New Britain Herald Newspaper, February 3, 1915, Page 6

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rt of the city ents a Month. be sent by mail 0 Cents a _year. Ftising medium in ooks and press advertisers. on sale at Hota- St. and Broad- : Board Walk, Hartford depot. [E CALLS. EST DECREASED ition of the the past year ‘for money at in- a report . year previous br $14,735, showing E $9,500. this decrease There is ox- int was not given and they have no g just how much nd ought to he. reat deal of com- ent for “‘money at Britain it t that the amount having been esti- o have dealings t it exceeded flollars a year and [ jolutely impossible r that amount on essors and while 14,000 a vear ago b almost one-third hecause a loaning business to such an extent not tally although positive is does belief, en hardly jbut that of the eptitiously, at it, and all that about it is that hpt, but there is dch the facts can a h as be any this is husiness re are always ing money with- s but the jet on that point igsessors are kept great even 1t per- im- e denicd a matter up. ion f or axation by which is and may suflicient who de- | to this | those laws up. | ; | | K DEADLOCK. b charter revision honest attempt to to which scem H of public safety an one deadlock pme il feeling, havi tie posed to have the i that rtment 1 month. This, g a in depz or ative and may be | gsibly result in all | de partisan. have the it would scem as 0 strings tied to ayor; if he is to should rmitted to attend ote on every ques- occasion delay. To permit | month because the boards be made arises will not idea t deadlocks from pould be avoided lic safety just all other hoards | d only look at the | up there as they | ents. This whole | n be avoided ivil persons of cer- cations shall he hose who as by service rules | stana | lexamination ill not ble inst the vho i etitors. are he appoint- not It more d better th e any - \ bhe remeni- the ta ould ided power est with any sub- by com- estab- THE uncertainties and | e so-called f ! being overconio | ep in that dir, e decislon of tho | e court this weck en who are trans- of the provisions held co-con- Bulletin. pretty plain that al shape was ap- Al sio | n their case because they feel that they tion sion to other states because the opportunities for better wages and conditions under | | are many immature teachers caused by { many and who are kept on teaching. | teachers, wages and advancement | are { soil. A Of when it wag being enancted. There | have been some cases tried in this country where the woman was as wil- | Ingly guilty as the man but it was (he latter whom the law sought to punish and in some cascs did punish. It has been claimed that act permitted blackmail and that is the reason for FACTS AND FANCTE to he he rkins in ten make it quite to lend him George De huy potatoc failed 18 willing Norwich Record. urges the poor hushel lots, but clear that the muney, the weel ting stride, troduction of Now what his into sees gel- 1 t the legis The time business h apportunity to speedil and the wrate iciency sho yeed hut it will wture to accumu- celerity without or log roll- a t opportunity for | { men behind the gzuns in the house | | and senate. They can make or mar the reputation of their party for some | itime to come.—Ansonin vure the the amendment. There never was that should not be made as equally guilty the man. making both the act will serve to put a stop practice that my ror new the has come in the non-essential wislation and 1o so- | Vital bills remaining | not rificed to son Diss to elimin good re: to believe a womain comes as 3 iy v gUILLY | oy rre: to o | conee on tl the government and cicty wishes stopped and will prevent D8 he easy for the legis ic o reputition piving way o fng This is any blackmailing scheme from beingz instituted afterwards. In these days of a demand for equal rights the woman in traffic should be punished as well ¢ the man. There has never 1) him or but it hs bit unfair that his accomplice should be permitted to go She will be equally liable with in future, may SN cases of illegal been Sentinel desire to release to lessen his = It is pointcd out as an example of he superior way Connecticut does hings over other states that her new ompensation liw put into effect W the ereation of a dozen of new jobs at cost to the state 30~ 000 a year. ew York, nine times the size of Connecticut, ibout 1t typical New York creating 500 new officers, or twenty-five times a8 many as Connecticut, al a cost of £200,000 a year, or nearly thirty thmoes as much, Whereas in Connecticut the commissioners were content with i New York they ordered any a cost of $250 h | Gthep affice costs were in proportion and is | The difference is most striking.