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For Infants and Children | Mothers Know That mihs old "‘336““5 inder the Foocley PHITCHEN i WORLD pple Wait in y Day. ‘orresponden e bs)—The russels by the | for . relief is rgest in. the ousand people | 4n the “bread | over six thou- | nd four thou- | i are daily dis-_ soup fes I have seen | pport from ono ‘in. Brusse fone nationalirty and unde- ey are of all Inone of them | no matter | e extent of | (stil have l'a- of them. if P write then‘} n they get soup | han take it. | t they will al- read lines and ! that when it | it | t to forget | itute. | lgaged ! [pitiful flotsam | 1l prepared in the Interna- | Van Gand. | people are en- | pjrong them are | fot the leading igive directinns | ty of the soup, H ir proportions. | who clean the | arrots, beans picat. This on- | volunteers eive at tha | i in the morn- | of the first s started tho e storehouse of is one of tre- the moving 1 i ite-clad chef scores of h dimiy ouds of the im- | seen | pung- ! boilin | n Flag. ooked it issent e commission € commission | es to the twen- ! ed all over ns were fo halls, turkish ly for | | Troubles | ™ lof France have l New iption of vege- stomach trouble ts like a charm. Severe ca often great tirs. So many fsing results that ring from con- liver and stom- Mayr's Won- sold by leading ith the positive money will be ion or quibble ¢ you absolute | aleoholic iing the army | months in Genuine Castoria Thirty Years GASTORIA THE CENTAUR COMPANY, NEW YORK OITY. baths, etc. During the morning, when- ever one goes, women and children may be seen coming and going wi pitchers of steaming soup nd their ration of bread under their arms." RATION OF RUM PART OF SUPPLIES British Soldiers;in Actual Fighting Lin¢e Receive Alcohol Daily Un- der Head of “Medicine.” London, Feb. 15, (Correspondence of the Associatea Press ~A daily ration of rum is still part of the reg- ular.supplies of British soldiers in the actual fighting line, but it doled out under the head of “medicine,” and the quantity allowed is only three tablespoonfuls with rations for two days, “This small ration of alcohol was { considered indespensable by the army physicians,” writes a correspondent to the Liverpool Post, “They con- sider it necessary that the soldier ex- posed to the cold for hours in the trenches, should have some stimulant ailable, and expericnce taught that the ‘drop’ of rum, taken either straight or in his tea, was the thing.” In some quarters fears have been expressed that the distribution of an stimulant to the soldiers might lead some of the men to form permanent habits of drinking, but army leaders replied that the quan- tity handed out was too small to justi- any such fear, and moreover, it is given to men only when they are actually in the front lines or in ex- posed positions on outpost duty. As a matter of fact, everything is done to ensure the sobriety of the troops. + When the armies are either advancing or retreating through a town all the saloons are closed, and the same measure is taken wherever the troops are in occupation of a town. Old campaigners declare that their daily spoonful of rum a safeguard against certain discases, such as cholera. As a notwithstand- < purchases of rum, the total importations of this beverage have fallen off moré than half since the beginning of the war. Importers explain this by saving that the rum makers in Jamaica and the West In- dies are not making as much as for- merély, because greater profit is to be realized just now from the sale of sugar, although the price of rum has advanced about seventy per cent. matter of fact, Native eggs, 33c doz. —advt. Russell Bros. GIVEN JAIL Bridgeport, Feb, SE 16.—Dennis Dowd of New Haven was sentenced to six jail by the city court here vesterday on a charge of having an illegal amount of certain drugs in his possession. He had been convicted before on-a similar charge. James DeFelice of New Haven was sentenced to three months in jail and then the continued till today to al- to communicate with rela- A similar charge against Frank Squires was nolled case low tiv was him TO SETTLE DISPUTE York, Feb. 16.—Sir Edward Morris, premier of Newfoundland, an- nounced here vesterday that he would soon confer with representatives the state department with iew settling amicably disputes arising out of the fisheries award at The Hague in 1910. He said he expected that the claims, which aggregate about +$100,000, would be so handled be- iween the governments that recourse to a court of arbitration would be unnecessary. ‘0 Native eggs, 33c doz. , Russell Bros. —advt. NEW |BRITAIN DAILY AMERICAN RED CROSS GOD-SEND T0' SERBIA Probem of Caring for Refugecs Proves Difficult One. ! Nish, F'eb. 15.