New Britain Herald Newspaper, June 28, 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, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 2, 191 6. AUTOMOBIL TIRES a choice lot of Seconds in both plain and non-skid types and are pleased to quote the following prices. We guarantee our Seconds to give perfect sat- isfaction or an adjustment on 3,500 miles basis will be mad Size 30x3 30x315 31x31, 32x31), 34x31, 31x4 32x4 33x4 34x4 35x4 36x4 32x4Y4 34x41, 35x415 36x41/ 37x4Y, 37x5 33x5 38x51 Our Motto: Money refunded Send check, money order or registered e: Plain Non-Skid Tubes $ 7.25 $1.65 9.35 1.75 10.30 1.80 10.75 1.85 12.90 2.00 13.80 2.30 14.00 2.35 14.65 2.45 14.95 2.69 15.50 2.70 15.75 2.80 16.25 20.30 20 75 9.30 10.25 .30 13.990 14.20 14.75 15.00 15.00 19.00 19.75 20.00 21.00 23.65 20.00 26.00 3.00 3.10 3.25 4.00 4.50 if not satisfied. Ietter and -our order will have our prompt attention. UNITED CYCLE CO. 1108 MAIN STREET, HARTFORD Have You Seen the Tire Bargains at A. G. HAWKER’S 11 ELM ST. AND 22 PARK ST. ALL THIS WEEK artistic and beautiful stock is carried—where - T THEY ARE GOING FAST. TIRED EYES headaches, etc. are natur . warning to you that you need GLASSES. put it off? Come here and have me EXAMINE YOUR EYES. and fit you to the right GLASSES Prompt attention now may save you j suffering and greater trowmble later on. F. L. McGUIRE, OPTOMETRIS' 254 Main Street. Ups’ Commercial Trust. LeWitt: HIGH GRADE FURNITURE of Distinction Offered at Far | Less Than Ordinary Prices There is pleasure in buying Furniture at a Store where the most the requirements of every reasonable person can be fully met— where the styles are so uniformly good—where the workmanship is the prices are alw such Furniture: can let the sunlight of art and est kind of cost. moderate erytime vertisement but that do niture is here for you to look at any time you are ready to come and see it. we We can make more honest Furniture than they ever bought hefore. 't prevent it from bein satisfactory—where to so sell make a sale we make a friend. We at the small- It is also a pleasure to us beauty into your home vour dollars buy more good taste and This is an ad- a fact. The fur- JLOUIS HERRUP COMPLETE HOMEFURNISHER 1052-58 MAIN STREET, Hartford, Near Morgan Why B 1 ian APPEALFORFUNDS 0 AID ARMENIANS, Auxmary to Na ional Committee Formed in This ity A committee, auxiliary to the American Committee for Armenian and Syrian relief, has been organized in this city and is as follows: Cr han, Rev. Henry W. Maier; treasurer, Frank G. Vibberts, New Britain Trust company; Joseph A. An- | drews, J. M. Burdick, David M. Canip, Rev. Warren F. Cook, E. H. | Cooper, F. 8. Chamberlain, A, F, Cor- , bin, Rev. Dr. Earl B. Cross, Howard S. Hart, H. D. Humphrey, Rev. Dr. George W C. Hill, J. F. Lamb, W. W. Leland, A. N. Lewis, F. G. Platt, Dr. T. Ti. Reeks, E. J. Skinner, Louis P. Stade, Andrew Sloper, Charles F. Smith, Henry S. Walter, BE. M. Wight- man. This appea committee issues“the following Armenians Persecuted. remnant of an anclent Chris- threatened Wwith utter destruction, is still crylng out to America for help in her indescribable | distress. The Armenian people are to- day suffering persecution unto death, not because they have in any way jeopardized the interests of the Turk- ish empire. but because they are | Christian and progressive and be- cause the European war has unleash- ed a deeply rooted religious hated. Who can be ignorant now of the horrible massacres of the last summer in which the refined cruelty of the Turks surpassed their well known in- genuity in the invention of tortures? And who has not heard or read about the wholesale deportations through which a helpless people, hastily up- rooted from its ancestral home, rob- bed of everything, subjected to name- less and endless ignominy, naked