New Britain Herald Newspaper, March 25, 1915, Page 5

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“The Bosy Little Store” SPECIAL - For Friday and Saturday J Gans Challenge Milk 25c¢ STRIGTLY FRESH CONNEGTIGUT EGGS 21¢doz. 334D for $1 Imported Sweitzer Cheese .... 35¢ 1b English Dairy Cheese ..... 24c1b Muenster Cheese Mild Cream Cheese EXTRA FINE. RUSSELL'S SUPERIOR COFFEE 32¢ I, 31-4 Pcunds for $1 The fincst Coffee we can buy. The best you ever drank. PURE LARD 11c b. HILLSIDE CREAMERY BUTTER J4¢ 1h. | 3 Pounds for $1. 0 A fresh made creamery Buttér of very fine flavor. Russell Bros. 301 Main Street . DREAM OF SOCIALISH | REALIZED IN ENGLAND Passage of Law Alcwing Govers- ment 1o S62¢ Ay Industry. (Correspondence of the Associated Press.) London, Friday, March 12—The new law which gives the government power to commandeer any factory of manufacturing plant no matter what industry it may be engaged, and | transform it into establishment for the production of munitions of general the in an war, is by agreement | most sweeping and revolutionary of ! all the startling and unprecedented pieces of legislation which have been rushed through the bewildered British rarliament since the begmning of the war. The bill brings'into being at a single stroke, although tentatively and for a special purpose, a condition | which has been the dream of social- | ism for. the past fifty years. As in Times of Feace. “It would be much simpler,” urged &1y Frederick K. Banbury in tne house of commons, “if we mereiy gave the government a one clause bill saying that during the continuance of the war they can do just as they ltke.” John Hcedge, speaking for the Labor party, told the house that the bill “gives effect to the contentlon of collectivist-socialist effort advanced by many of my colleagues.” Heretofore the practice of the gov- ernment in obtaining war supplies has been the same as in timos of peace. Many Bids Asked. Bids were asked from a number of firms making the articles needed and the order given presumably to lcwest bidder. In most cases, ever, it amounted practically to a blanket order to all the firms, asking for their entire output, with still a large | part of the demand unprovided for. Then the government would address its inquiries to firms in allied lines. This led to difficulties, as many of the firms willing to devote their machin- ery plant to government business found themselves unable to turn out the required product at a price as low as that which is easily possible to the firm which has been manufactur- | ing the same articles for years, Object of New Law. The object of the new law is to open to the country’s service the whole of the manufacturing industry cof the British Isles. In tne matter of taking over factories, Chancellor Lloyd-George announced to parlia- DUGH! LUMBAGO? "!‘ry Musterole. See How Quickly It Relieves You just rub MUSTEROLE in briskly, and usually the painis gone—a delicious, soothing comfort comes to takeits place. MUSTEROLE is a clean, white oint- ment, made with oil of mustard. Use it instead of mustard plaster. Will not blister. Doctors and nurses use MUSTEROLE and recommend it to their patients. They will gladly tell you what relief it ives from Sore Throat, Bronchitis, Congestion, Pleurisy, Rheumatism, Lum- bago, Pains and Aches of the Back or | Joints, Sprains, Sore Muscles, Bruises, Chilblains, Frosted Feet, Colds of the Chest (it often prevents Pneumonia). At your druggist’s, in 25c and 50c jars, and a special large hospital size for $2.50. Be sure you get the genuine MUS- TEROLE. Refuse imitations—get what ou ask for. The Musterole Company, . Cleveland, Ohio. | | HOUSECLEANING TIME 1S HERE Make your Furniture look like new. O Cedar Polish will do the work, | 25¢ and 50c bottle. Best of Brooms, | Brushes and Dusters, of all Kkinds. | Wash Powders, Cleansers and Soap. LIQUID CHINA Mends China, Bric-a-brac, Glass, Tin, Aluminum, Agate Ware, | Wooden Ware, etc. Articles mended | can be washed in hot water. Jiffy Detachable Screen ~ Door Hirge Don’t put up your Screen Door | without coming in to see a pair of | these hinges. ~Once the hinge is fastened to the door and house there is absolutely no further need of tools. Simply raise a little lever to lift door | away. A woman or a twelve-year. old child can hang a door in a min- ute. For sale at UNION TEA CO. 317 MAIN STREET Cut | | the | how- | the demand was so heavy that | roup, Stiff Neck, Asthma, Neuralgia, , MEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TF | MISS RAE TANZER IS CENTRAL FIGURE IN OSBORNE SUIT MIXUP New York, March 25.—Miss Rae Tanzer, a dark eyed, vivacious girl of twenty-two, is the center of the odd ! druggist for “2 How to Have the Best Cough Remedy and Save $2 by Making It at Home Cough medicines, as a rule contain a large quantity of pigln syrup. A pint of granulated sugar with 1% pint of warm water, stirred for 2 minutes, gives you as good syrup as money can buy. _Then get from your druggist 21 ounces Pinex (50 cents worth), pour into a pint bottle and fill the bottle with sugar syrup. This fixves you, at a cost of only 54 cents, a full pint of really better cough syrup than you could buy ready made x%r $2.50—a clear saving of nearly $2. Full directions with Pinex. It keeps perfectly and tastes good. It takes hold of the usual cough or chest cold at once and conquers it in 24 hours, = Splendid for whooping cough, bronchitis and winter coughs. It’s truly astonishing how quickly it loosens the dry, hoarse or tight -cough and heals and soothes the inflamed mem- branes in the case of a painful cough. It also stops the formation of phlegm in the throat and bronchial tubes, thus end-| ing the persistent loose cough. Pinex is a highly concentrated com- pound of genuine Norway pine extract, combined with guaiacol, and has n | used for generations to heal inflamed| membranes of the throat and chest. ask your | | To avoid disappointment, ounces of l’mex,” and don’t accept anything else. A guarantee of absolute satisfaction, or money prompt- ]ly refunded, goes with this preparation. he Pinex Co., Ft. Wayne, Ind. TONS OF CONDENSED MILK FOR BELGIANS breach of promise mixup in which James W. Osborne, former assistant district attorney, figures. Miss Tan- zer, in her papers filed in the $50,000 breach of promise suit against Mr. Osborne, claims he struck up an ac- quaintance with her and representea himself as unmarried. Mr. Osborne denied he had ever met the girl. Then suddenly there appeared in the case a man who said he was Oliver Osborne of Boston. He voluntarily came to New York after he had read about the case in the papers and had seen Miss Tanzer's picture to reveal that it was he who had been friendly with Miss Tanzer. Oliver Osborne said the girl had made a mistake in naming James W. Osborne, and he felt it was his duty to, clear James W. Osborne’s good name. This revelation was fol- lowed by Miss Tanzer's arrest on the | charge of using the mails for attempt- ed blackmail. She is now out on bail. Meanwhile Oliver Osborne has disap- peared. Further sensations are ex- pecteé@iin:this tangle. men{ that an organization of business men would set up with a live busi- ness man at its head. It will be the duty of this commission of business men as quickly as possibie to make a complete record of the available ma- chinery plants throughout the country; to determine the particular suitability of each factory for various kinds of work; to ascertain the pres- ent occupation of each factory, what proportion of its total effort is now on government work and the reason for delays in comnpleting contracts already in hand; to ensure that the country is fairly treated by the owners and work- men.and that at the same time work- men and owners are fairly treated by each other and by their new employer- in-chief, the ‘eountry. ABOLITION OF SLAVERY. In Yucatan, Mexico, Will Repay Trouble of U. S. Sisal Decalers. San Antonio, Tex., March 25.—That the abolition of slavery in Yucatan will more than repay the trouble and annoyance to sisal dealers in the United States is declared by General Carranza in a message from Vera Cruz, received here last night, Car- ranza is quoted as saying the reported scarcity of labor in Yucatan was not ! due to the war conditions but to the fact that owners of large plantations disposed of their slaves and in many instances sent them out of the coun- try to save them from falling into the hands of the Carranza troops. “The planters’ hundred per cent. profits may be reduced fifty or sixty per cent. but the poor Mexican lab- orers,” said Carranza, “will be made free and will reap the benefit of their work as free citizens.” BEGIN TO ENFORCE ORDER. New York, Match 25.—The Brook- lyn Rapid Transit company today be- gan to enforce the order of the board of health limiting the number of pas- sengers on two of its most crowded lines to one and a half times the seat- ing capacity of the cars. Without in- creasing the number of cars the com- pany had provided conductors with copies of the board of health order, and instructed them to count the per- sons getting into cars. When the specified limit was reached, conduc- tors were instructed to close the gates. —— e BILE AND BILIUUSNESS Coated tongue, bitter taste in the mouth, indigestion, headache, lack of appetite, constipation and a feeling of fatigue are effects of excessive secretion of bile. This condition iscalled biliousness and points directly to the need of something | to regulate the liver. For this purpose Pinklets, the new laxative, are greatly superior to old-fashioned liver medicines which over-stimulate the liver and, when +heir use is stopped, leave it more torpid han before. inklets are tiny, sugar- :oated granules that do not upset the stomach or cause griping. ‘5 Write the Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Schenectady, N. Y., for free sample or get a full-size 25-cent bottle of Pinklets from your own druggist. p ) for the adequate Cans Sent From England Apprec- ated by Mothers and Sick Big Bargains " n» Trimmed and Children’s Coats, Dresses " Week End COHEN’S 223 MAIN STREET. Map of the SURPACB OF WATER DIRECTION OF CURRENT WET GUN COTTON » DRY GUN C - USED AS A ORAG TO KEEP MiNE UPRIGHT AND NHELP IT TO (Correspondence of the Associated Press.) London, March 33.—The problem of providing employment and proper habitations for the Belgian refugees toth in Holland and in England, is qaily growing more urgent, in the | opinion of Percy Alden, member of | parliament, who has represented the British government in its dealings with the refugee question since the beginning of the war. The number of Belgian refugees in England is now officially estimated, according to a government statement in the house of commons at 180,000, not including 18,000 wounded soldiers in British hosptals: This total con- s of 65,000 men, 69,000 women and 46,000 children under sixteen. Alden’s Statemcnzt. “I feel very strongly,” Alden in a statement to the public “tbat, through lack of work an1 Proper housing, these Belgians run a serious risk of returning home at the end of the war in a demoralized and decteriorated condition. In HollanAd especially the method of dealing with | the refugees still of a temporary and unsatisfactory nature; they are living in churches, schoots, barns, sheds, and barges, and tne food they are receiving is none too good. As te the employment question, little o nco attempt has been made to deal with it, either in Holland or England. “I have made several visits to Hol- land at the request of the president of the Local Government Board, to in- vestigate conditions there, England and Holland are faced with a very awkward task, but a serious attempt will have to be made, and that soon, te provide remunerative work and adequate residence for tnese people. “My belief is that the ext step should be the building of some thou- sands of wooden huts, each containing three rooms, which coura be con- structed by the refugees themselves, and could be taken to pieces at the end of the war and transferred to various parts of Belgium to be used as dwellings until permanent homes cen be built, The building of the huts could be made to provide work for many thousand refugees. I calculate that at least $500,000 will be required launching of this scheme. It is the only way I know in which a proper semblance of family life can be restored to these Belgians auring their temporary exile from their own country.” ‘Warm Gratitude. The commission for relief in Bel- gium has sent over five thousand tons | of condensed milk into Belgium and | no form of foodstuffs supplied to the | Belgian people has brought forth such | warm expressions of gratitude as the | says Mr | of L’Abielle, | FOLLOW CURRENT 0Ff THE OCEAN — = (BRITISH) ijc;rdanelle;: S Battleships Were Sunk by’ MAR. I3, THE AMETH cuT CABLE Ft CIAM BurND$ Ft OF IRMEN BURNP RXILD B FERUMIL| PORTS (&) (%)) FORTS P : OCHEO®OCEEEs 2 ¢°° Ft SOUAIN ® OERE BANR MEDJIDIEH TABiAy Ft MAmaziey ¢°° THE BOUVET (FRENCH) SUNK THE IRRESISTIBLE (BRITISH) STRUCK MINE 4:09 PM. SUNK 5:50 PM 2 X ® Ft(©) 4 New Retery SUNK 6:05PM. ¢ n‘%’m £ KUM KALEH ©®) <] The destruction in the Dardanelles in one day of the three major fight- ing ships—the British Ocean and the | Irresistible and the French Bouvet— | represents the greatest naval disaster to date in the present war. These | three vessels represented a total of 40,155 tons of battleship construction, and if to these figures are added the aisplacements of the Frenca Gaulois ships were damaged and presumably | compelled to return to drydocks for | repairs, the total immediate loss to the allies reaches the enormous ag- gregate of 68,665 tons of warships. No such loss in any single | ment has been recorded since the w commenced. The waters in the danelles are characterized by strong currents which run steadily out strait r DIES FROM WOUNDS. Orleans, March 25.