New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 19, 1918, Page 3

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NEW BRITAIN DALY FIERALD, Boston Store STORE CLOSES AT NOON ON FRIDAYS UNTIL SEPT 12, Inclusive ANNOUNCEMENT of importance to Drosner-} tive Blanket Buyers. E have just received a shipment of about Four Hundred Suits that should have reached us two months ago owing to the fact that the Our first shipment of fine piece goods were late in reaching the manufacturer. grade Wool Blankets has ar- Well, here they are Gentleman and we're going to sell them at a iy ol short price on account of the long delay. i _ We have put them into our Big Sale which is now at its height and { As the These were bought in April | they go under the price tags that govern this exceptional Sale opportunity, bl at prices prevailing at that | Variety of fabrics includes weights for year-around service as well as those f,?;,fi';:’ & ; bi i designed especially for the Summer service and you couldn’t ask for a bet- pricsa time, which means, we own | ter assortment of styles. Beg them at less than today’s | N Another added feature of the sweeping Sale is our very superior line ANO ri d early buyin ill f fi Cotton V@ prices and early buying wil of fine Dresses in be advantageous to you. rose and . models, $7.88: i BLUE SERGE SUI I S T ——— | | fine white gab$ y | et one befor Better give Blankets due ’ o | consideration this vear, as| Which now enter the sale at the revised prices. Here’s a brief summary of | AL, the supply 8 short in the what’s going on. Don’t you think you ought to be in on it. Men’s and out at $2.95, Young Men’s | | Tailored and market now and will be more | and $7.50. Our 528 SUITS for $21.50 Our 530 SUITS for $24.75 PULLAR |t Our 335 SUITS for $27.50 & NIVEN|| mowaa® Our 540 SUITS for $33.50 awful drop. . < Beflter drop in You knowhwhat Hol_]andd_ers" Summcrt Sale of Suits always has meant: It K I]\ C H E ‘ and see. means more than ever in direct money to you now. : RJ:[' GRUSS TU ASK - S : | Tt will only cost you ten cents a day to have the comfort of :,,*‘,.. H O I AN D IQ S » Ask your grocer to send you AUNT DELIA'S BREAD. Chapters Will Make No Further e ! : i ¥You 7pse nothing and you gain not only comfort, but really bet- ! 9 ter and Lnore wholesome hread than it is possible for 3 to bake, Solicitations for Several Months, | TAE DAYLIGHT STORE 82-88 ASYLUM STREET’ HARTFORD becausy we are equipped hetter and have m_um:re:z e eaeetion) | - substitutes more fully. Aunt Delia’s Bread is wholesome, nourishing S and easily digested. Your grocer sells it. In a caommunication received by the New Britain chapter of the American Red Cross soclety, all chapters in the \ The aerodrome is set in one of wani‘&'rm tor had shouted to him above the | performance is carefully watched for | Atl = = TR i beautiful spots that one calls to mind i roaring of the engine, “Shall we/l any faults. Usually he is given a defi- ! ’ Atlantic division, which includes the fram classic pictures of English land- | loop and they did. But hitherto, of | nite piece of maneuvering to carry{ al chapter, are requested to refrain scapes. It s early in June and the|course, the instructor had been the|out. A pupil is never sent into the air from further soliitation from the pub- | Breatlevel field that stretches away in|real pilot, explaining maneuvers, en-|merely to fly about for a fixed time. el roal el TRAI 3 | front. of nw‘ h»m;»nw is h)kr a rich | cour aging ihnl\n\m]g [ain to secu ,‘an ‘,:to:wm_-r\; he will have more “dual” | Nt e 2 4 e \ green carpet. evond therc is a|accurate touch, and to become, as he | with his instructor and much of the ! > A e iy eSon T At woodiand, and in the distance is a| must if he is to he successful, 50 per-|old teachings will he repeated and 62 West Main St. 36ciety all over the Gountey was re- — range of low hills whose smooth con- | fect a master of 1hr-v'mn‘,;hme that he | emphasized. At this point perhap BDonABNltE e wenbreuiv b by it tour recalls to western Americans the | can make it fiy of itse the real understanding between in- that further attempts to raise money Get PmC“Cal EXDGI’]BDCG Bemre |rvr]7|‘hi:I: (,’,:";Ir‘\flm:lla"r and very quiet kh:“\‘\?