Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
BEARS YIVE CALVES Cow Gives Birth to Litter—All T Due to Fright of Mother, Mureh 24 by Hollis W STUDENTS STRIKE Calcutta Colleges Stirred by Govern- |+ | tegina hred Jersey, owned o farmer at | just given birth to fiv welghing about Ihas o three Jutest ment's Policy in Dealing With Na- | tives of India. il all ne mi thirty pour Caleutta, March 24 four colleges here have gone on # strike as a protest against the present | Students of normal calves performance fx detracted from, in the fact 1) litter of 10 the fright at a train birth and running over ing to a of Willinms' policy of the government in dealing | ™ with the natives | hene of At Lahore, congress volunteors have | 10! pleketed the shops of dealers in for. [C0W taking elgn cloths. duys before The dlstrict magistrate of that city has forfeited the security of 2,000 rupees pald respectively hy the lishers of the t and Akali, papers. Thes: tions have been tak- en under the Press Act this year's caly This was due moth mile, necor man in eharge pub- | at the farm newss | Provia | Unitea ates to have open air schoo The D. Miller Co., Inc. 26 CHURCH NEW LINE OF RUGS JUST RECEIVED Hodge’s Wool Fibre Rugs, 9x12. . ....$16.00 Tapestry Btussels..........$20.00 to $28.00 Velvet and Axminster Rugs, 9x12. .. .$39.00 Smith Wilton Velvet, 9x12, with fringe, $79.00 value . ...... .....$69.00 Velvet Rugs, 27x54 plain and fringe, $3.98 each Window Shades ............... 50c to $1.50 Bailey Floor Covering, 69c value. .49c sq. yd. Armstrong Burlap Back Lino/leum. e 90C Extra Heavy—$1.10 sq. Inlaid Linoleum. . . Curtain Rods of All Kinds Specia! Flat Rod, warranted not to tarnish ....................... 29¢c each TAKE ADVANTAGE OF ! OUR HOUR SALES AND BENEFIT THEREBY PURE FOOD e A pure 1l has . sAmMe Cow last year i A e | rome er a few statement of the animals ce was the first city in the 18, .$1.25, $1.50, $1.87 sq. yd. and several NEW BRITAIN REMARKABLE BIRD DAILY HERALD, CROWD HISSES ‘P. 5. FRIDAY, MARCH CITIES IN TEXAS' AT QUIGLEY RA[[Y‘ Rare Species in State Renowned, " Among Naturalists Brownsville, Tex., March Texas' bird sanctuaries, the legisluture Kleherg counties, 24 sel aside by last and in Cameron hid far to hecome world renowned among naturalists fn. asmuch in as one specics that exists no other part of the specics that are searce, have heen found there J. Gilbert Pearson, president of the Nautional Assgeiation of Auduhon go- cieties visited the sanctuaries recent. Iy, The “bird cities’ are located on Green Tsland, ong North and South Bird Island and or § -all small hodies Laguna Madre, Among the bhirds that seek refuge on these islands are hlue bills, teals, mallards, red heads and canvas backs, The wild birds, according to Mr. Pearson, apparently realize that they are safe on their res ation, for they very of Jand in the remain unruffled and unfrightened hy | visitors or noises that would frighten them away. Game birds not found® elsewhere {n the United States live in this zection The nds are distant from human inhabitants and rarely are visited by hunters, There are no predatory ani- otherwise mals on the islands to dc qlri} the | CEES. Green Island at high fide has not more than 12 acres of ground and 30 to 40 acres at low tide. Tt f{s about 30 miles south of Corpus Chris- 1i and North and South Bird Island are a little further south. There is a large number of royal tern and laughing gulls on Green tand and on Sonth Bird Island, according to visitors. Other birds on South Ts- land include Ward's heron, Reddigh egret, Louisiana heron and Great Tail grackle. On North Bird Island, Mr. Pearson found white peli s, a bird he said the Audubon societies wanted to con- serve, and several varieties of fal- cons, which he said were found fo place elsewhere in the United States. The chadcalaca, resembling a chick- | en and a member of the family, is another bird found on the reservation. The islands are leased to the Na- tional Association of Audubon eocie- ties for the purpose of protecting and | conserving the birds. BRING DOWN YOUR COST OF LIVING BY TRADING HERE 367 MAIN STREET Specials For The Morning Hours | From 7 to 11 ROUND — SIRLOIN — PORTERHOUSE STEAK ...... .LB. 15¢ From 7 to FRESH GROUND Hamburg Steak....3 Lbs. 25c¢ From 7 to 11 a. m. BEST MAINE POTATOES—15 Lb. Pk. 34c From 1 to 3 p. m. GRANULATED SUGAR...... 18 Lbs. $1.00 | Genuine Prime From 9 to 11 4. m. —BIG LAMB SALE — Short Light Legs Spring Lamb Loins Genuine Spring Lamb Fores Fancy Lamb Loin Lamb Chops Afternoon Special—From 3 to 5 Rib Roasts Beef Lean Smoked Shoulders . — ALL DAY SPECIALS — Z_PORK — .20c¢ 10c . 18¢ .3 Lbs, 25C w. 20¢ w. 36¢ TOP WESTERN — BEEF — Lh. 200 . 22C w. 10¢ 5c 12¢ 15¢ Fresh Loins To Fresh Cut Pork Chops Fresh Spare Ribs Fresh Link Sausage .... Fresh Sliced Liver Sugar Cured Bacon Fresh Rluuiull-! CHICKENS ime Rib Roast .. itoncless sh Rolls Lean Lb. - i Roasts ... Lb. 1 Stewing oW Lb. SWIFT'S MILK FED e . 20¢ Showiaer cuts ... 1. 18€ I"r:lll‘i:" Lb. 150 Veal Cutlets 40C 1w 40c¢ le W FATTED FOWL . ALL STRICTLY FRESH EGGS 2 doz 55c¢ BEST CREAMERY BUTTER lbs 75¢ MILD WHOLE MILK CHEESE Pound: 25¢ Best Pare - 27¢ .35¢ 21c 12¢ 10c 23c 27c . 25¢ 15¢ Lard binner Blend Coffee Red Butterfly Tea—All Kinds Walter Baker's Cocoa Lge. Vanilla Sub Extract Tin Fach Fancy | | | o | Pincapple [ Cut String Beans—{Can Wafers. .3 Pkgs. 1l4c: Peanut Or :\[illll‘ Butter ... 21 Rinds € Soups Best Pea Beans Flhow Macaroni Shredded Cocoanut Yellow Corn Meal .... Brown Sugar Ib. 150 . 25¢* 10c . 20¢ » 12¢ .29¢ - FRESH FRUITS AND VEGETABLES—SEE THE GRAND DISPLAY Heavy Grapefruit. . . .4 For 25cBaldwin Apples.....4 Qts. 35¢ New Seeded Raisins Large Ripe Bananas Green Cul Kale .. New Evap. Apples Fresh Cat Spinach Juicy Navel Oranges Boston Head Lettuce Solid Head Cabbagze Peck 39C . vmee DOZ 290 ‘raen 15€ 5c . Lib. vr TN 250 «e. Peck 49° 4 Lbs, 25c aun 25¢€ Large Sound Lemons Fresh Picked Beet el Freshly Dug Parsnips Red Ripe romatoes United States | the Thrae Tsiands | a colony of brown pelicins | pheasant | M| half of the Quigley drive. | e EEEEEE =& McMahnn Questions Candidate o City Finances | Hisses and shouts of hooes, followed hy § “Sit down you hig bum;" “Keep quiet, P, 8" and “Throw him out,” grected P, 8 MeMahon last night when he arose at a Quigley rally in Ukrainian hall, | publican | tnances candidate regarding MoMahon's Questions, Manlius H. Norton, Quigley's politi- manager and chalrman of the | meeting, and Policeman John Rogers, who was on duty in the hall, quieted the crowd sufficiently to allow Mr. | McMahon to put several questions 1o | the former mayor. The former the- ater magnate and hotel man asked Mr. Quigley if it was not true that | much of the inereased expenses of the [ C'urtis administration were traceable 1lary raises voted during Quigley’s tenure off} if it was not true that he had raised his own salary $500, and if it was not also a fact that the bonds for the Nathan Hale school were issued during the Quigley ad- | ministration. | Anent Salary Boosts. In answer, Mr. Quigley said his sal- ary had received one increase, that | being & hoost from $1,200 to $2,000, whieh was made whiye he was in | Cuba. The $500 increase was made during the last year of Quigley's ad- ministration and became effective in April when Mayor O. F. Curtis took office. Curtis then, he said, is the only mayor that the city of New | Britain has paid $2,500. Regarding the school bonds, Quigley said they were authorized during his adminis- | tration, but issued by Curtis and countersigned by Curtis as mayor. He was agreeable, however, to take re- sponsibility for the bond issue, but |if he did he wanted credit for the Nathan Hale school, he asserted. The can®date, prior to calling for questions, discussed the benefits ob- | tained by the' city through the build- eal and the city ice house. He told of al- leged rotten conditions in the days before the municipal abattoir built and of Mr. Curtis’ opposition to | its construction. He alleged that the | ice corporations had made the price of ice prohibitive to its uses until the city stepped in and, by own house, brought the commodity | down where it belonged. The Trip to Boston. eaker drew a round of 4p- hen he recited the tale of his unsuccessful atfempt to have the council appropriate $1,000 to bring the wounded soldiers to Boston to meet their “buddies” coming in from France, and how he and a few Joun- cilmen raised enough money to make this trip possible. Quigley made no mention of the famous carnival given for the benefit of the soldiers, how- ever. He charged Curtis with hav- ing blocked the Boston appropriation; | then, he said, Curtis used money that | he had no right to touch, by sending [ the Spaniards back to their home- land at a cost of $10,000, Curtis and Czar. About 300 attended the Sautter, one of the leaders of the G. | 0. . in the sixth ward, spoke on be- He attack- |ed the present mayor vigorously for alleged unwarranted exercises of pow- er, concluding with a statement: “The czar of Russia in his balmy days had nothing on O. I. Curtis.” PECULIAR OP! Button, Four Months in Child’s Wind- pipe. Removed by Doctor. Philadelphia, March 24.