New Britain Herald Newspaper, April 14, 1916, Page 8

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G | O to the ground floor stores andlook ata $25 suit then come to our upstairsshopandsee the same garments, the same tailoring, style and fabric for $15. There is no differ- ence in the suit, but there is a difference n the price for this reason. i We manufacture MONROE CLOTHES ourselves. 'e dispense with highrent by selling upstairs. We ave no charge accounts and no losses. We have 10 “sales” and therefore no necessity for marking lothes high now to allow for reductions later, so py combining all these savings we find it a simp- > matter fo sell $25 suits at $15. Should you find fter buying a MONROE suit you did not receive e value we claim, you are privileged to bring e garment back here or to the oifice of THE NEW BRITAIN HERALD and your money will be cheer- nlly refunded. No ifs or ands. Jonroe Clothes Shop Inc. 5 Asylum St., Hartford, Upstairs. Thos. Light, Pres. EELEY'S GARAGE tomobile Accessories Storage epairing a Specialty [Elm and Franklin Sts. ’Phone BOWLING, POOL,—FINE | | LIQUORS AND CIGARS OLSON’S CAFE (Successor to Hilding Nelson) 172-174 ARCH ST. ENIER. PICKHARDT & DUNN 7 MAIN STREET. OPPOSITE ARCH. TE‘I:EPHONE 3172 \dvance Easter Displays Emphasizing the Latest Styles The gre Parade will soon be here. with lavi his important annual even SUTTS, DRESSES, WAISTS, COATS, STLK ‘We have prepared departments of dress and dress accessories for STOCKINGS, RIBBONS, NECKWEAR, HANDKERCHIEFS Authentic in style and superior in quality, LINGERIE UNDERWE AR, Pink and White Batiste, Gowns, land Camisoles. An unequalled assortment of dainty models. CORSETS. All the best known makes represented “Gossard” front lace corset. here, Envelope Chemise, Combinations including the Events Tonighi “Officer 666, ceum theater. ter. Vaudeville and Keeney's theater. moving pictu Boys' club campaign fund commit- tee meets in City hall i board Methodist “mt:r't,\ in church parlors. Methodist Ladies’ { church. | »per, Methodist L. D. Penfield camp, S. of in G. A. R. hall. New Britain council, F. B. L., in Judd’'s hall. ", meets meets FORM LOYAL LEGION. and Girls Invited Boys to Mission { Rooms. [ The institution or a Loyal Legion | connected with the w. C. T. U. will | take place tomorrow afternoon in the Hillerest mission rooms on \West Main | street. It will be open to all boys and | Eirls. Enough boys and girls have been !sevurcd to ensuré the success of the | legion, which will be instituted by i Mrs. W. P. Corbin, assisted by Mrs. 1 J. J. Coats. The aim of the to- teach the young minds the evils of alcohol wind cigarettes. legion is High class photo plays, Fox’s thea- | quit | accept jobs out doors where the op- | | portunity to bask i Iron worlk chureh ¢ Hilleres SR SPRING FEVER EVIDENC Workmen " in Local Factorics Quit Work When “Old Sol” Gets Busy. Two of the local manufacturing concerns felt the effect of the impend- ing attacks of “spring fever” yester- day when several of their workmen during the day, presumably to in the sunshine pre- oftener., Sixteen men em- the foundry at the Vulcan n left their benches at noon vesterday and failed to return in the afternoon. This morning, however, the better grade of help was back, and no further attention will be paid to those who have left, it being presumed sents it=elf ployed in | thot they sought jobs elsewhere. Gen- eral Superintendent Hurlburt said this morning that owing to the brisk busi- nes$ on hand the company was forced hire all sorts of employes, and he supposed that many of them did not like the nature of the work At the New Britain Machine com- pany, eleven laborers heard the call of | the brickyard, and evidently respond- were absent yesterday aft- ernoon. The local manufacturers do not anticipate any trouble from their employes, and are confident that it is imply a case of good weather that af- fected the men who walked out yes- terday —_— 4 LARGE PROPERTIE On East Main and East Streets, « able for building or manufacturing sites: & to \ days H. N. LOCKEWOOD Real Estate and Insurance 86 West Main Street. NATIONAL HONOR I TEDDYS' PLATFORM America Must Be First, Last and All the Time Oyster Bay, L. I, April 14.