New Britain Herald Newspaper, August 29, 1924, Page 24

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—Donnelly, Mullen Co.- Siks and Wash | Goods Crepe de Chine, stand. ard quality pure silk in all colors, 40 inches wide, e yard $l '79 Special, Charmeuse Dress Satin, with bright lustre, heavy weight in black, navy and brown, 40 inches wide, o $1.95 Special, yard Japanese Pongee Silk in natural color; pure silk, Flat Crepe, a real flat crepe, heavy, all silk in black, navy and white, 40 inches wide, Saturday Spe- o $2.25 Dress Voiles including printed chiffon voiie and guaranteed flock dot voiles —I-:Bc \‘I:II:;. 40 inches wide. Saturday Price ...... yard 290 Dress Percales, fine qual- | 'w")l,dl“ nu: u",;'les, 36 inches | e. Saturday Special .... yard 150 Shantung Suiting — a splendid material for scchool dresses, all colors; 36 inches wide, Saturday e 4Be yard .... Dress Linen, we still have many good colors for fall wear, pure linen; 36 Children's white or eol ored Bloomers, all sizes 8 to 16, Saturday 39c Special . Girls' White Middy Blouses, square collar with V' neck and short sleeves, Sizes 12 to 20, Sat, Special .. .., 98C MISSES' GYM BLOOMERS These are made of the hest quality sateen, with | pleated skirt on band, and elastic knedr. Sizes 12 to | 22, Saturday Special 980 CHILDREN'S SCHOOL HOSE Extra fine ribbed in black, brown, white, Regu- lar 35¢ value, Sat, Special .. .. 23c CHILDREN'S SOX Children’s Drop = Stitch three-quarter length mer- cerized socks, Made with | fancy cuff top. Colors are tan, airedale and beige. ... 39C | NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, AUGUST 29, 1024, School Needs for Boys and Girls Lot 1.-Children's Bloom er Dresses, all fast color made of the hest quality gingham, Our own make =sises 710 $2.98 Lot 2eChildren's Ging ham Dyesses, many pretty styles with collar and cufts contrasting coloy, sizes 7 Y $1.29 " Lot 3e=Children's Dyess- es, gingham and chambray, some pantie dresses includ. ed in this lot, all best gual. ity and fast color, 98c sizes 2 to 14 ... Saturday Special--Better Dresses at $4.98, $5.98 and $6.98 Sizes to 16 Children's White Slips— faney hamburg top and pretty lace or hamburg hot. ton, Saturday Special . O 98C BOYS' BLOUSES Made of extra good qual. ity percale and printed madras in a variety of wanted patterns. Regular 98¢ value, Special inches wide, Saturday 'l‘ul;.é&;‘ipen. charmeuse finish, guaranteed colors; 36 inches wide, Sat. Special, yard 650 Collar and Cuffs Sets, all styles, made of or- gandie, linen and pique. Saturday 3 3 c Special . .. Camisole Vestee of net, trimmed with Val, and Venise Lace, Satur- et . $1.89 Special . “BOSTON STORE —Donnelly, Mullen Co.- THE “NEWEST" in WOMEN'S and MISSES' AUTUMN FROCKS Very Attractively Priced At $14 $16.50 $22.50 $35 An interesting collection of Chic Fall Frocks which reveal the style tendencies for the new season. The value as well as the style correctness of these gar- ments, all of which are appropriate for present as well as later wear, make them interesting. —— Sizes 16 to 48 —— New tunic ideas are featured: also coat styles, tube like models and other cleverly fashioned frocks with BRAIDS, RIBBONS, BUTTONS, EMBROIDERY and PLEATINGS, Models of Bengaline, Faille, Charmeen, Crepe Back Satin, Flat Crepe and Canton Crepe. Black, navy, penny, cocoa and other fall shades. | ’ Men’s Dept. MEN'S SHIRTS 500 Men's Shirts, made of silk striped and Fruit of the Loom material, in a va. riety of the season's most popular patterns, Every shirt guaranteed full cut, Sizes 14 to 17, Values to £1,98, Sat, $1 '19 Speeial . MEN'S WORK SHIRTS Men's Khaki Work | , Shirts, made of extra good | quality khaki agd double stitched, 98¢ value, Sat. Rpec 69c Speeial ...... MEN'S HOSE A special lot of men's silk hose, made with double heels and soles, Colors are hlack, navy, grey and cor- dovan, 69¢ value, Satur. day Special MEN'S TIES Cut silk, silk and wool | grenadines and other fancy wenvedfi. Values to §1.00, Saturday Special 350 3 for §1.00 TOILET ARTICLES Daggétt and Ramsdell’s { Perfect ('c:l]d Cream, 50c jar, Saturday Special 35C | Sterilized Hair Brushes. Value $1.00. Sat- Special . 500 Physicians and Surgeons’ Soap., Saturday ’ Special ........... 60 Melba Shaving Cream, | large size. | larg ‘[ Saturday Special 350 | HOSIERY Ladies’ Pure Silk Full Fashioned Hose, strietly first quality, a well known make; all the leading | shades, Black, white, cor. dovan, tan, grey, beige, Airvedale and tan bark, St . $1.00 | Special | Ladies' Silk Hose, made with the seam back, all new colors, black, grey, tan, peach, dawn and atmos. phere, Saturday | Special ., ., | Ladies' G ~the popular No, 275 | made with the seam back ixtra heavy weight, all the | popular shades. Black, tan, | white, grey, nude, orchid, nile, 'ulreda:le,dlun bark and pearl, Saturday Special . ... pair 95C UNDERWEAR Ladies’ Fine Lisle Union Suits, made in the hodice :tlyle l:’ld Eh:" knee, lace rimmed, Satur, day Special .. ea, 250 Ladies’ fine quality Lisle Vests, hodice and band top. Saturday 3 5 c Special . ... each Ladies’ 2-Clasp Silk Gloves, all colors and sizes, Saturday Special, $l ‘00 Pair NOTIONS ] Belding’s Darning Silk, all colors. Saturday Special .. 8¢ De Long Common Pins, 360 pins in paper, Saturday Special .. 9c Hump Hair Pins, size 6, assorted sizes. Saturday Special .. 8C Kert’s Lustre Twist — white and black, all sizes. | B A0 Sale of Sheets, Blankets, Cottons and Linens in the Unbleached “inches wide. Muslin, 40 Pillow Case Tubing, 42 Cotton Huck Towels - with red border. Sale, Basement Pillow Cases, made of good quality cotton. Base- inches wide. Base- ment Mercerized Damask, 64 | and 36 inches wide, extra White Outing Flannel, 27 | Basement —— Unbleached Sheeting 214 yards wide, a well [ | Large Double Thread 1 Turkish Towels, Sale, Basement each 1 Z%C | | | | | Large Plaid Cotton Blan- | | kets for double hed size | I l | I 70x80. Base- $3 .49 ment Sale .. inches wide, extra heavy, 29c Sale Baby Blankets, red and blue, very pretty. Base- Sele. each 25C Sale ..., el l7c ment Sale .. yard 69c White Oil Cloth, 45-in. regular 39¢ yard, | yard 25C Basement 39¢ 1 heavy quality, Basement | known make, 22c | 17¢ Basement i wide, Basement Sale eRehi G Sale, Sale, Sale ....... vard (11 AR | | f r yard .... ful had the League become by 1701, that it was able to turn over to the King of England in trust a territory Fully Light Castle For Second Time in History more or less closely follow the old leagie regulations. These are the When In Hartford Dine \’\'ithf L s(‘R AB MEAT, @ Three Family House on Fast street with a lot over § OYS‘TER‘: '8 300 feet deep with plenty of fruit, just like a sr_nall falm. '('I‘A’\ISH # 2 steps from the jitney in a very good location. This 4 S ¥ should interest the man who works in the shop and wants i his yard to feed him. Camp Real Estate Co Rooms 305.0, Bank Bldg. § LOBSTERS, SHRIMPS STEAMI? Honiss Oyster House Co. Temporavily Located At 25 CENTRAL ROW, Hartford @ Opposite Parsons Theater Grow Scarce. st. 272 Main Street Phone 343 MACHINE Bochum, Aug. —Ability to de- | termine the exact location of coal and oil underground by means of an For Quick Returns Use Herald Classified Aduts 'THE OLD HOME TOWN " BY STANLEY Dutch newspaper reports the inven- | tion was tried out successfully in | Holland | Dr. Mintrop now is traveling in the United States. been 01 SAY -NEWT | g 5 AT LOAD OF HAY THAT JUST, e Basement yard 123¢ wide, extra good quality. | yard 1 l C | Onondaga reservation near Syracuse, A M ETING FASHIONS EE g o p 800 miles long and 400 mil de. i with 565 Indlans; the Tonawanda | p o WESR (P08 BO0 S0 0o o E NEEDS Munich, Aug. 20.—Mirror hall in il e R the castle Herrenchiemsee recently ans, o Tusearora re - 2 ,,':,n ":,,ar" Lewlston, with 376 In.|¥ jarred by the War of the Revo- ! dians g | lutfon, Mr. Hewitt finds, but it has Northward Lvery Year as Pelts| for thé second time since the castle Plan of a Leagne Od Story|,™ |survived in a measuro unti today: T e | y‘nh t 3 L f the Five . . \w'vflu:u::e O\\'(()]r:ae»n acoupled a ‘pre. | Court” ldea. too, for Mr. Howitt John's, N. F. Aug. 20.-—The|including members of the former Wlfl] (he ]I]dlalls | eminent pace in its structure, initia- [ POINts out that “the federal council. |0 ror rur 15 extending north-wara | roval family, invited by the govern- tive and ad lace in its | ST Op | ”"‘;k:::': recalli had ‘e place n 18}, and determined cases in [ el fur companies operat-| The first complete filnmination of | Washington, Aug. 27.—The Tro-| The Mohawk. the Onondaga, the | Cordance with established rbies AR | ng from this city to the Labrador| mirror hall and its adjacent tobms s Coast and into Hudson's Bay, Each| ™as in 1886, —ordered by Princ Nations to it by four centuries. That | tribes of Troquoian blood, established | Preceden i . t rth : is what J. N. B, Hewitt of the Bu-|the league, with a mature constitu. | BT ROy AR opened to widen the field of the pelt | 2'( 1_’;’»"9 then visiting the Bavarian reau of American Iithnology of the| tion, and planned to bring into the | 2 o Ovi | hunter northerly Into the Arctic. (ekint :Remdcel 'O'P”,“ ide The Hud Ray Company and | ered through research of the | of men as allies. | Alaska's Big Industry “League of the Fiv tions,” which | Deganawlda, the prophet states-| o "y oo aue 00 Extensive | 2N the “ner Iready have des- held sway in the ) { patched their steamers on their an- young. He has|spirit. Hiawatha (not th onage | Preparations have made 10 | a1 four of the northern posts. Just returned to Washington from | of that name immortalized by the | place Alasks further investization of the organi- | poet Longfellow): Atotapho, a wiz- | fall on r with fox-raising, min- | dor and into Hudson's Bay are s zation, of which a remnant exists to. ) L , & noted chief- | territory, aceording to Carl J. Lo- | have been carrying on business with the state of New York. tainess, urged the pe; al revoltr | men, president of a trading corpora- | the nati for Gradually. * As the Indians of old left no writ- | tion. This was the more remarkable, | tion. company h the operations ten records, Mr. Hewitt had to de- | hen fighting was fashionable. | the fact that man ynatives are very | son's Bay Company especially seek- ritual, for his main source of infor-| The League of the Five Nations| wealthy on pa due to their 1arge | ing ont new fac fisids, This company mation. So far as the present is|came historically into being hetween | reindeer herds are nearly starv- | now has a numerous chain of posts concerned, 6,000 Indians at Brant. out the blood feud system, which | point where they leted. | of Hudson Strait. In recent y league under arrangement with the | was Killing off the bray 1S | The one sure way, without waste, is | the trading operations of hoth e Canadian government, and three | of the nations, and eradicat t-[to cultivate a taste for re r nies n very successfiu’ small reservations in New York state Bleached Muslin, 36-in. reservation, near Akron, with | z 7 | League disarmed itself. 1t was bad- | gune for Tur ling Further | was illuminated by its 8,500 candles i servath eace was the 0 he preservation of peace was the | Ty 41 n league. had its “World | gathering of Bavaria's first citizens, sitting as & court without a jury, | voy o cen oo aing 1o offielals | ment. ‘ 4 | principles of procedure, and with quols Indians beat the League of | Oncida, Cayuga, and the Sencea, | v 5 SR season, they say, new posts are| Regent Luitpold to honor the Shah Smithsonian Institution has discov- | federation in time, all known tribes | Revillon Freres, the “old” company | w York country | man of the Iroquois, was fts leading ‘when America wa ‘s reindeer industry this | All the way np the coast of Labra ard who at first bitterly opposed the | ing, f and sheep-ralsing in the | tered fur posts which in many cas “day in the province of Ontario and | plan, and Diigonsas Mr. Hewitt points out, in an ags | Mr. Lomen explained that despite | have extended northward, the Hud- pend on tradition, as embodied in| 1550 and 1570, It aimed at stamping ing. The herds 1 to a | in Bafinland A OLNEr ATEAs NOTTN | o —————————— ford, In Ontarlo, keep alive the S8 ever cannibalism existed. So power- | meat, not only throughont Ala and the fur catches large have | but in the United States and in f Two ye the Hudson's Bay | eign countr ympany undertook to establish a 2 2 | - herd of reindeer in Baffinland with | Learn Yacht Building ‘ HCTE e = supply of the regiop. The company | Lindefelde, Germany, was encouraged in its experiment by Attt D LSO WHIC oSS the success of a similar project in a f month, the fire department (inski 1 ad of meeting with B llowed to loaf. the snceess achieved with the rein- i the Hudso < Company met with partial fai municipal forest. g 4 he herd now is small - f 5 A %, ~ XA AR ,f \“\\\\\v «\\,:4‘ The John Cooke Co. | =¥ (% Real Estate and Insurance Bey |3 HOUGH ST Plainyille lure | i ———————— LARGE LOT —GARAGE Near New Rritain Trolley 2,000 CASTI Wil Secure Title || q to PIREMEN AS FARMERS Au In summer men the nieip 14 in winter they ar choppers in the Income from the helped clear the fon oper deer in Alaska CINDZRS FOR SALE | A. H. HARRIS —General Tencking— 099 WEST 81 e Sure 10 See THE NEW VICTOR with a Million Dollar Capacity. It is a full ize 2 Machine, cquipped with all modern standard in every detail. mstrate its merits to you, The 2100 M Adding (ROWLEY B NC PAINTERS AND DECORATORS 267 Chapman Street 1stimates cheerfully -1 CENTRALLY LOCATED 2-Family House For Sale, 13 Rooms. Nice Lot. Good ) ‘::::, THE IRON POLLER , NEWT, THE MORSE BREAKER TIED WIS HORSE To, WAS NOT ENOUGH TO HOLD HIM ~—— - AT MEAL TIME fCopyright by Harris & EWIDE John J. Tarrant Funeral Director and Fmbalmer 281 E. MAIN ST Tel, 22112 TUpholstery and Kepairing Residence §M Jubilee, Tel, 1151-2 Location. For Particulars See For the first time in the history of American schapls the teaching of model yacht building has been introduced as & form H D HUMPHREY of manual training. Here is a high school boy in Washington ® ® with a sample of his own work. Tha pupils build the rachts | themselves, from séast to finish. |

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