New Britain Herald Newspaper, March 31, 1916, Page 13

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

NEW, BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, MARCH 31, 1916. Well Known Remedy Relieves Chronic Case| WILVISITY.N.. A Lmportant f I'rom the Stomach With to Dispose Waste gularity, | People frequently attribute to fail-| & digestive organs conditions due to lLowels, and apply remedies that rwml ure of the that are primarily inactive | their very nature are more apt to ag. gravate than to relieve the disorder. When the bowels act regularly the stomach is in better shape to per- furm its allotted tasks and can usualiy be depended upon. To keep the bowels in condition there is no more effective remedy than the combination of simple laxative herbs known a3 Dr, Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin which s stores for fifty cents a Caldwell has in his practice uarter of a century and the standard household thousands of homes. Mr. Thos. De- | Loach, with the Department of the Interior, Office of Indian Affairs, =t ey Washington, wrote Dr. Caldwell re- | he cently that Dr. Caldwell's Syrup | hoitle P’epsin is the best laxative 1 have |y writin eny knowledge of and the cleaning | Washington St., prescribed this for over a | it today remedy in MR. THOS DelLOACH its use is nteed n. up by Dr. Caldwell's in should be on hand in ne for use when needed free of charge can be obtained W. B. Caldwell, 454 Monticello, 111 ttle every to br. CITIES SUPPLY BEST MARINES, NTOE IS NOW CAPITAL. (Correspondence of The Associate Nice, France, March all of the members of the parliament, and most of the Eerbian’ government oflicials arvc sathered in Nice, which may almost [ be said to have become the provision- | | al -capital of the Serbian kingdom. | i 4 'states Marine Corps recruiting although not officially recognized . such The members of the nation: o 5 nssembly have held several meeting: but nothing has been done except | to extend thanks to the Trench gov- | i ceruits From Places Better Sailors Taan Country Boys. March 31.—Re- cities make the t seca soldicrs, according to Ser- ant Walter ‘arel, of the local Larger higher i large Philadelpl noy - i uits from th perfectly willing to concede for country has a 1 community than hat the rural youth | is a better physical specimen and is more patriotic than the city fellow, but the recruit from the large town is keener, wider awake, and .will more readily adapt himself to conditions as he finds them. Therefore he makes the best Marine—especially in action Sergeant Carel has had years of e perience in Marine Corps recruiting. TIGERS CLOUT THE Hitting Nets Victory Over San Antonio by 5 to 1. am that love meaning in the rur 3 ity— ernment for offering them refuge | ' the large city lere. Meetings are held in a part of the mayor's office, not as official | sessions of the assembly but as meet- ings of the “Club of- Serbian Depu- ties of All Opinions.” The colony in- cludes a number of officers and a hundred wounded Serbian soldiers, besides the statesmen. Native eggs 29c doz. Russell Bros BALL. | S — | TRICKS TO ALD TRADES. (Correspondence of The Assoctated Press.) | Paris, March 23—One way of foil- | ing the French censor in_ political | matters has been found by the Paris- jan journals. The Figaro was order- ed to suppress a cartoon by Forain satirizing the proposed nomination of parliamentarians “‘commssioners to the armies.”” The publishers simply iy enclosed a proof of the cartoon to Batterics—Boehler and nll subscribers. Georges Clemenceau | gcwart and Coo. of the “Homme Enchaine” has adopt- e — ed the same plan with censored cdi- SMITH DIDN'T COME BACK. torials, enclosing them under cover York, March 31 to all the deputies and senators, with SR L letter postage. Subscribers of Paris- e jan papers who can afford it will hereafter be kept on the inside of volitics in this wa Timely San Antonio, Tex., March 31—Har and timely hitting and Boehle pitchihg won for the Detroit Ameri- over the San An- team. The score score | cans here yveste tonio Texas 1 was 5 to 1. The A Tietroit San Antonio i Sullivan; —Dan (Pork Boston heav Gunboat Smith's ' last night when Californian in bout at the in the Man- New Flynn, weight, efforts to “*come he defeated the the feature ten-round | Stadium Athletic Club hattan Opera House in West Thirty- fourth Street. A representative Budapest, March 28.—The price of | crowd comfortably filled the big the- beer in Austria-Hungary has been | ater, Several women were among raised for the third time since the war | the spectators. started, this time to $1.30 per hecto- litre (22 gallons) and two cents a glass. Before the war a glass of beer In a restaurant cost four cents; now It is ten cents. The breweries justify the increases by announcing that it 15 almost impossible for them to pro- materials, especially barley. bk rangy BEER GO UP—AND DOW tCorrespondence uf *he Assoclated Press.) | PONTIUS TO COACH MICHIGAN. Ann Arbor, Mich., Mar Brute Pontius, r Michigan tackle in 1913, will take the place of Ger- many Schulz as first assistant to Coach Yost next fall. Pontius was gradu- ated in 1914 and won the Southern foothall championship at Tennessee in n i He will of the Michigan linesmen “ure his first s as a coy have charg next fal Conn. cg 29¢ doz. Russell Bros.—advt. laid $1.00 New doz 3 28523 Oldsmobile Light Weight Four and Eight Cylinder Cars $1,005 for the Four Valve-in-Head $1,195 for the Eight Cylinder Demonstration of Touring car or road- ster in either model at your convenience. LUTHER J. PARKER 105 Vine &t ’Phone ¢31 2335455555555 4535555385 3332 A A A A A A for Plainville, Agent New Britain, Farmington, Simsbury T P i tidiiiiiaiid Yz N relieves | . | Syrup | A trial | larger | ORIENTAL TRAVELER | Arthur Rugh Will Address Gath- ering at Supper This Evening Arthur Right Rugh, who is to address the Living club and the Business class at the Y. M. C. A. this is a native of Pennsylvani graduated from Wittenbers college in 1901. In college he was two ycars president of the Your Men’'s Christian association; president of his class in the sophomore and senior years, a member of the college glee club, basket ball team, pitcher on the baseball team, and captain in his senior year. In 1901 he was state college secre- tary of Ohio, and the year followi: and was ARTHUR RUGH. traveled for the Student Volunteer Movement. He is at present national student secretary for China, having entered the service in that field in 1903, x Years in China. During his six vears in China he traveled through most of the provin- ces, visiting practically all of the im- | portant ¢ in the interest of Lhe association, and was on the inside nf the student.life while the revolution was ' brewing. He has been kept in America for longer term than the usual furlough and - has been very helpful to many of our leading asso- ciations in stimulating large intercst in the foreign work. He pri nts the conditions in China and the opportunities before the ch h and Young Men's Christian association with singular attractive- ness and ability. Mr. Rugh has the distinction of being the first American to introduce and train modern atheltics in Chine: colleges. lle will go back to China next month Two former local Y M . A. men, F. I1. Brown and Willson M. Hume, are now in China and t speaker will tell of their work this evening. WALTZ IS SHORN OF HIS OWN HONORS If Semky Wants to Be a Champion He Shouldn’t Meet Real Fighters. New Haven, March 31.—Although the press agents of ‘Semky” Waltz, the “self-styled” featherweight cham- pion, are claiming today that their boy was entitled to a draw with Young McAuliffe in the fifteen round battle in this city last evening, local sports and Referec Dave Fitzgerald, who have been accustomed to witness- | ing houts in other places than Com- NSPIRATION is the soul of of creation, the beginnins of masterpiece. Jnspiration ac]:ievement, the prima] motive Without inspiration greatness never has been attained nor work of genius created. Scripps~Booth design is not an accident, mere piece of work. The Scrlppc-Boofl: car is an inspiration in f nor the result of a set task. It is not a tself. The artist on seeing it is l.ntphvd to paint its befluhj, the engineer is lnspi!ed to sturlg its wonderful mechanism, the man on the street lmmecliutelq désires to drive it and ownm it. trained engineering judgment could have conceived such a vehicle. Only inspiration coupled with All that ome is accustomed to in expensive limousines in appointments, and more than one expects from any car in comfort is had in the Scripps-Booth light roadster or coupe. Scripps-Booth cars are owned almost exclusively by those accustomed to the highes class motor car construction, and with such have immediately taken a stand as fit floos~ mates to the world’s best cars. Four Oylinder Roadster Four Cylinder Coupe - Eight Cylinder Four Passenger - - $825 - - - - 8145 $1,175 Universal AutoCo Ch. 6650 Ch. 4321 stock hall, East Hartford, differ with them. At the end of the mill which Mac led by several miles, the capable Elm City official gave the decision to the Park City fighter who v forced to give away several pounds to get a crack at the alleged battler from Hartford. Some day a fighter is going to enter the ring without being placed at the disadvantage of starving himself, and when this happens, there will no doubt be a repetition of the famous evening when the ‘cheesec champion” attempted to give battle to “Battling” Lahn. Having some re- gard for the feelings of Waltz and his “elever” manager, we will desist from speaking about Mr. L.ahn any further, One of the most capable sporting writers, unbiascd in his opinions in his story of fights, has the following to of the mill lasi evening: e first round. they devoted to sparring and feeling out cach other and ncither of the fighters landed any decisive blows. The second and third reunds were casily McAuliffe’s for the Hartford contender seemed to be nervous. Waltz was swinging woldly ¢nd clinching in the third session and in the fourth he w knocked down twice. Waltz scored heavily at times with a left to the face and McAuliffe coun- | tered with his left and sent his right fo his opponent's body with great fcree in the latter rounds. In the fifth, seventh and eighth, Waltz carned even honors and his work in the eleventh and twelfth was as good as McAuliffe’s but, in spite of the fact that he did the most evi- dent damage during the fray Llows were not as timely nor as well placed as were these of the Bridge- port boy. his WANT RETALIATION TAX. (Correspondence of The Associated Press ) Madrid, March 28.—Spanish fruit growers are urging the government to retaliate for the threatened English prohibition of Spanish fruits by im- posing a heavy export tax on ore: like material which Kngland is taining from Spain Part of the pro- ceeds of the tax would be used to com- | pensate the fruit trade for its loss { cinnati tion Cincinnati Philadelphia feated South Atlantic League here yesterday 10 to 4. Pittsburgh doz, $1.00. REDS BEATEN AGAL Iohl Uscs Rookie Pitcher Who Baf- fles Old Leaguer: New Orleans, March 31.—The Cin- lost another exhibi- game here vesterday when were defeated dians 8 to Orleans ‘ye: Uerzog used he Nations by crday, the 3 to 1. lineup last for season, Cincinnati, were made and these, together enabled Fohl's The score: during L0510000 Batteries—Tonev, Moscley @ Baghy and Billings. MINORS. Mackmen Score 10 to 4 Vietor Jacksonville, Jacksonville, I7la., Americans the Jacksonville The score: Thiladelphia Jacksonville Batteries—Iarham, PIRATES DEI Hot Springs, Ark., home run and Baird at center The score by Boston e Pittsburgh .. May Mo Batter Miller, n, New laid Conn the Cleveland In- The Reds lost to New with xpects to open the season. oney, who led the National pitchers mound placed in the fifth inning. gles sime, errors, six runs, started on but Toney’s with men 000100001 — March o club Sheeh Meyer; Vaughn, Lenning and Baker. JAT SOX. March ationals defeated the Bos- 1 ton Americans here vesterday Johnston’s catch feature a running Shore and Agnew, Kantlehner and Russell Bros.—advt. WIN ANOTHER. | Force to See Him Work. Memiphis, Tenn.. March 31.—Yes- terday was Slim Love day in Mem- phis, Tenn., and the Yankees cele- brated by licking the local Chicks, 9 | to 4. Alll of Slim’s brothers, sisters, | cousins and pals from this corner of | Tennessee, as well as from the nearby | Love Station, Mi took f of one corner of the vesterday and let all know they were for Elmer Love first, and all re- | New York three | Memphis . ..001002010 4 score | Two lits —Baker, Gedeon. Three-base hit—ifemingwa | runs—Peckinpaugh hit—DMagee. Stolen bases 8 { Balker, Maisel Teft on d Win- | York, 6; Memphis 4. { Gedeon Peckinpaugh (larke and tark; fand Pipp. Ba off Russell, they Manager which Fred League the was re- Four sin- possession local stand the world Houghton | the time. i .100004211 o to L Stark. Magee, -New Double plays and Pipp; Gilhooley, Gedeon, It Love, bases v Ovel = —— "NATORS SCORE SHUTOU” 31.—The o asily de- of the i Defeat Catholic Nine in First Home Game by 9 to 0. ! Washington, March cexhibition game of the sea rcme In the first son on the grounds, the Washington team yesterds | feated University 9 to 0 ! Dumont fine control He | struck out eleven of the collége bats- nien in the five innings he pitched The score American league Catholic showed ¢ de- | 31. The ‘Washington a Catholic University - i Batteri Dumont, Humphries and Henry iharrity, Johnson, Fahey and H. White. 3l tol. 0 0 5 were the 0 SREs N Larson dropped another game in the pool tournament at Schmarr’s cafe last evening, the victor this time being Duanny Titzpatrick. When the score was counted up at the finish it was found that while Fitz j Relatives of Yank Pitcher Out ill"’ 338 Pearl St., Hartford, Con defeat of the week for Lars boys are getting rather ro him. was cleaning up 100 balls on the een baized table, “Sharley” had ac- cumulated but 62. It was the second Authentic Reproductions o Classic Furniture In furnishing an American home today, one has almost unlim ed rangc of selection from thousands of authentic reproductions classic Furniture, so that it har dly pays to be satisfied with Pu; ture that is without some recog nized origin. In our stock, you will find a very noteworthy collection of productions in the William and Mary, Adam, Queen Anne, Sheraf and other styles for dining room, living room and bedroom. We vite your inspection. C. C. Fuller Co Overlooking The Capitol Grounds — 40-56 Ford Si Hartford. / “Where quality is higher than price,

Other pages from this issue: