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NEWiBRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1918 CEDAR CHESTS MAKRE USEFUL PIeicSITNIT'S You wiil see one of the largest and choicest selections OF CHESTS IN THE STATE Among Them Are ’ 4 Boston Store% :,. Allen & Co. HARTFORD. Give Something Useful. Select for your Xmas gift something that is sure to make somebedy happy on Choctonss Day. | Many Beautiful Coats * CRETONNES in all the! —_—— : at $S8HS | wanted colors and shades figured and striped, suitable| for knitting and shopping, Amersican Walnut and Solid Mahogany, Cedar Lined Bags—Also a fine assortment | P B SR e e : Also Solid Cedar in the Latest Designs, With and Without Trays i ion covers and window drap-| [ cotian beitea mota with pockers. This coat it « 850,50 vamue for 815 M| Large, Medium and Smail Sizes. Prices Ranging From $8.00 to $40.00 ! with pockets under a tuck has smart raccoon model shows a belted froat 1t is of dark green velour and Lelted model. A $59.50 value for $45 One trim seam. collar. This ¢ Half a collar. season. taupe style Distinctive coat of wool velour with made in the slender silhouette et coney to 65¢ yd i 9.50. ing, range of prices from 33c | § This SEE QUR N@RTH WHNDGW C %}@RTER SONS OPP. THE PARK o “we 224 MAIN STREET Store Closes Priced $45, value of wool kersey has a stylish collar of Hud- about this coat is the belt which is Charming lines are the distingui lined. 4 50 value for $45. A attractive coat sdn seal, the odd feature one with the side panels. feature of this coat. Satin MUFF BEDS floss filled, big variety styles lined and unlined, some satin lined with pleated and ruffled open-, ings, others with cord and| rings—Use your own old furs and make a beautiful eral oth ¢ \ new coats and have just been received. muff at small cost, we have Four coats of black velvet velour that them from 50c up. These have stunning |||\an§h;L “I;:L_\ stripe ‘ut in Do not miss seeing these coats, they are woaderful. OPP. THE PARK % QOther Smart Coats at Low Prices Store Closes There are several other madels at higher pri These are all s Monday Evenings atin and be sold Collar of yet effective. for $65. skunk A Monday Evenings belted model. s simple DON'T FORGET we carry the largest and finest assort-| ment of Ladies” Aprons in the city, everything that is good in Aprons can be found here. PULLAR How Many X “Years Young?”’ “They that sleep shall never grow old” says the proverb. And with much truth. Many elderly persons take Borden's Malted Milk hot at night to induce restful, re- freshing sleep. Easily digested. Insist on Borden's—at all drug- stores—in square packages oniy. | Everyone Should Drink Hot Water in the Morning Wash away all the stomach, liver, and bowel poisons before breakfast. feel vour best day out, to feel clean inside: no sour to coat vour toague and sicken vour breath or dull your head; no constipa- tion. billous attacks, sick headache, colds, ymatism or sy, acid stomach., vou must bathe on the iIn- side like vou bathe outside. This is vastly more important, hecause the skin pores not absorh impurities into the blood, while the howel pores do, says a well-known physician To keep these poisons and toxins well flushed from the stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels, drink before breakfast day, glass of hot water with a teaspoonful of limestone phosphate in it. This will purify and. freshen the entire alimen- tary tract, hefore putting more food jato the stomach. Get a quarter, pound of limestone phosphate from your pharmacist. It is inexpensive and almost tasteless, sxcept a sourish twinge which is not unpleasant Drink phosphated hot water every morning to rid your tem of these vile poisons and toxi also prevent their formation. feel Hke voung folks feel: felt before your blood, nerves muscles became urated with accumulation of body poisons, be- gin this treatment and above all, keep it up! As soap and hot water act on the skin, sweetening and puri- fving, so limestone phosphate and hot water before breakfast, act on the stomach, liver, kidnevs and bewels. in and day do each o you and T cleansing, bile i cleanse, | like | opossum, $95.00 value. Eight plush $55 value for $3 veral heavy ues for $55. coats, lined throughaut, plush coats, all lined, belted models. attractive belted model. These are INDUSTRIAL LEAGUE OF WORLD PLANNED Would Bloci(_ German Encroach- ments