New Britain Herald Newspaper, February 8, 1923, Page 16

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. Russell Broa, amounted to more | fresh during the yea than $1,600,000,600, The amount of new ulu surance purchased during 2 was $9,300,000,000, an Imnvu- of §§00,000,000 or T% over ILLLE tive 1n undergraduate organizations. I’“' the dieposal of large qu At least 15 more men were placed | valuable articles stolen in Mexice. | They were advised recently that ST —— on probation, which bare them from jewelry, gold novelties, eto, were bes participation in all undergraduate ac- tivities and means the less of scholar: | ing surreptitiously sold at a certain Pro- PROFIT IN PINE ARABLE TRACTSIN DEPOSITS INCREASE 143 Reprosentative Lumber Companies ENGLAND DECREASE British Soil Fails to Meet the Nation's Needs arable land reased stil t govery ment ex to the Knglis! ation in the Mutton chops thre of the the if of ided for from gOV aned rough the nted out that extensive in And l-'l‘l.‘»( wiiyy for the grass year s lands are for both ind greens inkers and | Breed- | the ineseap reased by covered by During this wereage of po- with brussel for the mut- 561,000, the same tatoes sprouts ton r governme whict y potato crop em- and before the wcres report recorded substantial in- creases v number of cows and number of farms de- by 5,418 Acres planted in 00 fewer than a year ea has dropped the pre It may or may not be signi- t that beer, in which barley has a was imbibed in far less quantity d last year than previous yrewers blamed the high' taxes ¢ drop in the popularity of their foaming products, Pigs, too, are be- comi er d horses continue to make soline. Last year the pig ce revealed a decline of 200,- 400 porkers, and the foals were 8,400 less than in 1921, The condition of British agriculture is generally regarded as critical. The IZnglish farmer cannot grow food as quickly as the city consumers must have it, or as, in fact, they can gfl! it elsewhere. So the farmer is giving | up the plough and letting the grass grow under his feet and those of his gheep. The report shows that in many cases he is even giving up vhrl farm. During the last years of the | war enormons efforts behind the plough increased the arable land of this country so that it was possible for. England to feed an extra 4.500,- 000 of her population, but even the England could not feed half her hun- gry mouths, Since the armistice much of rew ploughed land has gone back grass until now the soii under plough is not much greater, to the government report, than it was immediately before the war. mak millions of mc 8 year the was 1 it the part, the Fresh eggs flc dozen. Russell Bros. -d:l\' The lessons of life are walk- ing the streets of this town. One man bought every get- T0CKS rich-quick chance he ever saw and got poorer every day. The happy man bought real estate. PH ONE. L= B. NELSON High Class Tailoring Imported and Domestic Woolens 58 W. Main St. Galbraith & Pattison Carpenters and Joiners Hardwood Floors and Paneled Ceilings . specialty. Tel. 1493-4 Repairs A.D. Clifford | — BUILDER — 14 Hawley Street LSTIMATES FURNISHED show Gain—Average § Per Cont on . BILLION AND HALF in 1018, " |legal notices have been futile, >land thé southern states. Tmvestment in 1017 Washington, Jan, §,—Profits repoft- ¥ 143 representatice companies in the southern pine lumber industry | eraged 9 per cent on investment in 1917 and 8.5 per cent in 1918 it was shown in a report submitted to eon» gress tolay by the federal trade com- mission. The veport was based on information whieh the commission was directed by the president to ses oure usé of the war industries hoard in its regulation of lumber More People Are Saving Money, Banking Association Reports Feb, §.—favings d Sates increased by about $1,500,000,000 in 1922 as com pared with 1921, according to prelim. inary figures tabulated by the Bavings Bank lll\‘llun of the American Bank. ers' assodation and announced here through district headquarters The figures show that, compared to reported savings deposits on June 30, 19021, of $16,615,605,000, the amount for the corresponding date in 1922 was $18,087,408,000, The number of savings accounts in- Chicago, deposits in the | for prices Revision of the return made hy the companies however ny elimination of [stumpage appreciation from invest .nu.u and costs, which the eommis- sio eld & Id not have been in- cluded increased the average earnings | to 12 per cent in 1917 and 11 per| cent 1815, The commission stated that |dicated by the partial data in hand even aftor this revision the production |Was 28,98 6 on June 30, 1923, as costs were inflated in y instances, | cOmpared 637,831 on the corre- A wide range in the earning rates |*PORding date in 1921, a gain of 2, was reported for both years, mounting 814,695, Kor both the amount of i loxs of 3 per eent fo & profit|%AVINgs and the number of depositors, 2 ner cent in 1917 and from a loas | 'Ater data of states from which com- por cent to a profit of 52 per cent | PIete roturns have not yet been re- ceived are ('xpl(‘lml to show larger {gains for 192 ey ‘ According to this report school $1.00, Russell B savings systems reported deposits of 185,500,000 during the last school year, an increase of 406 over 1921 and 1006 over 1820, The number of QUEER MISTAKES HADE ‘m rhool systems also ingreased by over 11000 during the last school year, and the’ number of puplls reported as par- Wrong Titles and ticipating was 1,271,000, a growth of 5067 over the previous school year, The data collected by the Savings Bank Division indicates that life in- surance, not including beneficlal so- ~Four years )isting cieties or the government bureau, now in the te vone directory as a “man | carried on American lives totals more midwife” has caused a Paris sur- than $50,000,000,000, Premiums on geon to bring action against the gn\'-;npw business during the year ending ernment, which is responsible for get-| November 1, 1922 amounted to $225, ting out the directory, to compel a|980,000. The total premiums, includ- change in m:« |vrn{~~nnlonul descrip- | ing the payments on annuities, paid phone calls, por«mml 4mnpluln'a and \cm narled up in red tape, has dug up Genuine Naturopathy promotes from the current directory some Health and Efficiency, It helps the queer oxamples of stupidity, He found ' sick to get well and keeps the well fit, that Bolo Pasha, executed as a spy It gives a level head, clear brain, during the war, is still listed in the normal appetite, good digestion, sleep, directory, as are other men who are|PeP and an immense capacity for ulmd or have disappeared. Two the- !work., The old custom was to treat aters, the Theater Rejane and the the effects, by my methods the cause Theater Dore, whose names long have | i located and removed by adjust- been changed, he says, have been| The latest electrical treat- unable to have corrections made in |Ments, violet rays and elec + light | haths ‘or whatever is indicated for a woman or h ral weakness, ‘lllt‘\l diseases, stonjach, liver, kidney or heart discases, high blood pressure Clouds Tonight and Friday Wil Be| o 'fauity blood circulation, neuriti, Warmer | sciatica or any form of rhcumatism, my treatments never fail to give | sired results. Or for those who have | failed to find relief, regardless of what ailments, this message is for you. The treatments are not embarrassing | for women and are painless, of of 11 doz, advt Strictly fresh egg ] Wrong Names, Other Things Are Listed in Paris | Telephone Books, Paris, 1eh, 8. he wants damages, His attorney, in an effort to -how hew the state telephone service RPI'ORT Any man, For Connecticut: I'riday warmer, winds, Conditions® Cloudy tonight, Fresh northwest The disturbance that was central yesterday morning over North Dakota has moved eastward into the Lake region. High pressure overcasts the Atlantic coast districts and the Pacific northwest, The tem- peratures are low in New England The Naturopath Physician and Chiropractor 252 MAIN COR. WEST MAIN Phone 765 Hours 9 A, M. to 8 P. M. Conditions favor for this vicinity, partly cloudy weather and warmer. Herald Classified ads are the talk of the town. EAGLES’ Big Carnival OPENS TONIGHT JESTER’S HALL | Three i Carr Entertamment hy St. Joseph's Jr. Minstrels Roadster Sedan GIVEN AWAY Something New and Different Dancing To Real Dance Music ADMISSION 25 CENT Sleighing Parties Taken Out | THE MAGUIRE CO. 102 LINWOOD STREET PHONE 20574 FOR SALE WANTING A SMALL RETAIL BUSINESS, CENTRALLY LOCATED, CALL ON ME AT ONCE. H. D. HUMPHREY l.l MAIN ST.—ROOM 208 NATIONAL BANK BLDG. Volz Floral Co. 92 W. Main St "8yt with Flowers” Tel. 1116 ANYONE Jobbing Promptly Attended to Tel ~391. DR.F.COOMBS| RECORD POTATO SURPLUS Growers, Government Reports, Chicagd, Feb, 8,—O0ne hundred and ixty thousand caroads of last sea- on's record breaking potate erop still are in possession of growers, a sur- plus without preeedent in the last nine years, the U, B, ‘Bureau of Agricul: tural economics said today, The cendition was sald to be due to diffieulty in moving the unusually large crop, It was estimated that only about half the 160,000 carloads would be marketed and the remalinder held for seed, Last N‘.-l.’h ll ARE DI\OI'I'I.D Trinity College “M- mu Those Who Fall Below Hartford, Feb, §.