New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 29, 1921, Page 9

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YOUR LAST CHANCE SATURDAY THE LAST DAY OF THESE WONDERFUL OFFERINGS NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, JULY We have gone over this stock, cutting down many items, placing them on tables still lower. We want to make Saturday a banner day and to do this we are giving you some rare bar- §§ gains. Everything back to normal cn Monday morning. on Saturday. So don’t fail to do your shopping § Fashion Park and Hickey—Freeman Clothes B facture. EXTRA Special Many suits added to this line from the better ones $24.75 Values to $55.00 Feature Table All exceptionally big values $1.85 Values to $3 oO Notaseme Llsle Hose 3 for $1.00 Regular 50c¢ value ) TWO-PIECE BATHING SUITS — WHITE, JERSEY AND BLUE TRUNKS AT LESS THAN ACTUAL COST !WILbO DAY Group 2 You will find some truly wonderful values here and a big range to select from $29.75 Values up to $60.00 Wllson and Manhattan Shirts Table No. 2 Finest of Madras & Percale and white collar atfached $2.65 Values up to $4 00 Lalbrlggan Underwear 3 for $1.00 Regular $1.00 value arn To Save By Trading at The PEOPLE’S MARKET CO. § CORNER PARK AND ELM: STREETS Plenty Parking Space. SPECIALS FOR SATURDAY Lean Smoked Shoulders 17%,¢ l’ot Roast Shoulder Steak Sirloin Steak Fresh Ground Hamburg 18 Milk Fed Fowls Lean Corned Beef 8¢ MEAT SPECIALS Genuine Leg of Spring Lamb 33¢ 15¢| All our 19 BEEF ¢ cut from fancy heav; Frankforts- 20¢ Telephone 2298 Sperry & Barnes Bacon 33¢ Lamb Chops Fores of Lamb Veal Chops Roast of Veal 45¢|steers only| Fresh Roast of Pork . . 27¢ g Cottage Hams | 39¢ ——————————————— e e erereeee————————te e————— I Royal Lunch iG¢ Nabiscos Uneedas 6¢ Fresh Made Elgm (‘reamery FANCY PEAS (Large Can) FANCY PEACHES (Large Can) HERMITAGE PEA! HERMITAGE CORN ) EASTERN TOMATOES PINK SALMON PE'{L ECTION COFFEE | LiPTCN’S COCOA LARGEST FRUIT DEPARTMENT IN THE CITY PcLatoes Onions Ripe Tomatoes, 3 1b 23¢ Sweet Corn 23¢ doz Cal. Oranges 33¢ Native Peaches 2 quarts 15¢ 5¢ Cukes (native) 3¢ Eating Apples 3 quarts Z5¢ Large Lemons 45¢ Blueberries .. 22¢ led Beans 15«‘ qt. Strmg Beans 4 quarts 15¢ Peppers . .. Cal. Cantaloupes 3 fer 20¢ Lettuce (large) 7¢ Cabbage (solid) 4¢ Carrots Appreciating the business given us by the Public, we have decided to put on a delivery to do away with the carrying of those large orders and will gladly deliver to @ny part of the Prompt attention and service to all orders, cither personal or :lty, orders of $1.00 or over. $33.75 Values up to $65.00 Silk 10¢ qt. Group 3 You can’t beat this lot. Now #3 is the time to buy that new @ Fall suit at a»big saving 29, 1921. B IDLENESS CAUSING. L0SS OF BILLIONS stabilty of Bmploment and | Bad Management Causes New York, July 29.—Idle men and machinery are causing a loss of nearly | a billion dollars a year in the metal | | trades industry says a report issued |B A | today by the committee on elimina ¥ | tion of waste in industry of the Am. erican engineering council. This es. timate does not include the value of |§ materials that would be utilized if B | productivity were increased. Not all sizes of every pattern but all sizes, and many going at less than cost to manu- [§ Instability of labor employment and faulty management, the commit- B [ tee said, are major causes of waste | § fj|in the metal industry which is the largest manufacturing industry in the United States both in number of em- |} ployes and value of products, The average waste due to avoidable i labor~turnover in the metal industry is computed at $109,000,000. Modern pmplo)ment methods embraclng the study of “why men quit” are urged. “We have {wo million unnecessary ‘separations’ the equivalent of two |Q 4 | million workers annually separated |§ B8 | and re-hirea,” says the report. Present industrial conditions in the M | United States and abroad are de- B8 | clared to have affected seriously the Table No. 3 ¢ Madras and all our } Pure Silk Shirts $4.85 Values up to $10 00 fl | metal trades industry which as a whole is operating at only about 60 S per cent of normal. “Manufacturers,” the report adds, “can undoubtedly hasten a return, to normal conditions by producing goods as economically as possible so as to make selling prices low enough to at- 4 | tract buyers.” The report says “it is evident that | 4 | management of labor must be elevat- B [cd to a higher plane. is the major factor in most if not |§ 8|21 industries it should be led by Because labor recognized intelligence rather than by 81 | radical agitators on the one hand or 2 for $1.00 Regular to $1.00 CITY ITEMS _— Ausust Victor records at Mora ns'. ora; Victrolas, Pianos. & C. L. Pi ey ierce & e SRR FIREMEN ON VACATION. Captain Fred #mith of Company No. 2 truck, Lieutenant John C, o nolly, of Engine Company No. ¢, $ | 'red Fagg of Company No. 1 truck and George Mycroft of Engine Com. pany No. 5, started the annual va- B | cation. Lawrence Saunders of Com. pany No. 2 truck, Edward Parker o i Engine Company No. 2 and Lieuten- ant Thomas Hinchey of Engine Com. pany No. 2 resumed duty today after g |the annual vacation. Con- | Object to 50 Hour Week, Employes Go On Strike Jamestown, N. Y., July 29.—Four hundred operatives in the Acme and Empire Worsted Mills here struck to- day against an extension of working time from 48 to 50 hours a week. The g | hills recently announced a five-day weorking week of ten hours a day, as against a six-day week of eight hours a day. The question of wages is not N | under consideration. Sinskie’ by stupid reactionaries on the other.” The metal trades findings are a . B8 | art of the general report made by |J Athletic Shirts & Drawers B | of industrial waste directed by L.'W. B | Wallace of Washington as vice-chair- | g the committee on its national assay man. The metal trades investigation was in charge of Fred J. Miller of New York, and William B. Ferguson W | of Philadelphia. b e B | SMALL IS ANXIOUS TO “SERVE PEOPLE” Ilinois Governor Objects to Interfer- ence With His Endeavors to Re- sume Executive’'s Work. Chicago, July 29.—GoWernor home at Kankakee, Ill, and appar- antly returns with a decision to leave his case growing out of- his in- dictment by a Sangamon county grand jury for the alleged embezzlement of state funds while he was state treas- urer, in the hands -of his attorneys while he resumes the executive bus- iness of the state. “I don’t propose to be annoyed fug- ther in serving the people,” Gover- nor Small said prior to leaving for |H his home last night after an all day |g conference with attorneys here. ““Oth- ers are trying to keep me from look- ing after the affairs of the people g but I intend-to go ahead and do my duty. “I am going to stick to business as closely as possible and I will not tolerate any further interference. 1| believe I have wasted too much time already on them.” BODY OF DR. STONE IS NOT YET RECOVERED. | Banff, Alberta, July 29.—No word | has been received today of the re- covery of the body of Dr. W. E. Stone, president of Purdue university which is lying somewhere at the foot of Rock Chimney, where the university president fell when climbing Mount | }§ Eanon with his wife last week. R. R. VALUATIONS. ‘Washington, July valuations of railroads announced to- day by the interstate commerce com- mission included: The Mcntpelier and Wells River, $1,925,000; the Union Freight Railroad Co. (Mass.) $429,- 833. S Stre CORNER MAIN and ELM. 60c LEMONS for ORANGES MUSKMELONS PEACHES HONEYDEW MELONS CASABA MELONS LIMES FANCY CUCUMBERS LIMA BEANS 15¢ quart, H SUGARLEAF PINEAPPLE BLUEBERRIES ........ FRESH PICKED SWEET CORN SPECIALS FORSATURDAY — FRUITS — 45¢ dozen 15¢ up .................... 25¢ . 40c dozen up 10c and up 2 quarts for 25¢ — VEGETABLES — ......... e ... 20c dozen 3 for 10c 30c dozen . 2 for 25¢ [§|K ... 5c each . 10c quart .. 61b 25¢ 4 1 25¢ 3 bunches for 10c b $1.00 4 Len | B | Small was expected back in Chicago today after spending the night at his | = 29.—Tentative | B —SATURDAY— BEACON BLANKET BATH ROBES $6.85, 2 for HOSE 35c mcludmg Notaseglé‘, MADRAS SHIRTS $4.00, 2 for .. $4.01 96¢ SHIRTS $2 Hand Clocked Silk Hose, 2 pair ... $2.01 $2 39 Madras, $2 UNDERWEAR $3 50 Sillc Stripes, Balbriggan Two-Piece 2 for $3.51 69¢c, 2 for .. TOc $3.50 White Collar $1.25, 2 for .. $1.26 Attached, 2 for $3.51 $2.50 Imperial Union ; NECKWEAR Suits, 2 for .... $2.51 $1.00 Bow Ties, PAJAMAS ) 11 el - $1.01 $2.95, 2 for .. $2.96 75c Four-m-Hand, UMBRELLAS 76¢ $2.75, 2 for .. $2.76 $1.51 ) 2 for b $1. 7}, Four-m-Hand,sl B Including Sweet Orr $2 35 Four-in-Hand, $1.49,.2 for .. $1.50 2 FOF 1 oo, $2.36 White Neckband All Straw Hats ... $1.15' SHIRTS $3.50, 2 for .. $3.51 Panamas ....cceces $2.35 Connors-Halloran Stores, Inc. The Main Store On the Main Street 215 MAIN STREET. Quick Results---Herald Classified Ad SATURDAY SPECIALS AT THE NEW BRITAIN - MARKET-C0.~ NUALITY GO0DS AT l.‘3l8 MAIN ST ECONOMY .PRICES TEL. 2485 ROAST PORK (Not frozen) LEAN SMOKED SHOULDERS ... SMALL LEGS OF LAMB . LEAN BONELESS POT ROAST .. PRIME RIB ROASTS . & OCOTTAGE HAMS .... FRESH KILLED FOWL ROAST VEAL LAMB STEW 14c BEST FRANKFORTS . Ib 20c BEST PURE I ™ 39c ™ 45¢ ™ 28c FRESH EGGS 35¢ dozen PEANUT BUTTER 15¢ ™ BUTTER LARD 43¢ b 14c b BUY YOUR SUGAR FOR CANNING NOW CHALLENGE MILK .........a 2 cans 27c¢ PORK & BEANS ... CORNED BEEF CORN FLAKES GINGER SNAPS T()\[AT()I;S (large cans) FA\ CY PEAS . FRESH PINK SALMON . MACARONT . - ROLLED OATS ..... 2 Uneeda Biscuit, Lemon Snaps and Zu-Zu's pkg 6¢ — P. & G. PRODUCTS — CRISCO 1o...vnniniaie CHIPSO (for the laundry) . 2 cans 28¢ N & (" WHITE V\P’l‘“i Sl‘ \R ‘\ APTHA POWDER . ... LENOX LAUNDRY SOAP NATIVE TOMATOES BEST POTATOES BEETS & CARROTS 3 bchs 10¢ NATIVE LIMA BEANS .......... 2 qts 25¢ LARGE LETTUCE .. head 10c CALIF. CANTALOUPES ca 10¢ large pkg 29¢ ONIONS et SUMMER SQl‘ibfl eew NATIVE é‘l S 3 PEPPER: PLUMS ... ORANGES .. AT i % e s e B N et s~ 3. gt 5 We Also Have a Big Display of Apples, Peaches, Bananas and Sweet Corn at Lowest Prices. LARGE JUICY We Are in No Wiy Udnrtected With Any Other Store in the City. 39c dozen

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