New Britain Herald Newspaper, January 22, 1915, Page 4

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y’s | | | asing picture is a healthy and happy old couple,—their eyes bright, brain alert and | hiable, It’s always a pleasure to enjoy their friendship and a constant delight to be § ated with them. he ts of old age and bring back the vivacity Pu;‘eefief/[alt Whiskey as a reliable stimulant. of youth, many medical men pre- Certain it is that thousands who have § reached the grand old age willingly extol Duffy’s Pure Malt Whiskey With its prescribed advice of a * tablespoonful in water just before meals and on going to bed,” Duffy’s has earned the undisputed reputation of an excellent tonic-stimulant for temperate use. Being an absolutely pure distillation of thoroughly malted’gram, it prompts the stomach to healthy action, promotes digestion and assimilation of the food, enriches the blood, and brings strength and vigor to the system. It is truly a *“Medicine for all Man- [ kind “—for medicinal purposes only. Why not have a bottle in your home to guard against | - illness, or in cases of emergency? Better order it now—before you forget. “‘Get Duffy’s and Keep Well.” Sola in SEALED BOTTLES ONLY. Beware of imitations. @et Dutfy’s from your local druggist, grocer or di If he cannot supply you, write us, we will tell yowwhere to getit. Medical booklet free. NOTE imile of age. $1.00 per hottle. arber’s Great iture Sale| BARGAINS THAT WIN YOUR TRADE s for you—the kind of mews that il i you will od, o and that is-news of the biggest' homefurnish- found in Hartford. Let us have your attention ead over the offerings below and then we will want store and know of the hundred and for you. Enamel Beds Pure white, baked on enamel. that you Beds can not equal elsewhere in price: $5.00 Bed for $7.00 Bed for $8.00 Bed for $10.00 Bed for $3.50. $4.50. $6.00. $7:00. one other Dressers Below are a few prices for oak dress- ers—of course, Wwe have all other fin- ishes: $8 Dressers $5.98. $10 Dressers $6.98. $12 Dressers $7.50. \RBER’S dain St., Hartford ITE THE GRAND THEATRE.) | PFAEFFLIN LETTERS | was RBOUR j and Drapery Co. Street, Opposite the Aliyn House, Hartford OUNT SALE Mats, Rag Rugs, Cretonne ‘Mat Size Axminsters, and Wiltons. 10 to 20 Come In Saturday. FOUND BY CHILDREN | | Winsted Authorities in Possession ofl Notes Said to Throw Light Upon Case Murder. Winsted, Jan. 22.—A number .of letters, said to have been addressed to Arthur Pfaefflin of Colebrook, and found on the highway by school chil dren near the place where Pfaefflin arrested on January 14, and which are said to contain statements throwing light on the murder of County Commissioner Hubert B. Case, | are in the hands of the authorities, it | was learned yesterday. The letters, | which Pfaefflin is believed to have | thrown away when he was taken into custody, were turned over to their | teacher by the school children, ana she gave them to the coroner. | Joseph I. Carrol, a business man and member of the police force here, and Joseph Aube, another business man, who claimed to have seen a tall and short man together in Winsted | on the day of the evening of which Case was fatally assaulted, and later [ leave in the direction of Barkham- | sted visited the jail at Litchfield to- day to see Isaac N. Williams of Bridgeport, who is held there in con- nection with the case. It has been | | testificd before the coronmer that a tall and short man were seen in the | vicinity of the Case store at Bark- hamsted about the time the crime | was committed. Carroll and Aube, who were wit- | | nesses hefore the coroner, declined today, to comment on the outcome of | their visit to the jail, by direction of the coroner. JUSTICE HOLLENBECK DEAD. Lincoln, Neb., Jan. 22.-—Chief Jus- | tice Conrad Holenbeck of the Nebras- | ka supreme court died here yester- day of heart disease after a brief ill- ness. Justice Hollenbeck had been in office only two weeks. A REMEDY FOR BRONGHIAL GOLDS ‘Philadelphia Man Tells How He Treated a Severe Case | With Vinol and the Success- ful Result. Philedelphis, Pa.—‘“ Last Fall I was troubled with a very severe bronchial cold with very bad effects from it, head- aches,backaches,andsick tomystomach. I was so bad I became alarmed and tried several medicines, also a doctor, but did not fet any relief. One of the men where I am employed asked me to u}Vmal, saying it cured his worst colds. 1did so, and in a very short time received the relief which I craved. Now I am | enjoying perfecthealth, and recommend | Vinol to be all that is claimed for it.”’ —JAcK C. SINGLETON, Philadelphia, Pa. ‘When we tell you that Vinol is the best remedy in all our large stock for chronic colds, coughsand bronchitisthere is no excuse for letting a cough or cold hang on for months and even years. { Itis the curative medicinal elements | of the cod’s livers, combined with blood ! making and strengthening properties of | [ tonic iron contained in Vinol which | makes it so successful in_ removing | chronic coughs, colds and bronchitis, after other medicines fail. Try a bottle of Vinol with the under- standing your money will be returned if it fails to help you. The Clark & Brainerd Co., Drug- | ts, New Britain, Conn., and at lead- | | others are anxious to huy, | trol, aggregating | ent congestion hope for the supply of further needs. ! | vocated, is an unw } certain to drag us sooner or later into { United States for the | Lenen in this ing drug stores everywhere. NEED OF MERCHANT SHIPS IN AMERICA Declares it in Papsr 6n “rice- Com for Gur Foreign Trade.” St. Louis, James J. Hill in a paper on edem for Our For- | submitted to the second Trade ‘indispensable” | eign Trade” National Foreign here today, condition for such freedom Convention said the was ade- quate ocean carriage in American ships. To buy sidies was, he declared, a losing game. The need of merchant ships in ica was almost as great : other natic for munitions “In the month of November,” h said, ‘“‘the exports from the port of New York were $12,000,000 more than the vear before. There was an crease of about 300 per cent. in ports of food products. The f m demand must increase in ratio with the exhaustion of I in warring nations. How are goods, which we desire to sell to be kets ? that of ried to the oversea m: Drop in Bucket. “Such a slight relief as was afforde 1e wise removal of the ry for farei 1 been given. It n the bucket Up to ing December 26, 1914, American 1 istry has been granted to 105 ve therefore operated under foreign con- 373,840 g crough to vent and holds out This is not pres- littie “American cost of t tion is from 50 te 100 per cent higher than that abroad. and & reported statement of ert Dollar, who operated ships in hoth domestic. and foreign trade, it costs about $17,236 more a year to oper; a ship of 3,000 tons under the ican than under the British fla are the disadvantages under Which our foreign trade labors. Rob_ | But Two Resources. “There are but two resources; a merchant marine owned and ated by the government; the a merchant marine provided by for the people. ‘“The former just now urgently ad- —and would be certainly a disastrous Xxperiment. Aside from the com; lications, almost one oper- other and the European conflict, owing to the uncertain and conflicting claims of na- | tional neutrality, this policy would be | followed by the total destruction of | the private shipping interest. Pri- vate enterprise cannot possibly com pete with a government which pays interest on the cost of its st and throws aside consideration of profit and loss. Panama Railway Example. “What is the prospecet, in this case, of economical management, and of those lower rates which the advocates of the plan hold out as a bait for its| adoption? We have an e °t mea of the fact in some comparative rail- road statistics. The Panama railway is entirely owned and operated by the United States. e most ‘affairs on the Isthmus it has been handled by honest and comjy ent men in their several lines. We have its off 1 report for the year ended June ! 