New Britain Herald Newspaper, December 7, 1916, Page 10

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HER GENUINE MENACE Heavy Migration Coming From 594 CrAMPLAIN ST., MONTREAL. ASla SOOH Aiter War ®For two years, I was a miserable Bufferer from Rizeumatisin and Stomack f bt Dec 1. Zvouble. 1had frequent Dizzy Spells, |V osnington. =~ 2% and when I took food, felt wretched | #8ainst a threatened mighiof - and sleepy. I suffered from Rheu. | PoPulations of Western Jsia 0 & matism dreadfully, with pains in my | United States is contained W 1 a1 back and joints, and my hands swollen. | nual report of fom s = A friend advised “Fruit-a-tives” and | Anthony Caminetti of the Immigra- from the outset, they did me good. | tion service, "_”fdo' p_uhm‘ mday.' e After the first box, I felt I was getting | war and conditions immediately after well and 1 can truthfully say that o “Fruit-a-tives” is the only medicine that helpedme”. LOUIS LABRIE. 50c. a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size, 25¢. Atall dealers or sent postpaid by Fruit- a-tives Limited, Ogdensburg, N.Y. MISERABLE FROM STOMACH TROUBLE Felt Wretched Until He Started | To Take “Fruit-a-tives” ) Ly, . Wy | R %W “The Bayer Cross” is on every package and on every tablet of Genuine Aspirin. Purchase Bayer-T E;lbl(:!ts Aspirin They protect you against counterfeits and substitutes. Warning on of the the Look for “The Bayer Cross Your Guarantee of Parity”’ Sold in Pocket Boxes of 12, Bottles of 24 and 100 The trade-mark “ Aspirin " (Reg. U. S. Pat. Office) is a uarantee that the monoaceticacidester of salicylicacid in these tablets is of the reliable Bayer manufacture. its close will stay the stream for time, but steps to head it off must be taken before transportation inter- ests begin to cull the field for their the report declares, 2 business, Immigration from the far Orient, too, is a problem still unsolved, the The systems here- | report sets forth. tofore devised to deal with it do not % P DR Yoo X %, J 2\ 9% fee S %9 (in =N the United States much is in the arid : e o iy 3 a) covers the country through the post! ried on construction work on twenty- | office and other departments. | four irrigation projects, completing | The assistance of the past office de- | ten and adding 5,000 farms-to terri- partment, Secretary Wilson says has tory for which irrigation water been particularly helpful. Some sixty available. Irrigation water is actually thousand post offices are distributing . going now to nearly 20,000 farms, blanks which the seeker of a job may'! The report emphasizes the work of | fill out and send through the mails Indian bureau, whose health | free of postage. When applications of campaign, it is declared, has cut the employers and employes in the same ' death rate among Indians seven in one | neighborhaod enter the post office the | thousanG. The bureau has conductea | postmaster brings them together with- | a campaign to savo Indian babies by out forwarding the applications. giving Indian mothers proper care. Homesteading on Increase. Hospita's were constructed and ad- Public lands in the United States ditional physicians were employed in are being taken up by homesteaders the health campalgn that have a tendency¥ so to broaden materially the efficiency of the other- wise fairly satisfactory plan.” Hindu immigration which would be permitted more freely under a recent supreme court decision, will be taken care of in the Burnett immigration bill pending in congress. Smuggling of Chinese, the report says, has been combatted vigorously with the result that amateur smug- gling has been stamped out to a large degree. Higher prices that Chinese are willing to pay therefore, it _is said, has attracted to the business an expert class of criminals who use more scientific methods. A bigger appropriation is asked to meet the problem. The war situation, the report says, has presented many difficult legal and administrative questions at sea ports and along the Canadain border. The report describes the develop- ment of its employment service and | outlines an extension of its policy of B co-operation with state and municipal ' | employment agencies. I. C. C. Recommends Changes. The Interstate Commerce Commis- | sion in its annual report today to con- gress recommended a sweeplng | change in methods of establishing | freight and passenger rates so that ! shippers would not longer be com- | pelled to show a proposed rate unrea- sonable or see it become effective. Carriers seeking to alter a rate would be compelled to show the change was reasonable. The recommendation is statute congress fix the interstate rates, fares, charges, classifications, rules and regulations existing at a specific date, prior to that of enact- ment, as just and reasonable for the past, and provide that no change therein after that specified date may be made except upon order of the commission; with provision that such statute shall not affect the proceed- ings pending at the time of enact- ment.” The purpose of the suggestion is said to be mainly to correct flaws in the present method by which an in- jured shipper seeks reparation for payment of a higher rate than sub- sequently is approved by the commis- sion, o 59¢ SOAP BOXES 20¢ to 49c¢ TRAYS 49¢ to $1.49 TALCUM POWDER BOX 59¢ to $1.49 BOXES 29¢ to 39¢ Incoldorslushy. e isionlact st hotladequatelon | Mexico shown in the annual report of Secre- | weather they! well adapted, it says. Arrangemends Secretary of Labor Wilson. Make seventeen millians for each of the pre- BEAUTIFUL —DURABLE—DAINTY—USEFUL— INEXPENSIVE the report, “‘should be so modified as is the chief recommendation of Secre- ceding two years and a still smaller | Y TS G R e ) to make use of the same administra- | tary Wilson’s annual report made ( h < NS 59¢ to $2.49 : s ning in a small way in 1907 it now | region. The reclamation service car- | HAT BRUSHES - / eliminate therefrom those exceptions m v e E OOk JEWEL BOXES { 8 MIRRORS ... promis¢ much improvement and ma- g S 5 N ! : chinery for enforcement of the Chi- | evasions of the embargo on arms to in rapidly increasing quantities . EVENING G / EVENI GS tary of the Interior Lane made public | ] . . keepyourboys for the admission of Japanese, it is Expansion -of the government's!today. Twenty million acres were Her Glad Wlt nya “1 VO['y £ [3, % declared, should be amended to fit| Public employment service by crea- claimed by private owners in the vear eet dry and warj conditions better. | tion of a separate bureau of employ- . ending with June 30, as against] ] 5 “The Chinese exclusion law,” says | Ment within the department of labor average for previous years. | BUFFERS .... 69¢ to $1.13 T COEERN tive methods and means as aro em. | Public today. The work, 1t is de-! ‘ Of the two hundred and fifty mil-| BONNET BRU M:;,s‘ = R T e i ployed in enforcing the general im- | clared, has outgrown the facilities Of | 1ion acres of public land still left in ' Rt e s \mm m‘ dfllwl;\.ww | cases) . 39c to $1.79 migration law; and the Japanese ar- ”};“ ureay jof ’mg:""““ Pt GLOVE STRIZTCHERS $1.09 UMl el “|PUFF BOXES ..49¢ to $1.79 rangement should be so changed‘as to | Where It has been directed. ] z SHOE HOR ANENED MELITARY BR pair . s NAIL FIL PICTURE i 7 XS " UILT of strong, sturdy weather- proofed leather o n sane, wide lasts for comfort. Stylish and plenty of room forall ve grow- ingtoes. Adandy Xmas gift to please the boy. TOOTH BRU 69¢ to $2.49 e Lee ks Your Boy Wants ! a Watch! INGERSOLL WATCHES & S GIVE A FLASHLIGHT This solves the gift Lights, 970 13% 172 170 _4 $220 NEWARK SHOE STORES GO. 234 MAIN STREET. Near R. R, Crossing. Other Newark Stores Nearby | Hartford, Waterbury and | Springfield. Open Monday and Saturday Evenings. When ordering by mail include 10c i —Parcel Post Charges. i il —229 Stores in 97 (‘iues.—i A, We Give Royal Gold Trading Stamps — Ask for them Special Cut Prices for Week of Dec. 4th to Dec. 9th, Inclusive. BIG 4 COMBINATION! 6 Ibs. SUGAR ............ A58 I can GETS HAND SOAP .. 108 | : 2 pkgs. JELLY POWDER .. 20 5 e 1 th. ELRYAD COFFEE .. . 358 = PLAY BASEBALL ATHOME 60 R.G. STAMPS FREE $1.10 N e e et e Grandmother’s Wheat FARINA . . . pkg 13¢ century. A real game of skill. T Fuall instructions enable those who are not fully TRY OUR WHEAT FARINA. WE KNOW YOU”LL BE SATISFIED. § acquainted with all the fine points of baseball to Quaker Corn FLAKES ..........pkg 5¢c play the game. An Ideal Christmas Gift. WONDERFUL VALUE. TRY A PACKAGE TODAY. A EWW"VW*N"‘ e T KA e 32 7 02 problem. Ever- vest pocket, lantern styles A USEFUL GIFT RUBBER SET LATHER BRUSH § ous styles in w_;:)fi-- and magn g $1.15" $4.69 GIVE A HAIRBRUSH g We sell good ones, 98¢ and up MULTIGRAPHS LETTER Fac-eimile of Typewriting done tn 1, 2 and 2 colors with signaturea. Letter Heads Printed. THE HARTFORD TYPEWRITER 0., ING | 26 State Streei Hartford, Conn. Colds if ollowed to .go unchecked frequently develop into TUBERCULOSIS, PNEUMONIA, CATARRH, TONSILITIS, BRONCHITIS. And dozens of other danger- ous but less well known dis- eases, such as infections of the inner facia passages, ear “that by Price 75¢. ‘. L) e i R Nend T REAL BALL GAME. Peautitul — BLUE ROSE — j —FELS NAPTHA— GULDEN’S g NEW MODERN ENGLISH Seal-grain A RICE SOAP MUSTARD DICTIONARY Buys a BON AMI, a cake 9¢ | COCOANUT, pkg 10c THE GIFT FOR HIM 9 8 Covered ; GILLETTE C Webster’s Lb. ..... 7c| 2cakes .. 9c| Ajar...10c SAFETY complications, etc., and mal- nutrition in children. Colds are not necessary for any one | to endure for any length of | time, certainly not long’ enough for any of the above! mentioned dangerous dis- eases to develop—PROVID- ED, that a prompt use of Lin- onine is made. This remedy is standard, a pure and whole- some emulsion of flax-seed | oil, Ecalyptus, Irish moss, and other efficient preparations. It removes the cause of colds | and keeps the system fit to | resist the inroads of germs | that overcome weakened and | run-down people. Its body | building qualities have long | been recognized by physi- | cians, and thousands testify to the good it has done and is doing them and their fami- lies. Take it at the first sign | of a cold or when you feel | physically unfit, HERALD ADVTS It was said, however, that the effect of such legislation would be radical | upon methods of rate establishment. At present tariffs praposing rate | changes filed by the railroads become operative on a fixed date unless sus- pended by the commission and shown on hearing to be unreasonable, unjust or discriminatory. If existing | rates are declared by statute to be | just and reasonable, it was pointed out, the burden will be on those who wish to change them, Report of Attorney General, Complete divorcement of transpor- tation "from production by amending the commodities clause of the inter- state commerce law; authority to sue corporations whenever they transact | business; perfection of neutrality laws | and extension of the right of search | warrant in criminal cases are among the recommendations of Attorney Gen- eral Gregory in his annual report to congress. The attorney general says that de- spite the government’s victory in the supreme court in the Lackawanna coal company case the railroads are still able to claim that the commo- dities clause does not prohibit them from engaging in production along their lines, provided only that they sell the articles produced before transporting them. He urges an amendment, introduced at the last session of congress, to prohibit a rail- road from transporting articles manu- factured or produced by it or by any corporation it contrals or it is affili- ated with by ‘having the same con- trolling stockholders, irrespective of interest in the articles at the time of transportation. He says it is also necessary that congr prohibit any railroad owned ar controlled by s producing or trading corporation, and not merely a plant, from transporting the articles produced or owned. Employment for federal prisoners and en amendment to the criminal code to prohibit the false labeling of | packages which contains arms and . PAY DIVIDENDS i mendations. ammunition are among other recom- The last is to meet Kellogg’s Krumbles, pkg 10¢ | Prunes, 40-50's, Ib 150‘ 7 Bars A&P Soap 6 lbs Oatmeal . ... Corn Meal . ...... Grape Fruit . .. ... Oranges SR e Y d 0§25 c-30C SPECIAL FOR FRIDAY AND SATURDAY ONLY A&P FLOUR .............by sack § 1.35 A&PFLOUR ..............by bblL Wheat has advanced 6 cents a bushel since this sale § went into effect. That means higher priced flour by @ the first of the week. 10.80 251b Bag GRANULATED SUGAR .. .$1.95 10 2 cans Sultana Spice, ..each 10c 1 pkg A&P Washing Powder 16¢ 1 pkg. A&P Ice Cream Pow- . 10c 1 pkg A&P Jelly Powder ..10c 2 cans A&P Chloride of Lime, 10c Stamps Free With Any of the Following ——————— Groceries — Delivery on 50¢ Worth or Over SEN RIS cans A&P Lyec .. pkgs Reckitt’s Blue bots Royal Polish bots A&P Vinegar pkgs ..each 9¢ Grandmother’s Oats, can Skat Cleanser ... .10¢ pkgs Soapine ....... h : Free Gity Delivery BAM 2P.M 'Phone 135 184 MAIN STRKWL. /<:W BRITAIN, CONN, We Give Rojal Gold Trading S:amps — Ask for Them REEREY i ...cach 10c i . .cach 10c @ ..each 10c § 5¢ 3 S N XL , N R S T N O N 03¢ 5 xR RAZOR $5to $9 A Few of the Kinds We Carry DURHAM-DUPLEX DOMINO Sure to be liked ..$1.00 Auto Strop Standard S .. .$5.00 Gem Junior ....... $1.00 Ever-Ready Twinplex 'Stroy wy Nevahone Strops; up from .. .. XMAS STATIONERY Tine sta- tionery and § correspond- | ence ca exclusive in design, tinet rds, dis- WATER- MAN FOUN- TAIN PEN $1.50 $2.00 T e Handsomely Iusirated In Colors All pronunciations are modern — the type is large and clear — the covers curl — high will printed not on grade paper. Gift for the A The Model Builder in sets of various sizes, which build several different modcls, with books of instruction with cach set. Prices 50c¢ to $7.50. é ; NEW BRITAIN 217 MAIN STREET GIVE A KODAK OR GAMERA 15 1.25 200 3.00 2 4. §4

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