New Britain Herald Newspaper, June 5, 1918, Page 5

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NEW BRIiTAIN. COMWNECTICUT, This sale only in the Ready-to- I I I I ! BEG : ; g OR I Il VERY SPECIAL Wear department, Misses’ and 200 Gingham and Voil Women'’s Coats, Suits, Dresses, RAPHAEL'S DEPARTMENT STORE i ' 51 §3.98 380 - 382 - 384 - 386 MAIN ST. ’ Change of Management Sale Our Ready-to-Wear Department has grown so large, due to the square deal we have given to all customers, that we were compelled to seek services of a buyer to devote all of his tin to this department. We have just secured a buyer who knows the New York style market thoroughly, and whose ambition it is to give New Britain a Ready-to-Wear department second to none between New York and Boston. But before he accepted this position he insisted that we must sell all stocks on hand, irrespective of cost, to give him a clean start. decided to put on sale commencing THURSDAY MORNING, JUNE 6TH, AT 9 O'CLOCK AND ENDING SATURDAY, JUNE 8— 1900 GARMENTS At Prices Much Below Present Market Conditions Consisting of Coats, Suits, Dresses, Skirts and Summer Furs To do this we have Sizes 14 to 48, We list here only » e eyt s Ali New Spring and Summer Merchandise SUITS COATS DRESSES KIRTS 31 Suits of serge and all wool poplin. Tailored, 42 Coats of all wool mixtures, poplin and serges, S asygshinment l;f Silk ?or_flm Dresses. Ordinarily : ripple back and straight line models. Marked less suitable for fall wear. Value $19.95 to $27.50. would be priced $8.50. Choice sale: - - $5.95 fancy cloth Skirts. ) Over one hundred styles to s| than present cost of materials. Values $22.50 to St e, GR lect from. F:r‘thls sale we 1h:5ve ayl:;ge tat'g $27.50. Sale price, choice .- $13-50 . . T we ol dplas Caos of fepesd full of Wash Skirts. Values $1.95 to $2.95. Spec modes have been collected for the women who salerprice i L ie il sl sl e v g 95 A wonderful assortment of wash silk and plaild a; 52 high grade Suits of serge, gabardine and trico- 57 Coats of serge, poplin, velours and gabardines. want inexpensive dresses. Taffetas, crepe de chine, tine. The most popular styles. Values $27.50 to Some all lined. Values $22.50 to $35.00. Special Georgette crepe combinations. Values $18.50 to Skirts made of pique, gabardines and linen. Sp $45.00. Sale price ..... sale price 5 = . v e S $19-95 $22.50. Sale price $12.50 cial values .. $1.95 and $2.9 | stations today, the total of men LOC E S! G AV 1 | buried. They entered the office of Col. raised Dy the draft in the United ATE PET R R McIntyre at Salvauon Army head- Ntates for its armies will pass 1,300,- = ! irters yesterday, and to him told 000. Before the end of the present, | the story nionth, the mobilized total will have | Salvation Army Places Floral Tributes “We were notified of our son's ERS passed 1,500,000, for the immense | burial. We know it is in Krance, but I military makhine that owes its exis- on Grave of Brave American Officer | where we do not know. On memorial » tence to the readiness of plain Ameri- Day, the Salvation army will place ) & FOOD--KEEPING e cans to fight is moving forward to a| Rutchered by the Boche. i fresh flowers on the graves of the Ald v | zoal that will meet President Wii- American dead in France. We camo | B et ] ; _ . in el Mn Y m Em.o“ m Gaflse Oi non's demand for “force, forse to the| A couple of fence pickets, hewn | to ask that if you come across our : A | —and by that we mean keeping your foodstuffs in fre 10N Y0ouths | utmost, and force without stint.” b from poplar trees, nailed and crossed, | J0hN’s grave will you smooth it over clean and appetizing condition for the longest possil] . | stick from one of the row of mounds | 210 Please decorate it?" | i ! time—is almost entirely a matter of refrigeration. Ame[‘]ca and Democ]’fl(}y | the country who take the burden of | just back of the churned, pock- | o ~OJUtant Raymona Starbard, a |ff 4 ! You can’t expect the cheaply made “ic(‘»box”'to do -gof the work have named registering .,ipeq earth of Picardy. And written ;[,’,I.]