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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1920, R TP 1 gyt M || S EE e S S S DD E e D R (S S E R A D TS THE McMILLAN STORE, 1 —ALWAYS RELIABLE— good and weak polnts. He know Proprictors what Tim Callahan can do, and he | (Robare Ruseeil’) Bundany excepted) at 4.15 | knows equally as well what the rest | Wid Bullding, 67 Church St of the team ocan do. He also knows | They say the men have lost v Monthe that the pepple of Connecticut a their jobs out there in Oregon - behind him 'in his —that they're the saddest lot » v 1 " chap: 2Ve DO P . Post OMce at New Britain | first football honors come o' chaps you ever looked upon. et | state. For women won the offices on BPHON v | last election day, an' when a i e woman gets a job most usually 96 NG. she’ll stay. The women are not A prominent rnchman has re- boastin’ o’ the things that they will do they'll look the sit- uation up an' down an’ through another big man of that country i o Vil thoss The former says that since the war poor human males who'll have there is no place for duellhg in to stand the gaze of women now in. power through this woman il sumrage e ©' course the Duelling was conducted with all the town is m ty small that's got alrs of a social function a regular a woman boss, an’ women in ISTICE NIGUT. party. Calling cards were exchanged each office, but the men must ( . ~ome across. They've found the Bt have been a greater | A friend of one party called formally | i”“v &> ds It: they have offered on a friend of the other. These men all thelr ald. in quite unneces- were courteous, and displayed the best sary feur that females are of manners. afraid. he women are not et soviod i thait When the fighters met at the field I;:‘s;:“:}'." *::L "“"“."‘:;":' ”(':_ BSe the day of battle the good manners continued i thariiliave the men Maos Men prided themselves on the haugrty Noah built his ark.” Now my stand they took. They were careful to ol' pipe gets whimsical: s )e as dehiberate as they were able: to smoke twists In a LS It archers who knew from | . hates to say unpleasant things: Bortonce all that war | *HOW no signs of fear, no nervousness. St nates thae duttinl tn Bt That was the European way ne‘ertheless it's forced to chirp Duelling in America in the Ameri- that womeh should recall ‘twas can way, with the nsts, will last men who gave the women that To: sgme of ther the Zred ig i . : M 1 corever probably. ‘There is no formal great right to vets this fall fppresented all that the. e e ee——————— Bt & s call made by the friend of one of the other, a father, a son —————————— - sl gl Cinte parties’ on the friena o fthe other. A | === = e man is insulted; he waits for no cere- | to heed precedents—what has been ht have n a greater tising medium in N and press | fused a challenge to fight a duel from [ [ ) e ] ! KEEPING ABREAST of the TIMES Whenever there is a decline in prices you can depend upon this store being in line with it. Your inter- ests are vital with ours and we watch the markets closely to give you every advantage in our offerings of staple or fancy goods. ; WATCHING THE MARKET ! = Eh would like to know more about the! £ ! market and changing prices, we are N . taking the liberty of giving the fol- I of our policy. . The changes in the market have not been uniform. Some goods have ! fallen; some have remained fixed. Silks dropped last spring, ard are R now steady with an inclination to go | - up rather than down. Some cotton G and wool goods, but not all, dropped b only recently. Other lines of goods |0 may fall in price, but the drop has not yet come. And no one can be sure when or if it will. With all the price changes that have or may come, customers want to . know that when they buy they are Plain Or hll' Trinm‘ed Efiects getting the advantage of favorable changes. They want to feel sure that they are not paying more than pre- vailing prices. { »‘ We can assure customers who buy‘ of us that they are getting the lowest ; S current prices, because we are re- | (2 adjusting our prices to conform to ' = B} the prices