New Britain Herald Newspaper, November 14, 1930, Page 12

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1930. [UEK, NOTBRAINS, | General Butler's Staff of Mascots |2 PILESUPMILL!(JNS T | summer when the greatest damage occurred inland, the force of the ent disturbance was concentrat- along the coast, the greatest de- ction being experienced in the oup of towns that are strung along the shore of the Adriatic from T venna in the north to a point ab 3t miles south of Ancona. Rosenwald Tells How He Came {0 Amass $300,000.000 Tajor General Smedley D. Butler had sent these Marine mas- nto the game between his Quantico, Va., football team and | rican Legion eleven, Ve, Brains story. But he only posed with th nd later, with 40,000 other fa to the Legionnaires by a tally of Tells a Family Joke HONUMENTS TELL UUAKEZUNESTURY Gives Away Million= : “ Latest Italian Upheaval Qceurs || on “Cali” of “Boot” Along Coast Heaviest Shocks Friday and Saturday Grog_p off3fl4.guits 50c Reduction on all Shirts now priced over $2.00 159, Off on all Boys’ Overcoats. Specials for Group of 40 Suits Sizes to 40 Y2 PRICE 209 OFF White Shirts Excepted Sizes 4 to 14. 9%, Off on all Topcoats and Overcoats. Prices were from $18.00 to $90.00. Knit-Tex and Winter- Tex Excepted. 109 Off on all Men’s Women’s and Boys’ Leather Coats. Now priced over $10.00. Globe Clothing House Cor. Main and West Main Streets the scoreboard might i venna, which originated in a|triumphal arch lagoon like Venice. ks to the silt carricd down by | centuri torrents, lies near th dge of a plain that 5 miles before it reache: the Apennine mountains. | 1813 1 this copstal plain | Popes until 1860. the ‘Heel’ of the peninsula. An- cona’s two principal monuments sketch two important chapters in its history. n. his wife, and his sister crected the Roman senate in A. D. 155 ia atitude for the impovement of the rbor. Not far away is a second | work by Pope Clement XII sixteen later. The port had becom a-| Papal territory in 1532 and except for an interim under French and | Austrian control between 1796 and . remained in the hands of the The city now h. imini, also [a population approximately 54,00 cdge quake re- s barely t o ¥ miles south of Rimini s Apennines reach the cal structure—mot the Monuments Sketch History neona. largest city on “Most of the towns hardest hit by A{the carth tremors are sea bathing . | resorts in the summer, and it was 1o the bath houses in several of the ccmmunities that the injured were taken. These woodeh struc- Iy to be injured Bion GO e o) <ldwellings and hospitals built of Rimini is probably th thing resort in Italy but even at Pesaro can be class- y during th ost popul a local indu mer months. shing Town Center of Quake “Senigallia icaths occurrs where most of the is also on the se. arily a fishing tow the earthquake dis- ved to have been imunity of 12,400 At the land end of one of | |its picrs is a triumphal arch of Tra- | marking similar | e Gypsy “Curse” Invoked When Party Is Fined Evanston, Jll, Nov. 14 (®— Evanston was under a Gypsy e today, but apparently no one was getting excited about it. 1t all happened when five Gyp- sies, charged with speeding in a motor car, sprinkled incense about the court room of Magis- trate Harry H. Porter, explaining that this was a curse on the city which would take effect, if and when, they were fined or given other treatment they considered unfavorable. Magistrate Porter thought about it briefly and then decided he would take a chance by fining them a total of $35 = inhabitants than to any of the other able towns. | ward the northern edge of the carthquake area, but not included | among the placcs listed as svffering destruction to buildings or loss of life, is the world’s smallest repub- lic, San Marino. It lies only 40 | nciles from Senigallia, and ten miles {from the coast near Rimini. 