New Britain Herald Newspaper, January 23, 1923, Page 3

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HEKALY, TUESDAY, JANUARY 23, 1025, SGO000RP0N00000000000000000000000000000 287 Main St. in our windows, Closing Them $1.00 CHILDREN'S SCARF AND CAP SETS in all wool former prices to $4.95 _$1.95 $2.95 Heavy Van Raalte All in cordovan and African only .. $2.95 Gordon All § sizes and in black only .. s $1.95 Camel Brushed Wool $1.00 WOOL STOCKINGS 69c BVRGGELPAIVLLOCLVVHV0VI0VSOVVCSV0LGICVLTVLL VOBV BLODT 100 WINTER HATS Formé Prices up to $10 Hosiery Ik Stockings, broken Stockings. While they last ————————————————————— Special Four Day Sale Everyone of the following specials are unusual values, We are either closing them out or they are discontinued, See these specials t At !'.K SCARFS in plain and roman stripe former prices to $4.95 $1.95 Silk Stockings $1.50 8 and 81, $2.95 Genuine $1.95 $1.50 buy at Gloves, in a WOOL GLOVES Reduced To . 35¢50¢ 75¢ 100 CHILDREN'S HATS Former Prices up to $3.95 Closing Them Out At Gloves $1.49 Imported Chamois Suede Dupex Gauntlets, sizes 7, 73, your size a wonderful 1 Lot of Broken Sizes Butlet Billivers Go. Booth's Block hbad d-ged-2el -ttt 22 T X X ECRCRCY @ LADIES' HAND BAGS Leather, Velvet and Duvetyn former prices up to $4.95 $1.29 $1.00 If we have $1.95 .$1.00 All $1.95 WOOL STOCKINGS $1.50 Mocha Gloves. Kid few colors. . H#eSGo85888% Outlet Millinery Co., Inc. #8844 888888 HARBOR IS FILLED ~ WITH GRAIN SHIPS| Nearly 100 Largest Freighters on Great Lakes at the Docks Buffalo, Jan. 23.—Strung along sgide by side in imposing array under the lee of the outer breakwater, and tucked agay in corners of the inner harbor here, are nearly 100 of the largest freighters on the Great Lakes loaded to capacity with grain harvest- ed in the American and the Canadian northwest last fall. The vessels with their cargoes, which comprise nearly 29,000,000 bushels or grain-wheat, corn, oats, rye, barley and flax—are worth at present market prices about $50,000,000. . In S Much of the grain will remain in storage in the holds of the vessels un- til spring when it will be elevated, loaded into canal barges, and moved | to tidewater. Other vessels have been so placed in the harbor that they can be moved up to elevator legs some time during the winter when the movement by rail will have relieved the clevators of a part of their bulging stores. The movement of grain from boat to elevator and from clevator to box cars never cecases from the time the | golden stream starts down the Great | Lakes, but the final rush is so great that these facilities meet the demands of only a small portion of the' fleet. Nor could tidewater facilities handle | the crop if it were possible to move | it there as rapidly as the freighters bring it down the lakes. 8o the big freighters become storehouses for the | winter, and they are as desirable for| that purpose as the elevators, } Winter Cargo. The largest winter cargo in float. | ing storage this season is in the hold | of the Stealer Willlam C. Agnew. | Oats in her bins would fill 250 box cars, or a total of 501,868 bushels— | one of the largest winter cargoes on | record. The Schoonmaker rates next, | with 445,000 bushels of grain. ' the grain carriers to battle through | the storm-swept lakes at the close ot | Southeastern Missouri are utilizing scores of caves in the Ozark Moun- tains as cold storage piants, with the result that practically no ice is need~ ed for storage purposes. A cave at Zack, Ark., known as the “Blowing Cave” because of the cold breeze blowing through it, has been fitted with pipes so that the flow of air may be regulated. The part of it | used for cold storage purposes is more than a quarter of a mile Jong and 125 feet wide, Great quantities of fruit were stored in caves during a recent car shortage. DR. GRANT’S REPLY Asks For More Time to Answer Bishop Manning’s Letter—Trial for Heresy Seems Sure. New York, Jan. 23—Dr. Percy Stickney Grant will send his formal reply to the letter in which Bishop William T. Manning asked him to re- cant certain of his statements or to resign within a few days, according |to a letter Dr. Grant wrote the bishop The Agnew was among the last' of |last evening. This letter read: “My Dear Bishop Manning: “I received Friday night your per. | DEAN OF COLLEGE URGES NORE FLAXSEED BE GROWN PMorts Will Be Made To Wutl Here What Is Becoming » Large Impont 23.