New Britain Herald Newspaper, September 14, 1922, Page 5

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AT ' BESSE-LELANDS The Rejuvenated MILLINERY Exclusively Feminine and Besse-Lelands Exclusively This most important department has submitted to a distinet change in personnel and character. As in a great many larger stores this department has been sub-let to a New York concern. It was the only department in this store which was managed by out- siders and is the last department that will ever be managed elsewhere. Our Millinery Department is now managed exclusively by Besse-Leland Co. as are all other departments in this store and it is in charge of Miss Butler. The Master Modes of “GAGE” and “JOHNSON” hats. More than we have ever assembled. Much of it is de- signed exclusively for Bes: se-Leland’s, all of it made for Besse-Leland’s which reflect the return to the note of elegance. Soft supple brims. vet. Much glver. Very, Huge sweeping bows. Much vel- very much Brown, Black, Green, Pansy, Purple, Ruby Red and Persian Blue. For every occasion. F liant showing, which form For every woman. In a most bril- ally opens the new era, in new millinery, in New Britain. Many to choose from at $4.95 Others $6.95 to $19.85 L e —— IS DOWN ON KING Venizelos Will Never Consent to Work With Constantine, According to His Friends in Athens. Paris, Sept. 14.—Former Premier Venizelos of Greece for whose return to power a strong movement is under way in Athens will never consent to work with King Constantine, say his friends here, according to Excelsior. As long as Constantine is on the = ASPIRIN Say “Bayer” and Insist! Unless you see the name ‘‘Bayer” on package or on tablets you are not getting the genuine Bayer product prescribed by physicians over twenty- two years and proved safe by millions for Colds Toothache Earache Rheumatism. Neuralgia Pain, Pain Accept only “Bayer” package which contains proper directions. Handy boxes of twelve tablets cost few cents. Druggists also sell bottles of 24 and 100. Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoacetica- cldester of Salicylicacid. —————— “LET'S GO GIRLS" MOONLIGHT DANCE Given By the Happy Threec Famous Broadway Jazziteers UKRAINIAN HALL Headache Lumbago ’throm’, Venizelos will refuse to have anything to do with the Greek state they declare, but at the same time he will not refuse his aid in saving the country from what he terms Con- stantine’s blunders. . M. Venizelos who arrived here yes- terday from Geneva will also visit Rome and London in his private ca- pacity, according to Le Journal, to pcint out that the Kemalist victory in Anatolia is more than disaster to Hellenisnr as it impairs interests of the great powers in the Near East. He is emphasizing the danger of a well organized government at An- gora working in close touch with Moscow and Berlin the anti-Chris- tian proceedings of the Kemalists and the consequences of a Turkish inva- sion of Thrace. FRENCH CABINET MZETS Important Session Held at Which Poincare Outlines Approved Course for Near East Peace. Rambouilet, France, Sept. 14.—(By Associated Press.)—An important meeting of the French cabinet was held at the summer residence of | President Millerand coday. Premler Poincare reported the ne- gotiations between the Belgian and the German governments over the German notes for German repara- | tions payments. He informed his colleagues of the directions he had given the French delegation to the | reparations commission as a result of the failure of these negotlations. The cabinet unanimously approved the premier's course. The cabinet then unanimously agreed on the policy to be followed in the effort to establish a durable peace in the Near East. Pittsfield Pastor Is n Made Vicar General Springfield, Mass., Sept. 14.—Rev. Bernard 8. Conaty, pastor of St. Jos- | eph's church, Pittsfield, was today ap- pointed vicar general of the Roman Catholic diocese of Springfleld by | Bishop Thomas O'Leary. He succeeds the late Rev. Mgr. John T. Madden of Holyoke, who died several months ago. { farmer and the business man and the NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER PRESIDENT’S WIFE NOW RECUPERATING Her Condition Improved S0 Much That No More Bulletins Will be Issucd—Harding at Bedside, Washington, Sept. 14.—Further im- provement in the condition of Mrs. Harding was reported today by Brig. Gen, C. E. Sawyer, White House phy- siclan, ‘The president's wife, he sald, spent an excellent night—the best since her {liness became critical. Batisfactory recuperative progress, he added, is being made. Announcement was made last night at the White House that in view of the steady improvement {n Mrs. Harding's condition no more formal bulletins would be issued to the press. 2 Dr. George T. Harding, Jr., broth- er of the president, who has been in attendance, returned today to Colum- bus, O. Clifford Kling, a brother ot Mrs. Harding, also left for his home in Marion, O. President Harding had no engage- ments for today, and it was expected he would spend most of his time near his wife's bedside. IMPROPER BUSINESS METHODS SCORED| New York Governor Declares Farmers | And Others Can Succeed If One | Class in Eliminated Syracuse, Sept. 14.—Governor Mil- ler in an address here last night de- clared “that the one problem of most | vital importance to this state and to every state is not to improve the con- dition of the farmer or the business man or the wage earner or the cap- italist but to protect all of the pub- lic fgogm the improper conduct of one class in it."” “If we can once fully apply that principle” the governor said, ‘‘the wage earner and the caplitalist take care of himself.” “The fact is,"” Governor Miller con- tinued “the day is past when if public necessity intervenes the state would not be warranted in stepping in to regulater matters in a way that would have been thought impossible years ago. Liberty is a relative term. Our marvelously expanding society has placed restrictions upon the right of the individual to do as he pleases even with his own. Business is now done by associations of capital and labor in such a way that, if the state does not compel it to be done in subordin- ation to the public interest the public suffer.” FIGHTING IN IRELAND Dublin Reports Heavy Fighting Go- ing on in Several Sections of City— can Machine Guns Being Used. Belfast, Sept.” 14.—Reports from Dublin today tell of heavy fighting over a wide area in that city shortly after midnight. The telephone ex- change in Crown Alley was under at- tack for about 20 minutes, machine guns being used by the assallants while another attack was made on the Four Courts hotel where national army troops are stationed. Loud reverberations were heard along the quays and in Sackville street and armoted cars were hurried to the scene of the firing. By 2 o'clock, however, quiet again pre- vailed. Last evening armed men raided the premises of the Dublin Clothing Co. on Wellington quay taking a number of National army uniforms. Advices from Cork state that Tim- othy Kennefic, a prominent republi- can of that city, was dragged from a lorry by an armed band and later he was found shot dead. Gets Chief Promotion For Long Term Record Greenwich, Sept. 14.—Captain James J. Nedley for 24 vyears a member of the borough police was promoted to be chief by the warden and burgesses at a meeting last night. He succeeds Andrew Talbot who recently died. Other appoint- ments were: Patrick J. Flanagan to be captain; Sergeant James Fahey to be first sergeant and Patrolman James H. Fitzroy to be second ser- geant. AMUNDSEN NOT GOING. Nome, Alaska, Sept. 14.—Informa- tion from a reliable source received | here today was to the effect that Captain Roald Amundsen would nor.I attempt this year his proposed flight | across the North Pole to Greenland, as was reported recently from Co- penhagen. The Oldest 14, 1922, A GUARANTEE OF QUALITY The“Winsol” Way High Lights in the Progress of a New England Enterprise, Whose Phenomenal Success + Adds a New and Significant Chapter to the Story of the Co-operative Plan A business undertaking conducted upon a system through which everybody, directly or indirectly con- cerned, actually and definitely benefits is something of an innovation in the commercial world. Yet it is upon precisely such a plan that the business of B. 0. & G. C. Wilson, Inc., of Boston—since 1845 makers of the famos Winsol line of household rem- edies and drug specialties—is being so successfully conducted today. The Beginning of the Plan The Winsol Plan was originated by Mr. Edward A. Wilson, who has devoted a lifetime to the manufac- turing, jobkting and retailing of drugs and medicines that for four generation have borne the Wilson name Its Development The father of the Winsol Plan was possessed of that rare attribute—Dbusiness vision. He believed in a literal interpretation of the 50-50 principle in busi- ness. measure of success could never be achieved by either the corporation or the individual who, taking every- thing, gives nothing. Mr. Wilson had long observed other cooperative plans. From this he acquired a broader conception of the profit-sharing idea. To the good points of other cooperative systems in practice he added some very definite ideas of his own. And from the sum total of them was evolved the present-day Winsol Plan—the last word in cooperation. The Plan In the widest possible sense, the Winsol Plan is a profit-sharing plan. It provides for Winsol Agents, who are retail druggists-—at least one of the leading druggists in each community—who agree to carry the complete line of products made by the company, and to “talk, promote, advertise and display” Winsol goods. Then, customers of these Winsol Agents are visit- ed by special representatives who explain the Winsol Plan. In this way the general public is taken into active partnership. Being interested in the business, when a tonic, liniment, cough syrup, toilet goods, a hot water bottle, or any like drug specialty, is want- ed, they insist on Winsol goods. Furthermore, knowing each unit of the Winsol line to ba the very best quality merchandise in its par- ticular class, the Winsol customers talk about Win- sol products upon every occasion. They recommend them to their friends. The natural result is that Winsol has thousands of “boosters,” located every- where. These people work for Winsol in the general good, to their own benefit, to the benefit of the Winsol Agent, the Winsol organization and the Winsol ownership, and to the ever-increasing demand upon the part of the general public, everywhere, for each and all of the articles comprising the Winsol line. The Winsol Associates There are no such terms as Capital and Labor in the Winsol organization. There are neither employes nor employers. The Winsol Plan abolishes all such dis- tinctions in that both the capital and labor repre- sented in the Winsol Company are partners. Both are stockholders in the corporation. Both participate in Winsol benefits and profits. Everybody, from clerk to chief executive, is a stock- holder in the Company. The activities of all are from the ownership point of view. The result of this is interest, loyalty, and a greater production of goods at less cost; a working willingness that permeates every department of the Winsol organization; an esprit de corps impossible to inspire in any other way. There is a time clock in the Winsol factory, but it is never used. The Winsol Line There are over a hundred distinct and different ar- ticles numbered in the Winsol line. Every need of the home in the way of a remedy for physical ail- ments common to the day’s work and the day’s play is provided for. There is a Winsol product—an efficient, time-tested remedy—for every common ill experienced by young or old. TO WHOLESALE and RETAIL DRUGGISTS Druggists and drug johbers a backed by the most aggr He had become convinced that the greatest® joining hands with Winsol in increasingly large numbers your jobber. alke to the selling possibilities of an ve advertising ever conducted on a group ot d Jobbers Get in on this big and successful merchandising idea The foundation of Winsol medicines dates hack over a hundred yeara The Winsol formulae found their origin in the tested and tried prescriptions of the best New England physicians practicing prior to and at the time the B. 0. & G. C. Wilson business was started in 1845. Physicians today are still prescrib- ing the Winsol preparations they have found so ef- fective. Before the Massuchusetts State Board of Health es- tablished its present well-equipped laboratory, the powdered drugs prepared by the founders of the Winsol business were adopted as the State standard of purity. This distinction was peculiar and signifi- cant in that it was enjoyed by no other house. And when the United States Pure Food apd Drug Act went into effect in 1906, to meet the new re- quirements not a single change in B. 0. & G. C. Wil- son preparations had to be made. Winsol products could not be better, or purer, than they already were. Not a single label had to be changed. The Winsol Leaders —The Sensible Tonic, is a general re- SANALT constructive tonic and blood puri- fier surpassed by none. It is the popular, big selling tonic that comprises quality, quantity and price. Compounded by a famous New England physician over 100 years ago, SANALT is still the most efficient known remedy for chronic constipation and its countless consequent ills. —The Great Emer- NEUROPATH[C DROPS gency Medicine — for over 70 years used from one end of the country to the other, and in England, Australia and Canada. The prepara- tion of a hundred uses. For a cold, the most effective of all remedies. For bruises and all kinds of inflam- mations, a wonderful linement. For colic and cramps, gives almost instant relief. No opiates, nar- cotics, nor harmful drugs. An ever-present remedy no home should be without. CERIZANE COUGH BALSAM \iTis record of over 90 years’ successful use in the treatment of coughs, and particularly valuable where there is any congestion of the lungs or bronchial tubes. It re- lieves the feeling of tightness in the chest; is sooth- ing and healing, and a valuable expectorant. Cerizane Balsam is not a “syrup,” and does not dis- turb the stomach. It is made from the most valuable vegetable drugs, and contains no Opium, Chloroform or other narcotics. The Future of