-~After a faculty meeting at Trinity college yesterday, 18 students rectived notices that they had been dropped because of defielent scholarship, as revealed by the mid- year examinations, The number 18 particularly large and includes several prominent athletes, besides several You Can Feel Younger There are bmany ways in which a woman can look younger than she really is; but we want to tell you how to feel younger. It's a perfectly safe and sane method which has been tried successfully by thousands of women. 1t consists in wearing n good look- ing light and flexible, comfortably shaped shoe called the Cantilever Shoe. The Cantilever shank contains no hidden metal. It flexes when you walk, harmonizes with the arch of your foot which nature designed to flex with every step. The Cantilever flexible arch supports restfully and kealthfully; instead of restraining and weakening the foot, it permits mus- cular exercise and free circulation, which strengthens. Well shaped, well made, finely finished, Cantilever Shoes seem so perfectly suited to one's foot that they help you happily through each day's duties and pleasures, they comfort you, lighten your step. FLEXIBLE Lint; YOUTH They give you the springy step of youth, add to your endurance in walk- ing by encouraging good posture and proper distribution of your weight over the heel and the ball of the foot while allowing complete freedom of action. The feeling that results is best expressed by quoting from a letter written by a middle-aged woman: “T feel fully ten years younger today than 1 did Saturday. Do you know why? I've had on my new Cantilever Shoes all day long and feel so com- fortable. 1 even feel like singing.” We are the sole agents for Canti- lever Shoes in this city. ‘Sloan Bros. 185 Main St. IT"S A GOOD NIGHT DRINK Our milk of certain? y quality puts you into a sleepy, pleasant nod o' dreams frame of mind if you drink aj glass or two before re- tiring. Try it. ESEIBERT & SON) “Your Milkman" PARW STRELT PHMOME 1720 MYSTERY HOUSE RAIDED, Hamburg Police Uncover “Fence" for Disposal of Stolen Articles, Hamburg, Feb, §.-—Police believe k THE HERALD The A-B-C Paper with the -B-C Want Ads ships. private dwelling in Hamburg, viding themsel with 96,000 in United States banknotes and posing as foreigners, several officlals Visited the place, The upshel was an “Inves- tigation rhvealing valuables ~worth $0,000,00 marks. All bore the im- Prlnll of Mexican firms, There Is No Substitute for Quality Automobile bodies, like houses, may be ecither strong, sturdy and durable, or light, flimsy and weak. Like houses, good bodies are ex- pensive, and makeshifts are cheap. Prices influence sales of automo- biles, as they do of houses, but highest quality and «are possible in neither. Thereis nosubstitute for quality. To cheapen quality of materials, construction and finish is not Studebaker policy. product is fatal to permanent suc- cess. Studebaker bodies are built to withstand for many years the exposure and use to which an auto- mobile is subjected. Better bodies are not built by any manufacturer nor borne by any chassis. Studebaker body plants are the largest body plants owned and oper- ated by any individual manufac- turer in the industry. The name STUDEBAKER is your best pro- tection, as it is our greatest asset. lowest price A makeshift MODELS AND PRICES—I. o. b. factories Termas to Meet Yous Convenience M. Irving Jester 193 ArchSt. 1THIS I8 Put in a Herald Classitied ad, it will | help you sell it | Have Your Eyes Then yon'll know you are treat- ing them fairly. Even though you bought glasses two years ago you should ascertain«if the eyes now need different lenses. Let us help you.’ Fraxpk E. Goodwin ht Specialist ST. TEL. 1905 327 .\l'\l CROWLEY BROS. INC. PAINTERS AND DECORATORS 267 Chapman Street TEL. 755-13 Estimates cheerfully given on all johe THE OLD HOME PLAIN DRY GoobS &< FANCY GARMENTS SUNDAY //Ar: Efl'—‘ P A STUDEBAKER YEAR You know Maple street, just below Whiting street, is a good, high class renting district, just ike the west end of the city. Well, this will inter- est you—We have a thyee-family house we’ve just listed—3 steam heaters,shard wood floors, etc. See \us Quick! CAMP REAL ESTATE CO. 272 Main Street Phone 343 Rooms 305-6 Bank Bldg, ——— e OYSTERS . —DRINK-— cagmn DI;‘FS; b 'AYERS’ SODA-WATER Take home a large bottle of lemon SHRIMP and lime—something you will like— SCALLOPS “:l';ll::‘gh::‘;e hottles—3c, 10c, 15c. LOBSTERS HONISS’S 24-30 STATE ST. HARTFORD COLD WEATHER NEEDS We have a full line: of new and second-hand stoves, oil heaters, gas lieaters, etc. A. LIPMAN New and Secondhand Furniture. 24 Lafayette St. Tel. 1329-3 BY STANLEY . THE TRAVELING SIGN PAINTERS PICKED THE WRONG PLACE WHEN THEY ATTEMPTED TO PAINT A TOBACCO AD ON AUNT SARAN PEABODYS BARN —

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