New Britain Herald Newspaper, January 5, 1920, Page 3

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U THAT U AGX AT OUR SPECIALTY Ju Store Closes At 9 oClock! AYD WE WILL BE AT XOUR ¥ Saturday Evening { SERVICE. AUTO REPAIR CO. 115 GLEN STREET. ] SPECIAL SALE Ladies’ Heavy Fleece PFLEASURE CARS i M. IRVING JESTER i _NOW !— ‘ Just when you want them VESTS White ribbed, heavy fleece, veund and high neck, short and long sleeves. Sizes 36 to 44. PANTS To match, :mall, medium and large. ¢ Value 75¢. ON SALE at - 49c Per Garment PULLAR - & NIVEN BENISON (A1 ) ii 430 MAIN STREET HAVE YOUR TRUCKING DONE PROPERLY AND AT REASON- ABLE EXPENSE. tc a daily Freight and La- press Sepvice. New Britain, New Ha. ven and New York. Trucks rented by @xy or hour. Local and Long Distance Moving and Trucking. A. H. HARRIS 1849, I opey | { Garage Tel. 1560. House Tel. 1 N B MANROSS AUTG GO, QVERLAND AGENCY, Storage and Acecessorles, Repair Werk a Specialty. "hune 2287 =227 M delivery and heavy duty trucks, from Y5 to 5 tons. | AMERICAN Balanced Six, Pleasure Cars. . A. M. Paonessa, Prop. astwood Eleczrical Service Station and Garage. starting. Lighting and Ignition Sys- tem Specialists. MAXWELL SERVICE SPATION. R 193 MAIN STREET, Phonec 387-12. “Please il Get Married” Livery Cars for Hire, Day and Nigm StorAge, Supplles and Kepairing. =1 000,000, 139 Arch St. i CITY SERVICE STATION. William of relief. worst of that he through London, Jan. 5.—Sir Goode, the British director | declares that Vienna is the {all the famine-stricken place: {Visited on a recent tour Central Europe. Although more than of foodstuffs, at a cost of nearl have been delivercd in relief since the siguing of the armistice. by far the reatest | share of which. he said. had beey | the United States under | turnished by | the direction of Herbert Hoover | ill so depiorable as | congitions are almost to deseription.” A | distinguished Britsh army officer {who had been in Vienna for some 2,400,000 tans $500,- i Buropean | time, implored him before he left the | God's sake what it is his experi- “For them told Lunche: capital: and tell William American | Austrian go home tlike 1 Siv ence the { her to Like Murderer's Cell. felt upon leavinz Vienna,” said Do, “as if I had spent ten da | in tho cell of a condemned murderer ! who has given up all hope of a ve- prieve. T stayed at the best hotel, ! but I saw no milk and no czss the | whole time T was there. In the bit- {er cold hall of the hotel, once the | gavest rendezvous in Europe, the visi- ht where there used (o be They were more like shadows representatives of the richi npa's world-famous opera housc s pacikicd every afternoon Why? | Women and men go there in order to seep themselves warm and because they have ne work to do. “In my officc T made several | periments at working in overcoat | with blankets for the staff when the thermometer insid was only one d | grece above freezing point. Finally T determined to get wood enough to ! light the one small fire for two davs. | It cost e 970 crowns, which to the | Viennese, is cquivalent to about £30 {or £40. { Do you wonder that the well-to-do people in Vienna are burning theiv furniture to a1t their stoves? | You imagine how the poor live or try | to live 1t is not unusual to sec the | traffic in onc of the main streets which Yleads (o the cemetery held up I rses. Nine-tenths carry the bodi ¢ childven 500.000 Fathcriess In Vienna. in the palace of & | former archduke. | thousands of 1wu|-t. 2n being fed with American Re- I lief food under the control of one i forty. | | than I ex and Children. a3 # Make Appoint- ment for Mani- ocur Facial or Shampoo, INCORFORATED &2 JANUARY WHITE SALE NOW 1IN FPROGREDSS SEMI-ANNUAL SILK PACKET SALE Begins ' Tuesday, January 6th THIS SALE, WHICH 1S A UNIQUE FEATURE AT THIS STORE. 1S MO! THIS YEAR Prices Actually L Th The Semi-Annual Silk Paciket Sale has become an event of great imp this store twice every season for dependable Silks in lengths suitable for at prices far below regular. D Pr sent conditions in the silk market are unlike anything heretofore to offer quantities of high grade Silks, staple as well as novelty, in usable len most every case less than > manufacturers arc asking today for the That indicates plainly enough that women who are real economies. Figured Dcew Kist isamong the packets offered NO SCARCITY OF SILKS HERE—FOULARDS. TAFF GEORGETTE, CHARMEUSE, RADIM, Packaze Al packets displ clerks Tuesday Silks. being in short lensths und theretore not usable in ed where they can be A Naturally, the first day of thc number of packets and all aye of reliable silks thing as represented een by the customer best time (ar 0 no one nced be disapy a e is the Length Material 73-4 vards 40-inch Navy Palka Dot Cheney Foulard 1 3 40-inch Heavy Black Crepc de Chine . 