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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, MARCH RENIER, DUNN 127 MAIN STREET, Opp Arch S At $5.98—Few_Coats, were up to $49.98 At $35.00—Coats, were up to $75.00 At $11.98Dresses were up to $21.98 At $14.98—Silk Knitted Dresses At $4.98—Knitted Sweater Dresses, were up to $8.75 At $1.39—Light Weight Sweaters, were to $5.75 At $2.39—Heavy Sweaters, were to $9.98 At $1.98—Silk and Wool Scarfs, were to $5.75 - At 89¢—Cotton Waists, were to $2.00 At $1.98—Liberty and Canton Crepe ] Waists, were to $8.75 At $1.98—Velvet Bags, were to $5.75 At 19¢ Pair—Small lot of Silk Gloves, were 50c pair. Kid At 59¢ Pair—Small Sizes in Gloves § At $1.39 Pair—Light Shades of $2.50 lew Britain’s Great TRADE AT HOME'T At $1.98—Flannelette Kimonos, val- ues to $3.50 25¢—15¢ and 19¢ Initial Handkerchiefs At 53¢ Each—Odd Pieces of Neckwear At 3 for At $2.00 Pair—Full Fashioned Silk and Wool Hose, $3 quality At $1.79 Pair—“Van Raalte” Glove Silk Hose, values to $3 a pair At $2.00 Pair—A Few Boys’' Heavy | Suits and Girls’ Jersey Dresses (3 to 5 years) were $4.25 to $6.00 At $1.98—A few $3 Silver Mesh Bags | At 49¢ Pair—O0dd Sizes and Shades of | Wool or Fibre Hose for Women (values to $1.50 pr.) At 33¢ Pair—Children’ value to 79¢ pair. At 39¢—One lot of Crystal Bead Necklaces and Metal Belts At 9¢ Pair—Infants’ 25¢ Lisle Hose, s Woolen Socks | w To Close Out All Rings, val. to $1.00 At 12%¢--0dd Pieces of Veiling, val. to 50¢ At 49¢—Mussed Rompers and Dresses values to 8$1.50 -Round Neck “Van Raalte” Silk Vests, $2.25 quality ‘Carter’s” Union Suits, low neck, no sleeves, ankle length, regular price $2.25. At $1.00-—Children’s “Carter” Union Suits, long sleeves, high neck, regular price $1.50 At 2 for $1.00-—-Small lot of Bloomers for women, $1.00 quality At $1.00—-Women’s $1.50 White Night Robes At $1.00—Women’s Envelope Chem- ise, were to $1.75 At $1.00—-Women’s $1.50 to. $2.00 White Petticoats At $1.00 Each—S$1.25 to $1.50 Step-ins At 25¢— At $1.25- At$1.29-- A TEL. 1409-2 - A4 At 50¢—Children’s Hats, were $2.50 to $4.50 At 50¢—Childien’s binations At $1.00—Children’s $1.69 Knicker Combinations At $1.00—Women's and Children’s Flannelette Gowns ($1.39 and $1.50 quality). At 39¢ and 50¢—Children’s $1.00 Gowns At 3 for $1.00—Children’s nelette Bloomers At 39¢ and 50¢—Children’s 50¢ and 75¢ White Petticoats At 69c¢-—Infants’ S1. "5 Veata,'swes 6 months to 3 years At 3 for $1-Brassieres, 59 quality At $1.00—-0dd Corsets, values to $5 each At $1.00—A few $2.00 Housedress $1 Knicker Com- 75¢ and 59¢ Flan- sizes 41/, to 61/, all colors Aprons 1 structivencas weemed confined to their Look at This, and Then Pity the Teacher! Kid Gloves flicted painful bites on men, but that was the end of it. Closer to the equator o much more sinister side of the fly became apparent when it was found that the seemingly always fatal o sleeping sickness of humans in those | sections followed the bites of the flies Thm Two POSSOSS swm[ OI‘U- did the death of domestic animals. {The entire future of the tropical SImmg slckness | African colonies of the various Eu- | ropean powers was seen to have on {the possibility of combating the sleep- ing sickness; for with the greater Washington, D. C, March 4.—The |freedom of movement stimulated by assertion that has recently come from | the advance of civilization, the dis- Germany that the German Colonial | ease spread from its local centers and wociety has o mrrr.-.sfu! remedy for|threatened to wipe out the entire the hitherto incurable “slecping sicks | population of countrics, In the years ness” of tropical Africa, but will not | Just preceding the World War British, make it known unless Germany's|German, French, Belgian, Portukuese pre-war colonics are restored, turns|and Italian sclentists were busy in attention to one of the most dreaded [ Afrion secking to learn more about of known maladics. {the testse fly and the discase, and to “It 1s hardly too much to say that |find ways of combating them. It the sleeping sickness, and the tsctse | though the devclopment and trans fly which play an impbrtant part in | migsion of the disease came to be causing it, have done more than|known in detail, none of the investi- mountain ranges, mighty rivers and | gators has clai i to discover any most other natural features to affect, | guecessful reme ave the Germans. divert and hold buck development in| “The investigations that dieclosed Central Africa.,” says a bulletin from | the complicated plan by which nature the Washington, D. (., headquarters | keeps the microscopic organisms of of the Natlonal Geographic soci | the sleeping sickness alive and injects “The Boer and British settie them into ¥ n victims makes a South Africa had no tsetse problem,” | rascinating ehapter of science despite |t gontinues the bulletin, “until their |the dark o of the picture, pioneers had pushed on toward the| Apimal *“Reservoir” and jtropics. Then their cattle, bitten by | “Hypodermic™ tiies, sickened and died. With the “It was found that there must b althe further opening up of the hi large animal whose blood is of the|come try the tsetse fly was Introd t to constitute a ‘r oir'| “Ome the world as a tiny ins T If this *r rvolr' | most 11 Gestructive of domestic cattl w a teetse fiy ors | tu the ravening lions that operate wn out underge a siight some of the same territory ¢ " e fiy's intestines and]} sleeping Sickness Challenged Cen- | o, ndes cted as theugh|an tral African Future “When Europeans came into o tact with the tscese ffy in s the more southern ‘fiy belts' ciaims the world's record for twing in these seven sets, The five sets at the left arve all in the fifth grade, get of girls, third from the right. Lakeside Ward School at Pine Blufl, Ark., taught by Mrs. T. 1. Davies, who is mother of the twin confided elale, nonc, 1ot ever hs enemi ever necused President Bhert of oa tondon, Mafch § ing on the presidontial job. On the other hand he is given eredit for . lefters to th tng patehed up innunieral controversics which ha a4 breaking t 4 president for some time, he nds that in that position he had harder, longer and mor than in the days when he delivered bread or men restaurant, Animal iish Chamt regions he infacte « republie to- Ebert was one of the six who fo ed the first provisional governmes milestone in his 1t o the republic, He beeame the president provistonally Mbruary 11, TOX TE RRILIS REIGN 1919, wi " o w wondon, March 4 Weimar .| popuiar dog is not. as one might sup- dential pose, the lnglish bull dog. but the fox 22, bu terrier. Of the 600 dogs of all hreeds of the unsettied conditions and Ehert, | “Xhibited at a nt London show, od by | More than a b d were smooth or 5 | wire haired Sealyhams were second fa would give the best that tiement of the v him. Thus the mere pussing of m a fair basis i+ Observes Anmversary Quietly op e e wr e February 4 € 18 & halit apueired by | s was postpons CCa use who had m zood, Famous NS . [ i irres @ youth when he ar » € ns ontinued to ay ored 1o 14 howurs daily as an ap- Pasily -nlthnplv made at home, case conld not transmitted from . for the tter part of a year i ‘ " T . gerness to help the working in office until 1 his he agreed to but it beats (hem all for their blood y Wis 53rd bt . came In e p do. GREENLAND DISPUTE NEAR EAD ¢ ih a saddicr's shop. Later, in President Eb public show or enle finds his greatest ple e in hard work-—=work which he now hopes wil resuit in general good for Germany and its people quick results. little for iment and Thousands of housew that they can & « does ot appear in the ny as prominently as neellor amd some other offi- Try This on Yours! make @ ful clarified molasses. he inctead of sugar s tastes good, ¥ e family a its truly = acts, penetra passage of the ens and raises the heals the m Lar-Mark Thowsand of Flics Scietists pecially i the skin is bot or irri- tated, Cuticura Talcum, dusted on the skin aftsr the bath, is soothing and cooling for little ones. ldesl lorr-uy-d:yim.a purposes. Copyright Harris and Ewing has devised this iapioved measuring board for babies for the U, S. Children’s till. That's all. { Standards, Washington, ¢ lodois k