\,f.:]’ml»‘,’;‘,i,nflT-I,f::{r':,“"‘,;",];,(.‘,‘m"”'\! - : LN R | food-keeping. To sell at the price it does, it can’t be ma) PRV | clerks for every 100 of (Mo YOUNE on the cross are the words: ‘“Lieut. | workers, was one of those who heard | g g carefully enough, or of the right materials; to give you e Washington, June 3.—Today, on Tk:s(r:znz"\:“:::o::;\‘)‘l‘\ "f‘r‘:;f‘“:““gl“‘_ hofi:\eelli John Peters, U. S. A.: Died in Action.” | the storv of the white naired man who | | 5 cient food-keeping service. It is cheap to bu\ but far ¢ on registering day may apply to any | The grave of this brave American is | L""’O'::;]“ l;““"“:\‘;“" O‘l“?'p'z:l‘_‘\-‘-“_"_“1“1"1 i costly to use. The it reaton s Hec oo : board for their cards. Names as R e o f For two big reasons, buy a lcall\ good refrigerator. e first I(‘J\OI:L is conomy llon youths, the estimated strength of | recorded will pass into the classifica- | 150 and is next to that of Capt. | Picardy. He knew the location of the good refrigerator will need less ice and \\111 greatly reduce loss through food spoilage. bhd-giins of 1818, register off the Orst | t,',?,’:‘sfl“0:‘,r\c‘f“??{‘idwu:i‘:b;!r'lcll'qw,H,ni',;' Fenton, another American who fell | grave of Lieut. John Peters, and moro | B second reason is Health—the good refrigerator is easy to keep absolutely clean and sanita station of the fourney to the colors. e ¢ e by tions, their status as to dependents| before the Boche drive. than that, he had attended.the funeral, for it affords no hiding places for germs.. These two reasons have induced thousands When their draft registration cards!and as to industrial or agricultural | bes ch S e omienirEs i d D For weeks Captain John K. Peters | ru1| military honors. families to install come into their hands, they come to | occupations, they will be assigned to |, Y i o Y D Cew b and his wife have been beseeching the s arents hear: s | the disporition of a switt, smoothiy- | Class 1, 2 4 or 5, The overwhelm- | When the parents heard this new . io ¥ ing majori however, as indicated by | N&VY department, and the war depart- | they were filled with joy. Flowers n?rkung and practiced organlz&qon. the estimate given the provost-mar-| Ment. and the Red Cross, the Y. M. C. | will be placed on the Picardy mound | @ 4 whose agencies in cvery country-side, | chal genera] cxpests to find placed in | A+ @nd the Knights of Columbus for | on Memorial Day, Col. Meclntyre as- hamlet, and city of the land have as- | Class one. some word of where their son is|sured Capt. Peters and his wife. i sumed sucdessfully the task of dis- They will go to the foot of the list — — S— —_— B A few minutes spent in our store examining a McKee riminating between the nation's need ! ©f 1917 registrants in each class, and i i Refrigerator will tell you more than the most complete for men who can fight or work, and | Wil not be called, the regulations| : . . i 1e provide, until those above them have, printed description. If you are one of the many people e additional need .for men at home| phaen taken, unlese by trade or educa. | ° - 3 to support its dependent population. tion they are fitted for specinlized who think “refrigerators are all about alike,” let us shov Observers, foreign and domestic, { anmy service, then they may be called military and civilian alike, class the | sooner. The system of determining the 3 e| M " ' . . you how unfair that is to the McKee—and to yourse pertormante fo data under the | orter of tmeir can ne amons tiom:| - Freezone” is Magic! Lift any Corn or Callus right : e American selective service law helieve we can convince you that a McKee will