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s s g court in Germany in his shirt- | Mitchell, Miss Grace Stowell. man, Mrs. Louise Lindbergh, Mrs.|which will be presented to the new 10 NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1930. sleeves, however hot it may be. A Lingerie—Mrs. Joseph Mulligan, | Lewis Mitchell, Miss Nellle Cronin, | U. 8. Veterans’ hospital in Newing« LAW BODY NEARS |zt s i MARRIAGES SHOW ~ (BLAME MARINE SULCIDES By witness in a case at Darmstadt was liquor under federal constitutional ON HEAT IN NIGARAGUAfined 50 marks. The court of appeals Boys' Department—Mrs. George | Reidel, Mrs. Robert Vance, Mrs. A. restrictions.” EN“ uF ITS wflRK The convention, which opened last J”MP F[’R YEAR o Menths While on Duty at Munich reduced the fine to 15 |Kinkade. J. Savard. Columbia university is the largest night, is expected to be attended by 1 1, | £ day i b The desciples Definite Propositions May S000 | imoce about 5000 cnurcnes ~ in | DEpaIIMENt of Gommerce Learns By Jewelry—Mrs. Robert Bertini. There will be on dispfay in one|in respect to enrollment in the Millinery—Mrs. Kenneth Kron. of the show windows a knitted | United States. In 1929 more than |about 15,000 members during its their brotherhood. | s Be Made by Group | Facts of Divorce Rate Washington, Oct, 15 (UP)—Nica- afghan which has been made by|36,000 students were enrolled at l]UKE T[] LEAVE —_—— ragua's excessive heat and absence | i s > g | of home environment were blamed BYsRhington, [0k 15 (7 — Ap-| Washington, Oct. 15 (®) — Matri- |y marine officers yesterday for a | i Fountain—Miss Emma Schaal. ASK NEWSPAPERS Alsle Service—Mrs. Roger Whit- | members of Eddy-Golver Unit and | Columbia. proaching & showdown on their long D (AR LT, G Lo a o i o oW ,232,55 o ajority of the suicides that have | i study of prohibition, the members of F[]R [;[]RHNAT"]N the United States last year, while |occurred among marine corps, offi- 3Pl‘0hlblt10fl Ofilfllflls Sefld 1163 | FOR LIQUOR STANG: President Hoover's law enforcement during the same period 201475 di,|cers and enlisted men, sinco tho tionnaire to 3’000 Rditors marks but censured the witness. Four Men Killed Selves In Past 15 b e ieidhiadisl A b | United States began occupation of o Pl CiaonBnlon s, oS T o ronoraes: |the South American republic in The preliminary report on the|jgis, woutd soom e fortheoming wers an. | Will REpresent Great Britain at parent. Already some of the special committee which conducted the fact |today by the department of com- 1929 matrimonial statistics issued | In the past 15 months alone, four icides—one-third of all those | Washington, Oct. 15 (P—Wheth- er the newspapers of the country | committed at all marine corps posts as a whole are predominately wet, | —took place in Nicaragua, accord- dry or neutral on the subject of na- | |ing to records at headquarters here. |tional prohibition, is to be learned | Officers who have served in Nica- | by the prohibition bureau. | gua and other tropical posts spoke | Three thousand newspapers have 11so of the torrential rains. [ been sent questionnaires_. prepared “There’s nothing but heat in | by the division of research and pub- | taken up this investigation is wheth-| .55 7 rare Abyssinian fbex which |the Dreceding year's total by 50,062, | Nicaragua,” one officer said. *“And Lcenopationsof the bureau. Along | er the dry law is being enforced and, | faw hunters have ever succeeded in | OF 4.2 per cent. There had been a|Wwhen it isn't dry heat, it's wet heat | With the forms went a letter inform- | it not, whether it ‘can be enforced. | ¢pooting. decrease the preceding year of 1.5 by | —vou never saw such rain in your |Ing the editors that the prohibition | There have been private intimations | ; comparison with 1927. The divorces, | life. It pours for days and days on | bureau wished to get the attitude of | A cake weighing 150 pounds and| 1., o oy ocing an increase of 2.8 |end. Nicaragua without doubt is |the press of the nation upon the from the commission ranks that a| . bt it standing 5 feet, 5 inches high With 8| o "oopy over 1928, could not keep !the most dismal hole on earth. It's subject of the 18th amendment and negative is likely as the answer to | St" el nches A » the first question, but there has been | 22-inch gold base has been made In |, ' i1 the growth in marriages. | great wonder therc are not more | the administration of the dry’laws. suicides.” | The findings will be made public no authoritative statement to that|London and sent out to Ethiopia for) Figure Ratio effect. Chairman Wickersham has | ® banquet which is to be given bY| “yy . a5 of divorces to marriages, | i B e O O diOneac S thmes reminded the public|Sir Sdney Barton, British represent-| - -5 (556 U6 & UOECE D SRS S | analyzing the replies received. This o Taw 1s pertectly enforced, |ative, in honor of the coronation. publication is planned as one of a series, for the issuance of which the finding inquiry into prohibition have | merce showed 10.1 marriages were Abyssinian Fete reached some conclusions and are | | performed for every 1,000 of popu- prepared at the proper time to sub-| T,ondon, Oct. 15 (A — The Duke |lation, while divorces totaled 1.66 mit proposals to the whole commis- | o¢ Gloucester, speci envoy from |Der thousand. | sion. | Great Britain to the coronation of| The marriages recorded one of | The first decision confronting the | tne emperor of Abyssinia on Novem- | the largest vearly increases, numer- ten men and one woman Who have | per 2, hopes to bag & mountain ny- | ically and in percentage, exceeding response to numerous requests, | not even the law against murder. The duke will leave London to- | 4 7 3 showed that for each 6.1 marriages of To guide the commissioners are|morrow and travel overland to Mar- ‘l Flashes Life bureau will draw upon a $50,000 performed one couple was dissolved. | appropriation which congress made many new reports and the members | seilles where he will join the P. and | The year before the ratio was an | P. liner Ranpura, travelling to Aden | returned to their work today after a four day breathing spell which was ordered to permit full study of these papers. Consequently, with all of the facts now digested, the members believed they were ready to get down to the actual business of reaching definite conclusions on prohibition. But it is generally believed that the task of getting the eleven minds together on this subject will require some time. | CHURCH GROUPS FAVOR DRY LA Wonld Give Statute Five Yea More to Make Good ‘Washington, Oct. 15 (® — The conclusion that prohibition stand under fire for five years more was before the international conven- tion of disciples of Christ today. This assertion, coupled with a finding that the intensified wet cam- paign of the past year “was launch- ed to make more difficult the cnact- ment of recommendations of the Wickersham commission,” as well as to increase the wet strength in congress, was contained in the re- port of the brotherhood's board of temperance andisocial welfare. The report is to be offered for approval tomorrow. “The strategy of the opponents of | prohibition,” the report says, “scems | to consist of three e¢lements, namely to create the conviction in the public mind that prohibition is a failure and that conditions are worse than under the saloon system; to sccure | west coast, Buck toward the east. | Buck’s elapsed time from Los An- as an ordinary first-class passenger. There he will join H. M. S. Effing- ham which will carry him to Jibuti in French Somaliland. He and his staff will then proceed by a special royal train to Addis Ab- baba. After the coronation on November 2 feasting and ceremonies will con- | tinue in the capital for eight days and then the duke will leave for British Somaliland and will spend several days trekking on hunting expeditions after big game. Three Fliers Planning To Continue Hops Today Wichita, F » Qct (UP)— Three fliers—two women and a youth of 16—prepared today to speed onward to their quest of new transcontinental air records. Two of them, Mrs. Keith Miller ind Robert Buck, flew into Wichita rday, Mrs. Miller from {ansas City and the youthful New pilot from Amarillo. Mille who comes from Aus- tralia seeking a new woman's cross- country mark, is flying toward the geles into Wichita was 12 hours, nine minutes. Miss Laura Ingalls, St. Louis flier, who raced Buck part way from the west coast, remained in | she was | Amarillo, Tex, where grounded by bad weather. She hoped to continue her flight eastward to- day. ACTRESS DIES Barcelor: pain, Oct. 15 (A— Irene Albg actress, 1 day at the She was con- sidered the leading character actre of the contemporary Spanish stage. | greater than the first. | for conducting an educational cam- | Another effect of the unseasonably even six to one. | By the Associated Press. Nevada was the outstanding lead- | New York—DMusic is to soothe the er among the states both in mar-|jmpatience of folks waiting for riage and divorce. Divorces totaled trains. Loud speakers for radio | :fif:lioan(})‘}\[or‘?“:-‘flriwf: b(’l(‘l) of‘D;S- programs have becn installed in the | ulation, ate of marriages pennsylvania station. | per 1,000 was 63.7. This was attrib- | 1‘(20’5]“1'1'13 Field, N. Y. — The uted largely by the government sta- iceless airplane approaches per- ticians to the adoption of strict mar- p,n Mies Lldorado Jones has in- r“lge’rr“'s by its neighbor, ,Cfl“f‘f’f- vented a muffler which has been nia. The same reason was given for | {.ctoq in flights here. Arizona’s ratio of 17.3 per 1,000, the | “Sian: s e se “\‘"‘:} 1“3:‘\:( continent Delaware | Mok tent which folds up compact- CTOSS B aware |y {3 pheing tested by the war and :)‘“‘1‘\ the “:’o‘;f‘ur{“f““"‘;h""\,;‘;az"(‘i‘a‘"r‘:_' air ministers. It Is designed pri- TR it (lnar(xxly m(r aviators who land in iso- | WIS a0 ; S ated spots. | e e O (| Budapest, Hungary—Under police | e sl e Tt e 1 S ooie e Ene R orad E IO OB Bt S RTIRE rlve dayd abtloe P rlortita ) c nents blia jand deatiip cdesirlans {ssuancl otilicenses toithose nnaen | oot arear broad yellomananis ony) _;1 | their arms to attract the attention of 2k | motor car drivers. | New York—It should be worth while to tuhe in on the N. B. chain at 9:30 p. m. eastern time to- night. Mary Garden is to sing. . Thomas, Virgin Islands rines and sailors often amuse them- selves by thumping on a piano of | the vintage of 1 It was made in Denmark. The case is of Virginin Islands’ mahogany which went to | Denmark in the farm of a log. It is New York reported the most mar- | in Hotel 1829, which takes its name Sece Caiih 12 Illinois had from the year it was built. §4092, Pennsylvania 70,507, Ohio _ Triest. Italy—In appreciation of 65,679, Texas 63,173, and California the art of the actress Tatiana Pau- | completed the more than "50,000 class with Georgia Lowest Georgia had the lowest proportion | of divorces to r riages, one being granted only to each 13.3 new unions. In Nevada there was one di- vorce to each 2.3 marriages. | Numerically Texas led in divorces, with 18 Ilinois was next with 15,760; Ohio had 15,313, and Cali- fornia 15,099. The only other state have more than 10,000 divorces was Michigan with 11,981, lova, Gabriele d’Annunzio has sent her light silks which he painted him- self. SECOND PEAR CROP Lisbon, Portugal—A six pounder | Onio,” Oct. 15 (A— silver inkstand is Portugal's gift for | the horseshoe table in the quarters of the world eourt at The Hague. | Munich, Germany—It is highly | improper for a man to appear in| Southingt warm weather is drawing attention here—a pear tree which is now bear- ing its second crop of the year. Theodore Carlson, owner of the tree, says that the secopd yield is TASTE THE paign in favor of the dry laws. Some other educational campaign plans, proposed before the transfer of the prohibition unit from the treasury to the department of justice, met with various opposition and did not get far. One of these involved pos- ters for use in schools. The questionnaire to the news- papers specifically asks the editors to express themselves on whether they favor the 15th amendment and the national prohibition liw, wheth- er they are opposed to the law, or whether their editorial position is neutral. Legion Unit Assigns Charity Day Workers Mrs. Arthur H. Petts has made the following counter assignments for Charity Day, which will be con- ducted by Eddy-Glover unit at the Boston Store on October 17: Hostesses—Mrs. Arthur H. Petts, Mrs. Maurice Pease, Mrs. Stanley Traceski, Mrs. A. S. Grant. Tinens—Mrs. Elisabeth Timbrell, Miss Clara Doerr, Mrs. Jacob Ber- nascont. Men's Department—Mrs. Harry Ginsburg, Mrs. Charles Sahrbacher, Mrs. John Ball. Hosiery—Mrs. F. N. Whittemore, Mrs. Ralph Spencer. Gloves—Mrs. William Callahan, Mrs. M. W. Bannan. Domestics—Mrs. V. L. Eddy. Silks—Mrs. Fred W. Hoffman. Cosmetics—Mrs. Lillian McNickle. Shoes—Miss Vera Schade. Infants—Mrs. George Proctor, Mrs. Cedric Powers, Mrs. A. I. Schade. Draperies—Mrs. Fred Ensworth. Ready-to-Wear — Mrs. Howard DIFFERENCE/ BELMONT WHY YOU Should Have a WAYNE OIL BURNER 6’ (o] < o o O REMS You are primarily nterested, of course in good heating for your 1ome. Quiet, smokeless, Automatic Heat Control—with a freedom from all the annoyance and worg of old fashioned heating methods. But, there are a number of other good reasons why you should have a WAYNE oil burner in your home. A few are listed below:— 1. The WAYNE oil burner is economi- 7. Carefree comfort is assured in Wayne eal. The original cost is lo equires 7 heated homes. 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