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$3 and $4 Shoe Values for — AT THE — Self-Service Shoe Stores THE DOLLAR — PLUS SELF-SERVICE WONDERS A combination that will afford the buying public an excel- lent chance to bring home some eye-opening BARGAINS, DOLLAR DAY. pay you t o travel miles out of yo h"Lf‘i"S 4> BUCKLE | v L 2 & ALL RUB S g I i h = v ¢ l o P - ELF-_ERVIC k SHOE STORE. MAKE YOUR DOLLAR DO DQUBLE DUTY'! Undersold. Self-Service Shoe Stores NORWICH, CONN. 18 FRANKLIN SQUARE Just a POETRY THE SPIRIT AND THE LAW. Upon ione mountainsides they stood apart ; One u_on {mmortal stone did roughly ace l‘.wl‘ that still shape the conscience of race | As the bright North Star shapes a sea- / 's chart; / man 3 8, Then came another, He whose tender art |~ Moved muilitudes to seek through Lime and space The brooding Love that craves ! dweiling place | Within the mystery of the human heart. The grass that blows along the country ! Glance At ARE TEE LOWEST PRI CONCERIs 1N MEW ENGLAND. We Crcw in Volume of Business—Acher- ing to Cur Strict Principle of Never Being These Dollar Day Specials One lot of Dress Shirts $1.00 One lot of Cloth Hats. $1.00 One lot of Caps..... $1.00 Overalls that were $1.50 and $2.00, for..... $1.00 2 pairs Not-a-seme Silk 3 pairs Not-a-seme Silk m Hose, for..... $1.00 6 pairs Cotton Hose.. $1.00 2 One Dollar Ties. .... $1.00 All $1.50 Ties, for..... $1.00 8 Ide Collars, for. . ... $1.00 3 Van Heusen Collars. $1.00 2 pairs 75¢ Wool Hose, for $1.00 $1 Extra Special Roxford Underwear 2 For $1.00 109, REDUCTION ON ALL MERCHANDISE IN STORE THAT IS NOT LISTED ABOVE. Ty .41 €RIPi00 ¢ 00 & & hove all it must | 000,000 in 1900. £133,000,00" ds the respect | $93,00,000 in 1880, vho have lived | It i5 quite apparent £ est. I leave it}yres adds the bank' ¢ cultivated | ouyr manufacture: would ful-' 4 constantly increa: ! products. Of cours; \state in exact figure: ‘of the manufactures wh.ch the country, for the r only record of manufactus exported xported from is by law their value “at tle time of] \londar year €Xbortation and at the por rame of | they leave the United State percentage Of . cansus record of manufaotures than in any pre-war year | duced is of course, that at the value, despite the 1321 fall . tory, often far distant from the por was more than double that exportation, and the record of ar preceding the war. duction, taken only quinquenially while it was not to be expected, that of exportation is annual or e 1de Record of the National monthly. But it is quite evident th nk of New York, that the the percentage of growth in expor anufactures for use in manu- of manufactures is g” would form as large a per- the percentage of e of the exports in i pre-war vears, for most of this material exported was sent to the tories of Europe which have not ye resumed their pre-war activities and purchases. But finished manufactures, which go directly from the United irty years ear- States to the non-manufacturing sec- lier the output of 1919 being thus ap- tions of the world, South America, proximately seven times as much as| Asia, Oceania, Africa, and our North 1889, while the value of manufactures| American neighbors, actually former exported in 1919, $5,120,000,000, is f 37 per cent. of the exports of the teen times as large as that of 1889, country in the calendar year 1921 and if we consider only finished against only 31 per cent. in the fiscal ufactures the record of 1913 is nine- and v t world 1 larger CED SHGE | in 1919 $62,427.825,000 as against $9,372,000,000 in 1889, th year 1914, 29 per cent. in 1910, 24 per|teen times as great as that of 1889. cent. in 1900 and 15 per cent. in 1890.} Manufactures produced in 1919 show —Thomas S, Jones, Jr., in Boston Tran- &cri] | nal. h Yes Last winter my wife sald we| e MUS' get a new sofa In the spring.” ; ‘Even at the greatly reduced prices of 1921 the total value of finished manu- factures exported was $1,625,000,000 against only $725,000,000 in the fiscal | year 1914, $500,000,000 in 1910, §322,- RACE OF THE.FUTURE ve were able a ed to remedy the unrest and excit- on of the present population by pro- ; | ducing a more stolid and hard-work- people to counteract the lack of rity by g sense of permanence and ercial morality; to hinder the valent waste by the development ctl an increase of 544 per cent. over 1889, while all menufactures xported show and incre” 2 4f 140- per cent, and fin- ished manufactures alone an increase lo( 183 per cent. a frugal and saving habit; to keep| our knowledge to its right uses by a peace-loving people who do not glorify fighting; to turn our intellectual fri- volity into a love of solld reading and literature. We need a race less sensi- tive In nerves thought not less per- == BEFORE. WATCH FOR OUR WINDOW JUST A FEW OF OUR SP MEN'S HEAVY RIBBED SHIRTS AND DRAWERS BALSTON HEAVY WOOL MIXTURE HOSE $1.50 MEN'S CAPS ......ccccocmone et enes cecon SALOM 100 FRANKLIN STREET A FEW MINUTES' WALK Our Dollar Day Specials SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 18th BIGGER AND GREATER VALUES THAN EVER :aTATISTe IMTRCe e o Tel 0 6 ln; aleTaieisle e TeTeI0 0 (0 0 0 tu: MBS WORKING BANTS .o oot e e i eing MEN'S BLUE WORKING SHIRTS . ..cocvv.. . ororenasomormisrocs resasermsnrerecs 2 FOR $1.00 MEN'S FLEECE-LINED SHIRTS AND DRAWERS ....... scovoe o DISPLAY ECIALS maness 229100 \ 8 PAIRS FOR $1.00 ... 2FOR $1.00 N’ NORWICH, CONN. HAGBERG’S Dollar Day Offerings ONE LOT OF COTTON WAISTS 2 FOR $§1.00 ONE LOT OF COTTON WAISTS 1 FOR $1.00—were $2.00 HEAVY GEORGETTE AT §2.00—were 34.75 All our other Waists at Half-Price, to make room for Spring goods. A few Suits left, small sizes, were up to $75.00—To close out at $20.00. 310 MAIN STREET i of state in the world. “granddaughter, who was the first Eritish ‘wearing . wd | 8t the top of their rolled-down stock- New York ways, The &tu& leaves between the earth and Y, The deepened lustres of an April dove Own l‘li.:h! the only law of thelr brief B ays; And as in light all colors folded ls, Th’; {rovhets and the Law are lost ove. pt. THE RULING PASSION. He owned 2 handsome touring car, To ride in it was heaven. He ran across some broken glasé— Bill $14.97. He took some friends out for e ride— "Twas good to be alive, The carburetor threw a fit— Bill $20.85. He started on a Httle tour, The finest sort of fun. He stopped too quick and stripped his gears— Bill $90.51. He took his ’2“ downtown to shep, To save ci¥fare was great; He jammed Into one lamp-post— Bill $268. ase Co. Norwich “Light House” Eaton Uk SPECIALS For Dollar Day Electric Vacuum Cleaners Reading Lam; = Electric Sewing Machines He spent about all that he had, And then in anguish ecried: “I'll put a mortgage on the house And take just one more ride.” —New York Evening Mall, HUMOR OF THE DAY Thermos Bottles Newlywed—Take & letter to my wife. Razors Stenog—Just a minute till I get out a soft pencil.—Life. “Whom does Charles take his musical t after?” ell, his father never liked work.” —Judge. North—That sh pressed as West—] to go!—Ex: Amuminum Ware Wash Boilers Skates Sherwin-Williams Paints Tire Chains t ow ought to bs sup- ral, And I badn’t Intended nge. “How do these grouches get wives?" “Many of .them were not grouches un- til they dld.”"—Loutsville Courfer-Jour- Liberal Reduction on AH Cash Purchases [EATORN CHASE C0. 129 Main Street, Norwich English ad—"By taking Blank's Cola each morning you will wash all from the stomach, leaving 1t with rosy ¢ -Jas"-—l pt. a bank cashier has mys- disappeared.” nything missing?” thousand dollars of the bank's here's the mystery?’—Birmingham Herald, ny don’t you make oene of those hioned speeches that bring an au. ts feet " at once,” replied Senator he audience came to its fest the purpose of walking out.” The Horse In Palnting. No real interest was taken In the horse until Vandyck's time, he and Rubens doing more for it than all previous painters put together. Rubens was 'a good rider, and rode nearly every day, as, I doubt not, Vandych also. The Venetians, as was natural painted him little and ill; but he be comes important In the equestriag statutes of the fifteenth and sixteentd centuries, chiefly, I suppose, under thy influence of = Leonardo. — “Moders Plinters,” Ruskin. e—*"Joe, your mother got talking this afternoon about what kind of a boy you were. She said your school teacher ed to pat you on the back nearly every Hub—"That's trme, my dear, but gen- the patting was too low down for Boston Transcript. me foreigners remain in dense lg- of our American life. I once i over glass beads New Premier Of France I recently met a t landed who had been looking n over and was making enthu- arations to open a saloon.”— o Courler-Journal. ‘e are many little ways of prac-| momy in the home,” proclaim- r Wheese sagely to his guest, aking sure Mrs. Wheese was out | ing. encouraged the visitor politely “Wel 7 3. 1 got a_new spring in the —Pittsburgh Chronicle-Telegraph. “You. nearly ran over those people,” | id the traffic cop, stopping the motor- | Sorry officer. You sce I just got this ar _and—" “What's your name? “Little* a Little learning is a dangerous | chuckled Itured cop, and tickled his joke that he ransgressor go {ree."—Boston Transeript. KALEIDOSCOPE About one-half the trade of El Paso is with Mexico. The *breadth of a ship !s about dou- ble tha draft, Street car fare in Moscow is 1,000 ru- bles a half mile, | More than 90,000,000 gallons of gaso- line was produced in 1918. i eRporters have been admitted to the| British parliament since 1835, It is customary to state the size of ' . . war war vessels in displacement tons. A single pair of sparrows and a of young ones consume about 3,000 in- sects a week, | The salary pald to the president of Germany 1s the lowest pald to any head § Mexican sombreros of the best quality are so costly that it would take a years wages of a workman to buy one. Difficulty is experienced in obtaining suitable hLorses for artlllery, so experi- ments are being made with moter trac- tors. Mrs. J. G. Wilkins, wife of & manu- facturer of Selma, {s one of the first wo- men to seek nomination for a seat in the legislature of Alabama. Pipes can be seasoned by a novel ap- paratus used by a London manufactur- er. This works by electricity, and smokes a pipe until the rawness of the wood is got rid of. A woman of Lebanem, Kas, recently sought to divorce her husband because during their twelve years of married life be had Insisted on moving sixty-three times, their longest occupamncy of sny home being four months, The lord chamberiain, to which posi- tion the duke of Atholl has been appoint- ed, has many tasks. Besides serving the censor of plays, he supervises tho r ardrobe, the royal physiclans and chpelains, and i= the keeper of the roy- al swans on the River Thames. Miss Victoria Drummond, the pesr's woman teo complets a full apprenticeship in the engineering profession, has cele- brated her admittance to the Soclety of Engineers by giving a mammoth theater party to all the workmen employed in the foundry in Dundee with whom the che worked as an apprentice. The enormous pressure of the wate: of the ocean at great depths may be judged by the fact that if a ship's haw- ser is sunk,to a_considerable depth it is squeezed tf# less than the dlameter of one's wrist. while it a plece of wood is weighted and sunk to the same depth it is so much compressed that it will no longer float when brought to tis surface again. F. H KENYON, General Agent G. N. DELAP, Special Agent D. W. LITTLE, Special Agent Hartford, Conn. New York women are fur