cost you ¢ as the ! selves the provost-marshal general has ) most tangibly successful of its mili- ot yet fixed, but the ral cta- ff h f __N | less in the long run than any other refrigerator you cou et sHiosis, nd saghicl Sy adnestion \ Lotk s St e off with fingers—No pain! tion is that some sont of a lottery of I buy PRICES to the man power reservoir of the | the type previously used, will be con- o i voungsters who had not reached their | ducted on a national scale, Yet of majority one year ago as the most | this offiials are not certain certain assurance of the final down- | the recurring draft calls come more | $11 tO $ fall of the Prussian autocracy. Be it | swiftly, and run to larger totals now, | near or far, the day of Allied victory | and the classification has come to be cannot be avaded, the practical mili- | more important than the numbers. A tary view is. so long as the ricing flood | late order number will serve only to = of tie American armies, drilled, | posipone for a few days the inevitable = equipped and equipping. can be | -all to the training camps, : tarned to the Buropean battiefront 3 : National purpose to see that no in- ; Bo‘m Sanitor Kntrl\enTab ‘/ eranda Flll‘niShlngs Provost-Marshal General Crowder. | dividuals evade service iz expressed in 5 | i Ton made of onc piece specially prepared who superviees the draft. fixes the | the regulations, wherein are votced R oskiverel i e maied tentative number given above for the | | i Smaoth and hard as glas Couch Hammocks, $16.25, $18.00 and $21.00. the command of the government to as snow and practic day's new total, and likewise from ally indestructibles {ammo \tan lards, and peace offic of a descriptions, ck $6.00 $7.50. the experlence tables of the year U ou can't ecsatch, pace o ra 3 3 3 Rock Galad) Blales meshiis st st % mar or burn o, High Back, Brace Arm, Maple Frame Veranda Rockd places the number of potential sol- diera to be added to the list today at : ; Needs no o) doth men, and city police, that they shall ) ; how vou $L95 li . ! assist exemption boards in scanning 750,000, concluding that the class will | lists be 75 per cent composed of military s 2 . 3 ) g abie. "1t will be Other Veranda Rockers and Chairs, $1.80, $2.45, $ and combing out attempted - 3 P i { and $4.00. v | evaders of the registration. & A piliidety o effectives 3 St i Grass and Fiber Rugs in all colors and sizes. Pigures available show that ne other country participating in the ) gy ! Metal Frame Lawn Settees, 1-foot, $6.25 and $10.00. great war has the actual resource in ) Ty Steamer Chairs, $8.50 and $9.50. men that the United States haa - | Against the provost-marshal general's ; = " COMPLETE AGENTS Fi estimate of 1,000,000 for the Ameri- ; | can military class of 1918, which '« i L 1‘[:" c8 ! HoME GLENWOOS For Infants and Children | added to the almost 10,000,000 total i i i i X Drop a little Freezone on an aching| cents, sufficient to rid your feet of | it FURNISRERS RANGES j of 1917, can be placed the German| corn, instantly that corn stops hurting,| every hard corn, eoft corn, or corn § | > In Use For Over 30 Years [ annual increment of 600,000, the| then you lift it right out. 1t doesn’t | between the toes, and calluses, withont [ f 4058 FORD OVERLOOKIl Alw-ynbun French of 400,000, and the Italian of | hurt one bit. Yes, magic! soreness or irritation. Freezone is the | STREET of 350,000, And all these classes in Why wait? Your druggist sells a| much talked of ether discovery of a | f@ sign-tun ’o:.:‘er ‘countries have been oalled in| 4inv bottle of Freezone for & few | Cincinnati genius. 5 . WARTFORD advance. & y The 4,500 local hoards throughout bhe anniversary of America's first Colfes oo Lo S LER R LR G b but one in a serried row on the hil- As they assemble at the registering

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