—Nish, some twenty thou- transformed by the war into a city of more t one hun- dred thousand souls The stranger within the city gates wonders where all the people seen on the streets sleep at night. The small public park, as well the two principal shopping streets, are as crowded during the daylight hours as Broadway and Fifth avenue on a late afternoon. The problem of caring for the thousands who fled from Belgrade and the north- ern gommunities of the country when war was declared has been a difficult one. Every house with vacant rooms was commandeered by the government, but even this action failed to provide shelter for hundreds of fugitives from the battle district In the dilemma in which the Serbian people found themselves the American Red Cross mission came as a veritable God-send. Everywhere the Associated Press cor- respondent has traveled he ha en- countered evidences of good work done by American citizens and has everywhere found grateful apprecia- tion on the part of the Serbian peo- ple. This appreciation was officially expressed by M. Milosh Petronievitch, one of the administrators of the dip- lomatic press bureau, who speaks English perfectly. Modeled After United States. “Our ¢ aid M. Petronie- vitch, nd all of our instituions .are really modeled from those of the United States of America, and some day we hope to be really an American state here at the end of Europe and the beginning of Asia. That, as well as the sympathy and aid for our wounded sept us by the American Red Cross during all three of our re- cent wars, accounts for the very warm welcome we shall always give to any American who cares to come out and study us at closer range. “We are not hospitable to all foreigners. Serbia 'is more accus- tomed to having enemies than friends. From the time the Serbian empire came under the Turks in the four- teenth century, until its liberation in the early part of the nineteenth cen- tury, Serbia was cut off as a state from all the rest of the world. Her Turkish tyrants had but one idea, to destroy the soul of the race, _the memory of glorious ana martial past, of its ocratic traditions and of its racial unity with the other Slav peoples. Tts chivalry perished in the great battle of Kossova in 1389, Kossova is a vast plain about 100 miles southwest of Nish, where the battle of Turkish conquest between the forces of the Sultan Murad I. and the Serbian Emperor Lazar was fought in the fourteenth century. This great battle ended with the complete over- throw of the Serbian empire and the five hundred year domination of the whole of southwest Europe by the Turks. This domination included all the peoples now comprising the Bal- kan states. All the sons of the noble Serbian families were carried off to Constantinople to form the famous guard of the Janissaries. They were reared in complete ignorance of their parentage, and with but one ideal, the Sultan. A certain number of the great Serbian families escaped into Russia, Austria and -Montenegro. From these and subsequent emigra- tions have sprung the members of the race who are today outside the king- dom of Serbi Bosnia, Herzegovina and Delmatia are integrally a part of the kingdom, though detached from it by European politics at the congress of Berlin.” Shows Serbia, mally a town of sand, has been nor- nstitution,’ =0 its ari Ancient Confines, Mr. Petronievitch pointed to & large map hung in his office, showing GAINS 40 POUNDS IN 40 DAYS. EMARKABLE RESULTS OF THRE NEW :TISSUE BUILDER TONO- LINE TABLETS IN MANY CASES OF RUN- DOWN MEN AND WOMEN. R PROVE IT YOURSELF BY BUYING w box of Tonoline Tablets NOW. ¥ George, I never saw anything e effects of that new treatment, gne Tablets, for building up of 't and lost nerve: force. It acted more like a miracle than a medicine,” said a well-known gentleman yester- day in speaking of the revolution that had taken place in his condition. *“X began to think that there was nothing on earth that could make me fat. J tried tonics, digestives, heavy eating, diets, milk, beer and almost every- thing else you could think of. Any man or woman who s thin can recover normal weight by the best new treatment Tonoline Tablets. “I have been thin for yvears and be- gan to think it was natural for me to be that way. Finally I'read about the remarkable processes brought about by use of Tonoline Tablets so I decided to try myself. Well, when T look at myself in the mirror now, T think it somebedy else. [ have put | on just forty pounds during the last | forty days, and never felt stronger. Tonoline Tabs are a powerful indu- cer to nutrition, increases cell-growth, tood, increases the number of blood- | corpuscles and as a necessary result builds up muscles, and solid healthy flesh, and rounds out the figure. For women who can never appear stylish in anything they wear becausc of their thinness this remarkable treatment may prove a revelation. It is a beauty marker as well as a form builder and nerve strengthener. Tonoline Tabs cost $1 for a 50-days’ treatment, at druggists, or mailed |y American Proprietary Co., Boston, ) Mass. HERALD, A at s T2 SRR S Ends Dry, Hoarse or . Painful Coughs Quickly A Simplc, Home-Made Remedy, Inexpensive but Unequaled siesdesdesfesfesfedideduduatiatesdesdeseseses dendendonbeode | The prompt and positive results given by this pleasant tasting, home-made cough syrup has cansed it to be used in nmiore homes than any other remedy. It gives almost instant relief and will usual- Iy overcome the average cough in 24 hours. Get 214 ounces Pinex (50 cents worth) from any drug store, pour it into a pint bottle and fill the bottle with plain granu- lated sugar syrup. This makes a full amily supply—of the most ef- ough remedy at a cost of only 54 cents or less. You couldn ready-made cough medicine for Easily prepared_and never spoils. directions with Pinex. The promptness, certainty and ea with which this Pinex Syrup overcom a bad cough, chest or throat cold is trul remarkable. Jt quickly loosens a dry hoarse or tight cough and heals an soothes a painful cough in a hurry. Wit a persistent loose cough it stops the for mation of phlegm in the throat and bron chial tubes, thus ending the annoying hacking. Pinex is a highly concentrated com- pound of genuine Norway pine extract. rich in guaiacol and is famous_the world over for its splendid effect in bronchitis, whooping cough, bronchial asthma and winter coughs. To avoid disappointment in making this, ask vour druggist for “21, ounces of Pimex,” and don’t accept anything else, A guarantee of absolute satisfac tion, or money promptly refunded. goes with this preparation, " The Pinex Co., Tt. Wavne. Ind. ancient confines of Serbian empire as well as the marginal line of the fron- tiers of that Greater Serhia, the crea- tion of which is in some quarters re- garded as the cause of the war. Be this as it may, it will certainly be one of the most important changes in the map of Europe if Serbia and her powerful Allies are successful against the Germans and the Austrians. “You can see,” contilnued Mr. Pet- ronjevitch, “how difficult has been the position of Serbia, with the Turks on the one hand longing to conquer what they lost; the Austrians on the other hand, urged by the Ger- mans, whose own expansion could only take place by pushing the Aus- trians into possession of all the Slav kingdoms of the Balkans, thus leav- ing free the German provinces of Austria for Germany. There is no doubt to our mind that Germany has had the idea of absorbing the dual monarchy of Austria-Hungary, thus dreaming of a kingdom ecxtending from the shores of the North sea to the Agean at Salonika, the Bosphorus and the Sea of Mamora at Canstanti- nople, and reaching out to a supreme control of the Mediterranean and even the Black Sea. No one who has not lived on the shores of the Danube has any real conception of the fanati- cism with which Austria ha worked to achieve this end, nor of the design- ing care with which Germany has ever promoted her designs. A part of the plan always been to keep the states of the Balkans from any fed- eration or cohesion among them- selves. This might have been more difficult had not several of the states had German princes for rulers. Ser- bia and Montenegro, yvou know, with the exception of Ttaly, are the only states of Europe that have rulers of their own blood and faith. s stro-German Diplomacy. ““Bulgaria, closely allied to Serbia in feudal times, and whose liberation from Turkey was effected by Russia, has ever been the working ground of that Austra-German diplomacy which has been so active at Constantinople The Bulgarian war of last year, as well as Turkey's participation in the present war, was the outcome of this diplomacy and intrigue. Serbia has been wiser than Bulgaria or Turkey. We have not been any too fond of strangers. Too many. of those who have come in the guise of friends have turned out to be Austrian spies. There never was a country so heset by spies and mischief-makers of all kinds as Serbia has been during the past fif- teen years, of since the German em- peror made up his mind that a Euro- pean war would ‘be the only means of acquiring new territory for Ger- many. “Serbia is trying to demonstrate to the whole world that her civilization is on as high a plane as that of Eng- land and America, even though her resources and facilities are not great- er than those of some of the Amerl- can states one hundred years ago. Tt was the history of the American Re- volutionary War, read by XKara George, grandfather of our . present king, which inspired him with a de- sire to lead his people in the uprising against the Turks in 1804." CASCARETS FOR COSTIVE BOWELS, HEADACHE, COLDS Tonight! Clean your bowels and stop headache, colds, sour stomach. Get a 10-cent box now. Turn the rascals out—the headache, biliousness, indigestion, the sick, saur stomach and bad colds—turn them out tonight and keep them out with Cu carets. Millions of men and women take a | i Cascaret now and then and never know by a an lazy upset misery caused bowels, or liver, stom- the clogged ach. Don't put in another day of distress Let Cascarets cleanse your stomach; remove the sour, formenting food; the excess bile from your liver carry out all the constipated matter and poison in the bowels. Then you will feel great. A Cascaret tonight straightens you out by morning. They work while you sleep. A 10-cent box from any drug store means a clear head, sweet stomach and clean, healthy liver and bawel action for months. love Cascarets because gripe ' or sicken. take and they never waste | Children | TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 1915, Auction-—-SALE---Auction Farm of 60 Acres, Approximately--- 10 Room