in the wholesale market \ ,\ almost daily. l'\ o ¢ In doing this we are simply carry- ing out our long standing policy of readjusting our prices to drops in the farker £tving Sour SComomecs ) the Last Saturday we did such a tremendous business in Coats that it was benefit of any decline even on our present stock. necessary this week to buy practically another entire new stock to prepare for Thus when our customers buy of this Saturday. We have been fortunate in securing more of these high grade ug, they may place full confidence in the integrity of our prices. We know garments to sell at this price. Smart and practical, designed by the best, in = the market, our large buying power poomy models of soft fine textures. Becoming belted styles, attractive loose Ei gives us lowest wholesale prices; we can assure those who buy here that back,—shawl collars and large rich fur collars of Australian Opossum, Raccoon, they are getting goods at the greatest Rypanch Seal and Nutria. Other Coats from $19.50 to $90..00. possible saving. } But watch for quality. There re’ . e . R e SO e e ' Wool Velours, Silvertones, Crystal Cords, Bolivias, Mixtures. H = France: that it Is a foolish practice. pn In New Hritain than t night-—Armistice hlght have marched; 11l not turget the earnest ing to reverence with ] ] o ol ) ] ] ] many others, removed Bhen the Court of Honor monies; there is no choosing of a | done in similar cases. The trial is so 5] 5 ] [ ] ) , but full credit should th Amerd Leal parties ground; there are no attempts ' long delayed that public interests o rerican Leglo . y glon | hide the true feelings. The insulted | Wanes. The man goes free because hc © many into the line of g } o = man hits the fellow who insults him. has known of the technicalities of the oy he Kosclusko | ., @ i the American way. That is | }Jaw and has in fact done nothing he | marehed tn goodly nuin- 3 0 » o ‘ . the way men from other countries ¢anot explain It is a cold blooded orm. The (factories fur- who come here to live return an in- | thing. but too often, in spite of the BRnds and the lights that [ atempts of prosecutors and\ courts, he woene. The U. S. Army 2 27 escapes. e Ty e e e “Direct action” is a dangerous cry. Much of sadness came; | " Tl in the habit of seeing | It has gTown 10 mean physical revo- Pus gelebration fist fights on the strecgs. It should | lution. But “Direct Action,” as applied dance drew the younger [ 5 L to apprehending the big criminal as b;;- :::;,x,m :‘:I“Nyl..m’::l; Jut the spirit shown in the Ameri- | Well as "T" ittle ‘one—the man “:ho | can way in the spirit that is the bet- | Steals in a round-about way as well The spirie of good fellow- as the one who simply “pinches” Barvaded was noticeable ter. Prearranged duels have an at- e e W e Which the war did more | MO*Phere of cold-bloodedness that ;‘co,d'd “‘;W b this country than has | M0Kes them all the more evil. gl Bat. of history All people who love a peaceful ex- “ stence will o that street fights, or" #ale New Brifatn observed | 'tence Wil hope thac 5 | , sonal encounters of any sort will Pay and Night deep in its o 25 » > el s But all red-blooded Americans A g Fighting I of course against the Fllllant signais which were EEETE AR EEE P EEEEEE I E Y Y Y Y EEEEE e EE A e E IS YE S EEYPEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE iR TR EEENEEEEEE T EEE EE EE ki . 5 cease. observance was solemn chandise at their ordinary low prices, glad that there never was a gen- | (From The Heralda o That Dat al habit of arranging for meetings iled in Europe. And all saiaras v | arge Assortment of Flush Coats . Full models, some belted with shawl and close-up collars. Some are self Spe(',la.ls Saturday lclzl;zared ;)lr trli(mmed with Nutria, Australian Opossum and Raccoon Furs. "All ined with silk. Outing Flannell 5 00§ $20.98 to £79.7 stripes and solid colors—at special L] R W e e AR These were originally bought to sell for from $39.50 to $95.00. Y ORGANIZATION, such as prev Britain Chlurity Organiz. | Fe4-blooded Americans hope that the, . Four new cases of diphtheria were arity Orgs spirit