New Britain Herald Newspaper, January 12, 1923, Page 10

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NEW RBRITAIN l‘l.\ll.Y HERALD, FRIDAY, JANUARY 12, 1028, T WOMENOUR ENTIRE VVINTER STOCK MUST GO OF NEW BRITAIN —We Have Just Purchased From A Large N ew Y York Manufacturer His Line of 200 ngh Grade ' B One Lot of W VS Sample Wmter Coats Our Entire swck i v _Our §30 and $8 -' IN ALL THE NEWEST FASHIONS Women’sad Misses POlreatndTWI“ : 5 Coats of the Finest Trimmed With Collars of F ALL [ BOLIVIA SQUIRREL NORMANDY WOLF—FOX ‘ and . . 4 >, Tricotine ' ORMANDALE KRIMMER | d cmew. | WINTER g F W D(J AS\% - O CUT BOLIVIA And Some With Fur Cuffs el R\ i Every coat is tailored in the best of fashion, and lined with the finest . l | silks. $ 75 (I T y Ladies! This is your chance to buy a real Exclusive Winter Coat at v : less than we ourselves could buy them for at the beginning of the season. Navy and Blacks in the COATS WORTH $3500—AT............... 85 1 9.98 1 , F'lhen 2 ormer finest of materials—at- ‘ tractvely braided and em- B coats wortH sazso—aT ... 5 25.00 Price Il brflldered lt;‘_)getther wslth 1 B other novel features. Sizes - s : to and including 44 v COATS WORTH $5975—AT................. 53 5.00 Just pick out the suit you —— No Alterations — . . | | COATS WORTH $75.00—AT................. $47.50 i fien s e Children’s Winter . e This lot includes box coat R | New Britains Shopping Center effects and long lined mod- CO ATS ; els in beautiful poiret twill, _ b ’ tricotine, velour, broadcloth o $5 00 vl and veldyne—many of them | ] _u 1 v suitable for spring wear. A 7 to 10 yrs,, dark and light i@ i 380 to 580 Mum‘/ NewBrilam ¢+ splendid opportunity to se- d $tore for rer ybody cure a lovely suit at a very mixtures; warmly lined and interlined. Worth $10. low price. chosen for the much-coveted honor jar with business methods in lhfil United States and Canada,” Mr. Proc- of participating. ! tor says. “There is no practical rea-| The complete cast this year In- cluded approximately 1,000 persons, | 1anguage and similar laws and insti-| tutions, the republics of South Am-| o erica ought to be on terms of closest R i ed g [ 15 One of Drgent Necessiies of icenmscavr o™ oris s Periormers Received Average o | their social but for their commercial | : Somh America advantage. 18,000 Marks Thls Yeflr “This ambition of the persons who | SR {are interested in the Pan- American | * |idea can be realized only when alli Oberammergau, Jan. 12.—Perform- Havana, Cuba, Jan. 12.—Better ‘"';thr Spanish speaking peoples of the ers in this year's Passion Flay re- ternal and international telephone| New World are able to talk and doiceived an average of 18,000 marks for communications {8 one of the urgent | business with each other as readily as | their services, according to the final commercial needs of South America, |8 MO% the fact among the English/|financtal statement issued by the com- ai o MC% | speaking peoples to the mnorth of mittee in charge. The sum represents according to Lewis J. Proctor, vice | them. about $2.25 at the prevalling rate of president of the International Tele-| *The stimulation of trade which|exchange. hone and Telegraph Corporation of | up-to-date nationai and international| At least 528 hours. were spent in P P P! New York. This is a step in the busi- | telephone service would nroduce,‘nmm performances. Sixty-isx pres- 5 ‘\\nuld have a very marked effect on|entations were given hetween May 9 ness progress of Latin America which |4y general prosperity of the entire and September 26, each of which is sure to come before long, he savs, |continent. A gradual combining of|took four hours in the morning and but the more quickly it is realized,|the telephone systems of South Am- |tour in the afternoon. In addition the sooner will trade conditions in|erica in the matter of control and en-|there were seven ‘months of re- South America generally display a |gineering methods seems the most|hearsals. As is commonly known, more steady and encouraging upward | practical way of arriving at a con:|men who are candidates for the chief trend. Mr. Proctor has just returned |tinental system of communications.