New Britain Herald Newspaper, February 14, 1923, Page 9

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- - BARGAIN WEEK ot Besse Welandy There Is Only One WOMEN’S Left HOSIERY - An ext i A A beautiful fur coat of Hudson Scal P { nt;x ":r:: 'r:: ';:';e :: h::l:’ with a deep full squirrel collar, Gor- ke o by . . 'y pair & geously silk lined. It's a $275.00 coat i migahercn kb WOMEN’S SWEATERS There are hundreds of beautiful sweaters to choose from and you would make no mistake to pick up two or thre'l the ridiculous price of DRESSES You cannot possibly reciate what these prices mean until you see Ghese gowns, It is truly a great sav: fing for anyone who buys a dress at $14.14 $19.19 manship, at Plan to visit our Third Floor tomorrow. It means a distinct saving to you. Give us a chance to show you real values and in giving us a chance you may be sure that you are not taking one yourself. ~ BESSE-LELAND’S Charlamagne thirty-two years to fin- ish the war. The best spot for observing the coming eclipse next September will be on Catalina Island, off the coast of California, scientists say. Edwin B. Frost, director of Yerkes observatory, Williams Bay, Wisconsin, will take an éxpedition there. The total eclipse will last about two minutes, starting at 12:54 p. m. September 1, at Cata- most of the season, and Blemis, a southpaw. - /To Go ’Round The World in Makeshift Boa g TOTAL ECLIPSE OF SUN WIL LAST TWO MINUTES of the Unwin .. Anderson Dalstron WACHINISTS TRIN |2 "CORBINS QUNTET..... Dummy Dummy . 110— 303 §2— 82 7 Jerry Murphy on the varsity last | Year, seems to have the best chance for the backstop position. He will, however, have a hard fight to beat out Ray Keegan, who captained the second baseball nine. Cordingly, a freshman pitcher of last season, was also out. | TR AL : | ICE WEIGHT ASSURED of the United States September 1 this S WOMAN Ehid s 337—1021 G LoiaE X | year, lasting for about two minutes, y, Ont., 14.—Mrs. s10—um |, 8 2 : i g 3 3 : but Chicagq and the middle west will{ Alex Yells, wife of a lumberman at A TS : vl b have only a partial eclipse to,view,|River Valley, forty miles from this 1duff 90~ 291 | Fremen A 84— 272 and a very small one at that, even|placc. was awakened before dawn by nkenburg 2 —_ “ga|Johngon . Which Insures the Correct Number |Jess than was seen here June 8, 1918, her dog tugging at her bed covering. Myers ... 319 ’ g when the last total eclipse visited the; Arising, she found the' house in pshany ; i ; G § of Pounds. , United States. *|flames. She jumped from a second el 2 Dantverg .. ¢ G Cleveland, 0. Feb. 14—Machines| Chicago, though, is hecoming rath. jstcry window into the snow, her haby installed at the stations operated by a |¢F, Used to being neglected uch jin her arms, just as the floor col- ¥ % |solar phenomena, for the available lapsed, dropping the dog into the Te—1184 Will Be United States on September 1 Visible Over Part (G 'onfhuen from preceeding page). f of This Year 1 gl 86— 276 | Landgren » : 'fif}:z DAY 2 90— 286 | Robertson Chicago, Feb. 14.—A total cclipse 110— 393 | Finneman ., of the sun will be visible over part Anders 3 gk o 102 | swanson .. “Thompson h 3y Stotts Cleveland Company Installs Machine 188—1439|T- Landgren . > 3 P. Ackeratrom score each Schroter Wilcox .. W. Johnson Agnelo 253 | D. Swanson 320 KENSI local ice company will block of ice so deeply that it cannot he cut or broken at any other places than at the slots. records show that the last time the moon intervened fand totally blotted out the sun's rays from falling on the southern end of Lake Michigan was flames, With the thermometer 32 degrees below zero, Mrs. Yells clad only in her night dress, crossed the frozen rapids The purpose 6f the scoring, the [TTHTER OOT | company announces, is to _mukv sure Tlm" w‘as ""D 83 Huwe } that (’»n._ch purchase r‘ receives accu- .. Charlamagne 10 9 Hewer i ; 7 rate weights. Guesswork is eliminat- S L 103 v 3 Dummy ; ; L o ed. The 100 pound or larger blocks e will be so cut that they will break up into 25 pound pieces. A melting fac- tor of eight per cent will be allowed, estimated to be 2 per cent above the| melt on the warmest days. Moffett P T R Matson Wilcox . s - — : CARDS RELFASE RE gt b William Roland, 42, a seafaring man of the old school, is get-| Rickey Sends Five to Minor League ting ready to circle the globe in his little makeshift, sloop-rigged Bascball “Clubs. vessel which is scarcely larger than a good-sized rowboat’ He| st Louis Mr, Feb. 14.—The re- built the boat himself and handles it alone. lease of five recruits have been an- e nounced by Branch Rickey, manager B of tite St. Louis Nationals. Pitchers| Earl Cash and Glenn Hostetter and/ James Hudgins, an infielder, were A;l 7(]!