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Delicious! Expresses But Poorly The Unique NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, MARCH 2, 1923, Flavor of request was granted, A few days later they had all Joined In making bricks for a com- munity school, but $30 worth of tar| paper and beams were needed, The material was fmmediately forthcom- ing, and the next day school opened, | "Seventeen days had elapsed from the time of their arrival in Greece | until their school was functioning,” Dr, Wirt says, VERY WHE RE 'RYZON BAKING POWDER | You vuse /ess thelr opponents, and succeed, In some HOYEMENT T0 HONOR STUDENTS IS GROWING Four Hundréd ¥oreign Students in Schools and Colleges Here In- vited to C. of C, Dinner, Philadelphia, March 2.~Four hun- \ honnr to be glven by the Chamber of Commerce March 1, Representatives of 41 countries are included In the list of students fo whom invitations already have been sent, Well known business men of this city, with thelr wives and daughters, will be grouped with the students at the dinner. Men prominent in Am- erican diplomatic and business circlos will address the gathering, It s an. chosen as speakers, The plan of entertaining foreign students at a banquet, is attracting at- tention 1a other cities. Officlaly of the Chamber ¢f Commerce say they have leasned that a similar affair is planned Iy the New York Morchants' assoclation, anrd that Boston, which held such a dizner last year, will hoid another this wiaton, Banquets for forelgn students also will be held, it cases, in keeping at least one jump ahead of them, For instance, therve |was the case of the German who double crossed the Norweglans, The Norweglan customs people were seek- ing a good, speedy boat to keep the rum runners away, and they found a German in Lubeck who had just what | was wanted, A seaworthy motor boat, 110 feet long, good accommodations, and with a guaranteed speed of 20 P fi b 5 2 ‘km:';u. The price was right, too, and n German marks to boot. So a sale potitable Business With THem | vus'veese: e v snesutstaionot s o aiza |the Norweglan customs authorities, 5 fwho sought congratulations on their Copenhagen, March 2.—~Rum, not'cenergy and business acumen, specifically the sugar cane product of | The new boat was taken out for the {Jamaica and Cuba, but rather any|first time, with high hopes. But the {kind of alcoholic beverage stronger | rum-running boat she found at sea than claret and beer, is the basis of a |Was a speedy craft too. She ran a smuggling trade in the Scandinavian |¢ircle around the customs boat, and |ths~u disappeared in the fog at 28 Is sald, 17 low: City, Ia, Chicago, Indianapolis, Spriugfield, Mees, and South Bend, Ind, dred foreign students in schools and colleges here have been invited to at- tend the third annual dinner in thelr MACKAY & WALLIN The Furniture and Drapery Shop Opposite Hungerford Court nounced by the chamber, Itesponses will be made by students, Represen- tatives of each continent will be "SALADA” I X A L TRY IT FOR YOUR NEXT MEAL, BLACK (Orange Pekoe Plend) MIXED or GREEN BALTIC SMUGGLERS HAVE GOOD MARKET Rum Running Proves to Be a FAMOUS SHIPYARD RESIDENTIAL SITE Many Yachts Were Built at This Place Near Marblehead Cliffs Marblehead, Ma March 2.—Th shipyard at the edg f the Marble head cliffs where many famous yachts were built, and aircraft later were | manufactured, is to be changed soon | into a reside 1 site, | In 1905 W, ling Burgess, a na- val archite: purchased the land and erected a yacht building plant. He constructed a marine railway, and the | rock was blasted to prepare a ¢ | which would accommodate with a draft of 11.feet. Anothe Jjunct to the yard was the Ox, a foot steamer designed for towing. Mr [t'nited States the latter part of April, | After attending the conference at Rome she will travel in other parts of Europe, She has made scveral voyasas to Furope in the last twelve years with her husband when he has written books of European travel, 43 MAIN ST. Bigger andBetter Values Here Saturday A wonderful offering is this 4-plece B«d Room Suite, Bow-End Bed, dresser with large mirror, roomy chiffonette and trip..: mirror dressing table, fashioned in the new Queene Amne Period de- sign, Auished in rich American Walnut, Full size crib with extra high sides, finished in white enamel; Specially priced at ........ e e b Crib Mattress to fit this crib, made of cotton, covered in art ticking, at .......... R R 4y . Steams & Foster felt mattress of fine qually, in art saturday at the low price of .... $149.00 ticking, Imperial Roll edge, Regular price on this 8-Piece Walnut Dining Sunite. Large size table, mattress should be $25.00, handsome buffet, 5 side chairs and one host chair, $19095 Special for Saturday covered in genuine brown leather. All complete Extra fine quality Mahogany Libzrary Table. One at the Special Price of the very newest patterns, St s e $139.00 ... $18.95 DAINTY RUFFLED CURTAINS—With tie backs. Our ptice for Saturday . TERRY CLOTH, in handsome new designs. For Priced $1.00, $1.25, $1.50 and all $3 50 . L) OVER - DRAVERY or prices up to — Pair . 5 TANIS — A . 95c SCRIM AND MARQ! 5 © PORTIERES — Yard .. very complete assortment—Priced CRETONNES, that can be utilized so many ways to make the home more beautiful—Priced countries and Finland that rapidly is IN SEVENTEEN []AYS assuming national proportions, {knots an hour. | Most of it comes from Germany.| An investigation only proved what | There it costs one crown a liter, and [the Norweglans had begun to suspect. Honor of Speedy Establishment of Charmi We offer these 4-pieces for to operate the ship. ss was granted pilot's | papers, and came into prominence n.s" the only woman pilot on the coast. land is a dry country, so there is no |week he sold the 28 knot boat to the question of the market. Norway also [smugglers. th r!ry. but with certain limna(hns,l A recent American visitor in Hel- Spain and Portugal compel her to ac- |singfors, Finland, was asked by his| Pilgrim fathers landed on Plymouth Rock they founded Harvard college | e ot BanEY ofl' tha lealisatitn ot thelr {eration a system of rationing which | fix you up.” The American followed | oKlfd1eh. | permits limited consumption, while |instruetion. Two minutes after twelve in Denmark there is no limit what- |he was accosted by a stranger speak- ever, every man can drink as much as |ing good English who took his order of twentieth century speed in estab- | i 8 The first boat to take shape was||ghing schools in a strange land, ac. | T80, but this matters not so v the Pontiac, for George Silsbee. Many | oording to Dr. Lincoln Wirt, interna- | T.uclh for the profits easily take care HOOP'NG wUG other yachts followed, sgme of which |40 01 commissioner of the Near|CL 20 such incident. The customs | No “cure”—but helps to re- : L € NPAT | 15lice on shore have been strengthen- duce paroxysms of it finds a ready sale elsewhere at six |The Lubeck German had sold them a Education Centers Goes Abroad cept a certain amount every ar Mj“:m«»r if he laid in his supplies. wines like port and sherry, they and ‘on corner of ——- and Their record has been held up to | the world for nearly 300 years as a | ;. ? he can afford to buy. But here the | for liquor, and later delivered it at his laudable example, but to the Arme- | duty is fantastically high, and cost is | hotel. | were su 1l in championship rac Mo % jus o in Boston, New York, New Orleans (t:::‘g:wi;r: 19;‘:;1”“ returned t0 feq, and the authorities are watehtul, | w0k % ; but nevertheless the smuggl: are | V' c K s VAPORUB {erowns: hence there is a fine margin [rum-runner discarded because she Chicago, March 2, (By Assoclated | would not buy her fish, and Norway — streets at twelve o'clock nian refugees encamped at Piraeus, the only prohibitive agent. and other racing centers. e 3 { Thousand of refugees wWere en-iy,iine it nearly all their own w 89 $l 25 l 50 C . . Over 17 Million Jars Used Yearly | $4 50 ru: L CRAFT CURTAINS, that make a room |of profit for the rum-runner. Fin- |was so slow, and within the same Press).—Seventeen years after the| must sell her fish. Sweden has in op- |sharp,” said the waiter, “and they will | the port of Athens, goes the honor| oo gionally the runners lose In 1907 the 110-foot gasoline Pas-|camped in the fleld apout Piraeus gy reason would seem to he that | senger boat Pineland of 300 hors Haver was built for Hayden & Co. ot Locr ciec8myrna disaster Had drivenw) ¢yoy uve yist.a liftleiblt amariar thii | 30,000 men, women and children I And upto New Orleans. The Pineland was one | of the first vessels to be propelled | successfully by motor. Airplane construction was begun in | 1909 and the first completed craft was | to of was almost indescribable, from Syria. The condition of the refugee cataps according Stripped of the veneer life, most of the refu- Dr. Wirt. ordinary THWARTING INFLUENZA QUAKE look 3o airy—Priced $1.98 $2.50 $2.95 Kirsch Flat Curtain Rods—Single, double, triple. You doubtless know that it is a well nourished body that is the strongest factor in thwarting the inroads of influenza or other disease germs. SCOTT’S EMULSION should be taken faithfully at the first signs of “catching cold” or tender throat or soreness in chest. The abuadant tonic-nourishing qualities of Scott’s, is an effectual help in all times of threatened weakness. SAFETY . FIRST—TAKE SCOTT’S EMULSION Scott & Bowne, Bloomfield, N. J. 2~ tested in February, 1910, by Mr. Bur-| gess, A. M. Herring and Norman Prince. This flight was the first made in New England. In the summer of the same year Mr. Burgess opened a testing and fly- | ing station at Plum Island, near New- | buryport, and the product of the Mar- | blehead factory was taken to the sta- tion by the Ox. Claude Grahame- White, Brtish aviator, made the first| fiight over the city of London in a| Marblehead-built airplane. In 1911 Harry N. Atwood attained fame by his flight in a Burgess plane from Marble- head to Washington. During the fall of that year another of these planes was fitted with pontoons and pilots succeeded in making it alight on and take off from the surface of the ocean, heralding the now familiar sea- plane. WOMEN VOTERS WILL END ALL BATTLES Permanent World Peace Will gees quickly reverted to a state below | the lowest savages. There were no | sanitary facilities. T"our hundred of the Armenians, refusing to be crushed by their mis- | fortunes, appealed to the Near East! Relief commissioner in Athens for a separate piece of clean ground where | they could get away from the filth of the general refugee camps. Their request was granted. Immediately the 400 started work making mud bricks, which they baked | in the sun. Quickly the mud walls of nearly 100 little huts rose five or: six feet into the air. Then the work halted. Another committee visited the re- | lief commissioner. Dr. Wirt went to | investigate. The Armeniang asked for roofing materials, which they es- timated would cost $10 a house. Thes| $3-50 And $3-95 Pair All sizes in stock. AKE AND HANG WINDOW SHADES ALSO PUT UP CURTAIN RODS AND FIXTURES OF W CALL OUR SERVICE PHONE—873-12. KINDS. SAGE, ALLEN & CO. 31000 (INC) 3109 Hartford Conn." IMPORTANT NOTICE TO ALL NEW BRITAIN CUSTOMERS We have secured a direct telephone wire to the store from Nw Britain, so that New Britain customers who wish to telephone their orders can do so without getting the Hartford central. The call is 3005. Your telephone orders will be attended to_by special shoppers who are experienced and will give you prompt and painstaking service. ALL Gome With Enfranchisement Hutchinson, Kas., March 2—Univer- sal enfranchisement of women would mean permanent world peace, in the opinion of Mrs., W. Y. Morgan, re- cently named as a delegate to the in- ternational suffrage conference in Rome, Italy, May 10-18. Mrs. Mor- gan is the wife of the editor of the Hutchinson News, who is a former leutenant governor of Kansas. “There is no doubt in my mind that the enfranchisement of women in Europe would end war in Europe,” said Mrs. Morgan. “France, denied the privilege of suffrage for women, apparently f{s about to be plunged into another war when the vote of the women them- selves probably would have prevented it. I hope and believe that everlast- ing pace will come to the world when women are given the opportunity to do their share in managing the gov- ernments of the world. “The Italian women are in the throes of a campaign for suffrage. This is one of the reasons why the meeting of the International Women's Suffrage alliance is to be held there | this year.” | The Rome conference is the first | of its kind since the war. Each coun- try participating, regardiess of size, is entitled to twelve delegates. Mrs. Morgan was selected by the National League of Women Voters, Mrs. Morgan plans to the leave =3 heal voluntaril}' Doctors and nurses know that carly attention to skin dirorders is necessary, and they are daily prescribing Resincl Soap and Ointment for minor rashes or eruptions as well as the more severe forms of eczema, Batbe the affected part with Resinol Soap ard then apply the soothing ointment. ‘water, g‘u. b torment is relieved at once nd healing ly begivs. Ash yowr druggist abeus Resinol. Resinol Your Clothing Problem is to buy clothes with individuality, with fine workmanship—at a price you think i It’s a real problem—Hickey-FREEMAN Clothes are the solution. Hickey-Freeman Clothes are customized. They show hand- workmanship of the most expert kind wherever it contributes to the style, the drape, the lasting good looks of the garment. s fair to pay. Every model is created by a master designer. The fabrics are the choicest of domestic and foreign patterns— many of them confined absolutely to Hickey-FREEMAN. The result is a garment which fits you perfectly—and gives you the satisfaction of money well spent. FITCH-JONES CO. “A Hickey-Freeman for Fit" CITY HALL Orders filled promptly. ALL THE POPULAR SILKS FOR SPRING PONGEES, FOULARDS, Pongee Silk A very high grade of Hallinson’s all silk rough weave pongee, the proper fabric for Spring dresses. White and natural color, 36 inches wide—§2.25. Bordered Crepe Mallinson’s Roshanara crepe with dainty colored borders. This fabric is ideal for sport dresses. 40 inches wide—§5.50. CREPES AND CREPE DE CHINES Foulard Silk We have just received these new and very beautiful Cheney foulards for Spring. The designs are lovely, the colors delightful, 40 inches wide—$2.75. | . Pussy Willow Mallinson’s figured Pussy Willow Silk in the new designs for Spring and Summer dresses, 40 inches wide—$3.95. Crepe De Chine A very beautiful collection of printed crepe de chine in small, dainty designs and all the popular color combinations. 40 inches wide, §2.95. NEW SPRING WOOLENS FOR CPATS, DRESSES AND SKIRTS All wool camel’s hair, 56 inches wide, in plaid backgrounds for sport coats and skirts. Sponged and shrunk. Special—$3.95. All wool eponge, 42 inches wide in the popular shades for skirts and dresses. Spong- ed and All wool taffeta, 42 inches wide, for skirts and dresses.’ All colors. Sponged and shrunk. Regular price $2.00. Special—$1.50. DON'T BE TOO LATE To Take Advantage of OUR GREAT SPRING SALE of MEN’S SUITS AND TOPCOATS Made To Measure Saturday, March 3 . We will make to your measure, from any one of our new worsteds, homespuns and tweeds a suit of any style and any size for only— $36.75 EXTRA TROUSERS ............... $9.75 A splendid collection of Spring fabrics. Take your pick. TOPCOATS ALSO $36.75 ; Any style you want, sporty or conservative Any size. No extra charge for big men’s suits. shrunk. Regular $2 quality for—$1.79, All wool jersey cloth, 56 inches wide, in all the wanted colors. Made of French yarn, Best quality for $1.89 a yard. All wool French serge, 42 inches wide in navy and midnight blue for skirts and dresses. Fine quality, sponged and shrunk. Regular $2 quality for $1.59. All wool check eponge, 42 inches wide in all the leading colors. Tan, blue, gray, sand. For skirts and dresses. Sponged and shrunk. $3.00 goods for $2.25. —— BOYS’ MADRAS BLOUSES 98¢ Sizes 8 to 16 A well made blouse, and excellent ma- terials. A real $1.25 value to be sold as long as they last for 98¢c. Come early! 25% OFF ON ALL WINTER COATS FOR BOYS Last Chance! Mackinaws, Sheep-lined, and Cloth Coats. Coats go back to Regular Prices after this sale.