Winsol The Winsol Plan is no longer an experiment. It has weathered the test. It has proven itself. It has been demonstrated beyond argument that the principles back of it are right. Winsol products have a superior standard of quality that is being widely advertised in New England. The Storer Rubber Company, furnishing the Winsol line of Rubber goods, embracing hot water bottles, fountain syringes, rubber gloves, ice-bags, pneu- matic cushions, etc., is controlled by B. 0. & G. C. Wilson, Inc.,, with a large stock ownership. In the Winsol Rubber goods is found a line unexcelled in quality. The Blendinol line of Toilet Specialties, purchased by B. 0. & G. C. Wilson, Inc., is one of the most at- tractive lines on the market. It includes Perfumes, Toilet Waters, Face Powders, Toilet Powders, Hair Tonics, Shampoo, Lotion and Creams. The high standard of Winsol quality is conspicuous in this popular line. It is planned that other drug specialties will be add- ed from time to time, each to be the quality product in its field, and sold and advertised under the Winsol name. Winsol is growing. The influence of Winsol is spreading. Its importance is increasing. And those participating in Winsol activities rest secure in the certainty that its potentialities of profit are multi- plying themselves every day. B. 0. & G. C. WILSON, INC. Boston, Mass. The franchise for selling the Winsol line is not confined anywhere to the Winsol Agent Any jobber can get them direct from us. from his jobber. Winsol goods are sold in the open market Any dealer can get them established line of fire-class merchandise, g specialties in New England, are —write to us. And retail druggists—write today. saturday Evening, Sept. 16, 1922 S = oy R | ELD N SERIOUS CHARGE | document made her Haines' wife and SHOPME M went to live with him. The couple | N AY WORK came here. Application made for re- lef led the officials of the organiza- | LivIng | tion to investigate the relations of |Certain Railroad Settlements Tend to |the man and woman, and the latter| | | turned over the document. Arrest of | Haines followed. The woman has| | been paroled on a technical charge Bridgeport, Sept. 14.—Allison H.|as she has an infant by her marriage Haines, who had been living with |to Shortt. Mrs. Helen Shortt, aged 19, was held | §n £3.000 bonds today for the Decem- ber term of the superior court. A points (Signed) B. M, JEWELL, ;\\nh request they notify all outlying Allison Haines, Bridgeport, With Marricd Woman He Claims REEOIL VDN = NOW READY! Your New Fall Hat AT Your Hatters Connecticut Hat Co. The Arcade Restore Workers to. Positions It | | Rbauliitatiie | No Official Statement That DeValera | and Mulcahy Were in Conference New Haven, Sept. 14.—The €xecu-| Dublin, Sept. 14. (By Associated |tive committee of the striking shop-| Press)—No confirmation is obtainable - men’s organization here today held| here of the report circulated yesters Nk A ts 1l setin discussion of [ day that Eamon ‘aler . Toth, Boston Sw immer, |11 ‘rr‘_gv v PR LY for e fon of | day tha Eamon De \,'}”1 had a con =t the situation and had read to it the|ference with Gen. Mulcahy command« bench warrant is expected to }:" Will Try Channel Soon |telegram from B. M. Jewell at Chica- | er of the free state army. The names sought that he may be 1"‘9}'} g | 'g. Sept. 14. (By Associ-|BO. The message was as follows of the two it is thought may have month. _?;hslznlri:;:ovlmnl ‘::N "\;1”»\ ess)—Charles Toth of Boston| J: C. Read, New Haven, Conn been associated through Mr. De Val- whose wifc h A l'-'rl deserted | who was forced to quit recently in Conference committee today anrwvl;»m reply to lhv_w»crh made by Shortt, whose husband ha i | to accept a settlement on certainiGen. Mulcahy who is the Dail minis- few Y - | his attempt to swim the English chan- | ! O e ed Tas faie A A e e |ratiroads of which you will later be|ter of defense at the recent parifas e woma sed, as s anxious 3 but Haines came to|today he expected to make hi advised. No men are to return to|ment session. prepared a paper|ond effort tomorrow work onh any dm(lrmld H]nin ":Hn‘\lrl\‘ r at E the officers of and oldest citizen of Marblehead, [ which purported to be a record of | e - \::v‘\l,l:o”::qm: (;D:\Dr;‘“r,q c “’(;";p Mass. That'c Samuel S. Preblé. He's | annulment of Mrs. Shortt's marriage Amasis, in Lg,\'pl‘ made a census e .s. e l.an 92 and has benn married 71 years. lshe is’said to have believed that thel‘auu years before Christ. sent to sec y c 2 to Have Annulled Marriage For. Strike Officials Agree. riage. was married, Bridgeport and sec- During the Civil war 80,158 Union and 30,152 Confederate soldiera died prisoners of war, Oldest Odd TFellow, oldest Civil War veteran, longest married man

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