New Britain Herald Newspaper, March 19, 1917, Page 3

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Boston Store PREPAREDNESS © s the Watch Word of the Hour. We are now in a position to show a most. complete as- sortment of FOREST MILLS UNDERWEAR For Men, Women and Chil- dren in various. weights, shapes and Qualities. We would suggest an early selection to safeguard your own interests. As there is . sure to be a shortage of these - goods as the season advances. Let us show you the novel- ties in Hosiery, in all the lat- est colors and combinations. ! . Set the New Creations in Crepe de Chine and Voile Here are a few random from oty ot o B0 L fro ‘Come in and the edi eta oo Ca 6 A P. MARSH %, ' ntomal Bathing’s Rapid Growth It is but natural to expect that a re- Met from Constipation and the many flls ‘which it causes which is so effectual and ®0 natural as Internal Bathing should . quickly make many converts. But its general use has increased to are found . the morning after ' an_Internal Bath. The elimination of the pernicious and poisonous waste wWwhi¢h ‘is ‘ever - presemt * in the Lower Intestine gives Nature a chance to work unhampered. And one arises in the morning clear-headed, able, bright, confident and eager for the day's duties. ‘Mr. Frank Isele, of New York City, write: “Please accept my thanks for your kind- ness. 1 have faithfully followed your in- tructions and the heart trouble has entirely disappeared. Undoubtedly this was due to the causes you mentioned—fermentation of the food in the stomach. ~Thanking you for your past favors, 1 remain, respecttully J. B. L. Cascade” the most ef- device for Internal Bathing. is being_shown and explained in detail at The Clark.& Brainerd Co. and at Liggett's Riker-Hegemen Drug Store in New Bri Ask for free booklet, “Why -Man of flay “Is Only 50 Per Cent. Efficient.” ———— e e If You Want Good Bottled Beer, Wine or Liquors, Order Same from PHILIP BARDECK, " 185 Arch St. . ’Phone 482-2 NULTIGRAPHS LETTER Fac-cimile of Typewriting done W 3, 2 ané 3 celors with signaturea Letter Heada Printed. THE HARTFORD TYPEWRITER GB. INC. ‘28 State Streez Hartford, Conn To- LUNCH BISCUIT Priced the same as ordinary crack. ers — the differ- ence is in’ the quality, All grocers ., sz No climate ,‘ . D affects it for the package pro- all parts of the world: high. low. hot, cold: in all seasons. to all classes— 6And the happy owner. near or far. who opens the savory, flavory packet finds the contents fresh, clean, wholesome and delicious, always. it aids appetite and digestion. allays thirst, .- gives comfort . « o and best of all The Flavor Lasts! lfeep them in mind ALL ABOARD FOR THE C. F C. DINNER Aunaal Banguet Wil Be Held To- morrow Night at EIK’s Club Chairman Eugene J. Porter of the menu committee for the annual din- | ner of the New Britain Chamber 'dfl Commerce which will take place to- morrow evening in the banquet hall of New Britain lodge, B, P, O. EL, has arranged an excellent bill for the 225 members and guests who, it is ex- pected, will sit down to the repast. Mine Host Fred Beloin will prepare the repast. The menu follows: Grape Fruit auy Cherry Mock Turtle Soup . Celery Olives Lettuce , Chicken a la King Saratoga Chips Chamber of Commerce Punch Roast Vermont Turkey Snow Drift Potatoes Cranberry. Sauce Mashed Turnips Fried Parsnips Cherry Sundae Assorted Cakes American Cheese Saltines Coffee Cigarettes Cigars Most of the list of invited guests which appeared in a recent issue of the Herald have accepted and will be present” for the affair. Gavernor Holcomb will be among the speakers as well as Mayor George A. Quigley and E. P. Jones of Winsted, state president of the Connecticut Chamber of Commerce. President George M. Landers will preside as . toastmaster and will make a short address of wel- come. President R. Goodwin Rhett of the United tSates Chamber of Commerce, will nake the trip to this city espec- ially for the event. Coming at a time When the country is facing a crisis, it is expected that President Rhett will Speak on uestions of the utmost im- portance, During his stay in this Chew it after every meal— see how much better you will oo & 'OX DRIVE! city, Ir. Rhett will be the guest of President Landers. i Secracary Andrews stated today, ’th&l there cre a few tickets remaining | junsold, and any person whether con-l jnected ‘with ‘the organization or not,! icun attend the banquet, tickets to be secured from Willlam H. Crowell or the secretary. : | 'RECRUITS NUMBER FIFTY '"omc Guard Office Will Be Opened on Church Street Tomorrow for Benc- fit of Factory Employes. { Rapidly increasing interest in the iNew Britain battalion of Home |Gnards has brought the total num- i Ler of enlistments up to an even haif hundred. Of these fifty men who kad enrolled up to noon