—Colonel Theodore Roosevelt, after the comparative quiet marked his trip to Massachusetts and Connecticut has jumped into the pre- redoubled vigor. He was asked to comment on The New York Tribune's editorial pledging the support of that republi- can newspaper, and he dictated the following statement: “Of course T deeply appreciate what The Tribune says of me, but I appre- ciate infinitely more what it says in advocacy of the things for which I stand. “The final sentence of the editorial says: ‘We are choosing which way the country shall go in the era that is now opening just as our fathers chose the nation’s path in the davs of 1860.’ “This sentence should be in the mind of every man who at Chicago next June takes part in formulating the platform and naming the candidate. The men at Chicago should act in the spirit of the men who stood behind Abranam Lincoln. From time to time it has recently been announced that the fight against Mr. Wilson is to be waged only, or almost only, on the tariff. Such an appeal would be an appeal to the belly and not to the soul of the Amer- ican nation. 5 “By all means provide for the things of the body, but only on condition that we treat the body as the servant of the soul. “I believe heartily in a tariff. “Unless we return tariff, preferably administered through a commiission of experts, we shall face a widespread economic dis- aster at the end of the war. “But this is not the great issue on which the fight is to be made if the highest service is to be rendered the American people. “The issue is that the American people must find its own soul. Na- tional honor is a spiritual thing that cannot be haggled over in terms of dollars. We must stand not only for America first but for America first and last and all the time and without any second. four of which convention campaign with protective to a protective Wants No ‘Peace of Cowardice. “Our loyalty must be to the whole United States. The east must stand for tne safeguarding of the Pacific coast against every foe. The west must stand for the safeguarding of the Atlantic coast against every foe. East and west and north and south alike must hold the life of every man and the honor of every woman on the most remote ranch on the Mexican border as a sacred trust to be guaranteed by the might of our united nation, “We can be true to mankind at large only if we are true to ourselves. If we are false to ourselves we shall be false to everyone else. We have lofty ideal to serve, a great m to accomplish for the cause of free- dom and of genuine democracy and of } fair dealing tinroughout justice and the world. “If we are weak and slothful and absorbed in mere money getting and vapid excitement we can neither serve these causes nor any others. We must stand for national conscience, for national discipline and for pre- paredn military, social and in- dustrial, in order to help the soul of this nation “We stand for peace, but only for the peace that comes as a right to the just man armed and not for the peace which the coward purchases by abject submission to wrong. The peace of cowardice leads in the end to war after a record of shame.” Political observers feel that the Col- onel, by his assurances that he is for a protective tariff, has pretty effectu- ally dug the ground from beneath the feet of Senator Warren G. Harding of Ohio. Harding has been selected as temporary chairman of the republican national convention, and it has been reported on excellent authority that a number of the Old Guard leaders are booming him as the dark- candidate to be run on the “economic issue” in order to head off the colonel, who has taken over, ap- parently bevond recovery hy any other candidate, the issues of preparedness and Americanism, Robs Harding of Issue. Harding, by the colonel's adroit move, has been robbed of the only issue he had on which to base his claim upon the nomination, as the colonel in a few words said all and more than Harding recently said along economic lines. The colonel refused more definite statement about Mexjcan situation created by the la- test note received from Carranza. He read the reportsin the late afternoon newspapers, including a full report of the note, and then shook his head when pressed for further information concerning his views. But the colo- nel's statement in which he hit at the Wilson policy made after he had ob- tained as full knowledge of the Mexi- can situation as could be obtained from the newspaper: The colonel’s message was looked upon here as still another message to the republican delegates who will as- semble in Chicago on June 7 to choose their standard bearer. It was pretty generally agreed also that it would prove interesting reading for Senator Harding and the men who have been quietly horse Senator to make any the grooming him for the race. The Harding boom has been taken as still another indication that the booms started for e Elihu Root and Justice Char Hughes had about collapsed, leaving the colonel almost alone in the field reported ESTABLISHED 1886 GLOBE CLOTHING HOUSE Copyright Hart Scbaffner & Marz as the effective advocate of American- 1sm. Colonel Roosevelt expects to remain ‘here for several days to talk over the situation with visitor: CABINET WILL REMAIN. April 13, Paris, .\]v]‘l]; 12:45 a. m.—The Portuguese pre Lisbon, via 14, mier after a long conference with the president had withdrawn the tion agreement terms 4 the question which had precipitated | the cabinet cr | Britain Typographical reld What Suit ? about Your Ias- Youll ter want smart style perfect taste, Varsity Fifty-five by HART SCHAFFNER & MARX, are just the thing Here EMERY SHIRTS, $1.00 up. are TRWOVEN SOCKS . 50c and $1.00. Prices are not high on aster Neckwe ntee all cloth- ing color d all wool. announced tonight tha collective resi of the cabinet satisfac had the projected 1ched amnest been r on of sis The annual banquet of the union will at the Grand hotel, April 29 THE CURRAN DRY G0GDS CO. Cur Anniversary Sale still continues with new and attractive line of merchandise. We are showing in Saturday. CLUSIVE WONDERFUL MPLE AND QUICK SELLING Suits. worth $15.00, big values Suits worth $18.00, Suits worth $20.00, and so on up to the finest reduction. WOMEN’S COATS tailored FROM We Dresses Our Spring and t quality. they big ASONABLE showing a AT VERY RE Hosiery and Summer We all are Underwear warrant with can every are dyed Our Dre: the season e Fabric A big Goods and Sitk wre showing a great line sortment of fine Voile figured effects, 25c valuc 5,000 yards of fine Percales, SATURDAY, yard OUR MEN S We have some good valucs FOR SATURDAY. Men's Negligee Shirts you pay $1.00 for Men's All Silk Neckwear, SATURDAY All Silk Ribbon, ir SATURDAY and in made of good SATL larze 11l colors, b-inch Women’s Handkerchiefs, embroidered corne EXTRA SPECIAL AT, °h A lot of fine imported Handkerchiefs, ' SATURDAY, each We are offering some extra Night Gowns, Skirts, Drawe Some extra good things in ( Some great values in white Skirts, a 59¢ 79c¢ all good va Kid Gloves PRICES. WOND NT—Big Silk and ATTRACTIVIE WE HAVE GAIN BASEME in the RFUL Suit Case Suits made at assortment PRICES. Depts assortment of standard makes and of the hi pure dye Dept, of fine Tissues SATURDAY Corset wns wanted VALUES and values added daily in every Ready-to-Wear Garments for STYLES IN SUITS AND COATS. HATS AND SHIRT WAISTS. PRICED VERY LOW FOR - $9.98 - $10.98 - $12.98 of -$3.98 ' Coat the same rate of Children’s and show a complete line of pair of our Hosiery fast and thg PRICES ARIS RIGHT, all the color, has new things of Cotton Waisting in AT, striped yard DEPARTMENT, MEN'S WEAR TO OF CER quality percale, that RDAY = . 59C full open ends S1e value. 95 12Y%c 5¢ 5¢ irm wide, worth 19c worth 10c worth 19¢ to 25c 1 Muslin Under Covers and Coml "....49¢c ™ 59c¢ AND 89‘0 nts, inations and colors, AT IN Bag OUR NEW Sale Now On BAR- t he na; tory bi New be

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