New Britain Herald Newspaper, September 29, 1922, Page 15

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The Good Old Stand By We have ’em— You don’t have to be a millionaire to buy one, either. Good ones at—$29.50 Better ones at—$34.50 to $44.50 Some men want a good looking, serv- iceable suit of clothes, without any frills or furbelows. A regular hard fin- ished worsted that will wear and hold its shape. Plenty of ’em. Beswe-Lelands City Items October Victor Records. Plerce & Co.—advt. Constable Fred Winkle has Tepper on Lafayette street, which is under attachment. Over 2,000 satisfied Kohler advt. been —ANNOUNCEMENT.— We have engaged a capable butcher from New York City to take entire charge of our Meat Department. ready to supply you with the finest quality of Prime Meats, f§ You can get your meats properly cut [ at the right prices. and strictly fresh and clean, here. Watch this space for Grocexy tnd Meat Specials for § Friday and Saturday. National Groc. and Meat Co. 176 ARCH STREET TEL. 1647 GROCERY DEPT. $1.23 $1.20 $1.20 Daniel Web- ster Flour. .. Gold Medal Flour Pillsbury’s Best Flour. .. Purity Flour Choice Texas Star Flour. .. Tea Table Flour Best Rice California Baked Beans .. ... 3 lbs. 2 9 (& Large Loaves Bread, all kinds, Small Loaves Bread all kinds Peas, Split and Whole 2 Ibs. and Toilet Per Bar 10 Ibs. Granulated Sugar for Tomatoes Large Can Corn 2 Cans for Thomas Pork and 4 for25c 27c Cond'sd Milk 2 m25c Evaporated Milk all kinds ... 3 for Challenge Brand Blue Label Catsup Red Raspberries, large can Sunkist Peaches large can Pink Salmon large can Grated Pineapple large can Schepp’s Cocoanut . . 1-2 1b. Hershey’s Cocoa $1.10 3lbs.25c 25¢ Soap, All Kinds Laundry 5¢ (Not any more than 10 bars to each customer) 58¢ (with each purchase) 2 pkg.25c FRUIT AND VEGETABLE DEPT. Green Mountain Potatoes 2 9 C Onions, Red and Yellow, .... 8 u,s.25c Apples 5 lbs. for Bananas Dozen Celery Bunch Large Heads Lettuce Sweet Corn Sweet Potatoes ... Cranberries Quart MEAT DEPT. %:"nianf;.i lér}(:glklder.: 1 gc 'ancy Oven Roas 3 c 25¢ Prime Beef 35¢ 8 ]bs:25c Fancy Pot Roast Prime Beef Loin Roast New England Pork ... Legs Genuine Lambs Legs Milk Fed (Half or Whole) Fancy Philadel- phia Fowls Fancy Roasting 40 c TBUTTER AND EGG DEPT. Tub Butter 380 y 42 C Print Butter (all kinds) Mild Cheese Brick Cheese Pure Lard ...... 2 Ibs. Coffee Per Pound Orange Pekoe Tea Oolong Tea Selected Eggs Parksdale Farm Eggs ....... doz. Strictly Fresh Eggs ....... doz. 25c¢ 37c 52¢ A marriage license was {ssued to- named trustee of the shoe store of I.j day at the town clerk’s office to Ever- i | house on 167 M| Hyman Dubowy, We are Bl ed that no NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, These are exactly weight overcoat. Slip into one of ett Goff Shepard of Bristol, and Fern Elizabeth Redden, of 14 Warlock t | street. C. L.|Campbell owners in New RBritain.— John Mikaulauskas of Park street, has sold his store and five room cot- tage in Berlin to Mr. and Mrs. James their new home and the business at the store. The regular monthly continue meeting of j | Penfield Camp, Sons of Veterans, will be held tonight in G. A. R. hall + Property consisting of a two-family Hart street, owned by of Griswold street, has been sold to Henry DMirante of street. Mr. \lirante plans to py the residence. August Bergstrom has sold his val- nable piece of land with a frontage on Buell street at Bassett street, to Bar- ney Miller of Stanley street and Saul Dubowy of Robert street. Carlson, Cashman and Dahielson made the sale. BODY T0 BE EXHUMED § | Remains of Mrs. Mills Will Be Dug Up to Determine Number of Bul- let Wounds. New Brunswick, N. J., Sept. 29.