and hungry, was driven along a tear and blood-stained Via Dolorosa to the Syrian and Mesopotamian deserts? We shall not recount the harrowing The tian nation, abandoned all pretence of furnishing bread or money to a Christian people | which it has decimated and driven to the desert to die. So the Armen- | ian exiles have daily faced death | through starvation and disease. Thou- ands of people have been found liv- ing on nothing but water for many | days. In this fleld the task is diffi- | cult, almost superhuman, as the wokers have to struggle not only against indescrible suffering but aiso against the ill will of the Turk. But it is here that American charity with the help of the humanitarian diplo- macy of America 1 scoe a glorious | victory over want, disease and human | cruelty. To the youngest nation on ! earth comes a cry for help from one | of most ancient and useful nations, which the Turkish government has nailed to the cross. Mr. Henry Mor- genthau estimates that $5,000,000 will be necessary to save these unfor- | tunates from starvation and to re- store them to their homes. | Frank G. Vibberts of the New Brit- | ain Trust company will receive con- tributions, large and *small, forward them to the American Com- mittee for Armenian and Syrian Re- lief. So we appeal to the people of | New Britain to make the continuance | of this relief work possible. ure- | ly those who are blessed with pros- | perity in these evil days owe a debt | of brotherly compassion and help to | those jho suffer and lose everything. TIME MEANS MONEY. Holland Amticipates a Saving of $2,000,000 By Turning Back Clock. The Hague, Netherlands, June 2 Holland expects to save approximate- ly $2,000,000 annually through its new “summer time” or daylight-sav- ing scheme, which went into effect at midnight of April 30. Parliament's act, comprising one short article, was adopted by both chambers with only a few minutes’ discussion, and 6,000,- 000 people are rising an hour earlier and retiring an hour earlier. Aside from the financial gain, much is ex- pected to result in the way of bene- ficial influence on the nation’s health. The change was effected with a | minimum of inconvenience, and there | were few late-comers in schools and | factorfes on the first morning of the | new regime. By a curious oversight, | details of these atrocities, which have already destroyed nearly one million of innocent lives. We can however record with grateful pride that the clearest and most persistent volce of protest in the midst of these horrors, was that of America, which through its diplomacy and its quickly organized relief forces did everything possible to assist the unfortunate victims. 250,000 Refugees. The hostile activities of the Turkish army in the winter of 1915 revealed to the Armenians in the East the murderous intentions of the Ottoman government. Many of them began to seek safety in the Caucasus and this exodus continued through the cold weather, until the refugees num- bered one-quarter of a million. Large- ly through the well organized efforts of the representatives of the Amer- ican Committee for Armenian and Syrian Relief these people were able to tide over the last winter, althoush there were unimaginable privations to endure and the mortality was ex- cessive especially among the children. Many of these have lately had courage to return, in the wake of the Rus- sian armies, to their ruined homes and desolate flelds. A Superhuman Task. Bad as the condition of the Armen- refugees in the Caucasus has been, it is in no way to be compared with that of their more unfortunate brothers who could not escape from the ruthless slaughter and wholesale deportations of last summer. The Turkish government has long since the big clock of the Palace of Peace at The Hague was seen to be still in- dicating