—Joseph Lalore, who resigned as city editor daily paper here, to enlist in the French army, is dead from wounds recelvea near Craonne, according to cable ad- vices received by his father here. New a French supplies for the baby canteens. The latest expression of/this feelingi is in the form of a letter from Car- | dinal Mercier to Herbert Hoover, as | follows: “Dear Monsieur le Presi- | dent: The commission which you conduct with as much devotion as dis- cretion has just forwarded me, for those in need, the considerable supply of 3,210 cases of condensed milk. | Your consignment arrived in the heart of winter at a time when deprivation | makes itself felt more acutely than | ever. Kindly accept, and transmit to | your fellow workers as well as all | those who assist us through your in- | termediary, the expression of my deep gratitude, and believe, dear Monsieur le President, in the assurance of my great esteem.” WOMAN SHOT AS SPY. ' Leneville, France, March 25, 5:20 a. m.—Marguerite Schmitt, a French woman sentenced to death as aspy after being court-martialed, was shot yesterday after the troops of the gar- rison had been drawn up to witness | execution. By her own admission at | her trial the woman accepted two hundred francs ($40) from the Ger- mans to enter the French lines and ! obtain information. The best new made btutter in New Britain is arriving at the National news- | w;m\y .. and British Inflexible, both of which | engage- | | face, of | ' " Dl Soap ysrmw!m 1 o s of Gallipoli and thence down through the Dardanelles into the Aegan sea The current attains to velocities of from three to four knots, and it was this current which the Turks availed of to launch current mines which would float down from off Chanak di- rect athwart the ships of the allies lying below. These current mines have all the destructive powers of a torpedo fired by a submarine, They contain guncotton charges, the same as operative mines, the usual charge weighting 500 pounds. The mines float along with the current and are invisible, since they are weighted so as to keep submerged at a distance of about fifteen feet below the sur- A drag attached to the up and down chain to give direction to the mine, keeps it in the current and prevents it from ghooting off shoreward. Once the mines are seems launched fal may be dep along with ed, and onl| contact with) the fulminaf to function, the whole t cotton con! | case. No | built that | 500 pounds | | alongside | the effect is bulkheads, exploding b, magazines of is just what pened to th consorts. to have be sudden, and those of the MORATORIUM. El Paso, Tex., March 23 he three month’s moratorium declared | yesterday by General Villa will be ob- served, it is stated by Villa agents, not | only in the territory under immediate control of the northern leader, but in all states of the republic dominated by | leaders who participated the Aguasca- | lientes convention. THREE MONTH'S Prescription for | Eczema) — for 15 years the standard skin remedy —a liquid used externally —instantrelicf fromitch. the mildest of cleansers — keeps tender and delicate skin alwaye clean wnd heulthy i Butter Co.’s store, 133 Main St.,, It is suiting everyone. Price 32c alb. Try it.—advt. | Qut of Sorts HAT IS, something is wrong with baby, but we can’t tell just what it is. All mothers recognize the term by the lassitude, weakness, loss of appetite, inclination to sleep, heavy breathing, and lack of interest shown by baby. These are the symptoms of sickness. It may be fever, congestion, worms, croup, diphtheria, or scarlatina. Do not lose a minute. Give the child Castoria. It will start the digestive organs into operation, open the pores of the skin, carry off the feetid matter, and drive away the threatened sickness. Genuine Castoria always bears the signature of | eat URIC AC BRI Says a little sa’ Rheumi to cure, ity. We are keep the fi less m good water, Rheumat eating too m foods that pi | absorbed int function of acid from d in the urine; also a this impurit | cold weathe; closed thus double worl sluggish and acid which circulating eventually muscles ca and pain o At the get from an | ounces of Jai ful in a fore break! week. This acid by n normal actio of these imj Jad Balts and is made and lemon jul and is used thousands rheumatism, | ant, effe which helps is beneficlal ¢

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