— The body of Mrs. Eleanor Mills, who with the Rev. Edward Wheeler Hall was found dead in a deserted field near New Brunswick, was to be ex- humed today. Authorities hope to learn definitely just how many times she was shot and whether her ankle was oroken. Steps to exhume the body of Dr. Hall also have been taken, investiga- tors believing an autopsy will aid them in working out the mystery. No autopsy was performed on the rector's body. The stimulus of a $1,0100 reward for apprehension and conviction of the murderer or murderers if the crime B | was committed in Middlesex county, offered yesterday by that county, may | bring new facts to the attention of the |investigators, detectives believe, A similar reward probably will be offered by Somerset county, where the | bodies were found U. OF PENN. OPENS Acting Provost Josiah Penniman Makes Plea For the Utmost Demo- cracy in Higher Education. Philadelphia, Sept. 20.—Making a plea for the utmost democracy in higher education Dr. Josiah H. Pen- niman, acting provost of the Univer- sity of Pennsylvania in an address at the opening of the institution declar- American institution un- less private and restricted, had the right to adopt a method of selecting candidates that in any way violated the prineciples laid down in the dec- laration of independence. “To do this,”” Dr. Penniman said, “is to be un-American in polley and there ig imperative neéed at this time to preserve the American character of our institutions and to send forth the graduates better and more loyal Am- ericans if possible than when they en- tered.” The enrolilment at Pennsylvania will exceed 1400, The trustees were oblig- ed to limit the entering class and gome of the upper class. WIRELESS ON AUTO Gen. Persh Son Rigs Up Radio So That Music Can Be Heard While on Trips. Washington, Sept. 29.—The mys- terious appearance of a bright copper wire running around the top of one of the big army limousines used by General Pershing, set afloat a rumor here recently that the former chief of the A. E. F. had become a radio fan and listened in on concerts or other matters passing in the air as he rode about the country in the car. Inquiry at the general's office to- day disclosed however that it was not John J.,, but Warren Pershing, the general's young son, who equipped SEPTEMBER 29, 1922. PAR-KERRY Overcoats For Men ‘the days for a light You don’t need an ulster, but you do need something. our Jersey Coats. Nut brown, Auburn, Cinnamon, Rus- set, Oak Leaf and Chestnut Brown. Hundreds to choose from and you can get a beautiful coat for as little as $22.50 Better one at—$39.50 Beogge Lelands the motor car .with teh radio appara- tus. He was aided in his project by the army sergeant who drives the general's car and the pair now are able to ride to music and occasionally induce the general himself to listen Taylor of Bristol, who will move into | in ANNOUNGE RULE ON MAILING ANIMALS Livestock Labelled “Harmless,” Only, Will Be Received ed Press)—A few bleary-eved croco- diles a yard or so in length whose digestion enables them to chew up brooms may be harmless in the legal sense of the word when shipped by parcel post but Postmaster A. L. Behymer of Cincinnati has his personal doubts about the matter. In addressing the national associa- tion of postmasters here today Mr. Behymer explained that live animals and various kinds of barnyard stock, under the law, were entitled to malil privileges if in transit they wore badges inscribed ‘“‘harmless.” The Cincinnati postmaster was clined to doubt that fair postmistress- es or a bevy of young women clerks in the home post office would look upon a crate of live mice as harm- less. Also, Mr. Behymer appeared not to look with servenily upon the prospect some day of being obliged to ‘“attend, water and feed various fowls and crated livestock™ as a part of the daily postal routine. The evolution of the egg he felt was not so bad explaining that first the parcel post handled crates of eggs then the contents of such eggs after hatching, in the form of live chicks only to be followed by full grown chanticleers and domesticated mother- ly hens. But when alligators and other grue- some creatures happen along in the usual run of business and, as was the case recently at an Ohio post office, escape from their crate and wallow about the office snapping broomsticks and otherwise giving vent to playful pranks until reduced to the official “harmless” stage he declared it was about time to call a halt The convention failed to take any action upon the revelations of the Cincinnati postmaster, evidently feel- ing the “harmless’” phase of parcel post management would in the proper course of events be corrected or modi- fied by the postal authorities. own MAY EFFECT DEADLOCK Inability of Party Leaders to Com- promisc on Hearst or Smith May so Result, Is Belief. Syracuse, N. Y., Sept. 29.