New Britain Herald Newspaper, June 22, 1923, Page 14

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There are house is offered in one of LOTS. NO RESTRICTIONS— EVERY THREE-PIECE SUIT in the And whether you pay $14.75 to NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, JUNE 22, 1923 ANNOCUNCEMENT EXTRAORDINARY The Most Drastic Step This Store Has Ever Taken In June! Choice of Our Entire Stock MEN’S SUITS ALL OUR GOOD MAKES IN MAKES 'LUDING KIRSCHBAUM, CORTLEY AND OTHER WELL KNOWN We Are Doing This Because We Must Raise A Substantial Sum of Money To Buy Our Fall Merchandise Come In and See For Yourself the Wonderful Bargains We Are Offering. DO IT NOW! Here is THE KNOCK-OUT CLOTHING EVENT of the TOWN! Yes, in JULY when stocks dve pretty well sold down most stores offer CHOICE OF THE HOUSE. But NOW when the assortments are SO COMPLETE that YOU CAN FIND THE STYLE YOU WANT in the PATTERN YOU WANT and MADE IN YOUR SIZE AND of OUR ENTIRE STOCK at EXTRAORDINARY SAVINGS, $197 Group/l SUITS THAT SOLD TO $30.00 Gro SU Every New Style— Snappy Sports and Nor- folk Models for the Young Fellows as well as the more conserv- ative types for the man, these FOUR $37.50, you can depend upon it that you are buying the biggest clo! in the city. FEW RESTRICTIONS PLACED ON PLAYERS Detroit-Club Bars Wives of Play- ers From Road Trips of Team Detroit, June 22.—The place for a ball player's wife is in the home, ac- cording to the management of the De- troit American league club, which has a rule barring wives of players rrom‘ road trips during the playing season. The Tigers are said to have fewer | any | restrictions upon players than elub in Ban Johnson's circuit. There 18 no fixed rule against drinking, but players whose Intemperance inter- feres with their playing ablility are sharply disciplined by fines and su-| spension, Golf Is Allowed Golf playing/ forbidden by some managers, is not objectionable to the Detroit team management, which points out that players are at liberty to engage in the links pastime, if they can find time during the playing sea- son between scheduled games other duties of the baseball field, Manager Ty Cobb, fortified by 17 years in the American league, Protests Against Stiff Swollen Tortured Joints Rheumatic or Otherwise Says: “When Joint-Ease Gets in—Joint Agony Gets Out.” It was a high-class pharmacist who saW prescription after prescription fail to help hundreds of his customers to get rid of rheumatic swellings and st inflamed nints And it was this same man who as- serted that a remedy could and would be compounded that would make creaky, tormented joints work w i as inuch smoothness as swollel ey ever did Now this prescript Joint-Ease, after being tested fully cases, is fered cists 1o the suffer from ailing limbering up. Swollen, tw stiff, pain-tormented usually eaused by rheumatis it wh ver e soaks right in 1 gets right at its fon rightly named coes on many o of- through sive pharm people joints that 1 ingy, inflamed through skin and fle to and correct the source. Remember Joint-Ease is for ail- ments of the jc whether in ankle knee, hip, ¢l A ilder, spine or finger, and w you rub it on, you may expect speedy and gratifying re- sults. It is now on sale at druggists Averywhere for 60 cents a fube. . BRITISH RULERS CLOSELY and | has ——— e thing values positive ideas about the development |of baseball clubs. The Tigers, under | his leadership, is one of the few clubs in organized baseball that does not have morning practice. Other pilots put their men through workouts be- fore lunch, to keep their muscles lim- | ber, No Morning Practice Cobb, on the other hand, maintains that morning practicé does more harm than good. He declares that if play- ers work out before lunch, then go to {the showers and relax for the few | hours before the game time in the af- | | ternoon, their muscles are not as flex- |ible as they should be. His practiee !1s to have his men on the fleld shortly lafter noon, and he sends them through |their paces then. By game time, he helieves, the player's muscles are fully |limbered and the player himself is in best physical fettle for the game. There are no fixed hours when De- | troit players must retire. Elimination of the morning practice avoids the ne- cessity of early rising, and players are able to get a good night's rest, even if they elect to retire late, GUARDED ON CONTINENT | Americans Who Saw Sovereigns Off For Italy Impressed by Their | Escort of Secret Servicemen London, June 22.-—Americans who | were privileged to see King George and Queen Mary off for Italy were struck by the number of secret-service men and guards who accompanied the British sovereigns, In KEngland the king and queen are relatively safe from the hands of assassins and eyil- doers, but when they are travelling on the continent they are much more carefully protected that the president of the United States when he leaves the White House, ' Dozens of picked detectives from Scotland Yard kept a vigilant eye on | the British rulers while they were in Italy. While the police of each coun- try through which the royal party travels are nominally responsible for the protection of théir visitors, the British authorities are not !Hlisfll‘d‘ with this protection and insist upon a | big retinue of their own trained sleuths. They recall that it was on | the continuent that an assassin at- | tempted the life of the late King 1d- ward. Only the prompt intervention of | of the king's guard saved the monarch. | Since Premier Mussolini came into power the Italian police have manag- ed to keep the anarchists well in hand. | N to Britain, France is probably | the safest country in which kings and | 1s travel. The French police, like Scotland Yard, have most anarchists | marked and watched whenever a for- cign potentate 1s on a visit. Queen Victoria declared she feit safer in France than anywhere else, even in England. 8he perhaps had in mind the | fact that she was threatened several | times in her own country, once by a madman with a stick, and on another | occasion in Buckingham Palace by a }lunanc. who entered the palace un- observed. {ecial elasses in general staff work, en- | older THE STORE OF THE CONNORS-HATLORAN STORES, INC., Geo. M. Lloyd-Jos. M. Halloran 215 MAIN STREET MILITARY EXPERT | BARES ARMY DATA Strength of Soviet Red Almy Made Clear by Correspondent London, June 22.—Much of the mystery and speculation which have existed concerning the strength of the Soviet Red army is said here to have been cleared up by a military correspondent of the London Dally Mail who has just returned from Moscow., He says that at the begin- ning of 1923 the strength of the army had fallen from 950,000 to 800,000, At the present time there are 280,- 000 men in the infantry, 60,000 in the cavalry, 70,000 in the technical units, and 30,000 in the navy. The Cheka's frontier units' contain 50,000 men, and its internal units 60,000. The army has 2,000,000 rifles, 14,- 500 machine guns, 5,700 light ma- chine guns, 3,000 cannon, more than 3,000,000 shells, and 1,000,000,000 munitions. The war establishment of a division consists of 15,000 men and 6,600 horses, comprising three infan- try regiments, three squads of cav- alry, three batteries of fleld artillery, THAT SOLD TO $35.00 up 2 ITS DEATH NEAR ALTAR Bride’s Father, Bridesmaid and Best Man Sentenced To Death Goettingen, June 22.—The ‘“‘shadow |of the gallows" fell across the mar- | |riage altar at an unique wedding iwhich occurred here recently., The that is delightful, (You never would three howlitzer batteries, and the us- ual contingents of sappers, engineers, | munitions columns, ete. Twenty-Threc Airplane Factories | There are 23 airplane factories, but | only five are now working. The avia- tion department, which is in the hands of a committee of three with Trotsky at the head, expects to have 10,000 airplanes in 1924, with corres- ponding personnel. | The correspondent adds that lhe" Bolsheviks also have recelved many shipments of alrplanes from Italy,| England and Germany. i Realizing the necessity of pmduc- ing officers from the working classes, | the Bolsheviks have established many | military schools, They are more numerous and better equipped, the Daily Mail's expert says, than simi-| lar schools in the United States and | England. The schools embrace spe- gineering, infantry, cavalry and sig- | nals | Overworked Mothers We all know them. Mothers who in | their anxiety to keep their homes neat | and attractive and their little ones as well dressed as their playmates, toil on day in and day out, sweeping, dust- | ing, mending and cooking, often suf- fering from backache, pain in side, headache, nervousness, sleeplessness, all symptoms of more serious ail- ments. Thougands of such women have found felief from such suffering by taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege- | table Compound, as is evidenced by | the letters of recommendation con- tinually being published in this paper. For nearly fifty years this old-fashion- ed root and herb medicine has been restoring ailing women to health and | strength. $24.7 GROUP 4—In this lot are our very finest Garments—hand tailored—it’s too important to miss—and every man who wants a first class suit should be here tomorrow ..... Group 3 SUITS THAT SOLD TO $40.00 $37.50 SPECIAL GROUP—AIIl the odds and ends. One and two of a kind. Some sold for $27.50, some as low as $19.50 and were good value at the original price ........... $14.95 UNDER THE MANAGEMENT OF bride was a deughter of a man sen- tenced to death, and both best man and bridesmaid were under sentences. The groom had been only to 20 years imprisonment. four were fugitive Flemish who had heen convieted cause of certain I'lemish tendencles wid pro-Germanism, by the Mapl-Flake ? Many people need to eat bran as a regulator ~—and know it— but they’ve never been able to emoy it. Now we offer them a breakfast food tasty and appetizing yet— Mapl-Flake is 25% Bran guess it unless we told you) Mapl-Flake is nothing more nor less than whole wheat, sweetened and flaked, and toasted to a delicious brown. It contains enough bran to be a wholesome, harmless, natural regulator. It is appetizing and nutritious, so rich in life-giving vitamins that it stimulates the appetite and furnishes the fuel to feed it. Bea “Mapl-Flaker.” $1000 in Pri for Jingles If the best of food you'd eat, Buy Mapl-Flake; it’s crisp and sweet; Wheat, Nature' 's food with bran and all, The flavor’s great, the price is small. The WHOLE Wheat Food that keeps you Right” Write a four-line jingle that tells how good Mapl-Flake is and how good it is for you. Write as many as you want—the more, the better your chance for first prize, $250 cash. There are 165 prizes in all. Come on! Every jingle writer a * Mapl-Flaker”— every “Mapl-Flaker” a jingle writer, Contest closes August 15, 1923 —send yours at once to the Contest Manager, Armour Grain Company, Chicago, Il.. | Made RIGHT in Battle Creek by the ARMOUR GRAIN COMPANY ICAGO similar condemned Belglans_be- MODEL of YOUR FAVORITE MATERIAL we are offering you CHOICE $290.75 R T Every fabric — all the new patterns and colors —in sizes to fit every man, regulars, shorts, stouts. Far-sighted business men should buy two or three smts at a special sale such as this. You will do a wise thing to follow their example. Labor and mate- rials this Fall are going to be higher, and for the life of us we don't see how it will be possible for Men’s Clothing to be sold at PRICES LIKE THESE. That’s why you will do well to STOCK UP NOW. Walk-Over White Shoes Redufged All We have gone thlough our stock of Whi, . Canvas Oxfords and Pumps, and have marked them all down in price for qulck selling. This is your chance to buy dependable Walk-Over Shees at exceedingly low prices. Walk-Over $6.50 and $6.00 White Cloth Oxfords on Prin- céss Pat and Chum las NOW ....... o Walk-Over 1 and 2 Strap White Canvas Pumps, were $6.50. NOW .... e All O(I:ll' Bl:ath nndSWhitteO Com‘li)inagion, and Tan and White ombination Sport Oxfords that were $l 90 $5 to $8. NOW ...... Walk-Over Swiss Buck Sport Oxfords with fibre soles, $8 grade. NOW $5 45 20 Pairs Walk-Over White Canvas Oxfolds, military heels, narrow toes. NOW.. 51 00 $7 White Nubuck Oxfords, low heels, wnth leather soles, NOW . ) $A‘ 90 Men’s Walk-Over Sport Oxfords, formerly sold for $3,00. NOW . v . $4 90 Our Regular $1.65 Pure Sllk Hose in black and Havana. NOW . y $l 90 This sale offers you Walk-Over Slmes nt unusually low prices. They are shoes which carry a trade mark known all over the world for quality. SEE THEM IN OUR WINDOWS David Manning’s Uiath-Cuer Shoe Store 211 MAIN ST. Chautauqua Begins Next Monday For Quick Returns Use Herald Classified Adsts,

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