“;"'( ‘!Il:‘:u it is his fi :‘r“;nghv Ls!.c,m tor and pupil becomes manifest f - - — | Two Stores, 95 Arch St. for the Red Cross just at present aerodrome many | Understanding and sympathy are im- would be unfair to the public’ which P j\\-'.:m for the drouning n’f M\'Munp&] G G watching to see him ‘‘take | portant factors in aerial instruction 5 ¥s bee s 24 t t a dozen are in the air and | off.” g communication is as follows es ra ¥ <e engine starts. The instructor, stand-| Frank Boteet of 50 Hurlburt street New York, N. Y., July 13, 1918 an has J climbed. ~ For the first | ing on the step of the fuselage, holds | notified the police that Stephen Noizin ‘““I's all chapters of the Atlantic Divi- An American Aerodrome in Emng- | time he is going up alone. | to his cap against the hurricane |of 11 Beatty street, who was riding a | sion: land, June 8 (Correspondence of the | Far weeks the Britieh instructor|raised by the propellers, and shouts | . ran into his auto at the « The response to the second war |Associated Press).—This is one of the | has heen with him constantly and he | his final directians. He points to the Main and Commercial fund campaign has been so generous | numerous aviation camps in England { has passed successfully the major|instruments, shows what the engine!dqamaging his bicyele that it would seem on all accounts de- | Where Americans are receiving their | tests. He can fly straight, the ins | revolutions should he, feels the con- cirable to have Red Cross chapters re. | finishing touches as fivers. When they | tor sitting beside him has made sure | trols, and bids the new “soloist” good frain from any further solicitation |leave here for the battle frant in|and he can work the controls without | cheer. | from the public for Red Cross pur- | France, they know all that can be |fear or “nerves.” He knows how to| IWhat the fledgling flyer's feelings | poses for some months to come. taught about fly Only the school | stall, to glide and to climb, and he has | are only those who have flown alone | ‘We have reperts from some dis- | of experience supply the post-|learned a good deal, toa, about the|know. He is dropping the pilot and | ric that special contributions are| graduate course that makes Guyne- [important art of landing embarking on the great adventure. { being solicited by auxillaries of chap- | mers and Lufberys On one memorable nceaston the in- | On a first flight alone the pupil ters, to undertake to finance their ac- tivities independently of the chapter, & ‘ and the impression created by the at % E e empt to raise such funds, following <0 close on the war fund campaizn, i x i most unfortunate 2] “We shall be criticized if too soon r the war fund campaign the pub is asked to patronize entertain- mants of one sort or another for the i hanefit of the Red Cross. 1 therefore m N wigh to urge the chapters of the At- ¥ ante division to curtail the number of AL e i Are Here Told the Best Remedy ‘o raise additional money P ; for Their Troubles. There are cases of auxiliar e which are supported by some reguls Freemont, O.—‘I was passing through the critical blan of contributions by their own period of life, being forty-six years of age and had all membership, and it is not suggested the symptoms incident to that change — heat flashes, ) N : his arrangement he interfered with @ rnervousness, and was in a general run down condition, / L N b Last Week of This BigSale! ey where it agreeable to the chapter 80 it was hard for me to do my work. L)'l;ia.dE. Pink- b \ \ J AR EnRE R s | ham's Vegetable Compound wwas recommended to me as : U R B torapy | “AL T W. STAUB,” the best remedy for my troubles,which it surely proved } 3 A 3 68 50 ‘Assistant manager, Atlantic Division to be. I feel better and stronger in every way since ) R 5 9 : looks back upon several weeks of value-giving |} §3:0 Sfampqd “Approved & taking it, and the annoying symptoms {mve disap- . 2 5 AL 1 that have’madg thousands of new women patrons for : 4 S ]e ¥ an Allen, Manager, Atlantic Di- peared.”—Mrs. M. GODDEX, 925 Napoleon St., Fremont, i ‘ : NEWARK shoes. 3 on ‘1(-‘ 0les sion.’ i P : Thousands have purchased Pumps and Oxfords in this sale - North Haven, Conn.—*'Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegeta- 3 i which they KNOW could not be duplicated elsewhere for $3.50. j B bl Compound restored my health after everything else : - 5 : Realizing it was a chance such aa the future could not possibly hold again, MAKE HIM WORK 8 had failed when passing through change of life, There KNHY \ S 3 iy ) many bought two and threo pairs for FUTURE NEEDS. This big sale B e nothing like it to overcome the trying symptoms. 5 A l ENDS THIS WEEK—so if you are planning to take advantage of it, by all == | In Such Cases X\ 'l | | “flewark Shoe Stores Co - e \ 8 | LYDIA E. PINKHAM’ i | b 3wt a5 g Two people can do three times as : - Tolors, $1.38 . much canning and drying as one. bt e ekt | has the greatest record for the greatest good 237 STORES IN 07 CITIES Note. m'z.»:;; may be had from the National War) Carden Commission, Washington, D. €. for two cents to pay postage. LYDIA E.PINKHAM MEDICINE CO. LYNN. MASS

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