New Britain Herald Newspaper, April 4, 1919, Page 14

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, APRIL 1, 19190 - ND ECoNowy — 88t year I purchased a standard Of shoes, and in sixty days the e worn through. I had them d with Neslin Soles—which me siX months in the same that wore out the other soles 0," writes E. A. Lancaster- of ster & Company, jewelers, peville, Tenn, . Lancaster’s experience with in Soles is not unusual. Millions Dple can testify to their long wear onomy. To reduce your shoe hse, buy Neslin-soled shoes. You et them in many styles for every Iber of the family. blin Soles are created by Science comfortable and waterproof as as long wearing. Good repair carry them. They are made e Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co., in, Ohio, who also make ‘Wingfoot 3 g\iamn(eed to outwear all eels. leolin Soles Sark Roe. . IF MOTH fng these S ONLY ENEW days how many children are plaining of headache, feverishness, Bach troubles and irregular bowels. If fieis only knew what Mother Gray’ $t Powders would do for thelr ch no family would ever be without them. powders are so easy and pleasant to and so effective in their action that fhers who once use them always tell mothers about them. Sold by drug- everywhere. KNOCKS OUT PAIN 'THE FIRST ROUND omforting relief from pain makes Sloan’s the World’s Liniment This famous reliever of rheumatic goreness, stiffness, inful s, neuralgic pains, and most ler external twinges that humanity | uffers from, enjoys its great sales | ecause it practically never fails to ng speedy, comforting relief. Always ready for use, it takes little O peneirate without rubbing and produce e Clean, refreshing. At all drug A large bottle means economy. Sloan’s Liniment Kills Pain 30c, 30c, $1.20. 0 Need to Be-;l:l_li;l, Scrawny or Sailow it you are thin and want to be imp; if you have wrinkles in your e that you'are not proud of; if the n is sallow or subject to pimples blackheads, take Mi-o-na stomach blets for two weeks and notice the nge. The majority of the thin people are n because the stomach does not jform its duties properly. It is not reting sufficient of the natural Eestive juices and in consequence | es not extract from the food enough | tritive matter to nourish every part the body. Mi-o-na stomach tablets are intend- to build up the stomach so that it il act properly and extract from the d the elements necessary to form s 1t you are thin patment of Mi-o-na stomach tablets fhey are small, easily swallowed and p sold on the guarantee of money k if they do not overcome chronic Higestion, ecute or chronic, stop pmach disturbance, belching, heart- rn, sour stomach, and any after ner distress, [For sale by the Clark & . and all leading druggists. try two weeks’ Brainerd =7 Cuticura <% Promotes /A Hair Health 7 [y o g i g b NONINE TAKES THAT AWFUL KICK OUT OF A HARD COLD AND RENDERS IT HARM- LSS, IT IS THE GREAT FAMILY REMEDY ¥OR ALL | FORMS OF COLDS AND A RE- MAREKABLE PREVENTIVE FOR THI: MORE DANGEROUS THROAT D LUNG COM- PLAINTS OF ADUV/ AND CHILDREN % Have a bottle of Iinonine handy all times—there’s no telling what stant it will pe needed, especially { been visiting Honolulu for some y | Dodecanese for coughs that threaten bronchi- Nothing qnite cquals Linoninc 0¥'S F; SED Emy; LINONT AL e Eyesight Specialiss und Manufacturing Optician, A. PINKUS, EXAMINATIONS ARE FREE oken Lemses Duplicated. 306 Main St ‘Phone 37C Satisfaction Guaranteed. IUgEISte— and > e, or Hartman, who was one of the delegates to the National Assem- bly. (c) Underwood & Underwood. MISSIONARIES WILL HOLD GENTENNARY Wil Be 100 Years on Sandwich Islands Oct. 28, 1919 Honolulu, April 1. (Correspondence of The Associated Press.)—The one hundredth anniversary of the de- parture from Boston of the first mis- sionaries from the United States to Captain Hunnewell, sailed from Bos- ton for Hawail. The vessel anchored at Kailua, Kona, Island of Hawaii, on April 5, 1820, and the landed that day to begin their work of civilizing the natives and convert- ing them to Christianity. The one hundredth anniversary of that date, April 5, 1920, also will be celebrated under tho auspices of the Hawaiian Board of Missions. planned to have On October 23, this year, it is the Sandwich Islands, as they were then known, will be celebrated here | messages between the Hawaiian | Board of Missions and the Board of | Foreign Missions of Boston, which | sent the first missionaries to Hawaii | 100 years ago. Those who arrived in the Thaddeus were Asa Thurston and | Hirman Bingham, ordained mission- aries, with their wives; Daniel Cham- berlain, Thomas Holmes, Samuel Whitney, Samuel Ruggles, Elisha Loomis and four Hawailans—Hono- 1il, Hopu and Kanul—who had re- on October 23 mext. On that date in the year 1819, the brig Thaddeus, ceived some education at Cornwall institute, and George Humohumo, son of Kaumaulii, the king of the Island of Kauai. The Hawaiians had been | en {o the United States on trading Trad and whalers had s the arrival of the missionaries, is from latter event that n Hawali dates. descendant misslonaries, lives He is the publisher Pacitic Commercial an interchange of Hawail on beforc but it the mode of Lorrin hurston, of one of the firs in ITonolulu now. of the Honolulu Adver tt history a | DODECANESE ISLANDS WANT TO BE SUBJECTS OF GREEC London, April 4—Residents of the Islands reccently a in London with an appeal to President Wilson, Premier Yloyd George Premier Clemenceau of France thelr 12 islands in the Aegean which were controlled by the Turks, be reunited with thelr mother coun- try, Gree Dr. Skevos Zervos and Paris Rou are the ners of petition as “the execu of the inhabitants cane: i “The Dodec the petition where Herodotus, the father of and Hippocrates, the father of medicine, have seen the day; the Dodecanese, which have reared and inspired so many poets, physicians and philosophers, fervently you to kindly inter their reunion with plead af the pe their deliverance the ve of committes the Dode- tnese," in favor and Aference ot to for, WNourishment in every golden granule ¢f Grape-Nuts The solid meat of barley and wheat. No ralse ln price Qluring or skice the war missionaries | | d; ‘i holme project and | thitt | request | T0 SUFFERERS FROM EGZEMA if you have eczema, your prompt use of Poslam may mean all the dif- ference between immediate comfort and a long periad of itching distress. ake the ea pleasant way to quick rclief. Apply Poslam right on the raw places that burn and itch. Feel a burden lifted as the skin is soothed and pacified. You will know then to what a high state of efficiency thls { reliable remedy has been brousht. i Poslam is concentrated. Short treat- ment suffices for most minor troubles. Sold everywhere, For free sample | write to ; Laboratories, 243 West 47th St. Poslam Soap, medicated with Pos- Jam, should bhe used if skin is tender and sensitive {0f This Number at Least Ten Were Successiul April 4.—Thirty-nine at- tacks upon submarines were made b { Tondon, the American naval air force in the re considered s a war and ten of them in some manner suc summary of American naval aviation | prepared at headquartcrs here. { When the United States entered the I ed of only thirty about essful, 84 i war the navy boas anything as signed | officers who knew flying. When the armistice the force was composed of 1,600 offi- | cers and 15,000 men, according to the | report. Trial and discouragemenas of the United States naval alv force in the war are enumerated ot along with “occasional” triumphs. Va- rious causes are assigned for lack of effectiven but many of the troubles are said to have been overcome and the service ready to execute what had been expected of it when the arm tice intervened. The summary of a tual operations is interspersed twith and the difficuity in training them, shortage of machines, stories of the receipt of machines from the TUnited States without propellers, without magnetos, defective parts and lastly of the failure of Italian machines for night-bombing for which they were {intended. The United States had ( turned to Ttaly for planes when ma- chines were mnot delivered America quickly enough. One of the biggest plans of the service was the “northern hombing project” for the co-operation of Americans with the British in al- most continuous bombing of subma- rine bases on the Belgian coast. A great many hindrances arose, some of them shown in the summary be- ing: Lack of machine: terial, lack of properly sonnel, both pilot necessity of compl with the Royal Air ter of supplies of cessity of ferrying Italian machines from Milan, Italy, to the north of France. Neither the night nor the were operating efficiently of the armistice, in the those who compiled the trained per- and enlisted men, ted negetiations Force in the mat- all sorts 'and ne- y wings at the time opinion of summary. It was planned to have 12 rons, six day and six night. however, was reduced to eight it was found that the United army could not deliver the planes required. American nachines with Liberty motors were tc be used for the day work and a contract was made with the Italian government to deliver thirty, §00-hoise power afr- | planes for the night work. The Ital- ian machines, it is stated. proved | wholly unfit for night bombing wor W is considered by the Ameri- { can navy the most successful aviation | operation resulted from the Killing- This Wi n agree- ment which Fngland was to fur- { nish seaplanes and 50 lighters i and the United States was to provide 40 seaplanes and 30 lighters by March 1, 1918 for offensive work in Heligo- {land Bight. The British were success- | fully doing similar work from their { station at Felixstowe. pproximate- Iy 1,000 Americans were sent to Kil- lingholme to train and assist the | British while awaiting the arrival of | the American planes. By uly 1, six ! American planes were assembled and ! the British turned ove: the station to [ the Americans. Tt was necessary to leave I'ritish planes, however, “owing to the faults of the first American { machine It is reported that the American propellers wore faulty, radi- ators leaked and that it was July 20 before the first wholly American pa- s undertaken en under these handicaps, how- the American pilots kept after ubmarines and the Killingholme ion had several attacks accredited to it. No case is recorded of where it was known a submarine was sunk | but even with its very efficlent | plane patrol *he Royal Air Force was given credit for sinking only one sub- | marine during the four years and a | halt of war. A verdlet of “probably | serlously damaged” was accerdited to American pilots of Killingholme by the RBritish admiralty. squad- This. when States | by 50 ever. i | | | ! MINERS GOT $6 A DAY. | Greensburg, Pa., April 4-—The | highest scale of wages ever pald in ‘Westmoreland county was in force in 1918, the miner's average daily pay being about $6, an increass of nearly $2 over 1917, The averages yearly earning of miners for 1918 was $1,800, in some instances this sum reaching $3,000. While $150 was the monthly average, many miners drew as hizh | as $400. some length | accounts of the lack of trained pilots | from 1 lack of ma- | sea- | securing to our 1 These men have taken the task of a fitting national memorial ate president. They are: | H. O. Wallace; 2, Gifford Pinchot; R. J. W: 4, H. L. Iches; 5, L. Wrigh Russell Cole i 13 sen. Wood; 9, Elihu Root; . Akeley; 11, Rector Manning, y: 12, W. W. Sewall; 13, J. . Goodrich, governor of Indiana; 14, L. Beeckmai, governor of Rhode Island; 15, W. White 18, John T. 10, C. King; 17, Will H. Ha; 18, R. (erman Berlin, WANT AMNESTY FOR | SUBS’ COMMANDERS Paper Suggest This as Part of Treaty April 3 (Correspondence of )—Demand that contain German the 1use peace ing ammnesty rine commanders for the they committed in the ruthle ub- | marine warfare is voiced by the All- cemeine eitung. The Berlin news- »aper evidently expects that the Al-| lies will demand the surrender of all | German submarine and {o present an argument to show why these men should not be punishsed | for the crimes they committed on or | ca under the seas. The paper also gives warning {hat any attempt to them responsible for their murder (e a o innocent persons might fan the flames | of international hatred. “These captains,” erts the news: »er not responsible for the of submarine warfare or for on the unrestricted under- campaign. They were acting within the scope of {heir orders and the Entente could not possibly hops to defend the position that these men were responsible when they simply ed out in a professional way the ctions they had received. the Entente is determined the responsibility for the srar to ubma- outrages “were conduct rying commanders i il place T H E THE STRAIGHT-UP SHOULDERS SHOWN [N THE SKETCH ARE MADE COMFORTABLE AND PRACTICAL BY THE APPLICATION OF THE BELL-DELL SLEEVE. EASE IS ESSENTIAL THROUGH THE SHOULDER AND BACK. TO MANY MEN IT IS MORE NECESSARY THAN STYLE, THOUGH FASHION PARK HAS ADMIRABLY COMBINED BOTH IN THE GAMELY NORFOLK. R. i | I i | | | { hatred i understanding and to ! PROMINENT MEN WHO MAKE UP ROOSEVELT PERMANENT MEMORIAL COMMITTEE * S T A e Motten; 19, T. A. Marlov Kingsl 21, I. R. Kirkwood; Theodore Roosevelt, Jr.; 23, Thompson,” chairman. (¢) Underwood & Underwood. on theu proceedings, would be the 1d before this dict members of tt will tain persons a ject of crimi n international tribunal only competent court we gladly await the “¥ngland and other Entente, the su however, fully pond serve as a f be followed peace to r If this do very would might sion of the conclu new the flame of to be a peace of reconciliation, the to be concluded must contain the traditional amnesty clause.” after is IT IS SUITABLE FOR SPORT OR BUSINESS WEAR AND PRESENTS ITSELF 70 ADVANTAGE IN PLAIN FABRIC EFFECTS. READY-TO-PUT- ON CUSTOM SERVICE WITHOUT THE ANNOYANCE OF A TRY -ON | The Wilson o City Hall

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