New Britain Herald Newspaper, May 15, 1916, Page 5

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‘GERMANY BEATEN END 15 IN SIGHT Samuel Hill Says War Wil Fnd Belore Winte Hill, twel muel for New York, has years with J. Hill, in the latter’s railroad terprises, arrived last night Liverpool on the American lined Phil- adelphia, on which he made il round voyage. It was his thirty- ninth on the Atlantic While the liner was in port on the other side, from Monday morni May 1, to Saturday afternoon, May 6, Mr. Hill traveled to London, cr sed over to France, dined with Albe King of the Belgians, at his headqua ters; visited the firing line in Weste France and Flanders, returned London by way of Boulogne Cabinet Ministers, went to S land, visited the fleet, the harbor protections submarines, and reached verpool some hours before the adelphia sailed for New York. Mr. Hill said he had made thix _rapid trip to get certain information nd had succeeded in his mission, the nature of which he could not dis- close yet. He is going to Washington today. May 15 ssociated father- who been his n-law aJmes en from Ti- Phil- Peace Near, He ““Germany is beaten,” he said “a Safe Home Remedy for Skin-Troubles ‘ Eczema, ringworm, and other itching, burning skin eruptions are so easily made worse by improper treatment that one has to be very careful. There is one method, however, that you need mnever hesitate to use, even on a baby’s tender skin—that is the res- inol treatment. Resi- 10l is the preseription of a Baltimore doctor, put up in the form of resinol ointment and resinol soap. This proved so remarkably suc- cessful, that thousands of other physi- cians have prescribed it constantly for over twenty years. Generally ‘resinol stops itching at once, and heals the eruption quickly and at little cost. Resinol ointment and resinol soap can be bought at any | druggist’s. Resinol Seap is not only unusually cleansing and softening, but its regular use gives to the skin and hair that insr | | the {year j having | to | leave { hou 1z | and natural beauty of perfect health which cosmetics can only imitate. DON'T FUSS WITH MUSTARD PLASTERS! Musterole Works Easier, Quicker and Without the Blister There’s no sense in mixing up a mess of mustard, flour and water when you can so easily relieve pain, soreness or stiffness with a little clean, white MUS- TEROLE. MUSTEROLE is made of pure oil of mustard and other helpful ingredients, combined in the form of a pleasant white ointment. It takes the place of the out of-date mustard- plaster, and will no blister ! MUSTEROLE gives prompt relie f from Sore Throat, Bronchitis, Tonsilitis, Croup, Stiff Neck, Asthma, Neuralgi Headache, Congestion, Pleurisy, Rheu- matism, Lumbago, Pains and Aches of the Back or Joints, Sprains, Sore Mus- cles, Bruises, Chilblains, Frosted Feet, Colds of the Chest (it often prevents Pneumonia). 4 At your druggist’s, in 25¢ and S0c jars, and a special large hospital size for $2.50. Be sure you get the genuine MUS- TEROLE. Refuse imitations—get what you ask for. The Musterole Company, Cleveland, Ohio. t the end of the war is in sight. Peacc wiil come suddenly, as the great W started, in August, 1914. There { will not be another winter campaign. Ger overw cannot struggle against the financial strain and conditions prevailing any elming economic ince the war. “In 1913 000 labor this 60 Germany imported 500,- s to harvest her crops, and vear she will only gather in per cent. of the harvest of the before the war. “King Albert, whom I have known personally for twenty years, was in excellent health and confident of his country restored to him 1t the end of the war, which in France and England is regarded as a certain victory for the Allies. The French people have got living down practical economic basis. They only sufficient food to sustain to health. “When the' Philadelphia got along- a eat them | side the Liverpool landing stage early Monday morning I was permitted at once and caught train to London, where I arrived fou er. I drove at once to the Embassy, presented my cre- from Ambassador JuSserand the State Department, and ab- tained a special permit to travel that night to Paris via Southampton and Havre, which is prohibited generaliy to neutrals who have to go by Folk- stone and Dieppe. Met Belgian arrival at Havre on Tues- French dentials King. “On my We Give Royal Gold Trading Stamps—Ask for them Special Gut Prices for Week of May 15 to 20, Inc: [FIG BARS o 7] Very Best iCreamery Butter 34¢ PEANUT BUTTER Ib 11c§ —A&P- IONA QUAKER CORN SFLOUR sac 90¢ A&P = BAKED Evaporated Apples, b 10¢ - @ Strictly FreshEggs,dez 29¢ can Sultana Spice box Fluffy Ruffle box Shaker Salt pkg A&P Jelly Powder. . .10c bottle Kitchen Bouquet. .25¢c pkgs Anti-Stick .....each 5¢ pkg Elastic Starch 10c¢, or 2 pkgs Jeach 5¢ 3 cans ---10c Starch.10c 10¢ ¥ 80 STAMPS with one large can BEETS Stamps Free With Any of the Following ——————— Groceries —————— A&P BAKING POWDER . ... FLAKES | 25(: A Package 5c : BEANS "0 2 ws 25¢] g&fiLEY,.....aIMc : Quaker Corn Meal, pkg Bc 1 bottle Salad Oil 20c i 1 can Marshmallow Creme.10c 8 1 1 can Globe 2 plgs Cocoanut each 5c¢ 1 can 1 17 (Kills Bugs) . 