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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, B THE MENTER COMPANY—CU €. YOUR THANKSGIW A ARE READY; MEN Don’t wait another day. Thanksgiving is aln get all the good clothes you want to wear at Than! enormous purchasing power our large chain of st are able to sell at cash store prices and make the tern the easiest in town. Don’t hesitate to come; credit is here and we extend it to all willingly and cheerfully. MEN'S OVERCOATS | Mer'sand Young ey i Men’s Overcoats " varicty an In Black, Gray and Mixtures. j s Make no mistake men; we will sell in Iceland Fox, $1 Sizes from 35 to 44. you a fine overcoat at as low a price $15; Marmot, $18 Value up to 315 us any cash store and our variety is Red Fox, $20 Special for Saturday ono now on easy payments. $18, $20, % Boys’ Overcoats, $2.50 ~and $3.50, Sizes from 12 to 17. Value from $5 to $10. Each and every garment will be guaranteed in every respect. Don’t Miss This Opportunity This is a money saving chance to buy a warm winter overcoat. | NEW YORK $10, $12 & $15 SAMPLE SHOP 357 MAIN STREET Are You Hunting for Bargains? Here’s Your Chance Bargains in Odds and Ends of X, $ $10; Grey Goat, $10- November Sale of Men's Sults Every man who has cver bought a suit herc knows that no greater values can be found anywhere. New styles, patterns and weaves Just In. $12, $15, $18, $20 and $25. ALTERATIONS FREE We ailter all wom- en’s and men’'s gar- ments free of charge and GUARANTEE A PERFECT FIT. Expert alteration workers only. MEN'S SHOES MEN’S HATS WOMEN'’S SUITS, D Our wise buyers in New York have some beauties, They know values and chain of stores, That's why our tract women who appreciate quality and ship as well as style. SUITS $10 TO Waists The newest and smartest designs in Charmeuse, Lace, Satin and Silk. $2.50 TO $6.00 Sweaters New lot just in, snappy styles, all colors. $1.00 a weck. $2.50 TO $1.00, Style, Comfort, Durability and Fit. Pay as yYou wear, $3.00 to $5.00 New Styles, Soft and Derby, Good values. Charge it. $1.00 to $3.00 DRESSES $7 YOUNG MEN’S BALMACAANS Snappy designs that will pleasc the dressy young fellow, and values no store can surpass. - Pay a Little Each Pay Day $15, $18, $20 B —— e — BOYS’ OUR BUYER OVERCOATS Get the boy a Zood warm over- coat for winter and pay in easy payments, g ¢ who lives in New 3 We are opening charge accounts Tt e with new people every day, We hips us ly the arrange to divide your payments to e suit your paydays. Come and sce us. | SNSRI SA very latest styles. | ana limousines that once graced the boulevards of Paris are now employed in this service and many of them are driven by their wealthy owners, belong is submitted to the most rigid military discipline. ‘We have threc roll calls a day. We do not sleep at home. No one quits the garage TRUST YOU We clothe the whole Don’t hesitate to LOVELY Our showih family. who rank as privates and are com- rades with professional chauffeurs. They wear uniforms marked with an “A" on the arm. Little is heard of their individual deeds, which led the Figaro to say their service was “obscured.” Tn reply the Figarc $4.50 to $12. during hours of service. “The other day, about nine in the | morning, the quartermaster entered | the garage. Everyone was at his| post. The machines were all equipped, | tanks filled, provisions in the ham- pers, carbines ready—everything there | printed on its first page a letter from [to show that we don’t just merely | one of these daring drivers, a Paris | make a ‘run around the lake.’ lawyer, that speaks for itself. It All Answer “L" — { ¥ 'r 3 Yy L Vi follows: * “They want a car!’ crled tho quartermaster. ‘Wha can go?’ re—— LONDON,” SAY GERMANS was chosen. A turn of the crank and the car was gone. Where? No one Kaiser’s Forces Circulate Report of lnvasion of England. to secing these machines depart to Associated come here. Make your- self at home. We extend credit to all willingly and ieerfully, Accept our invitation and come now for stylish winter clothes at cash store prices. CHILDRE! An exte ment, all col 3.00 TO EXPLOITS REMARKABLE Service of Daring Drivers to Allies is “Obscured.” Many Have Fallen. “ ‘Obscured’! The word is quickly said. There is too much ‘obscured.’ | And one has reason for being so who ! is forced to remain far from the front. Thus the automobile service is obscured. But the Figaro ought to say that in, their obscurity the au- | tomobilists know how to die and that numerous, indeed, have been those who already have fallen. “If, at the beginning of the war, one saw automobilists enjoying a ride |in the woods or with their cars s tioned hefore fashionable restaurants, that time has passed. That should | be known. October 1, 1914, may be shi out, disinfection from any quarantined ereas, provided has been stored away from sheep or swine. Hitherto it was necessary Ishnulll not only have been cut » August 1st, but that it should and Baled Before Octo- |3, o hoen baled before that date ber 1, May Be Shipped. o Washington, D. C., Nov. 20.—The TO PLANT SHADE TREES. provisions of the federal quarantines One hundred shade trees wiil declared onaccount of the foot and |planted by the Massachusett: feresti mouth disease have been somewhat |asociation in cities or tawns cf fo modified in so far as they apply to|population classes which win priz shipments of hay and straw cut prior | contests for exce'lence in strect tre August 1, 1914, and baled prior to | planting. (Correspondent of the Associated Press.) ecarthworks were erected where it was possible they might be useful in case some great disaster should befall the English nav concerning the means the Germans expect to use in reaching England. Guns which can shoot across the strait of Dover, submarine transports capable of landing large detachments of soldiers on the English coast, and submarine forts along the Belgian coast are among the mysterious de- vices gossip accredits Germany as having in reserve. The activity of the Germans in pre- paring fortifications of some sort at Zeebrugge, on the Belgian coast north of Ostend and not far from the mouth of the Scheldt, has given rise to many alarming stories. One is that cais- sons are being sunk from which the {¢o Germans will be able to fire tor- pedoes, These caissons are supposed to be permanent and of such char- acter that they can also be used to conceal disappearing guns which can === | in an emergency be raised for use above the water. Christmas Dinner in London. “Christmas dinner in London,” is the latest slogan of the German troops Oflicers and the November 20.—The exploils of the daring automobile drivers who whiz along the fringe of the shell- torn battle front, and sometimes into it, on missions of military duty that have cost many a life, are as remark- able as the aerial dashes in this war. Thousands of luxurious touring cars Par| MODIFIED. QUARANTINE {put the question. They go, remain | absent—many days, sometimes. “And R—-— went this time, like others before him, and as still others | will follow him, each day All Windows Broken. “In the evening the turned to the garage. dows were broken. dled its panels. Jean R—— was not with it. His comrade, tears in his | eves, had brought the car back alone, 'he automobile squad to which 1 {Jean R-— had been killed during the trip. His body was on the NUTHINB BEl IEH ground back there, somewhere in the north. They had not been able to jbring it back. Some English sol- B | diers had arrived in time to save | the survivors of this mission . which the poor chauffeur had left so joy- 1 «] L:ever Spent Any Money ‘. ¢ in the morning. hours la v & arage Tt DiariMe: <S0-SMUCH |wnore Sach mrenioir: in the garags Good as That | Spent for to the nume of Jean R—-, the quur- | Vinol.” | termaster auswered: | * ‘Dead on the field of honor.’ Bellefontaine, Ohio.—*‘ I wish every | LT (g tired, weak, nervous woman could have | “The men, in two ranks, raised the Vinol for I never spent any money in | hand to their caps. my life that did me so much goox “A day or twa later, one could see, that I spent for Vinol. My nerves were | one morning, some soldiers marching in a very bad condition, making me very ! with measured tread toward a church, weak, tired, and worn out and often | All wore on the left arm that letter drowsy headaches. I had tried cod | ‘A’ that is jeered at. They were the liver oil, doctor’s medicines, and other | comrades of the ‘obscured one. They preparations without benefit. were going to have a mass celebrated “‘One day a friend asked me to try | for him who had been killed by Ger- } Vinol. I did and soon my appetite in- | man bullets.” creased, I slept better and now I am strong, vigorous and well and can dom, housework with pleasure.”’—Mrs. J. F. | LAMBORN, Bellefontaine, Ohio. perfences with forest fires on the | Nervous, weak, tired, worn-out wo- | national forests this year shaw that medn a:;ul\q'mlfeerséhLnmborn’)s‘tad\nfie | automobiles, where they can be used, an nol or ere are literally | thousands of men £nd women who were | formerly run-down, weak and nervous, | transportation for crews of fire fight- | druggist for a 50-cent bottle of “Cal- who owe their good health to Vinol. ers. Motor rates are higher than | ifornia Syrup of Figs,” which has di- ¢ 5 3 i those for teams for the actual time | rections - babies, ¢ 3 It is the medicinal, tissue building ele- | * gor : | rections for ba 7.|n‘x‘ children of all} ments of the cod’s fivers. aided by the | CMPloved, Lut the total cost per dis- | ages and for grown-ups plainly on blood' making, strengthenin inflaence | tance traveled and in wages pald to|the bottle. ~Remember there are . 3 « es | 1¢ S, r e e i sol¢ ere, So s y N0 of tonie iron, contained in Vinol, which | ™% |ln ::r-nlvr:g ". flr(].; m-;?t“h 'Iol counterfeits sold here, so surely ook | tmalion 1680 efficient In xil such cases, } he time-saving is self-evident; tr and see that yours is made by the which ordinarily require two d. “California Fig Syrup Company.” The Clark & Brainard Co., New |time by team have heen made by Hand back with contempt any other Britain, Conn. tomobile in a few hours. fig syrup. Hay Cut machine re- All its win- Bullets had rid- T1 Pratt St Hartford, . Cushman, Pres. nhy. Sec’y (Correspondence of The Press.) Nov. circulating in .—Remarkable London London, rumors are EVEN CROSS, SICK CHILDREN LOVE SYRUP OF FIGS Don’t Poison Baby. ORTY YEARS AGO almost every mother thought her child must have PAREGORIC or laudanum to make it slee;. These drugs will %odun sleep, and a FEW DROPS TOO MANY will produce the SLEEP FROM W]gICH THERE IS NO WAKING., Many are the children who have been killed or whose health has been ruined for life by paregorio, lauda~ num and morphine, each of which is a narcotic product of opium. D: are prohibi from selling either of the narcotics named to children at or to anybody without labelling them *‘ poison.” The definition of * narcotic” is: ‘A medicine which relieves pain and produces sleep, but which in ous doses produces stupor, coma, convulsions and death.” The taste and smell of medicines containing opium are disqulud, and sold under the names of * Drops,” * Cordials,” ** Soothing Syrups,” eto, You should not it any medicine to be given to your children withonegou or your physician know of what it is com ." CASTORIA DOES NOT CONTAIN NARCOTICS, if it bears the signature of Chas. H. Fletcher. m Genuine Castoria always bears ;he signature of ./ . The Music Shop That’s Your Shop CUSHMAN If you own a machine—- | It feverish, bilious, constipated, give fruit laxative at once. Don't vour fretful, peevish child. if tongue is coated; this is a sure xign its little stomach, liver and bowels are clogged with saur waste, | When listless, pale, feverish, full of cold, breath bad. throat doesn’t ea, sleep or act naturally, has stomach- ache, indigestion, diarrhoea, give a teaspoonful of lifarnia Syrup of Figs,” and in a few hours all the foul waste, the sour bile and fermenting food passes out of the bowels and you have well and playful chill again. Children love this harmless “fruit laxative.” and mothers can rest easy after giving it. hecause it never | fails to make their little “insides clean and sweet. Keep it handy, Mother! A little given today saves a sick child tomor- row, but get the genuine. Ask your along the Belgian coast. have constantly circulated report that Iingland. men they expect (o invade While English officials have sald little about a possible in- vasion, therc has been no lack of preparation to receive the onslaughts of any force of Germans which might manage to cross the twenty miles of water between Dover and Calais, English acroplanes and dirigibles are constantly on the alert. The sea is fairly alive with naval craft of all descriptions. Mines are carefully placed, and any landing in England would doubtless be made at terrible cost, if such landing be possible, and once landed an enemy would find coast artillery 1 every possible ort of obstruction standing between 1e seacoast and London. Wire en- anglements and breastworks of sand- bags bar all paths leading from pos- sible landing places to the tops of the lky cliffs which surround the island, Trenches for riflemen and fied guns have been dug in strategic points all along the coast scold See —is Victrola head- quarters. if vou're a prospective customer, “make this your shopping place. sore, FKasy payments a feature. | Private Sound Proof ‘Demonstrating Rooms A personal demonstration s 4 Full Line of Up-to-Date Shapes at Reason- able Prices.. Also Switches and Hair Work q& all Kkinds. ‘ MISS STAFFORD 252 Main ¢t., Room 5, Hol.and Hoff.Bldg. irnish the quickest and che here—no cu:tside annoyancs. e S Hundreds of Demonstrating is a pleasure for thousands of yvoung soldiers have been giving practical g! us and a great con lence for lessons in digging entrenchments from And directed by that one end of England to the other the work has been all military cxperts, who saw to it ~ou_ here.