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Isn’t There Anytining You Need for Your House or Yourself? Why Shouldn’t YogBuy It on DOLLAR DAY? A EXT WEDNESDAY | The Merchants can’t seil an automobile or a piano for a dollar but they are The HERALD will tell you through its columns just what What Do You Want? Bargains will be offered you in all lines. striving to give you the best they have as cheap as possible. you may obtain and where it will be sold. - - - - Here are some of the merchants who have expressed their intentions of holding dollar sales. carry their announments - . - . - . - B The HERALD will T. W. O’Connor Miss M. Seibert Sovereign Trading Co. J. A. Spinetta Clark and Brainerd Conn. Hat Mfg. Co. Coocked Food Shop Wm. Cowlishaw P. Crona Crowell’s Drug Store Curran Co. Abbe Hardware Co. Adkins Printing Co. Harry Alex Alling Rubber Co. John A. Andrews and Co. C. Froeba M. P. Leghorn Leonard’s Confectionery Co. Hannah Loughery Park St. Market I. Porter Co. Porter and Dyson Co. B. C. Porter Sons Pullar and Niven Globe Clothing House Great Western Market Grindrod and Barnard Guarantee Shoe Co. A. P. Marsh C. E. McEnroe Herbert L.. Mills D. McMillan Miller and Olson Mohican Market Henry Morans E. Meshken United Electric Light and Water Co. Union Laundry Co. A. E. Benoit Union Tea Co. R. Berman Bowen and Co. John Boyle Co. Brodrib and Wheeler H. A. Hall J. M. Hallinan Jos. M. Halloran A. G. Hawker C. A. Hjerpe Hoffmann’s Bakery S. Stanley Horvitz George L. Damon Dickinson Drug Co. Rackliffe Bros. George Rapelye Raphael Dept. Store Renier, Pickhardt and Dunn J. Rabin Russell Bros. and Co. The Wilson Co. J. J. Naughton Hilding Nelson New Britain Gas Light Co. Eastern Millinery Co. Eastern Printing & Pub. Co. 25¢ Dept. Store. City Coal and Wood Co. NOTE TO MERCHANTS: Better make-up of your “ad” will be obtained if copy is brought in as early as possible JUTHERN CHINA PPOSES MONARCHY sents Movement Emanating‘ om Northern Part of Country crrespondence of the Assoclated Press.) anton,China , Sept. 5—Southern ina does not take kindly to the vement to make Yuan Shi-kai em- ror. Southern China, in fact, sel- m takes kindly to any movement hanating from the northern part of But the restoration of cspecially e republic. o empire is a project stateful to the merciai Most of great c« China. e ‘wealth of China is centered here hd in Inter of southern Hong Kong and Shanghai. he Cantonese have always been ex- They hd encouraged the two recent revo- for mely independent. financed Cantonese have wealthy through Many progressive extremely ho development of the mines in the come rait Settlements. Others have ade great fortunes in Java. And oit of the wealthy Chinese in the ited States are from the Canton eighborhood. Many of these men, REGOVERY FROM GRIP The form'of influenza popnlarly -alled lasts but a shorttime, 1s seldom fatal causes suffering and misery out of all | roportion 1o its importanc reason.is this. When t tage of the grip is passed there hains, & neurasthenia that persic honths if not properly corre: atient i8 moody, in poor spiri 'k of appetite and vigor and feels in- igposed to work or even to enjoy life. Warmth and quiet alone give comiort i Sleep the nerves vhich are always at high tension. The bestway to correct this after-effect bf the grip is to build up the blood end here is no better blood builder than Dr. Villiams’ Pink Pills. Asegoon as the revitalized blood courses m?:; the system you are aware of it thi g influence. Gradually the color eturng'to the pale cheeks, appetite and Cigestion improve and you are on tho Foad to health. The free hook ‘“Bnilding Up the Blood™” | ‘ontains a chapter on the after-etfects of © grip. 8end now for a copy to the | :' . \'fohams Medicine Co., Schenectady, | You can get Dr. Williams’ Pink |¥ills at the nearest Irug store or by mail on recei xes §2.50. fat him by a reformer. | later two bombs were found in of price, 50 cent per box; six ! General Lung Disliked- Even before the Preservation of peace set forth its plan for the restoration of the em- pire, there was extreme dissatis tion with General Lung, the mil governor named by president Yuan | Shi kai to direct affairs in Canton. War conditions made business bad. | Then the floods came and intensified | the unrest. While inspecting | damages done by the flood, General Lung was injured by a bomb hurled A few Society for the | house which had been smuggled in by | a cook bribed by reformers. General Lung has 25,000 troops in the vicinity of Canton and the Yun Shi -kai government has been | able to pay them regularly so far. | Rut in China there is always the | danger that an enemy will offer morc | money-and win away the military and naval forces. This happened hefors Canton, and if the wealthy re- formers were to advance sufflcient money to finance the opponents of the imperial movement foreigners re- o siding here are apprehensive of the | results. South Resents North. Southern China has been under the influence of Hong Kong so long, and through its extensive foreign trade is | so0 closely in touch that tion of northern China. with the outside | domina- | The for a separate government in south- ern China is always uppermost in the minds of the reform element. Reform- world, it resents the desire | | ers seek every excuse to advance their views and are seizing upon the movement to restore the empire as a | | reason for reviving their efforts to ‘throw off the control of what they re- guard as the more backward section of the country fhanghai, Nanking, Hankow and e other cities along the Yang-tse- kiang are well under control of tha iing government. Warships patrol the Yang-tse-kiang river and it is easily accessible by rail from Peking. The Pearl river is more remote. Can- ton and other cities along this stream are not accessible by rail from Pe- king. Forts along this river are lo- cated in a densely settled country where there are many reformers who have in the past seized the forts and defeated naval movements againsl Canton. Protect Canton. Every precaution is taken now to protect Canton against revolutionists. | The baggage of passengers arriving cither by rail or water from Hong Kong is Chinese men and women are examined thor- oughly to make sure they have n»n firearms nor bombs upon their per- sons, carefully searched. Apparently leadership for there is no effective the sentiment against e e Clipper in Port, Old Timers Recall Heyday of American Merchant Marine > EGER Y o g SON AND CRPTRIN For the first time fn many years the royal yards of a clipper ship, the four-masted ship Port Jackson, are | 'Y towering over the South street, New | hymn Iy York city, water front. For years the Port Jackson has been used as a training ship for the British merchant 1aarine, and up to the outbreak of the European war she wag engaged in and the restoration of the empire. Sun Yat-sen is thoroughly discredited in | he is Canton and all southern China. The | Tokio, reformers believe he tricked them and Nc¢ pay no attention When the war broke out a falling off of business made it neces- the vessel for was engaged by a shipping of merchandise between South and North American ports. York that work. to utilize British carry cargoes Jluropean Australian salled into Ituenos Alres with a cargo of linseen agalnst President Yuan Shi-kaj wi attempting individunl to the movement |the anti-government movement up to other their eyes in other concern to When she | was seen harbor from |cn e nized promote from looms big in tive MRITLAND folks around the water front rubbed wonder, moment she docked curious folks— native New Yorkers and others—have been drawn' to the water front to gaze upon this reminder of half a century ago, when the American clipper ship in every considerable port rth and was universally recog- ‘“‘the queen of the seas.” and from the —_——— the present time, but it has the sup- port of many guilds which are con- stantly opposing the Peking gdvern- ment, regardless of its chiet execu-l The New Economic Law. (New York World.) One of the largest and perienced manufacturers in tleut has expressed the opinfon in a | World interview that:— | Burope will ‘be taxed so heavily to | pay its war debts that we shall have | nothing to fear from competition with | cheap labor, for European wages will | have to be higher than heretofore. It would seem that Mr. Warner is wot properly instructed as to the part the war has been scheduled to play in American high-tariff politics. The new thought in standpadom is that buck-breaking war taxes make for reduced costs In production. Also the scarcer labor becomes from beinz killed off in battle and the greater | becomes the demands for labor in the work of rehabilitating the war-rav- vaged countries, the lower must go wages. If so obvious