—Efforts of party leaders to effect a compro- mise in the Dbitter contest between supporters of Willliam Randolph Hearst dnd former Governor Aifred E. Smith, for the democratic guber- natorial nomination were unavailing today. Indications were that the contest would go to the convention late today or tonight with a possibility of a deadlock, resulting in the nam- ing of a ‘dark horse" candidate. A resolution favoring light wine and ber was prepared by the platform committee Democratic women brought to the attention of party leaders the name of | Miss Harriet May Mills of Syracuse tor secretary of state and Mrs Franklin D. Roosevelt, wife of former assistant secretary of the navy, for comptroller. RELINQUISH OFFICES Canea, Crete, Sept. 29 (By the As- sociated Press)—The officials of the Constantine regime have turned over their offices to revolutionaries who formed a provisional government of {three Venizelists, Washington, Sept. 29 (By Associat- |~ Women’: Sport Coats Sport Coats--Dress Coats--Polo Coats Flapper Coats--Plaid Back Coats Plain Coats and Fur Collared Coats COATS FOR CHILDREN—COATS FOR GIRLS—COATS FOR MISSES—COATS FOR WOMEN FUR COLLARED | CAMELS HAIR COATS COATS Real hand tailored mod- Very unusual fabrics in|els. Authentic copies of soft, rich colors. Plaid back E,e" l:i‘:fi‘su’fih m]°‘:e}5 and fur trimmed. e L1088y SIGR $19.00 |24 SPORT COATS Raglan shoulder, invert- ed plait. Brown and gray polo cloth beautifully satin lined. $14.00 $24.85, $29.85 MISSES’ AND FLAPPER COATS $9.85, $14.85, $19.85, $24.85 | GIRLS’ COATS $3.95, $4 95, $7.95, $9.95 Were you to walk into the show rooms of a large wholesale es- tablishment, you would get some idea of the vast number of coats that are on display on the third floor at Besse-Lelands. Were you to ask the wholesale prices on these coats, you would get a definite idea of Besse-Lelands retail prices. We have plunged on Coats. NEVER HAVE WE SHOWN SO MANY—NEVER HAVE WE ASKED SO LITTLE - BesseLelands WANT A RE}EIBUC‘ luewd here by a representative of the \Yale Glee Club Will Faris edition of the New York Herald. | 0ge “The people of Greece will never| Sing in 13 Cities be =an=ficd to be governed by foreign- " {28 Greeks Will Never Be Satisficd With | org» he said [arews Eaven Aoert rz:ce!:"“r"p e Rule :t:‘;;f' gg}l’: new Lk "’ei isit 13 cities to sing before alumni. e These include Syracuse, Buffalo, en el SR e |Cieveland, _Detrolt, Milwaukee, st. Paul, Minneapolis, Kansas, Indianapo- Paris, Sept. 20.—'What we need in | thies.” Greece is a republic like you have in | il!s Chicago and Springfield, Mass. George, of Foreigners, American Newspaperman Is Told. America,”” said General Paraskevo- | poulous, Greek commander in chief In 1548 the Jews of Portugal wer»i Dutch girls and boys dress much undee the Venizelos inter- | regime, banished to Brazil. |alike until the age of seven. Ntaonl Meat Stores Co. »v= MAIN ST. Largest Retailers of Quality Meats in U. S. Spec1als for Saturday Worthy of Your Consideration POULTRY SP ECIALS 9(: LB. B Fresh Killed BOILING FOWL 90 LB. Fresh Killed FRICASSEE CHICKENS BEEF SPECIALS | Fresh Killed BROILERS Fresh Killed ROASTING CHICKENS 18clb « 22¢clb Fresh Killed TENDER FOWL PORK SPECIALS 28c lb .180 Ib Extra Speclal—Wedgwood Crea mery Butter 43(: Ib Lean Fresh g 326 lbsmroéfiil)s?[gms. 39¢clb Boneless POT ROAST ... HAMS. . 32C lb Legfigfifso'ms 180 Ib | 18c1b Tender Shoulder ROAST. ... Lean Fresh CAL. HAMS.. Prime RIB ROASTS Fresh Chopped STEAK.. Armour’s Smoked Star HAMS .

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