—With the importer of 8t Paul, Mina, Jan United States heavy flaxseed, efforts to inopease the pro duction of fax are being made by agrienitural eolleges in Minnesota, North and South Daketa and Men- tana Pirst appealed to by large nationa onsumers of flax seed, Dean W, €. offey of the college of ‘.rh'ulluve,‘ University of Minnesola is urging growing flax agd wheat together Dean Coffey explained that last year there was consumed in the United States 32,000,000 bushels of faxseed | while enly about 5,000,000 hushels were produeed in the country, the re- wainder being imported, With a good protective tarift hegefiting flax GOCEUCEUO000BR0E0000S |farmers get hetter returns when flax and wheat are grown together, on an average of about 30 pounds of wheat and 28 pounds of flax seedings to the nere, the dean stated, The crop is harvested with the wheat, bound, shocked and stacked like wheat, and threshed with the latter grain | Separation of the seeds after thresh- ing is not difficult, due to their dis- similarity, Also, growing in this manner eliminates much of the weed menace and gives a cleaner crop, SEEK TO PRESERVE BEAUTIES OF CITY New York's Park Commissioner Seeks to Give Looks to Metropolis New York, Jan. 22.-—Bcauty to soften the burly hulk of the world's largest and most aggressively modern city is sought by Park Commissioner Francis D. Gallatin, In his capacity 1s a member of the municipal art commission, he has asked Mayor Hylan to arrange a meet- ing to discuss the appointment of a commission to draft laws giving the || city authority to dedicate as public buildings, not to he destroyed without |* I sanction, all beautiful or traditional structures in greater New York. He will ask alsp that the commis- sion adopt laws.cBmpelling architects and builders to make designs for new edifices conform with the architectur- al ideas predominating in any given locality that sentiment, tradition or jbeauty has declared to be of acsthe- tic value. I We would thus make impossible the intrusion ofs jarringly efficient mod- ernity in construction into the pat- terns of sedate charm composed by buildings surrounding Grammercy Park or Washington Square. His Proposal. In his proposal,'Commissioner Gal- latin asserts he is not blind to the spectacular beauty of some of the city’s: most conspicuous office and | public buildings. He urges, for in- stance, that the Woolworth .building, whose sky-searching tower dwarfs the surrounding giants of granite and steel, be forever dedicated to civic beauty. Other Items. Other structures whose aesthetic appeal he would compel their own- ers to share in common hclule the Herald Building which, with its warm ! Italian personality, contends against! adjacent modern bustle with a Latin languor; the Times Building, austerely beautiful in grandeur of line; the quaint Hotel Brevoort in Grtenwich Peking, Jan Press) Sun Yat-Sen that location of Peking unfits it as | capith city of a progressive nation claim the honor. farmers to grow flax in a manner|Up the Yangtsse river, making it less difficult to handle, by [ claim on the ground that®it lies in | [ growers in this country, and with an | average price of 82 a bushell for lhr! past ten years, Dean Coffey predicts luerative returns from the growing of flaxseed for years to come, with the | ,produrllen diffeulties obviated 5 Experiments have proven that | | iAIlVflWECHANfiE OF GAPITAL SITE " Lacationof Pking Makes It Unt for Its*Present Honor 23 (By Associated A recent declaration by Dy, the gpographical the prompted many localities to Hankow, 600 miles presses its Pl the center of & » gricultural and manufacturing dis which preb ably will he improved in the near fu tre by the extension of & railroad in Suchwan Hankow's citizens advanee a senti mental argument that it was in their olty that the 1911 revelution begas which resulted in the establishment of the Chinese republic Nanking Favored Nanking, said to be favered by Dr Sun, has been the eapital of China numerous times. Its name €d lnru* southern eapital op posed to Peking, northern capital N A was the seat of government of six dynasties between the fourth and sixth eenturies and was made the capital under the kings in the four- teenth century, In 1811, the eity was taken by the revelutionaries, who es tablished the provisional government with Dr. Bun as president translats as Another claimant is Hangehow, 119 miles south of Shanghal, It was the capital of one of the Sung emperers who chese it because of its scenlo splendor 4 Too Far Removed, Those whe urge changing the eaps ital, argue that Peking 18 too far 7es moved from the rest of the country, having long been retained merely to please the Manchus. They say that if China is to be united pelitically it must have a capital more accessible to the whole country and ineidentally free from the terrific dust storms which at certain seasons, blow in from the Gobi desert, It is admitted, however, that China, in view of ita more pressing problems, probably will not make a change in the near fus ture Carrots and eabbages are grown 100 miles nerth of the Arctio eircle, (7773 earance | JALCS HERE ARE IMPORTANT WEDNESDAY SPECIALS Each Item Affords Substantial Cash Savings and There are Hundreds of Other Offerings Beside These —_—_———— Enameled Sauce Pans HAeavy stock, 1 qt. size, FOR W ONLY 33¢c — In the Basement — : and WHITE 50 doz. Women’s Jersey Bloomers A new shipment comprising white and pink 19¢ FOR WEDNESDAY ONLY 2 Pair 1000 PAIRS INFANTS Soft Sole Shoes Samples and manufacturer's surplus stock. | 39¢ | | FOR WEDN ONLY Moceasing and_ button styles; | also strap sandals and ankle | ties, J DAY Values to $1.00 Genuine Indian Head 33-in. wide. Short lengths, FOR WEDNESDAY 18c ONLY . Yard Grey Enamel Sauce Pot With cover, 8 qu size, FOR WEDNESDAY 49c n the Basement — Fort Mill Pillow Cases Size 15x36 — In the Base Grey Enamel Dish Pans - Heavy stock. 21 qt. sizes FOR WE ONLY 690 = In the Basement — 142 Cute Little Pantie Dresses Made in sizes 2 to 6, of hign | &rade washable lincne in several to shades. Two clever styles Congoleum ‘Floor Mats A large variety of patterns, Size 18x36. FOR WEDNESDAY Basement — Men’s Work Shirts Heavy blue chambray, double full cut with soft col- All sizes. stitched, lar and pocket. Turkish Bath Towels Large size. double thread. FOR WEDNESDAY ONLY 3" $1.00 — In the Basement — 0. N. T. Mercerized Crochet Cotton All Numbers ana cotors Imported Torchon Laces A new lot just received. Handsome edges in widths up to 5 inches. DAY Yai {C FOR WEDX T t I ouT “Minerva” Saxonette Yarn The reg. 45c¢ ball. FOR WEDN ONLY . A fine table for sweaters, hats soft four-fold yarn, and Narrow Bélts Genuine patent lcather and dull black smooth leathers, all sizes., FOR WED) ONLY * Safety Pins Good nickel plated quality. assorted, 3 sizes on card Village, where Jenny Lind stayed; the Plaza hotel, with brows scowling over Central Park; Trinity "€hurch, tran- quil in Wall street's very face; the Flatiron building, now traduced by its neighbors, but nevertheless a worthy pioneer of the race of giants; stately St. Patrick’s Cathedral, that looks be- nignantly down upon @, vivid Fifth avenue; the Colonial City Hali, brood- ling and aristocratically aloof on low- er Manhattan, These, and hundreds & others, he would make a part of the metropolis’ traditional wealth. “I got the idea in France and Bel- gium last year,” the commissioner said. “Municipalities in these coun- navigation. |sonal letter, which you had also sent Grain receipts at the port of Buf-|to the newspapers. Saturday and falo this season broke all previous | Sunday were very busy days, with records. The total of all grain and matters that could not be postponed; flour figured on a wheat-bushel basis, and today, -Monday, I have been away was 295,830,666 bushels, This is|from my desk most of the time. more than double any total since| *“I shall have to ask you, therefore, 1916. The previous high mark was|to suffer a few days to pass before my 25 years ago, when a bumper crop |formal reply is placed in your hands. brought the total up to 267.395.434| .gincerely yours bushels. i : 2 | “PERCY 8. GRANT.” !GE ISN,T NEEDED When the reply is sent, Dr. Grant | said last evening with some emphasis, Farmers in \llssmlrl and Arkansas he will send copies to the newspapers. | While nothing is known of what the Utilize Scores of Caves as Cold Storage Plants nature of the reply will be Dr. Grant's Poplar Bluft, Mo., Jan, 23.—Farm- scarfs. Mostly all shades. FOR WEDNESDAY Ball ,,60 ._—‘_ For Washing It Aids Growth! recognizes that the mt-day method of over- :mfinmt of foods, often strips them of essential vlmlnu., 5 Scott's Emulsion f e s v effectually to add vitamine-value to the diet. It helps to re- move the hindrance Women’s Heather Wool Hose | _ The popular drop stitch style. 19c: Collar and Cuff Sets Tailored Bramley styles, made of washable linene. Also im- ported Venise Lace, Tuxedo on s 15¢ FOR WEDNESDAY FOR WEDNESDAY 4 ONLY ¥ Pair ONLY . § 7- 0 T Fine Silk Lisle Hose' For women: made by the American Hosiery Co.: to sell at $1.00 pair. Strictly first quality; black only. " Bath Rugs Good size in pink and blue; very handsome designs. s BAC Hose Heavy fibre silk, guaranteed first quality. Black, cordovan friends expect he will refuse to resign. By repeating the objectionable utter-|trfes, including Paris and Bruges, ances in his sermon on Sunday he|have been successful in this endeavor. has made it clear he will not recant.| Why not New York? Therefore a trial of charges of heresy FOR WEDNESDAY to growth and health. Seott & Bowns, Blosmted, N. J. [ ers of Northeastern VICTOR Arkansas and is fully expected. TALKING MACHINES . AND RECORDS See Victor Advertisement Opposite C. L. PIERCE & CO. 246 MAIN STREET OPPOSITE THE MONUMENT Threatened R. P. Poole, Herrin, (I1L) real es- tate dealer, testified for the state in the trial of those accused in connec- tlon with the strip miné massacre. Now Poole says he's received a note threatening his life and, along with it, the hangman’s noose shown in the picture. and cocoa. FOR WEDNESDAY ONLY 85¢| 59¢ = In the Basement — ONLY . 300 TUBES Ipana Tooth Paste the 50c size FOR WED) DAY 29c ONLY Willington Thread Full 200 yard spools FOR WEDNESDAY ONLY 3" 10c “Gillette” Razor Blades 15 dozen in packages FOR WEDNESDAY 29 c ONLY Package Woodbury's FACIAL SOAP The 25¢ cake FOR WED. ONLY 15c Cake Sewing Machine Needles For all makes of machines. 3 needles in tube. FOR WEDNESDAY ONLY . SR 5c |~ A woNpERITL LOT OF . i [ Children’s Rompers | FoR wipxpwbAY - gy Cc ONLY Sizes 2 to 5: full cut garments, made of excellent grade wash- able ginghams, chambrays and | | linenes. Values to $1.00 in the | lot FOR WEDNESDAY ONLY .... . Pair Bandeaux Brassieres Made of heavy pink mesh material: hook back models. FOR WEDNESDAY 15c ONLY Pinochle Cards Good celluloid finish decks FOR WEDNESDAY 19c Another Lot of ONLY Nursing Bottles Rovee Nursers 2¢ LUDEN'S MENTHOL cotaH DROPS 8 ounce 'OR WEDNESDAY ONLY Fach Everywhere Se package FOR WED. ONLY

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