an economic law calls for any corroboration, the fact that it is Indorsed by as progres- sive protectionist as George W. Per- kins should be enough most ex- Connec- | Taxing Married Men. | (Bridgeport Post.) The mills committee, seeking new sources of taxation, has received a de- tailed suggestion for the heavier tax- atlon of married men. The donor of this excellent idea is a professor of New York University, who dabbles in economics and who ought to know something of the nature of taxation. Few are those who can avoid pay- ing a tax, and no man pays a heavier | tax than he whose income is small and consumed by the demands of his family. Neither factory, store nor railroad in any true sense pays its own tax. The tax is charged into the cost of A CLEAR COMPLEXION Ruddy Cheeks—Sparkling Eyes | —Most Women Can Have Says Dr. Edwards, a Well-Known Ohio Physician — Dr. F. M. Edwards for 17 years treated scores of women for liver and bowel ail- ments, During these years he gave to his patients a prescription made of a few well- known vegetable ingredients mixed with olive oil, naming them Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets, you will know them by their olive color., These tablets are wonder-workers on the liver and bowels, which cause a normal actlon, carrylng off the waste and poison- ous matter that one’s system coilects. It you have a pale face, sallow look, dull cyes, pimples, coated tongue, headaches, a listless, no-good feeling, all out of sorts, in- active bowels, you take one of Dr. Edward's Olive Tablets nizhtly for a time and mote the pleasing resuits. Thousands of women as well as men, take Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets now and then just to keep in the pink of condition. Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets, the success- ful substitute for calomel — 10c and 25c per box. All druggists. The Olive Tablet Company, Columbus, O. | | gests his plan ! of fiction } of the Town the goods and is paid by the gon sumer. The married man, is not usually al childless man. He has more persons, depending upon him for support, than the single man, his purchases ar larger, and his contribution to the tax fund is correspondingly greater) He pays more rent, more tariff ta more of every other kind of tax. The distinguished professor sug would tax large fam- ilies out of existence Peculias | the mind which counts weaith in| horses and cows, but thinks man, ¢ most useful creature in the world,} not an asset. It is difficult with professors of type. Th only useful function they seem M« exert is that of showing that *¥eR stupid men know enough to be p tessore. to know this what to 8 The Paperhanger Detective. His name is Philo Gubb; he ol ten lessons in detection from a @or respondence school and Is now fullfledged “deteckative”; his experi | ences are perhaps the most arqusin that a pen has been recently calle upon to write about; he is a creatiog but his creator is none les than Ellis Parker Butler, author o “Pigs 1s Pigs” The wondrousl laughable adventures of Philo Gubl will be chronicled from week to wee in The New York Sunday World Il lustrated Magazine. First articlesnext Sunday, October 31 You can'f affol to miss it. Order from your newi dealer in advance.—advt TO THE BOARD OF COUNTY COM MISSIONERS FOR HARTFOR COUNTY I HEREBY APPLY for a Licensq to sell Spirituous and Intoxicagnd Liquors, Ale, Lager Beer, Rhine Win and Cider at Nutmeg Building, Depol Street, Town of Berlin, Conn. M place of business is not located with in two hundred feet in a direct W from any Church Edifice or Publl or Parochial School, or the premi pertaining thereto, or any post-office) public library, or cemetery. Dated at Berlin, Conn., this Stheda; of October A. D. 1915. JOHN T. BAKER, Applicant. We, the Undersigned, are electo and tax-payers, owning real estat of Berlin, Conn., &n hereby sign and endorse the foregoin cpplication of John T. Baker, for license, and hereby certify that, saig applicant i{s a suitable person ‘to b licensed pursuant to said applicatiol Dated at Berlin, Conn., this Bt day of October A. D. 1915, William D. Dunham, Myron A Goodrich, James Brown, Phillp W Spindler, Richard Luby I Hereby Certify that the named signers and endorsers electors and taxpayers, owning estate, in the Town of Berlin, ’ Dated at Berlin, Conn., this 3 of October A. D. 1915 OLIVE M. SHAW, Asst. Town Clefi. 3 above,