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THURSDA EPTEMBER 15, 1921. IR 5 . . looks and prosperous appearance, | New Britain Herald. A g TSN e G = MEMALD PUBLISIING COMPANY, p a4 da Sunday excopted) s (Robert Russell) rave to pay $25 a year for the priv- R B oo P e R ilege of becoming members of the ® . When nights are warm an’ balmy |} ojue of which Tex Rikard is the 2 . gm0 courn s || youve. pomeked a1 s | St s o ot o |8 an O s 1NC. 00 Three Months, long, menager of a boxer, the latter being e An dirtied up an’ tired out, you | iten a misnomer, will have o pay JR— fists of another, while sweet-tongued TELEPHONE CALLS Beat; you'rs longin® for that persons who stand with their hands on ws OMs Jeceton bed (re “ropes” after having removed ’ A > o That mother's made up early- their hats and displayed hair cut in profitable adv ¢ medium In where, jest now, belongs your manner wonderfiil and beautiful to v, Creulat s ‘and press . Pomn alwars epem to & gy behold, will have to contribute $10 ||f When coolish evenin’s o' the fall anually for the privilege of being thus don't keep you out so late & - Asave . i ey el «dmired, and the man who thumps - ; , rcone mentlons “Jest 4 1] .o bodies of the fighters and says v » eredit walk™ you sort o' hesitate | A news pub- | | 1 \hey are all right, otherwise called the An’ think the blazin' lo; ¢ s 3 “physicians,” will have to “kick in un't so almighty bad e with a like amount % An’ truth to tell, when you're g ; The wisdom of the boxing commis; there, the fire makes you gk = son penctrateth even into the ‘‘cor- » when the winter comes alc s Nabies his stow ners” of the “boxer,” where those per- beard ons, generally clad in sweaters or silk @istribution 1 oth nat loeat advert At times y sorry, then irts, rub the contesta jlash him o —— e — times you're glad that he's ap- with water held for a brief moment LY ROGER W. BABSON e in the iaborer's mouth, or who wave . B 3 It ain't the season o' the year the towel violently, will have to pay The Herald realizes that the busi that makes our homes all this-- : bt $5 annually for the privilege of rcad- Dess condition s the topic of conver-[| The heart whero happiness is e sation among morchants aé well as found—soft peacefulness, sweet & thefr names in newspapers after the man ahout town. The question bliss; he words “In Pugnacious Pete's “How Is business?” is asked now, In summer balm; in winter's corner were———."" cold; T ; Just as conversation aboutethe weather when storms sweep o'er dear mother necessity, in her used to be the major premise of talks mankind, care of Invention, has had to dig into for talking’s sake, & year ago A dearer place than Home Sweet her protege’s pockets.. But it hurts Home, no man may ever find. The Roger W. Babson article which net more than it does the gentlemen This sale will be conducted on the second floor of our own store at 199-203 Main street, the Herald is to begin next Saturday of the “profesh.” and Will begin at 9 a. m. Friday the 16th. show how business is swaying. They _— i MawJihe Jetensels Jot R se AN |1 The febayg ex vl i nar sl The entire Bankrupt Stock will be ready for the greatest sale of Bargains New Britain through which channels the trade koep a lot of people just where they currents of activity are directing| {17y This On Your Wise(|are. 8| ever saw. We hought this stock at a very low price and we are going to see that our cus- themselves. For instance, if there Is Friend il mw—“—.: = ;l—o‘f— e o tomers get the benefit. & certain class of commodities acting 1 . (| takes advintage of the fact to play, A . . 3 . e e eadn it | Lo S Terms during the First Week will be: Nothing sent on approval, nothing sent c. o. d., be detected by Babson's delicato| {another was one-half full; another P T nothing held on part payment, cash in full at time of sale except that purchases will be charg- T s s ed on request to our regular charge customers. A T SN 1¢ you have owed a bill a long time, ||} Fully $10,000 worth of desirable ready-to-wear at less than half, that’s just what this sale it b ] (I Y caraay STahi || Bavait iEyouican e Aot ion IRy RIS means. Come and get your share of the Bargains! dren; 90 oranges. s mathematical system long before the had half as much as the first two casual observer would be aware of| )together; another had 3 1-2 quarts, ) the fact. How much wine had he? é and the reason for this tact is worked out, using theory, practice, and a «President Plays on Long Island tendency toward certain activities us- | __ headline. Perhaps he's saying to him- || SKIRTS CHILDREN’S WINTER COATS ing financial history upon which tw oalt. “Wo'n " 2a B 7 = e & Spmaaities ernment to the city with as little cost | **!