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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1918. THE WORK OF THE AMERICAN SALVAGE CORPS repairing. g 1 aken from German the Thousands upon thousanc forms and other German shipment to salvag ‘nderwood. Surely you do not now fear that Money in the Bank Seized by the Government! [t Will Not Be Seized. There no reason for keeping Your Money in the House. Money kept in the house is never safe. Money deposited in the SAVINGS BANK OF NEW BRITAIN is always Safe. See what has happened to money kept in the houses of three persons right here in New Britain, as reported by a local newspaper in the last few weeks: $800 STOLEN FROM TRUNK. Anthony Alino. a L Street, Grace of the local police that trunk LARGE ROLL OF BILLS NEARLY DESTROYED. While the firemen were fighting the flames from within the Hanna house, Miss Hanna called to the fire- men that money was bidden in the place. Fireman George Scheyd of Company 1, went to the trunk where the money was hidde and brought out the pocketboc containing a lavge voll of bills, The covering was buwrned and the bills just escaped destruction. boarder at 219 salle reported to department $800 at claims that yesterday morning had his his He taken been stolen from hoarding place. the some time since The lock of the money was Thursday afternoon, trunk was smashed. APPROPRIATED FATHER’S ROLL. Street About a weck ago William A of 313 High reported to the police that his 13-ycar-old sc Leo, took $150 out of his trunk and left town. » The same thing will hapnen to your money if you keep it in the house. Mereover, it earns nothing for you there. Then bring your Meney to the SAVINGS BANK OF NEW BRITAIN, where it will earn something for you every day. In a year $100 will grow to be $104, and larger or smaller amounts in like proportion. This Is the Picture of the Bank to Deposit in. Lock for the Building at 178 Main Street. ASSETS—$10,008,262.91. SURPLUS—$473,611.18 SAVINGS BANK OF NEW BRITAIN AMERICAN BUSINESS of | | | Great | by | endeavor | the | nere, | foreign | policy, OUGHT TO ORGANIZE | British Suggest Reconstruction | Commission for After War Work London, Oct. 30.—(Correspondence Associated the United directors the Press.)—Business men of States are urged the of the American Chamber of Commerce in London to to induce the promptly to Iteconstruction with the America This prop: statement United ore Co cconomic and Great 2 commission, er the the directors of Chamber Commerce contain men judgment poliey and and authority to proceed with similar bodie Brit and other countries with Central Powers. The time has come for the busines communities of the United prepare to formulate an after-war ays the statement. The American chamber is prompted make the recommendation because it believes the establishment of friendly trade relations between English- speaking peoples and the removal of all business distrust and suspicion are essential in and per- manent League of Nations. The chamber also the restrictions which upon America's jritain “have led to lief in one country that they benefit ‘the other”. This the chamber says inevitably raises the. issue with Great Britain. ‘Nothing”, it “would suit Germany better than to breed discord out of them. Nothing this chamber believes more important to the future of the world than good natured adjustment of these issues between the English- speaking peoples.” It is none to soon, ber, for the United St allies to agree upon a equitable disposition material so to reconstitute the stocks depleted by the wastage of war and by the criminal folly of German submarin “Another matte: for joint action tax assessment, chambers statement. does the present situation justified hardship on individuals of both nationalitles but it also practi- cally prohibits the employment of the capital of one country in the enter- prises of the other, and is thus a strong deterrent all co-operation between them the work of re- construction.” One of the first purposes aimed at in the proposed after-war trade reconstruction should be the restoration of private initiative and business says the American chamber. The chamber, however, realizes that Zovernment control over virtually every form of activity cannot be re- laxed immediately upon the end of the war but it asserts that the re- vival of private enterprises is of supreme importance to the future. States te an nmission relations Britain. Congr Americ to deal between ned by American o should strong sound rep- exper- of resentation and of of in de ience matters have 1t once to of at act Great war e a successful that im- points have out been posed trade the be- directly situation, adds is ac s the cham- ates and its plan for the of all raw urgently calling that of dual income the American “Not only work un- to in to be TRANS-ATLANTIC AERIAL ROUTES 1 a Half Is Proposed Time For Trip, Airplane Maker Predicts. London, Oct. the Associated (Correspondence of Press)—“America should | States to to | with | 'KIDNEY TROUBLE DISAPPEARED After One Month’s Treatment With “FRUIT-A-TIVES”. MR. HENRY DATER From the tip of Cape Cod in Massachusetts, to the Golden Gate in California, has come endless praise for the wonderful healing powers of ‘Fruit-a-tives’, or Fruit Liver Tablets, the medicine made from fruit juices and valuable lonics. Right here at home, we have the testimonial of Mr. Henry Dater of 658 First Avenue, Troy, New York, who wrote under date of April 29th, last. “I have been a greal sufferer for years with Kidney Trouble and Constipation. I tried ‘Fruit-a-tives’ about a month ago, and with almost immediate rvesults. The Kidney Trouble has disappeared and the Constipation is fast leaving me”. 50¢. a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size 25¢. At all dealers or sent on receipt of price, by FRUIT-A-TIVES Limited, OGDENSBURG, N, Y, AIRPLANE DELIVERS FOOD T0 SOLDIERS British Air Force Supplies Bel- gians With Thirteen Tons Dunkirk, France, Oct. 30, (Corre- the ated Pre: Thirteen tons of food were carried by the Royal Air and the Belgian to several Belgiin army which had advanced beyond the Houthulst For- st in Belgium, early in the Allied of- fensive in the Belgian sector, and sus tained those troops during the period in which they were cut off from sup- plies owing to impassable rcads. This is believed to be the scale in which supplies were ever delivered to troops by airplane. Continuous rain, shell fire and ar- tillery fire had ground the roads out of existence. Thes were transformed into channels of deep mud. By eve- ning the general in command of the Belgian forces reporied that supplies of food had been exhausted. Would it be possible, he inquired, to send food up by airplane? The answer was that it would and the task was assigned to the Belgian Air Forces and to the Fifth Group of the British Roval Air Force. Their job was to deposit army rations at a point to which nothing but a bird or an airplane could penetrate. It has been done before, of course; the n of Kut received sup- plies by air, and ammunition and the spondence of Assoc Sritish Force Air Forces divi- sions of the garri become wi day and a h when an will see morning after Handley Page tor. recently lHe prophesied that immediately on the declaration of peace it would be possible to begin an air service be- tween Marseille: London with a ingle stop at for an overhaul ing in gasoline. Mr. Page con- will in a come York ich of England and the time will lnglishman in New London paper the publication,” said airplane construc- his its the and and tinued “Constantinople twenty hou If hours, aid “An a sengers, of that i of a non-ston would car: carning load class acrodromes route. ond-class vided every 100 miles. “A minimum service of six chines each way per day could provided for a capital of under £500,- 000. The annual cost would be under £600,000. could be reached . Rome in twelve and ind Marseilles in eight,” mile service could both for a rate but little present in force base my calculations on medium-sized machine making flights of 400 miles. Fach 4,400 vounds of revenu There would first- at each end of the and another in the middle. S aerodromes would be pro- be run and ps in exce: 800 profit, at at mails o the use be ma- be like have been dropped at various places. But it had never been at- tempted on such a scale. The cases of rations were broken up into appropriate parcels and these were packed in sacks of earth to cushion them for the fall: while upon the front the hungry divisions pre- pared tne dumping grounds nd marked them with large white cro: es machines shared the work between them, including squadron of the Fifth Group's seaters. They lifted their loads easily and one by one they dipped to the front—it was the front, too. and cl to {he line—and droppel them ove board to the cheering reception com- mittees below and returned. Only one machine, attacked by n German ma- chine-gun from the ground—it was as close to the front as that—had to land; and by 11 a. m., t} PN erd ported that all units had Some eighty his supplied COAL PRODUCTION REDUCED Prom Various Causcs, Production is Atmost 100,000 Tons Behind Daily Average of Last Year. Washington, Nov. 23.—Production of anthracite coal has been so re- duced number of causes that it is now ne: 100,000 net tons behind the daily production for last yvear it was 64,921 000 tons nounced today in making public figures production for the week endin 16 Production averaged 234,000 net tons daily in comparison with 333,000 mnet tons during the same week of 1917 In- fluenza and the celebration of the armistice signing contributed to the lowering of production, it was The total production of anth for the coal year to date is 63 net tons, the fuel administration an- by a rly av on November nounced today At the same date last j year it was 61.921.000 tons, GLOBE CLOTHING HOUSE Established 1886 Materials, designing, tailoring are the best obtainable in ART SCHAFFNER & MARX Clothing $25 and higher. Fine Negligee Shirt with soft or stiff cuffs $1.00. This is a bargain. We have the Lee Unionall Suits for Children, age 3 to 16, $1.25 and up. 1S HARD T0 SATISFY PEOPLE IN RUSSIA Unstableness of Population Pre- sents Grave Dangers Oct. y ociated Press)—If any Stockholm, (Correspond- ence of the A nation outside leader attempts to set up a stable government in Russia they doubtless will find the mercurial Russians a difficult lot to satisfy. They have plenty of ideas and opin- ions but lack action. “The trouble with they believe opinions are achieve- ments, ' recently said a prominent American who is familiar with Rus- sian affairs. This certainly character- izes many of the Russians who are now waiting in Scandinavi for something to happen in Russia. They are criticizing the Allies for failure to act more speedily in Russia. Their changeableness Is surprising. The very leaders who were loudest in denouncing the Brest peace treaty were soon hobnobbing with the Ger- mans. Paul Milyukoff and other leaders of the extreme right who had pretended great friendship for the Fntente turned to the Garmans in an effort to establish under their protec- tion a monarchy which would father the policies of the Constitutional Democratic party. When it became evident that the Germans would not enter Northern Russia in large number and set up an aristocratic government similar to that of Skoropadsky in the Ukraine, hourgeoiste leaders who had turned from the Entente to Germany, again became friendly toward the Entente and less critical of the failure of the Tinglish, French and Americans to enter Russia in large numbers and overthrow the existing government. Tintente successes on the western front and Fntente support of the Czechs in their phenomenal cam- paigns against the Bolsheviki further softened the heorts of Russian lead- ers of the extreme right. But diplo- mats of the Entente powers stationed in Russia were not deceived by cham- eleon-like n leaders whose aim seems to be the establishment of class government. The of the En- tente in refusing support to the Ho vath government in Sibe: indicates clearly the decision of the Entente to stand aloof from class and party movements and zive the great mass of Russians a chance to work out their will by democratic means. s or Russians is that Russ action To the Board of County Commission- ers of Hartford County: Austrian Singing Robert Mautner, dent, duly authorized Society, hereby apply for titicate to entitle it to have possession and dispense to its mem- spirituous and intoxicating 1i- as an incident to its social life under the provisions of Chap. 296, Public Acts of 19 1t the quarters of said Society located at 195 Arch Street, Town New Britain, Said Society has for its purposes and objects the following: To mote sociability and encourage It ha was organized The Oflicers, Directors, Governors, are as follows: Gustave Knaus: Vice President, ert Mautner; Secretary, Felix mer A copy of its By-Laws, Constitution and List of members are hereto an- nexed Dated at of November, THE Society, act Vice Pres rote of said a Club Cer- in i The ing hy by be quors pro- sing- membership February of 354 1918, Board of President, Rob- Ham- o and 6, New Britain this 13th day 1918, AUSTRIAN SINGING SOCIETY Robert Mautner, Vice President, duly authorized. By ‘03 Copyright 1918 Hart Schaffaer & Marx MANROSS AUTO G OVERLAND AGENCY, Storage and Accessories Repair Work a Special Phone 2227 139 Arch DR. CLINTON J. HYDE THE PRICE YOU PA “I know I ought to take treatnf I have been running down fo last year or two. I am all fagged have no ambition, worry from ing till night, don’t care whet am dead or alive, have lost weighf cannot do the same work I use do some years ago. If I wey strong as I was, I could earn money. I know I ought to treat a good specialist, but I cannot a to pay for the treatment.” You are paying for it NOW, friend, and dearly; yet you dol get it. Let me tell you why. Your health is your capital; working capacity is the interest| are drawing. A good manager never spends than his interest. Should he begin to draw or capital his interest would, of ‘c decrease. And what are you doing? You allow your health to run more and more; therefore, you not work and earn what you use Do you see the point? You are d ing on your capital—which is health—by allowing it to run g and the interest (your wo capacity) is steadily growing sm: You used to make good md now you earn about half of whaf used to get. To make two, three or four dq was play to you; and you had your heart and soul in your wor] These happy days gone. You now barely make a living] find it almost beyond your stre And you shudder at the thou what will happen when the breakdowpn comes. Figure out in dollars and what you have lost already an will be amazed at the amount; what you are going to lose is b estimation. The dollar don’t, is an You spend it for it. Wor want and depri you MIGHT earn! ctual expense to And what do yod 1xiety, despond ation for your fal The dollar you take out of pocket and spend for treatment an experienced specialist is no expense. It is an investment. A eturn you get increased wol ability, higher wages, health and piness at home. Which will you choose? Can you hesitate? \Dr.ClintonJ. Hy Specialist in Nervous Diseases. ASYLUM ST, COR. FOR HARTFORD, CONN. 10 to 12, 1:30 to 4; 7 to 8. Su and Holidays 10 to 1, and Chi