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WISCONSIN ROWERS IN HUDSON REGATTA That Instiiution to Be Represented | at Poughkespsie This Year Madison, Wis, April 15.—Wiscon- | #in will be represented at the inter- \yne;late regatta at Poughkeepsie, N, Y., June 17, for the first time in ten years, if the Badger crew proves worthy in its tryouts, according to Coach H. E. Vail. The university ath- letie council has approved sending the varsity crew to the eastern meet, For the past two months, Badger crew aspirants have been going through daily indoor practice and as soon as the lakes around Madison clear up, Coach Vail will put his men on the water. Not until he has seen the team at work on the lakes can he determine the prospects of the team in the intercollegiate meet, Vail de- clares, . The Badger coach has four of last i vear's crew as a basis for the team. | I'he veterans are Capt. R. J. Scheutz, |appeared while the crew of the coast | yation in many of the M. MKINLEY SINKIKG. | BECAUSE OF QUAKES| Tradition Flax It That Alaska Peak Sinks About Two Feet A Year { McKinley Park, Alaska, April 18.— | Tradition has it that Mount McKin- | ley, the loftiest peak on the Ameri- | can continent, sinks about two feet a year from its official altitude of 20,- 300 feet. | Residents of the region are convine- | ed that this happens. They point out that there is an average of four earth- | quake shooks a year, and contend that the mountain settles about six inches | with each tremor. By way of attempted confirmation, | they refer to the Aleutian Islands. | According to recent reports from sci- | entific sources, no one can state the | location or altitude of many of the | small islands in the Aleutian archi- | pelago. One day an island may ap- pear well above water and the next dy it may have vanished, | Numerous small islands, including | Bogoslov, are reported to have disap- | * peared without a trace. Bogoslov is | rccalled as the island which syddenly | NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, APRIL 18, 1924 Deligh ragrant "SALADA" TE A has a pure, fresh flavor beyond Ask for a pacKage today. compare. the play, were most harmonious.” The up-to-date dressing gown in satin broche, and the “elegant if amusing” bathrobe appearing in other scenes get as much notice as if they had been | the costumes of the leading ladies. Men's costumes for the Riviera in an- | other play are fully described, with | special mention of the shirts, “which | are poems.” 3 COLONIES LACK MONEY Lisbon, April 18.—The financial sit- Portuguese H. E. Johnson, captain of last year's | guard cutter Bear looked on, in 1906. | colonies is arousing the anxiety of the team, O, L. Jones and H. J. Bentson. | For these topographical freaks the home government. Fhe minister of All four of these are starboard men | Llame is placed on Mount Katmai and | colonies has requested the governors with two years' experience. Coach Vail is faced with the task of | developing a new set of port-siders to | balance his eight. E. M. Plettner, K. | . By and G. €. Jax, members of the junlor erew last season, are prom- ising candidates, Previous to 1915, Wisconsin was | represented at the national regatia cach year since 1898, Since the war, however, interest in the sport here lagged and no effort was made, until this year, to compete in the nationa! meet, . Coach Vail is an old timer at the boating sport. He has considerable | cxperience as an oarsman himself, | coming from Nova Scotia where he | established a credible record, He coached on the staff at Harvard for | iwo years and has been the Badger mentor since 1912, IS BOBBER A BARBER? COURT HOLDS NEGATIVE Washinglon Justice Has Perplexing Question Imvolving Poetry Which Is Recited By The Judge, Seattle, Wash., April 18,~Whether ' a hobber is a barber, a question that | has disturbed the state of Washing- | ton since the legislature a year ago enacted that barbers must have i cenges, evoked the classies when a case reached Judge J. T. Ronald in | wiperior court here on appeal from | the justice court “Reanty pariors, like haseball, hecome a national amusement,” Judge | lionald rematked in deciding