10c 1 bottle Jet Oil Shoe Polish, 10c 0c B S — 25 STAMPS with large bottle of A&P EXTRACTS e ————— Special Sale of A&P Laundry 20 STAMPS FRE No Better Soap Made . i Fres 8 Delivery ¥ Tel. 135 cakes Soap With Extra Trading Stamps of A&P LAUNDRY SOAP.... ¥For Washing Purposes. 25c¢ 8 Free i Delivery § Tel. 135 NEW. BRITAIN day forenoon I drove to the capital of Belgium which is called Nice Ha- vraise, and saw the Minister of Jus- tice, who telephoned to Paris and arranged for my visit to King Al- | bert. Before taking the train for | Paris T was taken for a twenty-five ; mile automobile drive outside Havre s o { where the crops are abundant. Not | a square inch of grounds t been | left uncultivated. I saw more vege- | tation in that ride than I did after- | ward in the whole of my trip through | England and Scotland.” (AL $33 A TON N BUENOS AIRES And at That Price it Is Hard to, Get Buenos, Aires, May 15—Coal for ordinary consumption in the Argen- tine is now $35 gold per ton, and hard to purchase even at that figure. To prevent the reduction of the present meagre supply, he national govern- ment has ordered the principal steamship companies not to put on board any outbound vessels more coal than necessary to carr yvto the near- est Brazilian port of call. This coal is the property of the steamship com- panies stored here as a precautionary measure and the fact that the gov- ernment has been obliged to place an embargo on this private property is indicative of the seriousness of the fuel problems in this country. The railroads likewise have been | forced to economize by cutting down the summer time-tables of trains, and in the meantime they have placed or- ders for 1,500,000 tons of hard wood for fuel. But even wood has gonc up $5 a ton within a week, and is now quoted at $33 paper, or $14 gold. Charcoal which is largely used for domestic purposes is also a ton dearer. | | [ | Naval Ships Short. The situation is such that even the ships of the Argentine navy are de- clared to be impotent owing to the lack of coal. The American-built battleships Aivadavia and Moreno were constructed to burn oil, but ap- parently the oil problem is nearly as serious as the coal situation. Crude petroleum from the Argentine wells is being offered in limited quantities at $80 paper, $34 gold, per ton. Al- though reported inferior only to the best Rumanian oil, the Argentine gov- ernment and people have displayed 2 sceptical attitude toward the native oil. The deposits have been said to be unlimited, but despite this the ont- put has been small and neither the navy or manufacturers generally avail themselves of the native product. The German Electric Light and Power company, which supplies this ecity and suburbs, and which formerly used coal exclusively, began to use the Argentine oil after the outbreak of the war but has lately discontinued that and is now burning the Mexi- can product. This notwithstanding the recent grant by the government of $15,000,000 to develop the Argen- tine oil regions. ‘Water Brought Thirty Miles. An official report of conditions pra- vailing in and around the Comodoro- Rivadavia oil area shows some in- efficient conditions under which the development of the field is being undertaken. Water is lacking in that which the development of the field is being undertaken. Water is lack- ing in that region and has to be brought from a place more than thirty miles away, and labor is also scarce. Being a government mono- poly, and heavily fiscalized, the op- erations have been eclaborate and costly, but, it is charged, extremely inefficient. Tt is said to be doubtful whether the oil fields will ever re- spond to the elaborate hopes based upon the casual discovery of them in 1907. A government inspector, just returned from the district, cxpresses his surprise that the locomotives plying to and from" the petroleum zone are still being fired with costly coal. The peat deposits of Tierra del Fuego are declared to contain in- exhaustible supplies of that fuel, but with scarcity of coasting vessels and the difficulty of securing labor for that bleak region, it is more than doubtful whether it will ever pay. Of wood there is an enormous supply, but it grows in the remote and gen- | erally insalubrious regions. i As for American coal, the freight charged, 90 shillings per ton, rules it out of consideration, in view of the fact that the British product is shipped at $50 a ton. This can be done because freighters are sure of picking up profitable charters in the river Platte for England or France. To give an idea of the manifold ways in which the lack of fuel af- | ADVERTISING, THE KEY T0 THE SECRET Men Who Buy Publicity - Time was when the buyer who was not expert in knowledge of what he bought was likely to come out a ¥ e second on every purchase. Selling, in those times, was laborious and eX- pensive. Then husiness men began to realize that it was possible so,to organize a business that every customer should have a square deal and the public be induced to rely upon the seller’s ex- pert knowledge and the seller’s desire for a trade that would be fair to all parties. That is the newer fashion in selling goods. One of the agencies in bringing the public to a knowledge of this desire was advertising—it was the powerful educational force that was to revolu- tionize selling and to make the pub- lic feel safe in buying upon the repu- tation of the seller. Advertising Misused. It is not surprising, in a world which still has its full share of selfish unconcern for the other fellow, that there should have arisen some \»\\I. ness men who were willing to misuse this mighty force for good—this time- saver, this money-saver. In their turn, those who desired that the force should be applied to good purposes and mnot to 4, dis- covered that these had appeared upon the surface were likely to make the whole system seem bad in the public eye—that some there were who thought it rotten to the core. The few advertisers were hurt- ing the many. It was then that the Associated Ad- vertising Clubs of the World arose and said to the crooked advertiser: “Thou shalt not!” Truth makes business pleasanter. There are three laws against adver- tising misrepresentation. Laws Against False Advertising. . there is the law of the land— That has been powerful toward keeping men straight as well as affording a means for the punish- “) DON'T SUFFER ANY MORE” “Feel Like a New Person,” says Mrs. Hamilton. New Castle, Ind.—‘“From the time I was eleven years old until I was seven- teen I suffered each month so I had to be in bed. I had head- fects the currents of commerce, 1t is sufficient to note that the great hotel proprietors have met and de- liberated upon the hest course of ac- tion in view of the increased kitchen and laundry expenses, which are nearly double what they were. MOOSE LADIES' NIGHT. Program To Be Followed by Social and Dance Friday Evening. The Loval Order of Moose will observe “Ladies’ Night” on Friday evening in Judd's hall. The commit- tee has arranged the following gran Selections—Mandolin cluh. Song—Robert Andrews. Piano duet—Misses Mildred and Madeline Kinderlan. Song—Miss Noona Song and dance—Herbert son. Violin and piano Anderson and Ohman. Song—Miss Eliott Character sketch—Thomas Songs and medle; tete. pro- Clark John- Strans. Empire Quar- duett—DMessrs. | ache, backache and such pains I would cramp double every month. I did not know what it was to be easy a minute. My health was all run down and the doctors did not do me any good. A neighbor told my mother about Lydia E. Pinkham'’s Vegetable Compound and I took it, and now I feel like a new person. I don’t suffer any more and I am regular every month.”’—Mrs. HAZEL HAMILTON, 822 South 15th St. When a remedy has lived for forty yeers, steadily growing in popularity and influence, and thousands upon | thousands of women declare they owe | their health to it, is it not reasona- ble to believe that it is an article of great merit? If you want special advice write to Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co. (confidential), Lynn, Mass. Your letter will be opened, read Refreshments will and idancing will follow. be served | and answered by a woman and held in strict confidence. Public Assured of Square Deal by | blemishes which | S5c & 10c Packages the | | I ment of those who insist;upon { erooked path. | " Second, there is the law of pride. Liars do not have the respect and con- | fidence of the public and the average | business man is animated as much by | |a desire for leadership, a desire to be | somebody In the community, as