% lldwl}OJ Others who made good |sent to the Iort Smith club of the! Western association; Henry Vick, a Foresters. 4 | were Miss Iretta DBush of Wyncote, | Pa., 137; Mrs. William B. Merrill of | Catcher, went to the Houston Texas | Newton ‘Center, Mass.. 136; Mrs. 1. 1°ague team, and Pitcher Carroll| 1. Haarbeck of New York, 133: Miss| Grimm was released to Syracuse of | | T.ora Kahaya of New York, 129, and | the International league. Mrs. John J. Stewart of Cold Spring Harbor. ol smtaeeeen HIRE NEW INSTRUCTOR | Licutenant-Colonel Dicttrich of Aus- | of the Temagami river in her bare feet and staggered to a neighbor's houde, where she is now in bed, suf- fering from shock and exposure. Patrus year—T772 A. D.— started his war The eclipse only s, but it took R 1] a"r“ [‘“ Conway ussel Brwin. 3 A. Anderson .0 Maloney scheldel g Wells .. it 400 Rawiow : Baracen. ndgerly 97 Colby Lewls Abrahamson . ; i Sigws. 7 S4— 233 FETAT Ohion H1— 32 g, a, Carroll ¢ Gl P 9 L= By o'Ben AB-1108 | SRR e Hillstrand 91— 269 [Filgin .. Vo 8 0 prize, was awarded the trophy with- . Fitzsimmons . out more ado. . Pagan ... . Mctarroll . scores 41 are unsually due to straining Derlin Construction Co. Mayers ... v 78 81 when constipated. 3 Nujol « being a Ilubricant (il : | keeps the food waste soft Cooney L 107 105 and therefore prevents Hjere .. .88 98 . | straining. Doctors prescribe TTIRET | night who had heard of the proposal, | Nujol because it not only Ameriean Legion. but_none would admit any definite| soothes the suffering gof John McCormick .9 knowledge of the plans. President, piles but relicves the irritas LM ORmION Heydler of the National League said tion, brings comfort and J he $ad heard the reports but that the Johnson helps to remove them. Dummy magnates had not discussed , the Nujol is a proposition at their schedule meeting lubrieant—not yesterday. Charles H. Ebbets was| a medicine or quoted as saying that ne ._cumza.qo.l laxative — so7 the National League Park in Brook- cannot Iyn could be used when the Robins| weré away from home. This use of | Djettrich of Budapest, | major league property is a featurc jicutendant colonel in the [that will apply to Brookiyn and!iungarian army and commander of Washington, according to.the plans. | the Austro-Hungarian army fencing ' i . P . Treat Matter Facetiously. | instructors' course, has been appoint- | 1o P d:f"‘l"‘" = T"’I”":‘\:“' f“"’:‘? International Teague men in the a4 5 member of the physical ,d“m_‘lrllf‘:; J. i ”‘m,)","sl J. :-mmlxrzlxls : lobby of the Waldori were inclined 10| tjon department at Dartmouth and !"f”' B M. Patness W8 L treat the matter facetiously. “Do g expected to arrive in this country r?rlm.', .l a’yn;'(w.“ h 2 ssa, ‘H. cou know what I'll do?" asked G“nrg(; early 1n March to assame his duties|F 2}t and Judg Stallings, part owner and manager of | pere as instructor in fencing and| Rochester. “Ill just put an Interna- | g ing. i | BENies bhs tional League club in Pittsburgh and| ™ Cojonel Diettrich was several years |, );v:ro’m;.w;.. i Brookiyn™. Another wag threatened | oo a the head of the small group | ooies found i Lake la Wourche, Itn put a major league club in ]!rnak-} of European skiers who specialized{fc'r PAftr B Tha ere placed thers o igh Alpine skiing. He was the | it - g Pl Jack Dunn of Baitimore, the storm L B g Hspra:"-“"‘: college and wers ot those o center of the draft war, was not out- | yiujiy every mountain in the eastern| ) ' l.l‘n”m‘,v‘m el e wardly perturbed. “What do T care?| \jne " tne Carpathians and Norway. | o sie vorr. o was spokesman ot | 1 got a million dollars i the bank." | jror"s number of years he served [0 Nov VOrk. who was |‘r,u--|> o & g prebniatn s Diipl X dritied whole companies| " .yaniel and Richard are alive and | fwell’at New Orleans where they are | junder daily observation by the Kian | (Continued from precceding page). \ —————‘ {Elect Two Classes Of Hotel Directors| An issuance of $400,000 bonds was authorized at a meeting of the direc-| pating the genuine tors of the Elihu Burritt Hotel cor- poration yesterday. Two classes of directors were cted, Class A directors will present | holders of preferred stock. They are che, | the following: *, Bennett, G. P. Hart, A. G. Kimball, P. C. Rickey, 17 Holmes, George P. Spear, Judge \ustro. | B F. Gaffney, G. W. Traut, H. L. S STO” |Hateh and W. L. Hatch. Holders of common stock will be represented by tism, neuritis, and for pain in e not | Eeneral. Accept only “Bayer" packe | age which contains proper directions. Handy boxes of twelve dablets cost few cents. Druggists also sell hottles ty-two years and proved safe by mil-| of 24 and 100, irin is the trade ons for colds, headache, toothache,[mark . of Bayer Manufacture of neuralgia, lumbago, rheu-| Monoaceticacidester of Salicylicacld, s you see the name * age or on tablets you Bayer product prescribed by physiclans over twen- trian Army, to Teach Fencing and Presideflf Barnard Says New League Talk Is “Bunk” Cleveland, Feb. 14.