|roles hegin preparations years in ad- from a tour of investigation in South [This would involve the atandardiza-|vance by raising beards, since wigs America. tion of the equipment methods and|and makeup are not allowed. Vil- “The importance of a continental | transmission practices of all locai|lagers also must bear in mind al- telephone system to North America is | plants, as well as the extension of the| ways indeed from childhood, that well appreciated by everybody famil- ' long distances.” | good character is an essentlal to being 3 son why the same facility in the trans- action of business should not exist in| w R[iE Rl] n | South America. With a common: \ Grandma’s ParicakeFlour THE kind prandmother and preat-rand- mother used to make—those delicious light brown, fluffy cakes that tasted SO good on frosty mornings! Prepared today in the good old- fashioned way, you get all the old-time taste. THE HECKER CEREAL-CO. Also— Heckers' c—-r.m..s.un.-. Buckwhest, Self. Ruising Flour end Jiggtum. all of whom, as usual, were Ober- ammergauers, Of this number 124 were soloists or had speaking parts. A large number of women and children were used, especially in the ‘“mob” scenes, Anton Lang, who portrayed the part of Christ for the third time, is reported to have waived his right to a higher share of the receipts in or- {der that the average compensation lfor the participants might be in- creased. Tickets of admission produced an aggregate of 21,640,470 marks, the | committee’s statement shows, while 5,806,398 marks were realized on the The expenditures amounted to only 17,753,048 marks, having been kept | comparatively low because little new construction was required, many cos- tumes were in good condition from the 1910 season, and all necessary dyeing of oid material was done gratis by a Munich firm whose manuger is a resident here, resented by the 318,040 visitors who saw the play this year. Eliminating 248,775 Germans, the quotas by na- tionalities were headed by tourists from the United States who numbered 22,231. Other parts of the two Am- ericas contributed 2,843 visitors, while English and Irish \isitors numbered 12,263. SELL RARE WINES Much Still Lies in the Austrian Im- perial Palace Cellars Vienna, Jan. 12.~~Rare wines to the value o0 20,000,000,000 crowns, ‘or | 000 at the present rate of exchange, still lie in the cellars of the imperial palace. One vintage of red wine known as “Achauer of ¥m- | press Elizabeth” from grapes grown from vines brought by her from Greece, 18 being sold at 900,000 crowns the bottle, or approximately | $12. There is said to be the largest stock | of original Chartreuse, both green | and white, in the worid stored in these cellars, and it is to be sold abroad for standard money only. RUN TO HONDU RAS This New le- .“I' l'u' Shipping Monopoly in German Hands Tegucigaipa, Honduras, Jan. 12.— The Pacific Mail Steamship company, the leading line on the Central Ameri- ean Pacific, has turned over all its in- terests in the Bay of Fonseca to a German house. This step is believed Fere to mean that, outside the naval rights acquired by the United States from Nicaragua by the Chamorro- Bryan treaty, there remain no ship- ping or maritime interests of any kind in the Bay of Fonseca in the kands of Americans. This action and the running of Ger- man steamers direct from Hamburg sales of librettos and photographs. | More than 30 countries were rep- to Amapala, wiil, it is thought, re- sult in the formation of a shipping monopoly in the hands of the Ger-| mans. RE-OPENING ANNOUNCEMENT | Our store at 423 West Main Street, re- cently damaged by fire, is to be REOPENED on Saturday, January 13th, withan entirely new stock of ECONOMY qhality mer- chandise. WE HOPE FOR EVEN BETTTER RELATIONS WITH OUR CUSTOMERS. { OUR BUSINESS POLICIES WERE NOT DAMAGED BY THE FIRE ! OTHER NEW BRITAIN STORES 525 STANLEY ST. : 521 ARCH ST. 87 DWIGHT ST. 270 SOUTH MAIN ST. 85 ARCH ST. STORES ALL OVER THE STATE BEESS e ———— e The Economy Grocery Company For Quick Returns Use Herald Classified Adots, - A

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