New Britain Herald Newspaper, June 30, 1922, Page 24

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other side, mostly in Germany, and | ’ | Benators who made the freak tariff|and for which appropriations | exhibit was that these articles were f purchased for a few cents on the were [can commerclal houses have to em- ploy middlemen in ‘dealing with Rus. slan concerns, are interested in the possibility of eapturing this interna- made." Mr. Byrnes explained that {f the di- rector of the budget has prevented / " sold over here for dollars, and that|some department from making egpen- »|\hPrP’an in ur?rr to 1\r;1('r’lll 3 |hr4; ditures n;\! nul:nrlzml and not app-|tional brokerage. Hence they are of- American manufacturer a high tarift| propriated for by Congress he might |fering . : iy duty was necessary. The cuckoo|be correct in some measure, but it j‘::x'u‘;fur:nb::\l:: A"‘;":"‘" products to clock will serve as an fllustration for | would not be a saving. '"The mere i\ qived fro L o, ane Ehe oAt ROUlenB Wheel ThOllgm lO Be the “cateh™ in the “trick™ in these ex-| fact,” he said, “that some bureau has (¢, ¢pa (1 n;onr; l‘funln Angd transmic “; hibits. The clock is said to have cost| not spent more money than Congress |y, l'nne:;";t [fiu!"' The fact that Necessity of Ll | 94 cents in Germany, retalled here for | said a year ago that it should spend IAL8N- Bas:nat : recoNtilvm %&SSIW 0l Lo $22, or at profit of 2,240 per cent.|during the fiscal year does not entitle | U58I& creates the need for middle- Ji:st how such a clock could continue | that bureau or the head of the budget | MM @nd up to the present time these TR to compete at these prices with clocks | to say that a saving has been made, have been found largely in Eng- BL RICHARD LINTHICUM. | made in the United States was not of | because that bureau might have spent |81 (Special Correspondence.) course made clear, The trick {8 in|more." Axel Robert Nordvall, Swedish Washington, June 30,—All of Wash- | the exchange on Germany. The cost| He declared that the mere fact that |NED trade commissioner to Wash- ington, except in official circles, and | price as stated is at the present value | Congress has appropriated over $345,- ington during the war, says that presumably the country at large, is of the German mark in American|0nn,000 in deficiencies during this|SWeden is in an excellent position to having a quiet laugh at Senator Mec-| money, while it is practically certain | year is a clear refutation of any |2Ct as intermediary for American bus- Cumber's freak tariff exhibit in the|that the clock was bought for import | statement that has been made by the [IN®5 men desiring to do trade with Senate. The chairman of the Finance months ago when the mark was worth | director of the budget that there has | RUssia. Not only are the Swedish| importers and exporters financially Committee seems to have followed the | three, four or five times as much as| eld P. T. Barhum axiom that “the it is worth now people like to be humbugged,” so he Another phase of this trick shown staged a tariff exhibition with trick| ought to have great interest for the If it were literally | exhibits. Practically none of thie ar- American people ticles exhibited except a table cloth, true that an article costing 94 cents! some napkins, a watch and a knife or an approximate sume, i{s being sold are in common use among the people. at retail for approximately $22; if a As freaky as some of the exhibits knife said to have cost 7 cents is be- | ing sold at retail for §5, it is obvious were, the most marvelous and start- ling are vet to come, according ta that somebody is profiteering, and that Benator Thaddeus H. Caraway (dem., | the freak tariff show, staged by the, Ark.), probably the ranking satirist republican tariff tinkers and sleight-, of the Senate of-hand men in the Senate, should have been staged in the office of the attorney general and the exhibits marked for the grand jury, so that that terror of profiiteers and evil-do- Attorney General Daugherty, “I have been informed,” said Sena- tor Caraway, "that among the most interesting things they yet have to bring on in this circus is a roulette wheel They seem to think that is|ers, one of the necessary household uten- could be as successful in putting sils. They also have in the room be- osmehody in jail as he once was in Jow a statue of a lady minus her getting them out. clothes and a bottle of prunes. I do Third Bill. not know who 1s to be ring-master when that particular circus is brought The so-called third deficiency bill| in, but how appropriate it was that|for 1922, which is in reality a fourth the fiirst circus opened with a deficiency bill for the current year 0";‘"’“ i s 2hii | carrying $40,043.012.31, is under dis- o et MeCnmber | CUssion in the House at this writing was the exhibitor, and when Senator | This bill makes the total deficiencies John Sharp Wilhams tickled the | for the current fiscal year $345,6 elock under the chin to make the|z45 25 There is no serious objecti ‘“fik” ;m’ga' the whole durn thing (, t1o 4 and it is interesting main- g0 apssd. o Iy because of the repeated statements “The cuckoo,” Senator Caraway ex- | of the director of the budget, which plained, “is a bird which lays eges in | 'fi}:‘f: o ;"lzvf;"z'“m‘:‘;;"!h;"‘;’hi”‘};’::: oms other bird's nest. and how . &DP-| i ¢ ihe United | States slnce the Dl’OpflafP dfie tb open, B fanis ‘l"\l"]i:fir went into o»eration Klon with & cuckoo, They nexbiopen-iiiirs tne director of the buflget s sav- NHe W EeT ator e Pomeranaiwith mrs“"; money, ‘‘clearly he is not _sa\'mg indulgence in facetiousness inquired, it by rfdizrxnz ',],“ apprnprmhor?s “Where Is the organ grinder?” Sena. | Tade by Congress,” as Representative tor Caraway replied that the Senator | S/ o0~ \B & po;p e ?‘11 from Indiana (Mr. Watson) w. ”‘P‘haq nr:l\z Am; ro'”, }T:ni CD"V”:‘;:“'U ;e organ-grinder. "I am sorry he is not| 188 MOt BUE OO APV E“’ pLaLes present,”” he added, “but unless there A y is some organ for him to grind he never is here.” Senator Caraway exhibition as follows “It strikes me, if T may {nterrupt the Senator from North Carolina, (Mr. Simmons) that it is appropriate | for a party which has become so ab. solutely helpless that the papers of it: own faith are denouncing it for its incompetency to open a show here in the Senate with a cuckoo and con-| clude it with a monkey. They are so typical, so entirely typical, of the ca- | pacity and the performances of the | party. I am sure that the people who | elected them will appreciate that they | have run true to form.” The contention of the e SEALED PROPOSALS. Public notice is hereby given that sealed proposals for furnishing labor and materials to construct a new| Normal School Building at New Brit- | aip, Connecticut, will be received by| the State Board of Education, opened and publicly read at the office of the State Board of Education, State House, Hartford, Connecticut, on July 18, 1922, at 11 o'clock a. m. standard | time. | The work for which proposals are| !hereby invited covers the complete jconstruction of a Normal School +Building ready for movable equip-| iment. The work will consist of a summed up the zeSt tohot weather menus 2 =g 1l Putnam Coffee republican ~q¢ Javes the day US SERVE YOU ELECTRICALLY —THE— COWLES ELECTRIC CO. 392 STANLEY ST. TEL. 2229-4 ' New Britain Royal Cleaners. LET ! complete, School Building will be one been a saving. |able to carry on a great volume of business with Russia, he says, but they have developed machinery for carrying on this business equal to that of any country now exploiting the Russian market. Sweden has expended millions of kronor in establishing free ports at is!o«-kho\m. Gothenburg and Malmoe with commodious warehouses where goods bound for Russia can be safely stored. Moreover Sweden has been actively trading with Russia for more than two years and has full knowl- edge of what goods Russia most needs. SWEDEN READY FOR AMERICAN BUSINESS Would Like to Get Profits As Middle- man Between U. S, Sellers and Russian Purchasers, Stockholm, June 30, — Swedish business men, observing that Ameri- NEXT TO FOX'S NationalMeatStoresCo.| -3, Largest Retailers of Quality Meats in U. S. 70 ‘WEST MAIN ST. FRESH NATIVE BROILERS......LB. 45¢ TENDER FRICASSEE CHICKENS. .LB. 29 ARMOUR'’S STAR SM’KD HOMS. .LB. 35¢ PRIME RIB ROASTS ........... LB. 28¢ BEST PRINT BUTTER .......... LB. 43¢ FRESH CALVES LIVER ......... LB. 45¢ LEAN BONELESS POT ROASTS. .LB. 18¢ — FOR SALE — Seven room house. All improve- Small farm, right in the city. ments. Furnace heat. Nice barn and poultry houses. 3 cows, 1 Farm implements. Crops all planted. Inquire H. J. FOIREN horse. Martha Matilda Harper Method of Shampooing and Sealp Treatment. Fistablished 1888 BY MISS H. L. COFFEY Water Waring, Manicuring, Facials, Treatment for Loss of Hair Mascara Tonique, Hair Brushes, Ointment, Cream. 259 MAIN STREET. TELEPHONE 637 | { 8chool Building and Boiler House| | and two stories high with part base- {ment, covering an area of approxi-| mately 38,000 square feet. The Boiler House will be of fireproof construc- tion throughout. The School Building will be fireproof throughout with the | ‘qupfion of the roof which will be | of heavy timber construction. Bids will be received for the work | ;under four separate contracts as fol- ‘lows: | »1. General Construction Work of| | Bchool Building and Boiler House| | which includes Landscape Work, and i all masonry, carpentry, steel and iron, ! yoofing. painting and all work kindred ! ghereto. | ~2, For Plumbing and ‘[ kindred thereto. .3, For Heating and Ventilating and 1all work kindred thereto 4. For Electrical Work work kindred thereto * The right is reserved to accept or yeject any or all proposals. All h!ds‘ [#nust be enclosed in sealed envelopes ! endorsed ‘“‘Proposal for New Britain| I'Btate Normal School, addressed to| {‘A. B. Meredith, Secretary, State Board | of Education, Hartford, Connecticut.,”| stating the branch of work covered.| | No bid will be considered unless ac- eompanied by a certified check to the| | order of the State of Connecticut in| ; the amount of five per cent, (5 per| | eent) of the bid, or a bid bond in like amount, binding the bidder to| ! execute a contract if awarded to him.| . The terms of the proposals with| | gurety required are fixed by the spem.i fications. | Copies of the drawings and specifi- | cations will be on file at the office of | the State Board of Education; the| Architects, and Engineers, for the pur- | pose of estimating. A limited num-| ber of copies of the plans and specifi-| cations will be loaned to the pros-| pective bidder on a deposit of a cer- tified check to their order in the sum of $50.00. The plans and specifica- tions for the General Construction| Work may be obtained by applica-| tion of Guilbert & Betelle, Architects, | 546 Broad Street, Newark, New Jer- sey. Plans and specifications for the Plumbing, Heating and Ventilating, and Electrical Work may be obtained Dby application of Alfred 8. Keilogg, Consulting Engineer, 89 Franklin Street, Boston, Massachusetts. If| plans and specifications are returned on or before the submission of esti-| the check will be returned, but ‘the plans and specifications be ‘returned the deposit may become ted. By Order of the Board, = A. B. MEREDITH, 3 Secretary. Dated, June 37, 1922. all work| all | | | | | and | | DINING manufacturers. uiet and Luxurious In two-toned Walnut, 40-56 FORD STREET ST Ik ROOM FURNITURE Fitting attributes indeed and those which most people want symbolized in their Dining Room Furniture. A Tudor Period design modified for modern interiors. Simple sturdy lines and not too ornate decorations, give it a distinction and quiet luxuriousness that never grows tiresome. one of the very nicest styles produced by furniture HARTFORD Hartford Stamped in, 18x45 in, 18x54 In. embroider for this sale Regular prices up to $2.98, ! for this sale ........... New Telephone Number 3-1580, Use It Freely. A Most Unusual Sale of ~ART LINENS At Extraordinary Reductions Linen Scarfs worth up to $2.25, broider. Regular prices up to $5.50. for this sale OnlY .vuivbsareransinnns 2.75 sizes are 18x34 to 5 54-in. Linen Centerpleces stamped to em- 1.2 broider. Prices ranging up to $7.98, 3 75 for this sale ........o.0vuvunnn P [ 36-in, Lineén Centers, stamped for embroidery. Hartford 45-in. Linen Centers. Stamped ready to em. 72-in. Linen Centerpieces, stamped to embroider, For this sale $1.50 $4.75 Art Dept. Second Floor. Wrist Watches For Women Women’s Wrist Watch- es, 14 carat, hand en- graved case; guaran- teed Swiss 15 Jewel movement; mounted on black silk grosgrain rib- bon, six styles, in octa- gon, square, teneau, ete., the same also with sap- phire crown. $19.95 Special price .... Prescriptions Accurately and Promptly Filled For prescription work we employ registered pharmacists of ex- perience and ability and these men are far removed from the busy department store hum and hustle. We utilize only the best of chemicals and pharmaceuticals and give customers exactly what the physician prescribes. Our prices are low enough at all times to create comment. For Picnics and Motor Trips We call your attention to the articles listed below, which are eo indispensable to outing; paper dishes, table covers, napkins, cups, ete.; |l very light and easy to carry and may be destroyed after the lunch. Luncheonettes, consisting of six each of the following six {teras, all for 19¢c: 8—$8-in. Dinner Plates 6—Round Cups 6—Ice Cream Plates ALL FOR And These Items: 8—Crepe Napkins 6—Sheets of Wax Papers, 19¢ Wax Lunch Rolls, each .. 5 and 10c White Paper Napkins, per hundred .. 15¢ Flash Light Cases. Paper Plates in all sizes. Stationery Dept., Main Floor. T e e VISIT 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 SPRING NEEDS SUPPLIED ‘We can supply you with the latest thing in strollers and baby carriages at a very attractive price. A complete stock of linoleums and floor ~overings. A. LIPMAN New and Secondhand Furniture 84 LAFAYETTE ST. Tel. 13298 272 Main Street Three family house on Wallace stfeet. Good business corner to build a store and make a good living: See us about this preposition. Money to loan on mortgages. CAMP REAL ESTATE CO. Phone 343 Rooms 305-6 Bank Bldg, FOR SALE Valuable property at 33 Court street. |Brick house and extra lot; over 100 feet frontage. Court street is the coming business street. See H. D. HUMPHREY ROOM 208 NATIONAL BANK BUILDING For Quick Returns Use Herald Classified Advts. THE OLD HOME TOWN . S T s BY STANLEY HOLD 'ER NEWT SHES AREARIN’ WHEN PETE DRUMMOND, TFE BUS DRIVER CAME IN FROM A TRIP TO HOOTSTOWN - HE RAN OVER TO CLAM THE GRAND PRIZE HANGING LAMP— ARRIVING JUST AS “THE STRING ngfiE =

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