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Ha: G. FOX & CO. rtford. NEW, BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, APRIL 28, 1916. The Big Notion Sale Is In- teresting Women all over the state. Make out your list from Wednesday Night's Paper and send it in. Special Sale of SILK DRESSES $15.00 None on Appoval. We have taken about 50 Dresse: styles and offer them for S: Special Price REGULAR PRICES $19.75 TO $25.00. s from our regular stock aturday at this None Exchanged. of street and afternoon frocks in 15 different $15.00 The Dresses are made of Taffeta, Crepe de Chlne, Georgette and Crepe and Taffeta and Georgette com- binations. The colors are sizes 16 to 44. Regular p gray, Belgian, navy, rices $19.75 to $25.00. rose, green, brown and blacks— Special for Saturday $15.00 Special Purchase of Scrim Curtains Manufacturer’s Close Outs ‘We have been very successful in securing one of the leading manufacturer’'s closeouts in Scrim Curtains, regular $1.75 to $2.00 values, and we are going to offer them to you at the special price per pair NOTE OUR WINDOW DISPLAY. 98¢ Specnal PriceSaleofMisses’ Silk Dresses MISSES” Special Price ings are great. DEPARTMENT, $19,50 up to $29. 0 Values SECOND FLOOR, NORTH SECTION, $12.98 This sale coming at this time of the year is a sale you cannot afford to miss for the value sav- All new stock, no two alike, made up of manufacturer’s extra cuttings, sizes 14, 16 and | TO RENT—Six room tenement sec- I ONE CENT A WORD, SN S LOST f LOST—Between Rockwell avenue and Glen street, bank book con- taining sum of money.. Reward if returned to Herald office. ond floor new street. and 3 4-28-tf all improvements; house; location 54 Garden Tel. 605-3 between 9 a. m. p. m. TO RENT—Large pleasant room for lady for light housckeeping. Pric $3.25 week. 56 Hawkins sec- ond cottage from Hart St. -aix | 4-27 TO RENT—Four and five room tene- ments, conveniences, large garden, rent reasonable, 63 Fairview street. 4-22-25-27x TO RENT—Large, room for one or Private entrance. first floor. furnished, front two gentlemen. 296 Arch St 4-27-2dx TO RENT—Five rooms, all improve- ments, at 446 West Main St. In- quire 491 Main St. 4-27-3d TO RENT—One-half office *in trally located building. Reasonable rates. Stenographer in office. For particulars address Box 4BB, Herald Office. 4-27-3d TO RENT—Four rooms, all improve- 1 cen- GASHINADVANCE. MINIMUM CHARGE 10¢ EACH INSERTION. ALL advertisements for the classified column must be in the Herald office by 1:30 p. m. on the day “f issue. s FOR SALE. FOR SALE--A™O5T 9 rooms, fine garden and fruit, good takes this at once. NEW BRITALN TIO NAL HELP WANTED—MALE. plating to work on heavy work. Must be a worker himself and able to obtain | results from four or five helpers. THE NEW DEPARTURE MFG. Employment Bureau. WANTED! on brass and Six good polish- CO. All Two good buffers Nickel plated work. ers on steel work. THE NEW DEPARTURE MFG. CO., Employment Bureau. FOR SALE—Second hand gas stove, | laundry stove, refrigerator, L‘Odl'h“ hammock and kitchen tables. Apply 65 Grove Hill immediately as party is leaving town 4-28-2d | FOR SALE—1914 Maxwell \uuring} car, electric lights and starter, | $400.00; 1 ton truck, fine conditi $400.00; 2 tenault taxi $300.00; 1916 ChevroletBaby G touring car, §675.00; Pierce-Arrow 6 cylinder (uunng car $475.00. Williams Auto Elm street. FOR SALE Baby Grand 1916 model touring car; electric lights; self starter, ~Address Box| 22X X, Herald. 3 FOR SALE—Barred Rock h: eggs, pure strain and good also a few setting hens. 162 V street. Tel, 1797. ance 4-27-d3x | ments, $9.00 month, arket | | st. Ga:den Also 5 a;lnoari chi:[nwe; { FOR SALE—Standard bred mare, reg- with barn, $10.00 per month. In-: istered, good all around arimal, quire 55 Market St, first floor. Tel, | valuable for breeding. Dr. Witte, 1486-5. 4-27-3ax | 852 East St, Tel. 832-2. 4-26-1wk TO RENT—Six or seven rooms, 118 | FOR SALE—Eggs for hatching Maple, corner Whiting. 2dx Clark’s Red's Berlin. Te]c,p}’\()ne ——— | 665-5 4-26-d4x TO RENT—Four room tenement third | floor, all improvements. 97 South| FOR SALE Apply Burritt St. 4-26-6d| Naughton's Baking or 1«*inneéz.n:l'= -26-6dx | TO RENT—Five rooms, second floor, | BRITAIN'S GOV'T. hvorable Reception of With- drawal of Service Bill ndon, April 28, 3:43 a. m.—The hing newspapers virtually all lc of the situation which has n in parliament through the un- able reception of the withdrawal he government’s military service s a new political crisis. vseless for sections of the ministers to agree on a compromise if they have not secured the consent of their respective supporters, The cabinet was deluded by the secreet sessions and assumed that because the plan was not then upset it would after- wards receive the assent of the house. The secret sessions are now con- demned even by their authors as ab- surd and not to be repeated. The alleged compromise obviously satis- fied nobody and the cabinet had to withdraw the bill or invite immediate defeat which would have meant its departure from office.” The Daily News notes that the na- tionalist party has decided to with- draw the bill or invite immediate de- feat, which would have meant its de- parture from office.” losed Shop” Issue Point In Anthracite Conferences L MMINERS, . BREAKER B o5 AND _JOHN P WHITE & h both sides apparently ohdu- on the proposal of a ‘“closed the strike situation in tho e coal mining industry The threatening preatened with a hiners unless they the workers, operators strike of 170,- recognize the without yicl ing any ground on the closed shop, nevertheless announced their willing- 0 withdraw their demand for heckoff” system. By yielding t so much they hoped to bring > operators into some kind of com- bromise which would avoid a strike. On the matter of a closed shop, how- ver, John P. White, international president of the United Mine Worke icclared there would he no surrender. | draw the support which it hitherto had given to the coalition cabinet and will hold itself hereafter free to act independently as its own policy dic- tates. S TO CLERKS. Sales Manager Dodd of the Ameri- can Hosiery company addressed the clerks’ association of the Besse-Leland company last evening at the monthly business fon and banquet held at the Broadway restaurant. Mr. Dodd spoke on salesmanship. — e ON BEING THE WHOLE CHEESE. TALJ If You Were Left Alone in the ‘World Here Is What Would Happen. (The Commentator in New TLondon Day.) I wish it wasn’t so hard for al] of us to realize that each of us isn't the whole cheese in the scheme of exist- ence—that there isn’t a single one of us that doesn’t owe everything he has or hopes to have, and everything he is or hopes to be, to the fact that there are other people in the world besides himself. Take yourself, my- self, or the chap over the way. Sup- pose that something happened to all the rest of human creation and that vou, for instance, were left al] alone on th face of the earth. It doesn’t require such an awful lot of imagina- tion, does it, to picture the dreadful- ness of such a situation? You would be boss of everything, ct course, like Robinson Crusoe on his island. All Rockefeller's money would be yours for the taking—and would be only a drop in the bucket of the total of your possessions—if you could get to it; all the crops in the fields would be vours, all the cattle on the ranges, all the wealth of the world, in fact—because there would be no one to dispute your possession. But you'd probably starve to death or freeze to death, or be eaten by wolves as soon as the wolves found out that mankind had disappeared 2nd that the fat places of the earth were open to them You wouldn’t be able to go very far away from the place where you happened to be, spite of the fact that you con- sidered yourself owner of all the 1ailroads and steamboats and trolley Iines, because there wouldn't be any- hody to run them for you. Possibly | you'd be able to feed yourself, after 1 fashion, out of the world's stock of food, until it spoiled; but T'll be hanged if I think you’d have a very good time—do you? Nobody to do one solitary thing of the thousand things that society now does for you; no picture shows, even, unless you could divide yourself into sections and run the electric light plant all alone, shoveling coal and all, and operate the picture machine yourself at the same time—and even then, when your films had run out vou couldn’t get others, even if you knew where they were, unless you 1 22 Oak street. 4-26-d3x 18, $19.50 to $29.50 values, special sale price $12.98. TO RENT—Desirable six room rent, IN THE LOT ARE: first floor. Tyler, 508 Stanley treet. 4-26-4dx 1 Claret Charmeuse, $19.50. I Check Taffetd, $19.50. 1 Serge and Georgetts Crepe st hai 8 Black Crepe de Chines, $22.50.] 1 Raspberry Taffeta, $19.50. Combination, $29.50. TO RENT—Five room front flat and | 1 Copenhagen Crepe de Chine.| 1 grocn marreta, $19.50. 1 Stripe Taffeta, $19.50. M s e $22.50. _” i 1 Brown Georgette Crepe and | 131 Main street. L. | 1 Black and White Silk Com-| 1 Navy Russian Charmeuse, | ik, $22.50. 4-25-64 | bination, $25.00. $25.00. 1 Navy Figured Taffeta, $27.50. TO RENT—Tenement, 6 rooms, gas, [ CHOICH *SPRCIAT HATR SPRICH . oo s Lt et l f s $12.98 garden. Close to trolley. Rent right. Apply now Charles H. As- g pinwall, Berlin. 4-25-5ax . The Daily News lobby correspon- The Daily News notes that the na- | LO. RE%‘T_TQ“E“‘F"‘ LySEoomSiasts w ERISIS lUUMS | dent says: “The incident shows it is | tionalist party has decided to with- | ©nd floor. Inquire 36 Connerton street. 4-23-6dx | TO RENT—17 room bungalow on Ray- | mond street or will sell on easy pay- ments. C. L. Barnes, 192 Chest- | nut. 451-2. 4-22-d6x TO RENT—Four rooms, all improve- ments, at 161 Washington street. Tel. 961-5. 4-14-tf TO RENT—Five room tenement first floor, all modern conveniences at 236 Maple. Inquire on premises. 4-13-tf TO RENT—Tenement five rooms. All | improvements including electric lights. 32 Monroe street. 'FPhone 557-15 or 1325-4. 4-7-tf —————————————— NOTICE., NOTICE—Automobile parties taken out. Reasonable rates. Buick car. Richard Covert. Tel. 1073-4, 4-25-6dx ——————————— stables. FOR SALE—Edison Phonograph with 65 records, in fine order. $8.00 it taken at once. Box 12XX, Herald 4-25-tf FOR SALE—Pansy and black rasp- berry plants. Tel. 971-12. 4-25-1wX SALE—1914 Maxwell roadster. painted and overhauled. reasonable. 546 West Tel. 747-12 FOR ewly Wil sell Main street. 4-20-w1 SALE—Several tiwo family houses of nine or ten rooms, mod- ern improvements, also building lots on or near trolley lines. At reduced prices. Basy terms. W. P. Steele, 260 Chestnut street 4-22-6dx FOR H.ELP WANTED—FEMALE. Salesladies Wanted! Apply Box 8 B. L. Herald WANTED—Girl could run your own railroad train to go after them. As a matter of fact, had a few months of being the whole cheese I reckon you'd be mighty glad to make a deal with an angel, if you could, with a solemn pledge on your part to let the other fellow have everything in sight—all of those world’s riches if he said the word—if you could only be given a companion; or that youwd work twelve hours a day for a place to sleep and three squares if the earth i could just be repopulated once more. You see it’s not yourself alone that makes this world a possibility for you; it's the other fellow. You may step on his toes in a crowd, stick your elbow in his eye, and possibly slap his face if he remonstrates with vou; but he’s the chap that helps you to eat and to live under a roof and to wear real clothes and to listen to music and go to shows and be a human being, nevertheless. Just because you don’t realize this it isn't any the less a cold fact and vou don’'t do any great credit to your intelligence when you look at it in the other way. I know vou don’t generally put much stock in such expressions as “the brotherhood of man” and such words as ‘“altruism,” etc., and for my part I confess to the belief that after you'd these terms, and otl.ers like them, are used mighty freely by a lot of people who don’t sense their real meaning any more than you or I or the fellow over the way But you don’'t want to forget the kind of a time that Robinson Crusoe had before he found his man Friday, Just the same, or that that is the kind of a time which is the just due of every man or woman who gets the notion that he or she doesn’t owe any- thing to anybody else. If people who have friends and companionship and social intercourse—somebody to speak o and somebody to sell them for general house- work. Apply 1939 Stanley St. 4-27-tf WANTED—Maid for general house- work. Apply Mrs. Marwick, Cor- ner Hawley St., and Corbin avenue. Tel. 722. 4-26-3d WANTED—Girls for packing room. Apply Russell & Erwin Mfg. Co., Division. 4-74-6d ‘WANTED—Competent \Vages right. second girl. Mrs. L. H. Pease, 41 4-19-tf One Look at BARNESDALE Means a Lot AUTOS TO RENT By Hour or Day. J. M. Finnegan Stables Trlevhone 302 food and clothes and theater tickets and to print books and newspapers for them—it isn’t because they de- serve it. If they had what was com- ing to them each would be put in a little cold world by himself, to shiver himself into the everlasting silences. Just about ninety-nine one hun- dredths of the mean and selfish things that are done in the world are done because somebody forgets all about | this matter of interdependence—that | every other fellow is necessary to him | «nd every other fellow ha sideration coming, I gue WANTED—Competent man to do grading and seeding on a new lawn. WANTED-—Stone H. Hibbard Co. masons. Apply INISHED ROOMS. TO RENT—Furnished rooms at 32 Grand street, all conveniences. Tel connection, 9 first | WANTED—To rent small house in or near New Britain for the summer. State full particulars and terms. Ad- dress Bungalow, Herald Office. e. 0. d 6 times| WANTED—By a couple, cottage of five or six rooms, or an apartment, all modern improvements. Good location, will pay about $30. Would not object to suburbs. Address Box 20 B L. Herald. 4-19-6d E. O. D. WANTED—Sidewalks and curbs to be perience for a temporary position l in the Bookkeeping Department of | a manufacturing concern. Address | Bookkeeper, Herald Office 4-26- JANITOR, experienced in all branch- es of the work, desires position; good reference. Address Janitor, Herald. 4-26-d3x 3d | POULTRY. WANTED—Every woman, anybody, who | keeps hens to call at any of the dealers be- low for a free trial package of Dr. Hess' | Instant Louse Killer. Remember, hens can't | fight lice and lay at the same Are | your hens lousy? This free t ackage | will tell. Dust it in the feath thorough- 1y, wait a couple of minutes, then fluff brisk- 1y over a piece of white paper and look for | dead lice. ~Test this free trial package also | for lice on horses, cattle, sheep ticks, tain bugs on cucumber, squash vines, slugs on rose bushes, etc. Inquire | also about Dr. Hess' Poultry Pan-a . the tonic that will keep your poultry heaithy, | make your hens lay and your chicks grow. | cer- | and_melon Any of these dealers will glve you the free trial package of Dr. Hess' Instant Louse Killer: S. P. Strople, 113 Church St.; The Dickinson Drug Co., 169 Main St.; F. | Labieniee, Kensington. | PRINTING In Many Different Languages, BY SKILLED UNION MEN Moderate Prices, LINOTYPE COMPOSITION. Office Hours: 8 a. m. to 6:15 p. m. Mondays and Wednesdays to 8 p. m. Tel Mgr’s Res, 179-5. Foreman 339.12 THE EASTERN PRINTING CO., 53 CHURCH STREET, TEL. 634 C. EBBESEN. MGR. ing department. 516 Asylum St. ’Phone Ch. 1141-2. 242 X there were enough people preaching this kind of philosophy and preach- | ing it steadily and plainly enough, | there wouldn’'t be any need of so | many religious creeds—certainly not | of so many laws—and the world | would be a happier and better place than it is. DESIRABLE HOME, No. 190 HART ST,, FOR $3,300 ON LIBERAL TERMS. barn H. D. HUMPHREY, 272 Main Street BANK BUILDING FOR SALF A. D. Telephone —_— .| FOR City of garden hose. tires $2 ea. and Howe red tubes; | year tires in stock. Rubber Stor: ford. right hand side. Avoid trouble by having your insur- ance written Address Box , Herald. 4- i — - how. WANTED—15 carpenters. Apply B. H. Hibbara Co, 4-2 DWIGHT 'CARS TO RENT CLOSED AND OPEN CARS FOK WEDDINGS, RECEPTIONS, ETO. MORRIN’S GARAGE apgs TO RENT—Large front room, X 1 and Walnut. 4-27-d2x | . | Agents Hrdson Motor Cars. New % ) t aud 7 Passenger Autos for hire. LOR BNl st e oo o ol | B epaica) Suppiies, Siorage. vate family; running water. Wil e e Court street. 4- ! Ty BLM ST wanTE, FOR SALE - WANTED—To do housework by the BUILDING LOTS dadol Callizs Seymour e 1dx | O West Street, Attwood Street and -28-1dX | Morgan Street. Weekly, monthly or quarterly Oti Denison Garage. Livery Cars for hire, day and pight Storage. Supplies and Repairing. AG'T REO 'Keeley’s Garage relaid by first class workmen with | : Elm and Franklin Streets. : 9 Z0kveausiexpericncc NIl “:“2'6 t¢| _ Dealer for Overland and Cole Cars. Livery Cars for Hire. Storage and | suppli WANTED—A person with some ex- | Repairing n Specialty Tel. 1288, 4 LARGE PROPERTIE On East Main and East Street able for sites. Supplies TELEPHONE - 326 - Constructive Advertising SEE us for ORIGINAL IDEAS for your PRODUCT. A postal will have our salesman explain our illustrat- THE A. PINDAR CORP. FOIR SAILKE The Moore Property No. 32 Hart St. 83 Ft. Front. Large House and Barn. schultz & Costelio, Inc. Sireel. For Your Insurance and Wiring The Dolan-Duniay and hennery—Someone New second-hand and furniture, stoves and ranges, linoid eam, oil cloths, beds, bedding, quilts 3 v rices, New g secs Good husky man with fair knowl- | G¢t our low prices. New and s cdge of copper and mickel - electro- | ©Nd-hand furniture bought and sold} LIPMAN, E 1329, 34 Lafayette LE—Largest stock in the k 1st and 2nd Auto Tires. Radiator hose, water hose, Extra special Dbicycie Velvet shoc] Asylum St., Hart- First Rubber Store from Depot, Surety Bonds by a man A. PARSONS, Booth’s Block, who knows Go to TEL. 943-2. 200 E- MAIN STRE payments. Chas. H. 30 Vine street. 430 MALN STREET, AND MAXWELL "Phone CARS 24, uit- manufacturing building or H. LOCKWOOD Real Estate and Insurance 86 West Main Street. Fixtures Electric Co. Electrical Contractors 89 Arch Street Tel. 775-4. Appliances Dwight Ct. 3 Bags ¢ $1. 05 Hartford, Conn.