New Britain Herald Newspaper, December 3, 1915, Page 7

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Suit or Overcoat Made to Measure will give you a Suit Free. OPEN EVENINGS TILL 9 P. M. HERE'S WELCOME NEWS TO MEN WHO INTEND GETTING A NEW SUIT FOR CHRISTMAS' I have scraped up an immense stock ends from one of the largest woolen mills in Lawrence, Mass., whose reputa- tion for producing fine woolens is second to none. The goods are principally single suit lenghts, but in no case is there more than fifteen yards of any one kind. On account of the fact that the yardage was too small to be dis- posed of to the jobbing houses, who require entire pieces for their trade, the lot was sold to me at about one-fourth the regular price. Included are all Fall colorings such as brown, gray, silk mixture, fancy worsteds and serges. Beginning tonight entire purchase goes on sale at price that any man can afford to give himself a Christmas Present. And if you can duplicate the value anywhere in the city for less than $18.00, I Order your Chrristmas Suit now. All garments tailored on premises. “TOM” MURRA $12.50 394 Main Street New Britain .’ MONDAY AND SATURDAY 10 P. M. “Submarines? Poof! We Fear Them Not!” Says Tommasso As He Sails For Italy WiTH 2.200 ITAL SAILS from cities in the west. band played Italian airs and the res- ervisls waved Italian flags until the liner was well on her way down the bay. None of them seemed at all concerned about the possibility of the Verdi meeting a submarine in Lining the rails of the new Trans- itlantic Italiana line steamship Guis- | sppyVerdi, when she sailed from Jer: jey city for Naples and Genoa, were 2,200 Italian reservists, most of them 1AN RESERVISTS The liner’s : the Mediterranean: thronged the pier for some time be- fore the carried portmanteaus, ble of excited men and their baggage delayed the departure iwo hours. the attention which it A ordinarily good crop | estimated bushels of good deserves. in Vermont quality. But this i New England will hope that such ef- forts may meet with the largest suc- cess and that Vermont’s crop may be more than doubled. But Vermont should not have a monopoly of this sort of thing. That state has no advantage over Connecti- cut, and in fact is far behind us in some matters. We also have the land which can be used for apple raising profitably. We have the cli- mate which apples need if they are to get that peculiar twang which consti- tutes a good part of their excellence. And we are near the markets, and even near the points of shipments for the foreign market. In some years in the past lack of proper facliities 'has resulted in large crops which did not reach their proper markets. But certainly there is ability enough In the state so to organize distribution. The Speakership Today. (Washington Star.) There is now before us an exhibi- tion of the great change made four years ago when the office of speak- er of the House was stripped of all real power, and its occupant left with nothing but the gravel in his hand. Until then the speakership j had been second in importance only to the presidency. Since then it has possessed next to no importance at all. It would have been quite lost to view except for the man occupying it. He has conferred distinction up- on it, rather than it upon him. The house is assembling at a time of the utmost gravity. Not two o three, but many things are pressins for attention. It is a time when no: only every member should do duty, but should bhe assigned so to give the country the best that ir him. No square peg should be put into a round hole, no round peg into a square hole. Every piece of the machine should be in its proper place { But what do we see? One of the most experienced members of the body, its most effective orator, and one of its most striking and interest- ing personalities, assigned to the du- ties of a presiding officer, with his talents limited to exercise over points of order and to the putting of motions to adjourn. Could anything be le: logical or less business-like? Was ever before so much good legislative material wasted? Of course, Mr. Clark can descend to the floor and speak on any subject as is The reservists liner sailed. Most of them and the jum- of the liner New England Apples- trouble to taste these apples, and |There seems to be some quality in our | that appeals to him; can record his (New Haven Union.) probably most people have, knows | soil which gives apples raised here i|vote on any question that comes > le growers not only | that their greatest appeal in most| flavor such as cannot be imparted by |up; can make suggestions to any P crapnie, 8 R cases is not in the flavor but in the! the richer, but in some ways less sat- | member or any committee on any makb a business of raising apples, | appearance and in the way they are |’ factory, soil of the regions in the | matter in hand. But such privileg but have brought the packing and|packed. If Connecticut apples were) far west. do not cancel the fact that, as he is marketing of apples down to a sci- ! packed and marketed with such care Just now Vermont is making & |left by the present arrangement, he ence. Everybody who has. taken the nothing could stand - before them.) serious effort to give apple raising]must “butt in," or wait for an invi- Y is at something like 3,200,000 far below what might be raised, con- sidering the soil and climate of Ver- his | The Curran Dry Goods i | COAT AND SATURDAY WILL BE THE at most RIDICULOUS PRICES. Suit at Reduced Prices. Here is of the season. Come in and look over our EXTRAORDINARY COATS AND SUITS NEW BRITAIN EVER HEARD OF. We put our entire stock of COATS AND SUITS on Sale Tomo JANUARY or later when the season is over to buy a Coat chase your Coat or Suit at a Big Saving in Price at the Garments, and see the wonderful values offered. SUIT SAL GREATEST BARGAIN DAY You do not have to wait a golden Opportunity to Pu [ well selected stock of Choi AT LESS THAN HALF FURS.-.FURS.FURS THEIR REAL VALUE Rings for Women. Children and Babies. AN EXTRAORDINARY RING SALE Manufacturer’s SampleLine of Gold Shell Rings GGl All of the latest designs of the Jewelers’ art. - 19¢ each i, 7 N in- -\ “ PICTUR SPECIAL AT, each Less than the price of frame. Neatly Framed Pictures, all good subjects, 50c and 75c¢ values. K SALKE . 25¢ GLOVE SPECIAL Women’s Imported Kid Gloves, $1.00 values,at ............ 79c HANDKERCHIEF SPECIAL Imported Handkerchiefs, neatly 5 embroidered, 10c value, at . . . . - MEN'S WEAR Men’s Negligee Shirts, neat patterns, fine percale, $1.00 value. SPRCIAL AT .... Men’s Fleeced Lined Underwear, 50c value. 59¢ L AT 350 "SPECIAL AT o % T9¢ 39c ) value. Men’s Fleeced Ribbed Underwear, all sizes, 50c¢ value. Men’s SPECIAL AT Natural mont. , And so organized efforts are Wool Underwear, 00 79c being made to get the farmers to value. SPECIAL AT . e plant new trees and to take better Men’s Wool Sweaters, in oxford, 50 98 care of the old ones. The rest of value. SPECIAL AT .............. e c Extra Heavy Shaker Knit Coat Sweaters, in ox- SPRCIAL AT .. $1.49 UNDERWEAR and HOSIER ‘Women'’s Fine Ribbed Bleached Undervest and Pants, 50c value. SPECIAL AT . 39 4 69¢ ‘Women’s Fine Ribbed Bleached Union Suits, $1.00 value. SPECIAL AT .. 19¢ 174 Women’s Ribbed Vest and Pants, 25¢ value. SPECIAL AT .. . shesn Women’s Fine Silk Lisle Hose, 25¢ value. gy 79¢ ‘Women’s Cashmere Finish Hose, 19¢ value. lo SPECIAL AT Children’s School Hose in black, all sizes, 1% 9c : ‘Women'’s Silk Hose in black, $1.00 and $1.25 value. SPECIAL AT SPECIAL AT value. SPECIAL AT pi'spasengas tation. Nothing is expected of him , nickle.” on his own initiative. | Take the case of preparedness. It in-ordinary, is reasonably certain that had not the tograph and think, president invitzd him, Mr. Clark would not have called at the White House to discuss the most important issue of the day. And it so happens Ford, Thomas that on that issue Mr. Clark is in Burbank. agreement with the president and | public sentiment, while the man who under the new arrangement is lead- er of the House is in opposition. | This change as to the speakership was ordered because of the clamor the democrats had made against what they called “Cannonism.” But that clamor had also .embraced ‘gagz rule;” and yet as to that they have copied the republicans most faith- fully. Why make fish of one feature of “Cannonism’” and flesh of another? are, efficiency lies in the men of mechanical vented and made to p it manufactures and this efficiency and the b which we accompl. Three Men in 2 Picture. (Bridgeport Telegram.) In a group photograph recently ar- irived in the editor's mail, are *three in factories of this city vised by Bridgeport in men, all past middle life. The pho- | tected by patents. i tograph is an informal one and has| Connecticut has b | apparently caught these men in a | natural attitude and with natural ex- pressions, not camera-faces. A char- acter student, analyzing this photo- graph would be struck by the simi- v in this trio of faces. Two of e men have white hair; the third has white, tinged with iron gray. All of the faces are healthy looking, but lean and clean cut, apparent evidence patents