New Britain Herald Newspaper, September 28, 1917, Page 14

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STYLE CORNET! RNER MAIN and CHURCH STS., Hartford .' st Anniversary Sale FRIDAY, SATURDAY, MONDAY MARKS THE :Dpening of the Fall Season " AND SIMULTANEOUSLY PRESENTS TO YOU A Display of Distinctive Fall Apparel To fittingly observe our first birthday we have de special prices on all new merchandise in addi- pn to marking odd lots below cost for immediate osal. & 3 f > e | ,\ ' = ‘That’s where the real wear comes—right on the . Many times, when his tire has worn 'way on the tread, the tire owner has wondered if ould not be made to yield more service. The lowest priced mileage fecan. Let Jack see it. Maybe many tires is that built into them by Jack’s expert p kil Flat Tire ? CHARTER 4641 | THE AUTO TIRE CO. JACK THE TIRE EXPERT 7'Allyn St - NEV BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1017. REMARKABLE PHOTOGRAPH OF THE FLIGHT » z oF RussiaN soLbiegs Berore THE GErmans|] Globe Clothing House This extraordinary photograph, just received from Europe, shows the first MULTIGRAPH LETTERS Fac-aimile of Typewriting done ia 1, 2 and 3 colors with signaturea Letter Heads Printed. THE HARTFORD TYPEWRITER CO. INC. 26 6tate Street. Hartford. Conn. Fashion Pérk’s Double- Breasted Idea Developed in accord with the correct English desigh, but bold and typically '‘American. Shown in select weavings and plain effects of Brown, Blue, Green and Grey. To be had READY-TO-PUT-ON A custom service without the annoyance of a try-on. $25 Other styles executed expressly for us at Fashion Park, $26.00 and more. STACKPOLE-MOORE- TRYON CO. QUALITY CORNER 115 Asylum St., at Trumbaull, Hartford LUXURIOUSLY COMFORTABLE OVERSTUFFED PIECES ] We now have ready for your inspection our new displays of overstuffed Davenports, Sofas and Chairs. ~ You will find it worth while to look over our ex- tensive showing while the assortment is at its finest. - Comfort has been the first aim in the construction of these fine pieces but the element of style and appearance has not been overlooked. “ though supremely restful will grace any home. he exquisite selection of beautiful coverin the display. COMPLETE HOME FURNISHERS 40-56 FORD STREET - HARTFORD 47 WHERE IS HIGHER THAN These pieces o gs in these pieces is a feature of AGENTS FOR GLENWO0D RaxgEs ~ OVERLOOKING CAPITOL mad flight of Russian troops at one point in the eastern line when the TEAGHING HISTORY A DIFFICULT TASK Changes Wrought by War Add to Instructors’ Burdens Washington, Sept. 28-—How the lessons of the great war may be taught in the school room is told in Teachers’ Leaflet No. 1, on ‘‘Oppor- tunities for History Teachers,” just issued by the United States Bureau of Education of the Department of the Interior, for distribution to teachers of history throughout the United States. That the American teacher of his- tory is this year planning his work Eunder conditions at once perplexing and inspiring, is the bureau's state- ment in announcing the new work. In its appeal to teachers the bureau says: “The Nation has finally been drawn into a great war, a war which de- mands for the successful prosecution not only sufficient and courageous service in the Army and Navy, but also the loyal co-operation of mil- lions of men and women who are not enrolled in the fighting forces nor di- rectly responsible for the civil ad- ministration on which those forces depend. “First of all comes the duty of keeping, for teacher and pupll, the hapit of at least trying to see things as they really were and are. This is not easy at any time. It is peculiarly | difficult at such a time as this, when too many people believe a slight dis- tortion of facts may be a patriotic [ duty. In the long run loyalty to the country as well as loyalty to history are best served by looking facts squarely in the face. “The training of young people and of the parents through the pupils to take an intelligent part in the deci- sion of public questions is important enough at any time, but it is pe- culiarly so in this war whose mean- | ing for the individual citizen is not ! so easily brought home. In 1823 and | 1827, when the Monroe Doctrine was ! under discussion, Daniel Webster re- | iferred to the people who thought | | that Americans had no interest in the | | Buropean system of mutual Insur- | | ance for hereditary rulers against { popular movements. What, they | said, havt we to do with Europe? | The thunder, it may be said, rolls at ' ia distance. The wide Atlantic rolls | between us and danger; and, how- ever others may suffer, we shall re- ! i main safe. Webster's answer to this question was strikingly . similar to some of the utterances of President Wilson: ‘I think it is a sufficient an- swer to this to say, that we are onc of the nations of the earth. We | have as clear an interest in interna- tional law as individuals have in the laws of soclety.’ That was said long | before the steamship, the submarine and the wireless had broken down still further our ‘splendid isolation.” Today we are fighting for our own | rights, but over and above those spe- cial rights of our own we are fighting for international law itself, without which no nation can be safe, least of | all those democratic governments | which are less effectively organized | for war than for peace. “Np one can take an intelligent | part in a great conflict for the safety of democracy under an orderly sys- tem of international law unless he is really interested’ in and knows some- thing about .ofther nations than his own—about the difference between a republican government like our own or that of France or the scarcely less democratic constitution of Great Brit- ain on the one side,*and, in sharp contrast to all of these, a strongly monarchial system iike that of the German Empire, in which the most Important measures affecting the na- tional welfare may ,be practically de- termined by a single hereditary sov- ereign or a smal] group of such sov- ereigns.” _— e CHEMICAL ENGINEERING. Cambridge, Sept. 28.—The study of chemical engineering has been great- ly stimulated by the war. This fact is revealed in the courses selected by students at the Massachusetts Insti- tute of Technology for the comingl Jear, cry was raised: ‘“The German cav- alry have broken through.” DIFFERENCES SETTDED. Paris, Sept. 28.—Differences be- tween workers in certain classes of munitions and their employers have been settled, both sides agreeihg to the formation of a permanent com- mittee of conciliation, according to an official note issued last night. CUTICURA HEALED SKIN_TROUBLES ThatCaused ltchingand Burn- ing and Loss of Sleep at Cost of $1.00. *‘My neck and ears were covered with een blisters. I thought I would go rantic with the pain which was terrible. Then the blisters turned into sore eruptions which were red and inflamed, and § itched and burned so that when I scratched the blood came. I could not sleep or eat. “‘I tried all kinds of oint- N ments, salves, etc., butwith no effect, and I stood the pain for twelve months. Then I used Cuticura Soap and Ointment, and found relief after twenty- four hours, and two cakes of Cuticura Soap and one_box of Ointment healed me.” (Signed) Maurice Levinsky, 796 Pembroke St., Bridgeport, Conn. Cuticura SoaP and Ointment are not only wonderful healers but wonderful reventives of skin and scalp troubles if used exclusively. The Soap, for daily use in the toilet, cleanses and puri- fies, the Ointment soothes and heals. For Free Sample Each by Return Mail address post-card: ‘‘Cuticura, Dept. R, Boston.”” Sold everywhere. Copyright Iast Schaffner & Marx Sport Suits by Hart, Schaffner & Marx are pictured above, front and back views, all wool fabrics, $20 up. Interwoven socks are sold exclusively by us. Boys’ Mackinaw Coats $6.00 to $10.00 We are ready to show the latest Fall Styles in Gloaks, Suitsand Dresses For Women, Misses and Children, at reasonable Also the Newest in Millinery Raphael's SpecialtyShop THE NEW STORE, 170-172 Main St. Next Door to the.Savings Bank. prices. Ic a word each day pays for a classified adv. in the Herald, X You get results. Th at’s what you want. . KATTEN & SON Hartford One Price Clothing Co.,114-116 Asylum Street, Hartford. FALL AND WINTER COATS The Right Styles at the RIGHT PRICES Style is an important factor in your Coat, for a Coat is always conspicuously in evi- dence. You safeguard yourself against wearing something which is not strictly up - to - date (An exact illustration of one our new styles.) when you buy an H. O. P. COoOAT And you can select froma wide variety of different offects, getting just the style that is most becoming and pleasing to you. These Coats show ‘he same careful, thorough and high- grade (ailoring as our H. 0. P. Suits—None Metter to be had at H. 0. P. prices.

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