New Britain Herald Newspaper, September 10, 1915, Page 14

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OSIERY DEPARTME AT DAMON’S SHOE SHOP Is by far the largest of its kind in the city and one of the largest in this £ finto this stock. state. Why not purchase your Hosiery Here, where you get the largest as- E - sortment and pay no more? Goods from all the leading manufacturers have found their Holeproof Hosiery, Phoenix Hosiery, Onyx Hosiery, Ameri- osiery, McCallum Silk Hosiery and many other brands of AINOR, BOOTH'S B LOCK NEW BRITAIN.. F PATENTS. nts issued from the U. fice, Tuesday, September e State of Connecticut, from the office of Sey- le, solicitors of patents, reet, New Haven, Conn. , W. F. Irrgang and G. signors to George P. Windsor Locks. Truck. ey, assignor to Pratt & Hartford. Lubricator. Bolan, assignor to The Side- TSe Shoe Co., Hartford. tin, Hartford, assignor to Typewriter Co. Erasing * typewriting machines. oddard, assignor to Water- . Co., Waterbury. Letter Rail- powicz, Bridggport. }..yle, agsignor to American Graphophone Co., Bridgeport. Press- | ing sound records. A. K, Lovall, New Haven. operating apparatus. 1 T. H. Macdonald, assignor to American Graphophone Co., Bridge- | vort. Ejector or throw-off for sound records. E. J. Madden, assignor to The Haw- thorne Mfg. Co., Bridgeport. Clamp- ing device. C. J. Strainer. C. D. Platt, switch. J. H. Shaw, assignor to Sargeant & Co, New Haven. Indicator lock. L. Y. Spear, assignor to Electric Roat Co. Propelling apparatus for vessels. H. G. Voight, New Britain, assignor to Sargeant & Co., New Haven. Lock. L. Weidlich, Stratford. Electric switch, Same. Adjustable reflector for in- candescent lamps. Window McCarthy, Waterbury. Bridgeport. Electric Designs. A. F. Rockwell, Bristol. Tile. Automo- | |ti FRENCIl DEPUTIES FIGHT. (Correspondence of the Associated Press.) Paris, August 30.—Doubts have arisen in France as to the wisdom of allowing mcmbers of the Chamber of deputies to serve in army and while doing so return {o Paris from time to time and crit ¢ the minister of war and the conduct of the war. Two hun- dred deputies, or one third of the membership of the lower house of parliament, are in active service, some as privates but most of them as unior officers rarely above the grade of captain. They were reserve offi- cers before the war. A few of them are restless Intriguers who in their double capacity or military men at the front who with the right to leave their commands for Paris at any :e the chamber is in session cause a great deal of embarrassment; both to their military superiors in com- mand in tke ficld and to the cabinet. ‘ hooi ~Cildren . In a remarkable test, recenfly made under the supervision of the State Brd of Health of Minnesota, over 9000 school children were questioned as Can’t Afford hat they ate for breakfast. A large percentage of the breakfasts consisted of coffee, bread and but- .co.fee and oatmeal or some other cereal; coffee and hotcakes; coffee and uits; coffee and coffee cake, or coffee alone. ps prevail everywhere throughout the country. “IS IT ANY WONDER,” SAYS THE EXAMINING PHYSISIAN, “THAT 23 PER CENT OF THESE CHILDREN HAVE FRE- SEIEADACHES?” P thinking of the chief cause—coffee. And it IS no wonder Pwe consider that coffee contains the powerful drug, caffeine, a nerve on and notorious cause of headaches, heart trouble, sleeplessness, irrita- n and other ills! % Parents often often wonder why their children are sickly, dulland back- d in school, when frequently the cause lies in the homely, accepted habit iving them a beverage containing an insidious poison. ‘When scientists and Boards of Health everywhere are speaking out nst the dietetic dangers to which children have been so long subjected, it is h time that parents take heed and corregt these conditions. No child should permitted to use coffee. It is easy to furnish them instead the pleasant, pure jod-drink— Instant Postum Made from wheat, roasted with a bit of wholesome molasses, Postum ns the goodness of the grain andis amost delicious beverage, economical, enient and free from coffee drugs or any other harmtul substance. Postum comes in two forms: The original Postum Cereal, which has to be boiled; Instant Postum—soluble—made in the cup with hot water—instantly. They are equally delicious and the cost per cup is about the same for both kinds. ' Postum for Children Avoids Coffee Troubles! : “There’s a Reason” Probably the same condi- Handicaps | only by big:game hunters and oc- 3 casional iovers of scenery. LIKE SWITZERLAND Wonderful Natural Scenery in: Glacier Reserve Rivals Alps | e i Many hundreds, perhaps thousands | of people who never heard of the ! Glacler Nationai Park before this spring will visit it this summer- It has been a National Park since 1910 but, in a period of utter public in- difference to the glories of American scenery, it has passed almost un- roticed. Now that America has suddenly become aware that she pos- sesses the most superb accessible scenery in the world, Gracier is des- tined to rapid recognition as the one real Switzerland of America. It is in northwestern Montana, close to the Canadian border line. The park derives 160 glaciers; but there are more than 90, all told, if one ¢ ses as glaciers many interesting snow patches of only a few acres each, which, neverthe- less, exhibit all the characteristics of true glaciers Its scemery is striking- 1y Alpine yet it possesses individuality to a high degree. In ruggedness and sheer grandeur it probably surpasses the Alps, while geologically it is markededly different. It strongly differentiates also from other mountain scenery in America. Ice-clad Rainier, mysterious Crater MKC, spouting Yellowstone, exquisite Yosemite, beautiful Sequoia—to each of these and to all other of our Na- tional parks Glacier offers a highiy individualized contrast. Region of Remarkable Beauty- To define Glacier National Parl, picture to yourself two approaching chainsg of vast tumbled mountains which pass the Continental Divide back and forth between them in wormlike twistings, which bear living glaciers in every hollow of their loftiest convolutions, and which break precipitatedy thousands of feet to lower mountain masses, which, in their turn, bear innumerable lakes of unbelieveable calm, offspring of the glaciers above; these lakes, 1n their turn, giving birth to roaring rivers of icy water, leaping turbent- ly from level tec level, carving in- numerable sculptured gorges of grandeur and indescriable beauty. Those parallel mountain masses form a central backbone for the Na- tional park. Their western sides slope from the summit less precipitately. Their eastern sides break abruptly. It is on the east that their scenic quality becomes titantic To really comprehend the person- ality of Glacier one must glance back for a moment into the geological past when the sea or great lakes rolled over what is now the northwest of this continent. It was water that deposited the stratified sediments which are now these rocks. Untold ages passed, and the lake bottom, under the urge terrific forces hidden in the interior of the ecarfn, lifted, emerged, and became land. Untold ages passed, and the land hardened into rocks And all the time the forces kept pressing to- gether and upward the rocky crust of the earth. "For untold ages this crust held safe. Result of Titanic Upheaval. At last the pressure won. The rocks first yielded upward in long irregular wavelike folds. Gradually these folds grew in size. When the rocks could stand the strain no longer, great cracks appeared, and one broken edge, the western, was thrust upward and over the other. The edge that was thrust over the other was thousands of feet thick. Its crumbling formed the mountains and the precipices. ‘When it settled the western edge of this break overlapped the eastern edge ten or fifteen miles. This thrusting of one edge of the burst and split continent over the other edge is called faulting by geolo- gists, and this particular fault is called the Lewis Overthrust. It is the Over- thrust which gives the peculiar char- acter to this a ing country, that and the inco: 1y tumbled char- acter of the vast rocky masses lying crumbling on its edges. Thus was formed, in the dim days before man, for the pleasure of the American people of today, the Glacier National Park. Today the visitor finds this the most | wonderful combination of mountain tops in .America, bounded by vertical walls sometimes 4,600 feet in height diversified by many glistening glaciers and by beautiful timbered slopes leading down by graceful curves to the bottom of deep valleys. Scores of lakes are unsurpassed in sheer beauty by any even of Italy and Switzerland. There are more than 250 lakes in all. How it Was Discovered. this sea or of Nor is scenic wonderland merely a sample of the neighborhood. North of the park the Canadian moun- tains rapidly lose their scenic inter- | est. South and west there is little of greater interest than the moun- tains commonly crossed in a trans- continental journey, To the east lies the plains. This region appears not | to have been visited by white man be- fore 1853, when A. W. Tinkham, a government engineer exploring a | route for a Pacific railroad, ascended | Nyack creek by mistake and re- traced his steps, when he discovered the impracticability for railroad pur- poses of the country he had pene- trated. The next explorers were a group of surveyors establishing the Canadian boundary line. This was in | 1861. In 1890 copper ore was found | at the head of Quartz creek and there was a rush of prospectors. The east side of the Continental Divide, being part of the Blackfeet Indian Reser- | vation, was closed to prospectors, and | congress was importuned for relief. | In 1896 this was purchased from the ; Indians for $1,5600,000, but not enough for the visited copper was found to pay mining. ‘Thereafter it was 7 | tibility to shock. YOUR GIRL'S APPETITE ‘When your growing daughter’s appetite becomes fickle and she al‘x‘gwu a degpr: for sour, starchy or chalky articles look after the condition of her blood. Ifshe is pale and languid, nervous, without ambition and irritable her blood :)snu'r‘mble to meet the demands made up- it. Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills are a specific remedy for the form of anemia, or lack of blood that afflicts growing girls and Proper treatment with these pills will not only correct the trouble but prevent it rom progressing into a worse form. Du; her 'teens & girl lays the foun- dation for her future health. Lack of blood at this time may rob her of robust, healthy womanhood. ~_It is of the great- est importance to administer to girls who £TOW pale and weak a safe, non-alcoholic tonic and Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills meet eveg requirement of the most careful mother, Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills make the blood rich and red and it carries renewed health and strength to every part of the y. These pillsa are recommended Wherever a tonic is needed. _Your own druggist sells Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills. Send today to the Dr. Wil- liams Medicine Co., Schenectady, N. Y. s name from its fOF the book, ‘‘Building Up the Blood.’} i8 free, TURK SOLDIERS FEAR AEROPLANES Modern Warfare Best Method in Gallipoli (Correspondence of the Associated Press.) Constantinople, August 30.—Al- though the Turkish soldier is hard- ened to artillery, machine-gun and rifle fire, he 1s still so terrorized by the aercplane that the mere sight of one sends himn to cover. The fear of the flying-machine is due, of course, to the effect of the bombs and darts that are thrown by the aviators, hut there are psycholo- gists among the Turkish officers who maintain that the fear of the man- bird largely arises from the fact that men still carry the “bloody memory” as evolutionists call it, of the days when human beings were the prey of ‘nuge winged creatures. But the veroplane bombs has qual- ities of its own to make it a fearful thing. Unlike the artillery projec- tile, it has no iracjectural curve, against which cover can easily be obtained. In adaition, although the scatter area of .either the aeroplane bomb or the sisel.darts is small, it is in the form of g eemplete cirele while the scatter are@s ofcthe artillery pro- jectile iies almost straightforward of the explesion. For this reason, an infantry position that is well pro- tected against 1he artillery and small arms fire is still open to attack from above. Factor in Effectiveness. Another factor that makes the aevoplane bomb feared is that it con- tains high explosives of a sort that ecannot be employed in artillery am- munition, owing io their great suscep- Most of the British and French aeroplane shells dropped on the Gallipoli peninsula contain ni- | tro-glycerine, a mixture of nitro-gly- cerine and ceilulose, the two making an explosgive that is ninety-eight per cent, pure, which, in other words, is all converted into heat with the ex- cepiion of about two per cent. The shattering effect of this explo- sive upon the steel shell of the bomb is terrific. At -its best the ordinary artillery shell flics fnto a small num- ber of fragments, hut the aeroplane bomb is shattered completely. Its fragments usually show edges that are as sharp os that of a razor, and wounds caused by them are deep la- cerations. Bombs Make Bad Wounds, The aeroplane bomb “splinter” has a shattering effect upon small bones, hut hitting a large bone it will firmly imbed itself. The artillery projectile fragment hardly ever does this. The wounds caused by it are as a rule fatal or easily cured, while those caused by the aercplane bomb are what surgeons term ‘“viclous.’” While the artillery “spiinter,” owing to an absence of great velocity at mean dis- tances, takes a direct course in mak- ing a wound, the aerial bomb frag- ment, because of its smallness, shape, sharp edges and greater velocity, It~ erally plaws a zigzag route through the human body. Were it not that the Roentgen rays make the location of the fragment possible, the mortali- ty from the effects of aeroplane bomb wounds would be appallingly great. ITCHING ECZEMA GOVERED ENTIRE BODY, RESINOL CURED Could Not Sleep. 8 Remedies had Failed. Resinol Stopped Itching Immediately. Boston, Mass., Aug. 11, 1914—“My entire body, even my eyelids, was com- pletely covered with blisters as large as a pea. When one would burst water would come from it, and then it would turn into & very painful sore. The burning and itching were something terrible, and I COULD NOT SLEEP nor rest. I think I had one of the worst cases of eczema a human being ever had. “I used eight different kinds of rem- edies without success. I then tried Resinol Ointment and Resinol Soa and it stopped the itching IMME- DIATELY. I gradually noticed a change for the better. Now I am en- tirely cured, and am without a pimpla or blemish on any part of my body.”— (Signed) Edward F. McCullough, 249 River St., Mattapan. Résinol Ointment and Resinol Soap heal skin eruptions, clear away pimples, and form a most valuable household treatment for sores, burns, ete. Sold by all druggists. b 2 ESTABLISHED 18806 <2 E | Globe Clothing House | We Have the Largest Stock of STETSON HATS In This Gity. Also DREYER HATS NEW STYLES OF SWEATER COATS The Important Sale This Week Are the BOYS’ SUITS AT ONE-HALF THE REGULAR PRICE This Store is the Home HART, SCHAFFNER & MARX CLOTHES Agfinst Substitutes Get the Well-Known Round Package HORLICK'S THE ORIGINAL MALTED MILK Made in the largest, best equipped and sanitary Malted l Milk plant in the world Wedo not make“milkproducts”—#® Skim Milk, Condensed Milk, ete, Butonty HORLICK’S THE ORIGINAL MALTED MILK Made from clean, full-cream milk and the extract of select malted grain, reduced to powder form, soluble im water. Best Food-Drink for All Ages. Used for over a Quarter Century - B Take a Package Home Advance Styles For Fall and Winter LADIES’ SUITS, COATS, SKIRTS and DRESSES. Our line is now complete, comprising all the pop- ular materials, colors and designs. Expert workman- ship and made in our own factory, will assure' every lady visiting our store that each garment is finished in a superior manner. REASONABLE PRICES ALSO PREVAIL. Look at our windows, come in and examine our goods. It is no trouble to show our different lines. Weé have also a fine, new assortment of Ladies’ Waists, Petticoats and Raincoats. All necessary al- terations Free. J. RUBIN 135 Main Street, Barnes’ Block

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