annually tak manufacturing towns patent office busy. and Bridgeport are towns and in proporti the patents taken out very nearly alike in not appear to dimini ed to compare notes of their charges. We know, by the frank, open, sunny | done they will be ab! expression of their faces, that they | 800ds we now sell to t are devotces of the simple life. They probably have country parishes and eke out a scanty salary, while deal- | countries with respect ing out kindliness and good cheer to their parishione The practical man-emphasis on the practical—would look at the picture in some scorn. “Those men,’ he would or perhaps he would say “them guys”) “won’t amount to much. Too {dreamy. Ne foresight. Yook at their Il of them one thousand miles in the clouds somewhere. Son- ny, when you see a man with a face like that, keep away from his. He's a dreamer. He'll never make a Forty years ago the Cartridge company, making cartridges for superintendent, A. C. of the most .noted i chinery and started them independent of to make the most Poets, artists, musicians, dreamers- | for Mexico, but neither Russis would look at the of our own kind. Wonder who they for I'd liké to know them.” As a matter of fact they are Henry Edison and Luther Connecticut’s Inventive Genlus. (Bridgeport Standard.) The Waterbury American asks its readers to “think over” the fact that a good part of Waterbury’s industrial proud,” it says, “‘to have others notice port is in very much the same posi- Hundreds of articles turned out immense quantities in the manu- first of the states in the number of its activity of the inventive impulse does from us the machinery by which it is Bridgeport has always been liberal in its treatment of outside cities and the kind to which the American refers. which had been world, to Russia, where he set up ma- Russians which , would have made they had possessed the skill and abil~ ity to improve upon the teaching and They did something of the same | Mexico developed any great of capacity for continuing the ing of ammunition when left to own devices. (Boston Post.) Senator Lodge, returning to ington and getting up steam for year's elections, makes a p that the republican presidential will carry Massachusetts by ,000 to 100,000.” Which 1s giderable prophecy. Let's see! Governor-elect MoCall, in parts, is the greatest vote- the republican ranks, with the exception of Justice Hughes. Justice Hughes hag positively to be a presidential candidate.) Mr. MecCall defeated Go ‘Walsh by considerably less than 7, plurality, A change of 4 3,500 votes would have defeated Call and re-elected Walsh, Wonderfully popular as Gow Walsh personally is, he would compare with President Wilson vote-getter under conditions ing in recent months, Pres! ‘Wilson has greater republican and dependent following in Massachu today than any other living demoo S0 here is Senator Lodge's lem. If he intends to make good that prophecy of his: pho- ‘‘Here are thrce machinery its gentus have in- roduce the goods sells. “We are ways and means ish it.” Bridge- are articles de- ventors and pro- een among the en out, and its have kept the Both Waterbury manufacturing on to population in each must be number. The sh, although it | ot clean life and a hard-working | takes on new phases and develops He must take a less popular jone. All three men have light, deep- | along new lines as the conditions of | ¢than Mr, McCall to oppose & | set, dreamy eyes, and wide mouths, | life and industry change. Speaking | popular man than Mr. Walsh: and over the face of each plays a | of how other towns may learn the |then he says he's going to roll smile, friendly, humorous, quizzical | ways of Waterbury and profit by that | “from 75,000 to 100,000 plurality. and kindl, “Here are three fine | knowledge the American says: “But It can’t be done, Senator! It clergymen,” one would say, “gather- | if they learn how to do it and obtain |pe done! le to make the Wh Bell Rings, he market.” - (Manchester Herald.) ‘When the bell on the mereh cash register rings the echo is h way out in the factory, As the goods move over the com er of the dealer, progress is reco all along the line, That is why the manufacturers such good results from newsp advertising. i1 When the newspaj advirtl appears the dealer gets Busy, The manufacturer f the 1 almost immediately, and /both deale and manufactureer are stimulated u little extra push, to assistance of Union Metallic Russia, sent its Hobbs, then one nventors in the . p: v« a plant for the this country if e e e e e of it possible.

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