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MEN’S AND YOUNG MEN’S Palm Beach Suits $-10.00 Suit at $10.75 YOUNG MEN'S AND CONSERVA- TIVE STYLES Norfolk and Pinch Back Values to $18.00 ALL GO AT $11.95 MEN Al 8 S MEN’S $2.00 CAPS Better Grade. Value to $2. ALEL GO AT oo iencnes 89¢ $25.00 SUITS AT $15.45 $18.75 $35.75 NEW YORK SAMPLE SHOP 357 Main St., New Britain LN Something Going on i?.very Day! Men Gef ‘Ready! The New York Sample Shop Big Sale has taken New Britain and Bristol by.storm. We :re setting the standard for present day selling. The lure of low prices is the magnet which draws thousands to SPECIAL ! ’S AND YOUNG MEN’S Wool Suits Men’s Trousers $1.85 $2.85 $3.85 Values that are most unbelievable at this price $3.00 Trousers Ve G L $4.50 Trousers 30.00 SUITS AT B e $5.50 Trousers [} R 35.00 SUITS AT, our store. Get your share of these mighty bargains. They are yours. Boys’ Suits $5.45 $8.50 Boys’ Suits at $10.50 Boys’ Suits pants. At . Suits marked down to ....... i 135 Main'St., Bristol _ $7.45 $15.00 All Wool Two Pant $9.45 Underwear $1.00 Union Suits 59 c | 1 L AR $1.50 Union Suits 89 c { ¥ P S GRIL SHIRTS $1.50 Men’s Shirts 89 c $2.50 Men’s Shirts $- marked down to . . 1 '45 $4.75 with two MEN’S $12 RAINCOATS at Sizes from 34 to 46 The best value ever offered construction of this rallroad will make | possible the development of a wonder- | ful area of mineral lands, rich in sur- | face showing of gold and silver, here- | tofore too isolated to permit of profit-| |able operation. It wiil also bring | within the reach of rail transportation | several million acres which have been passed upon by the geologists of the 1M('xk‘an government as potential oil/ A4 lands, government officlals state, (hp' " RAILROADS T0 OPEN THO HILLION AGRES Construction of Lines Through [ bearing lands, carrying live ofl seep- | DEVOTE 70 YEARS T0 PASSION PLAY Jacob and fthi MOVIES HELPING T0 MODERNIZE PEASAN OId Type of French Peasant I Mathilde Rutz Have MANY IDLE SERVANTS Housemaids and Cooks Out of Work | sitions offered are usually in families on Account of Pauperization of Middle Class. Berlin, July 6. — Pauperization of | | the middle classes in Germany has part of servants, and remind the ser- THREB-DAY DINNER., Tokio, July 6.—A publiec dinner extending over three days is planned | to follow the wedding of the Prinece | Regent and Princess Nagako, which |is to take place in the fall. Three thousand govrnment oiffeials, the dip- lomatic corps, the foreign colony and many others are to be be invited. The Empress, the Prince Regent, Prin- cess Nagako, who then will be the servants frequently are no longer able | to feed themselves. Larger cities, such as' Berlin, are heing deserted by servants out of work because the po- Wwhich are.in such reduced circum- stances that cooks and housemaids do not care to share the family’s lot. Newspapers print many articles about the necessity for loyalty on the vants that they lost the war ag well ag the employing class and should share Crown Princess, and other members of Tower California to Be Started the royal family, will attend at stated N times, Rapidly Passing Away | Just Gelebrated Golden Wedding | woriea srest narasnip on servants |age, structure, and oll sands ylelding | R R | petroleum at surface tests. f The control of all potential and un-| o e 6 Movies in farming upled ofl lands in Mexico has been| \BTS SHY DR ORTE L peasants National . Rallways of| methods of cultivation have the consequena®s. Oberammergau, July 6.—Jakob and Mathilde Rutz have just celebrated their golden wedding anniversary, one | more milestone in two lives which have been devoted to the Passion Play for 70 years. Rutz was the vil- lage smithy of Oberammergau until age pulled him away from the forgé, and s the father-in-law of Anton| Lang, the renowned portrayer of the Mexicali, Lower California, July 6. Bids for the constructlon of 150 v“fles!?c“ ‘ of rallroad through Lower California Vested in the ) i °f | new by the National Railways of Mexico Mexico by the Mexican 50"’!";"""‘ " | made the people of the cities real- will be opened soon, according to an | on the grounds according to an official| ;. ity gomething of a shock that announcement of Jose I. Lugo, mili-| Published notice; of affording adequate | ¢p. "\eocant 4s changing his Ways. tary governor of the northern district|fuel supplies for all of the needs "ff\ The policy of keeping land hold- of Lower California. the raflroad lines in Mexico. |ings small has made the Irench a The construction of this railroad, Terminus of Road, [ nation of proprietors, so far as such government officials state, will make | The terminus of the new railroad } a condition can exist. The French in- available more than 2,000,000 acres| yij] pe at Port Gonzales, 150 miles! heritance laws tend toward the equal|life of Christ. | of farming lands, particularly