Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, July 22, 1921, Page 8

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NORWICH BULLETIN, OUR BIG FOR 7 DAYS Now in the full flush of the season when every one requires summer wearables, comes our Big Clearance Sale. Thousands of patrons, familiar with our Annual Summer Sale, renowned for years as an opportunity for economical buying, know and appreciate the generous price reduc- tions and are awaiting this important an- nouncement. We shall make it SEVEN days of quick, rapid selling, for this is a plain business proposition—stocks in all departments are en- tirely too large and now that the logical time has come, they MUST GO. To that end we have MEN’S SUITS $25.00 .. Sale Price $18.50 $30.00 . . Sale Price $22.50 $35.00 . . Sale Price $26.50 $40.00 . . Sale Price $29.50 $45.00 . . Sale Price $34.50 $50.00 . . Sale Price $37.50 MEN’S TROUSERS $4.00 . ... Sale Price $3.45 $5.80 . ... Sale Price $4.25 $6.60 . ... Sale Price $4.95 $7.50 . ... Sale Price $6.45 - $8.50 . ... Sale Price $6.95 PRICES WITHOUT REGARD TO COST, therefore this is your opportunity. There are hundreds of Suits, Summer Outing and White Flannel trousers, Shirts and Hose. Summer Underwear and Bathing Suits for both Men and Boys all MARKED DOWN at prices that will make things go with a rush. MEN'S HATS $5.00—56.00 Now $3.95 Eachdepartment in our big store welcomes you with liberal varieties and all goods offered are of our regular stock. 'NEGLIGEE SHIRTS $1.25, $1.50-Sale Price 95¢ $2.00, $2.50-Sale Price 1.35 $1.00 Work Shirts . Prices quoted here are the regular prices at which the merchandlse formerly sold—and not “value prices” as is often used in order to show a larger mark down. A _ ALL GOODS MARKED IN PLAIN FIGURES _STRAW HATS Half Price LIMITED SPACE PERMITS MENTIONING ONLY A FEW OF THE MANY BARGAINS WE SHALL OFFER— COME AND SEE THEM FOR YOURSELF, MEN’S BATHING SUITS $L15 to $4.95 Please give us all the leeway you can on alterations. Such a rush as this puts a tremendous burden on our tailor shop. It will help us both if you'll bear that in mind. 744 Main Street Open Saturday Night FRIDAY JULY 2z, 1921 gone through every department, SLASHING THE J. F. CARR COMPANY A Great Money-saving Event In a Class By Itself Clearance Sale OF MEN’S AND BOYS’ _Clothing’ and Furnishings - Commencing Saturday, July 23rd COLLARS Men’s and Boys’ Sale Price 17¢ NECKWEAR T5c ... Sale Price 55¢ $1.00 .... Sale Price 75c $1.50 .... Sale Price $1.15 . 3 for $1.00 BOYS’ SUITS Were $10, $12, $15 and $18 Sale Price $6.89, $8.89, $10.89, $12.89 BOYS’ HOSE 19c.. . =it Sale Price 45¢ blc - Sale Price 35¢ . Sale Price 29¢ BOYS’ SHIRTS AND BLOUSES Sale Prices 69¢, 79¢, 95¢, $1.15 FOR MEN $1.50 Silk Hose ..... $1.19 75¢ Silk Hose ..... 59¢ 50c Lisle Hose .... 35c 35c Lisle Hose .... 29c President Suspenders 33c THE J. F. CARR COMPANY Willimantic No Telephone Orders Taken . (Contiaged from Page Twe) iméwn to tfe older residcnts of Wili- wnummvmn:zmd innesota, which s but settled at the time. ir ll" i€ hully located in Southern Cal- crnh Beré they remained for sixteen Y Then Mr. Keyes located in Castella Shasta ‘county, mnorthern California, @ lumbereountiry where he raises apples anc strawberries o a large scale. The eaftern trip was planned over z Shasta Seutinern lemh, New Mexico, North ern Texas, Oklihoma, Kansas, Miss-uri Ilineis, Indiana,” Kentucky, Ohio, Pean sylvatie, Virginia, New. Jersey, New York and them into Connecticut. Th Keyes had their /first glimpse of the At lantic Ocean at. Atlantic City, where tre. spent twe telling * abeut the trip Mr. Keye said: “This trip is pot a demonstratior of the Ford sutomobile but I will sa: that? it js thé only automobile that en: or twe 'persons #ould use for comfor on a long journey. I have seen severa castern parties in California whe haw crogsed theé continent in Fords and tre say the cars behave splendidly and tha the cost’is small compared to-othe makes." Mr. Keyes states that he has thus fa covered 5,000 miles and toat the enl mishap be met with was the breakin. of & spring on the car, in“a small tow: in Arizona.. He fizured that it would ne cessjtate a long lay-up but nearby wa 'ord _service siation- where -the r- nuired part was secured and the triy ed. The original set of tires still Yin use. Mr. and Mrs. Keyes siee in_their car. - The front seat is arrangec he back can be tipped over, fillins in the space hfiween the seals. Over this & mattress is placed, making a com fortable béd: “While here- Mr: Key: N‘L‘a"rd en anethe: Keyes“lef¢ Thursday and “will ‘ge as “fa Me., and then to Niag: will ‘be ‘made to Cinad4 near Detrojt then - into Minnesota. lcwstone par will “be’ visited for a wi or two. XMr and-Mrs. Keyes expect to arrive at .U« California- home about November 1 wic their 11,000 mie trip will be ended. HUMOR OF THE DAY Critical huumd—where did you ge the iracipe for this mess” Cultured = Wite (cxlmlv\—“cv cipe” from the Latin word - rcc‘lpen - take. Husband—T ‘used the correct word then. This pudding is a dose—Bes- ton Transcript. “Did, you_inform father you intené to marry me?’ said the girl with fiuf- fv hair.. . “Yes,” answered the young man with the large éyeglasses. “All he said was that he wasn't very well acquaint- ed with me but hé didn’'t see why I should tell him my troubles”—Wash- ingten Star. “Children under twelve years of aze are not aliowed to appear in vaudeville.” “Doés the same rule apply to jokes™ —Loulsville Courier-Journal. “Héw wag the flay last night™ “It must have Been good.” “Yea “A mad who went in on a pass Te- marked in the vemlcull( of the day that”he'd ‘say it was'" — Birmingham Age-Herald. “That fashionable doclor seems 1o have a large practice.” “G6t 86 many patients he can afford to sénd bunches of them to Floride for months at a time."—Leuisyille Courier-Joura; “Freddy. do yeu know what became of that piece of.cake that was left or the tray?" asked mother. Fréddy—Yes, moth®r. I gave it to little Boy that was hungry Mother—That was good of you. Whe wallthe: boy. Freddy—It was me!—Boys’ Life. Jealous Marjérie: How is it tha yéu always Mave vour way, Jane? What line, of drgument ‘do you follow Jane: 1 folléw thé line of least con- sistancé.—Life, “Did it'seem. mueh like spring up t the city?) askéd an acquaintance. + “Yep,” réplied ‘the gent from Jimpsor Juncllon who ‘was just back from the blt burg. “I saw a robin just Before 1 left.” —Kansu City Star. Separate - accémodation is new provided in .thé -audiences for men and women in motion picture theatres | in “Madrid. I‘fi.unl ofls fer the rallroads W " regitns “aré belng obtained by dis- umng the bituminous limestones hat ore !x:d ‘sbundaztly in Syria and Pales- The_ traveler h Ouwegu Kas., alight- ing at, the station, is srseted by = " sjgn At the Station cafe, which “Dont ge Intd Town Lookinz Haflf tarved.”. On the epposite side of the sln reminding the traveler who |is about te. ‘take the next train out {1s the ‘sign; *“Den't' Leave Town Hun- &Y. Phfl‘pphe vm(en abound in food fishes, “but' fishing - is “done -only 'ir shallew wltert and the catch is not adeqate fer the demands of the is- landets. Ameng the fish available anchovies, herrings, pempanes, bass, mullets milkfish, barracudas, p :li:;. srunts, parrot fish and soldier The newly inwested colodial fue! 'rhi&h is_now under investization by pected to geve the ‘Japanese shipping & most efficient fuel at i low price and te » the ‘alarming -decrease of the supply of coal and petroleum. The leeward of 2 ship is the opnosite to that on which the wind blows when It crosses her course, and which is toward thp weafhér side. Leeward is on the lee to windward, or the wea- M side. A lee share is the shore on the lee side of the ship, or the shore or which the Wwind bléws; and a ship is saic ;1o be under the* lee of the shore wher the wind blows from the shore, or wher she ‘is in. some measure sheltered by the shore, y To oumuu 2 great number of petty inconveniences that generally go witt washing- the teeth insthe morning; a feun- tain_toothbrush- is a practical, recent in. vention, says Popular Mechanics Maga- zine.. Within:the brush handle is a hel. low . compartment. designed to ecarry s tube of paste. To wash the teeth,. the bristlés of-the brushes are wetted anc the paste from the inmer tubes intro- duced 5" them by turning a knurled co’ !ar at the end of the handle, which fores: 1% out. An extension of the. business cmdncu( by the Prague =ample fair is the ecxpe sition: special train, which has. been mak- ing a_comolets four of the Balkan states Tha itinerary : Includes Roumania, Hul zaria_and Jugo-Blofia. - The cars contalr sample displays -such as were exhibiteé at the récent fair in Prague, and consist of those prodacts of Czecho-Slovak ir- duntrr which' ‘are normally exportsd to éTe are, in particolar, ?inlln of l:esrr-h'eu railway wagons, ron. goods 8, ‘porcelain, glass, whoks, minéral oils. buttons.. inin ard textile’ warés: and ‘many sorts of machin. ery, lu Reporta,

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