that Lobhers need't he leonsed barbers, The lawyers having dealt with the | case of Samson and Delilah, the judge | hrought out some lines from *Ailton and other poete’ Lamenting the modern spirit of women, “which has yobhed her of her chief charm, to wake wigs and toupes for men,” the court yet admonished her “Then ceass, hrizht nymph, to mourn thy ravished hair ! “Which adds new glory ing sphere,” Povhaps, riused the udicial mind de jtself up, Anna Larson, ks William Hoffman, unli- d in @, beauty porlor, “long, loore hair fling deftly Wl her head,” or perhnps a8 a beantiful mist falling down o her wrist vy a thing and K , onrt benuty or workers have 1o the jokes aminations as have | | 1o the shin- ! braided and | concluded, oughta't to lrarn to poss ex- | rhera Bori: of Bulgaria Likes (limbing His Mountains Troyan, Bulgaria, April 18, —King Foris has just performed a remark. able fest as a mountain climber. Ae- companied by a young professor from the University of Sofia, his majesty | appeared unespeetedly at the Troyan monastery, an ancient institution n ihe Balkans nedar here, spent the night in a monk's eell, a nded serviees in the morning and started with his eompanion fto the peak | knawn as Zelenikovetz climh of three hours and, chureh Tt was a like avery mountain elimber, the king carfied his modcst luncheon, together with seme sclentific instruments and & yug, slung over his shoulders in a knapsack. It was a hards climb, for the show was considerably more than knee deep. 1t was nightfall when King Boris teturned to the monastery, and it was only then that the monks discovered his identity. EMIGRATE TO ARGENTINA Buenos Aires, April 18.—The Ttal- ian government proposes te carry out an extensive scheme for promoting the emigration of Ttalian agricultural Ja- borets to Argentina. Tt becomes ef- feetive in April with the departure | from Ttaly of the first contingent of workers, These laborers will be pro- vided by the Ttalian government with the necessary resources for starting work on land of their own. T1§is un- | derstood that this colonization scheme in elosely connected with another one | to.augment steamship services be. tween Ttaly and Argentina. | CONSTIPATION | Is the Curse of Creation and 90 per cent of the start of every serious sickness—causing de- pression of spirits, Irritability, drowsiness, loss of appetite, cor rect this trouble at once, and you will be as near proof against pos- Pavaloff volcanoes, which intermit- tently send out dense clouds of smoke and flame. Paris Critics Describe Male Players’ Costumes | Paris, April 18,—Descriptions of the costumes of actors is the latest thing in some Paris newspapers. The rcad-l ers of one journal were told recently that pajamas worn by two actors in | | can crepe, if somewhat daring, like MONEY SAVING SPECIALS FOR SATURDAY AT ‘ Best Pure Lard 2 lbs, 25¢ NUALITY JECONOMY PRITES " Morning Specials From 7 A. M. to 12:30 ‘Noon LEAN FRESH SHOULDERS ARMOUR’S SHIELD HAMS DOMINO GRANULATED Special LEAN 3P M o5 P M. SMOKED of the various colonies to investizate the matt and suggest measures for improvement, SWALLOWED HIS MASTER'S DICE Berlin, April 18,—Operating on an ailing bulldog, a Berlin veterinary found in its stomach a set of dice, the property of its student owner. From a dachshund that rattled strangely when it ran, the same veterinary re- {a play produced last week, “in Moro- | moved an iron ball and a big stone. |Uolh patients recovered. THE NEW BRITAIN; ~ MARKET (0. 318 MAINST ' r | GoOns AT - | [ | | | | | { | H423 | 1 | | | | Aristocrats of Germany Widely Aid Their Class | Leipsic, April 18.—The association of German aristocrats has more than | trebled in membership during the 1as§"; three years., From an organization founded by 30 noble Prussians some §0 years ago, it now claims an en- | roliment of 15,000. The association has become very ac- tive in educational work, and has es- | tablished schools in several population centers where members of aristocratic families may take courses in cooking, household management and nursing, | and learn other duties pertaining to the home. Considerable attention, too, | has been paid by the members of late to teaching sosial hygiene. A recent report of the directors sets forth plans | for additional housing facilities for old people’s rest homes conducted by the association, where dependent aged men and women of the society may spend their last days in peace and comfort. A deep blue color of the sky, even | when seen through clouds, indicates an approaching storm. ! Evaporated Milk 8 cans 29¢ TEL. 2485 BEST MAINE POTATOES ARMOUR'S STAR HAMS SUGAR - - - 1b.9c Shoulders, lb.wl Oc All Day Specials in All Departments ROAST PORK LEGS GENUINE LAMB ... PRIME RIB ROASTS ROAST VEAL BONELESS POT ROAST i T HAMBURG SUGAR CURED BACON BEEF LIVER LAMB FORES CORNED BEEF . BEST FRANKFOR WE HAVE A FULL L Ib. 25¢ | FRESH Cl . b, . Ih. 12¢ | CALVES’ LIVER . I, 25¢ | PORK SAUSAGE .. BOILING BEEF ... COTTAGE HAMS ... " th. 10¢ Ib, 18e .. b, 10¢ .. 32¢ SWIFT'S PREMIUM, ARMOUR'S STAR, SPERRY & BARNES STRICTLY FRESH! EGGS WEDGWOOD CREAMERY " GOOD LUCK OLEO 320 b Butter "FRESH MADE PEANUT BUTTER 1h. 2 qu. 55e¢. Fresh From The Churn = 1 NUCOA NUT OLEO | PILLSBURY’S FLOUR FRESH FIG BARS FRESH CRISP .\'u(g.::.-“ ... 2 cans 256 Je',.'\‘}l Flavors, pkg IOC by . 9 rolls 25C e ued8e Not-A-Seed Raisins 2 pkgs. GINGER SNAPS PORK AND BEANS ! Fancy ! Peas ... | Reyal Lunch | Crackers p Crac 2 Ibs, 25C Qllf::‘cff;:;t'z 1b. box 25C ~ Wheal ...,pkg.llc | Wheat 23¢ FANCY FULL CREAM CHEESE. " | FIRST PRIZE NUT OLEO STRICTLY FRESH! EGGS Ibs 89c . Th, 32¢ 29¢cw sack 97¢ 2 Ibs. 25¢ 2 Ibs. 25¢ 3 Ibs. 25¢ 25¢ 33c 29c¢ 15¢ Solid Packed Tomatoes 2 cans Premier Salad Dressing Ige bot Rumford’s Baking Powder .... Ibh. 0ld Dutch Cleanser 2 cans We Carry a Full Line of Fancey Canned Fruits Consisting of l‘cnché*. Pineapples, Cherries, Raspberries, Loganberries, Blackberries, Blueberdes, Fruit Salad and Grapefruit LARGE FLORIDA 'ORANGES, doz 23c LARGE RIPE BANANAS, doz 25c CALIFORNIA SUNKIST LEMONS ....... EXTRA HEAVY GRAPEFRUIT . 4 Eor 25¢ Bunch Fresh Cut Spinach ... Sweet Green | Peppers ... qt. Fancy Baldwin Apples .. 3 qts. 18¢ 25¢ Cflglfing Beans qt. 250 l Kiln Dried Sweet 25c Potatoes 2 Ibs. New G e(“'lbh";e"..‘lb. SC %‘(lm"?;::vch lgc ‘ 15¢ Onions .. 4 Iba Fresh Crisp zoc Celery ... beh. " ASPARAGUS, TOMATOES, ICEBERG LETTUCE, CUKES AND RADISHES A World of Lovely HATS For Easter Wear Ultra Smart in Style—Yet So Moderately Priced $5.00 - $16.50 A radiant collection of model hats comparable only with the ex- clusive—hats that bear charm and individuality — hats that fairly breathe of Springtime. In colors—from the always alluring black to the riotous high colors of Spring—with new and novel versions of adornment. Here Are a Few Extra Specials for Tomorrow Sport Hats all styles and colors $1.95 to $6.95 ————— One Group of Hats wonderful values Special $3.95 value $6.50 —————————— CHILDREN’S AND MISSES’ HATS See them in our Children’s Dept.—A wonderful sclection and enough to choose from $1.95 up to $5.98 A Wonderful Selection of Flowers, Wreaths, Fancies and Supplies at Lowest Prices One Table of Hats Special $2.95 value $5.00 _—— Goldenblum Millinery Co. Main and Court Sts., New Britain , “On the Square” Your Money’s Worth Or Your Money Back The o Reliable Store | | D. MILLER & CO. 26 Church Street SPECIAL ' FOR SATURDAY Men's» Topkis Athletic Union Suits, 98¢, 39¢, Ladies' Silk Hosiery, 5%¢, 98¢, to £2.00 pr Men’s Silk Lisle Hose, 25¢ pair. Bromley's Lace Curtain Material, 12¢, 59%¢ yard. Bromley's Neck Lace Curtains, $2.75 to £3.25, $3.50, $5.00 pair. Velvet Rugs, 3.8x10.6, $37.50. Wilton Velvet Rugs, 9x12, Saturday only, £75.00. Bath Mats, from $1.25 to $4.25. Men's Middlesex Hose, heavy quality, 25¢ pair. Men's Silk Hose, 30¢ and 79¢ pair. Ladies’ “Futurist” Underwear, 98¢, $1.25, ‘ $1.59, $2.98, Ladies' Summer Union Suits, 3% to T3¢, P S Armstrong's Linoleum Rugs — 9x1056, Men's Shirts and Drawers, 79¢ to 87¢ gar- ‘ £15.50; 9x12, $16.50. s, | Window Shades, 5%, 79, $1.10, $1.25, Men's Union Suits, 79¢, 98¢, $1.12. | $1.59. Armstrong’s Printed Linoleum, $1.00 =q. Rubber Mats, 16x28 size, heavy quality, yard. $1.45. . Tnlaid Linoleum, $1.50, $1.75, $2.00, $2.25, | Cocon Mats, 98¢ and §1.25, $2.98 sq. yard, | We carry a fall line of Curtain Rods. 14