New Britain Herald Newspaper, April 15, 1915, Page 13

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“TI” FOR SORE, TIRED FEET-—AH! “TIZ” is grand for mbhing. swollen, sweaty, salloused Feet or corns. “Pull, Johnny, Pull!” +Ah! what relief. Nu more ‘tired feet; no more burning feet: no more swollen, bad smelling, sweaty reet, No more soreness in corns, callouses, bunions. No matter what ails your feet or what under the sun vou've tried without getting relief, just use “TIZ.” “TIZ” is the only remedy that draws out all the peoisonous exudations which puff up the feet. “TIZ” cures Your foot trouble so you'll limp or draw up your face in pain. Your 'shoes won’t seem tight and your feet will never, never hurt or get sore and swollen. Think of it, no more foot misery, no more agony from ‘corns, callouses or bunions. Get a 25 cent box at any drug store or department store or depart- ment store and get instant Wear smaller shoes. Just once try “9IZ.” Get a whole year's foot ~om- fort for only 25 cents. Think of it. s e T A . WHY CHILLY WEATHER BRINGS RHEUMATISM Slys Skin Pores Are Closed and Uric Acid Remains in Blood. Rheumatism is no respecter of age, color or rank. If not the most danzerous of human afflictions it is one of the most painful. Those sub- ject to rheumatism should eat less meat, dress as warmly as possible, avoid any unduc exposure and, above all, drink lots of pure water, Rheumatism is caused by uric acid which is generated in the bowels and absorbed into the blyod. It is the function of the kidneys to filter this acid from the blood and cast it out in the urine; pores of the skin are also a means of freeing the blood of this impurity In damp and chil- ly, cold weather the skin pores are closed, thus forcing the kidneys to do-double work, they become weak and sluggish and fail to eliminate this uric acid which keeps accumulating and circulating through the system, cventually settling in the joints and muscles causing stiffness, soreness h._d pain called rheumatism. i At the first twinge of rheumatism get from any pharmacy about four ounges of Jad Salts; put a tabiespoon- ful in a glass of water and drink be- fore breakfast cach morning for a This is said to eliminate uric by stimulating the kidneys to mormal action, thus ridding the blood of these impurities. Jad Salts is inexpensive, harmless and is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with Ili- thia and is used with excellent re- sults by thousands of folks who are subject to rheumatism Here you have a pleasant, effervescent lithia- water drink which overcomes uric acid and is beneficial to your kidneys 25 well. Ilic Quality Print Shop — Printing done iD many languarecs GOOD WORKMANSHIP — MO - ATE PRICES, D Linotype Comnosition. EASTERN PRINTING AND PUB- LISHING COMPANY. (kurch Street. G EBBESEN Do Myr IverJohnson Bicycles Are the Best We have the largest line of New Wheels in the city, Come in and see pur large display of Wheels at our low prives of $15.98, 122, 5'04 $25.00, $30.00, $35.00, $36.50, 537.50, $45.00, $50.00, . A GLADDING 4 Chestnut Street high grade THONEY AND ITS USES, DOMESTIC QUESTION ' Cakes Made With Honey Kctp Longer Than if Made Wih Sugar. Washington, D. C., April 15.—Var- jous ways in which the housewife can use honey to advantage are suggested ' in a new publication of the United States Department of Agrilculture-— Farmers' bulletin 653, “Honey And Its Uses in The Home.” In this coun- | try honey has hitherto not been in as common use as in Burope, It is, however, a compar- | ] in cookery. ! atively simple matter to substitute it | in many recipes for common sugar or | for molasses, and when this is done | the resulting flavor is often both novel | uand agreeable. One of the great advantages in the use of honey is that cakes made with : it will keep much longer than those | made with sugar. A honey cake made | with butter, for instance. will keep its | quality until the butter grows rancid, | and one made without butter will | keep fresh for months. For this rea- | son honey is especially useful in re- | cipes that call for no butter. Icing ! made with honey has the same ad- vantage and some icing made in the | experimental laboratory of the De- partment of Agriculture was found at | the end of ten months to be as soft | and in as good condition as when it ;| was first made. Should Be Served Like Jam. The experiments conducted, by the department indicate that many of the instructions in the old cookbooks, for | the preparation of honey are unnev= essarily elaborate. Tor example, it used to be thought that honey had to be brought to the boiling point and then skimmed and cooled. Since honey is extremely likely to boil over, this process requires great care. Ex- periments showed, however, that it appears to be quite unnecessary, and it is probable that the notion arose at a time when ordinary commcreial honey contained more impurities than at present. Similarly, the old re- cipes say that the dough should be kept at least one day before the soda is added. No evidence to support this theory was found b the investiga- | tors. On the other hand, however, they did discover that dough contain- ing honey can be more ez kneaded it allowed to stand for several days. Again, the use of “potash’ is recom- mended in most of the recipes in foi cign cookbooks as a means of raising the dough. The properties of potash are quite similar to ordinary baking soda, and there seems no reason why the latter should not do just as well. Baking soda is a common kitchen commodity in America, and potassium bicarbonate--the potash of the cook- | ery book is almost unknown for | household purpose As a matter of | fact, a little experience will enable any competent cook to substitute | honey successfully for sugar in bread, | cake, preserved fruits, sauces, and candi Tt is safe to estimate that | will sweeten a dish about as much as a cupful of sugar, but since honey contains water in addition, there is less need for milk or other liquids. Ior practical purposes it is accurate enough to consider that for cach cup- ful of honey a quarter of a cupful is | added to the recipe. If thesc facts are kept in mind special honey recipes are unnecessary Honey is marketed “in twa forms, known respectively as comb honey and extracted honey, the former being used much 1li jam or marmalade and the latter either in that way for for cooking. In the past there has been some prejudice against extracted honey—ar honey removed from the comb—Dbecausc it was believed that this was frequently adulterated. How- ever prevalent this practice may have been in the past, recent legislation and the efforts of honey producers them- selves have made it dangerous and unprofitable. There now, it is be- lieved, little adulterated extracted honey on the market. Comb honey {s practically certain to be the pure product of the hive, because it can only be adultered by processes which cost more than they save. When sold at retail there is now compar- atively little difference in the cost of comb and extracted honey, but the the latter can he purchased at whole- sale very much cheaper. The rea- son for this is that the producer of comb hon makes a product which is practically ready to be delivercd { to the consumer. Moreover, it costs the hee-keeper less to produce ex- | tracted honey while the wholesaler i | i ! KEEP LIVER AND BOWELS REGULAR WITH CASCARETS No More Headache, Bad Colds, Sour ' Stomach and Con- stipation. Get a 10-cent box now. No odds how bad your liver, stom- ach or bowels; how much your head aches, how miserable and uncomfort- able you are from constipation, in- digestion, biliousness and sluggish bowels—you always get the desired results with Cascarets. Don’'t let your stomach, liver and bowels make you miserable. Take Cas- carets tonight; put an end to the head- ach biliousness, dizziness, nervous- ness, sick, sour, ga stomach, back- ache and all other distress; cleanse your inside organs of all the bile, gases and constipated matter which is producing the misery. A ‘10-cent hox means health, hap; ness and a. clear head for months. No more days of gloom and distress if vou will take a Cascaret now and then { All druggists sell Cascarets, Don't forget the children-- their little jnyid, lneed a gentle cleansing, tuo, German Converted Cruiser Kronpring Wilhelm Had Only Four Guns Aboard The the Licel here April 15 followed Newport News, Kronprinz Wilhelm interned arriving in wake of the Prinz Iriedrich, month ago after thrilling and ef- fective