the old-time on May-day morning. i The one industrial sphere in which objections are missed in the agricul- tural world, and a number of farmers in Friesland and elsewhere are evinc- ing an inclination to regulate their activities by the old time. Earlier milking, for instance, is not in the in- terests of the milk vield, while much disadvantage is anticipated in the har- vesting months. The earlier work- ing hour, will, it is declared, be use- less, as mowing and other operations are then impossible owing to the dampness of the early morning, while the aftermoons will be too short. Such obstacles are, however, not expected to prove insurmountable, and on the whole the daylight-saving act is voted a success. REV. NELSON EDWARDS DEAD. Was Pastor of Methodist Church in Clinton. Clinton, June 28.—Rev. Nelson Ed- | wards, pastor of the local Methodist Episcopal church, dled at a hospital | in New Haven yesterday after a brief illness. He was 59 years old, was graduated from Wesleyan university in 1879 and had held pastorates in Higganum, Naugatuck, Unionville and Burlington Glen Cove, L. I, Thomaston, West Haven, Rye, N. Y. Seymour, New Episcopal Rochelle, N. Y., and Clinton. sahsfgmg gfegifil reg aevenf _ '{Véqm.afl, lmmaflalm'ci//d’m//we/cofl} fi/fl YOU CAN AFFORD MY TREATMEI My Low Fees Are a Bless- ing to Suffering Human- ity, Who Can Least Afford to Pay the High Often Asked by Special- ists. No Need for Money Matters to Stand Any Longer Be- | tween You and the Relief You Seek. If chronic Consult a physician at once, DR. CLINTON J. HYDE you READ EVERY WORD OF suffer troubles, If You Suffer from Nervous or Chronic Troubles I Charge $2 a Week—No More, No Less BE SURE HE IS SPECIALIT as the fleld of medicine is a broad one, and to get the best results without risk to the patient, special- ization is necessary. I AM A SPECIALIST VOUS AND CHRONIC ~DISEASES, and as such have made a thorough study of these maladies. I KNOW from the study of thous- ands of cases just how-to proceed to give you immediate relief and to re- store you to permanent health if it can be done, and in the shortest pos- | ) sible time. in these se, I cha | more, no less. opinion your c I will I can do, tell you, tell you frankly jug and will do just v if you follow my di faithfully. If it is possible build you to your old-time and happiness, I will tell you not, I will tell you to what you can be helped- In short tell you the FACTS—the THAT IS WHAT YOU WAD KNOW ISN'T IT? Come and meet Do false pride or money matter in the way another day. (] thing of a single good reason v should not see me and talk ov case, when it costs you not on| You have nothing to lose b ill-health! Do not suffer Prices IN N me. I DONT “PATCH-UP"—I RE- BUILD You be re- and want to know if you helped; if your health can stored; how long it will what it will cost. Without any charge or obligation on your part I will give you my With the Hartford Specialists, Conn., Hou 9a.m. tobp. n and Holidays, 10 to 1. can be take; THIS OFFER from nervous or DON'T DELAY! BUT Trumbull St., to 8 p. m. HY m- .Iml 7 I'M Gomié To TeEAcH You To Swem- You OUEMHTA HNOW row ARD FTTLL BE Fun {\T/ For LS BOTH Teaching Friend Wife to Swim By BRIGGS - on Tun THAT'LL BE] SIMPLY TRIS - Lootr- BE AFRAVD OF SINKING - ALL You NEED s CONFIDENCE NowJ - WATCH - JUST PUT YOUR HANDS QuT IN FRONT OF You LiwEe DoN T 1 AWEULLY GR FOR A WOMAN| To SWiMm Tk T ACE FUL T wree ! 1T FeELS S0 Funny To ’/ A Lot orF ] > ATTENTION JumDNUP AND _/ Tou' | GAvE Me! How DYuu EXPECT— 154 - ! You'LL SkHow ME — THATS ALL The Good (T Does To TRY AMD TencH You ANYTRING \[ l//// \\\ lfl“/// SAY Do You TH'NK You'RE [Sr i YeLe H| YsLLING Don T AT ME You ELY UP AT EVERY LITTLE THING — I'm GOING IN- You CAN Do AS You PLEASE |- CAN- Don'T You FORGET You PLE _ et Ee

Other pages from this issue: