New Britain Herald Newspaper, May 12, 1922, Page 3

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, MAY 12, 19z In Every Department You Will Find Specials for ~ Tomorrow That Are Real Bargains MEN'S WASH TIES in all white and fancy stripes. Value 29¢ Special for i lsc T A Saturday ......... “DOTEX” PILLOW CASES made from the best Muslin, 42x36 and 45x36. Special for ...... Eagh 25c Baturday s, « oo v o0npoe LADIES’ BUNGALOW DRESSES made of fine quality Gingham and Percale. Fancy trimmed. ... Each $l ’75 Saturday Special ... WII:DSORd ?lREl;lPEI STEP-IN Comes in'white and flesh color. ! Special for Saturday 750 LADIES’ SELLO SILK CHEMISE AND VEST . White and flesh color. Each $l 'OO Special for Saturday . HAMS DRESS GIN! 27 and 32 inches wide. Comes in checks and plaids. Special for Yard l 5 C Saturday GINGHAM DRESSES for children, for 2 to 14 years. Comes in plain colors, checks and plaids. A large .variety of styles. $l '00 Special for Saturday . ... Each FANCY BOUDOIR CAPS A large assortment of colors, many 9 dainty styles. Saturday special, Eachi 80 SASH CURTAINS Cross-bar Scrim, cut full size.” Special 38¢ ™ 50¢ ™ Fine Muslin Sash Curtains, all . neat patterns ..... Pair 700 : léAD]ES' FINE lélSLI'} VEST With bodice tops. Sizes 36 to 44. 25 C Special for Saturday Each ) LINGERIE CREPE Plain and figured in flesh, blue, yellow, orchid and white. WOOL JERSEY 56-inch wide in navy, brown, tan, grey, copen and red. $l‘59 LADIES’ FINE LISLE HOSE With fashioned back and double soles. Comes in black, cordovan, grey and medium brown. Special for Saturday, Pair 490 INFANTS’' EMBROIDERED DRESS PATTERNS Made of fine white lawn. A large variety of patterns. Special fof',,. Fach $l .50 Saturday DULLAR and NIVEN Mrs. Mattie Crawford calls herself a “laundress of souls.” evangelistic tour from Chicago, following campa (B —)= ¢, = WO men' Of Middle Age HE critical stage of a woman’s life usually comes between the years of 45and 55, and is often beset with annnoying symptoms such as nervousness irrita- bility, melancholia, heat flashes which producehead- ache and dizziness, and a sense of suffocation. Guard sour health carefully, for if this period be passed over safely, many years of perfect health may be enjoyed. ASEZAXEN _._‘ €05 N NZ == = ot X 7 <o, . DM igns in Canada and Mexico. SRV S N N> == =% S CET R e o o %/‘ i A ‘ri“ T — =3 = <2 TR 0 L) LS - fe= e, ¢ ~. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable fluence, tones and strengthefis or narcotics. Its value is prov Deurer. Colo—“T have taken Lydia E. Pinkbam's Vegetable Compound and 1 can not tell you the good it has done me. 1t is good for young and old and T always keep a bottle of it in the house, for T am at that time of life when it calls for it. My husband saw your ad. in the papers and said, ‘You have taken M'o’rytfiing you can think of, now I want you to take Lydia II. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound!” So I let him get it, and T soon felt better, ‘Ttook about six bottles’ I keep house and do all my own work and work out by the day and feel fine now. T tell everyone about the Vegetable Compound, for &0 many of my friends thoukht T would not get well.”— Mrs. R. J. LINTON, 1850 West 33rd Ave., Denver, Colo. Vegetable LYDIA E.PINKHAM MEDICINC CO. to help women through this crisis. ‘the long weeks and months covering this period. It is prepared from medicinal roots and herbs, and contains no harmtul drugs Letters like the above do influence women to try Lydia E. Pinkhams Compound is especially adapted It exercises a restorative in- the system, and assists nature in en by many such letters as these: Mctmpnlis. 111.—“T have taken Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compotind and it is all it claims to be and has benefited me wonderfully. I had been sick for eight months with a trouble which, confined me to my bed and was only gble to he up part of the time, when I was advised by a friend, Mrs. Smith, to try Lydia L. Pinkham's Vegetablo Compound and Liver Pills, T was so much benefited by the use of these medi- cines that 1 was able to be up and about in two weeks. T was at the Change of Life when 1 began taking the medicines and T passed over that time without any trouble. Now T am hale and heartv and do ail my housework.”—Mrs, Tawma CuLvEr, 705 E. Tth St., Metropolis, Il Compoun LYNN, MASS, Yard 220‘ She is starting on a nation-wide / But the Flephant Friend of Present FIVE GENT CIGARS ARE NOW DESIRED Continuance of Tax However Will Kill Them Is Opinion New York, May 12,—We nearly had the 6c cigar back again. Byt the chances are slim, now that congress is. seriously considering a permanent continuance of the high duty on im- ported tobacco which was clapped on during the war. Former Vice-President Marshall made a big hit when he said, “"What this country really needs is a good- ic clgar.” IFor the epigram contained the homely truth that the 6c cigar in- dicated a return to normaley all the way along the line and that rents, foods, clothing and prices for amuse- ments might soon return to pre-war conditions. Duty Was High. Before the war, the duty on Su- matra tobacco was $1.85 a pound. The emergency war tariff increased | this duty to $2.35 a pound, and the | purpose of senators who are sup- posed to be acting on behalf of the growers of domestic tohacco in some | states, is to have this emergency tar- iff made permanent. Clgar manufacturers say, "It s fm- possible to make cigars exclusively of domestic tobacco that Americans will smoke, The tobacco grown in New | York, Connecticut, Pennsylvania, | Ohio, Wisconsin and other states in which the industry is carried on, pos- itvely requires Sumatra wrapper in order to secure a blend. Efforts to use American Wrappers on cigars with domestic fillers have always failed.” Recently some cigar manufacturers, anticipating a return to pre-war tar- iff on tobaccos, have made reductions in the prices of domestic cigars, but | | they assert it will be necessary for them to raise their prices again if the proposition to make the emergency tariff permanent §s adopted. But even the loss of the “good” 5c clgar of which Vice-President Mar- | shall speaks i{s perhaps the least ser- fous of the effects which will follow a continuance of the $2.35 duty on Sumatra wrapper tobacco. Farmers Affected First, “American farmers who raise - bacco will be the first to feel the pr.s- sure if the plan to increase the duty is adopted,” ®aid a prominent manu- facturer. ‘Instead of applauding the senators who are trying to jam through the hight tariff, tobacco growers will be likely to curse them a year hence. With a $2.35 tariff, we will have either to raise the price of domestic cigars or pay less for do-| mestic tobacco. We cannot raise| prices without losing business. More cigars were smoked 5 vears ago than are being smoked today in this coun- try. So in order to keep prices down and prevent the cigar business from going entirely to the bad, we have got to cut costs, wherever possible; and the first cut necessarily come on the home grown tobacco.” Cigar manufacturers all over the United States are plainly worried over the proposed plan to continue the | high -tax rate on Sumatra wrapper. They are pessimists, due to the fact | that they predict many cigar makers will be thrown out of employment, that farmers will receive less money for their tobacco and less tobacco will be sold, that factories will have to he closed anhd cigar jobbers will be af- fected. 1In the end, the government, instead of getting more revenue be- cause of increased duty, will get less, for importations will be cut down. Lives in Generation’s Childhood, Memory at Tufts. P. T. Tarnum's famous elephant, Js | of Tufts college students, but he is | not forgotten. His picture adorn: bonds which are being issued in the Tufts .college million dollar endow- ment campaign, in recognition of his | place $h Tufts traditions. P. T. Bar- | num gave the body of Jumbo to Tuftg |and it is enshrined in state in the college museum ,also given by Mr. Barnum. 1 Toward the fund $500,000 already is pledged and $300.000 more is to b given by the General FEducational Board provided an additional $400,- 000 is raised. Bonds are issued in de- nominations of $60 and multiples thereof. Kach bond is an acklow- ledgement. of the college authorities of receipt of the face value of the bond as a contribution to the en- dowment fund. Tt also carries cou- pons on script which entitles the own- er directly to control the disposition | of ten per cent of the face value to | student whom he may designate. committee includes the foltowing: | Charles Hutchinson, Chicago; Herbert | Hoover, secrctary of cnmmf\rcc;J Thomas O. States Tariff commission; John W. | Weeks, secretary of war; Dr. Austin | B. Fletcher, New York city; William [W. McClenteh, Springfield, Clifton' H. Dwinnell, Boston; A. Harwood, New York cit E. Parker, TLawrence, Walter L. Cook, editor, Springfigy Republican, Springfield, | Mass. TARING STRIKE VOTE. Shopmen on Contract System Con- tinue Balloting Just the Same. Chicago, May 12.—Decision against | the contracting system of railroad | |shop repair work handed down by |the railroad labor board, vesterday |will net halt the strike \ote heing taken by the 5000 union shopmen | |on the contract system according to | shopm! officials here today. | At the shop crafts union’s recent |convention a strike ballok was or-| ’.lf‘rml on the contract question and [on the elimination of time and one-| {half for overtime—a rule eliminated | by the board last fall. If the earth turned around in about an hour and a half instead of 24 hours things wonld have practically | | no weight at the cquator. | Medford, Mass. May 12.—Jumbo, | @ The organization for this campaign | |8 has been completed and the general || Marvin, chairman United | § GOLDENBLUM MILLINERY CO. 188 MAIN STREET + Y. M. C. A« Bldg. Big Values for Tomorrow Another Unprecented Sale of | Modish New Millinery AN EXTRAORDINARY SPECIAL PURCHASE OF 500 Smart Trimmed Hats VALUES UP TO $15.00 AT THE REMARKABLY LOW PRICE OF $3.95 and $4.95 Hats of unrivaled beauty; fashioned of Canton Crepe, Georgette, Hair, Felt, Straw and Straw combinations in Dyessy, Tailored and Sport models; trim- med with Ostrich, fancies, flowers, ribbons, streamers—in all the season’s new colors. ; This Phonograph and 24 Columbia Record Selections Twelve 10-inch Double Face Records ‘68 All For ONLY 50 Weekly Easily Pays For It. Immediate Delivery. “dead and gone,” according to a song | § Plays All Makes of Records This is your opportunity to get a high-grade Phonograph — 45 inches high — finely finished Mahogany, with 24 Columbia record selections (your own choice) at less than former wholesale price. Sold regularly for $135. The big saving is yours. SPECIAL SALE REGAL and CLEARTONE RECORDS 47c LATEST UP-TO-THE 47C MINUTE HITS —INCLUDING— STEALING WEEP NO MORE SMILIN’ ON THE 'GINNY SHORE EVERYBODY JUST A LITTLE LOVE SONG GOOD-BYE SHANGHAI SHWideners 138 Main Street Colwrbix Grefoncl:s—Grarby Phonographs—Columbia Records COME EARLY help defray the expenses of any Tufts | i EP

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