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MY W BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, MAF i U ALL “RUN DOWN?" Rheumasalts Will Make | You Feel Fine Jf you have that “all-in” feeling, al- ways ache, always tired, and are in a “run-down” condition, then you need Rheumasalts, the scientifically blended sn;ikchemlcally bure carbonated lithia rinl For constipation, headaches, sallow ~skin, coated tongue, bad breath, indiges- tion, biliousness or take Rheumasalts. There is no caffeine or calomel, or any dangerous dr;fs in Rheumasalts. It can be used for adults, convalescents and in- “fants. Simply ask your druggist to give you about five ounces of Rheumasalts. Take two teaspoonfuls in 35 glass of water be- fore breakfast each morning and in a few days you will feel fine. Rheumasalts cleans out the stomach and intestines, eliminates toxins and poisons and leaves the intestinal - canal clean and sweet. It sweeps the system clean from putrid, fermentins food. If you eat meat, your blood is full of uric acid.” Rheumasalts will banish uric acid from your system and also act as a sa- line laxative. Remember the name—Rheumasalts. Be sure that your druggist gives you the gen- uine Rheumasalts, which is prepared by -the famous Rheumabath Company, Min- neapolis, Minn. 25c, 50c and $1.00 Botules. rheumatism, _ A Remedy for Bronchitis > . o * THE CURRAN 0. - §P Gto 9 P. M. . Tonight Bronchitis is a distressing and dangerous disease, often fatal in its results. At the first evidence of a cough take Kerr’s Emulsion of flax-seed, Linonine. This re- markably successful medicine has an unbroken record as a cure for bronchitis, even the most stub- born cases yielding to its great healing influences: Don’t choke and sutfer with bronchial coughs—Linonine will relieve you. Try a spoonful to- night at bedtime, it will enable you to avoid those coughing spells that your very existence. ' AIl druggists, 25c. 50c, $1.00 threaten EXTRA FLIALS TONIGHT i 36-inch Bleached Cotton, standard 10c and 11c makes, limited tonight 7c yd Fast Color Apron Gingham staple patterns tonight, lim-| Extra Large and Heavy ! Turkish Towels, 25c value,' Tonight 15c ea Women’s House Dresses, neat patterns, values up to $1. | 39c¢ dreadful | _ yvears to a monoplane, FLIGHT AT EXPOSITION Noted Amercan Aviator Pung 3,000 Feet Into Sea San Francisco, Cal, March 15.— Lincoln Beachey, the most daring o American aviators, whose exploits the air are familiar to thousands o: people, met his death yesterday after noon while giving an exhibition fligh over the grounds of the Panama Pacific exposition. At an altitude o 3,000 feet, Beachey began a shar descent. The wings of his aeroplan collapsed and the machine plunge: into San Francisco bay near the ex- position grounds. The Last Thrill Beachey was completing his second flight of the day when the accident cccurred. Having previously electri- fled thousands of spectators with a series of aerial somersaults, the air- man sought to give them an addi- tional thrill by making one of the sensational perpendicular drops which usually featured his flights, The fatal fall was attributed to the fact that Beachey entrusted his life yesterday for the first time in several An exception- ally large crowd had been attracted to the fair grounds to see whether he would attempt the same exploits in Neurasthenia is a condition of exhaus- tion of the nervous system. The causes are varied. Continuous work, ment._al or physical, without proper vacatign periods, without proper attention to diet and ex- ercise, also worry over the struggle for success, are the most common causes. Excesses of almost any kird may pro- duce it. Some diseases, like the grip, will cause neurasthenia. So also will a severe shock, intense anxiety or ief. The symptoms are over-sengitiveness, irritability, & disposition to worry over trifles, headache, possibly nausea. The treatment is one of nutrition of the nerve cells, requiring a non-alcoholic tonic. As the nerves get their nourish- ment from the blood the treatment must be directed toward building up the blood. Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills act directly on the blood and with proper regulation of the diet have px—ove(}3 of the greatest bene- fit in many cases of neurasthenia. A tendency to anemia, or bloodlessness, shown by most neurasthenic patients, is also corrected by these tonic pills. Your %\gvl;) druggist sells Dr. Wi g’ Pink 1118, Two useful books *‘Diseases of the Ner- vous System’’ and ‘“Whatto Eat and How to Eat’’ wil be sent free by the Dr. Wile liams Medicine Co., Schenectady, N. Y., if you meation thia nanar. Edison The Leader OfAll READER: Let us bring one of these wonderful musical instruments to your home on trial free of charge. No needles to change, no rec- ords that wear or break. Machines Priced $60, $80, $150, $200, $250, $275 Come in and hear them. L. A GLADDING, 4 CHESTNUT. 'BEACHEY KILLED N - MAVE COLOR INYOUR GHEEKS j Be Better Looking—Take | Olive Tablets | T¢ your skin is yellow—complexion pallid—tongue coated—appetite poor— ou have a bad taste in your mouth—a azy, no-good feeling—you should take Olive Tablets. Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets—a sub- stitute for calomel—were prepared by r. Edwards after 17 years of study ‘with his patients. Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets are a purely vegetable compound mixed with olive ‘oil. You will know them by their olive color. If you want a clear, pink skin, bright eves, no pimples, a feeling of buoyancy fike chi13hood days, you must get at :he cause. Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets act on the liver and bowels like calomel—yet have no dangerous after effects. They start the bile and overcome consti- pation. That's why millions of boxes are sold annually at 10c and 25¢ per box. All druggists. | Take one or two nightly and note the pleasing resnits . ‘The Olive Tablet Company, Columbus, O, the new machine that he had per- forming in his biplane. On the first flight all went well, and the aviator’'s familiar tricks were indulged in with the exception of the perpendicular drop. This Beachey had saved for the climax. It proved too much of a strain for the frame of the monoplane. Plunged Into Bay. The machine was at an altitude of 3,000 feet when Beachey shut off his power. For some distance it dropped head-on for the earth, and then the aviator grasped his control levers to: adjust the planes for the graceful descent which had characterized his previous flights. At that point the wings crumpled and the aeroplane, turning over and over in its fall, plunged into San Francisco bay, narrowly missing a vessel lying at the government trans- “port docks, Hundreds of spectators rushed to the nearby waterfront, but with the exception of a few fragments of the aeroplane floating on the surface of the bay, no sign of the wrecked ma- chine could be seen. Launches put out immediately, cyuipped with grappling hooks, and a boat’s crew from the battleship Oregon, which was anchored a short distance away, joined in an attempt to recover the body of the aviator, which was strapped to the machine under forty feet of water. Beachey's Body Recovered. The body was recovered shortly after 5 o’clock. Hillary Beacheey, a brother of the aviator, witnessed the twragedy. He was standing on the deck of the United States transport Crook, watch- ing the flight. He said he heard a crackling sound like the breaking of a ship’s mast. The monoplane fell | only a few feet away from the trans- | port. X | Determined to Be Aviator, Toledo, O., March 15.—Lincoln Beachey, who was killed yesterday at San Francisco, flew his first aeroplane at the age of 18. At that time he was working in an aeroplane factory here and asked Charley Strobel, his employer, to give him a chance. Ilis request was refused. ' He was determined to be an avia- tor, however. He would sleep in a tent at the factory, and at dawn would take out one of the machines and make a flight unknown to Strobel. He kept this up several weeks and flnally demanded a contract. Beachey escaped death by a hair’s breadth at Charter Oak Park last June while giving the same kind of an exhibition that snatched him from the ranks of aviation at the Panama- Pacifice exposition yesterday. All through the afternoon of the day of COULD NOT STAND ON FEET Mrs. Baker So Weak—Could Not Do Her Work—Found Relief In Novel Way. Adrian, Mich. — ‘I suffered terribly with female weakness and backache and 3 got so weak that I could hardly do my {work. When I washed my dishes I had to sit down and when I would sweep the floor I would get so weak that I would have to get a drink every few minutes, and _before I did my dusting Iwould have to lie down. I got 80 poorly that my folks thought I was going into consumption. One day I found a piece of paper blowing around the yard and I picked it up and read it. It said ‘Saved from the Grave,” and toid what Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegeta- ble Compound has done for women. I showed it to my husband and he said, “Why don’t you try it?’ So I did, and after I had taken two bottles I felt better and I said to my husband, ‘L don’t need any more,” and he said ‘You had better take it a little longer anyway.’ So 1 took it for three months and got well and strong.’”’ —Mrs. ALONZo E. BAKER, 9 Tecumseh St., Adrian, Mich. Not 'Well Enough to Work. In these words is hidden the tragedy of many a woman, housekeeper or wage earner who supports herself and is often helping to support a family, on meagre wages. Whether in house, office, fac- tory, shop, store or kitchen, woman should remember that there is one tried and true remedy for the ills to which all women are prone, and that is Lydia E. Pinkham’s %egetable Compound. It promotes that vigor which makes work easy. The Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass. e SR8RES IMLE GIAL HAD CHRONIC COUGH 3t from Whooping Cough— ! Was Terribly Rundown and Weak—Mother Tells How She Was Cured by Vinol. *hiladelphia, Pa.—‘ My little girl ed thirteen years had the whooping ugh which ‘settled into a chronic ugh, with a ran-down system and lung ouble. She had to stay at home from hool while being treated by the doctor, »d nothing seemed to help her. I saw nol advertised and decided to try it. soon noticed an improvement, “and ter giving her four bottles her cough gone, her strength has returned and < has a good appetite. We think cre is nothing like Vinol.”’—Mrs. M AITE, Philadelphia, Pa. | What Vinol did for this little girl it ill do for others, for it is the healing, :urative, tissue building influence of the nedicinal elements of the extract of :0d’s livers aided by the blood making, strengthening properties of tonic iron which makes Vinol so successful in such cases, and children like to take Vinol ecause it is pleasant, and it is much »etter for them than ‘cough medicines’’ vhich have no strengthening J)ower. vhile Vinol builds up the body and hrows off the cough. Remember, if Vinol fails to benefit, ‘ return your money. The Clark & Brainerd Co., gists, New Britain, Conn., and at ing drug stores everywhere. Drug- his accident in Hartford he had ' thrilled the crowds with daring spirals and flying upsidedown. His apparent ahandon of all care for safety made the crowd feel certain that death must overtake him before long. He re- | covered from his injuries and re- turned to Hartford a week later and was even more sensational though his back was encased in a plaster cast. Most Skilful Aviator. Aeronautic authorities regarded him as the most skilful and daring of American aviators. He earned this /| reputation long before the French fivers, headed by Pergoud, began to glide through the alr upside down. | Beachey was in retirement when these feats were heralded and was drawn back into the game by his desire to surpass the remarkable flying of the Frenchmen. 2 ‘With an aeroplane of small wing surface he flew upside-down, made | spirals while head downward and | looped the loop. i Beachey was born in San Francisco in September, 1887, and made his first | flight in 1905 at Oakland, Cal., pilot- | ing a dirigible, balloon. In 1906 he cir- | cled the capitol at Washington. He | soiared over New York city In July, 1907. His motor failed and the wini whirled him across the Tiver, wreck- ing the dirigible. His first heavier-than-air machine, a monoplane, was wrecked at St. Paul in 1910. He made a successful flight in Los Angeles, but then wrecked an- other flyer. Firsat to Circle Capitol. On May 5, 1911, he was the first man to circlee the capitol in Washing- ton in an aeroplane. He then startled the world by flying over Niagara Falls. Later he won the first inter city aero- plane race in America, flying from New York to Philadelphia. He wasg the most prominent figure in the 1911 Chicago aviation meet, spiraling at sharp dngles. Farly in 1913, Beachey announced that he had made hig last flight, as- serting that he felt partly responsible for the deaths of nine aviators who had tried to emulate him. When the deeds of the daring Frenchmen were chronicled, he returned to flylng. In October, 1913, at Hammonds- port, N. Y., his machine swept several spectators from a roof, killing one. Beachey boasted that 20,000,000 people had seen him fly. Feats Thrilled Thousands, His feats which he went through here at Charter Oak park thrilled thousands of people on the three days when he flew, His actions in the air were likeend to those of a bird for there seemed to be little of which a bird is capable that he could not do. He soared out of sight in the clouds, suddenly to emerge, spiraling and swooping toward the earth until it seemed that he must be dashed to pleces. The accident which befell him here hapepned on the first day of his exhibition. The accident occurred on the home stretch. Beachey started from the stands and headed toward the west, trying to adjust the mixture of his engine which had troubled him all the afternoon except when he was at a high altitude. The engine choked and slowed down, and realizing that he would have to land, he made a sharp turn into the paddock to avoid hitting the trees at the edge of the track. Shock Upset Machine. The loss of power caused the ma- chine to swoop to the ground, one wing hitting before the ground gear had come into use. The shock upset the machine which turned completely over, resting on the top of the planes. Beachey was strapped into his seat and was unable to extricate him- self until help arrived. The fall smashed the works of his watch. ! which foretold of his murder. He recovered from his injuries, re- maining at the Heublein hotel for | several days and later returning to complete his exhibition at Charter Oak park. It was his boast that he never disappointed a crowd. prefer- ring to take his life in his hands and perform the daripg feats that made his name known throughout the country rather than have it said that he feared his calling. Death Due to Drowning. That Beachey was still alive when he struck the water and had suf- fered no major injury as the result of the fall except a broken lég, was the opinion expressed by Dr. David F. Stafford, autopsy surgeon, who ex- amined the body 'at the morgue last | night. The face, said Dr. Stafford, wusl discolored from strangling, indicating that death was due to drowning. Cuts in the aviator's hands were taken to indicate that he had made desperate efforts to release himself from the mesh of twisted wires and rods in which he was entangled When the machine fell, Beachey was protected by the engine, propel- lers and hood of the monoplane which struck the water first. It was pointed out that if Beachey could have disen- gaged himself he would probably have managed to keep afloat long enough to be rescued LINCOLN'S BODY GUARD DIES AT WASHINGTON Colone! W. H. Crook Succumbs (o Pncum-nia--Had Eveniiul Career Washington, March 15.—Colonel W. H. Crook disbursing officer of the White House, who was President Lin- coln’s body guard and who has been intimately acquainted with every president since 1860, died Saturday at his home here. He had been sick with pneumonia more than a week. Fifty years of service as a White House employe, through the adminis- trations of twelve presidents, made Colonel William H. Crook one of the most familiar figures in the national capital, and in his old age left him rich in personal reminisinces of the intimate side of White House life. The assassination of Linvoln and Garfield, various weddings at the White House. and the impeachment of President Johnson, were among numerous events which Colonel Crook recalled in memoirs of his half-century of White House service. | Taken from Police Force. He was taken from the Washington police force in 1865 and appointed President Lincoln’s body guard. Prior to this he had served in the TUnion army. He accompanied on many of his walks and drives, and it was his duty to watch over the president dur- ing public receptions. Colonel Crook told often of how, on the afternoon before Lincoln's assas- sination, the president had come to him in confidence and said that on three successive nights he had dreams Crook thereupon begged the president not to 80 to the theater that evening, as planned. Lincoln insisted, and fur- thermore would not hear of Crook accompanying him. He ordered Crook to go home and rest. As they parted, Lincoln failed to say “Good Night, - the only time he ever failed to say it, said Crook. Interested in Play. Colonel Crook also always tained that the substitute guard night the play and left his post of duty, and that if he himself had been present, Booth would never have entered the theater box to shoot Lincoln. It was Colonel Crook, who, during the next administration, carried to President Johnson the first news of his acquittal on impeachment charges. He served as Johnson’s bodyguard, and on the day the verdict was expect- ed he was on hand. When he was told the news he ran all the way fom the capitol to the White House. The presi- dent’'s eyes filled with tears, and he gulped when Colonel Crook burst in with the tidings, later thanking him warmly for his trouble. Close to Grant., Col. Crook was unusually close to President Grant and the members of | his family, and in 1870 he was ap- | pointed ‘*‘executive clerk to the presi- | dent of the United States.”” Later, | in 1877, President Grant made him disbursing officer of the White House, | the position he held during the suc- ceeding administrations. It was dur- ing the Grant administration that “TI7” FOR ACHING, SORE, TIRED FEZT for tender, puffed-up, burn- ing, calloused feet and corns. main- that in became interested s v “Sure! I use ‘TIZ" every fime for any foot trouble.” You can be happy-footed just like me. Use “TIZ” and never suffer with tender, raw, burning, blistered, swol- len, tired, smelly feet. “TIZ"” and only “TIZ"” takes the pain and sore- ness out of corns, callouses and bun- ions. As soon as you put your feet in a “TIZ” bath, you just feel the happi- ness soaking in. How good your poor, old feet feel. They want to dance for joy. “TIZ” is grand. *“TIZ"” in- stantly draws out all t' e polsonous exudd ions which puff 1p your feet and cause - & +med, aching, sweaty, sme Tee.. Get a 25 cMt box of “TIZ” at any drug store or department store. Get Instant foot rel:ef. Laugh at foot suf- ferers who complain. Because your feet are never, rever gong to bother or make you limp any moré. l i \, Ml. CUDLUL Gas Just returm Horses were bought at the hight p the mal ho be given to be several purpose the low figure will In this car will business and general 1,060 to 1,400 Ik We car cords, heavy be equalled See us before you n the Nev England buy horse | dump cartel P. H. CONDON ¢ 22 LAUREL STREET, SRR life at the White House began to be more ceremonial, Col. Crook told how he Giteau, President Garfield's assassin away from the White House casions before he finally succeeded in killing the president Guiteau had been accustomed to go into the re- ception room, agk after the health of the president, gtay a short time and leave, He became obnoxious one day, and orders were given to keep him away. On the morning of theé assassination the man returned to ask bout the president’s health, and Crook & worried when he heard of the affair, The president was not told of his fears, however, and in one of his books of White House memories Crook tells how he found Garflield turning hand springs with sons that morning. Supplied Squirrel Soup. Crook was in one of the House windows when Garfleld brought back after being shot president was and his hand to a group of employes. Warren S, Young, another veteran White House employe, and friend of Crook, was with when he died, and gave the first an nounceemnt to the world, While the president was still hovering between life and death, Crook heard that he would be helped by some squirrel soup, 80 he obtained a special per- mit, shot some’squirrels, and supplied the soup. Col. Crook saw on o« nis White was The conscious waved five White House p WE GIVE RUYAL GOLD TRADING drove | Garfield | | given by marriages. other men dents undi ing notes spoke in fajthfuln, casion of entering th which he o was present bers of the HEADA White House , throbbing mowents to ders which age at any est, surest h world. Do agony and | Millions of found that misery is | for. STAMI Reductions made throughout list, many 10e gro 25¢, Read the list. many 15¢ groceries 2 for 25c, many othe D ——— SPECTALS FOR MARCH 15th TO MARCH 20t A&P Jams A&P Pumpkin ... . Best Seeded Raisins . . A&P Condensed Milk . . . 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