—Three year old Ellen Louis Nettles of Potts- town, Pa., who for four months had been ahle to breathe only through the small holes in a button lodged in her throat, today was well and happy as a result of an operation yesterday by Philadelphia surgeong. The child swallowed the button while playing last November, and it lodged in her windpipe. Repeated efforts to dislodge it proved unavail- ing and difficulty of respiration fre- quently caused her great pain. Two i after she was placed on the | onerating table yesterday the button | lay in the surgeon’s hand and she was bivuthing freely. I ] (=] e =z = rrd <t wn oloooooooooooooooooociooonooooioonnoiooio) [Cooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo] Announce NEW PRICE On High Grade Patent Leather OXFORBDS for Women. $3.90 The wholesale price has dropped so we give you the henefit of the reduction. 413 MAIN ST. clooooooooolo) 10 question the re. | eity | | [ | | ing of the municipal staughter house | ‘M was || building its || | Phonographs About ¥, Price Saturday 1922, TO ARRANGE BOUT BETWEEN PASTORS \\Al-hlnu'un State American Legion Officials Want “Fighting Chaplain® tn Meet Reverend Opponent, Mareh 24, officlals of Washington attempting to arrange a hox- Ing mateh between the Rev, John W, Reard, First Presbyter- fan church here, who was the “Nght- ing chaplain” of the 91st Division, and the Rev, Earl A, Blackman, pas- tor of Chanute, Kansas, and natfonal chuplain of the egion h men are known to have con- siderable ability with the gloves and both are in the Middleweight cluss, If arranged, the bout will take place during the 1022 state convention of the legion to be held in the fall at Wenatehe, Washington, Refore Rev, Beard went overseas with the “Wild West" division during the war, he was known as the “Sky Pilot of the lumberjacks,” and was popular with lumbermen throughout the Pacific northwest, When the 81st division went into training at Camp Lewis here, Rev, Beard attracted aftention hy riding a bucking broncho. The wildest horse at the remount station was picked out for him and he successfully navigated the animal. Sometime ago Rev, three fast rounds with John Dickin- | son, a British war veteran, at a smokér given by the local post of the | American L,N:ion . WION(‘O“ FREE PRESS. Y\rnnrov\march 24.—A free press is announce s one® of the possibilities of the near future, The Central So- viet Executive Committee has decided that henceforth all newspapers must be self-supporting and must reorgan- ize on a business basis or quit publl- cation. Under the old Soviet regime all the expenses of newspapers were paid by the government. New, High Tacoma, Wash,, can Legion Ameri- state are pastor of the Tt's the newest, would have it. Reard hoxed | Only a few for immediate delivery at . this low money-saving price. 59 Down Sends One Home At Once Onlyyg MADE TO SELL FOR $115 Easy Weekly Payments LIBERAL CASH DISCOUNT maker and Widener’s to give entire satisfaction. Just Received - New 10 inch Double Face Records Dance hits, song hits, standard numbers—good assortments. These recnrrds were not made to sell for 39 cents. They sold formerly for 85c and §1.00. 138 Main S NOTIGE ! .h’n\.l i SARQLY AT PrdiioN M Par - Vee he reason we present “PAR VEE” to you this spring is briefly told. smartest, best looking sport model there is. If there was a better one we It has the “Bi-Swing” sleeve too. It's right absolutely—It looks and feels like a real coat just as soon as you put it on. $45 Wilgan's Class Plays All Records Fully Guaranteed A REAL BARGAIN—full cabinet size, 43 inches high, finely finished mahog- any. Powerful two spring motor. Deep rich tone. Our special price $59 is less than former wholesale cost. The big saving is yours. '‘Guaranteed by the LIMITED NUMBER SATURDAY—ORDER EARLY Shipment 39 treet | The winner of the Granby Word Contest will be announced in next week’s papers.