New Britain Herald Newspaper, June 6, 1922, Page 14

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, JUNE 6, 1922, SALE OF — THE WILSON COMPANY STOCK Stock on Hand and Merchandise Ordered —SUITS — RAINCOATS | | Formerly = | $35—8$10—$15—$50—$55—$60 NoOw THURSDAY, JUNE 8th, at 9 A. M. | TOPCOATS $27.50 and $37.50 FLANNEL TROUSERS Formerly $10.00 and $12.00 NOwW $7.50*$10.00 'NECKWEAR AlSI Ties ... 75 Al $1.50 and §2 ... $1 |All $2.50 and $3 ..... $2 STRAW HATS, Henry Heath and McGregor $2.00 and $3.00 White Cheviot, Collar Attached JFormerly $3. NOW $2 00 %Former]y $2. NOW $1 00 ; —SHIRTS — Other Shirts Formerly $2.50, $3.50, $4, $5. NOW $1.50, $2.50 $3.50 {Foymerly $1.00 —CAPS— Henry Heath and McGregor 50c, $1.50, $2.00, $3.00 —UNDERWEAR— UNION SUITS NOW $1.50 $2.00 —HOSE — 35c—3 Pair For $1 .00 Formerly Now e 5(0c 100 75¢ NOow $1.00 Formerly Now Formerly $1.50—$2 B ——— —PAJAMAS— $L30 ..o NOW ] $7.00 (Silk) ...... NOW $ 5 $10.00 (Silk) ...... NOW $7 ;Linen Knickers ' $5 and $6.651j Il — GOLF HOSE | Formerly Now | Formerly $1.50 $l .001 $4.00 $2-53 $1. 50| $5.00 35¢ and 50c | COLLARS 156, e oeisls 2for25c All Leather Bags 15 Off Dress Tuxedo Vests 5 Price BILL WRITES MABLE AGAIN Tells About— Bddy-Glover Post| Furniture Drive (Apologies to Edward Streeter.) New Britain. Connecticut, June 6 Dere Mable, Well Mable I gess if you seen the paper last night you will be purty dis- sipointed and you will be sorry you didnt mary one of those cheep guys which maybe can fite but which cant rite anyhow. I have got all over planning to be a riter and as soon as | wood no what I reely done for my | this campane is over which s a reg- | lar awfiss and Ive got to finish it, Im | going back in the army where jelosy | dont pervent a man from rising and showing how good they are. Becuz| no matter how good you can rite they is always sumone who will be jelos of you and will cut out the best parts and its much eezier to be a corpral | like Napoleon don Well Mable T r you how Jim Rogers ast me to rite for the publick becuz of its needing a smart fello to advertise for the Eddy-Glover Post, American Legion and I gess you no from that peace of potery how good I could rite if they wasnt sumbody too jelos to let it be published Well Mable I thot I wood just start off with what I done in the war. You remember the pichure I had took for Uncle Sam and relatives? Well up over it I had set in big printing roze evrybody wood notiss “EVERY INCH | A HERO"—and down underneath in| Teglar size printing “Heroes all”| meening by that they was others which done there bit too. Modest— thats me all over Mable. And then I rote a good long peace 3786 words about what I done for my country and how I had got in with a hole lotta Germans and it was a wunder I got out alive. And then I went on io say how you mite not be setting in that big eezy chare if it wasnt for ihis man and sum others and dont he de- serve as good a seet as your setting in rite now. Well Mable I red it out loud and it sounded so good 1 got rite up out of my chare to give it to the Legion and I figgered how lots of other people in New Britain wood too ‘Well Mable I took my photo and all them sheats over to Maurice Pease who was a major once but is now a plane mister becuz he sed he wanted to reed it first and I figger out he's one of them fellos which wants to say I no it becuz I seen it before it went to print. Well Mable T watched him reed it all the way thru and it took quite a while on acct of his haveing to turn his back at the sad parts and at the end he got rite up out of his chare just like I done when I got to the part about dont he deserve as good a chare as your setting in? and EEe———t—— MAZDA LAMPS FREE DELIVERY —THF— COWLES ELEORIC CO. 392 STANLEY ST. | didnt have no humin appeal TEL. 2229-4 New Britain Let Us Serve You Electrically then he kind of pulled himself too- gether and thot about how evryone fame. But can you see Mable why he | should have been mad?® His face wad | the top of his head was red as fire. He just took them sheets and tore them up but the photo was tuffer and only bent and perhaps I can use that | later tho the noze looks broke. Thenl he began to talk reel loud about how we wasnt making no appeal on those old grounds and that the publick was Odessa, June 6.—DMusic. once the getting sick of it and let em give what JOY of the people of Russia, is now they reely didnt need and wood like their consolation. They hunger for to. Well Mable I gess you no how I bread, and they long also for music felt tho your not being a author I gess |to make their unhappy days more] you dont | bearable. Well I thot of lots of good things In passing the unlighted streets to say back and have thot of even the cities of the lower Volga, better ones since but as long as he |stranger is often guided by had been a major I didnt. I just says music bursting upon the Russians Wanting Food Turn to Helody as Only Comiort of | the piann‘ rimes or a classified ad—and he says streets of Astrakhan little boys and a classified ad wood be grate in com- 'girls, often refugees, may be seen at So I says well what shall I the op windows, at practice, thrum- v and he says—Eezy chares, a 'ming on dilapidated pianos. At the big table or 2, victrola records, rugs, d tions, during the long waits, posters and pictures, eezy chares, sub- people sing. This kindly, talented scriptions to magazines, eezy chares, p turn to music for comfort as and etc. as a distressed child to So thats what I done. But now you | its no Mable why it wasnt no good and And it | no post-war music, no| and buzz-saw composi- | makes a fello sore Mable to be a riter | tions. are the old, old songs and not to be allowed to lof love of the bitter-sweet of Yours for free gratis and |happiness gone, of the prisoner in his riting. of the ‘‘shadow o'er the heart.” Here in Odessa, by the Black Sea, there is and has been opera, good . The the speech cell, WHAT IS OUIJA BOARD? Supreme Court Declines to State What | outside the city are bare, It Is. cemeterics are full, and new ones y : gape for more bodies each day. No Washington, June 6.