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creased from $900,000,00 approximately $2,400,000,000 in 1917, Imports from Europe fell off more than $300,000,000 in the period 1912 to 1917, while those from other parts of the world increased about $1,500,- 000,000 in the same period. As a natural comnsequence of this change in the currents of trade, es- pecially the great redaction in mer- chandise from Europe, the share of the imports entering by our Atlantic Coast ports in 1917 was but about €9 per cent of the total merchandise im- ported against 74 per cent in 19 and 77 per cent in 1910. On the other hand imports entering by the other ports especially the Pacific Coast and Northern border greatly inereased. The value of imports en- tering through the Pacific Coast and Northern Border ports has more than doubled since 1913, while that en- tering by the Atlantic ports increased but about 50 per cent. The share of the total imports which entered by the Pacific Coast and Northern Border ports has more than doubled since 1913, while that entering by the At- lantic ports increased but about 50 per cent. The share of the total im- ports which entered by the Pacific Coast and Northern Border ports in- ed from 17 per cent in 1913 to per cent in 1917, while that en- tering by the Atlantic ports fell from ctically 74 per cent in 1913 to 69 er cent in 1917. Oriental trade now prefers the Pacific route. On the export side conditions are reversed as to the relative port ac- tivities. The cause which resulted in a reduced flow of merchandise from Jurope to the United States, the war, created a large movement of mer- chandise from the United States to NOTICE AUTOMOBILISTS—Let us repair your car. We have the ex- perience-and tools, work done under direct supervision Nels J. Nelson. Permalite batteries, batteries re- charged. Cohen Motor Co., 8 Chest- nut. street. 1-4-64 FLEGTRIGAL _SUPPLIES COOLEY & TROUP, ELEOTRICAD CONTRACTORS 6 Main Street. Why risk the above when you can have the work done better HERE and at really reasonable cost Our splendid equipment plus our fine soap and thorough skill insure a quality of “flatwork” “rough dry"” service that the and wili satisfy most exacting demands. Just call 904 and we’ll do the Union Laundry Gorp,, 266 ARCH ST. e T NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, JANUARY 10, 1918 fat 11:45 p. | midnight starting Sunday NEW TIME TABLE IN EFFECT SUNDAY New Haven Road Forced to Re- arrange Its Schedule New York, Jan. elimination of §2 10.—Following the Ppassenger trains an- nounced by the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad Company on January 6, the company is re-arran- ing its scheédule of trains to relieve fur- ther the prevailing pressure incident to war activities. These new schedules will &ffect Sunday, January 13. They ef- fect some of the important through | trains, but mostly concern local trains. { the important changes arc | 11 and 12° The forme s Boston week da t 10:05 for New York, and the latter leaves New York week-days at 10:03 a. m. for Boston. These trains will hereafter leave at 10:00 a. m. and sare scheduled to arrive at destination at go into a. m. now leaving Boston v at 12:00 midnight will leave vn Sunday and thereafter at 11:30 p. m.; and Train No. 2 instead of leaving New York at 12:00 midnight will leave m 30 night trains between New will leave at 12:00 muary 13 The 12: York and Boston Trains No. Boston Waterbury, leaving New York at p. m. and No. 276, leaving New Yor at 2:18 p. m. will be combined between | Yor b0 & and Oceania an indrel ximately $500,000,000 and \frica an increase of nearly 000,000. On the export side th crease to Europe is about § 0 000,000, to North America over 000,000 to South America about $15 000,000 and to Asia and Oceania gain of about $300,000,000. T S CALL. Bethel, Jan. 10.—P. J. Garvin of this place, secretary of the Connecti- cut Pharmaceutical association today | issued the call for the mid- w)ntl‘x' meeting of that organization, which will be held at the Hotel Stratford, Bridgeport, Wednesday, Jan. 16. A movement to secure government rec- ognition of pharmacists by the crea- tion of a commissioned pharmaceuti- cal corps in the army will be one of in- wm.DNG—Brmg We weld them ACETYLENE us | your broken metals. Irom, Steel, inum or Copper. Cohen Motor Co., | 86 Arch street, 8 Chestnut street. 1-4-6d like new. Brass, Alum- NOTICE! Bradbury’s Deughnuts and | Crullers For Sale at all lead- | ing grocers. W. E. HART, Agent. Tel. 656-12 FOR SALME. Two family 11 room improvements and 93 besides extra building street. Terms easy. H. N. LOCKWO0OD, Real Estate and Insurance, City Hall. Auto Repairing Prompt and Efficient Service Expert Mechanics Dealers in Chalmers and Oakland Motor Cars. THE AUTO SALES CO. 168 ARCH STREET. TEL. 2252 Dr. A.A. TUTTLE Veterinary Surgeon, 273 Chestnut Street, ’Phone 451-! TAXI and LIVERY Servico Reasonable, Reliable —17 Passenger Packard Limousine— H. I. HART, | the | Boston. and im. | Autos To Izent; Closed Cars. house with' all | feet frontage | space on side | New York and Hartford, leaving Ne at 2:15 p. m. The train will leave Hartford at m. running on same schedule as at present to Train No. ng Boston for New York at m. weekdays via Hartford and Waterbury will have a schedule twenty minutes earlier {o ng there at 2 p. m. g New Haven at 6:02 p. and New York at 8:10 p. m. | Additional changes are being d by the management. The com- pany is attempting to interfere with the convenience of the public as little as possible and many of the changes announced are being made with the public interest in view. The need to conserve fuel and the urgent necessity for expeditious movement of freight | is all-important in the country’s w preparations, and the discontinuance trains last week has made a in schedules necessar: NOTICE PRICES PAID FOR AUTOMOBILES BY— J. HOCHMAN Tel. 468-4 con- JUNK Expert Repairing. Batteries | Recharged. Acetylene Weld- ' ing. Storage. COHEN MOTGR CO., 86 ARCH ST. 8 CH TNUT ST, J. HOCHMAN Pays the Very Best Prices for JUNK. TEL. 468-4. OVERLAND-MAN- ROSS CO., All Models Overlands. 139 ARCH ST., Storage. Accessories. Williams Auto Co. Office and Service Station, 287 Elm St. | W. F. Keeley Co. (Elm and Franklin Streets.) DEALXR IN REO, CHEVROLET AND Denison Garage 430 MAIN STREET. REPUBLIC TRUCKS. Tel. 1930 h GARAGE" 596 ARCH STREET Livery Cars for hire, day and night Storage, Supplies and Repairing. Municipal pal Potatoes and help the work. Telephone Orders—War Potatoes Were raised and purchased to benefit the people of New Britain. The Municipal Farm Committee has about 6,000 Bushels on hand at present. Buy munici- committee in its patriotic $1.50 Per Bushel at Storehouse $1.65 Delivered Bureau 2211. Mayor’s Office 902. R R I S AR PSS N S SO PP 5T TO TO RENT—Five-room tenement, e i SITUATION WANTED- WA Have you lost a sum of money? OQur records show that it pays best to advertise this particular loss. Glasses, Pins and Rings are found in surprising quantities and turned in at the Herald. Your money will surely remain in the finder’s hands if he does not xnow who lost it. lassified CASH IN ADVANCE. HELP WANTED—FEMALE., WANTED—Waitress and dishwasher of Connecticut. phone 1471-3. Reward. Tony Lacava. Tele- ~ TO RENT Store for commer- the Asia Restaurant. 1-10-2dx WANTED—Experienced girl for gen- eral housework. 50 Cedar street. Nagle Sanitarium. 1-10- WANTED—A young lady for keeper. Prentice Mfg. Co. NOTICH, cial use in Herald Bldg. Frontage 67 Church street. Heat furnished. Apply Herald Pub. Co. room with or Arch and —C )nc large without kitchei. Corner NOTICE—New Britain, Conn., Jan- uary 5th, 1918—By order of Hon- orable Edward M. Yeomans, Ref- erce in Bankruptey, I will sell, for cash, at Public Auction, to the hizh- est bidder, on Friday, January 11th, 1918, at 2 o’clock p. m. at the re: taurant Number 149 Main Street, in New Britain, Conn., all stock and fixtures contained therein, belonging to Larry’s Restaurant, Incorporated. Fred Winkle, Trustee. 1-5-10 Walnut. 1-9-2dx RENT—First improvements. class tenement; all NOTICE — Automobile painting at Richardson’s garage, 159 Vance St. 155 Washington street. 1-9-4dx st Apply t floor, M. 21 Hurlburt street. Deckdel. NOTICE— “losed car to rent by hour wreful driver. Cohen Mo- Chestnut street or 86 1-4-6d or trip. tor Co., 8 Arch street. URNISHED ROOMS WAN' WANTED:—Young man dratt wants a permanent Address “Permanent’ Arch street city 1-10-3dx not in position. 691 By young couple, 4 NISHED ROOM zht housckeeping. Herald Ofi Rooms for Address Rooms, 1-10-3dx or four furnished rooms, Ernst, 320 1-10-12 >ping street room heated apartment. Her 1-10 IED—An American woman sires a position as housckeeper de- in a > ROOM for light house- All conveniences. 101 street, upstairs bell. 1-10-34 ome for one or sons preferably gentlemen Housekeeper, Herald Office. 1-11- two per- Address Ldx FURNISHED R ()OV[—“'JLI‘ Twa gentlemen 24 Wash- street 1-10-tt ingtc WANTED—I want to buy all kinds of antique or old fashioned furniture or crockery; write what you have. I will call. E. E. Sheffield, 18 Durham avenue, Middletown, Conn 1-¢-2dx NTED—A woman to take wash- TO FURNISHED RENT —Front room at 352 Arch street. cond floor. 1-8-3dx —All conven- tric light. Call ROOM t and e 505 Arch street. FOR SALE. ings home. Apply 64 Grand street. 1-9-34d | | waNTED WANT! WANTED- —— e WANTED WANTED—Two collectors do one more Garden street. 1-9-3dx to 61 nurse’s laundry. D—Children to board by d Wo have for| Red Kidney ; FOR Yellow Eye or put up in peck ed at vour house. Send or- ders to Moorland Farm, Kensington, Conn., Telephone 646-12, SAL Delive 1-10-24x week or hour. Address F. G., Her ald office. a young woman ild. References. Rristol. with a Telephone 1 i wiring ixtures nable prices. R. Jerome St., Tel. 1-4-6dx repair work; re: L. Coridan, Jr., 1628. HELP WANTED—MALE. tool-make; Firs 58 The w Britain and machinists, Tool Co. FOR FOR S SALE-—30 acres of land, new bungalow and barn; electric lights in both; also a cellar wall for new bungalow; two minutes’ walk from trolley; 6 cent f«IIA to N Brit- ain; ag 2,700, will sell for § 5 3 . balance on time 3 1-8-5d 27 acres, Bristol 1-7-6dx —Wood ot tain, Box 2 near New SALE—1915 Price §1 Ford Touring car. Telephone 1927. 1-8-3dx 2 Woodland St 1-10-3a and sales men who can furnish tons of A-1 ha, il good refe: inteed salary insure ences. We pay gua and commissions and vour life free and pay lowance in ca of FOR strips for doors. Interlocking Send postal 401 Chestnut street. SALE weather A. A, Fuller, 1-8-6dx | manent positions. 33BB, Herald Office WANTED—Man, fort work with good pay Near home. r around. Pequod FOR cheap, Will sell A. Stepina, 173 or Wm. Palu- South Manches 1-8-3dx SALE—Barber shop. Address Ch. City St Greenwood St., 1087 Main Eir, ska, Conn. 1-10-1w Nursery Co., Meriden, HELP WANTED— Men for work and painting; steady work and good pay. Inquire Berlin Con- TOR SALE OR FOR RFNT-—P(‘st F:um in Newington; near New Brit- 2 CHARGE 16 whenever you need Whatever you need and it the ‘ Herald classified columns will I ive you a surprising amount ) v MINIMUM of service and results—Let ONE CENT A WORD EACH INSERTION, t he city know you: wants packages. | § ain; 162 ticula er. acres. For terms and par- apply to Kirkham & Coop- 12-26-tf struction Co. 1-8-64 WANTED—AnR office Publishing Co. boy at nd picture theater. Addrc Herald Oftice. LEAVE THAT RICKETY TENEMENT before the next cold spell puts of the COAL DEALER—Buy you at the Mercy yourself—EASY TERMS. CAMP REAL ESTATE CO. 373 Main Street DON'T MISS THIS Three Family 14-Roem $6,500. Only $1,000 cash is tage of this opportunity. THE W. L. HATCH CO. INSURANCE AND RBEAL ESTATE OPEN MONDAY AND SATURDAY FOR Come in and let us show you how this proposition works cut. SALE—Dairy, milk routes, &ec. Best in New Britain, with modern cquipment, pasteurizing outfit, &c., valuable good will and routes, with or wethout lease of farm, stock and suildings. Apply to &irkham & “ooper. 12-26-tf a nice snug home for 308 Bank Builaing. OPPORTUNITY House on Hart Street, necessary to take advan- 39 WERST MAIN §iRuEl EVI (Terms of Payment Arranged) THE A, GLINTON GO. 231 ASYLUM ST. Hartford’s One Price Piano House Your Storage Battery Why Not Store the Battery for the Winter With Us? We offer you special se Batteries Called for and rvice. Inquiries solicited. Delivered. A. G. HAWKER 11 Eim Street, —FGOR Brick Block, srick Block, —-Single Cottage and Large Lot; (EY, . 1l Greenwood St D. HUMPH FIRE INSU There would not be much suffering in this world f people only knew where to turn for help. Chronic, Nervous and Spe- cial Diseases are more trying, are harder to endure, because they are with you from weelk to week, from month to month, often from year to year. You are not sick encugh to go to bed, yet you are not well enough to enjoy life and do justice to your work. And the firmer your trouble takes hold of you, the more it saps your vitality and crushes your ambition To treet such troubles lly requires the S0 sue- long, New Britain. ALE— Tenements and Store: also extra lot. Tenements and Store; Bargs Cheap. 272 Main Street. RANCE TYPEWRITERS— Our of factory rebuilt ma our renta guar: chines of all mal s service; best anteed machines; lowest prices; wd machiney promp! inspect monthly; deliv ——— Suffer? painstaking studies of a spe- cialist who has made their treatment and cure his life worl. Dr. Hyde, determined to investigate ways and meanss to help the victims of Nerv- ous and Chronic Troubles, has devoted his professional Jife to their speedy and thor- ough alleviation. By consulting him you will therefore get the benefit of his experience and mature judgment. His thorough equipment ecnables him to give you every kind of treat- ment your case might re- quire, If there is help for you, Dr, Hyde is the man to help you, Thae‘ Hariford Medical Speclallst DR. CLlNTON 373 9 to 12, ASYLUM ST, 0 to 5, J. HYDE T., HARTFORD, CONN, 7to 8; Sundays, 10 to 1