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i HEALTH ESSENTIAL shown as well mandments which hold the gypsies Keeps Food From Spoiling and |iosme" e "Sommeroryemn . iMay Eliminate Word “0bey” et vorid pous aber b men: | Sommersnne it Aids Digestion (By U. S. Public Health Service) Washington, Aug. 28. P>—The in- |specting these principles the gyiu" timate relationship betw, alth | has survived ABlp etmeen Mealth (o ndiam s Pt sor o ment, “Separate not from the hus- | and food has aroused widespread interest in recent years. Much attention has been devoted |spirit and to the constituents of various kinds | Nave obeyed the of food, with particular stress on the importance of the different vi- | Plack hair among all gypsies. tamines they coatain and one com. |the last commandment has lost all estimates of the but moral force since number of calories each can pro- | Mation will permit the operation of St e the meit [the old gypsy law which compelled That situation may be ascribeg |2 defaulting In large part to the importance of |S1ave to the lender for a year and a half. putations and these body building and heat pro- ducing elements and partly, per- haps, to the interesting complexny‘ of the problems involved. The more commonplace question of food preservation and refrigeration, while engaging the attention of a number of investigators, in the opinion of Public Health Service obaervers, appears to have aroused relatively less general and scien- tific interest than it merits. The refrigeration problem, they feel, is especially emphasized in summer owing to the importance of protecting all raw food against un- due heat. This is particularly true of milk and other dairy products, meat and fish, which should al- ways be kept at a low temperature until cooked. During very hot weather, health investigators nave learned, many cases of intestinal disorder among infants, children and, to a lesser extent, adults can be traced either to improper or unwise habits of eating or to failure to keep food products properly cool and covered. Many persons, thay have found, fail ; to realize that it meat, fish. and | milk are not placed in a refrigera- | tor until several hours after they are purchased their qualities are likely to be greatly impaired. Even when that error is avoided consid- erable spoilage results from failure to return unused portions of the foods to the refrigerator as quickly as pomible after removing them in the course of preparing a meal. All foods, the health authorities explain, contain bacteria, which, if aliowed to become numerous, will cause fermentation in the stomach and intestines, resulting in various kinds of iliness. The digestive | Juices of the organs involved are| adequate, however, to overcome | their harmful activity if their mul- tiplication is retarded and held | within reasonable means by refrig- | eration. GYPSIES ORDERED TOROAN N0 WORE End of the Romany Trail Be-| lieved in Sight Washington, Aug. 28. (A—Has| the gypsy come to the end of the | Romany trail? Hungary has ordered the roam- ers to settle down and adopt con- ventional clothes. Three years ugo, the Boviet government told the gadding Russlan gypsies to pick a home and &tay in jt. But the National Geographic society | says listory is just repeating itzelf. History shows that other govern- REFRIGERATION IS ~[sesis 52z EPISCOPAL PRAYER (husbands). bands,” has kept intact tribal langnage. The women second, witness the black eyes, swarthy skins and But | {Only One of Nativity Enlisted in “Rom” in the gypsy Their women get scant among gypsies, only important. That is by the three com- no matter Separate not from the “roms" ! Be faithful to the husbands. Pay your debts to the husbands. Unity, loyalty, honor; by re- in a world oppose | no civilized debtor to serve as OF CIVIL STRIFE Union Army Gloucester, Mass, Aug. 25. (P— Edward Day Cahota, reputed to be the only full-blooded Chincse to enlist in the union armies in the Civil war, came to Gloucester this | summer to revive boyhood mem- | ories. The National Tribune, the veterans of the Grand Army of the Republic, is authority for the statement that Cahota was the | only Chinese to enlist for Civil war | service. The same authority | states that he was the only one of | his race ever to enlist in the Amer- | ican regular army up to the time of the world war. Cahota claims to be a Glouces- terite, for his association with this | old seaport goes back more than | 70 years. In 1857 Capt. Sargent 8. Day, skipper of the last of the old square-riggers sailing out of Gloucester, was on a voyage to the | treaty ports of China. While there he 100k on a Chinese cabin bo. of | eight years who proved so likeable | that the captain adopted him un- | der the name of Edward Day Cahota. That was organ of how (‘ahota reached Gloucester. He was only 15 when, in 1864, he stretched his age and won enlistment in the army. He was assigned to Company 1, 23rd Regiment under Capt. Edward Sto- ry of Gloucester. At the battle of Cold Harbor a member of the company, William E. Lowe, now living in Marblehead, was wounded. Cahota took him to the rear to an ambulance station and then rejoined the fighting line. In recent years, when members of the old 23rd regiment have g:ad their reunions, Towe has been the only member of Company I to an- swer roll-call. He has responded as “the only eurviving member of Company 1" When Cahota learned that Lowe was in Marblehead, somewhat ill | he drove to the fellow-veteran's home to greet him. | Cahota went west after the Civil war, enlisted with the “regulars” and remained with the army 30 years, until 1904, when he was re- | tired. His residence is at the National Sanatorium of South Dakota. MARRIAG TENTIONS Notice of marriage intentions were ments have failed to make a farm- |filed with the town clerk by Cath- er or a townsman out of a swarthy, erine V. Conley, is not believed | Washington can remove from |Walsh of 46 Sexton strect; Anna M nomad gypsy. It that an order a nurse, of 275 street and Martin J. gypsy blood the urge to wander on | D'Rosa of 66 Cleveland street and and on, |Frank Cefaratti of 66 is an odd |street: Helen J. Barry of 217 Colum- who | bus avenue, Meriden and Carlton I'. The term “‘gypsies” error of an Englishman thought the swarthy people came from Egypt; Egyptians — gypsics. Bona and daughters of Rom-ny, | they call themselves. Cleveland Perrin of the same address. READ HE l.\lth‘ CLASSIFIED ADS FOR BEST RESULTS MARKET CO. PHONE 2485 Large Pkg. ... Maxwell House COFFEE, Ib. . 49¢ ROAST Not PORK frozen Ib. 28¢ Royal Lunch CRACKERS . 3()¢ 2 Ib. box ROAST VEAL ....... LEAN PORK CHOPS BOILED HAM ... FRESH KILLED FOWL ............... Ih. 39¢ v Ib. 32¢ 1b. 68¢c White Loat riovk, mex ... $1.09 Campbell's Beans and Tomato Soup, 3 cans 25¢ Confectioncry Sugar, 3 Ibs. 25¢ Premier Dressing, .... bot. 33¢ Early Junc Peas ... 3 cans 20¢ Pure Covon ...... 2 1b. can 25¢ KELLOGG’S CORN FLAKES . ... 2 pkgs. 13¢ Wedgwood Creamery BUTTER ~ §7.00 Fresh Selected EGGS, 2 doz. \ 79¢ 1h. 33¢ Good Luck Oleo . Nucoa Nut Oleo .. Ib. 28c First Prize Oleo Gold Coin Oleo . . Ib, 28¢ 1b. 38¢ GOLDEN BANTAM CORN .. LARGE RIPE BANANAS .. . doz. 19¢ . doz. 19¢ Tomatoes 6 bs. 20° Elberta sound Yellow Ontons, 4 Ibs. 15c Native Beets ... beh. Sc Native Carrots . - beh. 3¢ Peaches, bask. . 39¢ ea. 5¢ Summer Squash . Solid Head Cabbage . Long Green Cukes . . hd. 8¢ 3 for 10c NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, AUGUST 28, 1928. changes to be considered by the|tions. Churchmen who favor their|“Book of Ages” will become also | dents. and has abandoned The water is un- House of Bishops and the House |elimination point out that they are |the book of this gencration | methods for tabiy's claws. usually blue, due o lack of minute of Deputies, the legislative bodies [not and never have been a part of | In England, where fthe ostab-| A service is specially installec for | plant and animal life. It of the church, in eonnection with | the Book of Common Prayer, but|lished church is under state con- | the loan of cath belonging to the | parent that a six-toot _ white diss efforts to adopt the revised Book |simply have been printed under the |trol, matters similar to those | municipatity which continues jcan be s of Common Prayer. Slight revisions | same cover as supplementary. which will come before the gen- | methodicaliy to rid the clearly at 200 feet town of | depth. in the services at morning and Whatever action is taken on the | eral convention here in October | rats. Every year a professional and | evening players, and new praycrs | prayer book Washington | have to be submitted to pariiament | otticial service, good govurn- |convention will he of historical | for final ratification, to the fact that | political controvers newer | Geodotic Survey. Belici in the existence of great at-chaser is appointed who | masses of weeds in this sea has no Widespread | organizes the warfare the supervises | basis in fact, Marmer writes in the now wages | the municipal cats, {Umited States Naval Institute Pro- at the 4 ern trends, also are contained {n|revisions have been rare. Only|in Britain over revision of the | It was at first planned to nse fox- | ceeding sea has surface IOP Bndes the revised edition for vhich | three revisions have been made | Book of Common Praver. et sim. | terriere. tam experienced showed | weed patehes up to 100 feet in dia- bishops, clergy and laymen have|in the history of the American |ilar questions are expected fo he | hat they harked mo W occasionally as laige as bLeen working for 15 years. church. The look was compiled | Settled without ditficulty during | bit. chasing the 1at rather than de. E in extent, which do not §n- Washington, Aug. 25 (®—The| Retween 125 and 140 bishops. |during the 12 years between 154u |the meeting of the church body in | stroying it. When the dogs hegan terfore with navigation. bride's promise “to obey” and the | PIShops coadjutor and 1ishops|and 1552 by a commission headed | Washington. to cause 100 much damage. the o o j ¢ endowing her | SM{284N. and batween 600 and |by Archbishop Crammer, who was | e — town invested in cats COMMUNISTS ARRISTED Hdsgeoam's act of endening' her |16y iaioal and loy delepaton will | acsintod by s vishops and six| Municipal Mousers — % 3 o5 (oL “with all his worldly goods,” way |vote on the revisions. Little con- | doctors of divinity. | pal M .. Navigation Not H erpd | Dooms boayd Aug st Vo Ris be deleted from the Protestait |troversy is anticipated, save prob-| The Right Rev. Charles Lewis| Used in Rodent War <Yavigation ! ot Hamper etan Talleean T DT o Episcopal marriage ceremony when | ably over the proporal to eliminate | Slattery, Bishon of Massachusetts, | Havre, Auz. 25 ®—Municipat | In Beautiful Sargasso Sea w.re arrested and taree quantities the forty-ninth general convention |the Thirty-nine Articles of Re- | says the change will eliminate | cats make life miserable for ”V<“ W York, Aag. IS, (#—The Sar of literature were confiscated today of the church meets here in Qcto- |ligion. These were set forth in|many archaic expressions which |rats of Hatre. The town council| gasso sen is pictured as a place of when the police raided more than Ler. 1571 “for the avoiding of diversi- | have lost their meaning or are | finds the oldest means the hest for beanty rather than a menace by H. a hundred hom: and meeting That question will be among |ties of opinions” in religious ques. |now misunderstood, and that the | exterminating the pest-carrsing o-| A Marmer, of the L. 8 Coast and places —end of —Extra Values in All Departments—Come and Save! —Clearance! —Wonder Value! 84 Sets Only! Ruffled Curtains 50¢ st —214 vards long; tieback valance; good quality scrim: trimmed with fast color blue and rose band. —Cl=arance of Wonderful Double Thread ~ Quality - Service - Value - - A GREBAT STORE IN A GREAT CITY C each —buy them by the dozen; pretty colored borders; large size; 39c¢ quality. You'll buy a season’s sup- ply at this low price. Men’s Work Hose 8% $1.00 —cordovan, black, grey. 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