in Foreign Market Rome, Oct. (Correspondence of the Associated Pross)—David Lubin, American delegate to the Internation- al Institute of Agriculture, gested to Italian and Bri ment officials and financiers a plan to block German encroachments in for- eign markets by teaching the back- ward peoples of the world how to manufacture their own goods. It is proposed to send a ccmmission to the United State to advocate the adoption | of this method. Mr. Lubin’s plan is to organize an international industrial league which would establish commercial bases in zones of forcign trade and to teach the people of those zones important niethods of tusiness and ture. It is pointed would eliminate the them has sug- manufac- that this necessity for to purchase manufactured ar- ticles eitier from Germans or from any others. out At a first glance, it would seem in- advisable for the English or Ameri- can exporter to help build up indus- tries in a foreign market,” said Mr. “They would feel that they re, by teaching raw labor to be- come expert destroying their own trade, and even running the risk of { having that labor return to compete in their own home market. I think reflection will show that there is real- I little to fear from the legitimate competitor. In fact, the competitor is, as 2 rule a customer, and the stronger the competition the mo valuable the custom. Both the Uni ed States and Great Britain are com- sh govern- | petitors but they are also each other's | best customer. Neither has much to | fear from Morocco, for instance, as a | competitor, but likewise they have lit- tle to gain at present by her custom. However, if Morocco be converted in- to an industrial center, it would be- come to a customer. “Under the present sample-trunk method of increasing business, there is no business worth while for anybody there, but if Morocco were taught to use her raw labor, she would start to manufacture and, right off, could be sold raw products and machinery. | There would also be a gain on finan- cial investments, on banking transac- tions, on her increased volume of ex- nd imports. 0. once this infensive plan of development were started, we would have a block to the German method we have complained of, which was always dangerous hecause German business was accompanied by polit- ical meddling in the country involved, and her profit carried back home to help build up her armies, and her armics used to bulldoze the world.” “We are under the impression that we are living in the twentieth cen- tury, but from an indmstrial point of | view this is true of only a small part of the world. The backwoods coun- tries are still scratching the earth with a pointed stick, sowing seed by hand, reaping with a sickle, making shoes and clothes by hand. The dif- ference between the old world of the | hand and the new world of the ma- { chine is seen right here in the basin of the Mediterranean where civiliza- tion was born, say two thousand year: Much of this immense terr is still where it was two thou- sand years ago. Why? Because it { hasn't the machines of France, Kng- Jand and the United States. “It is in the interest of the nations fighting Germany to invade hev srmer fields and there set the ma- chines at work, teach their leaders business organization and their work- ers how to become experts,” | ago. tory GARFIELD RESIGNS AS FUEL DIREGTOR | ing the After Christmas Holidays Will Return to Williams College Washington, Dec. 4.—Fuel Adminis- trator Garfield has resigned and Pres- ident V tion. This was announced last at the White House. “It was announced at the execu- tive offices today,” sald the statement, “that United States Fuel Adminis- trator Garfield had tendered his resignation, to take effect at the pleasure of the president, and that the president had accepted the resigna- tion, although it was made clear that the need of domestic consumers will continue to receive the attention of the fuel administration until the win- ter is passed.” The correspondence president and Dr. Garfield was not made public, nor was there any in- formation as to when the resfgnation becomes effcctive or whether a suc- cessor to Dr. Garfield will be named. Tt Is understood that Dr. Garfield plans to remain at his post the re- mainder of the month, but that after the holidays he will resume his duties as president of Williams college. Tt is assumed that he resigned at this time so that the president could act in the matter-before his departure for Europe. The White House statement made it clear that the fuel administration will continue to function, certainly until the end of the winter. Dr. Gar- field himself announced recently that he hoped to be able to remove rice restrictions and possibly the zone reg- ulations on bituminous coal about the middle of this month, but that contiol over the domestic supply of anth cite would be continued until the of the coal yvear, next April 1. son has:accepted his resigna- night between the al IS INDICTED AGAIN Victor L. Berger and Campaign Manager Under New Charges in Wisconsin. La Crosse, Wis.,, Dec. 4.—Victor L. Berger, soclalist congressman-elect of Milwaukee, and his campaign mana- ger, Louis A. Arnold, were indicted by a federal grand jury vesterday on 16 counts involving alleged violations of the espionage act during Berger’'s sen- atorial campaign last March. They are charged with sending through the mails copies of The Milwaukee Leader dated March 6 containing Berger's platform and also cantpaign pamiph- lets in violation of the espionage act. It is alleged they thus interfered with the operation of the military forces of the United States to promote the smgeess of enemies of the country in timejof war; with intent to cause insubordination with dislovalty and mutiny in the military forces and with obstruction of the recruiting and en- listment service of the United States. Berger is to be tried hefore Judze Tandis in United States district court at Chicago under similar indictments Afterward he may be brought here for i trial, WANTS NEUTRALS' CLAIMS FULLY ESTABLISHED, Dec. 3, (By the Associated Widmer of Wofingen in- resolution in parliament today inviting the Swiss government to immediately approach other neu- trals for the purpose of jointly estab- lishing the claims and rights' of neu- tral nations at the peace conference, particularly relative to a future league of nations, Berne, American and sailors here | in | LLONDON OVERCROWDED. Soidiers and Sailors Trouble Finding Accommodations. London, Dec. 4—American ave finding difficulty obtaining sleeping tions and the municipal zovernment has offered quarters the edific courts and in many of public including the law parliament buildings. The American Red Cro! beds for the mc tingent of nearly 600 Ame arrived today and is being quartered at the law courts. Have . soldiers accommoda- | | GONDORF LEAVES PRISON, ! = of the Wire Y Tapy Sing ers Serves Four s in N ¥l Decid; also known wire tappers,” who up several hundred thousand in swindling operations before ! victed in Manhattan, walked Sing prison y being ther rears. H living at Atlantic to get him, Sing, Ossinin Macdon: | “king of d, as Gondorf, cleaned con- out of sterday a free man, a little more than wife, who had been City, sent an Gondorf stopped in Os- sining to have Benjamin Fegan, lawyer, continue the legal battls he started for Gondorf to force the prison after four harles { dollars | 1to | | department to allow prisoners 10 days { off every j work under the ! tion 1 Gondorf is going to car | the e to the court of appeals for the benefit of the prisoners. isoners’ compensa- BICYCLISTS MILES PEDAL IN 56 1,009 HOURS' TIME Madison Square Garden, New York, 4—At 8 the 56th the leading thirteen teams in the Six Day bicyele race had pedalled 1,009 miles, two laps. Boavker hrothers were one lap behind. The 56th hour record is 1,159 miles, five laps, mafie Dec. a. m., hour, delicious. A B R i i 30 instead of 40 for efficient | ‘ment | Skupshtin | the here by Anderson and ‘Dupuy in 1915, i i DENY KING'S DISPOSAL, Monter That Published Stories rin Government Declares Are F: 11 Mont ted a Paris, grin gov denying Nichol: Dec nment the been deposed. —T7 1S s ports’ that King he sta ment h no points out that the constitutipnal existence, and that the only ' body having authority of making any pro- nouncement as to the sovereignty: of state is the national parliament This body, it cannot meet af present, many members con< fined in Austrian prisons living is said, being or USE Victory Bread—save wheat. That’s an import- ant obligation with you now. When you have it toasted—just right, and buttered hot, you’ll find that this “substitute” bread has a lot more flavor. Toasting brings out flavor—every time. It makes tobacco Try Lucky Strike Cigarette—it’s toasted. Openyour package this way