New Britain Herald Newspaper, February 5, 1919, Page 5

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)

Our 42nd Annual Sale Begins Tomor 3 REGARDLESS of the RAPID ADVANCE in all kinds of FOOTWEAR we shall as usual at this time of the year, DOLLARS worth of SHOES, cost of material and labor. AT THIS HOM. RUBBERS Children's Rubbers Misses’ Rubbers Women’s Rubbers Youths’ Rubbers Boys’ Rubbers Men’s Rubbers 48¢ 55¢ 63c 63¢ 75¢ 90c S For Children and Misses Children’s $1.50 Gun Metal Button Sale Price $1.25 Chfldren’s'$2.00 Gun Metal Button Children’s.fléi.zs Patent Button 2 .... Sale Price $1.65 Sale Price $1.75 Children's $1.50 Patent Bumps ST Sale Price 98¢ Children’s $3.50 Brown High Gut Lace ..... Misses’ Button Misses’ and Pat. But. .. Misses’ Pumps Misses’ Cut Lace Sale Price $2.75 $2.50 Gun Metal Sale Price $1.98 $3.00 Gun Metal Sale Price $2.25 $2.00 Gun Metal Sale Price $1.39 $4.00 Brown High Sale Price $3.00 All Sales Strictly for Cash REPUBLICANS ARE | WINS GREAT HONORS | Norman Hapgood Thinks Party Is Helping League of Nations New York, Feb. 5.—In an address today at the opening of the Atlantic Congress for a League of Nations, Norman Hapgood, President of the League of Free Nations Association, paid a tribute to Ex-President Taft and other Republican leaders who, ' he said, were helping to protect the’ country from having the questions connected with the League of Nations turned into party politics. “A member of the British Parliament,” he said, “has given money to found a chair Cof international relations in one of the British Universities to be named after President Wilson. I think it would be an excellent plan for some ch American to establish a chair of international relations in an American University and name it after Mr. Taft.” Most of Mr. Hapgood's speech was EECHANS PILLS Keep the stomach well, the liver active, the bowels regular, and the breath will be sweet and healthy. But let poisons accumu- late in the digestive organs, the system becomesclogged, gases form in the stomach and affect the breath. Correct these conditions with Beecham’s Pills. They promptly regulate the bodi- ly functions and are a quick remedy for sourstomach and Bad Breath Bargest Sale of Any Medicine in the Werld, Sold everywhere. In Boxes, 10c., 28e. M jon the | ment on principle was strong, but the | i feel your best, ! for one week. | from the stomach, i cleansing, | sone phosphate on an empty stomach | is wonderfully Invigesssing. | Phate will cost very little at the drug i cleanses, | complexion pallid, are assured | one week of inside-bathing will have necessity for having the ! League of Nations possess legislative powers. ‘Almost every day,” he said “some development at Paris shows that it is impossible to think out any plan which will be static. From the very beginning the more radically- minded adherents of the League idea have been afraid that this League would be a mere protection of the status quo in various countries. They Thave been afraid that this League might have a record something like that of the Holy Alliance. This argu- argument from experience in the last two or three weeks is stronger still. President Wilson has clarified the situation by saying that in his study of the various problems growing out of the war he finds many which simply cannot be answered all at once. They demand continued attention. This, in itself, means the power to legisiate, that is to say, the power to use judgment on particular situations | as contrasted with judicial power HAVE ROSY CHEEKS AND FEEL FRESH AS A DAISY—TRY THIS! Says glass of hot water with phosphate befors breakfast washes out polsons. To see the tinge of healthy bloom in your face, to see your skin get clearer and clearer, to wake up with- out a headache, backache, coated tongue or a nasty breath, in fact to day in and day out, just try inside-bathing every morning Before breakfast each day, drink a glass of real hot water with a tea- spoonful of limestone phosphate in it as a harmless means of washing liver. kidneys and bowels the previous day’s indigestible waste, sour bile and toxins; thus sweetening and purifying the entire alimentary canal before putting more food into the stomach. The action of hot water and lime- It cleans out all the sour fermentations, gases and acidity and gives one a splendid appetite for breakfast. A quarter pound of limestone phos- store but is sufficient to demonstrate that just as soap and hot water sweetens and freshens the skin, so hot water and limeston phosphate act on the hlood and in-| ternal organs. Those who are sub- ject to constipation, bilious attacks, | acid stomach, rheumatic twinges, also those whose skin is sallow and that them both looking and feeling better in every way. | tralize the acids in urine FOR BOYS AND YOUTHS $4.00 Tan $5.00 Tan Boys’ $3.00 Gun Boys'" $3.00 Gun Youths’ $2.25 Gun Youths’ $2.50 Gun Youths’ $2.25 Gun Boys’ Boys’ Storm High cut Storm High cut Metal Metal Metal Metal Metal . Youths’ $3.00 Tan Storm High cut Sale Sale Sale Sale Sale Sale Sale Sale Price Price Price Price Price Price Bluchers Button Bluchers Bluchers Button FOR MEN Men’s $4.00 Gun Metal Bals Men’s $6.00 Tan and Black Bals . Men’s $6.00 Calf and Kid Bluchers Sale Men’s $8.00 Dark Tan Bluchers Men’s $6.00 Tan Calf Oxfords . ... Men’s $5.50 Black Calf Oxfords . Sale Men’s $9.00 Tan and black Oxfords Sale Men’s $4.00 Gun Metal Oxfords which would be merely applying prin- | some considerable time in the light ! probably also have to address meet- | ciples already formulated to disputes as they might arise. “Suppose President Wilson wins on his point that the German colontes ought to be managed by the League of Nations. Tha one point means not only the creation of a Leaguc but it means that the functions of the League would be legislative. There might be one country authorized to represent the League in a particular case, and there might be a general eexcutive body acting for the League between its sessions, but there would certainly have to be representatives from the various countries who would | | meet from time to time and settle the developing aspects of such big ques- tions as the control of colonies would involve. “T hope that after this point is won, about the control of the colonies, other steps similar in prin- ciple will be taken, such as the inter- nationalization of harbors and rivers | which are essential to the economic life of several countries at once. This | will be applying to new problems the method that has worked so well in the case of the Danube and the Scheldt. If the Rhine and the Vistula, for eaxmple, should be international- ized the League of Nations would have added to its functions the supervision of the workings of any such plan, and no doubt the modification of it for SALTS IS FINE FOR KIDNEYS, QUIT MEAT Flush the Kidneys at Once When Back Hurts or Bladder Bothers— Meat Forms Uric Acid. No man or woman who eats meat regularly can make a mistake by flush- ing the kidneys vcccasionally, says a wecll-known authority. Meat forms uric acid which clogs the kidney pores so they sluggishly filter or strain only part of the waste and poisons from the bicod, then you get sick. Nearly all rlieumatism, headaches, liver trouble, nervousness, constipation, dizzine: sleeplessness, bladder disorders come from sluggish kidreys. The moment you feel a dull ache in the kidneys or your back hurts, or 1f the urine is cloudy, offensive, full of sediment, irregular of passage or st- | tended by a sensation of scald'ns, zet | abcut four ounces of Jad Salts from | any reliable pharmacy and take tablespoonful in a glass of water be- fore breakfast for a few days and your | kidneys will then act fine. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia and has been used for gen- erations to flush clogged kidneys and stimulate them to activity, also to neu- so it mno longer, causes irritation, thus ending bladder disorders. Jad Salts i{s inexpensive and can- ! not injure; makes a delightful effer- vescent lithia-water drink which all regular meat eaters should take now and then to keep the kidneys clean and the blood pure, thereby avoiding serious kidney comiplications. German | aj ... Sale Sale Sale Sale Sale consisting of lines to be discontinued and broken lots. THIS IS LIKE FINDING MONE’Y(' E OF GOOD SHOES YOU WILL FIND REDUCTIONS THAT ARE REAL. Th Price $3.00 $3.85 $2.35 $2.25 $1.75 $1.98 $1.75 Price $2.49 $3.00 $4.75 $4.75 $6.00 $4.50 $4.00 $7.00 $3.00 "BOOTH'S BLOCK NEW BRITAIM, of experience. |~ “Tnis tegtsiative need has been the | 1ast for the general public to fix the mind upon. The Hague had made it more or less familiar with the judicial function, but the Hague was a court with nothing to enforce its decrees. Next came a realization, therefore, of the need of putting some kind of force behind the court. Every country. in its own affairs, finds the need not only of courts and executives with power but of legislatures to relate this machinery to the public; to give to the courts the enactments which they are to apply in cases of contro- versy. A country which has no legi lature is not a free country, and a | League of Nations which had no legislative functions would not be a League of Free Nations." Mr. Hapgood also spoke about the situation as affected Dby the United States senate, “Mr. Wiilso! he said, doubtedly find it necess: y to remain in this country long enough not only to dispose of those general matters re- quiring his attention in Washingto but also to make clear to the senat many things that of the mem- bers do not unders It going to be difficult to two-thirds of that body to take a gr new step in ad- vance. Some of the reactionary dem- | ocrats will refuse to follc dent, and it will be nece a large percentage of the more oper minded republicans in order to give the two-thirds majority required b fore the League of Natlons can come effective as far as this country | is concerned. I think Mr. Wilson will “will un- is Fresh Fruit Desserts—2¢ Jiffy-Jell desserts, rich and fruity, cost but 2 cents per serving. Each package contains a vial of fruit essence, made from condensed fruit juice. Add boiling water, then this flavor, and you have a fresh-fruit dainty. i Compare Jiffy-Jell with | the old-style quick gela- i tine desserts. You will find it five times better, yet it costs no more. Millions now enjoy it. | JiffyJell 10 Flavors, at Your Grocer’s 2 Packages for 25 Cents | taking life, that is to | tirely new to diplo | tween i principles ings in some of the large cities in or- der to stimulate the public to take an actjve interest, as many of the sena- tons will have their views determined by what they hear from their con- stituent “I have pretty good sources of in- formation from Paris, and I know that a month ago there was much dis- couragement among our representa- tives because of the lack of support in this country for the president’s ef- forts. That situation has improved in a month, but it is still true that the president is wetting much more en- thusiastic support from the populace in other countries than he is from his own public. The reason for this is surely that the European peoples have been through such an agony that they are turning with appealing hope to that statesman who has seemed to put most faith in an entirely new of , a The son way w3 Euro- tru as they pean populace do because he has for more than four been co-ope: vears to ethical and ative principles to the front, to make them do in the future the work that distrust and hostility and excessive nationalism have done o badly in the Thus the United ates is leading in the attempt to ap- ply to the whole world those princi- ples of co-operation that Washington and a few other leaders induced 13 suspicious colonies to undertake over \ hundred years ago. It took several discouraging years of effort to et the colonies to give up their habits of hos- tility and exaggerated individuality, and we have only a few weeks to win a similar point for the relations be- nations. The victory we are trying for is a victory for American in their broadest aspect. These principles are illustrated not only by what we accomplished after the War of Independence, but by an enlightened conception of the Monroe Doctrine. The Monroe Doctrin meant that the United States was terested in preventing warlike compli- cations from getting started on this continent. Our participation in the deliberations of Paris means that we are now interested in preventing war: like complications from getting sta od anywhere., This hemisphere in the time of Monroe was the only danger point for us. Today we are just likely to be drasged into a war start- ing in Serbia as we are into a war starting in Brzil." struggling a CRAP-SHOOTERS ARRESTED. | Four Youngsters Caught by the Police “Rolling the Bones.” Four small hoys were arrested Officer Flynn in the doorway Booth’s block yesterday afternoon for shooting craps. The boys had two sets of “bones” and were rolling them on newspapers in the hallway. Th of the boys peddle newspapers and were disposing of their earnings by shooting craps. of Women's Women’s $7.00 Kid Lace Women's $7.50 Brown Calf Women’s $7.00 Kid Lace Fawn top Sale Women’s $7.00 Kid Lace Grey top Sale Women’s $8.50 Brown Kid Women’s $5.00 White Canvas Lace Sale Women’s $6.00 Brown Calf Oxfords .00 Patent .Butto and Lace . ... 0 ve a0y Dale Women’s $6.50 Brown Kid Lace . Sale Women’s $7.00 Gun Metal Lace .. Sale e Sale o Price $1.49" Price $1.49 Price $4.50 Price $4.25 Price $4.98 Price $4.98 Price $4.98 Price $4.98 Price $6.50 Price $2.49 Lace . Sale Lace . Sale Sale Price $4.50 For a Few Days Our Store Will Be Closed from 12 to 1:30 and Monday and Saturday Evenings from 6 to 7:30. Edward Pitts, of Hartford, the ordnance office P. and F. Corbin's. n Hartford yesterday when he tempted to dispose of the bicycle. bation officer. ANNUAL. of the CITY MISSION The annual meeting chapel of the First church. outlined by the be Noises. was in chambers this morning for stealing a at Pitts was arrested at- He was turned over to the Hartford pro- New Britain City Mission will be held to- Congregational The work of the mission will superintendent, Miss Bartlett, and there will be exer- cises by children from the two sewing LEONARD FAR OIL Relieves Deafness, Stops Head Noises Nine out of ten cases of Deafness and Head Noises aro caused by eatarrhal mucus (matter) in the Eustachian Tube, which connects the nose and the ears. Leonard Bar Ofl removes the mucus, passages of the head, and the result is improved Hearing and relief from Head It Is not put in the ears, but is “Rubbed in Back of Bars” and inserted schools, the housekeepimg class the Italian Sunday school. STEINER—LEUPOLD. The wedding of Miss Elizabeth 14 pold and William Steiner took pl Monday evening at 6 o'clock at , South church parsonage, The coul were attended by Miss Ruth Lehn] and Gustave Winger. The bridegro was discharged from the Navy a weeks ago and his bride was formg principal of the Osgood Hill school morrow evening, at 7:45 o’clock, in the Ham and eggs for breakfast. your ham where you will but get cggs at Russell Bros. 55c a dozen natives. Russell Bros, 301 Main —advt. opens up the tube and the other air in_the nostrils, and “Common Sense Di- rections for Care of Hearing,” which s companles each bot- tle, tells you exact- | 1y how to take care | of your own ocase. Do not be misled by substitutes or imitations. The only “EAR OIL” | . Leonard Ear Ofl. It'is the | original and has been on the market since 1907, and every year it has relioved ‘Imk for this sign in Drug Store Windows It is a LEONARD EAR OIL AGENCY hundreds ot people of you have alreac their Ear Troubles. No matter how long you have been deaf, nor how deaf you are or what caused your deafness, or how many things 3 tried which have failed to relieve you, Telieved many such cases as your own ‘Leonard Ear Oil has Why not you? / Subscribed and sworn to before me this 13th day of 1918. Joseph Braman, Notary Public No. 221, City and County of New York. A Testimonial That Has Been Sworn to my hearing completely restored by Leonard Ear Oll, I feel it an obli- gation to let you and others know what it has done for me. My deaf- ness was caused by catarrh and I N oytaber, had been growing worse for years. sidering giving business because of my deafness. It was necessary well in my regular work using less than two Leonard Ear Ofl 1 hear ss well as ever and am still on my job Sincerely STAFFORD, 531 West 145th St., New_York City. 11-13-18 Dear Mr. Leonard—having had had become so deaf I was con- up my regular for me to hear After bottles of yours, JOSEPH A For sale in New Britaln by The Dickinson Crowell’'s Drug Store, 254 Main St. Proof of Success above druggists. This Signature on Yellow Box and an Bottle 169 Main St., and Drug be given you by the Co., will o Manufscturer Sufte 605, 70 Fifth Ave, New York Oity

Other pages from this issue: