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The Bankrupt Stock ' New Britain Clothing Co. Must Be Vacated Open All Day Wednesday 4th Day of Sale Now on 200 LADIES’ FALL COATS $3.00 each LADIES' VOILE DRESSES ~ — OF THE — 75¢c each POPLIN SKIRTS—SMALL SIZES $1.00 PONGEE SHIRTS NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, AUGUST 15, 1922 "WHITE SHIRTS WITH OR WITHOUT COLLARS $1.00 TABLE OIL CLOTH 15c yd LACE AND EMBROIDERY Sc yd SEEK STOLEN JEWELS. Providence, Aug. 15.—Police are searching the pawnshops for any of | The police say they have no clues as | ! the jewelry, valued at $21,000 which was stolel from Mrs. B. S. Craib of | St. Louis some time hetween July | a/many and Spain _combined. 29 and ‘August.5, while she was ¢ e ‘guent of her sister, Mrs. Isaac Kelly, at “Shore Acres,” Narragansett Pier. | i to the rohhr Tibet is larger thard France, Ger- SPECIALS FOR WEDNESDAY MORNING PURE FOOD N STREET > - NOTE THE BIG PORTERHOUS SIRLOIN ROUND SHORT CUT IN PRICES - STEAK 1 18¢ Legs of Bright Fancy Lamb .. ..... Lb. 18c Fores Lamb To Stuft Loins Lamb To Roast Loin Lamb Chops Legs Milk Fed Veal Shoulder Cuts Choice Veal Fresh Ground Hamburg » Sugar Cured Corned Beefl Meaty Pot Roasts Beel Lean Boiling Beef ... ’ Fresh \Imh‘ Frank forts Fancy Veal Chops Choice | Veal Cutlets Lb. 50 . 10c iy . 15¢ .25¢ . 32¢ Lean Smoked Shoulders ........ Lb 14c BEST CREAMERY Butter..2 Lbs. 73c i e Lat 2 Lbs, 27c Lerd Dirner Blend Mohican Evap. Milk . .. Fresh Shredded Cocoanut Sunbeam Mayonnaise e 19¢ Lb. 19(: Bot. 20¢C FRESH SELECTED Whole Milk .1, 25¢ Cheese Ceyl o I 35¢ )avis Baking Pow- Confectionery e l7c Gunpowder and Ceylon Tea Sugar Pink Alaska Salmon . e ———— —— . —SPECIAL— —SALE— 15¢ 15¢ 25¢ 5¢ Sound New Onfons Native Green Lima Beans . ... Fancy Pie Apples Large Summer Squash . 4 Lbs, 2 Qts. 4 Qts, . 2 For BEST NEW POTATOES—15 Lb. Peck. . GRANULATED From 9 to 11 A, M. 21c From 9 to 10 A, M. 14, Lbs $l-00 Bweet Com et Corn ... Do 15¢ :’;;;i:m g vez. 19€ ixtra Feacy zsc Sweei Potatoes, 4 Kresh Bunches B or Carrots ..... GAR Native RED RIPE TOMATOES 4 Quarts .......0onn 14 Qt. Basket PEACHES 2 Quarts .......... : 190 $1.15 14 Qt. Basket ..., LADIES’ KHAKI SKIRTS KILLED IN EFFORT TO SAVE HIS LIFE Great Barrington Man Jumps From Auto in Front of Train, Great Barrington, Aug. 15—Fearing that the automobile on which he was riding would be struck by the |north-bound train, Severino Magadini, a mason of this town, jumped from [the machine and was struck and {killed by the locomotive at the Van Deusenville crossing shortly before 8§ ‘n'clock yesterday morning. The auto- | mobile, driven by E. H. Shaw of Grnar Barrington, cleared the tracks I lin time te avold a collision. fi Magadini was employed by Mr. |Shaw on a Stockbridge job and was going with him to his work. Shaw |did not see the approaching train |and was warned just as he began to eross the tracks. He put on speed and cleared the crossing jdst in time. His employe was so terrified thaf he jumped’ His body was mangled. Magadini was a native of Italy but had lived for several years in Great Barrington. He was 42 years old. /READS DOOM OF 3 BLONDINED HAIR l.\[uat Be l-‘.lm;;rd From Righteous | World, ' Says Dr. Straton of | New York. is will to Chicago, Aug. 15.—Blonde hair all right, but “blondined” hair be. one of the things consigned |eternal limbo when the final account lof the world is rendered,” Rev. John | Roach Straton, pastor of the Fifth Avenue Baptist church of New York, declared on a Sunday sermon here. Other items’ mentioned as dishonest wand ready for final elimination from |a righteous world are ‘“wooden nut- (megs, half cotton 'wool,” watered milk, Ipasteboard ‘leather,’ padded forms and yellow journalism.” | All of these were classed .‘"gnmblln: dens, drinking hells | haunts of shame.” with and No one knows when jet first came into use. BREATHING EASIER NOW | New Ha¥en Board of Finance Agree- ably Surprised When Back Taxes |, Excced Amount Nceded for State.| New Haven, Aug. 16.—Members of the city board-of finance ace omng\ casy in mind as they had made no\ | provision for paying a state tax of 225,000 in the budget, figuring that| the collection of back taxes would | cover thls, They could only estimate | wirder the law $187,000 in back taxes, [but collections Rave alrcady resched $306,000 with five months' receipts yet to be added. Women are new peting Aj treas. urers in eight counties in Nebraska, | returned from Bar | son of Forest street has returned to COAL SHIPMENTS WILL BE DELAYED Condition of Gars Will Hamper, Speeding Up Efforts By Harry Hunt | Washington, Aug. 15.—Predictions of a serious coal shortage next win- ter were given additional weight to- day by statements made by Julius H. | Parntelee, director of the bureau nl‘ rallway economics. Even though the coal strike shnnm be settled, attempts to speed up trans. portation of coal will be seriously hampered by the condition of rail- way rolling stock, he declared, | There are today, Parmelee says, ap- | proximately double the normal! num- ber of bad-order cars—the total being in the neighborhood of 300,000 out of a grand total of 2,344,000 freight cars. Because of the shopmen's strike, and the consequent failure to make | necessary repairs, the number of cars which will have to be laid up for a general overhauling within a vnwl months is rapidly increasing. "jhe peak of out-of-order cars and !ncoriin- tives seems likely to be reached about the time the peak demand for coal transportation arrives, and will add a | serious complication to the fuel situa. } tion, | “Normally,” says Parmelee, “about seven to eight per cent of freight cars are out of service for repairs. Today, however, that percentage is in the neighborhood of 14 per cent and {s in- creasing. “So far the numbers of lald.up lo- comotives has shown no large in.| crease, but because of present shop | conditions it is naturally to be expect- ed that that will follow. Heavier Load “The number of cars actually out because of bad condition, however, | does not wholly revea| the real situa- | tion. By keeping in service large numbers of cars which are in need of minor repairs, but which are still suf- ficiently serviceable that they are not in danger of actually breaking down or endangering thejr contents, a heav. {er load of major repairs will have vnl be met in the early future. It is a case of failure to ‘take a stitch in time.’ Care that could be laid up now | and repaired in a day or two at a cost | of perhaps $40 or $50, will have to he lafd up in a few months to undergo general overhauling or rebuilding at a cost of several hundred dollars. | “Despite the coal strike and the | great falling off in coal shipments that resulted, there has been the sur- prising condition of an actual increase | in total car loadings over a year ago. | That indicates that business was de- cidedly on the upgrade at the time | the strike came. In fact, it was the momentum that business generally was acquiring that carried total car loadings steadily upward through the first months of the atrike, despite the loss of nearly one-half normal coal shipments. 50 Per Cent Less “In April, the first month of the strike, the number of cars of coal John A. Andrews & Co. —HOMEFURNISHERS— We Are Showing the Famous = ViclorY - the Victory PIPE Lgng ,9, .E.H;BNAC E Club Club Home Builders Attention! Those who want to make their homes more comfortable! Those who want the most satisfactory service! Those who want to save money on their coal bills! — BUY A VICTORY PIPELESS FURNACE. AND INSTALLED RIGHT The VICTORY Pipeless Furnace is one of the famous Williamson line—known for their superior construction and quality. For more than a third of a century the name Williamson on a furnace has stood for the highest achievement in furnace making. So in the, VICTORY we have a furnace that is made to give long and sat- isfactory service. The best your