adapt-|gouth of Mexicali. This port has m(rrmlmont of children in wills, so (h@t} In 1850, as o babe of three, Rutz ed to cotton for which water can be feet of water at the shore lines, and(in most cases the farm is actually di- (oclf his original part in Oberammer- obtained from the abundant flow of vided into small tracts rather than|gau's famous play, He was U\rnfiaau the Colorado river. A total of $2,000,- ld and the proceeds distributed. as Adam’s son in one of the Old Tes- 000 has been made available for the This love of the land, and a secre- tament lablealux: which feature the work, and an additio $2,000,000 tiveness born of living to himself is|performances. Ten years Iatr*r‘ he an-| has been set asidein the treasury of gon in a program of colonization and | Said by sociologists .tu be c-hangi;m’. pfured a8 an ‘alw soloist an:l in lgs.ui fornia for future work. development worked out by Governor| Lhe farmer of today looks upon his|was chief assistant to the Passion L3 |1and as the instrument of fortune| Play prologist and choir leader, Construction, Lugo, with the approval of President| 2" b R ke 8 Latge B8 \ 1 building. He will sell it at a profit for| Johannes Diemer. During the per-| This pioneering railroad construc-| Obregon. The details of the plans he can buy more. formances of 1880, Diemer again held | tion, according to Mexican officials, is | heing carried out include the estab-| y | | i 1 s ¢ G IPifty years ago the French farmer|this combination position but Rutz| the biggest plece of construction work lishment of gins and compress at Gon-| 4" ag s gecret the return from his|often substituted for him and in 1890 since the United States built its Alas- les for the handling of the cotton crops and the kind and quantity of |replaced the leader entirely. kan railroad. The conditions con-| &rown on the new lands. fertilizer he used. If he needed| For canturies the Diemer family tended with are equal in hardships money he regarded borrowing with| has furnished the cholr leader, Rutz and ‘opposition ‘from nature, but at such dismay that he went to a money | being the only person ever to break | extremes in their variety. Cold, snows lender in another district, often ul‘m on this otherwise uninterrupted| and the conquering of mountain fast- night, and paid usurious interest to|succession, " nesses prevailed in the horth. This escape publicity. In 1870, when the Passion Play southern operation involves combat | The modern farmer, although still| season had to be interrupted, Rutz with terrific heat in the summer sea- | i FA i co es- | PErhaps in the minority, joins cooper-| was called to the colors for the Fran- #0n, death dealing sand storms, iis-| ~FOrt Au-Prince, July 6.—A conees-| ., 00000 g selling organizations, | co-Prussian war, 1t was an ironical| erable chill in other portions of the|sion for the canning and export of| jic.,cses the best methods of cultl-|ceincidence that he was billeted dur- | year, and at all times ahsence of wa-|pineapples has been ordered by the|yvation with his neighbors, and 1s|ing the hostilities with a French fam- ter or Ifving thing upon which to sub- | Haitlan Council of State to an Amfe!'l» proud to tell what good bargains he!ily which had once been his guests at slst, except a tthe shores of the gulf, [can company. While Haiti raises has made. ¢ | Oberammergau while attending the where water fowl, fish, and shell fish|large quantities of pineapples, mone| This, however, is the rosy view of | play. abound. | has been exported in the history of|country progress. There still remains| Mother Rutz's devotion to the Pas- In addition to opening up farming | the island. the old type of suspicious peasant, sion Play has expressed itself princi-| guarding jealousy his bit of land and | pally in hospitality caring for many the secrets 'of his savings, hidden in|of the thousands of tourists who trek | the houso or buried under the floor.|this way cvery ten years. One of her| This method of hoarding, known as|two sons lives here and took a prom- | the “woolen sock,’ 'is believed by|inent part in last year's play; the| financiers to explain the rapid disap-|othen lives in Munich and is there- pearance in France of gold and silver, | fore not eligible to the cast. Her and even of a great mass of bank-|daughter Mathilde, the wife of An- notes. The French have learned to|ton l.ang, made a name for herself in subscribe to bond issues, as a matter | former years as a Passion Play artist. of patriotism, but the police records | Rutz continues active in public life, of big hauls by thieves in apparently|as a member of the village govern- poor homes show that many French-|ment and one of the Passion Play ex- | men still have no use for banks. iccuuwf committeemen. SAYS USE OF INSULIN ?'PLAN BIG EXPEDITION | HELPS INT. B. CASES| 70 SEEK DAH LOCATION' Cure for Diabetes May Also Prove | summer Vacation of State Geologist ! | | FOR SATURDAY: As Usual You Will Find Best Values at BONELESS PQT ROAST OF BEEF LEAN COTTAGE HAMS ships of large tonnage are expected to carry from this port the products|S© from the Imperial Valley. | The railroad enterprise is the first| 5¢ of Beef . . Ib. 14¢ Sugar Cured Bacon ... ..... . Ib. 25¢ Fores of Young Lamb . .. . Ib. 15¢ Lean Boiling Beef . . Ib. 8¢ Sugar Cured Puritan Hams Ib. 28¢ Prime Lamb Chops . Ib. 30¢ Roasts of Milk Fed Veal '. .. 