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OUR Citrate of Magnesia does not contain Magnesium | Sulphate (Epsom Salt) ™ 3 Always Try The Drug Store First The Dickinson Drug Co. 169-171 MAIN ST. GREAT $200,000 Unloading Sale —of- MEN’S and WOMEN’S NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, JUNE 22, 1922, WOMEN T0 SHARE IN ATHLETIC ACTIVITY Will Take Part in Events at G. 0. P. Outing Sathrday At a meeting of the athletic com- mittee of the republican club last evening Dave Ellison was selected to captain the first, third and fifth wards while Warner Johnson heads the sec- ond, fourth and sixth, Councilman Clifford Hellberg been busy organizing the women's teams from the different wards and are now ready for the fray Sa The list of events are as f Baseball (men) Fast vs. West; { ley ball (women) East vs. West; vo -f ley ball (men) East vs, West; 100 v, | dash (men), two entries from coch! ward; 50 yd. dash (women) two en tries from each ward; team bLroad jump (men) East vs, West; team broad jump (women) it ve, West; | throwing baseball for distance (wom- | en); tug of war (men) Last vs, West; boat race, 100 yds. (wom:2n) one en- try from each ward; [0 yd. swim (men). Prizes will be awarded the winners of the following events: 100 yd. dash (men); 50 yd. dash (women); throw- ing basehall (women); 50 yd. swim (men); boat race (women) The athletic committee is in charge of Chairman B. Loomis, Councilman Clifford Hellberg, A. Dorbuck, boys' secretary Y. M. C. A., Miss Ruth Schade, Miss Margarette Sengle, Miss Williams, M. D. Saxe, William Green- stein and J. Hergstrom, physical di- rector Y. M. C. A, COURT AID OF CUPID Chicago Judge Takes Legal Steps So hae W vol American Girl May Wed Million- aire Chinese Student. Chicago, June 22.—Probate Judge APPAREL Make every preparation TO BE HERE EARLY ! RSFALLS =99 Ydsylum Sireet Hartford #]t Pays To Buy Our Kind” Telephone 2-2254 City Items Robert Murray, the well known motorman, will sail Saturday for Ire- land, where he plans to spend the summer. Mrs. Rose Schneider has brought action for divorce, alimony and cus tody of her children, against Samuel Schneider, her husband, a well known baker. Lawyer Josiah H. Peck of Hartford represents Mrs. Schneider. Real estate of the defendant on Hart- ford avenue has been attached by Deputy Sheriff M. E. Broderick of Enfield. The action is returnable in the superior court, the first Tuesday of September. Foreclosure action for Karal Jan- kowski et al. has been brought by Lawyer Michael Sexton, against An- tonio Tomareski, et al. for recovery on a note for $2, secured by the defendant as a mortgage on property in Newington. Members of L. D. Penfield camp, Sons of Veterans, have received an invitation from the Ladies' Auxiliary to the S. of V. to attend a supper Friday evening at G. A. R. hall. A son was born at the New Brit- ain hospital this morning to Mr. and Mrs. Lippman of 128 Brighton street. Charles G. Hallberg of Hartford, has purchased, through the Aaron Danielson agency, five acres of land in Newington center from Harriet A, [Kellogg. He intends to immediately erect a home on this property. STODENTS HAVE BIG FEET Normal Size Shoes At Plattsburg Far Too Small For Men From 15 Col- leges. Plattsburg, June 22.—One of the early surprises of the Reserve Offi- cers’ Training camp being held here | for six weeks is that college men have ! big feet. The quartermasters laid in a supply of shoes of the normal sol- dier sizes when the camp opened, but when Lieut. M. M. Potter, in charge of shoe fitting, lined up the students from fifteen colleges and preparatory schools he soon ran out of the 7s and 8s and had to stop the distribu- tion until more could be obtained Tens and 11s were the rule, The biggest foot in camp proved to bear size 11} double E and the smallest 5B. PLEADS AS MOTHER DIES Small Son Cries Outside of Locked Door As Parent Ends Life in Room Paulsboro, N. J,, June 22.—Worn out with crying and pleading to his mother to let him into her bedroom, two-year-old 'Jackie' Christie lay down outside the locked door and fell asleep. Hours later he was found, over- come by illuminating gas which his mother, Mrs. Josephine Christie, had turned on in the room, ending her life. The boy will recover. dentifrice st long enough Horner made the path of the inter- national cupid smooth yesterday when he appointed Miss Bridget Sullivan, public administrator, guardian of Roosevelt Chao, twenty-year-old Chinese student at the University of Chicago. This necessary legal step taken, Miss Sullivan gave permission for Chao to marry Miss Mary W. Koeh- ler of Chicago, and immediately thereafter the couple paid a visit to the marriage license bureau. Chao is studying political science at the university. His father is reputed to be worth $8,000,000, and has given his consent to the ceremony, so has Mrs. Koehler. WILDCAT IN CHICKEN PEN Captain Fish, of Fishtown, With Dogs and Gun Dispatches Ferocious | Marauder After Fight. New London, June 22.—Capt. John Fish of htown was aroused last night by the cackiing of hens and| with his dogs and a rifle the captain hastened to the coop and found in it a wildcat. He shot the animal, but did not seriously injure it. The dogs were sent after the in- truder. The cat put up a lively fight, | but was finally forced out of the coop and escaped to a nearby tree. Capt. Fish took a shotgun and riddled the animal with buckshot until it fell| to the ground. The cat weighed 60| pounds, the captain said. AMU N AT NOME. Seattle, June —Captain Amundsen's exploration ship, bound on a five year scientific tion in the North Polar basin region | has arrived in Nome, Alaska, 17 days out of Seattle, according to a cablegram from Captain Amundsen. The Maud will proceed to East Cape, Siberia where five Siberian natives, taken on last year, will be dropped and a supply of fur clothing taken aboard. Roald Maud, xpedi- | WOULD REGULATE ¢ 5 Lakewood, June 22.—As the result | of six recent deaths at grade cros ings of the Central railroad of New Jersey near here, the township com- mittee has authorized Counsellor Wil- fred H. Jaynes, Jr., to prepare an or- dinance reducing the speed of trains | |Mrs. Mitchell said, is the daughter of |Chico, Calif., | who is held in the city jail awaiting MISERABLE FOR TWO YEARS “Fruit-a-fives” Restored Her Strength and Vitallty MovvronviLLg, CarroLy Co, N, H, *'I was all run down and work was burdensome owing to Indigestion, and gas on my stomach which caused me to belch a good deal. My heart seemed to be affected, 1t was two years ago that T was in this condition and began the use of “Fruit-a-tives”’, which proved the very remedy Trequired. I was freed of the Indigestion, which I attributed to my heart; and I can conscien- tiously recommend ‘‘Fruit-a-tives' the great Fruit Medicine”. Mrs. FRANK W, WALLACE, 50c a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size 250, At dealers or from FRUIT-A.-TIVES Limited, OGDENSBURG, N.Y, e e MUGH MARRIED MAN T0 BE PROSECUTED One Wife However, Says He Loves Her Best of Al Detroit, June 22—A charge of con- spiracy to defraud may be brought here against Donald D. Stewart, held in Los Angeles on a fugitive warrant, but authorities of Massachusetts, New York or Indiana probably will have first claim to the prisoner, a private detective agency announced here to- day. The conspiracy charge is con- templated, it was said by Bruce Gran- nis who claims Stewart defrauded him of $1,200 in a stock deal in 1820, Robs Boston ‘“Wife." Stewart was know in Boston, ac- cording to the detectives, as Donald Allan McGregor. In that city he is declared to have been married in September 1921 to Miss Norma Eh- renseller. The officers declare he ob- tained 81,000 from Miss IEhrenseller and $1,500 from her mother before deserting her. Stewart's real name, the detectives stated, was Robert Allan McLaren Browne. Had Other “Wives", Bruce Grannis' sister, Bertha Ellen Grannis, was one of the four women to whom Stewart is alleged to have been married within the past four vears. His lawful wife, Mary Barbara James Mitchell, also resides here, as does Miss Gertrude Van Lopik to whom Stewart was engaged to be mar- ried, but who broke with him after several of her reiatives endorsed al- leged worthless checks issued by the former minister. Has No NI Wil Mrs. Mitchell was aware of her husband’s relations with other women, she said today, but forgave him sev- eral times after he had deserted her, then sought to return. She bears him no ill will now, she asserted, and sympathizes with him in his predica- ment, Mrs. Mitchell said she was sure Stewart did not marry her for her money, ‘‘as was the case in his other marriages. “He always told me he loved me best of them all' she added Her baby, 15 months old, Margaret, Stewart. Had Several Pastorates. During Stewart's alleged conquest of hearts and purses he held pas- torates at Dundee lake, N. J., Pater- son, N. J., Douglas, Ariz, and finally according to informa- tion in the hands of detectives here. His first wife, who divorced him is sald to live in Dundee Lake. Can't Live Down Past. Los Angeles, June ~—Donald D. Stewart, the unfrocked clergyman the arrival of officers from Boston, where he is wanted on charges of bigamy, grand larceny and conspir- acy, has met interviewers with this comment: “T can't live down my public won't let me.” past; the passing through this section. Wi But be sure to To Make 80 Glasses of Snappy Sparkling Root Beer! Just get a bottle of Williams® Concene trated Root Beer Extract, some sugar and yeast—then add water and follow the simple directions plainly printed on the label of the extract bottle. Oh, Boy, it's good! Root Beer Extract concentrated extract made in Hartford, Conn. THE WILLIAMS & CARLETON CO. LLIAMS® get Williams’— the genuine Hartford, Connecticut " & as e eres ¥y o AT T ATy T T T TS With Stewart when he was arrested Tuesday night was Mrs, Ethel Turner Osbaldeston Stewart, the second of the four wives he is said to have mar- vied, and who also was taken into custody, 8he is charged with havigg conspired with him to effect his al- leged marrlage to Norma Ehrenseller of Boston, from whom he is said to have stolen $2,600, ‘Was Vice Crusader, Stewart, 37, and a native of Scot- land, attained considerable promin- ence a few years ago through his work 48 a vice crusader and temperance leader, and as the author of a prohi- bition campaign song, “We'll Make California Dry.” After Mrs, Maud Hendricks committed suicide at Hay- ward, Calif, near Oakland, December 30, 1914, when he refused to marry her, and he was arrested on a statu- tory offense, he was unfrocked, al- though the charge was dismissed for lack of evidence. BLACKSMITH'S SON GROTESQUE PAINTER Weird Interpretations of Subjects Painted by Szukalski Chicago, Ill, June 22.—Grotesque- ness characterizes the drawings and sculpture of Stanislaw Szukalski, the Polish blacksmith's son who on May 31, married Miss Louise Walker, the Chicago society girl who was to have been Miss Mary Landon Baker's only attendant at a wedding which was postponed last spring. The bride is the daughter of a prominent Chicago physician, Dr. Samuel J. Walker, and her mariage to Mr. Szukalski took place quietly at her father's apart- ment on Lake Shore Drive. Mr. Szukalski depicts. conscience, for example, as a monster of writh- ing tentacles and myriad eyes. His “Angel of Rebellion” is more attrac- tive; the angel's features are not un- like those N a portrait he has made {of himself, although the latter shows a meditative youth spirit of revolt. Work Is Extreme In Style Mr. Szukalski's technique, particu- larly his treatment of line, suggests the Japanese; his imaginative inten- sity seems mediaeval: Rodin's influ- ence might be suspected in the dis- torted anatomy of his sculpture; Aubrey Beardsley is suggested by the grotesque and sometimes satirical nature of his drawings. In the oc- casional lack of obvious relation be- tween form and title, and in the ap- parent spirit of revolt, his work has something in common with the ex- treme modern schools. Weird and Grotesque, The conscience in his picture, “Man and His Conscience,” is at once like an octopus, a gnarled, branching tree, a nightmare and a worm. It is like a worm, however, only in form;! it does not crawl, but is rampant in mid-air. Two of its tentacles are crooked llke human fingers, with glaring eyes bestudding their tips and knuckles, and point accusingly at| “Man.” Eyes are scattered plentirul—i v over its entire visible body. *'Man" has a dour, wrinkl- ed visage, prim, set lips and furtive | eyes. rather than a Grotesque Conceptions, Mr. Szukalski's “Medusa” differs from the classic Medusa surprisingly |or Friday and start for Europe. LIFE SAVERs THE CANDY MINT WITH If hot and dry and dusty, your throat will welcome the tingling freshness of LIFE gA ERS. Do try some today! Wint.O-green Cinn-O-mon Lie-O-rice Cl1-0-ve adorn her head. One would have ex- pected Mr, Szukalski to make the most of the snakes, but his concep- tion is uncanny enough without them. Perhaps he scorned them because they were traditional and had been used before; perhaps he wanted to show his power to create a snaky sensation without actually painting snakes. The brows of “The Angel of Re- bellion” swirl into a massive scowl which is austere and earnest rather than surly or repulsive. ‘‘Men Going to Church’” are represented by a curi- ous strutting bird. ‘“Man Following His Principles” is a mystical picture wherein a man seems to be dragged down by a heavy beam which hangs from his neck. Lilies sprout from the beam, but he cannot see them. M'CORMICK “FEELS 26.” His Surgeon Makes Statement Then Says He Was Joking. Chicago, June 22.—Dr. Vietor D. Lespinasse, who performed the gland operation on Harold F. McCormick, has issued the following bulletin: “Mr. McCormick is making excel- lent progress. His condition physical- ly is very good. He is resting com- fortably and will leave the hospital soon.” “How old does Mr. McCormick feel today?" he was asked. “Oh, he feels about twenty-six.” Then he added: I did not mean that. That was a joke. I have no business talking to vou people. Mr. McCormick is doing fine." It is possible that Mr. McCormick will leave the hospital Thursday night He is much annoyed over publicity of the operation and wants to forget it and have the public forget. He is said to feel that the incident Wwill mark him for mirth for years. in her lack of snakes that usually FLOOR Adds years to hard woods —brings out the beauty of the grain N ey Vi FINISH Floors subject to hardest wear offer the kind of test that Kyanize Floor Finisu thrives on, Easy to apply, right from the can, No mixing. n today, dry tomorrow with the handsomest lustre one could des Clear varnish, or eight attractive from Light Osak to Daerk Mal Waterproof sbsolutely. des ny. So tough that grinding heels cannot scratch it white, For that very remsen Kyanize Floor Fuish s the ideal varninh for farnitare and ol wood work, as well as foors. HERE'S OUR TRIAL OFFER ON KYANIZE FLOOR FINISH: CUT OUT THIS ADVERTISEMENT, and pay 15 cents for a good brush to apply re below will g ugh to finish the Kpanise. The de Kyanizs Floor Fioish, e you free of charge a quarter-pint can of chair or small table. T Choice of eight colors. RACKLIFFE BROS. CO., Inc. 250-256 PARK STREET NEW BRITAIN, CONN. CROQUET ‘— SETS — HERBERTL. MILLS Hardware WANTS SOUVENIR OF UNCLE’S HANGING Usual Request for Bits of Rope at Legal Executions Finds Novel Parallel at Goshen, N. Y. Elizabeth, N. J., June 22.—Charles W. Smith of 12 Spencer street, an Elizabeth letter carrier and a veteran of the World War, is going to have a piece of the cottonwood tree at Goshen, N. Y, from which his great- great-granduncle, Cladius Smith, was hanged in 1789. Mr. Smith declared yesterday that Mayor Gott of Goshen said he could have as much of the tree as he want- ed. He plans to cut about two pounds of the cottonwood into a desk orna- ment or paper weight. Claudius Smith, according to tradition, was leader of a gang of outlaws prior to and dur- ing the Revolutionary war. He rav- aged the countryside and threw terror into the hearts of Colonists and Tories alike, fearing neither the king or his men. One time he raided Brit- ish boats lying at anchor in the Hud- son river. 336 Main Street CELLAR PRISONER CURED. Boy Confined By Parerdts Is Out of Hospital, Well Again. Syracuse, June 22.—Kenneth Ver- nier, five, of Eastwood, whose parents are serving penitentiary terms as the result of charges made after the child was rescued from five months’ impris- onment in the cellar of his home, was released from the hospital yesterday restored to health. The boy, who was emaciated, dirty and in rags and weighed only 27 pounds when rescued, presented a striking contrast yesterday when ar- raigned in the court of a justice of the peace for temporary commitment. His face has filled out, he was clean and he wore new clothes. He gained 15 pounds in the hospital. PALACE Thurs., Fri,, Sat. Mack Sennett’s 5 reel comed “HOME TALENT” with Ben Turpin FREE— APairof Shoes “Whose Advertisement Is This and How Do You Know?” To the writer of the correct and in our judgement the best answer, we will give the choice of any pair of $5.00 shoes in our store absolutely —FREE — This is open to any man, woman, hoy or girl in New Britain. ‘Address your reply to Box “A” Herald Office and be sure and sign your name and address. No replies will be considered that are not in the box by 12 noon on Saturday. l’ V.. %R A Start Owning Your Own Building Lot, Now!! Many people have spokén of the “THRILL OF A LIFETIME" as being several different things, but all agree that there is no that of the first piece of 4and you own. “THRILL" comparable to Its boun- daries above the ground extend heavenward into limitless infinity while, below the surface, it ex- tends—some say—cléar through to China or there- abouts. SOIL; plant anything you Tel. 1075 et v Whatever those particular boundaries are, you are at least privileged to dig in YOUR OWN want in it and i)ut up the TEMPLE OF YOUR HOME ENVIRONMENT — YOUR OWN LITTLE NEST ! Many and varied are the choice offerings of building lots avallable at your very elbow at reason- able prices and at terms that will eliminate regrets that some have suffered when they could not pay all cash or meet the terms required. FOR THE BUILDING LOT SEEKER CLASSIFICATION 81 Make The Herald Want Ads Your Real Estate Guide