money can buy—the lowest price you can expect to get a really good furnace. The name Williamson is almost a by word in the colder sections of this country, where proper heating is of the utmost im- portance throughout every winter. When you've made a careful inspection of the VICTORY furnace you will agree that its quality and construction is unsur. passed. Yet, the price is VERY LOW be- cause, modern factory facilities and large production enables us to quote you low prices. The guarantee behind the VICTORY is an absolute protection to you. The VICTORY Pipeless Furnace is guaranteed to heat the house or building where installed to 70 degrees Fahrenheit in the coldest weather, or your money in full, will be refunded. We would like you to come and inspect this Furnace, if you can not come Jom Vlctory [MADE RIGHT shipped was just 50 per cent. less than the number shipped in 1921. The total cars loaded, for all| purposes, however, in April, was 2.5 | per cent more than in April, 1921, “In May, coal shipments declined | 47.4 per cent, but total car loadings| increased 3.5. “In June, coal shipments were oft 39.3 per cent, but shipments of freight exceeded those in June, 1921, by 10.6 per cent. | “And even in July, following the shopmen's strike, with coal shipments off 48 per cent, total car loadings were 10 per cent above the preceding July." (Copyright, 1922, NEA Service.) PERSONALS. Mrs. Thomas O'Day and family of Beaver street, are spending the week | at Momauguin. Miss Ada L. Needham of Wakefield court is spending a vacation at Nor- folk. Laurence Mouat and daughter, Miss Miriam Mouat, of Grove Hill will | the latter part of the week for Mic gan. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Pelton and children of Forest street and Miss Agnes Middlemass of 8outh High street will leave the last'of the week for Vermont to spend the remainder | of the summer season. Miss Dorothy Wolf of Norwich is the guest of Miss Carlyn Kingsley, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harvey | Kingsley of Bassett street. | Frank White of the Swift House | will leave for Canada the latter part of the week. Mrs. Herbert Swift and son, Roland‘ of Park Place have returned from | Block Island. Mrs. John Lomis and children of Forest street left today for Madison to spend the remainder of the season at their new summer heme which has recently been completed. Donald Hart of Lincoln street has Harbor, Maine, where he has beén spending the past two weeks with his family. Miss Anna Quinn who has been the guest of Mr. and Mre. Clifton W. Wil- her home in Washington, D. C. | Mrs. A. G. Cadwell and daughters Miss Helen and Miss Evelyn Cadwell of Harrison street left today for York city to spend the remainde: the week. of Stanton Ashley, son of Mr, and Mrs, George Ashley of Harrison sireet has returned from Middlobury collcge where iie has been taking a summer cchool course. Mr, and Mrs, Ralph Walnwright and children of Stcele street -are at Hawks Nest for the month, Mrs. Adeie Peters of New York city {0 visiting Mre. W. P. Bacon of Lex- ington street. ’ = | April, | we will be glad to send you a catalogue—FREE. Our Easy Payment Plan will help you—join the Victory Club today and be comfortable and warm this winter. JOIN THE VICTORY CLUB As a special inducement for those who want to buy their Furnace on our Easy Payment Plan, we have formed the VICTORY CLUB, which gives you the advantage of having your furnace installed now—You can make the easy payments later while you are enjoying the comforts of a nice, warm h%me. Don’t wait until cold weather and then wish you had joined. DO IT | TODAY. For Quick Returns Use Herald Classified Advts. In Italy’s Civil War Warring factions in Italy have created a condition closely akin to that in Ireland. Here is a scene that is typical of that in many Italian cities. The Fascisti, extreme nationalists, are gathering to wrest city leadership from the communists and other extremists.