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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FREE. A leather covered miniature appointment book to the first 300 customers who make a purchase in our store. QUAUYVJ We are now ready to serve you in a still better way than we have been heretofore. The new store we have moved to, at the corner of Park and Meadow Streets, is directly opposite our old stand. It has.been built especially for the use of a Drug Store and nothing has been left undone to make our store a safe place to come for all your Drug Wants. Our prices are always the most liberal in consistency with the quality of our merchandise. FREE—— Souvenirs With Each Purchase—Come Tomorrow HAWAIIAN ISLES RELATIONS CENTER Japan Thinks U. §. Should Have Them for Economic Base Honolulu, T. H., Sept. 30.—Japaneso and Americans should make the econ- omic factor in Japanese relations in the Hawallan islands a lever for better understanding, instead of permitting 1t to become a cause of hostility and mis. understanding, Baron N. Kanda of the Japanese house of peers and one of the foremost educators in the Japanese em- 223 Park Street Cor. Meadow Street 1366 Phone arisen and gone to the barn after the chores were all done, especially with L sore foot, hence she was absolved from blame. But the popular rumor ,utran the official’ rqcords, and the taings besy remembered about the great disaster are Mrs. O'Leary and ner cow. Two men who later headed the Chicago fire department were mem- Uers of the first engine company, No. 6, to arrive at the fire. They were William Musham, who was foreman ¢t the company, and John Campion, Assistant foreman. Both later be- cane fire marshal. The fire will be vividly reproduced in the fourth scene of the festival play portraying Chicago's history, which is to be given in Grant Park, in a specially bullt auditorum seating 15,000 persons A cast of more than 0, with a chorus of 1,000 singers ind an orchestra of 100 pieces, will FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1921. Visit us tomorrow and receive a pretty and useful Gift. 223 Park Street T, Cor. Meadow Street Phone BOSTON, SHOE CENTER Government Decides Upon That City as Future Distributing Point for Army Left-overs. Boston, Sept. 30.—Under a recent order from the War Department, this city becomes the distributing cener and purchasing point for army shoes. Purchase, distribution and inspec- tion of the footwear will be under the direction of Captain Charles G. Keene, who has written a book considered au- thoritative by military subject. During the World War, 44,000 pairs of shoes were supplied daily to the Quartermaster’s department, but now oply 3,000 are furnished. Approxi- mately 800,000 pairs are in storage now. men, on the 1366 During 1920, 18,671 flights were made in the work of civil govern- The total production of power by public utility companies in ——FREE— A leather covered miniature appointment book to the first 300 customers who make a purchase in our store. FREE—— Souvenirs With Each Purchase—Come Tomorrow electric ment flying under the direction of th= | the United States is 39,000,000,000 kil- Canadian Air Board. owatt-hours a year. @ SUNNYCORN 7ne Instant-Cooked Breakfast Cereal Splendid for children and grown ups- Cooks in 2 minutes! wm&nds& be employed in presenting the play. The first scene shows the coming of Marquette and Joiliet, the French mussionaries, in 1673. Old Fort Dear- hprn in 1803 and the massacre in 1812 are shown in the second scene. In the third, the last Ind'an treaty, signed in 1833, by which the Indians traded a million acres of land in Illinois for a million in Missouri and left Illinois farever, is shown The feurth scene shows the days of 2 aka's létter printed in the Tokio Jiji ;T (;vly\!r: \\;’nr. and clo“u('n with the fire. 3 : | that the authority and in- e fitth shows the World's Fair, and 5 > 4 :.'.'i':.'l‘l «::.dAn:‘trlcn “are pov\yrrh-.\n in|the sixth a prophetic vision of what Philanthropic people of England bk fisns Hawall before the labor power and es- | Chicago may be fifty years hence. sential strength of our countrymen un- less America succeeds in driving the Japanese altogether from the Hawallan jslands because the islands have been bullt up by the streugth of the Jap- anese.'" Mr. Yanaka's letter also expressed the opinion that while ‘‘the United ,Btates has too many soldiers in Hawall, ‘the Japanese residents of the islands ¥ welcome them because the building of barracks to accommodate them furnish- ! ed the Japanese with work.' Concerning this opinion Baron Kanda said ““This is nothing more than the ex & pression of a business man's point of view. One cannot expect a man who has dollars always In his head to take an intelligent view of problems which affect the destinies of nations. For my own part 1 did not know of these forti- fications and preparations—it I may use such a