New Britain Herald Newspaper, March 4, 1924, Page 9

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EW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, MARCH 4, 1924, y . « TOILERS AMONG MEN DIRECTING ENGLAND Advent of Labor Goverament ”*“’WMWM"HOMD TRADING” MEANb MORE MON‘EY SAVED MEN’S P RR SRR SR Very Low Prices PURE. THREAD SILK HOSE Merchandise DELIVERED to City and o o 0 0 m“»mmu-m“fl-“ Bavidson & Teventhal \ # will surely interest you. a1 :,_fclllg\mflasmgzfildél lfififik' T'l.!;;: g THE HOUSE OF QUALITY, SERVICE AND ACW BRITAIN, CONN. Suburbs by Our Causes New Epoch in Bl’itlill ooee 10c rade At Home l with embroidered initials 10 Ed)d e 5 OC | ‘ Motor Delivery BW £DOC London, March 4.—It has mever been the custom of English uncles to tell their little nephews that they might grow up some day to be prime minister, as American boys are in- formed of their universal birth-given opportunty to become president. But such may become the custom in Eng- land, now that the old entrenched sys- tem has been brought into the opem and scattered by the advent of the la- bor government. H STH WILL BE WOMEN’S COTTON VESTS THE NEW FLANNEL WOMEN'S GLOVE SILK VESTS NORMANDY VOILES The genuine only. 50 Flesh, orchid, honey- different new 1924 designs. K 1ot in the season’s most wanted materials, shades and styles; every one our new 1924 regu- " lar stock; in all s . WE PUT ON SALE bo Il of Splendid Quality and Fast or Ginghams; 18 Charming Styles Popular Checks and Plaids, Held in New Britain Sizes From . 36 to 54 MADE WITH SETIN GINGHAMS — UEVERY s LATEST STYLES— BRAY, SHEER ORGANDY, RICK EES, POCKETS AND BELTS, s OOUR & P" lALS g Rugs—\ade of new material in vari- colors, with fringed ends. 27%54. Trade At Home Day 98¢ pston Bags—Made of enamel cloth; well H.» Sewed on handles. s fle At Home Day s 1 -OO D0-Piece Imported Cailshad China Dinner gmall rose band decoration on a pu e [:(Ilomc . aey 339.50 p-Piece Imported China Tea Sets—Plain bands and floral decorations. Very CALH $6.95 At Home Day 133323533 S RS 7 DAY Being the Greatest Sales Event. hat Can Be Found at Every For You Will Benefit Greafly By the Savings. READY - TO - WEAR DEPT. SPECIAL NO. 2 i 'F™ " $2500 NEW SPRING FROCKS Handsomely made Dresses TRADE AT HOME DAY Trade at Home - The Values That Are Men- Dept. Bargains That Are CHILDREN'S COATS $3 Made of mixtures and polaire, some fur trimmed, 20 —8econd Floor some plain; sizes 3 to 7. BRUSHED GOLF SWEATER COATS Especially $1.50 ~Sccond Floor Buff-coat style. Utility garment. suitaple for work coat. ’l‘m\‘e At Home Day ............ TREMENDOUS BARGAINS AT YARD GOODS DEPT. or 2lc supre, =In all the new patterns, imported sl 29¢ Prade at 1 lo=e130st gra o, fincst patterns, $8xs§8 Trade at Hon vanee ard. .. Timported Gin nd domestic Frade at Ho New Spring ¢ j2-inches wide, ial Lot of Ginghams—32-inehes wide, Guaranteed st. Neat patterns, 19 Trade @t HOME = Yard. ..o.ovornererensaoaes C New Wool Chevks—In vighteen difforenty designs, Al wool, in the most wanted patterns, l 00 Frade 88 HOME == Yard........o00eneens N Crepe de Chine—Just received 40 new picees, The sea newest shades. Fine quality e at Home Tissue Gingham—Guaranteed fast color Frade at Home Windsor Crepe—All plain colors, strictly first 25 iality, Trade at Home g R C furton’s New Tissues—1924 design, beautiful 59 patterns, yard wide T're at Home | veses c Sateens=kEntire stoe b different shades, Yard wide, Trade at Home 33¢ " $2.50 Handsome $1.59 Main 1"loor gh grade. Com Trade at Home Dress Flan ull shades, $ Novelty Siiks==A new shipment just arvived patterns, suitable for dresses, Kimonos, Trade at W ] e Crepesesqi.inches weautiful combinations, Tra CANTON CREPE All silk, first quality, Trade At Home Day, in all wanted shades. $2.50 Main Floor 1-Piece Imported Chima Mixing Bowl Sets Colored bands; first quality. Trade At Home Day ............ 95(: Salad Bowls—Colored luster bands, with fruit center decoration. Trade At Home Day ............. 19¢ Aluminum Deouble Roaster Double Boilers 6 and ® quart Preserve Kettle and Pitcher. Choice Trade At e DRy ..vsiioenen .... Each 89c Needle lidged Table Tumblers, 8 ounce e e e - - i o - ot wi s 1RADE AT HOME” BETTER VALUES FOR LESS MONEY Snmananms 47c Day— | Day. Band or bodice top, in all sizes. 56-inch, Trade at Home | ghades, Yard ...... 3" 50c —Main Floor o e e et — A Sensational Purchase of 35 — Beautiful and Well Made FUR COATS Save Money and Buy Next Winter's Fur Coat Now Note the Great Savings $11.)AN0RTHERN SEALINE $150 SEAI INE (S(out Coata) At . $79 00 ... $33.00 .. $99.00 48 and 45 inch lengths and are handsomely lined throughout $59.00 COI\E\ ('OATh At . ~8econd loor GLOVE VALUES That Encourge Quick Action WOMEN'S IMPORTED GLOVES Of washable Chamois Suede, strap wrist \st);es in spring colors. Trade At Home N T W Ll 64C IMPORTED CENTEMERI GLOVES The nationally known “Capitol” quality, Tmported; two-clasps; lambskin glove with embroidered 'll).aclé. IP“;}"L grey and white, — rade At Home DRy siiinpni § A $ l 95 7 FINE FRENCH KID STRAP WRIST GAUNTLETS This is the famous “Meyer” make of glove selected soft skins, perfect fitting, overseam stitched. Desivable colors. Alr sizes, Trade At Home $2.45 DAY 5 canngss . Main Floor in all wanted Trade At Home Day .. $1.95 —Main Floor - APRON FROCKS Very nicely made of Ginghams and Percales, daintily trimmed with rick rack braid in countless humber of styles, Trade At Home Day 79 C EXTRAORDINARY UNDERWEAR BARGAINS ‘. 45¢ Women's Fine Ootton Vests—AJll firgt quality in a fine combed yarn, Band or bodice top, 11l sizes. Trade at Home Women's Cottan Unfon Suit<—Band or bodice top, tight or shell knce——Trade at Home Women's Glove Silk Bloomer: lew, plain or with fancy cdging Trade at Home Vlesh, orchid or honey Women's Knitted Bloomers—Pink or white, Sizes 36 to 44, Trade at Home Women's Bleached Union Suits—Medium weight, in stiyles. Trade at Home Men's Plannel Night Shirts—Rcgular $1.25 value, all first quality Trade at Home Men's Frait of the Loom Night Shirts—=gizes 16 to 20 n a quality garment Trade at Home . can ~|m1 and Drawers—Al! first 43 ta . Trade at Home . ...... c =Main Floot Men's Balbrig wality, Size § TABLE DAMASK $4.00 CORSETS | our C hv!r'l at this . C.-B., Bon 72-inch mereerized dam- ask in a beautiful assort- Trade ment of patterns. At Home Day. Yard ..ovcvvnnnns 69c dey and sun glow. Trade At Home $1 44 ~Main Floor THE NEWEST STIFF COLLAR AND CUFF SETS Complete sets in several late models. The smartest neckwear development of the season. Trade At Home Day, 4 4 c Complete Set . ~-Main Floor Ladies’ Pure Silk Hose, Iull fashioned. Irregu- lars of a $2,00 quality; Trade At $1.00 —Main Floor bluck and grey. Homeo BOOTT TOWELS ITemstitched absorbent towels, Size 18x36. Trade At Home Day .... Each 19 1,000 Sizes Up To 54 Each —8econd Moor reLl BASE LOOR COVERINC | We still have a large stock of patterns from which to make se- lections. Trade At Home Day ..... Yard 390 Sceond Floor WOMEN'S PETTICOATS Tricolette and Tub Silk Five hundred of them. 25 leading shades St $9 50 Second Voot INDIAN HEAD 10-inch unbleached sheetings, suitable for sheets, cases, etc. Trade At Home Day Yard ....ooc0nnnnnee 190 ~—PBasement CRETONNES A large selection of pat- terns and colors. Prices up to 4%. Trade At Home Day. Vz Price. Third Floor 8 [ Lefore his ninth | Copenhagen, 8 | conter for Scandinavia, Under the old system those who oe- cupied mighty political seats mad mostly been trained for public life from boyhood. Prime ministers were personages with luxuriant family trees, “public school boys” whose later youth had likely been mellowed in the aged cloisters of Oxford or Cambridge, If the prime minister wasn't all of that as, for example, the self-made Lloyd George, well, most of those who helped him run the empire were, miners and ex-office boys and ex-locomotive cleaners and ex-mill workers didn't sit at the cabinet table in No. 10 Downing street,, as they are doing now. The old-type minister was Lord This or Lord That or Sir Some- thing else or, if he clung to a plain “Mr.”, it was not usually because he | couldn’t have a title if he wanted ope. But in the new cabinet headed | Mr. MacDonald, nine of the 20 mem- bers wore white collars only on Sun- days in their first struggles for exist- ence. And some of the others were clerks. MacDonald, a boy reared by a grandmother in a little fishing village in the north, felt the metropolitan urge at the age of 19 and came to London. But all London had to offer him was a job addressing envelopes and lickin gstamps. e got the cquivalent of $2.,50 a week for it, The new lord privy seal and leader | of the house of commons, J. R, Clynes, 8 | began work at the age of ten as a # | piccer in a mill, Arthur Henderson, the home secretary served his appren. ticeship in a Newcastle iron foundyy. . W. Jowett, the first commissioner | of works, started work as a half-timer birthday:. . | Thomas, the colonial secretary, was an errand boy at first and then, when i | he put on long breeches, he started # | cleaning engines, e soon became |a fireman and then a driver of loco- motives on the Great Western Rall- way. The minister of labor, Tow Shaw, 8 (started work in the cotton mills at 8 | the age of ten, Several of the new cabinet oficials | were miners; Stephen Walsf.the see- i | retary of war, went into the pits at 14. Vernon Hartshorn, the postmaster general has been in the mining induse | try all his life, John Wheatley, the | minister of health, though now a pub- 8 | lisher, worked underground from the 1:.;" of 12 unt he was 22, Willlam Adamson, secr ¢ for Scotland, teil- ed in the pits fo years, With very few exceptions, every big official in the new British government has had to ,u ork for a living during most of his lite, Inad i | {Danes Call Cars Luxuries For Taxation Purposes March 4.~The new [law cstablishing a 15 to 30 per cent : {tax on automobiics has been soverely | eritized in motor cireles, particularly } by the heads of American car making | companies with branches in Denmark. | They claim that their companies have recently acquired large plants in Den- | mark with the intention of employing ds of Danes and using Copen- a collecting and dstributing Russia and other European countries, Some prominent Danes have, ex- pressed the opinion that Americans, whose government apparently taxes necessitics, have no moral right to up- B | braid Denmark for placing a tempo- rary tax on luxuries. : scholarship for Engliah Girl to Michigan College Manchester, Mareh Miss Mar- jorie Lindsey is to enter the University of Michigan under one of the fellgw= ships given by Miss Frances 1. Riggs, of Detroit, through the English Speaking Union. Miss Lindscy s a graduate of the Manchester universtly jand the second English student to be given a Riggs fellowship. The first, | Reginald 1. Lovell, of the University of Londen, is now studying at Ann Arbor, Mis#s Lindscy was chosen from a list of about 100 applicants. The fellow- | &hip 18 tenable for 12 months and was given to promote better understanding and good will between the two English B | speaking peopics. [ FRANCE MAY SHOE HER CLERKS Paris, March 4.-In the midst of mcasures providing for drastic econo- mies and increased taxation, the French Chamber of Deputies will con- sider a bill sponsored Ly the legder of the radical party and reading as fol- lows “The Chamber invites the government to restore in the 1924 budget the indemnity to the ushers, office boys and clerks in government- | stores and ministries, permitting them to buy their working shoes at the expense of the state.” l(-\"l' \DUI"'\ \l “ VLAG Cairo, March §.—Egypt bas formal- adopted a new flag. It will be & green ficld With a creseent and three stars. HAWAIT 11 llli F";ll‘l\()fi Manila, March 4—The bureau of abor reports that 7,261 Filipino la- orers went to Hawail during 1923. | In the same period 1,406 laborers re- 8 | turned from Hawali to the Philippines, Warsaw, March 4.—W. Trat, police | inspector of Warsaw, defeated W. Ols- zewski, Warsaw correspondent of the Chicago Tribune, in a 25 yard swim- R | ming race recently. The contest took place in the frozen Vistula, the ice of which had to be cut Jor the race. The thermometer rogistered four de- grees below freezifig. Mr. Trat covers ed the distance in 15 seconds, half & s | sccond .ahicad of his opponent

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