-—Réports of the proposed formation of a new baseball circuit to be backed by the major leagues were characterized today by | . 8. Barnard, presidéent of the Cleveland Indians;, as “bunk.” “News has been scarce this winter and those New York writers are always writing about the draft and new schemes to make the minors come to time,” Barnard said. *“As a matter of fact, major league club owners are | not wortrying about the draft. There is no league needed to fight it."” TERRY TO QUIT BASEBALL. Chicago, Feb, 14.—Zeb A. Terry, veteran infielder of the Chicago Na- tionals has been placed on the volun- tary retired list by the Cubs, accord- Sreosoted) and ward | ing to an announcement yesterday - - \Ypi;‘v‘“"‘klin'—' ::‘-g‘rl:;e::,odumgu le. Fine for whoop: [ by Baseball Commissioner Landis. BREAKS PINEHURS? RECORD. e safe, sure and | Terry, who formerly was a member | " :l;:n! remedy that yon can depend | o¢ (i Chijcago American and later | BATTERY MEN REPORT. A rembers,” Burger sald. He was| f | Mrs, Scores 149 Out Pos- merabers,” I¥ - b1 MP;“;;IF‘ your childrea 80d yOUP ) '~ ieqn business on the Pacific] M "’;fl" e Rinbe q:"(" - N introduced as “official spokesman of coast, and *had expressed a desire to SNG4 wewn - P 9 Eigl % " s | the invisible empire, Knights of the { Sighteen Respond to Coach Slattery's Sold by City Drug Store. retire, [ o ll:' S e 1 Ku Kiux Klan b 2 | Burger dec 14.—Coach |ard would be ‘produced when the| wlled out his battery | Morehouse grand jury convenes to y afternoon and|consider the findings of the reeent 149 out of a possible 150 points, in |18 reported. The men were given a|hearing® into Klan activitles in More- Huhn, Princeton and University Col-| the course of the weekly rifle tourney | long workout in the baseball cage,| house parish, Louisiana. v .. C 4 L w sitchers getting most of the — ——" lege, won the broad jump, the 120-| for women. Mrs. R. C. Blancke of | with the pitchers ge L = yard hurdles, and the 220-yard low| Essex Fails, N. J., finished the|attention. The candidates for the NEW MACADAM ROAD. hurdles. By, the victories of Huhn|tourney as runner-up to Mrs. Barr|other positions on the team will re-| Turin, Italy, Feb. 14 —A macadam University College won by one point| with a score of 143, | port next Tuesday to Coach Slattery. | road for use of motor traffic only is from Queen’s College. 1In the broad| Mrs. Alvin Hutzler of Richthond | Among the men who turned out|to be built from Turin to Milan, a Yoo, and jump Huhn made 20 feet § inches; in! and Mrs. A. W. Stanley of New Brit- | yesterday were Ken Hill, a pitcher | run of 100 miles. For the most part sonsbl who won most of his games in his| the route is over flat land, and it is otesr -y to Eorope vnder ¢ lerses: | the 120-yard hurdles, which was run|ain tied for thirl place, at 139, and 6.2, 1920 Mediterranesn:“Baltic "GSdayucrmioe. | o, the wind, his time was 0:16) Mrs. Hutzler, as the leadce among | freshman year and who was on the | expected that racing cars will be able FrankC.Clark, Timessidg. ,N.Y |35 and in the low hurdies 0:28. . | those who had not previously won a, varsity squad last year, but was sick | 1o make the run in an hour. Skiing at Dartmouth College. eh. 14.—Anthon formerly al Hanover, N. H. WARD OFF GRIPPE Get rid of that cold quickly before fev. frish conditions sct in and you have a bad ease of grippe. Leonardi's Cough ag:fl !(Crmoledr quickly soothes and w throats, cuts the phlegm, protects the E‘f’?“ stops irritation and brings relief, RSSO ou bave a tight cough, bad cold, pe or* bronchitis get a bottle of Leon: I!’lfil Cough Syrup | Pinehurst, N. C, ¥eb. 14—All pre- | vious records were broken at the Pinehurst Gun club yesterday, when Mrs, tmwrence Barr of Larehmont and Pittsburgh turned in a ecard of candidates ye ated Daniel and Rich- HUHN FEATURES AGAIN, | Oxford, I"eb. 14.—In the semi-finals of the Oxford University Intercollege Cup competition yesterday, Tevis Cambridge, Mass,, Feb. Jack atte CLARK’S 20th CRUISE, June 27 #% MEDITERRANEAN Aod Europe, by Speeially Chartered WhiteStar 8.5, “BALTIC" "3 ling Hotele, Drives S0 upurard,nclading Hotee rives v visite Personally Lo

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