by a desire for those profits we measure in dollars and cents. Third, and greatest of all, probably, {is the law of self-preservation. The ! | business death rate is amazingly high | {among liars! Public confidence is an ential to successful selling—the first ential. | es Business Men for Better Things. Business men have sickened of the nister things in business. They have | realized, as never before, that the| square deal is pleasanter—and more | profitable—and as they have been | converted, through their own natural | hungering for better things, they have found the Associated Advertising | clubs, with a powerful central or- | ganization and with branches every { where, ready to help them, ready to act as a great clearing house for this newly recognized national sentiment. | { This tendency is so strong that all | alert business men have observed it; | government officials have observed it; | | state legislatures have recognized it | | ana have worked in harmony with it. | |- Not long ago, Joseph E. Davies, | chairman of the federal trade com- | mission, remarked that the advertising | interests of this country were doing, | voluntarily and from within, what the | trade commission was organized to do for other branches and phases of busi- ness from without. That expre the situation in a direct, forcible way —and was a greater compliment ever paid any business? Makes Advertising Pay. The movement for absolute truth in davertising has had the heartiest sup- port from business men. In com- | munities where advertising clubs af- filiated with the Associated Advertis- ing Clubs of the World have carried | on a vigorous campaign to eliminate the few remaining advertising mis- representations, the merchants and other sellers of goods have backed the cau morally and financially. They have been the mainstay of such move- ments—and wh In the answer to that question is | the crux of the whole matter—truth in advertising pays the advertiser, be- 1 cause it makes advertising pay the public better. June 25 to 30, at Philadelphia, there will be a gathering of the men who | have been doing this work—the an- nual convention of the Associated Ad- vertising Clubs of the World. It will be a meeting not of mere advertising | craftsmen, but of business men—mem- bers and non-members of the Asso- ciated clubs. They will gather to find new courage for a still more vigorous effort to make advertising what they believe it is and should be—the ser- | vant of the buying public. Advertised Letters The following is a list of letters unclaimed at the N post office, May remaining Britain, Conn,, 1916: Mrs. Budney. Thomas Brenner. Cosmo Carlloni. Miss Laura G. Dillingham. Mrs. Ida Denious. Bolestaf Domlkovski. Edward Ellwood, Francesco Davanzo. Russell Hubbard. Mrs. William C. Hawley. Geo. Hall. Miss Lillian Kelsey. . Kimball, Michael Lefkiaes. Willlam Lepet. Mr. Mukonas. William Merrick. Herbert Peck. Eddie Peterson. Miss Rockwell. Elroy J. V. Summers. Miss Elsie Schunack. John Stricker. Howard Starr. Mrs. Mary Shaw. Nicholo Vittoria. . M. H. Wil W. W. ¥ for mention date | letters anad of list. WM. F. DELANEY, Postmaster. Through Lawyer M, H. Camp, John Brady has sued Pasquale Salata 1 Eugene Chiappni for $75. Prop- erty on Oak street has been attached. | | Progress. | the monarch to | campaign. | from the BISCUIT COMPANY YUSSOF IN THE WAY 50 HE WAS KILLED | Suicide Story_E)&)&;l by Author- ity on Ottoman Affairs May 15.—The the death of the Crown Prince Yussof Izzedin was suicide or assassination is no longer open to doubt, according to an au- thority here on Ottoman affairs, who say The Prince was ass the first of February in of Zindjirli-Coyou by his cflicer, Hassan Bey.” “Lang before the war,” this au- thority avers, “when Enver Bey succeeded in having a crown council instituted for him, Prince Yussof was condemned to die. Since the war began he had.been more than ever eliminated from all influence. “When the Sultan fell ill during the summer of 1915, the eventuality of the accession of the Prince pre- occupied the Cammittee of Union and His hostility to the war ad been unconcealed; his accession to the throne meant the opposition af the projects of the menaced its exist- question Turkish Paris, whether sinated on his palace ordnance government and ence. One evening in September the principal leaders of the Committee of Union and Pragress were secretly | assembled in the house of the Sheikh Ul Islam, Hairi Effendi. Enver Bey, Talaat Pacha, Bedri Bey, the Pre- fect of Police, Husein Djahid, vice president of the chamber, and Be- haeddine Chakir, private physician of the Prince were present. Hussein Djahid called attention to the diffi- culty of Turkey” situation at the time, deprived of all means of re- newing its supplies of ammunition and consequently anxious as to developmen of the Dardanelles In those circumstances he pointed out the presence on the throne of ‘a prince known to have Leen opposed to the war might be useful in obtaining a favorable peace allie the oppos To sed a Enger to view. It re voiced by the way pressed lively Pacha. ion, leave headaches, | throne to Yussof giving the argued might committee a The second Wahid, he observed, nourishe better sentiments toward the mittee, but it was impossible to press everyone i resul mast helr, death of Yu 1y cut making a again at called eof; but be determined turn tervention empires, of prove a salutary “The deliberatars separated decision but the: the same place a few when four determined for the Prince they r riled over all resis left the date for the execut later according { Thereupon ca an accord with Turkey a at the side of the followed by the evac Gallipoli peninsula by Entente Allies. The time was sidered propitious and on the February the prince was agsags| in his palace of Zindjirli-Coy his ordnance officer, Hassan B] Gai, offi announce the cause of the prince's suicide by the opening of imp) veins in his left n, would I tified by T and foreigr tors “When the ap! there were no names af foreig tors signed:and those of Turki tionality were all affiliated wi government, with Enver Bey o the Committee of Union and ater death of of events. Pulgar the was irkish certificate Prince Wahid Eddin, the | heir to the throne must by th know what is current informa Constantinople now; that Yuss| and that he Wi sassinated by order. The day condemnation is known as W] the house where the verdict wq dered and the names of thosd were present.’” assassinated, HIT BY JTO, DIES. Was Stepping From Car Whou Struc New Haven, May 15.—Mrs. beth Larivee, fifty-five, who by an automobile as she was § from a trolley car nere Saturd of her injuries today at the Her skull was fractured. The driver of the automaobil Cooper, was arrested after t dent and held in $750 bail on aj of reckless driving. Woman REPORTS SUICIDE ATTE} George Unwin came to polic quarters Saturday night with of poison he said he had jus| from Gus Collins who was a commit suicide in a saloon. Collins was arrested for drun and was subsequently sent to 4 pital’ sufferings from the delirt mens. N0 ’APPEmE;:L’m[E” Symptoms of a Run-Down €O We have a Remedy. We ask every weak, run-do son in New Britain to try o with the understanding thag money will be returned if it d re-establish their health. Let the following give us confid “I am in the military busi on my feet most of the time; so weak and run-down that I appetite and was unable to sld a severe chronic cold and lost or. I had learned about Vinol a friend and within three wel taking it I noticed an 1 ments, and soon gained in er the | Others present ex- | health and strength. I am mending Vinol to my friends also speak highly of it.” Hoar, West Chester, N. Y. In hundreds of cases whe; fashioned cod liver oil and ex have failed to restore streng health, Vinol has succeeded, while it contains all the’ they do, its good work 18 not by useless grease and ofl. T & Brainerd Co., Riker-H the | 1ruggists, New Britain, Conn, TIRED EYES atc. are nature’s wa to you that you need GLASSES. put it off? and fit you to the Come here and ha EXAMINE YOUR EYES. right G Prompt attention now may sav cuffering and greater trouble laf F. 254 Main Street. L. McGU OPTOMETRIST Upsta'rs owve Commercial Trust, LeWitt's RENIER, PICKHARDT & DUN §27 MAIN STREET. OPPOSITE ARCH. TELEPHONE 31 SPECIAL FOR THIS WEEK CHILDREN'S to 6 years. CHILDREN pink and blue chambra 5 ROMP! AT 50c—A spiendid assortment of rompers Sizes 6 months to 6 years, BLOOMER DRESSES, AT 50c and $1.00—In white and colored chambray. Sizes 2 ERS made of seersuckor GIRLS' GINGHAM DRESSES Sizes 6 to 14 years—A variety of styles in plaids and stripes are a big value at $1.00. GIR A collection of dainty styles, lace 6 to 14 years, $1.00 to $10.00. WOMEN'S SUMM white and colors, $5.00 to WASH KIRTS—In Rep, Piqu-~, S” WHITE DRESS and embroidery trimmed. @ DRESSES—In styles that are “different”. $18.50. Bedford Cords, saberdines, Many new models, $1.75 to $5.75. “IDEAL"” HOUS Percales and Ginghams in a number of new styles, $1.00, $1.50, and $2.00. CONTINUATION OF DRESSES OUR SUIT SALE Every suit to go at a great reduction

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