18¢ Veal for Pot Pie . 10c Sperry and Barnes’ Bacon . 35¢ Sugar, in Cartons . ’ . 5 Ibs. Large Raisins ..................... Ib. Fancy Tomatoes ................ 2 cans2l¢c Libby’s Corned Beef .............. can 25¢ 5 Ib. bags Daniel Webster Flour ........ 29¢, RNED BEEF .U 7 to 11 A, M. SPECIALS 25¢ 12%c m29C ...59%¢ 25¢ Fresh Hamburg Lean Smoked Shoulders, 1b. Legs of Young Lamb ...... New Potatoes. peck Evaporated Milk ..... 3 for EXPORT PINEAPPLES TO U. S, Haitian Council of State Gives Ameri- can Concern Canning Concession. Shoulder Roasts ALL DAY SPECIALS 33c 'm45C 25¢ .%156 15¢ bunch 5 [0S Fresh Eggs doz. .. Print Butter ..... Large Cantaloupes, 2 for 5lc 14¢ Fancy Peaches .. Large Plums ... 2 doz. Help in Banishing of Tuberculosis, is to Be Trip Through Grand Large Fresh Beets .... Canyon of Colorado. Says Dr. Sansum. Sapta Barbara, Cal, July 6.—"The| Lawrence, Kans., July 6.—A trip | of | through 400 miies of almost inacces-| diabetes by Dr. F. G. Banting of To-| I8 canyon of the Colorado river as| | | geologist for a government party is to |ronto, Canada, may be considerdd a e the summer vacation of Dr. R. C.| [Rr— | great aid in the anti-tuberculosis| Moore, state geologist of Kansas, and | 1/ P S | discovery of insulin for the cure | campalgn,” said Dr. W. D. Sansum of | head of the dcpartment of geology at| {the Potter Metabolic Clinic, Santa|the University of Kansas. The party | | Barbara, Cal., today at the 19th an-|under the leadership of Colonel Birds-| |nual mreeting of the National Tuber-|eye, director of the topographic di-| grumsig association now in session in|vision of the Geological Survey, is to| . [this city] “A good many cases of|leave Lee's Kerry, Arizona, about| — | tuberculosis are also diabetic. Here-| Aug. 1, and expects to finish the sur- | tofore the treatment of diabetes meant | a severe diet, often causing under-! The primary purpose of the survey, ' nourishment, although the treatment|according to Dr. Moore, is to seek | | of tuberculosis calls for the best nour- | sites for dams for the control of the |1shment possible. Cases affected with | flood waters of the Colorado in the in- both diseases have in the past been|terests of irrigation, and to determin- | A New Feature vey by the middle of October. | | nearly hopeless.” |ate sites for the development cf‘ The use of insulin, Doctor Sansum [ower. | The new specially reinforced cylinder with larger perforations allowing a greater volume of water to | pointed out, now frees sueh }-'Mwn'si This party is to consist of ten per- | | from all diabetic aymptoms, and if tu-| Sons.. Colonel Birdseve is to be in| | bercuiosis is present, this may be|Char with Doctor Moore as geolo- | - | treated with the best general diet that|RIst, assisted by two members of the | | the market affords. One patient under| f°deral bureau. In addition there willl rush through the clothes. [the care of Dr. Sansum gained 35 be five boatmen and a cook. Where| MORE DEPENDABLE MORE DURABLE MORE EFFICIENT [ pounds, and now weighs 15 pounds| S%iftness of current does not make it EASY TERMS — DEFERRED PAYMENTS more than he ever has weighed. In|iMmpossible, frequent stops will be | every one of his tuberculosis diabetic|Ma1c for examination of the topo-| | cases, 1aboratory findings have shown EfaPhical and geological formations. | " sald Dr. Sansum, “that such | t3nC® of nearly 450 miles, the river patients have the same chance of re.| %8 @ fall of 2,600 feet, Dr. Moore out diabetes.” fairly well described by the Powell il expedition of 1869-72, and the few 2 [then, details are lacking, and it is to | 'I'HE CUNNEBTIBUT “GHT AND PUWER cn Warsaw, July 6.—This will be the | supply the necessary information that . | scraper of 22 stories, which will be * | 92 WEST MAIN STREET TEL. 230 [ comp'eted next year. It is being| Wrist watches are sald to be giv-| % every four stories. The building will | clder-fashioned pendant watch for lhue 1,000 office rooms. | ladies. i 145 Price Plenty of Them at $1.00 More at $1.50 and $2.00 YOUR HATTERS ARCADE improvement. “It now i‘wvn“\ ee's Ferry to Needles, a dis [covery as have similar patients with- | $249. While its general features were CONNECTICUT HAT CO ‘ | expeditions that have been made since | L4 first city in Europe to have a sk the present trip is being made. | built in terraces, becoming narrower |ing way in England to a révival of the‘ 14 Price