— i argument that | 8eport Post contravert, even if there The pen- responsibility always | seemed a willing | is 1 1 « 1 free. and a fear of prosecu- | Gl of yout e to keep her at home | | B | him | tion ser hds Zoes this manner, where she belongs. In the act will be better than it used |u“ be. respect | or The change was needed. TEACHERS PENSIONS, k bill this The teachers pension is hefore the legislature again year being backed up by is difficult was a disposition to do so. to o | Jo take \ inter A in as William it wil “‘even' The statement of Rryan to the effect that ten years for him to get the newspapers is liable to against it. The and | pretation in more than one way. firemen it; it has also been cs-| 8reat deal has been printed ; : | criticism of Mr. Bryan, and quite tablished in manufacturing and other| . ...h in his praise. Some of this concerns and always| has been written of him, some b Sith =ood There have kim, and the most of it for him or some men pensioned by the large cor- ut him, and i either case thefne g papers has given it liberal spaces, awn city. without money and without price. If, of late, Mr. Bryan has appeared te receive rather more criticism : than he has enjoyed, perhaps he should have a pension as well as many | |y Hq, A0 CHONER - BELIAEE - BC present it on | earlier days as silver-tongued orator | They have found upon | and be thankful he is not liable to cent. | receive from them a bill for publici that would be hard to “‘even-up. sHartford Times. is too firmly established in idea this country to begin ta offer any ar- gument police have large business results. been porations in The our hool teachers do not present others, but they econo- mic grounds. investigation that only this teaching, ten per of the teachers in end thirty placing to and country thereby vears themselves in a posi- TLooks Bad for Gabricl, Louls has consideration a new city ordinance to regulate street noises, and should it be adopted there may be interesting develop- ments, according to The Globe-Dem- ocrat, which thus discusses the mat- ter: “Under the proposed new auto- mobile law as we understand it. the angel Gabriel, when hée blows hig horn, is likely to he arrested for dis- turbance of the peace. No such loud racking ana d recable are be permitted. We drop this carly hint to Gabriel as wishes him well. A clause in the new ordin- ance says ‘unnecessary noises by drivers, ecither by the of Dbells, horns, cutouts or other device, will subject the owner or driver to a fine.’ But it seen us that that long word ‘unne is full of legal loopholes. What is a nece F no nswer us that? A noise that is ade- q for a quick ear may he totally ineffective for a dull one. Sometim { only a gentie ‘Hey. there!” will do and [ unhappily enough sometimes it won't. to an uninterrupted vbhooting are down the center of a crowded aring the pigeons out of their making the stenographers in | s drop two or three letters had | their typewrite terrifying old ladies about to cross the street, blurring | | business conversations in the banks | ! and converting staid citizens into rub- but | hernecks, we suppose that is unneces- nd as for the cut-out, the to do to ecut it out.” to a of Connecticut. be ecligible pen-| g S only four per cent. this Iocated in while this state are that rumber It cates appears edu- | trains and the good teachers, and young women zives them neces Yy experience hecome they go to which to work are better there than in this noises ite, so that in Connecticut there | to one who and have not retlire changing method also more older money this ever ones who which use sufficient on to to Iducators contend that Cfonnecticut, v while it has, of course, many very good vroposition s There teachers it a general not obtaining the best. is in & of good the reality this that to which a in state and reason for 15 many young women go elsewhere . work offices, offer or accept places in better opportunities than does the | on school room Women hive many opportunities vpencd o them s wWhich were con- all the during recent yve: sidered practically closed tao men a few vears ago. In of- | san wise fices of the large manufacturing con- | thin is Land (Manchester cerns the office help consists mainly | who and | i Bachel of yvoung women not only per- | of’ Bachelor Guardian.) Iingland the land of bachelor there is pleity of material for our army” without any of the ma men. Indeed, we could safely | exempt not only the married but the | hetrothed and still raise an army of | 500,000 men, assuming, as we surely | may, that oniy one man in two 5| tween the ages of twenty and thirty- physically fit, One worl it this way: In England and not | Wales alone there are 4,250,000 men | between the ages of twenty and thirty- | attraction | ive, and ove 0,000 of them are Ta give the round figures, bachelors' must | between the of twenty and are 1 5,000 bach- it twenty-five there | elors 1o L000 married men; from oD } twenty-five to thirty there are 750,000 in- | hachelors to 750,000 married men Chalf half), from thirty to thirty-five there 375,00 bhachelors 1,000,000 mazried men. Thi total 250,000 bachelors ‘uitable ages in lngland alor to show form stenography . | typewriting, | ! is but hookkeeping and render excellent They of become | 50 driven | . riven o and | pied service have gradually men out those occupations have so proficient that the male stenographer and typewriting a has almost entir the machine operator be- disappeared from large busines be | five to is | out young | L This work to the the schaol offices. appears very congenial average woman and room doe; seem able to supply any for her. Under those conditions it be easily that the state ages attractive; can seen make teaching more it those must see that offers suitable for who be their portunities to may and are and clined make life wor to which they be the tution it the under it see also that conditions i to gives willhl e work are such that b of all and Wales It rem 8 million bachelors aged to married are certain nat of instrue- | ber not en; Lie larger.) [ twenty-five, It is stuted that only approximately | j,50nel for the an insti- the hest state and for cnildren, many that who Cor to marry, d to twen 10e there are not en.| rather who for the num- | married must | twenty and | most men are | X five out of six Between the ages of thirty man in Betwo thirty man in U bach- | n thirty-five and forty | one man in five is a bachelor, hetween | and ferty-five, in seven, bhetween forty-five fifty cight One may consider still unmarried and forty bachelors, of no are leave school early f whom must at an age, and during the vears they b in school shauld the best the be giv b n « be ot instruction and tors. natn to unmarried. be « teach- to | twenty-five lis a thirty-fivc elor. Betwec three per cent. of the present are and two mnd n this state are* eligible bill, would ing force in bachelor pension under the 0 that to be proposed one four start with the expense not very heavy fort: and | one in | that men | between | one ma | ! | There is the best of reasons why itself cultiva- i who thirty-five firmed that one-fifth ulation has [tion of mareying cizht hundred suming are overy exert mumicipality should : Teth s e pre con- it | pop- | » the utmost to S0 the total intention encourage one may take male or idie | dear timated. s that of every available The littie garden Fut its importance is under 1t the cstimate of cxper enough vegelables can he raised on a tract of land measuring twenty-five by fifty fect me-quarter the of the overage city building 1ot supnly a family of six or cight ns, inch plog on of is expectia- This gives us over thousand bachelors. As- | half of them to he physically | fit, (¥ ives us 400,000 men, The | remaining 100,000 could be thrown in | I hy Scotland Ireland, vepresent- | | ing the of their | is 1t 10 and pers proportion Dopula- were not thought Hartford Post. ]nnn to that of ¥ and and Wales | in | bility | kin, ! propriate | them, | held that the most virtuous thing that | or to last he Mz horee Can't “You no tryout Mahomet grunted the chief, as roll of bills; “we had ver in the woods; that Mahomet's brother than 7 ot night,” pocketed a WHAT OTHZRS 3AY Views on all sides of timely questions as discussed in ex- d homet toolk more o you run cow! changes that come to He office. With Gazette Nothing Wr (Emporia K ‘. mporia’s Kansas-day dinner at Presbyterian church, the and hear the most Chief Justice nsas, “They Know Not What They Do.” CLiving At | the town useful man in W. A. Johnston for almost forty of the Kansas state contemporary with Murdocks, Ruggles, Martindale of Empor strong men out in the ho builded Kansas strong and deep: they were the Kansas “saints of the Lord."” whose “firm foundations” have mada Kar 1 rock of righteousness a weary land Justice Johnston, for thirty a formative period of Kansas in her social and industrial status revolutionized, has heen the persist- ent, strong, dominant mind of Kansas supreme court., the and a: as he: he, however, iined. He has impressed there all these years Justice Johnston's mind open: he has welcomed without flinching. Yet never has lest his fine poise: never has cheapened his dignity: never has he feared to squelch a fad when Iits pretense wi Politicians have gone to the peopla with issues, have brought the issues into legislation: have been advertised of men for their achievement. But always winnowing this kind of a harvest, preserving every ounce of good grain, cherishing every worthy | idea. this gentle-voiced. wise man. I sat at his desk in the court-room with a kindly heart and high aspira- tions. The populace does not know bPim: vet he and none other, has been always at the helm in times of stress; has been striving at hard make the dreams of men in. come true in terms of real irst Church.) will meet e most contemptibly superficial that one take is that which one continually in American pa- pers that it does not matter who start- ed the war,” It Aoes matter, and God will judge between those who had it their power to start war, in the several chancellories, and history will bring in its verdict, according to the evidence. But that Honsi- has to do with a comparatively number of individuals. Tt embrace the people, A whole in any nation. It would be amusing, dia it deal with the greatest tras edy since that of Calvary, to compare the that from Germany with the letters that come from Eng- Innd The heart of the people of both nations is right, though neither believes of the other. They htough cach of them wishes ere not. They are animated by like impulses, though cach believes the motives of the other is something that it And they know, frighiful tragedy and civ ation totters on an abys Never since the dyi praye Father, not Kanse view ean 2868 Ve As member ate, he Eskridge, Stotler and state 1T the 1 host losser ' res a small not does in vears in not letters come who has re- himself court have gone « are they strong heen things he has new the not goes on, | the hrink Calvary aj forgive what they way of showing it is that to- learning how caused, there are we can do te prevent from producing 1l ture, hecau do was or's now they know there any The worst is not, was roso for do 1s them day there such war some like resuits of But, a thin condition in the & £ Injustice to the West. (Collier's.) Fifteen years ago it was universally always labor to hustings Justice. So Kansas has had forward-mov- ing court. Technicalities never have ampered justice, The laws have been interpreted in the light of modern knowledge and modern con- ions. Nothing has had to square itself with Greece and Rome in the Kansas court: laws, movements, dencies of our public life have only to be sensible, and just, into life as vital parts of our govern- ment. could owned it be done with a piece of land the government was to get hands of private owner possible. This had been from the beginning. All kinds of devices and inducements W used to 1ade sottlers, pros- ind exploiters of kind to take the land off the government's hands. Al sudden, over night. P the public attitude CGifford Pinchot. Mr. Roose- a few others pointed out with of alarm that under the old system the amount of land owned by the federal government was rap- idly dwindling, and that the natural resources in the way of water- power sites, timber, and the like w passing into the hands of monopolies. With somewhat dazing uddenness there was a complete reversal of at- titude. A man tryving to get a piece of land from the United States gov- crnment, instead of being welcomed and aided and treated a patriot, was regarded at best a public cnemy—at the worst, a swindler, and was thwarted in Dos- sible. Because of thi of attitude good many painful things happened to men who could not adjust theéir minds as quickly the government at Washington the public generally did. A few such men ave not yet changed their minds. They still think the old plan Ballinger was one of these ind when such a man happened as Ballinger was, in an official able to affect the manner of of public lands, he became storm center of excited emotions. unpleasant thir happened to We are not sure but that some things w under the cir- cumstances, rily cruel. Ob- seure individunals who were caught in the middle, to speak, of procuring a piece of land were subjected, to un- pardonable treatment, If a man had begun to acquire a piece of land un- der the old system and the old mosphere. and had not completed title hefore the change came on, was held up and harassed in ways that might reasonably have led to a public rebellion if the men affected had been compact and organized. Public opinion in this nation ha overwhelmingly crystallized the point that government-owned lana nupon which there are important nat- ural resources, like water-power sites, shall never again alienated out- right priviite owners, hy into the as rapidiy the theary a a er pe pectors, every of a S0 to 11k changed velt and note had to pass A Project to Depopujate New York. (New York report of the tax commission by the mayor to find sources of additional revenue might be called, “A project to fetter busi- ness within the city of New York and reduce the population.’ 1t would levy habitation upon All who occupy dwellings apartment an occupancy tax” tenants owners all stores, tories or business offices: “a tax unearncd increment.” and a hrand new tax on all income or salaries excess of $2,000 earned within city limits, mo matter where the cipients may live As real estate every year and its market the “increment.” where there is now fully taxed. The and “occupancy’ proposals in substance to raising places in which to live business. Thix would men and to other exodus of also Herald.) The appointed tax" or upon fac- on as of s or every swWift way reversal in the and is at inew value any. appraised was hest. men, to be, amount rents for transuct many or drive orations position, disposing the husiness cor shift thein citic would cause an already ov- erburdened rentpaying residents. The fourth ition incomes alaries and this even though the recipient domiciled in ther state—is simply ridiculous. The burdens upon tatc almost intolerable and are check- the city’s development. How in- nious is the proposal increase burdens and the same time away population and busine eminent revent to guess again offices ind these ore propo A tax on unnecess and he " real e now ing these drive These his he raisers wiil 1 ! Wesleyan, (Worcester firth located on Gazette.) The Wesle Conn.. of compinred ghty ; revenl annual alog Middletown commendabl Prosperity Young in with Harvard collated of institutions throughout the isted long enou stiuency, degree when Yale, it the he yeurs, e and with of learning | Tt has Toyal con- | thou- | is when miss ared Wron, highet W in Horse. . Hawley Oregon horn that state, his parents were among the to the far west on schooner, when Indians ful blackberries Among the Oregon was to whom he tells Washington Star, ilustrate guileless mind poor Lo after contact with the white man, 1t that Indians of this (ribe, unlile neighboring nations, h o horses, descendants of which had allen their hands; and one these Ma homent, was as feet as the wind, and reputation had ne into land. The white men the had also a horse which they could beat hing this chained S0 I rin Representative of but ploncers a prair were plenti in o Alabama, men's tribes in Umatilla, in ard a the the hi RIS el fine Arabinn country h to have ox- wis \ made up of severnl who went v d non-graduates | [ considerable snds of gradiat with th entering and iriends ach | ha noble red wrand the and of iy s number of sons ons students Co-eduen it re, of et in 1878 Momewhat | for | joint | good (G to wis of similar story tlonnl from Aterm of yvears S of With other castern collexes of rank i srldes Browih yvears hayve lor of the college's freshman the largest in | Wesleyan Kasy of | points, situated on the of Middle- walk of the Insti- finer S made up the num- rises three ull the number 174 the history of access from all portion of the city minutes Ame rank The faculty and e st seen d fine into steods, Phases Intost in class | sire students, ofr abroad highest within his the country thought of deelared 1 the white m pitted against groomed and their pets animal wit of five river, town Connecticut tution of paysical outlook, | sents the names of forty-one membe students of all ¢la very few 1| authorities of the as the maximum lix-President MctCracken University of New York the opinion that 500 is thc her institution, md it New evidently no Picun any collegia has lightnin P cer day. n's nag, Rex, Mahoment curried and The Indians tent, whe woman, side n catalog wis which was Both ox had only st white speed their have nig of her 164, 500, 1 | | os to | the | he of sides only than which are a sed the in n old smoking wanted n their G guard at the men, of Manomet I hrilied the horse test him steod naming | | | the has expressed I num ol number s that who of the the place them it door o 1o so idos not tire land ting ypointments | who o order to Tt moonl Rex. hey him, hut furlong he horse The the white owned to uni- for versify I that futions are which their : enn hest accommodate. Noticing th he student list of repre sentatives from twenty-nine states and indi- any her one is En rank, out several of ingt ran by a hair returned took Rex with- the distanced turnir quictly at the race het everything their and and him plants and i i ac is made up out then wis next day od the mecting countries of the (xtent Among Massachusetts ranis | men | to foreign is had nite ning cation of they even hats, on Rex. the the he flew, and | thus represented Mahomet left Rex half a mile in the ‘mmlh, sending forty-seven students. | shoes "he s states, was started, has served the peopla | Plumb, | of | where- | Others have come to were | he | ten- | re- | inhabitation" | | ana ARGUE PASSENCER RATE IN ILLINOI Fourteen Rairoad: residents Want Twenty-five Per Cent. [ncrease. | was | Springfield railroad presidents today presented to Governor Dunne members of the state utilities rguments why the passenger inois i should be rais 1L, Feb, 3 and commission rate in »d from two to two and a half cents a mile. The hearing was the opening of the campaign of the transportation companies to obtain legislation permitting hie of passenger revenues in | ern states, Several of the heads of the railroads and many important officials of traffic departments will make aking tours of the states. The views of the railroads werc sented by Charles H, Markham, dent of the Illinois Central In Attenda railroad presidents the conference werc Chicago, Burlington P. Ripley, Santa Fe U. Mudge, Rock Island lines: W. J. Jackson, Chicago and Kastern 11 nois; H. G. Hetseler, Western Indiana;: H. R. Kurrie, Monon; A. J. rling Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul | A. H, Smith, New York Central lines; W. G. Blerd, Chicago and Alton; 8. M Felton, Chicago Great Western: A. B | Pennington, Soo line: Daniel | Baltimore and Ohio, and W. A ner, Chicago and Northwestern | Pennsylvania lines were by Vice President A. M. ENGLISH NEWSPAPER ADVOCATES SHIP PLAN increase middle sp pre presi- to Hall and H. Other here attend | Holden, Quiney: E Gard- The Schoyer Merchant Marine Would Be Valuable Asset to England, Says Heir to Colonial Estate. 3 Raids British United to London, Germ submarines commerce might | States merchant Great Britain as o food, in the News, which prints ticle this morning justifying Presi- dent Wilson's attitude on the ship | pirchase hill now before congress, The paper says this “Unprecedented development of state socialism’ is the only means whereby the United States ! can recover its place in the world of shipping. The editorial sets forth that in the present war the submarine become srious menace to Kng- land’s supply and in future war will dominate her position il. the meantime science should cover some effective means of defense “Should it then threaten ship- ping with destruction and ourselves | with starvation.” says the Dally News, “30 will not be an unimportant fact | that a great neutral country, possess- ing mercantile marine own, an d its ships into our un- molested and unafraid Feb. a. m by n on make @ marine valuable means of supplying of the Daily an editorial ar- opinion has a food 3 any dis- our 1 of its s ports CHANGE RULES, Civil | nounce New Requircments. The today State S ice Commissic state civil mnounced had days in the Hartford | service that changes in its rules mwade to effective ten the change being described annual report 1o the which now ready for The commission also | its report