5 yards 40-inch Heavy Black Crepe de Chine . ) 10-inch Taupe Charmeuse, imported .. 1-2 yards 40-inc vard 1 Old Blue Charmeuse, imported -inch Natural Chinese Pongee . -inchv Natural Chinese Pongee 1-2 yards 32-inch Natural Chinese Pongee . . vards Dress Satin s6-inch Chiffon Taffeta ceame 2 yards 36-inch Black Stripe Kumsi Kumsa 6 yards 36-inch Navy Chiffon Tafleta Slack lmported Charmeuse ds 10-inch Navy Crepe de Chine 10-inch Black Crepe dec Metcor inch Cheney Polka Dot inch Navy Pussywillow ards 5 yards 3 S6-inch Black ards vards 40-inch 5-4 yar ards 6 yards & dium 10 Tauy 40-inch Turquoise Figured 40-inch Black Charmeuse . 36-inch Old Blue Chiffon Taffetu D e 4 B B B B 8 R B8 6 p R PR Y R B B8 B yards 5 yards yards seorgette me ving to usec Silks can find . roNGE LS. regulut se. IMPORTANT THAN EVER Wholesale ortance. Our customers furn to Waists, Skirts, Dresses and Suits encountered, but we are still able ths at prices which are in ai ades of merchandise. many opportunities here CREPE ETC. DE CHID stucks are not retur el ! nd sel ion tion made quickly. 4 but we have such a lar And 3 Os hointe We guarantce every- %. Spring Sale Price $20.51 1.9 4 Price 25.59 30.00 16.50 B B D 4 e B B B R A BB 4 tors huddled together in the gloom of | Can | club | tria, | zet to work. and until plebiscit o | | | | fronti | tors ! proportion i distribution will be apparent when 1] . WHAT IT’S LIKE,” BRITISHER’S APPEAL | Former English Officer, Stop pipg in Vienna, the Home of | His Recen{ Enemies, Sends Tragic Cry For Feod And Supplies to Bring Relief to Starving People. young: naval aflicer, whom 1 was proud to recogmize as one of those Americans who did excellent work in the cariy days of thc commission for 1 Belgium. Our own Britis missions, both in Austria and in Hungary. and a number of unofficial British workers ave doing everything possible to stem the tide of distress.” In Serbia alone, Sir William declared, there are 500,000 fatherless children. most of whom arc suffering from hunger and exposurc “It scems to me that you cannotl trifle witl -ation and privation in Central F such as prevails to- day in Vienna without running the risk of a carnival of Bolshevism which would probably not be confined to this continent. I do not want to cry ‘wolf’ and T am rather inclined to think that Bolshevism Ias been used too much as a bogy, but anyone with half an eye must realizc that if. as a ult of apparently legitimate griev- ances, forces of unrest arc loosed the heart of Europe, the whole world the United $ Will be menaced.” Pcace Delays Cause of Trouble. Sir William declaved that “first and foremost among the causes of the vresent situaticn in Central KEurope is the delay in making peace. celv scems to be in the United Kingdom,” he continued. “iselated from the rope by a narrow strip of water and sl e in the United States, iso- lated by the Atlantic oceun, that Aus- Hungary. Bulgar arc still technically at war Allies and, what is more at war with mest of their neighbors. “As one approaches the frontiers one fiids every little wayside station packed with soldiers, bayonets fixed and railway sidinzs congested with ammunition wagons. W nd all the wasteful effect of preparediess for war upon economic and industrial progress, are visualized for miles as onc travels throuzh these countries. Ewrope All Mixed Up- “In many corners of Central Lu- rope today the inhabitanls do not on know their own nationality. Un- umiversal pea ratified, bundary comin are able to can determinc the future of democracies Central Burope will be a patchwerk ¢ ethnelogical dislecation. An oveu protonged armistice, following four vears of war, has knocked awa almost every fundamental prep: D litical, financial and economie the Danube—the main avenue of traffic—fear to send barg out of own territorial ‘waters lest they should be appropriated by their next-door aeighbor. Just as on land the British Temmy 1s the only feguard, for a train of supplies on the Danube on¢ of Admiral Trou bridze's British mine-layers. with lttle British middy in command, 15 the only, guarantee of safe conduct “The other dav, on the Jugo-Sla trains of food suppli r ranged by the Allied Relief and all paid for by ernmeat were cn thew gate starvation in Vienna. At the last moment the Jugo-Slay, government clapped on an export duty of 40 per nt. and refused to permit the trains ions “Etates on way t zo forward unless that tax was paid | in foreign exchange. I ventured to take international law into my own hands and, thanks to the resourceful- ness and intrepidity of a couple of young British Army offi those {rains arrived in Vienna. ‘Trafiic Handicapped. “Another interlocking difficulty between food and transport is stent flocking . sacks of flour, live ducks and all kinds of produce into the towns. in. or any e not only the ins roof of overy railway carriage thronged with this quacking erowd of food specula- Their traflic has assumed such as to make iegitimate railway travelling almost impossible. \What it means in the problem of food as the and o geese In snow ., vou can { tell you that a train of 40 carriages full of these profiteering peddlers can | only carry put into four ordinary railway i truc | hcuse | tend. GOLI' CLUB DANCE. The Sequin Golf ub of Maple Hill will hold a dinner dance at the club on Saturday evening, Januar) 21. fo which a number of local mem- bers and friends are planning to at- A short pr am will nished by the ford B1ISTOT OSE CALL. \lbert Bristol. aged 16 vears, ployed at the llotel Belein. had a nar. row cscape from serious injur car near White Oak. the vouth the fender him. lle was walking close el and evidently of the car saved o the re- | in | es as well as ourselves. | A ! realized | continent of Ku- | a and Turkey ! with the } important. i { | upon . a unti! | of peasants with | agricultural | as much food as could be | be fur- | Tempo quartet of Harts vester- | day. when he fell in front of a trolley | Fortunately for | became confused Nérvdds Pe‘di)le" should use KALPHO and observe its mag- fca cffcct in the treatment of nervous. hess. insommia, brain fag, irritability, mental cxhaustion, nervous h e, loss of memory. etc. KALPHO actson the brain, nerves,musclesand bload cells, rebuilds wornout nerve tissues and is in Aispensable to all mental workers. Con- tains no harmful nor habitforming (drugs At druggists $1.00. Refuse substitutes. “Please f‘ Get Married” attended by Dr. Joseph Walsh, dressed his wWounds, consisting of abra ions about the head, face and 1 n injury to the spine. CASTORIA For Infants and Children In Use ForQver 30 Years Always bears W ihe Signature of Head or chest— are best treated “externally” with VicksVaror “YOUR BODYGUARD" ~ BAKING DAY features the familiar bag of ANGELUS FLOURj in thousands of kitchens whera the most delicious bread is the rule. ‘Thompson Milling Co., Lockport, N. Y. . Sold by Doherty Market, 406 Arch St. who \\_C. L. PIERCE & CO. C. L. PIERCE & (0. Opposite Monument 246 Main St., New Britain The Music Store That Deals in PIANOS VICTROLA Sign of The Leading Store C L P I E R C E & C 0 C. L. PIERCE & CO. ]uick Returns Use Te try to contrcl ralread rates by arbitrarily limiting profits is to put the manager “who makes his profits by eff- cency and econemy om the sarse level as the one whe tries to accomplish the same result through extortionate ~harges. Gomsmission ; Raport t At‘ho sasiom ;. o President—1°11. THE old-time pack-bearer could carry a hum- dred pounds ten miles a day. . The railroad is the modern pack-bearer. " For every employee it carries 2,000 times as much. Back of each railroad worker there is a $10,000 investment in tracks and trains and terminals, with steam and electricity like a great beast of burden. Without this mighty trausportstion mechine the railroad worker eould do no more than the old- time packer. But with it he is enabled to earn the highest railroad wages paid in the werld, while the country gains the lowest-cost transportation in the world The madern raiivoad does ‘as mueh work for half a cent as the pack-bearer could do for a full day’s pay. I'he investment of capital in trensportation and other industries increases production, spreads pros- perity and advances civilization. To enlarge our railroads so that they msay keep pace with the Nation’s increasing production, te improve them so that freight may be hauled with less and less human effort—a constant stream of new capital needs to be atiracted. Under wise public reguiatioz the grawth of railroads will be stimulated, the country will be adequately and ecomomically served, labor will re- ceive its full share of the fruits of good manage- ment, and investors will be fairly rewarded. &Iolgocaztlon of Railway recuffia Those desirsnz srfarmatior. concerning the railroad situation may ob- tain literature by wwiting to The Asseeighion of Railway Epecutives 61 Broadway. N» ¥ork

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