warlike term—on the part of the United .States against an enemy that does not exist, Neither have I time to give attention to the business man’s wviewpoint concerning problems whose solution affect the welfare of the race Business men &re the same the world over after all. Perhaps the shipbuila- ers in America or Britain or Japan might welcome another war because for them it would mean prosperity and great amounts of money. But their view is purely selfish and is not the wviewpoint of the statesmen or of the Jover of humanity. How deplorably they miss the world significance of the jssues confronting the nations now. “The very thought or idea of war s so preposterous that 1 do not even take any interest in it."’ pire, declared here during his service as delegate to the Pan-Pacific kduca- tional conference ‘economic penetration’ of Ha- wail by Japanese does not constitute s source of ril to the United States, Barob Kanda sald in commenting upon a dispatch from Toklo, ter written to Japan by member of the Ja which spent some time here on its way to Washington. Mr WRITE for A memorial lighthouse will be built at Pointe de Grave, near Bor- deaux, France, to commemorate - the intervention of the United States in the war. Only 25c¢. a Day Secures This New Model Grafonola Saturday This is all it costs to purchase this newest model Grafonola. Our terms are so moderate that the payments amount to only 25 cents a'day. You cannot obtain so much real pleasure for so little outlay. E SAMPLE have brought starving Russia, hundreds of children, who are being nursed back to health. This picture shows Dr. Isaac Karant, of Bow Head In the province of Kuieschow China, is a race of dark-skinned aborigines called the Black Miaos dif- fering greatly in character from the Chinese. hospital, London, giving one of the little refugees the daily ex- amination. Own this chest of beautiful silverware For 30 coupons and $7.50 these 26 pieces of handsoms Oneida Community Par Plate The pattern is . For 30 more cou- Prime, meaty eggs from modern farmyards Big, meaty eggs like Parksdale Farm Eggs aren’t laid by just ordinary hens. They're laid by quality poultry raised by modern methods. That’s why Parks- dale Farm Eggs are so uniformly good, why they've pleased New England families year after year. MRS. O'LEARY 15 , OUT OF HOLIDAY Sends It Home Saturday If You Call Early Our present stock of this popular model Grafonola will be sold at’ a saving of $40. Was $125, now only $85. You get the use of the instrument at once. Guaranteed by the Columbia Graphophone Company and Widener’s. Remember, $1 Sends It Home Saturday Exira Feature—Saturday Only Four Regular $140 Phonographs—Every One Brand New and Guaranteed—With 24 Selections of Musi¢c FREE Complete Only $85. CWidener:s 138 Main Street Granby Phonographs Newest Model Colurbia Will Not Take Part in Chicago Fire Observance ~Mrs. and her celebrated cow will have no Get the best the farmyard offers by insisting on Parksdale Farm Eggs. Save the coupons that are packed with them—one with each dozen. They’ll help you get a chest of Oneida Community Par Plate Silver O'Leary or a beautiful dinner set of Parisian China. Chicago, Sept 30 | part in the observance of the semi centennial of the Chicago fire, to be held here Oct. 2-15, it was disclosed goday. The >n being that ecarch of the rds of the fir parment shows that be O'Leary and the cow had r hour before the fire start nothing to do with starting although it did start in the O'Leary cow-shed These records show that there was & rumor at the time that nelghtors had slipped Into the barn milk the ‘sow for materials for an oyster stew or a milk-punch, a another that a bunch of boys from the neighbor hood were smoking in the barn. A broken lamp was found in the rains of the barn the day after the fire. This gave rise to the report, now become a legend, that Mrs. O'Leary had gone to the barn in the evening carrying a lamp and that the cow Plqued at being disturbed, had kick o4 her mistress, who dropped the lamp, and the big doings were on The fire department Investigators lcarned that Mrs, O'Leary had a sore foot on the day of the fire and had retired at 5:30 that evening. It was u-pnyuu n, would have Buy Wedgwood Creamery Butter for its rich, coun- try flavor, for full measure—the excess water is pressed out—for the coupon that comes with each pound. Save money on new dishes Think of getiing 42 pieces of Parksdale Farm Eggs and Wedgwood Creamery Butter are so exceptionally good and such unusual value, you should use them regularly. If your grocer hasn’t them let us know. P. BERRY & SCGNS, Inc., Hartford, Conn. Sole Distributors for New England States bossed with 30 free coupons and $6.00. For 30 more coupons and $6.00 you can get 36 pieces more. A third set of 34 pieces for 30 coupons and $6.00 completes this magnifi- cent dinner service of 112 pieces. Columbia Grafonolas and Records > v