New Britain Herald Newspaper, May 27, 1924, Page 15

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P RSS RA L S SH CS NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, MAY 27, 1924. go/la/té/ ‘ o | Madame X Reducing Girdles Quickly Reduces Waists and Hips VOMANS JAPPAREL SPECIALTIES ' May be worn in place of a Corset. Come in and let Miss Borg WOMANS JAPPAREL SPELCIALTIES blIDDLETOWN == NEW BRITAIN . ’ ; . YilGLETOVWN == NEW BRITAIV explain and fit you to this new really reducing corset. NEW SILK BLOUSES ' NEW SWEATERS $4.98 | $1.98, $2.98 $3.98 $4.98 e A Store Full of Wonderful Values e e e i Maize, White, 3 checked, striped, V-nedks, ronnd necks, square 1 s Sizes 36 to 44, ; bt Black, : 5 "~ for Wednesday Shoppers | wm e NEW RUFFLING . PREPARE YOUR COSTUME xy DECOR \1‘1?\'%;\\' Tailored Wash Waists and Blouses 50¢c, 75c, 98c yard AT REAL MONEY SAVING PRIC $1.89 Formerly up 1o 5 Organdies, nets, georgettes—White. , novelty colors, It you . have @ dross fo tein,, come in and see (his mammoth showing, Al | ew ummer resses Dimities in checks and st Many with linen collars and cuffs ‘ Bramley collars, 1ol cotiars, V-necks, | colors, Nizes 3§ 1o 46, HAND BAGS $9,98 NEW PRINTED SILK SCARFS $1.69 VALUES UP TO §19.98 $1.50, $1.98, $2.98 Formerly $1.95 (0 $295. | NORMAL.L .. HAND MADE VOILES, PRING : She MUS DOpEIA R NCILY, YO tatax. & vney: color ontime o """,';',',':I:":,:."":":,':"',‘:\::"1""‘ Each and ¢.ciy Gre<s crisp and new, Light shades, mediu. . J . Fittings in cach hlg.' small sizes, medium sizes, large sizes, ) { Everyone can be fitted; everyone's taste can be suited. Han . = j — DOZENS OF STYLES — d Made Envelopes, Gowns, Slips $1.89 NOVELTY CHECKED SILK HOSE _ a5 i s imbotitiin New Coats MNew Coats Colors—Reige, fawn, Ma Jong, grey, white [ Checked with either white or black, MiSSES' AND LADIES’ SUITS $ 12.98 A e $15.00 | VALUES TO $29.50 Formerly up 1o $19,98, Formerly up to $20.50, A wonderful buy from a manufacturcr that was clearing up his baiance of stock, dJust the '\'Ir::"‘ for the Holiday, enables us to offer these truly wonderful bargains ! . 3 Tans, greys, , brick dust, Each one Silk or Pongette lined; Tans, Greys, Greens; sizes 18 to 44, Sizes 16 to 40, e ] Miude on A very fine material, daintily embroidered by hand and all hand sewn, slips, Emvelopes—sizes 36 to 11, Gowns—16 - 17, A few odd suits—Poiret Twills, Ations played 5 parts and in which are re- |OUT OF 811 by A. D, Fieke, oday as a aternal reprosentative of | opening s h at the New Books at ivified for the contemporary generas “This new | of poems exhibits FUNB | the churches of the southern assem- | inquir < ¥ an ambulance coimaining a man fon the jdols of past decades.” the versatility of the author and show ily. His visit, the first by a moder-| In . he said, 212 men were was seriously Injured and every Lt i Jow clearly he has mastered his teche ! since the denominational schism, | disabled for more than seven daye, |61 yards a hearse. This is part of the g PORTY YEARS IN WASHINGTON | nique.” Afi presented the opportunity for reopen- | and in addition 1,207 lives were lost. | miner's wages, purt of the price he [4 Instltate by David 8 Barry, ‘ .o | | ing the entire question of reunion of These figures meant that every work- [ pays in the struggle with natural “Fpfendships and experiences of a | OFFICE MACHINES, APPLIANCEKS the two arsemblies Ing aay more than five persons v forces that people may have coal and Washington correspondent, AND METHODS by Walter 1 d. Kvery ? tons of conl'he and his family breac . raised was ®tained with one may i s \DVANCHD ACCOUNTING by . 1| FRIENDS IN SOLITUDE by £ Withe| 0 o o o Preshyterian Modernists Trying Five Men Killed Daily 10 50" ikt a5 e Poat heats Train Bennett, 1 ors, ALTERNATING (! NT ARMA- 'y conntry of Cumberland, Mr, Smith continued, “were tanco from Vienna to I'URE WINDING by T. W, Croft 4. Outlook ’fnll{ many sources extending from it of the miners' federation, | jnarehalled in one procession, four hest pout 150 miles—in two . . | . the 16th century down to our own| R wve gome istics regarding fatall- | men in a rank and cach rank one and |and a half hours, is being eompleted It COLLECTOR by Dr. G IMMIGRATION: LECT poey. day! o Lit Rev, AL el mines of Britain, little | a half yards apart, they 1 have here, The fustest train takes MENTS AND CASE RECORDS by Grand Rapids, Mich. M / k1o average person, in his|a procession of 45 miles, Lvery 15| four hours, with the e ots Ldith Abbott PRACTICAL ELE reshytarian modernists today sought , some of which Wai da 1IN eals, Instre wear, KESTREL BEDGE OND OTHER tamps i letter PLAYS by Wiltrod Gibson The present volume of dramatic . o perfect a blockade in the path o SANDSE OF TIME by Walter Sichel Recollectior nd refleetions of the ia w Dr, Clarence 13, Macartney, Victorian age.” . and - William Jennings AMERICA'S THE WORLD f Gibon among the discerning.” : ryan, oderator, has moved by Herl H N Times SONNET AND VERSE Hilaire ceked through the '»‘;‘L}‘T:‘”;“‘. y ‘”.lyiqu‘w"Wl{:w“; KU KLUN KI AN Uy £ M: Meckile “‘,“'Im Belloc's « ed poems en .‘ “ semibly o st WATI{I NS BR.OTHERS Eates,” A carcrnl study of the significs thusiastically written Mot night .« o of the Ku Kinx Klan, written by ; MRN8t b BN N e O EQTE “ONN BIRDE OF THE NEW YORK CITY |professor at Dartmouth.” SUNRISE TRUMPETS by dosph | merehe o . SO. MANCHESTER, CONN. RGN S I»“ ““,.‘.,,, i LATUTUDESR by Edwin Stanton Muir, “Lyrie poems, intense, fragmentary, “& i o 3 1 F]f“eth Amn\'crsary | torary eriticism--every | Abruptly lovely: their chiseles tie wil J J " -‘.w'v ile cod with thought "H”‘f y unha iy o comment of nth-takingly he fundamentalist steam roiler which will go far to establish Wil- THYE CONTRART by Hitair n 1 trasting the 1 nited cinims that the \ alien to the O, 1 the substential . . e IR NSO A THE TEACHING 'WORK OF THE i e s v ev, CHURCH by Committee on the | : e etk War and the Religious Outlook b e contro © two opposing political and r¢ . | i wh trign mer in Ameri . . THE CYANTDE PIOCERS TROL AND OPERATION \ 1 y ing thur W. Fahrenwald | Miing aside to make practi- whim and amusingly on all that A 1 Jacks Charles Stophen Brooks, 'A LIVING UNIVERSE by Law A THIRREAD OF ENGLISH ROAD by U1 Y St PP g N i withor's cxposition of T “The author writes in an easy, dis . I heenuse he is throu, gland and comments . Gl o I y of it 1o the practical |he obserye Occasionally he forgets KOMICS 1FOIt EVERYMAN N. Y. Times, Wis nareative entirely and launches forth into what for all p ical purs 1eltossignol, br T simple divect language it de " poses is an cseay and when in this i L sty = MANY MINDS by €« " vein he is parth Iy engaging."'— The aut nti v his k of [N, Y. Times ¥ 1 American writers in . o finmanner ME g WORLI'S BEST EPIGIAMS by | 1em il a | games G. Lawson ointed spe Cring per iwo 2 | 4 | Sunird sotech covering ¢ o e e e | T t/ 11l JUBILEE hundred v - remi. T sonerate . Harry im- ity SPECIAL b m i een a choser r me original fon an ¢ The vocation is FILING DEPARTY A iscove the hywaye of peych . " i cated by the au. FION AND CONTROL by B. E. p o y light en the pdschlnt METHODE OF TEACHING MODERN ¢ . sn of humor can fail FOOTIIGHTS AND SPOTLIGH » LANGUAGES by C. H. Handschin, 'te e L : v or has re £ G » Biinney Ty L to' consii ‘ s Berkey & Gay scences of one wh teading, conversation, grammar . 5 fronrielby e . J SETESESESS—— 04 class edministration are treated | WHAT THE BUTLER WINKED AT/ cussion be i . | b S . “General impressions of one who | | e 100 1 . t g I es re sor e NILNSTONES §3% ARERICAN LIV |8 been & DUOR S0F SLriooucs o of by self. [ X . ERATURE by Perey Holmes Boyn- in service with the nobiity and gen- Foxd veriures are > ]d M : e, ¥ ¥ TN, ™ ltey Mr. Horne's hook, whieh owes now befere the judicial commission, a 1eces in S()l ahogany “ev r Io qet "r" A useful high schen! guide to the 'its distinctivencss largely to the fact permancat ar of the church N h | B! iuidy of American fiterature.” A.L.A. that it is written by a man entirely | Witnessea eard b s commis- | i without literary training or preten- mion yestoriay, it ” 1 others ia " . o tions, reads ss engagingly as fction.” | were 1 a to speak . ? T e story of & man who satis. Y. Times Book R toda w the b compict- . 0 « wanderiust in the army. 1‘9 ed the o . ented to R The Hepplewhite Bedroom S\x:!c\thm Berkey & k a hand at San Juan in Luzin, in > S g s Fighs ; ay has made for our Fiftieth Anniversary is al Piles and ab-1 0 Boxer Rebellion, in the Great s G supreme tes { w-av'T\io:ed ('". the beautiful wood in the use of which returs " bout them all as ; the question o n s woman nee: Yer an- wendlemerodilg ,.,,.i‘:'..':: ” mission's report. | Hepplewhite was most expert—solid mahogany. ith any discon i ader oft forgettully, ; With adoptio: ter of & pes Ebonized ornamentations and ombcllxsh!neuts of arising fro adventures, hu- oo grimd o — i acacia burl add an unusual note oi distinetion. oth 28 MOAVA ¢ s a0/ S Smamnetion . s Bataem | The three pieces—bed, dresser and chiffonier, a moderate prics at an ' visit “ 5 a scors © jemi or bed. dresser and dressing table would ordinarily : . . 2 - * on the money yyymg i . e two day : - cost $387.50. The Jubilee price is $235. Other how . ] L s - | picces—some of which are illustrated—can be had Ty uick=1 “Confessions of & young man—fash- § B g e e ' at these prices: Standing Mirror for Chiffonier t often comes j,n0q with a deft humor. It is frank-| § . ¢ "t “Thin 18 1o % Chair $15 Vight Stand $15 cheduled to ¢ €20., Pench $15., Chair $15., and Night Stand $15. in cases of long 1 &t s ey th % —— 1 , ofs personal all the way through with opersting m : 1o Dleeding, really - ot givtng any Of that unplensant at- / fear the " Nareterd ond Seiuet. Now on sale at our Manchester store. yhers of cue {hat destroyve the HER, U8 A by R.H. 1 arm of rome volumes” X. Y. Times Tie 'y 1HF ORAL ETUDY OF LITERA- W. 3. Gitkerion, TURE by Algernon d¢ Vivier Tassin 333 Washingten St Boston,

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