New Britain Herald Newspaper, November 15, 1918, Page 3

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)

Boston Store The State Council of De- fense on the advice of the Council of National Defense following have issued the RULES FOR CHRISTMAS SHOPPING: 1. Ruy useful articles. 2. Pay cash for them. 9. or you may not be able to do it at all, retailers are asked .not to put on extra Christ- mas help. 4. Ship your gifts early, mails and expresses must not be congested. 5. Select gifts that can be shipped in small space. 6. son where you can. We would suggest the fol- lowing useful articles: Handkerchiefs, Neckties, Hosiery, Umbrellas, Corset Covers, Chemise, Gowns, Bath Robe , Chemise, Gowns, Bath Robes, Blankets, Comf or tables, Gloves, Do your shopping early Deliver presents in per- Aprons, ! | NEW BR'TAIN A N S T T T e e B L 3 g . b T HARTFORD. Saturday IN ALL SEPARATE PLAID PUSSY WILLOV CREPE DE Plaited Models; Some with Panel Effects over Accordion four-inch Belts with buttons; best workmanship, all be gone Saturday Night. Box the novel biggest values. a Day of | Many Big Specials DEPARTMENTS. SKIRTS AT $7.05 BLACK TAF CHINES, ETC. Plaited, Plain Gathered Styles. Wide Crush Girdles, Plain pockets. Finest of materials, All at One Low Price. They'll 'AS, AND hips; SILK DRESSES AT $15.00 ‘Wonderful Values. Styles not to be found where. Styles for Miss and Matron. else- SERGE DRESSES AT $16.50. Each One a Bargain. Values not to be surpassed. Dresses for Style and Service. GET YOUR FURS SPLENDID ASSORTMENTS HERE FOR THANKSGIVING. AND BIGGEST VALUES. ELEGANT BLACK FOX SETS PRICED ONLY $98.00 SUPERB BLACK WOLF SETS SELLING at $95 and $65 WE ARE MAKING A SPECIAL FOR SATURDAY—ALSO DISPLAY OF MUSKRAT COATS OF FURS FOR CHILDREN. Towels, Table Linen, Quilts, R R s RS i 2 SR T . WNapkins and a lot of things for Baby’s use. PULLAR & NIVEN STOMACH UPSET? Get at the Real Cause—Take Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets That's what tnousands of stomach sufferers are doing now. Instead of taking tonics, or trying to patch up a poor digestion, - they are attacking the veal cause of the aitment — clogged liver and disordered bowels. Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets arouse the livéer in a soothing, healing way. When + the liver and bowels are performing their natural functions, away goes indigestion and stomach troubles. If you have a bad taste in your mouth, tongue coated, appetite poor, zy, don’t-care feeling, no ambition or nergy, troubled with undigested foods, ould take Olive Tablets, the sub- for calomel. Edwards’ Olive Tablets are a purely vegetable compound mixed with olive oil. You will know them by their ~olive color. They do the work without griping, cramps or pain. Take one or two at bedtime for quick relief, so you can eat what you like. At 1Cc and 25c per box. All druggists. JyfyJei With Salad Flavor Jiffy-Jell desserts come in many fruit flavors. But Lime Jiffy- Jell — flavored with iime fruit — makes the best salad jell. It is tart and green. The flavor comes in liquid form, sealed in a vial, Serve with your salad. Or mix in veg- etables, cooked or un- cooked, before the Jiffy-Jell cools. Left- overswilldo. Ormixin meat scraps and make a meat loaf. Try Loganberry Jiffy-Jell for a dessert, and Lime for a salad jell. One package serves six. These quick, economical dainties serve a big need today. 2 Packages for 25 Cents At Your Grocer’s Jifty-Jell —Waukesha, Wisconsin MADE IN RINGFIELD PAINT.AND . CHEMICAL 0. MACKLIFFE BROS. CO. New Britain Distributor. Your Hair All droggists ; S 25, Ointment 25 & 50, Talcum 25. Samplo sach Iree of ‘Outicura, Dept. K, Beston." COMFORT KITS ARE - BANNED BY ARMY {Red Cross Orderefiot fo Make Further Distributions e Comfort kits will no longer be dis- tributed to men in the training camps by the Red Cross following an order | issued by the General Staff of the at the request of General ing, barring them from the per- al baggage of soldiers going over- The need of shipping space on transports for the equipment that the oldiers must carry together with the act that troop movements in France ry rapid, occasioned this re- (uest from the leader of the Ameri- can forces. A definite list of the ar- les that a man may take with him has been issued by the War Depart- ment. The articles contained in the Red ss comfort kit can be obtained, for e most part, by the men in the camps and cantonments in the United States. Through the regular freight channels, however, the Red Cross will be able to arrange for shipment overseas a large quantity of comfort iits which will be distributed through ts Foreign Commissions. Such ship- ent will be made because it is felt hat under existing conditions the its furnish to the men overseas ad- litional comforts that are much ap- it is held, therefore, that justifiable to expend funds for kits to be distributed in this way. Mailing Yoxtended. The date for sending Christmas par- cels to the members of the American ixpeditionary Forces, announced originally as November 15, has been changed to November 20, allowing clatives five days longer in which to make up their gift boxes. The cartons that will contain the ¢hristmas gifts can be obtained only rom Red Cross Chapters on the pres- ontation of a Christmas parcels label. The latter will have to be sent by the coldiers overseas. Without the label no Christmas box can be sent. The Red Cross Chapters are now receiv- ing their allotment of cartons and a complete force of workers will be on hand to facilitate the task of exam- ining, approving and sending out the packagi The Christmas parcels will be sent to the American Red Cross Commis- sion in Berne, Switzerland, and from that point will be distributed to the prisoners. seas. UNIVERSAL CLUB ACTIVITIES. The Universal club of Landers, Frary & Clark was the guest of the ¥. M. C. A. last evening and staged a mock trial of a breach of promise suit, much to the amusement of the <pectators. Lieutenant D. Gordon Manning, who was wounded and gassed at the Somme in 1915, gave an inters of his experiences while ‘“‘over there.” WILL SAVE MASTERPIECE. Powerful Heating Apparatus Used to Prescrve Famous Picture. (Correspondence of the Asso. Press) Milan, Nov. 15.—A heating appara- tus powerful enough to force heat through a pile of sand bags twelve feet thick and to dry without scorching the wall behind is needed to preserve one of the world’s masterpieces. “The Last Supper” of Leonardo da Vinci which is painted on the wall of the church of Santa Maria delle Grazie here. The dampness which accumu- the colors of the damaged by time. nardo's picture is unsuited to frescoes of Luini painted on the same wall. give each set of masterpieces treatment required and still problem. Italian been unable to find a solution. ng address and told of some , lates in the sand, necessary as a pro- tection from air raids is fast fading picture, already 'PREDICTS TERRIBLE WINTER IN RUSSIA Starvation Faces Millions, Owing to Crop Failures | London, Oct. 29, (Correspondence , of the Associated Press)—A winter of i starvation is a safe prediction for | Russia. Indications are that it will be one of the worst winters the Rus- sian people have experienced in all their history. All summer the food situation in Russia, particularly in Moscow, Pet- rograd and other large cities has been steadily growing more and more acute. In the latter part of August, before the writer léft Moscow, bread, or that mixture of straw, oat husks and other ingredients of unknown origin which Moscow inhabitants are induced to accept as bread, had al- most entirely disappeared, and cer- tain city districts had not received the usual allowance for nearly a week. The government had classified the population into categories, whereby workingmen and government em- ployes received a larger allowance, while professionals and well-to-do people get the smallest, which in Moscow amounts to one-sixteenth of a pound. In Petrograd the bourge- ots or middle class fared poorly on an allowance of three herrings a day. The shortage of bread is largely due to the government's short-sighted policy in fixing a low price for grain which did not even cover the farm- er's expenditure, let alone profit. The peasants refused to comply with the decree to turn over all grain in ex- cess of a certain arbitrarily fixed amount to the food committee, and when the latter were re-enforced by a detachment of armed “bread cru- saders”, the peasants gathered from several villages and offered resist- ance, frequently putting the crusad- ers to flight. But even if the government price were much higher the peasants would not willingly exchange their grain for worthless money, of which they seem to have much and which has no prac- tical value to them. They want man- ufactured goods, which the govern- ment is unable to furnish, as most of the factories are idle, for lack of fuel and raw material, and also because { the Bolsheviki need the workmen to | fight on the numerous fronts. — LESS MEAT IF BACK AND KIDNEYS HURT Take a Glass of Salts to Flush Kid- neys if Bladder Bothers You— Drink Xots of Water. Eating meat regularly eventually produces kidney trouble in some form or other, says a well-known authori- ty, because the uric acid in meat ex- cites the kidneys, they become over- worked; get sluggish; clog up and cause all sorts of distress, particular- ly backache and misery in the kid- ney reglon; rheumatic twinges, severe headaches, acid stomach, constipa- tion, torpid liver, sleeplessness, blad- der and urinary irritation. { The moment your back hurts or kidneys aren’t acting right, or if bladder bothers you, get about four ounces of Jad Salts from any good pharmacy; take a tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys will then act flne. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia, and has peen used for generations to flush t('logged kidneys and stimulate them to normal activity; also to neutralize | The restoration necessary for Leo- | the acids in the urine so it no long- the | er irritates, thus ending bladder dis- and other masters How to | orders. Jad Salts cannot injure anyone; the | makes a delightful effervescent lithia- guard | water drink which millions of men against the danger in the air is the and women take now and then to So far the experts of the | keep the kidreys and urinary organs Ministry of Fine Arts have clean, disease. thus avoiding serious kidney DAILY ERIDAYSSN@VEMBERS 5 1918. HERALD, AR A Red, White and Blue Boutonniere FREE to Every Lady Who Visits Our Store Tomorrow | Celebrate! Old Empires, old slaveries, old burder -re gone ! A new day of freedom and gladness is here ! Away with the old and on with the new ! When the whole world is putting on a new garment, why shouldn’t you have a n\w coat? Of course you should !~ Every woman is entitled to one right now, when everybody is celebrating the glad tidings. Hold your head up as high as the rest and take pride in your new coat, as you certainly will if you buy it at LAZARUS !—If you see a particular- ly stunning coat on the streets of New Britain, you may be quite sure it came from LAZARUS'! Step in tomorrow and see for yourself. THE NEW FALL COATS--Just Arrived from New York--Picked Especially for This GREAT VICTORY SALE And priced especially low to make glad. hearts even gladder! In fact we challenge comparison with any other store in New England on prices—and on quality too! The quality is even more important than the price. We are here to make a reputation—if we don’t, how can we make a profit? All the merchants of New Britain are wondering where we get our coats, and how we manage to sell them at such amazingly low prices. Such rich fabrics—Silvertones, Velours, Crystal Cords, Pom Poms—quality to the eye and to the touch. And so smartly trimmed, with aristocratic furs. And cut on the very newest lines, in enough models to suit every style of figure—and whichever you choose you know that you are in the very height of fashion. Come without fail tomorrow—take a look elsewhere first, so you will appreciate our Coats all the more when you see them—and make your selection at our Special Sale prices of $24.98 to $29.98. Coats that we would be quite justi- fied in selling up to $50.00 apiece. WE HAVE PREPARED ALSO A SPECIAL SALE OF GEORGETTE BLOUSES STYLES AND PRICES THAT CANNOT BE MATCHED IN NEW BRITAIN! For several weeks past we have been getting Georgettes from the best designer and makers in New York—picking them with loving care, as a collector would pick rare gems—and they are gems! That any woman can resist the appeal of these Waists and not buy at leat two or three is unbelievable! To describe them is useless—like trying to decribe lillies! Simply come and rave over them—But first take a glance at other Georgettes elsewhere and the prices—so when you see the $4.98 and $5.98 prices on ours, you will realize how lucky you are in getting them! Come as early as you can Saturday—the Georgettes will go quickly to the wise women who come here first. Other Special Values to Reward You for An Early Visit Tomorrow—Dainty Neckwear Sets (Look at Qur Special Neck- wear Window Display ) —Fascinating Creations in Underwear— Sport Skirts and Sweaters, and the Cleverest, Newest Modes in Waists and Dresses—Be An Early Bird Tomorrow ! A Choice Selection for the Early Christmas Shopper ! LAZARUS CO. “In the Square” 164 MAIN STREET “On the Square” “New Britain’s Model Store” (Three Stores Also in New York) sent the following message to Baron YANKEES COOPERATE | szt tho following me WITH THE JAPANESE yoii'ona tho Amur, for rapidity and 2 T | success is truly remarkable. Ho landed Americans Under Col. Morrow Bri- | ot Viadivostok on the 19th of August, WHAT ABOUT FATHER? Obsessed with the big idea of protecting those gaded With Japs in Siberian, Campaign—Cordial Relations, Tokio, barovsk, Nov. Siberia, by American and Japanese troops has been a subject of mutual congratulation by commanders of the troops of the two nations which co-operated in this swift move of 420 miles north from Vladivostok to the point on the Amur River. The American troops were com- manded by Lieutenant Colonel C. H. Morrow acting with the Twelfth Japanese division. For the share of the Americans in the action, Lieuten- ant Colonel Morrow has received a congratulatory message from Baron General Uyehara, Chief of the Japa- nese General Staff, through General Otani, commander of the Allied forces. In return Lieutenant Colonel Morrow 15.—Capture of Kha- ' concentrated on the 23rd, and fought a brilliant and successful battle on | the 24th. On September 5th he moved | his army 420 miles for the capture of Khabarovski; an accompiishment worthy of the best traditions of the glorious Japanese army. “I sincerely thank General Oi and the staff of the splendid 12th division for all the courtesy and friendly feel- ing displayed to the American troops under my command. The serving of the Japanese and American armies will more closely unite the already friendly nations.” ENDICOTT RESIGNS. Boston, Nov. 15.—Henry B. Endi- | cott today tendered his resignation as state food administrator to Gov. Me- Call. It is understood that he will continue as a member of the state ‘.ubnc safety committee, at home, father often omits the essential protection of his most vital asset—strength. SCOITS EMULSION is as beneficial to the hard-wo business as it is to the growing child. th'e quality to the blood that enables th grip strength fast. Scott’s helps solve th. tht_:t faces every business-man—that of with the wear and tear on the body. Scott & Bowne, Bloomfield, N. § rking man of ’s imparts e body to e problem keeping up

Other pages from this issue: