, 13 yields more ek v et n Pep ¥ard ..ivonnazain charges were emphatically denied ' powder 1 advise sing my Youth i el SlhA E eLg d power, 4] reduces gear-shifting . . . and |5 is anti-knocking 32 INCH CHAMBRAY— One of the Goshute's chicf rea-( can be had in the Light Type. Both #0ns for their opposition to him, | have the same delicate elasive fra- « .. Tank up, today, with TYDOL . . . and get the thrill ReLl e RecdiguRltymaten i lzl/éc Brigance said, was his demand that | grance. fdrive . s Per Yard ................. e the ‘while man's maringe. sere-| or Whits mt 40y 1ot commer z%e A of driving with a fidal wave of power at your command. W . - 10V w Per Yard ..... 2c de 2 h y ‘; N Made by the makers of the NEw VEEDOL MoTOR OIL LANENE Sen TRAFFIC o« « the tougher, heavier-bodied oil for the modern motors Plarg'n a;sorsud colors. er Yal secsene RAYON REMNANTS— You will find unusual values in this lot. 36 IIXCMERCI{\QLES— # : E , New ns. PerYl‘::lY.....T.?..%...‘....l7c CASOLINEG " | || o omeom from substiteti W.TGRANT CO and There's GET-UP and GET-AWAY in every drop ‘ of it

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