1913, to be compared with the sta- tistics of all the railways of the me period. | The rate on the Panama line w 3.48 cents per ton per mile, as agair .7268 of a cent for all the railwa of the United States, That is, the government rate was almost five times | the rate made by private enterprise over the entire country. ““At the International Trade Con ference of the M ssippi Valley and Central West, which met at Memphis last November, the following resolu- tion was reported: ‘“ ‘Resolved, That urged to enact maritime legislation | looking toward placing the American | shippers and ship-owners upon a basis miore nearly equal with these of competing nations, thereby enab- ling American exporters and ship- owners to meet the competition of other nations in the ocean carrying trade.’ “Absolutely KEqual.” “Not ‘more nearly equal, but ‘abso- service by big sub- | £ Amer- | congress be | ¥ lutely equal’ should be the requ ment of American ability and Ameri can pride; an equality secured neither by such protection as is accorded to the weak or by gift money in the form of a subsidy, but a privilege of-1 fered to the strong that he may con- quer what is his by right That is | the key to an ample American ships. There is the essary condition of that ecxpansion in our foreign commerce which we know to he possible and be lost or won according to our wis. dom or our folly. nec. which v JUDGE CARROLI, PROMOTED. Boston, Jan. 22.—Governor Walsh has appointed Superior Court Jumes B. Carroll of Springfield the place thesupreme Tudge appointed L few wecks upon court bench formerly held by don. Judge Carroll wa: superior court judge but ago, his advanceinent being, it -was | stated at the state house the most rapid of any ju ever sat upon the state, Shel- who has Judge Carroli i Kknown in Britain, having delivered the at the Elks’ memorial exc He is a eulogy cises years ago tor and is cqually jurist. remarkabie remarkablc provision - of | & N Starts Tomorrow Morning at 9 o'Clock The savings in ik's sale make it worth your while to purchase now for {uture use. A reduction of one-third to one-half off regular prices prevaii threughoutali departments.Take advantage. RAPHAEL'S DEPT. STORE THE CASH STORE THAT GIVES THE BEST VALUES De- Gen Gents room Preparations are now being made to enlarge partment. Our large stock must be cleared tlemen this is your first great bargain opportunity of the year, and should 95¢c 2c Men'’s 50c to i5c Neckwear, all new patterns, open ends, at-... o 35C 3 for $1.00 Men's 39c open ends new Neckwear 9 19¢ Paris or Boston Gar- 16 ters, at C o 32c Men's | all sizes, value 69¢ 3 Underwear, | 39 fie 4 C 36 | Union Suits, at. . C By it i c\,\?rn's Haynes Union Suits, | ois | value $1.00, 79 { 33c| - c 1215¢ Turkish Towels. Special at .. IL OR TELEPHONE ORDERS FILLED DURING SALE. our to make yvon take advantag i 436 17c 79c Men’s $1.50 Dress Shirts, at Percale $1.00- Handker $1.26 Shicts, at . Men's Men's 10c¢ chiefs, at Men's $1.00 \Wool Underwear, at Men's Giastonbury Health Underwear 85(: en's . $1.00-§ I'lannel i o o [ en's 59c¢ Flannel Shirts, at 39c Men's Ribbed Un- (Men's 50c Work S denwear, at el 27 C | Shirts, at Joys’ 59¢ Ribbed Flannel Night Gowns, aynes Ribbed regular price 50c, at Men's en’s 50c Fleeced Underwear Aprons, at 72x90 B]éached Sheets, Special at ON The Largest Assoriment of Ladies’ Shirt Waists in New Britain Assoriment to Suit Any Woman'’s Taste Voile All our $1.98 and $1.50 white all 'sizes, all | Silks, Jap Silk ) Waists 50 doz. Beautiful Lawn or Pongee Waists, beautiful Lawn other fine 89c $1.00-$1.25 and man; styles, reg. price Y8c to P waists, Special at the sale 48(: 0 An assortment of Waists, a large asst., in white and all colors, 69c and For one day, our $1.98 all silk Crepe de Chine Waists, in | maize, pink, white, navy and blk ‘ at ... all .SIIZ(‘.\ Special $1 00 | Mesaaline! Voiles, while they last, at . " Crepe Waists, none | than $1.98 to $3.00 price Lacc sold less $1.00 stock must be All $2.50 to $3.00 Crepe de Chinc and Messaline Silk About 50 different colors. Your choice, at 1 l at one Waists. | f styvles and $1.50| "’ Hosiery for the Family at Prices Which Force You to Buy 18¢ 200 dozen Child- 22¢c ren’stineRib Hose, 8¢ in back _— : 10c sodfor less than e P o 3?C 15¢, ail sizes G 22c 19c¢ 10c 25c Silk Lisle Hose, at , pair Men's 12 1 = Never Specia! at this sale Women's 12 C r at, pair =

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