New Britain Herald Newspaper, November 1, 1922, Page 3

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MEN! OVERCOATS! Look ‘em Over Where There’s a Plenty to Look at Bese Lelandi City | ity Items ‘ LY Headquarters for Flapper Coats at Besse-Lelands.—advt, The first of a series of dances un- der the auspices of the Mantieson Glée club will be held at the Y. W. | C. A. on Friday evening. Victrolas and,Planus, Henry Merans, ~—advt. Leon Keernan, six year old son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Keernan of 90 Rockwell avenue, was taken to the New Britain General hospital yester- day with slight injuries after having been struck by an automobile which UE * LITTLE ‘ WONDER, CAPSULES Quick Relief for Indigestion, Dyspepsia and Constipation ~60 cents st Druggists below or from Jaques Cspsule Co,, Inc., Plattsburg, N.Y. The Dickinson Drug Co. THE FINEST OF Fo 3 THE MOHICAN MARKET NATIVE MACKEREL. . GENUINE BLUEFISH. . FANCY 'SEA TROUT. . SHORE ADDOCK ... STEAK “BLUE" .. STEAK o m18c .m22c m20c mlOC .ml5c CoD . .m18c HALIBUT ... 1. 3D C OPENED LONG 23¢ 25c¢ CLAMS ..... pint 20c IPSWICH SPEAMERS, 2 gts ROUND CLAMS IN SHELL ... qt. FINEST CANNED: FISH—ALL KINDS—AT MOHICAN PRICES ESH FISH FOR THURSDAY AND FRID. e e s | was driven by John Shea of 574 Arch street, The boy was attended by Dr, D. W. O'Connell Now is the time to have your photo !taken for Christmas. 'Make an ap- | pointment today. Johnson &' Peterson Studio.—advt. | Mr. and Mrs. Phileas Scott of 47 West Main street, yesterda, bservec Itheir 30th wedding annivel Last evening they were surprised by a number of friends who held a Hal- lowe’en party in their honor. Results Jack Britton fight. Pilz's,— advt. | The Kings Daughters soclety of the Elim Swedish Baptist church * will ,meet tonight at the home of Mrs, |Johnson, 20 State street, Rackliffe | Heights. Hallowe'en Social will be given at | St. Peter's church by the Children of | Mary Thursday night.—advt. There will be a meeting of the | Commodore Jack Barry council A. A. R. I. R, tomorrow at 8 p. m. in Judd's hall. | AY FRESH WHITEFISH. EASTERN SALMON ... SAYBROOK FLOUNDERS LARGE MACKEREL FRESH NO. 1 SMELTS, Ib LIVE OR BOILED SHRIMP FINNAN HADDIE SALT COD BITS, 2 Ibs. 250 SALT COD i 30c OVSTERS . pint 3OC OYSTERS .. pint .mlfic .m25c m12c . 22C 25¢ 28¢ m150 MARINES BUILDING GREAT PLAYGROUND New Stadium Constructed Entire- Iy Waste Materials ‘Washington, Nov. 1.—Bullt entirely of waste and donated materials and without cost to the taxpayers of the country, a stadium which will rival any university athletic fleld is ap- proaching completion at the United States Marine Corps base at Quanticoy Va,, and will be used for the first time November 11, So quietly has work on the big structure progressed few persons out- side of the Marine Corps have heard of the unique project, Secretafty Denby today took occasion to call at- tention to it, to praise the spirit of the men at the Quantico base who under Brig. General Smedley D. But- | ler are making it a reality and to built by the Marines in honor of the | Marine dead of all wars, | Victory of the Quantico football | team in its first important game with |a university team-—the contest last Saturday with Georgetown-—is said to | have strengthened the determination of the Marines to complete the sta- dium. This is hoped for by the {opening of the 1923 football season | as approximately 75 per cent. of the work has already been done, Had to Change Stream. The stadium is being built in a natural amphitheater formed by hills along a small stream. The first task of the Marines, who are doing the work after the regular duties of the station are completed, consisted in changing the course of the stream. When finished the stadium will be over the stream which will run through a conduit beneath the play- ing field. The ends of the semi-am- { phitheater have been closed this task |involving the moving of more than 150,000 cuble yards of earth. The tadium proper will be 630 feet long and 325 feet wide. A Will Seat 100,000, { The seats, of which there will (eventually be 100,000 are being built tof concrete upon the sides of the | hilis, The cement was donated by a | number of large firms dealing in that | material and the iron rails to rein- | force it were obtained from waste | dumps and supplies of condemned war materfals. Approximately 35,000 of the seats will have individual | plates each bearing the ngme of a Marine who lost his life in the line of duty. A memorial arch will form the eutrance to the stadium. Necessary expenditure of money, { which w date has amounted to less than $4,000 has been met through appropriauons from the reclamation fund of tne base. This fund accu- mulates frons sales at the camp stores. Marine officers estimate that the sta- dium when completed will represent a cost of $500.000 had the work been done by private cuntractors. | | | HUBBY NO. 3 SHOOTS “WIFE” AFTER ROW Harry Schmidt Says He Insisted on Remarriage to Give Their Child a Name, Newport, Ky, Nov. 1.-—Mrs. Edna Schmidt, 29, was shot and seriously injured by her husband, Harry, 23, in a rooming house here late last night. The woman, it was said, prob- ably will recover, The bullet passed through her body near the heart. | 'The shooting followed an argument |sald by the | precipitated when he requested the |woman, who, he says, married him {when she had<two husbands from whom she was not divorced, to marry {him again and give their child a name. The couple were married, said the husband, after his discharge from the government hospital at Fort McHenry, where he had been a gas patient. He said he did not know she had been married before until last April. Then he learned she had had two other husbands, and was not divorced from either. Schmidt said he then left home, re- turning two months ago when he A FINE LIST OF VICTOR RECORDS FOR NOVEMBER (See Opposite Page) WE RECOMMEND 18950 | I Found a Four Leaf Clover, | Two Little Ruby Rings. By Whiteman’s Orchestra These Records will play on your machine no matter what the make. C. L. PIERCE & CO. 246 MAIN STREET ~ Opposite the Monwnent | point out that the stadium is being | husband to have been, Remarkable | =] Goldenblum $2.95 Shapes Are— Snug Fitting Draped Toques Off-The-Face Mushroom Pokes In the Gamut | of Fashion’s Colorings From— Black Browns to Fall Shades Emphasizing the New Persian and Russian Influence In the Season’s Ultra-Fashionable Styles Offering Actual Values From $5 to $15 : Sale Starts Tomorrow At9. A. M. learned his wife had divorced her two previous husbands. ARCTIC GETTING WARMER Indicate Reports From Far North That Frigid Zone is Rapidly Be- coming Less Cold. Washington, Nov. 1.—The Arctic ocean is warming up, icebergs are growing scarcer and in some places the seals are finding the waters too hot, according to a report to the commerce department today from Consul Ifft at Bergen, Norway. Reports from fishermen, seal hunters and explorers, he declared, all point to a radical change in climatic conditions and hitherto unheard of temperatures in the Arctic zone, éx- ploration expeditions reporting that scarcely any ice has been met with as far north as 81 degrees, 29 minutes. Soundings to a depth of 3,100 meters showed the Gulf Stream still very warm. Great masses of ice have been re- placed by moraines of earth and stones, the report continued while at many points well known glaciers have entirely disappeared, Very few seals and no whitefish are being found in the eastern Arctic while vast shoals of herring and smelts which have never before ventured so far north are being encountered in the old seal fishing grounds. URGE LAW ENFORCENENT Fedgral Council of Churches Makes Plea to Al Christian People to Exert Influence to This End. Washington, Nov. 1.——An appeal ‘to all Christian people to exert every in- fluence to secure the impartial en- forcement of all laws" was issued td- day by the federal council of churches of Christ in America. It declared the “announcement of the program of the forces opposed to prohibition is a direct challenge to the churches and the friends of orderly government’ because they purpose to support can- didates in the coming election who will vote to legalize the manufacture and sale of beer and wine. The appeal which was prepared by a special committee including Willlam Jennings Bryan, asserts that the op- ponents of the Volstead act demand restoratign at the manufacture and eale of Meer and wine in face of the fact that both are intoxicating and therefore cannot be legalized without first changing the constitution. N ext Week Monday Tuesday Wednesday | $2.95 NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1922, Millinery Company 188 Main Street "New THREE DAYS ONLY Extraordinary Sale—Thursday, Friday and Saturday 100 Trimmed Hats Most Wonderful Hats Ever Offered at $5.00 Y. M. C. A. Bldg. Britain Materials— Metallic Cloth ; Brocade Hatter’s Plush Velvet Fur Felt Paisley Slipper Satin Singly or Combined— With Trims of— Ostrich Jeweled Ornaments Embroidery SEAMEN WANT PROTECTIO Pacific Coast Sailors Urge Action Keep Chinese Coolies From peting With Them on Ships. San Francisco, Nov. 1.-A to President Harding from Furuseth, president of the let the administration should attempt solve the problem of Asiatic work on American ships was made public Furuseth were being driven off the seas ‘because they by Furuseth here today. charged that American sailors had refused to eat, and wi Chinese coolies.” “We feel that you scarcely real the present deplorable position sleep American seamen in this respect,” the letter sald. “The workers ash are protected by the federal contract labor laws and the Chinese exclusion RODOLPH VALENTINO and NAZIMOVA Com- Andrew Interna- tional Seaman’s Union suggesting that Flowers, etc. "$5.00 | WEATHER FORECAST. act, not to mention recent immigra- tion restriction laws. American sea- men enjoy no such protection.” England_ Makes Offer to U. S. About Consulates London, Nov. 1 (By Assoclated Press)—Ambassador © Harvey, it is learned from an authoritative quar- ter, has recelved a note from the British Government with regard to the case of the American consulate at Newcastle ‘closed last summer, stating that Great Britain is ready to compromise by withdrawing the charges against the consulate officials of discrimination against British ship- ping if the United States will reopen the consulate and replace Consul Slater and Vice Consul Brooks with others. N to Fair Tonight and Thursday With Warmer Winds Blowing Tomorrow New Haven; Nov. 1.—For Connec- ticut: ~ Fair tonight and Thursday; ' warmer Thursday, fresh northerly winds, becoming variable, g Conditions: The two western dis- turbances have united during : night and now form a well = defined storm area central over eastern Kan sas, Rain has been general during the last 24 hours in the southern dis- tricts and between the Rocky Moun- tains and the Mississippi river. The front edge of the rain area this morn- ing is in Illinois. Pleasant weather continues in the eastern portion of the Lake region and New England. Conditions. favor for this vicinity fair weathem with slightly higher tém- perature, followed by ' increasing cloudiness, ter to ers 3 ith ize of The Grand Falls of Labrador are 2,000 feet high as compard with Niagara's 164 feet ore erica’s Home Shoe Polish A Great For School Children The SHINOLA HOME SET helps the children to form lasting habits of economy, by making it easier to get the daily shine, The genuine bristle dauber cleans the shoes, and applies polish easily and quickly, The large Lamb’s Wool Polisher brings the shine with a few strokes. For 100% neatness, the shoes should be shined daily with SHINOLA. Shinola— Always 10c Black, Tan, Whits, Oz-blood and best to say ‘‘SHINOLA’’ in “CAMILLE" - By Alexandre Dumas

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