New Britain Herald Newspaper, February 8, 1918, Page 13

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Look for the Bayer Cross when you buy Aspirin. It is on every tablet and every package of the genuine. “ The Bayer Cross — Your Guarantee of Purity’” The trade marl: ** Aspirin” (Reg. U. S. Pat. Off.) isa guarantec that the monoaceticacidest TABLETS in pocket boxes of 12 Bottles of 24 and 100 CAPSULES i scaled packayorof 12 and 24 of the reliable Bayer manufac numerals for cro for football COLUMBIA MEN HONORED. A'(N)('lnlll and Cross-Country Teams | e & SEs hunhe fanas PINALS AT PINEHURST Miss Dorothy €. Hurd and Mrs. J. D \rmsirong Meet Today New York, Feb. 8 Twelve men of ) Calumbi foothall team werc gwarded (’s” by the university com- Mhittee of athletics nd five their ®C'. F. T.’s.”” For the first time in the fistory of athletics at Columbia, the embers of the cross-country team D, Armstron of Buffalo, will meet e oo pner 0 Thee T Mrs. Dorothy Cambell Hurd, the med- ere placed third i the intercol = i 3 il Bl B e allist, in the final of the St. Valentine dte cross-country meet last November. Pollowing is the i tournament at Pinchurst today. M Football E Kennedy, | Furd won her :M_\l:,i’_—“’}" ,'l{r"“]n(m‘,\_”M.Whl‘;:f;’u \I\,: against Miss Pauline Starrett, of Bal- Cocaran, J. Houlahan, M. Canapary, €. fhaw, S. Weinstein, B. Healy, Jr. dfrack “C": H. G. Larson. A Hublsenbeck, A. Turner and P Avard. In addition, the following members | Mrs. Armstrong defeated Mrs. John the team werc given their “C. C.|D. Chapman, of Greenwich, by 2 and ' 1. Mrs. Chapman was three down at Moss, J. P. Knox and A. J. the twelfth, but reduced her disadv tage to one 1 by winning the next rded their two holes in par. The fifteenth and sixteenth were halved and Mrs. Arm- {rong won the contest by taking the e g tusrol vesterday without any diff whatever, taking ten of the eleven winning by 9 up and 7 to play. LT PWKS UMPIR Thomas ! the American asso- | FOR THROAT AND LUHGS e R RO o Fajeim_ compound. that wilt brin umpires for the 1918 season. ned Robert Hart, of Spring- who has been in the In- '\box, mchdmfl war tox \tional league for the last four | ists . ons. Hart o officiated in rdelphia vicon leaguce in 1912 and ECONOMY SAVING SAL Big Specialsin every de- pariment S Stamps This is a grand opportunity to | secure seasonable merchandise at Cuof and less in many items. EXTRA SPECIAL PRICES in suits, Coats, Furs, Dresses and Skirts country, but none | Pinehurst, N. C., Feb. S.—Mrs. J. 4 semi-final match | holes needed to decide the issue and | | are compelled to take this or die, | i | | | | the question of the | Many of them are still ignorant cf NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, S P T NS DUTCH FAGE TO EACE WITH FAMINE | il O Vidh nister Declares Holland Hust fla\e !ncreased Supplies New York, Ifeb. 8.-—Holland must | have imcreased supplies from the United States or prepare to faco alarming shortages, is the word that . Auzust Philips, the new Dutch minister, brings to this country. The minister sketched the predicament of | the therlands due to diminished import from the great western store- | house with rapid, salient detail at crview in his suite at the Ritz lton Hotel yesterday, soon after anding from the Nieuw Amsterdam. Dr. Philips at the same time ex- pressed a confident, optimistic view { that the present negotiations looking | toward the relief of the hard-pressed peorle of the Netherlands would find an carly solution satisfactory both to this country and to Holland. That regulation of hippinz between America and Hol- land is regarded as of utmost impor- tance by the Dutch government was plainly shown by the nature of many of the minister's comments. “We have always been largely de- pendent upon our sup- | plies of many necessities,” Dr, Philips said. “Now that shipping between our countries has been interrupted Holland has come to suffer the full jgors of the war. We are out of { everything. We lack wheat, oil, cot- ton and many other staples that we regularly purchase in America. Hol- land today, on rations, with serious shortages staring her in the face, Is | suffering much as the belligerent na- tions of Burope. There is, however, the diplomatist strongly assured, no feeling of ill will among the Dutch toward America. They appreciate the difficult adjust- ments that America, a belligerent, must make in her trade with neutrals and believe that these adjustments will be made rapidly as possible and in a spirit of friendship. Since America's entry into the war the food situation in Holland has be- come so grave, according to Dr. Phil- ips, as to give rise to occasional tur- | bulent disturbances. Before all. the | diplomatist said, American wheat is { i needed, sufficient American ns to assure the people their bread suoply. | Dr. Philips has been in this coun- try hefore and brings with him to | his complicated task a knowledze of the life and the people here. More- over, he explained vesterday, he is the type of diplomatist that Amer- ican sentiment has always advocated —a non-professional. Dr. Philips comes here to solve the problems pending between this country and his { own in the light of good will, mutual | understanding and fair play. he new minister and his family 1 re 1 in this city several days r ding to Washington. xpects to See Holland Moliand will be forced to enter the r on the side of Germany within | » months to save its people from ration. That was the statement of D van Loon, formerly a membe faculty of Cornell University. ~d aboard the Nieuw Amste s an extended stay since last July | the Netherlands. “The people in the ited States | o not understand conditions in Fiol- 1and,” said Dr. van Loon. *“Within two months there will be absolute siarvation unless foodstuffs are al- towed to enter the country from over- as. g peoples are driven to | desperate trai Germany offers them food from Roumania. If they what can be expected? “Turthermore, the people of Hol- land do not understand why the gov- crnment of the United States is pre- hipments of food and hold- vessels. Very little news garding affairs here gets to Holland. | The people over there really are at a loss to know reasons for the embargo. the reason prompting the United States to enter the war. “] bpelicve that better arrange- ments could he made for getfing Am- erican news to Holland than now ob- tain, and that the question of ship- ments of foodstuffs should be given serious consideration.” “I am informed from reliable sources that the German navy in- tends sending out m: ive submarine cruisers next month. These will be armed with heavy ordnance. Som> will carry 15-inch guns, it is said, and will be able to hold their own against well-armed war ships. Dr. van Loon said he had heard that the impending German drive may be against the American forces. CAMP DIX ENTERS TEAM. Metropolitan Asso. Receives Applica- tion for Entry in One-Mile Race. New York, Feb. 8.—The Camp Dix rclay team, which recently won the army and navy champlonship at the Millrose A. A. games, yesterday noti- fled the Metropolitan association that it would start in the one-mile race at the Preparcdness games at the 13th regiment armory, Brooklyn, on next Monday evening. The Dix entry increases the num- ber of service teams starting to S(‘V(‘n hblnahnnw Abel R. S 1181y starter for Fort Hamilton. In- cluded in the personnel of the Camp Dix team are Howard Berry, former University of Pennsylvania star, and William F. Kelly, former national champion, among other erstwhile college athletes. CAFES BARRIED TO SOLDIERS ra Feb. 8 The American Pre | to clease the kidneys and flush off the | body’s urinous waste get four ounc | desired, nor did my genecral health vost Marshal has ordered posted a list of ninety-eight restaurants, cafes and bars which are declared to be “out of bounds. Officers and soldiers are B | forbidden to enter these places under penalty of being brought to trial on charges. FROR ;8 4 Wemen Praise Lydia E. Pinle ham’s Vegetable Compound for Hezlth Restored. In almost every neighborhood 1 America are women who have trica this standard dy for femole ill3 1 know its \,r)rvh Athol, I . Pinkham’s | Aqutulw an.umvnj lm~ "done me e, | { world of good. 1suffered from a weal ness und a great deal of pain every hing brought me any re- s medicine. I am a differ since I took it and want others v to know abovt it.”’—Nw . Lawson, 569 San Francisco, C W("fl\ nervous conditi terribly from a fem: trouble for over five years. Ihadtaken all kinds of med- icine and had rv different. doctors and they all said T would have to be operated on, but Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound cured me entirely and now I am z strong well woman.”” —Mrs. H. Ro: AMP, 1447 Devisadero St., San Francisco, Cal. For special advice in regard to st ailments write Lydia E. Pinkham Med» icine Co., Lynn, Mass. The result of its many years experience is at your service. e i i —— For Skin Soreness of infants and children you can find nothing that heals iike Sykes Comfort Powder Leading physicians and nurses have used and endorsed it for more than 25 years. | 25c at the Vinol and other druq stores | The Comfort Powder Co., Boston, Mass. _| QUIT MEAT WHEN BACK HURTS OR KIDNEYS BOTHER | Says Urle Acid in meat clogs Kid- neys and irritates Blad- A glass of Salts is harmless way T | K flush Kidne tho says Au- It you must have your meat every day, ecat it, but flush your kidneys | with salts occasionally, says a noted authority who tells us that meat | forms uric acid which almo lyzes the kidnevs in their effor expel it from the blood. They be- come sluggish and weaken, then you cuffer with a dull misery in the kid- FEBRUARY ney region, sharp pains in the baclk or sick hcadache, dizziness, your | stomach sours, tongue is coated and | when the weather is bad you have rheumatic v he urine gets cloud full of \1\mm|1 the nnels often get sore and irritated, obliging vou to scek relicf two or three times during the night. To neutralize these irritating acic of Jad Salts from any pharmacy here; take a tablespoonful in a gl £ water before brealkfast for a fow d and your kidneys will then act fine This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice com- bined with lithia, and has been used for generations to flush and stimula‘e | sluggzish kidneys, also to neutralize | the acids in urine, so it no longer ir- ritates, thus ending bladder weakness. inexpensive; cannot in- a delightful eff Read What Father Lynch Said A recent attack of pleur Teft me in a rundown condition. My strength did not return as fast as 1 improve as it should, 2nd a bronchial cough distressed me greatly. 1 con- sulted my physician who recom- mended Linonine. Before I had finished the first bottle T began to im- prove, the cough disappeared entirely | and T commenced to gain in flesh and strength. Linonine has my hearty en- dorsement. I recommend it to all who are in need of a builder, or who suffer from bronchial or lung troubles. | REV. H. J. LYNCH, Pastor St. Peter's Church, Danbury, 1886-1905. Linonine has been the most ef- fective remedy for all form coughs, colds, bronchitis diseases for many, many years. was best in Father Lynch’s time, it is best now. 1f coughs or colds threaten to bring you low, or have already done so, it will bring about a rapid d yvou will be yourself - time Took for this familiar trade-mark. All druggis(s sell Linonine. ) 1918. SPECIALS SPECIAL SALE 100 dozen Shirts 79¢ each, 3 for $2.25 B L SPECIAL SALE Men’s 25¢ Hosiery 15¢ a pair o SPECIAL SALE Men’s Flannel Shirts $1.35 each — SPECIAL SALE Children’s Suits $4 o SPECIAL SALE $2.60 Chamois Gloves 79¢ o SPECIAL SALE Men’s Union Suits $1.29 SPECIAL SALE 2-piece Gray Natural Shirts and Drawers 85¢ each SPECIAL SALE Men’s Odd Trousers $2.50, $3.00, $3.5¢ —o0— SPECIAL SALE Men’s Suits $14.75 Besse-Leland Co. 38 Stores 38 Cities ALWAYS MORE FOR LESS

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