% “We're 8 long time dea Green’s prices from $2.00 to $20.00 < Splendid warm coats, 4 to 14 year sizes Babson is not always right, but that | @8 Possible. Even the most efficient o Green’s prices $5.00 to $15.00 i i s s e | o, s ars S et | BN is HELD IN | Sale Prices $1.00, §1.95, $2.95, $3.95 and $4.95 Bankrupt Sale Prices $2.95, $3.95 and $4.95 Wherever the human gage Js concern- | fAr. sometime Tne last reports we ed, there ° istakes, but Babson have from Washington are that affajrs = - - B enas et W he | Arelbrighies milfovesTina oo unt B d ER “AISTS_ : ‘ ‘\BOYS’ WARM OVERCOATS right, so much so that some 16,000 | Possible, it would be wise to get men k Of Georgette, etc. Green's prices $1.00 to $10.00. 1 4 to 14 year sizes loremost American business men turn- | ! ested in New Britain's big busi- . . e foremont American business men turn- | Iatereeted In New Britain's ble bus Sale Prices 45c¢, 95¢, $1.95, $2.95 Green’s prices $8.00 to $15.00 ed to him last year for a scope of con- ditions. He receives over $1,600,000|!f they desire, to this effect if they (Continued from First Page). - Bankrupt Sale Prices $2.95, $3.95 and $4.95 every year for his observations. That ""}l{"“'";‘ this -“‘“"‘“}:'v:""““ the true one. Vet ol Uy ataoTe 5 CHILDREN’S WASH DRESSES s his business, and he can be depend may we one pleasant 2 g P pressed doubt whether Lgon Par ’ ed upon to give the best that there is| memory of the old-time city meeting— | [l Cp i en, despite his detailed con- ||§ Green’s prices $1.00 to $2.50 WOMEN’S DRESSES in him. His repwtalon (the backb the promise of a good plan and the | fession. A : Silk, Serge, etc. Green’s prices $12.50 to $70.00 > of his%arning abllity) s at stake Ofmcials pointed out that Parks rices 65¢ and 95¢ each 2 2 € hiarning Abiy) in i sake. o | Iter redeermin of that promi pShcisle puliet out et Earts Bankrupt Sale Prices Bankrupt Prices $7.95, $9.95, $14.95, $19.95 confronted by Church, who then sup- his name has become a pecessar THE MOTION PICTURES, plied most of the answers to questions | |R& = word throughout financhi circles of Lawyer Danaher of Meriden, speak- ;'1" :.- Eiets '“‘«““K““'"’-‘ ' ‘VODIEN’S FALL COATS TAILOR MADE SUIT e world. ing at a Republican rally in Nev | Mrs apparently un- = . 5 al. th rld t a Republican rally in New Brit Just right for now. Every kind of desirable material Fall and) winter ‘veighta. s ST s i pes w ay throughout her son's 1o- The Herald has contracted for his t fall used a little story to illus- % 3 cital of the details of the murder. At Green’s prices $15 to $30.00 . n weekly newspaper report and much | trate his point. He told of @ bottle in | the close of nis stosy she remnsmed . " Bankrupt Sale Prices $7.95 to $24.95 valuable information can be derived |(he grgss alongside the road. It would| *I cannot understand why Harvey Bankrupt Sale Prices $7.95, $9.95, $14.95 $ from his observatiobs pass unnoticed, but just put that bottle | Puried the man (Carl Ausmus) in the . garage. There is a vacant lot next door And Some Very Fine Coats at $19.95 and $24.95 ey y SEAL COATS TWO-PLATOON, enough spirit in the average person to | the neighborhood s buried. Why Of extra q\mlity. Only Faurt et lin el here is satistaction in the prompt. | W8Nt to take a shot at that bottle.|dldn’t he bury him there? Then they ||} 7, ] T ™ 1 Istact the § pt WOMEN’S WINTER COATS 3 Coats—Green’s price $150.00. i ipleeinoriad "] That s the case’ with the moving|¥ould never have found him. atoon W Church, in his first confession said |}8 Many of them handsomely trimmed with fur. tem, promised to the firemen and the | Picture industry which has worked its| ), 4ione lured Daugherty and Ausmus Bankrupt Sale Price $75.00 Each Deople at the last, old-time, Rever-to. | ¥4¥ UP to the fifth place in line of |to his home, killed them and disposed Green’s prices $15.00 to $45.00 > Sesmotben .¢ 55 i the foremost Amer ndus of the bodies to obtain possession of 5 =~ 9, - Y . by, foroten ety mecting. hean taken | Tt drama- has haen going |40 automobile Later he'said he had Bankrupt Sale Prices $7.95, $9.95, $14.95 e Ll P along unnoticed until the recent Ar- | pn SccPmblice and sl And Several very fine Coats at Bankrupt Prices $19.95, $24.95 ankrupt Sale Price $87.50 Each Prosent to the Common Council next | PUckle episode has brought it to the| Parks' confession repeated in detail 5 — | 7 Coats—Green’s price $200.00 attention of the public He has put|how he and Church killed the two — 3 )| ). Wednesday evening Men will be re- ooty el it on the fence, the same as the bottle, | 2Utoobile salcamen, threw Daugherty’s ||} FUR NECK SCARFS Bankrupt Sale Price $100.00 Each or body in the river and burfed Ausmus’ and has made it the target of criti < T A e is Chunch and « Green’s prices $10.00 to $18.00 2 Very fine Seal Coats—Green’s price $300.00, firemen will be watching members of named amsociate as the Council, but the eyes of the peo- | It May be just to -vriticize the|the third man involved. i Bankrupt Sale Prices $4.95 and $7.95 Bankrupt Sale Price $150.00 Each P I S R SR Church yesterday i ave as- pla will b »n them. - . - : ”L ; (.”' Sason ERos “|serted he named Wilder because he The city voted to give the two-pla. | ™% but 100k at the vast amount of [ [liel \Wiider could easily prove his - good the movies are doing. Take for| innocence” and said the “real third . 2 H : toon mystem to the firemer The pla fifoon mystem men. The Plan | o ance, Charlie Chaplin's “Shoulder | man” was Walker. Walker, like Wilder Remember the Time and Place—Sale Begins | Remember the Time and Place—Sale Begins 10 be submitted has appeared to be the - sh an A at release keopt all the|Was able to establish an alibi T e opored. ot will re- | housanda of American Doughboys and | P At 9 A. M. Friday, Sept. 16, at At 9 A. M. Friday, Sept. 16, at nnt o e s wiw e | 0 0 v e BROAD STREET MAN [l The McMinlan Store, 199-203 Main Street | The McMillan Store, 199-203 Main Street ly possible to make it. By the votes reflected the times, and it is proclaim ot the members of the Council men | st bty may know how dependable the latter | °3 VY MaNY as Chaplin's masterplece Sarah Bernhardt in “Mothers of consider a moral obligation to be. nce” was shown all over the world It became a moral bullder for the tir — = = 3\ | make suitable paving for the road |give careful attention the American may be; It s concelved by human back to mormal. standard of honor. miinds. ‘There willibe arguments raleed | ) foldlers. She wus prociaimed (Continued from First Page.) CTS AND FAN‘ IES ‘ i E= s a second “Joan of A by the — i z “Chasseur Alpines” who b ypen e to|struck by the bumper on the front of M -, #hemselves betore the people for not 2 , R i Ccalis i Gat nurted Tt pits land entirely surrounded by jealousy. | feeling that a new world can't be woting for It, and say that if they had | 1o PA"r® DY the cashedral at Rhelma | | \rack and dragged under wheals|| — BY ROBERT QUILLEN - = SafLsedioioms i) whe the "D e Sarah" a « 5 B shanve 1o vote for another piaa)| ot B s rah™ was acting|cor upwards of 100 feet before the @A republic has lost its savor when NOT ASKING LOAN. certain scenes for this remarkabletrain could be stoppe ——— = = citi gi v : with this or that eliminated, they = train could be stopped. citizens begin to speak of Government [ Buenos Aires, Sept. 15—Negotiations would have favored it. If the plan, When money is tight, fewer men The success of sharpers indicates|as “they.” Letween Argentine government and . that the buyer's strike has not yet —_— i gt thaRe eliminating “this or “that” they |, o4 are to be spoken of in the high-|™a" '<"-{" s notified ;{,.4; ,_vim.l er- are. _ be-n extended to bogus securitics Government should do all in its ;\rn;esr‘;fzoaono‘;::l;‘:ifeu;se:;u;l:sn;;%;l;ai: might have found other “this's and | .. terms, but also who doesn't fesl ‘"n 'uv H'I’h'thr‘l.uk‘l‘n",‘:‘ \anmsho( D;EA A sharp appetite won't cut living = L’&‘;;‘;rd“‘or Ezfiz‘;\;mflxs]img'{fil‘; hc‘ learned in authoritative guarters a thrill of pride as they witness the »gslowski, at 20 Orange street.|€Xpenses. cre, pictures of the victory parade in Paris? | Search of the clothing revealed a T . small piece of tissue paper, a $1 bill, Even brilliant men can't shine in a pair of glass gold rimmed specta-|dull company. cles which were broken by the auc picture. dent, a steel nail file and a postal The teeth in our laws are not the motion pictures are with us to|card written in Slavish addressed to|only ivory part. ay. and the endeavors of the pro-|“Mr. John Lison, 216 Broad street, has survived through the years, and = —— - on a fence post and the: is just There is now something defaite to “against.’ ot only the eyes of the There are faults with the plan it Police headquarters was advised at history making pic.|once and Medical Examiner Water- other “that's” which were, according to them, quite as damning. The mayor has kept his hands from this matter recentl He refused to In this way patriotism and loyally to country 1Is kept allve through the #0 on the present committes to draft & plan. At the last meeting of the The Council he presented three plans. | None has been adopted. He is In a | gucers are bearing fruit, in spite of|New Britain, Conn And nearly all lies are the product| i @ poor T =t I|the Arbuckle scandal. Individuals may | Th¢ man mar "v'i' andlecyae vellow streak. as mad because he frantic for a th you refused them; I X R O o) =usn A = a valuable suggestion RS :(but the The most expensive permanent wave | hore for the antis. have done my part to re m the city's by films go on forever COMMUNICATED et The plans did not give the two-pla o 2 _— In a world full of perfectly good - > To the Bditor of Herald: adjectives, it is difficult to understand : Clever Is he who thinketh up a new Dear Sir: i 3 why they called it the “Supreme” They were not tull orked out. It "h udent body o 2 N | > % “ounc by bebid method of taxation which will not fall| . The student body of the N. B ; Collncil would seem keeping off the com 8. especially the ones out for the f: | upon the general taxpayer, but most-| hal team, greatly object A _ |1y upon the fraternity wont to be|cles which the Record has been pub- The Ume has come, the Harding ber of the fire board, he was planning - lishing about our coach., George M 4 said, to talk of many things: of guns to veto this plan, the \bstance of | “41led. without protest, “sporting Rk A ales protest & = s ¢ ¢ & 2 and ships and incoms tax, and the Necessity of more money for the costly sport of Kkin, position to say: “I presented plans toon generally to all the fire stations. mittee, and being an ex-officio publishing any more facts about him | The American proletariat will never te scoms to be the mother of the | in regards to which they know not resort to violence while it can enjoy f = She ha . the thrill of passing a rich man’s car Another undesirable immigrant is HEgERas ened by the fact that he | ltest way to get it. She had said|Ing g A q ’ ther sirengthened by ti S RO e nts: “These sporting| Ve Some members of the studentfon the hill the one who comes over filled with y v body of the N. B. H. S. ar ting e the typical American desire to get [t the plan was prepared #entlemen are ‘froe spenders’ nor | an apology from them for ti ticlas| o Hedsaz tsn't like ours. Over|rich Without much effort. It would be wise, of course, to con- | Whuld they much object to paying a | Which hn]w nh”‘ |”|nx ]l~|\(’v!“l'l' theleli it affecta the other end. v mount to engage, pa e PADAT, L enpes Moy ons was S 5 ] : it i : wult the mayor now, in this important nall amount t ngage, partake of printed in the issue of September 14 '\",d, ll» vlfunmlyl ‘vl‘ :f _n H)s]l}l:: have a hand in ffair of the fists " 1 It will be a long time before high | the man who is decent because he is ave a hand in ffair o i We wish that you would kindly gh i it ent feels y get buck to a pre-war level. |afraid of getting caught feels y superior to the man who takes a chance which he must have contemplated His attitude of planning a veto is fur did not attend last night's hearing matter, and receive the benefit of his advice on any matter which might be | in which they are interested not only | print this protest in your paper in re- | Jinks irds to the matter Franklin Davis, It is almost a physical impossibility The ono predominating thought of the | So the gentlemen who wear clothes Frank Grifia, e e e e mayor seems to be 10 give good gov- | that attract attention to their good Players. {he side of your opponent. At any rate. good intentions would changed before the plan is presented. | firancially but also artistigally.’