which prompted instant action, reported to the¢ health department to- bncelved with the aim of | ™ S cold-Sicoded Selay and| ratheg than ocold-bloodes : ‘?rm- priests started today taking the nd human kindness is not | PUPerficial courtesy, will never dle. cenatia of the 8t Mxty's parish: tense because one. goes SN . Two Rew hydrantsihave been'placed doing of good in a busi- JAIL(AS A CURE. | m’x!:: :i:‘ ;fx::; Srl";xor:l:ay“\’:’;r:‘s,wul ! nner. This Is what the| /'wo headlines stand close together play the Shelton associated football a well known newspaper. The first team at Electric field tomorrow aft- ernoon 2 The committee elected to arrange fzation provents an “over. | Housing for the fancy dress concert of the t chinrity activities, When | Senator Willilam §. Kenyon told the Carmody council, Knights,of Colum- Housing Committee that “a bus, that will be held next month at e o . ; Fin the Armory is as follows: W. F. De- D & all good work in laney, M. P. Leghorn, Thomas Mec- i charity in New Britain. | would help a litle in solving hé (., James Rourke, M. J. Halloran, problem of housing shortage.” M. J. Keeney, J. R. Gaffney, John The other headline, close by, was Feeney, M. O'Hayer and F. G. Rus- | sell. he organization one family It is possible that the street de- ' br instance, is not aided by partment will experiment with as- while | Usual ones, Articles worth a few phalt on Church street from Main to dollars had been stolenh by some wom- | the road station. ity on a business basis. ) ] o ] ] u n plans to do in rth while to realize that | reads “Thinks Jall Terms Would Help The story beneath tells how = E Teazel, « fast color Outing ¥lauuel, Saturday e 29c¢ e |Cold Weather Underwear for = Originally sold as high as 45c yard. the Whole Fangy Fi,nc Gin ams We recommend “Carter’s” and “Munsingwear” . ! for satisfactory wear, perfect fitting garments. With mfxrm:nfioflf::m;nzrdm-:_ sour . the weather making heavier underwear a necessity - and others in beautiful assortments— | nany women are apt to put most stress on weight, i 2 inches vid nd usually sold for 2 . ) e e e | forgetful for the moment of the fact that wearing ¥ 7 SC y d quality and fashioning are also important features. '%f L ] the Charity Organization building profiteers sent to jail el sure that what one gives t be thrown away. By “3 Shoplifters Sent To Jail"” The story beneath the headline was one of the rent organ tions Inother needy family which d at all the news columns of this an. The thieves imprisoned. \ Probably there are fewer bullding profiteers than there are profiteers in It is a regrettable fact that the R. other lines. The headline is taken O. T. C. of the High school did not | turn out to paradeJast night to help | to this organization and to the ex-service mofl make the day a | Bone when it calls for funds, | COMmon success, but that matter was decided | The point is that there is very by Captain Clark of the unit. His little adoo made when one steals di- idea in refusing was based on the - Sy rectly. A man steals a plece of meat ShOWINE that T T o dvantage S e iae = . marching ther uniformed organi- Bity Orgunization. in its re- | PecAuse he ls hungry, and, If caughi, 4,¢iong were askéd to march, but they he is straighway imprisoned. didn’t which makes it appear that the A man plans an arrangement R. O. T. C. was being singled out for | Pritain hospital It is es & charitable organization. | " hereby he is able to combine capi- Criticism. tal in such a way that the public will P Ak s onlynsdighe Britain hospital s not men for a little over a month, but | have to pay high prices. Many schemes he has been there long enough to are involved. It it difficult to place the know whether his unit would make ; blame. The plotter has at his beck and @ creditable showing or not. He pnally and which you may 1l skilied lawyers, They find many tNOUSHt It best that his men stay any moment You are pro . ¥ out of the parade sons first why the case should he If the unit had paraded and made delayed, then why there is no case a poor showing, it would be the butt at all against the man of ridicule which, at the best, is not o el G L EL LT Courts and judges are honest. But Vleasint. The captain has received h, perhaps. And you the criticism for his men, he i« they are obliged to follow legal proving that he is a true military techntcalities and they are compelled ™an who acted in a military manner. e stated, a clearing house to help the poor or needy merely as an example. Shoplifters are iyou have covered the fiekd, However, great attention need not be paid the«;eu points for they are factors we are most exacting about:; in our examination of each garment before ofl"eringit i SpCCia,]S it for sale. An assortment of 33 Inch Ging- | WOMEN’S UNION SUITS $2.75 to $5.98 suit. hams in Checks, Plaids, = B MEN’S UNION SUITS $3.00 to $4.98 suit. kind we rogulorly sell for 75c yerd | CHILDREN’S UNION SUITS of all kinds and _styles. 7. I heavyweight ribbed Cotton Suits. Also part wool Suits for beys and girls. govr contribution will be money is quite apart from you give for the hospital you to a cause which iInterests 5 5 C d SEPARATE SHIRTS, DRAWERS, VESTS and PANTS for Men, Women \ y *J { and Children of medium and heavyweight in cotton, wool, silk' and wool. burselt fe e futur You your family and ON OUR THIRD FLOOR Keep Your = | - ‘ | {(reton Hafldb gk A:ain Samdgei en- Warm %) 5| | tire stock will be offered at Offering at our enlarged . ! G0, . ¢« Glove Dept. exception-i (¢ = B l it /C DtSCOUfll al values in Wool Gloves off regular prices. and Mittens, Leather| 8 3 o . Cliires vl 1Mk dens ilh | fy|Scrim Curtains warm fleece linings. White, cream and ecru, Fl!!l ile values to $3.50 pair. We have extra large assortments of the very Saturday $2.50 pair. best ‘in Women’s Gloves for street and dress wear. of Trof : Woo™ 3 “ets| Cut Glass Thanksgiving Sale of Linens | = { White, grey. p -ids, extra If you wish to select a brand new Table Clcth ! value at $9.98 pair. Enrich the Thanksgiving and Napkins for use Thanksgiving Day or simply to' table with a few pieces of choose a few extra pieces to make your supply more: WOOLNAP BLANKETS c‘_‘t glass. A thousand Full size, heavy in white | pieces to choose from at comm\lete you really ought not to overlook this sale of | linent It’s a great bargain opportunity. or grey $6.49 pair. | department store prices. o) o o o ) o o o ) o) P T ) ) 6 ) ) o ) this protection, as you | ' as you should desire to do LPRINCETON GAME. o oty i ot | FACTS AND FANCIES tatos will be fought to a fs Saturdey at the Palmer By ROBERT QUILLEN when Y visits Princeton | Dear Irish het-heads, the price Let us be thankful that gamblers | treedom is but the price of a ticket have made no effort to corrupt ou | national grm of passing the buck. ontest last Saturday between and Princeton ending in h tle has acted as a goad to | interest, and it I8 conceded, tartors, that the Yale-Prince- | enr will be one of the t Toothall his people of Connecticut thelr fatth on the ability = bach Tad Jones to turn out a #th the same caliber as his | but not aiv.ays to the swift, m. A brief review of Tad |, .. one can see what he is getting but John Buli is willing to put his boaching career at Exeter and | — | meney on the Neet jows that he 18 a true wondor | When money talks, it speaks as one | —_— ;*.\ wuthority | The tree-love of Bolshevism will | —_— | give a new meaning to any future prned out the champlonshid | {45510 will be established when re- | organization of Daughters of the tory school elevens In the | form berins where charity does Revolution. s Exetor defeated Andover - : —— it . | . : , 2 i The right to vote is inherent. The he intensity of a man’s desire for e8e yoars aftor troy had re-| .. ., of a party is inherited {an automobile is mecasured by the R o the hasids o¢ Jomes. —— frequency of his tirades against car 916, at Yale, Jones gabe a As we understand it, the League is | owners. onship New Haven. | to be a co-educational institution. 4 nship team: to The election proved one thing. It oS oved th 2lics can muddle through | [&! the years 1913 and 1914, Tad EEBEEEEEE@EEEEE@E@EEE 5 E]E w6 = E R E E EE EE