today, a ma- jority have had previous military training and the others show a strong cesire to learn. The general recruiting committee of the public the day recruiting' office wculd be established in Christine’s { barber shop, adjacent to the Herald office, tomorrow. The office here will be open from 9 a. m. to 7 p. m. each day and from 7 p. m. to 9 p. m. the office in City hall will be open for rec- cruits. The recruiting committee is of the belief that by having the recruit- ing office open days on this busy thor- oughfare many men employed in the foctories will have time to drop in and sign up, where it would be im- possible for them to find time to go over te City hall The office will be made very con- spicuous by posters, photographs of Mayor Quigley and Governor Hol- cemb and the national colors. SECOND WARD POLITICS. James Iverson of 174 Kelsey street, councilman. from the second ward, will not seek re-election next month, it was stated today, and George Fors- Lerg of Chapman street is busy get- ting signatures to a primary list, pre- paratory to announcing his candidacy for the vacant chair. Mr. Forsberg is employed by the Traut & Hine {Manufacturing company. As yet no {candidate has announced himselt to attempt, to ‘wrest the re-election as councilman from Albert F. Eich. staedt. . TONNAGE OF FIRST MONTH IS 800,000 Berlin Figures Far in Excess of| Those Given by London Berlin, March 19, (via Tuckerton). —Tre results of the first month of in- tensified U-boat war seem to have sat- isficd the most optimistic expectations of the Germans, since the total of nearly 800,000 of merchant shipping destroyed represent a full month's work. In the first place, the intensi- fiel cperations only began on Feb. 4, and even after that date a grace was observed by the U-boats on various rcutes hy an agreement with several neuiral nations to permit certain be- iated vesst to get safely home, from which circumstance English shipping also derived some advantage. it is estimated that if the U-boats Lac not been thus handicapped and had heen working a full month they would have passed the million mark. In addition to the above described dis- advantages, the weather was verv un- favorable to operations a part of the time, and last, but not least, the short hours of daylight must be reckoued with in arriving at a correct judsg- incnt of the first month’s results. The fisure named indicates by no means the total effectiveness of the new operations, since for their purposes every ton remaining unemployed in neutral or hostile ports for fear of meeting the U-boats counts as much as the tonnage actually sunk. German naval circles here are very enthusiastic regarding the TU-boats’ success. There is a wide disparity betweon the. officlal German figures of the de- struction of shipping in Fehruary, the first month of unrestricted submarine warfare, and the figures given out In England. It was sald authoritatively 4n London on March 3 that in Feh- ruary German submarines sent. to the bottom, .in round nymbers, 490,000 tons of shipping. No mention: was made of. ships destroyed by mines. NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, MARCH 18, 1917. Mail and ‘'Phone Orders Filled Promptly # Easter Displ CostumeFabricsforS With a Flare of Bright Color, | Fashionable Stuffs for Suits, - Vivid Stripes and Limitless Checks INO, HARTFORD “A GAIN OF A MILLION IN 1917 -~OF— ay and Sale rin _ Skirts, Coats and Stylish Dresses The Right Woolens at Special Prices An important special event in the Wool Dress Goods section beginsTuesday. Exceptional-values of: fered. All the popular fabrics. shown—gabardine, tricotine, Poiret twills, Burells, English homesps alpaca, stockinet Jersey, wool velour, sport wool and cobweb-serses $1.00 All Wool Crepe De Old Rose, Taupe, Tan, Cadet, Havana, Myrtle, Navy, Plum, Belgian and Black. Worth $1.39 All Wool Cream Serge, * 45- inch French Weave. Extra special. Chine, 95¢c Sé-inch Black and White Shepherd Checks. All sizes in- cluded. Worth more. . $2.19 S4-inch Sport Fabrics, In velours. Showing of mnew, fi tractive stripes, checks, plaids. Big values, NEGROES ARE READY TO FIGHT FOR U. 3. Head of Tuskagee Institute Speaks , at South Church In time of war or ather national peril the United States may expect undying support from the negro pop- ulation, both as to moral support and actual army service, according to the statement of Major Robert R. Moton, successor to the late Booker T. Wash- ington at Tuskegee Institute. - Major Moton spoke at the South Congrega- tional church yesterday morning, de- fending the negro and arguing that they should be given equal education- al opportunities with the white race. Major Moton told his audience that a few days ago he was asked whether or not the negroes would fight for the United States in case of eventualities, or would they passively allow the Stars and Stripes to be dragged through the dust. Died Honorably at Carrizal. “I responded,” Major Moton sald, “by telling him that the negroes would do as they have always done: as they have done in every bit of tiouble this country has gotten into, i by fighting to the end.” “Look at the way the negroes act- ed at Carrizal, not so long ago. Wihen they went out to speak to the Mexi- cans, believing they were under a flag of truce, and when the Mexicans sud- denly ambushed them, what did that regiment of negroes do? They fought and fell one by onc until cleaned out, but they fought. The negroes are just as patriotic as any class of per- scns in the country. They have their future ahead of them, and are not as some races are,.I believe, with their futures back of them. We are only about fifty years a free people and look at the progress we have made. You could not expect that from 8,- 000,000 people who had for the past 200 years been slaves there could im- mediately be made 3,000,000 self-sup- porting, independent people. No, but in time see what we have become. Plea for Education. “When the negroes first got their freedom, the question as to what to do with them ardse. Somie suggested sending them back to Africa and oth- ers suggested sending them to a de- serted section of the country where they could not mix with white per- sons. Then there were some far- sighted people who said, Let, us train them. And that s what has been done. We were trained, until such a time as we were able to take carc of ourselves. The greatest factor in that great work of training the ne- groes was the Tuskegee Institute founded by Booker T. Washington, who has since died. I might say now that the negro race is thankful that it came to settle among the most pow- erful people of the Anglo-Saxon race, and the negroes are glad to have the opportunity to live and grow up and develop among the people of the United States.” ‘Horlick’ jOrliCK’S 'R:Ihdflllk Substitutes Cost YOU Sama Price. Leonard and ~ Fheoan 0 b avenr> wrprheil Wina, ant fae teill AT Waol Novelty Cheths more, lléri'mann Co. “SERVIOE AND SATISFAOTION,” THE MOTTO OF THIS “Another Step in E CORSET ‘We have just installed a comfortable fitting s Lully are now prepared to give our patrons & ing for—Corset Fittings. Our Corsetierre, who is a graduate of the “Nemo Hyglene stitute” and with a good practical experience is feady to assist advise you in selecting the correct Corest. : frep of charge. ‘Phone or write ‘Phone No. 76-2. This servige, also any alterations that might have to be mad for special morning appointments. THE WOMEN’S APPAREL SHOP, 165 Main St. .AUNT DELIA’S BREAD is with a light flaky crust that melts deliciously HOFFMANN’S uniformly good and wholesom in the mouth. 3 —Your dealer sells HOT CROSS BUNS will aiways be found of a superior quality and daintiness. We nothing to make them so. High and perfect baking make Hoff man's Hot Cross Buns is possible to bake. ‘We have them hot every day at 8:30 p. m.~—per dosen .. A CLEAR COMPLEXION| HORSES ‘Ruady Cheeks—Sparkling Eyes Says Dr. Edwards, a Well-Known * Ohio Physician Dr. F. M. Edwards for 17 years treated scores of women for liver and bowel ailments. During these years he gave to his patients a prescription made of a few well-known vegetable ingredi- ents mixed with olive oil, naming Dr.. Edwards’ Olive Tablets, you will know them by their olive color. These tablets are wonder-workers on the liver and bowels, which cause a nor- mal action, carrying off the waste and poisonous matter in one’s system. If you have a pale face, sallow look, dull eyes, pimples, coated tongue, head- aches, a listless, no-good feeling, all out of sorts, inactive bowels, you take one of Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets nightly for a time and note the pleasing results. Thousands of women as well as men take Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets—the successful substitute for calomel—now and then just to keep in the pink of con= dition. 10c and 25¢ per box. All druggists. NAGLE SANTTARIOM AND PRIVATE ly by MARY E. NAGLE, B. N. sroor HO .\ = 7 D | FRESH CARLOAD HORSES ARRIVE READY FOR INSPE AT OUR STABLES TUESDAY, MARCH 20th, 1917, These horses are xight from ° farms of Ohio. Splendid matel pairs—2,700 to 3,200 lbs, and h some singles—1,100 to 1,600 Iba.: These horses show quality, smooth farm and business. .chu well broken and ready for hard No colts. If in need of a horse, see us, KM horse as represented. S fact guaranteed. See our complete dump carts, farm gears, dumps, har; eases, etc. 5 CONDON'S NAME IS A GU ANTEE. 2 o P. H. CONDON & G0., Ing 30 Laurel Street. Bristol, Co "Phone 58-8.

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