can be obtained personal application tar: is | tol | The the rules it | the fact commission heen hence fir be is imnounced that v cre- from Y the whose office is in tate copi- that el whenever in statutes require commission must make inges notice AMBULANCES TO RED CRROSS Harvard and Yale Stodents Contribu- tions Will Be Shipped Soon, The scventeen ed by e been Red rope the Washington, Feb mbulane b to automobile do Harvard turncd Cross and awili in the near future battle fields ¢ ambulances bear a huge of white. They red or worlk “tu the shipped for serviee and e 10 aver n he khaki-covered on a field cquipped for re red fully cross a are T0 HEAL SICK SKINS AT ONGE You don't have to WONDER if Resi- nol Ointment is doing you good. You KNOW it is, becausc the first applica- tion stops the itching and your tortured skin feels cool and comfortable at last. Why don’t YOU try this casy Resinol way to heal cczema or similar skin erup- tiont Resinol clears away pimples, too, and ie a valuable houschold remedy for cuts, sores, burns, chafings, cte. It has been preseribed by doctors for 20 years and contains nothing to injure the ten- derest skin. d by all druggists, The regular use of Resinol Soap is usually enough to prevent those dis- tressing rashes and chafings to which most babies are subject. This is so, first, because Resinol Soap is absolutely pure and free from harsh alkali, and second, because it contains the Resinol medication, on which so many physi- ciaus rely for skin troubles. Fourteen | west- | various | | Willard, | represented | MCMILLAN'S * NewWindo ¢ Draperies | The by thel evetd new drapery rinterial vard are more beautiful tha; e Window Display New Figured Curtain Madras White and eccru, also. ccru nng’x,‘ 19¢, 20, | dainty colored effects 20¢ yard. | Curtain Scrims and Mars | quisettes, s Hemstitched and Faney Draw | | Work Borders. Special values |¥ 150, 17¢, 19¢, , 250, 29¢, 35¢ 3...‘(8 Work' b » windew Shade Done Now after | Have Your Let ux look your ghades. Your old rixed ones ind 21) over op new shades made hung comb plete (‘phone No and our shad@ man will call on you | Two Thousand Pieces Sam'q [ ple Jewelry, Choice 10c¢ each, Vaie I'riendship pins anda sets, Cloisonxy Collar Jabot M™ins Sets, Shell Gold Pearl Ail and and Brooches Rings, Hat Pins B and (Now and Silver Plated arrettes Ear Ring, Chains Pendants real Zhc values on sale.) Women’s Wool Union Suits | $1 50 grade, $1.38 cach $1.75 grade, $1.59 each, Sale of Stamped Goods Stamped Pillow Tops P, 19¢, values to So0agy Now e each, Hemstitched Pillow Cases Stamped to embroider, size 45x38, Special al 75¢ pair, - D. McMILLAN 199-201-208 Main Street unless Diet and Bellicosity (Providence Journal iderable th lakd e Con emphasis has heen upon the report that the German peror is sharing in the rigorous frus gality has been imposed upon the " that ik erman omizing man of ways been of his life tensified that or ily They the 1 people the fo imperial tl upplies econ- For a has ale simplicity position he for the will noted hut th now probability inv There the his fam« ANy wi hat will b he will member frer f1 to this but om the ¢ enough P fare e simple in el and th comparatiy wsure the i haring n of their peog erial example to the € millions ready The vagt ace pro- ition, 18y food, n blesy ma will ch obably i the b more rfully plain fare of commonly i nerally ve rtance, f n t th imj upon the ating lor nounced ¢ EPO it possit ' Ininer P quantities th [ and perhaps in sma heretofore from gentier . e Germar Ider ight r 1o rant nd pre- duce bellig- vrospect iser Diet h pe ry fa self- n experts cribe hion as the 7T | erenc ir toni (eem bring and rev ot I RESINUI_ BEGINS * For Those Choking Coughs | Those dreadful colds that fairly$ threaten life, there is one remedy that will bring quick relief, and * that KERR'S FLAX-SEED | EMULSION LINONINE. For® years this medicine was used ex-+*® clusively by physicians. but it ig nov- obtainable at all drug stores, If you are affiicted with cough or cold it will certainly relieve you of it, and at the same time build up the system. Even bronchitis, that most dis- ‘ressing and dreaded of coughs, gives way to the great healing in- fluences of Kerr's Flax-Seed | Emulsion, and it relieves the lungs of congestions and prevents pneumonia. Try it, it is such a relief. Three sizes, 0c, $1.00, b

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