New Britain Herald Newspaper, August 12, 1921, Page 5

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STORE CLOSES EVERY MONDAY UP TO AND INCLUDING SEPTEMBER 5th. 'Now For A Record Making Saturday At the MILL-END SALE “{In addition to tho money saving offerings quoted in our initial opening Mill End Sale announcement thewe will be hundreds of mew and astonishing bargain offers Saturday — New arrivals of new goods 106 NEW Bki!AIN DAILY Hartford nunierous to mention, among which is a ‘EPECKAL PURCHASE OF WOMEN’S NEW FALL POLO COATS THAT WERE MADE TO RE- TAIL THIS FALL AT $22.50. We offer them Saturday at the Mill End Sale at the unprecedented low pricé of Just think of it, only $8.00 for a stylish Coat of All Wool Camel’s Hair Polo Material. Lined with seco, belted and finished with fancy stitching. Sedson. ONE REEL OF $16.98 and $22.50 SUITS AT THE MILL END SALE .. Made of bést Jersey cloth, all wool materials, only two and three of a kind. : $9.00 cheviot and other Natural Opossum Scargs, double fur, finished off with head and tail. Regular $10.98 value for $5.00. ONE RACK OF ABOUT FIFTY SKIRTS, made of fine quality vet Tou_ch T T st Is so pere and Bealing, = free from harshingredien itiss standard household remedy for ‘burns, .. RESINOL SOAP e ASPIRIN Name ‘Bayer” on Genuine Take Aspirin only as told in each ’ackage of genuine Bayer Tablets ot Aspirin. Then you will be following he directidns and dosage worked out 'y physicans during 21 years and roved safe by millions. Take no thances with substitutes. If you see he Bayer Cross on tablets, you can ake then without fear for 'Colds, feadache Neuralgia, Rheumatism, farache, Toothache, Lumbago and or_Pain.| Handy tin boxes of twelve ,‘ IeW cents. Druggists also ell large packages. ' Aspirin is the TWENTY-FIVE SKIRTS, con- sisting of checks, satins and satin plaid poplin. Regular $12.98 values. H:'. $7.00 Saturday .... \ POSTERITY T0 HAVE READABLE NEWS FILE New York Library Will Use Japanese Tissue New York, Aug. 12.—The problem of preserving for posterity important newspaper files. which, since wood pulp superseded rags in the manu- facture of newsprint, has baffled li- brarians all .over the world, at last apparently has been solved by officials of the New York Public Library. After seven years of experimenta- tion, backed by the co-operation of three New Yory -daily papers each of which has spent $5,000 a year to find the best preservative method, the of- ficials believe they have discovered the correct solution, that of mounting each newspaper between two sheets of thin Japanese tissue. This shuts the original sheet from the air, reduces 'its legibility but strengthens the page and permits its free handling without danger of dis- integration. As almost everyone knows, .the newspapers of fifty years ago were printed on rag stock and were tough and durable. You see them in the libraries almost in as good a condition as the day they were printed. Not so with the journals printed since the 70’s and 80’s of the past century, ac- cording to Harry M. Lyenberg, chief reference librarian in jthe New York Pyblic Library. Wood pulp paper be- comes yellow and brittle after ex- posure, he said. Bound volumes treated by the new process have been in daily use at the library for some time and are free from the marks of wear and tear shown less fortunate contemporarie. " The library has a regular depact- ment for the treating of newspaper files of three New York dailies. With the aid of recently perfected mechani- cal equipment it prepares the papers at a cost of about $35 to $40 a bound volume, which is paid for by the pud- lishers _in order that their papers may be preserved in the library ar- chives. The tissue paper ued in the process is imported from Japan where it is made by hand. It is applied wth rice paste, and adds only one-thousanath of an inch to an individual sheet, mak- ing a volume about one inch thicker than it would be ordinarily . “The paper problem is acute only in the case of papers printed on ground pulp,” continued Mr. Lyden- berg. £ - - “Papers of the present period are certain of complete disintegration within a short time. Paper makers could make better stock if the pres- sure for speed was not so great and. more- time could be taken to. wash the chlorine and other bleaching ele- ments from the pulp. But makers must Keep their cost down and that us- ually means a weakening of quality.” Mr. Lydenberg said that extensive experients with chemical solutions ‘put on new stock by spray or brush had failed because no chemical treatment would patch up torn sheets nor fill in Bayer Manufadture ot cylicacid. WOMEN’S NEW FALL TATLORED SUITS SATURDAY AT THE MILL END SALE . These Suits were made to retail at. $32.50. quality tricotine, some are trimmed others plain and still others are button models. HERALD FrRIDAY, AUGUST 12, 1921. Men’s and Young Men’s Suits _ Formerly Sold From $30 to $65 o - at Three Prices $11 $19 $29 include all our Kuppen- heimer and other good ODDS AND ENDS SUITS Only one or two of a FAMOUS REGULAR STOCK SUITS Certainly this is the wonder value of the $25 | Good All at $25.00. .. $5.00 ONE LOT of about fifty Skirts, made of wool velours,- box pleated models, ‘with belt. Regular $9.98 values Saturday to the tests made with the Japanesc paper. Experiments are being continued at the library, Mr. Lydenberg said, with the hope that some still better process of preservation may be found. He said experiments also were being . madc with an Amercan manufactured tissue paper. The New York: method, Mr. Lyden- berg said, is.now used by a Chicago newspaper. AWAKE COLLEGE BOYS Jazz Hurts Your Taste and Fmer Sen- sibilities—Reserve Gone Out of Wo- manly. Treatment. State College, Pa., Aug. 12.—‘Jazz’’ is hurting the standards of taste and the . finer sensibilities of many college students, according to Prof. A. R. War- nock, dean of men at Pennsylvania) State college. ‘‘Something of reserve has gone out of the personality of our young women and something of nobility has gone out of the attitude Jf our young men tow- ard young women,” ‘he said in com- ment on college life since the war, Why Not Try This? Ir a Pile sufferer don’t become desponden: — try Hem-Roid — no greasy salves—no cutting—a harmless internal tablet remedy that is guar- anteed to quickly bamish all misery "or costs nothing. Clark & Brainerd Co. GO TO - Jones’ - Quality Market 10 MYRTLE STREET. SPECIAL FOR SATURDAY LEGS OF GENUINE -SPRING LAMB The Best in the City 34c 1b. Phone 285. broken spots. The use of chiffon, or FREE DEUVERY thin light silk, also failed to come up|—— & ® <7 kind, formerly sold at: $25 to $35, most all sizes, Now Sold at §35, $40, $45 makes, $45 to $65_' NOW. g NOw. : K"All» Summer Goods, Flannel Trousers, Office Coats, at Greatly Reduced Prices We will net carry over any Merchandise. Don’t cur Prices tell you we mean this? CONNORS-HALLQO STORES, INC. 215 Main Street ' A 10-Shave Tube of Palmolive Shaving At the Stores listed below ked “What is your conception of the ideal shavmg cream?” For many years we have been making .the ideal toilet soap. We blended palm and olive oils— the balmy casmetics of age-old fame. And millions of people have adopted this Palmolive Soap. Six years ago we started to embody this blend in a shaving cream. And the first step was to ask a thousand men the vir- tues they wanted in it. > These were their requirements: First, a quick shave Nine-tenths of these men wanted quick shaves, above all. They did not like long brushing, finger rubbing, hot towels and delay. So a cream was made which acts in one minute. Within that time the average beard absorbs 15% of water. And that is erugh. This result is due to almost in- PALMOLIVE | Shaving Cream | The stores named below will supply the Free Tube on this Coupon T stant ‘oil removal—the oil that coats the beard. Next, liberal lather Next, /they wanted liberal lather. And they wanted a little of the soap to go far. So we developed a cream which multi- plies itself 250 times in lather. A bit on the brush — only one-half gram — suffices for a shave. A’single tube of Palmolive Shaving Cream serves for 152 shaves. Then they wanted a lather which main- tains itself without drying on the face. So we perfected a lather which main- tains its creamy fullness for ten minutes. That is ample time. This lather does not need replacément. Your Name Addr ura ™ ™ = omn me o we w ES EEA Out-of-town A soothing sosp They wanted a ing shaving cream, They wanted a lubri razor, no irrita- tion, a pleasant after-effect. % Thebestvn{evuhmw&eaenda is the blend of palm and olive oils. The ther is a lotion in 'itself. 130 creams were made Wezreexperuinmpmhm' But took us 18 months to attain i shaving cream. 130 formalas were made up and tested. Thus step by these supremacies were attained, 3ad ‘the best shaving cream in existence. Now we ask you to test it. Learn ia how many ways it excels. , It. dead the way to a lifetime of delightful Present the coupon for a trial tube. - 10-Shave Tube Free. Present this coupon, with your name and filled in, to any of the stores named.. It 2 10-Shave Tube of Palmolive Shaving is good fi is Cnan.“ residents should mail this coupon to The Palmolive Company, Milwaukee, U. S. A, and the tube will he seat by mail. Key Depty No. B¢ .

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