House, 2 Barns---Located On Main Street of Berlin, Conn. Pursuant to the order of the Superior Court for Hartford County, I hereby give notice that I will sell as a whole at public auction on the premises on the first Monday of March, 1915 at 10 o’clock in the forenoon, the following described premises:--A lot of land with the buildings thereon, situated in Berlin, Conn., and bounded north by land of Harriet Hopkins, Worthington Ecclesiastical Society and estate of Lucius Ben- nett, partly by each; east by land of Isaac Alling and Carrie E. by Isak Freeberg. Bennett, partly by each; south by land of C.S. Webster and Daniel Webster and by land of Spencer Clinton, partly by each, and west by land of Harriett Hopkins, Catherine E. Churchill, Daniel Webster and highway, partly by each, containing sixty (60) acies, more or less, said premises being now owned Said Premises have been appraised at the value of $11,500 by three disinterested persons appointed by said Court. A deposit of 5 per cent. of the purchase price will be re- quired, the balance to be paid within fifteen days upon delivery of deed, after said deed has been approved by said Court. Dated at Hartford, Conn. this 13th day of February, 1915. Real Estate. SUCCES SFUL OFFENSIVE NEXT T0 IMPOSSIBLE Weaer and Growd on Western Frant Against Belligerents. 15. (Correspondence of The Press.)—The mili- tary correspondent of London Times in a recent survey of conditions, said that there is little likelihood of any important advance movement by London, Feb., ociated the either side of the western front for a long time to come, Under the present cenditions of weather and ground, with range of argues next to knows the ctly, offensive artillery which andmark successful every ex he that impo: is ble. “The district in army is operating swamp,” declares th obs “Water stands on the iff slippery and holding clay., rendering the move- ment of infantry across country im- pessible. For weeks on end it has rained, and when it has not rained thick mists have enveloped the coun- try. The deep trenches are filled witth water, and the necessity of standing ir: this has cost us many casualities, Acres of Bob Wire. “Tt is only on slightly rising ground that life is at all supportable. The which the British is practically with a labyrinth of trenches both sides the front lines are cnly pos of observation. of barb wire cover most of the | tion In rear stretch many and communication trenches “Freastworks have been by both armies on top of the ground to meet the difficulties of holding flcoded trenches, while strong posts, defended villages and farmsteads, other arrangements, complete positions. In the rear masses of guns of all calibres, so well concealed that they are practically invulnerable, and joined up by telephones to all advanc- ec trenches, make a strong framework for the defense. Three Direct “During all the saonths that the British have occupied this district only three direct hits have been made shells upon the British guns. An attack, therefore, has to deal with an intact artille which knows every range to an inch. “A forward trench may often be ulted or mined by either side, or knocked to bits by heavy clearea by trench mortars end hand grenades, but a local suc- | Ccss 1f this character has no conse- lqumwv-\ The battling in front s Acres posi- Hits. by German a it may shel or he constructed | fronts of the rival armies are covered | On | often | lines, | largely the sapheads . “As for the flying corps, despite the weather, the in can escape that notice if these airmen. “The British army is not accustomed to winter campaigning and ured ually It had its lessons to learn C. M. STARKWEATHER COMMITTEE OF THE SUPERIOR COURT, 36 Pearl St., Hartford. Conn. Mutual Building. Telephone, Charter 5749. rn them, In “sm(r of this the army has stood the | test remarkably well, and is probably | in better health than any other, friend- ly or hostile, operating in the region” between snipers and men in | cost something to le < Only Mi: 1 Six Days. it has missed only six days air since August. Not hostile strategical ECURE 16 of ROBBERS Washington, Feb, robbers raided one trolley terminals not capitol yesterday, held the cashiers campaigns have us- |at bay with revolvers, and got away in warm climates. | with $2,000 in cash, but in their aaste and it has | overlooked $5,000 more 2,000, Two masked the principal , far from the easily any surprise is not in- to it taken Ith place GIRLS! 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Your hair fluffiness and an incomparable | will be soft, glossy and beautiful in and lustre and try as you will just a few moments—a delightful sur- nnot find a trace of dandruff or prise awaits everyone who tries thi —A real surprisc awaits you. be possessed of a head of heavy, fluffy, to have Just Knowlton's rec- soft hair and lots of it. 25 cent bottle of minutes there will be LINKED BY TELEPHONE OU. R Doctor, the Police, Friends and Trades- people, you have the quickest means of reaching any or all of them if vou are one tele- of the thousands of links in the endiess phone chain, HAVE YOU A TELEPHONE IN YOUR HOME?