New Britain Herald Newspaper, November 7, 1919, Page 5

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NEW BR DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, | INTIMATES AMERICA | SEE THE NEW VICTORY CRAWFORD RANGE IN MY WINDOW A. A. MILLS 80 West Main Street Telephone 381 Plumbing To Stop Coughing Stop The Tickle Hayes’ Healing Honey Stops The Tickle Heals The Throat Cures The Cough 35¢ per Bottle A Free Box of Grove’s O~Pen-Trato Salve i Opens the Pores and Penetratesl YFor Head Colds, Chest Colds and Croup, is enclosed with every bot- te of Hayes’ Healing Honey. You get the Cough Syrup and the Salve for one price, 35c. Made, Recommended and Guaranteed to the Public by PARIS MEDICINE COMPANY Manufseturers of Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablot: and Grove's Tasteless Chill Tonic. Tinning Heating ON THE RUSSIAN FRONT Gen. Yudeniteh Reported As Extri- cating His Troops From Perilous Position—Reds Claim Victory. Helsingfors, Asso- cifted Press.) learns that Nov. 6, (By the The Esthonian bureau Yudenitch ating has suc- of s, but Gen. ceeded in extri most his troops afier suffering heavy loss that his forces in the region of Gat- china and Luga were completely cut off by Bolshevik cavalry. Bolshevik reports attribute the defeat of Gen Yudenitch in this region to the cutting off of thesc troo A Bolshevik German sources inmates of K ave died of nd fugitives rs newspap. nnish frontier :port received through 630 af the 1,060 prison in Petrograd tarvation. Eight thou- wccording to Helsing- have arrived at the from the Petrograd | district. GIANTS SIGN WILBUR HUBBELL. New York, Nov. 7.—Wilbur Hubbell, | who performed this season for the To- a fine | ronto Internationals, signed a contract with the Giants yesterday. He made reccrd in the minors and show- €d good form against big league hif- ters on the last western trip. KRING ALFONSO LEAVE E NOV: 6, fonso of Spain from Boulogne. (Havas).— arrived here g Al- tonight Special For Tomorrow Big Trimmed Hat Sale High tlere is your opportunity distinctive variety of de ifying high gra better 0 Millincry. values, le millinery of character in a special selling. select wonderful We have never Drop in and bargains in offered a more inspect thesce ofierings before the most stunning models have been chosen, Trimmed and Special . .. Made of Velvet tar value $10.00. Table 2 Tilk vet, in a Lyons and Panne Vel- Unquestionably an oxtra Special cad $4.98 Table 4 Newest Untrimmed Shapes Wide of the newest untrimmed Velvet in smart chin chin, Worth $1,98. line valuae. assortment Table 1 Raady-to- Wear Hats. wide variety of styles and colors, $5.98 Regu- Table 3 Charming Trimmed Crea- tions. Styles becoming to all faces, models to please you as well as your friends. Spocial . $6.98 Values to $10.50 Onc Table of Feaiher Hats Special $2.98 and up. Value more than double, Children’s and Misses’ Hats Also wide assortment of and Plush Tams in Velvet, Felt $1.48 ™ Headquarters for Hat Frames and Millinery Supplies. Goldenblum Millinery Co. 188 MAIN ST., New Britain, Y. M. C. A, Bldg. Branch 863 Main St., Hartford, over Harvey & Lew 3 N B e S TR PR BETRAYED HUN GODE ‘But Bernstoril Brands Zimmer- mann's Charge as False Berlin, the Zimmermann, affairs the war caused a mild sensation du !ing today's session of the national as- sembly commission investigating the war, when he admitted that the Ger- man authorities had been suspicious that their code which had been made known to the American authorities was betrayed to the Entente by the United States government. (The ref- ! erence is to the special code, which the American government permitted to be used in wireless communication with the Washington embassy, a copy of which was furnished to the i stute department.) ! Count Bernstorff, Nov. 7, Press.)—Dr, | secretary (By Alfred forelgn Associated for during when ed re- — | Barding these suspicions, eaid at first that he could not swear that these wireless message had noe been com- municated by the United States gov- ernment to the Entente but later de- clared under oath that he had never known of such treachery. He declared Germany had a difil- cult and dangerous cable route through neutral countries but that messages had been concealed as com- al dispatches. The submarine warfare came into the investigation again today. U-Boat Warfare. Admiral Eduard von Capelle, the advocates of the subma- rine campaign said the U-boats had not been able to get at American transports because each submarine covered a limited circle around Eng- land and the whole ocean could not be patrolled. Various British and Amer- ican inventions, like the ‘listening bpat,” Admiral von Capelle declared, were other things which prevented attacks on transports. Admiral von Capelle did not men- tion mines or depth charges during his recital. He would not admit that the admiralty underestimated the United States as a factor in the war but declared it was known from Eng- Jand's experience with a volunteer army, that the United States could not raise many troops in six montha and it was thought by the time they were trained the war would be over. England Was Weakening. von Bethmann-Hollweg, chan- celler during the greater part of the war, declared he believed in June and July, 1917, that the submarines were so destructive that England was weakening. He said Lloyd George's speech when he ed for “ships, ships,” was probably not recognlzed as a peace opportunity and he assert- ed the same could be said of the speech of Mr. Lloyd George at Glas- gow, demanding “silver and bullets.” What had been the impression re- garding the entry of the United States into the war was then discussed by 1he commission, Von Bethmann-Holl- weg declared that any man who read the Lusitania and Sussex notes of the United States would have known this was inevitable. Dr. Zimmermann was asked whoth- er he said, in a general party mecting, regarding submarine warfare and theo entry of the United States in the war, that American aid militarily would amount to ‘zero, zero, zero,” the for- mer foreign mintster evaded the an- swer. General Ludendorff has been sum- moned to appear before the commis- | sion tomorrow. VHUNGARY RENEWS DEMANDS Tnsists That Bela Kun Be Extradited —He Is Now Directly Charged With Vice one of Dy Plotting Several Murders. Vienna, Nov. 5, (By The Associated Press).—The Hungarian government has renewed its demand for the ex- tradition of Bela Kun, former dictator ¢t Hungary. Distinct charges are lodged against him--that he caused to be murdered certain Hungarian of- ficers in Russia, Rumanian officers who came to Budapest as emissaries, and certain citizens in Trans-Danu- bia who criticized his government. He is also accused of levylng illegal tribute. For Coughé and Colds Try Most stubborn of all coughs, vields to its healing prop- erties. Try this famous old family remedy and experi- ence the comfort it brings to those who use it. The purest |and safest of all remedies it builds up the body and re- | stores vitality at the same /time it is relieving the sys- item of coughs, colds, bron- i chitis, and all forms of throat and lung troubles, The above familiar (rade-mark on every package—all druggists, 60c | and $1.20. ‘\ Holding to a Standard EVEN with its great resources this house cannot expect to meet the full requirements of the public this Fall. ‘What it can dois to hold to the Kuppenheimer standards — so that no purchaser may find a Kuppenheimer Suit or Overcoat affected by the The HOUSE of e doarae mmpiyot || KUPPENHEIMER good woolens. , Its friends will find the same sure touch of style, a still wider choice of models and patterns pro- duced by a house icalous of itssixty years prestige. Uppenheimer A National Tlothes Service The House of Kuppenheimer A Naticno? r Yervice T PR Kuppenheimer Clothes Are Seld In New Britain By CONNORS-HALLORAN “The House of Kuppenheimer Ciothes” ) 248 MAIN STREET NEW BRITAIN, CONN.

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