—The Supreme |y . 1o city, no war, no battiefield Court yesterday announced that it y o4 guch sadness. The singers on would not determine What is a oulia| e giage RUREEy: ‘W0’ re “the| board. on was presented in a|SCEM Shifters; the musicians are he question was presented In A {nungry and &6 l8Fthe gudience. case brought by the Baltimore Yl sach Vel through tha d e « tested ing Board company, which protested |y, ).oning streets, thousands take against taxation of such boards as|., N B g o nsistad thag | their gouls to the doors of the hand- 5 LA Ak '3t some opera house, thousands whose should the court refuse to hold that |y i. 5re ragged with old clothes the board “is a grade of motor auto-| 0" ©> 5 3 Gl whose stomach are as e matism, involving ®considerable sub- [ 198 N::”:f;\:u”;p::!g "‘i‘,",‘:”r:: r"}“: conscious action of intelligence” that |, =4 S0 FEEE CEAlE i it would at least classify the smaller |'® (¢ MaEC 2 i .n';“ R boards as “children’s toys.” | 15, OPELAS ATG SOMIEIHACE $H08E B The lower Federal courts sustained the Government's contention that the boards should be classed( as sporting goods. ISIT OUR DINING ROOM WHEN IN HARTFORD Call At 24-30 STATE ST. Live and Boiled Lobsters Soft Shell Crabs Fresh ,Crab Meat Shrimps Steaming Clams Chowder Clams HONISS’S One hundred a nine Ger- man submarines were lost during the war. Galbraith and Patt—ison Carpenters, Builders and General Contractors Estimates Cheerfully Given Jobbing Promptly Attended To. NOTICE We have a special bailt Cadillar for towing and wrecking jobs. 24 hour service. Cadillac repairing n specialty. Live and dead storage. Prompt service is our motto, TheJ. B. Moran Garage 16 -18 BOOTH STREET Tel. 622-15 House Phone 1864-15. — FOR Four-family house with large I 140 MAIN STRELET darkness. | | well what do you want then nursery Walking at early morning through the tand Kiev, room and good location for business block. ‘Ital)—"Tosca" and but more often Russian. Pushkin, the famous poet, graced the city with | his residence for many years, and so |operas made from his stories are |liked, “Mazeppa,” among others. One favorite is “Dobrovsky,” the tragedy of a bandit, libretto by Pushkin, music by Naprovniki. This opera has a fine romance, a duet in the third act, when lovers sing and promise to be ‘always true, always the same.” This refrain especially touches the audi- ence. One remarks it by a set still- ness, rather than by tears. The opera over, the singers and the men back stage slip homewards; |the people file out like shadows |through the gloom of the streets, the lights of the building drop away, the “La Traviata,” ymists roll in from the sea, and dark- ness, and silence and the unburied possess Odessa again. FOOTBALL STAR ON BENCH Chicago, June 6.—Walter P. Steffan, Chicago alderman, former University of Chicago foothall star, who was elected to the superior court bench | yesterday, will resign as head coach |of Carnegie Tech at Pittsburgh. Railroad service beteween Moscow Russia, has been reduced to one train a week. JSE SEIBERTS PASTEURIZED MILK AND CREAM “I should worry” ) said Little Billy, the bad boy. Mamma said she was going to send him to bed on bread and milk. . Evervone knows that’s a feast if the bread's good and the milk’s SEIBERT'S. Eh? ESEIBERT & SONJs “Your Milkman" PARK STRELT 3 ProNE 1720 .05 SALE — ot on corner, 150x123 feet. Price $8,000. Ample 'H. J. FOIREN PHONE 1790 CITY HALL —DRINK — Ayers’ Soda Water Call for it by name and get the best. For Sale at Your Grocer’s Three Size Botties—5-10-15¢ CROWLEY BROS. INC. PAINTERS AND DECORATORS 267 Chapman Street TEL. 755-12 Estimates cheerfully given on all jobs SPRING NEEDS SUPPLIED ‘We can supply you with the latest thing in strollers and baby carriages at a very attractive price. A complete stock f linoleums and floor ‘~verings. A. LIPMAN New and Secondhand Furniture 34 LAFAYETTE ST. Tel. 1329-8 FOR SALE—A MODEL HOME Brown Stone, brick and shingle—135 Columbia street. 9-room cottage,:all modern. Large corner lot and nice garage. Owner leaving town and wishes to sell at once. HUMPHREY For particulars, call on-— 272 MAIN ST. H. DAYTON Room 208, N. B. Bank Building. 2-Family house on East street at a very mod- erate price. In very good condition. 2-Family house on South Main street, near Sand Bank Hill with large piece of land. Rent, with heat furnished, in West Main street block. CAMP REAL ESTATE CO. 7 272 Main Street Phone 343 Rooms 305-6 Bank Bldg. For Quick Returns Use Herald Classified Advts. THE OLD HOME TOWN STANLEY WHEN THEY DISCOVERED THE LODGE LADIES BY STANLEY FROM HOOTSTOWN TOOK MANY CHANCES ON TH HANG/NG LAMP.

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