operafions for the arms. In her raid of the seas since she slipped out of New York harbor August 3 last as a Gerinan merchant which German | passenger Wilhehn | and | prinz took 960 sels de sent fo & | ferent steamship the Kron- never touched lan.d prisoners from various ves- of these n ports at dif- on German ships, which the raider in response to wire alls. The sixty-one prisoners | had on hoard are Britich sailors from [ the steamships Tamar, destroyed who purchases extracted honey has several processes to go thraugh with before he can sell it at retail, It the housewife is willing to do these herself, she can effect a considerable saving. The mplest and, perhaps, most popular way of using honey is to serve it like jam or syrup with bread, pancakes, etc. When used in this way an ounce of honey may be re- garded as the equivalent of an ounce of jam. When intended for up it is sometimes diluted with hot wa- ter, no oniy (o make it less sweet, but also ¢ r to pour. The house- wife will also find some form of tart fruit served with honey, cottage cheese, and bread and butter an at- tractive combination and an eco- nomical substitute for the much prized and ipensive Bar-le-Duc currants which are themselves nften cooked in honey and served with cream cheese and crackers. very e rometer and Health, Surgeon Banks, U. Health Service.) Every person capable of putting two and two togcther obtaining the correct answer has been conscious of feeling out of sorts, as the printer would say, when the clouds hung low and the sun obscured. A week of dull weather scts Whole munity on edge and the mental, moral and phy at its heap. (By S, Public and was = com- close, about fit for the scrap Under such atmospheric con- ditions, when prolonged for a number of day an Englishman admits that he feels ‘“scedy” and the American confesses that he is fecling *‘mean,” botk adjectives relating to a state. of inental and bodily dumps. This situation is generally buted to the lack of unshine every human being retains the ancient beliefs in the potentiality of the sun in its relation to his life and its well- being. He knows tnat 1t gives warmth and light and brings forth his crops from the fruitful earth, and rightly vields it a respect for its great and generally benign influence over mundanec existence. It 1s true that we feel “bully” in sunshiny weather, but. .sunshine is the accompaniment of certain atmospheric conditions not wholly shown by the thermometer or the solarimeter. A few sunless days or hours are not sufficient, however, to put a hoodeco on the temperament and activities of a whole population: there is another important controlling agency but little understood, even if appreciated, and it exercises a much greater influence than the sun in a given space of time. If the sunlight were absolutely necessary to our up- keep nightwatchmen and laborers on t'ile morning cditions would be chronic invalids, and mine workers the most unhealthy people in existence, If sunlight were necessary to animal life attri- MOTHER GRAY'S SWEE?” POWDERS FOR CHILDREN, } W i Brentup Gl 'mu. They Break up Coic TradeMark. in 94 houre. Aceil D nfl*.iuu. t Sample mailed FRE y " | vwiiile, &S ST TED, Lo Roy. N.Y. components of man are j for i all of the night prowiers would cease to exist. The gascous cnvelope of atme pheric air surrounding the earth is tie medium in which we have to live, and it bears the same relation to the human family as the waters of the globe to the order of fishes. The air tand water are essential to the life as | much a factor to man as the quality of water to the fish. This normad atmosphere air exerts on our hodies definite dynamic forc physical ssure of 14.7 pounds on every are inch of our bodies. if we live at { or near the sea lcvel. and {un we go this atmospheric pressure diminishes until on the heights of the Ttockies it is probably twe pounds | 1ess. The normal pressure at sea level i« indicated by the barometer as thirty inches, and it decreases by an estab- 1 ed scale as it ascends these moun- fain heights. Most persons know that ascents of mountainous peaks, thou- sands of feet above sea level results in marked physical distress, difficult breathing, general depression at the summits, and in extreme cases bleed- ing at the nose and even from the lungs, due to this lessened atmospheric pressure. Just so it happens that when the barometer is “low” for a considerable period, say a drop from thirty, the normal guage, to twenty- 'nine or below when stormy or dull weather ensues, wWe get the analogous cifect imperceptibly, but in an appre- ciable degree: for it has happened that a definite measure of atmospheric pressure is releascd from our bodies and naturally there follows a disloca- tion of our normal balance. The average adult man sustains on every pleasant day an atmospheric pressure of about fourteen tons at sea level, when the barometer reads at thirty and a drop of an inch or more, to twenty-nine and below practically takes off half a ton or more of his load to which he is accustomed. Paradoxically, instead of feeling shter and freer feels its disturbing Gepressing effect on his tissues. He has to become adjusted to this altera- 1 ! or usual relaxation, and while it is slow in its manifestations, as barometric changes are generally gradual, yet the effect in miniature is like going up to a great height on a mountain range. Of course this feeling is neither serious nor fatal, but the relaxed condition in unpleasant weather extending over # number of days makes us feel “out or sorts.” Shaved a Man a Minute, (London Chronlcle.) Which gives the quickest shave, the At the club luncheon table discussion on this im- | safety or ordinary razor? portant topic opinion was pretty even- ly divided. Then the writer remind- {ed them of the shaving competitions of years ago at ihe old Royal Aquarium, which the pick of Lon- don’s Figaros fought for the blue rib- bon of the profession, attended with {all the of sport-— Judges, es { doctor and a nurse in attendance. A champion emerged from the Hemeric struggle—one Teddy Weeks, wh name has been immortalized in He shaved a man a min- ute for an hour with an ordinar; s without drawing blood, Cay sufely razor beat this? paraphernaliz timekeepers, re and o e razor the the higher | tion from normal tensity to one of 'un- ; were March March : 1 raiders brought as thrilling as did the litel t'riedrich. Her rec- ord of destraction, however, was ac- | complished ‘with cn!y four guns, two | taken from the Gerinun cruiser Karl- | sruhc and two captured | Ccleby, he zecond destroyed | of | the | a story er from tho | chant steamship La Cor- | k October, 1914, 1 COTTON REPORT FOR MARCH MADE PUBLIC 523,959 Bales Used During Month Compared With 1 51 Consumed in Same Month Last Year, Washington, during March clusive of April linters, the announced yesterday Cotton on hand arch in manufacturing estab- lishments and independent warenouses ggregated 5,119,317 bales. March consumption compared with 493.354 bales used in March a year ago. During the eight months ending March 31, cotton used 3.578.215 bales, against 3,765,210 in the samc period the previous year, Cotton on hand March 31 in manu- facturing establishments was 1 bales, against 1.6 ) v independent ware 1.8534,008 March 695,210 months Cotton u bales, - census burcau was last in last were last year and 6,689.613 bales, 1 yvear’s period. 1o bales against for the cight against 7,236,075 in 1 Imports were 38,534 bales, against 30,863 last year, and for the eight months 206,790 bales, against 115,157 in last vear's period. Linters used were against 24,720 1 ear, and for the eight months 214,579 bales, against 204,683 in last year's period; on hand in manufacturing establishments 161,- 647 bales, against 103,626 last ycar, and in independent warehousee 100,- 208 bales, against 8 last year, Linters exported were 60,175 bales and for the cight months 155,365 bales. Cotton svindle: rumbered 30,91 858 in March last y A RAW, SORE THROAT Eases Quickly When You Apply a Little Musterole And MUSTEROLE won't blister like the old-fashioned mustard-plaster. Just spread it on with your fingers. It pen- ctrates to the sore spot with a gentle tingle, loosens the congestion and draws out all soreness and pain. MUSTEROLE is a clean, white oint- ment made with oil of mustard. There’s nothing like it for quick relicf for Sorc Throat, Bronchitis, Tonsilitis, Croup. Stiff Neck, Asthma, Neuralgia, Head- ache, Congestion, Pleurisy, Rheumatisr: Lumbago, Pains and Aches of the Baclk or Joints, Sprains, Sore Muscles, Brui:- | Chilblains, Frosted Fect, Colds on th» Chest (it often prevents Pncumonia). Nothing like MUSTEROLE for croupy children, 5 At your druggist’s, in 25¢ and 50c jars, and a special large hospital size for $2.50. | Be sure you get the genuine MUS- TEROLE. Refuse imitations—get what | you ask for. The Musterole Company, | Cleveland, Ohio. 31,398 bales, active during March , against 31,083,- ar, Save the Babies. NFANT MORTALITY is something frightful.’ ‘Wi can hirdly » l of all the children born in civilized countries, twerty-two or nearly one-quarter, die before they reach one year L per cent., or more than cre-third, before they are five, and one-h the, e fifteen ! We do not h a v use of Castoria wou majority of these precious lives, Neither do we hesitate to say of these infantile deathe are occasioned by the use of narcotic prep Drops, tinctures and soothing syrups scld for children's complaints more or less opium or morphine. They are, in co erable @ deadly poisons. la any quantity, they stupefy, retard circulations to congestions, sickness, death, Castoria operates exactly the you must see that i rs the signature of Chas. H, ¥letcher, causes the blcod to circuiate fproperly, opens the pores of the ekin and allays fever. ’, @Genuine Castoria always bears the signatare of — ‘ tYourifinQer—tips The smallest details of your business are often ofJ;rcat importance to you. Wh have to for wgat should be on han A q;-eat building, constructed of thousands of bricks, is useful because all the bricks are in place. Keep every record of your business at your er-tips. You can do it with DejuxXe, PETITE SYSTEMS Thirty modern systems for business and professional record-and-account kee&i which providesimple, inexpensive me! :& for men who would not keep records by more complicated time-taking methods. The systems comprise: Sales Records Attorneys’ Case Dockets Expense lleurh Attorneys’ Collection Dockets Credit Records Phodcnr’ dolour Liability Ledger Pay Roll System ey b At Rl Bt fcords o T Stock and Parchase Records Dentists’ Appointment Bosk They cost but little—but are just as effici as'the most elaborate accounting form: p Take advantage of the aid they offer. Call our samples and a copy of our complete um= Adi:iens Printing Co. 66 Church Street, New Britain. 111 AL R i Victor Egg Praserver I'reserving eggs when they ¢ per dozen, and keeping the are plentiful and prices are 18c § m until eggs are scarce and pri range from 40c to 60c per doze n is certainly true economy. No Just suppose vou had bought y our Winter's supply of eggs whe they were selling at 18c and 2 Oc per dozen and put them down wi Victor kigg Preserver, the sam e as you would fruit in the cannin, wson what a saving you woul d have made. Our prepcration is & and far superior to water glass (sl a package mixed with fifteen q of eggs. Buy a package of our V ready when the price of eggs drops, # Victor Egg Preserver sells for 26e¢ me from your dealer, wi ou a package by par cel post prepaid on receipt of 36¢ i We make a speclal price on an order for one dozen pack! ages. For Sale by: CLARK AND BRAINERD CO. DICKINSON T. B. FARREL & SON. Manufactured By solutely harmless, simple to use icate of soda.) The contents of 25 dozen tor Egg Preserver now and be put down your Winter supply. package, and if yo» are unable will send stamps. of water will preserve to secure GEO. M. LADD DRUG CO. 8. P. STRO! Apothecaries Hall Co, "™ Conn. Seeds--Seeds —-Seeds The Only Real Seed Store in the City Is at No. 113 Church Street At no other seed store in will find the of high grade sceds as you will at this store—we speclalize in sceds and the kind we handle are the best that money can bu. WHY EXPERIMENT WITH SEEDS? BUY THEM HERE AND YOUR TROUBLE We wi ion o our LAWN SEED, a special mixture with only the HIGHEST GRADE of SEED USED, WIZARD BRAND SHEEP MANUR This is the very best BRAND on the market. A carload will arrive from Chicago Stock Yards in a few days. It will pay you to wait and get this brand. gives the what it necds to make things grow. town you assortment This Manure soil S. P. STROPLE 113 CHURCH ST, NEW BRITAIN, CONN. 'PHONE 939 Y -

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