3 little republic, only 38 square miles | in extent, has its capital and chief | tewn (also named San Marino) | perched on Monte Titano, 2,000 above the Adriatic. The tiny s is entirely, surrounded hy territory.” Sl | | Kerchiefs lfl MAIN STEEET Saturday is the Last Day of Our STOCK REDUCTION - SALE A Storewide Event — Offering Values For Everyone MILLINERY COATS BLuLs ‘\I‘_';Aflr.s‘\” Fal Lavishly Trimmed With Fur! Embodying the Newest Styles 250 O‘H $2950 $4950 Every Hat is Plainl £49.50 Formerly to Marked £89.50 Sclect Your Hat and Deduct 25% From It. DRESSES 200 New Fall Styles Special for the Event HOSIERY By Special Arrangement With GOTHAM GOLD STRIPE And Other Leading Manufacturers CHIFFON AND SERVICE WEIGHTS Pointed J{eel Formerly Priced Square Heel $l 10 t0 $1.95 Divided in Two Groups Our Reg. $10.95 Dress Now $7.95 Our Reg. $16.50 Dress Now $12.95 Buy early while the sizes and colors are complete. SPECIAL $5.00 COME EARLY ! Saturday Morning I'rom 9 A. M. to 12 Noon 25 DRESSES Our Usual $10.95 Grade Spend Ten Cents More Each Day and Help Drive Hard Times Away Do vou want to do vour bit to relieve unemployment and hard times? Then invest one more dime per day in something vou really need or want. When you spend just one dime, you start something. You start a movement which he]p» everyone through whose hands that dime will pass. You get vour money's worth from Merchant Brown. Brown uses that dime to replenish his stock of merchandise, getting his money’s worth from Wholesaler Smith. Smith in turn spends that -dime with Manufac- turer Johnston. And Johnston invests it in more materials and LABOR. Thus, your dime not only gives you your full money’'s worth; it also gives increased purchasing power to many others . . . For the same dlme, once it is taken from your purse or pocket and put back into active circu- lation, will buy ten CENTS” worth of commodities if spent only once a vear, or ten DOLLARS’ worth if spent a hundred times a year. few years ago, we were all asked to buy Liberty Bonds “till it hurts.” Today we are on the battlefield of another war, equally destruc- tive of values. We are fighting a nationwide buyers’ strike that is causing untold financial losses and actual physical suffering. But we can win this }\_Fnz'iziflamst the enemies of prosperity, if each one of us will BUY TILL JRTS. If each of us will invest just 10c more per day in something we really need or want, we will increase the nation’s total purchases within the next 12 months, by more than four and one-half BILLIONS OF DOLLARS. Do your bit. Buy now, or sigh later. Spend just one more dime each day and help drive hard times away. Sponsored By The New Britain Herald Circulation Over 15,000 Daily The Herald Has Over Three Times the Circulation Of Any Other Newspaper Published in New Britain Abour Iforty |dafferent , “Kinds of 7 metal n.ri lt“%;tnge making the avera automddbile - TRUTH STRANGER THAN FICTION ‘Theawugewamloses ; ayoundl.nd ahalf a / ‘%da_y | CARVERS 890 Up ROASTERS We have one which holds & 6 Ib. roast for $1.00 Others up to $1.50 HEATERS OiL and ELECTRIC COTTON GLOVES 10c Up l RANGE OIL BURNERS Come in and get our pnces—Terms if desired 73 ARCH ST. Plumbing SHOTGUNS and Shells Hardware Phone 106 ;Use Herald Classified Ads For Quick Results NEW BRITAIN RADIO SHOW HOME EXPOSITION STATE ARMORY Arch Street NOV. 17 to 22 INTERESTING! Novel! PHOTO RADIO The actual transmission of photographs by radio In charge of R O A engineer, who sends pictures every half hour on this latest marvel of radio. Sec the pictures of the Governor, Mayor and other prominent people received by radio, THE “SEVEN AGES OF RADIO” Marconi's original radio set used in 1901: the elaborate Navy reccivers developed soon after; other sets up to present day radio. SHIP MODEL AND RADIO COMPASS <hows exactly how it Is controlled by radio compass 54 used on large tranzatlantic liners of today— L of interest! WORLD’S LARGEST AND SMALLEST RADIO TUBES SEE THE THEREMIN Most wonderful musical instruments ever invented. Plays music by the wave of your hand. Come and try it. SEE THE HIGH FREQUENCY FURNACE Metal heated to the melting: point and human hand inserted comes out uninjured! A spectacular display. Very interesting. Startling! I b given e gifts, donated h\ cxhibitors. ADMISSION WATCH FOR THE 50-50 PLAN AT THE SHOW ANDERSON ELECTRIC CO.

Other pages from this issue: