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1G. FOX & CO. MAIL ORDERS CAREFULLY FILLED. HARTFORD FURNITURE---MANY SPECIAL OFFERS Parlor Suites Sale Price $62 50 Four piece including Sofa, Chair, Rocker and Ped- estal Table; upholstered in selected tapestry; regular value $75.00. Dining Room Suites Sale Price $85 () Ten piece Dining Room Suites in full Colonial style, golden oak; Buffet, China Closet, Serving Table, Ex- tension Table, 5 Side and I Arm Chair worth $110.00. Dining Room ' Suites Sale Price §155_ 00 Mahogany, Adam Period style ; Buffet, China Closet, Server, Dining Table, 5 Side and I Arm Chair; worth Fumed Qak JChairs and Rockers One complete section of our Mission Room is de- voted to these Chairs and we can show you all grades. $8.00 Chairs, sale price . $7.00 $10.00 Chairs, sale price $8.50 $11.00 Chairs, sale price . $9.50 N5131508Chairs; sale price s e e $12.00 4$15.00 Chairs, sale price ..... ....$13.50 $22.50 Chairs, sale price . $19.50 $29.50 Chairs, sale price ....$26.50 BIG SALE OF RUGS Drapery Department 3rd Floor There are Dining Room Outfits and Bedroom Sets and Parlor Suites and odd pieces of Gift Furniture —and they are as attractively priced as they are attractive in design. Our Furniture floors are ablaze with new pieces and we want you to come and see them. We want to have you realize what a real factor our immense Furniture Department has become in a very short tim e. You cannot stroll about on these floors without noting the fact that this store is just as resourceful and enterprising in the handling of Furniture as it is in the handling of Suits, Waists, Housekeepers’ Small Wares or anything else. These specials are for five days only. Bedroom Suites at $85,00 | Bedroom Suites at $155,00 Consisting of 6 mahogany pieces; 4 Poster Bed, Dresser, Chiffonier, Dressing Table, Chair and Rocker to match, worth $110.00. Bedroom Suites at $100. 00 Six pieces in Adam Period style, birdseye maple; Bed, Dresser, Chiffonier, Dressing Table, Chair and Rocker, worth $120.00. FIRESIDE CHAIRS VERY ATTRACTIVE STYLES. Genuine mahogany frames, cane and tapestry back, with these are also odd mahogany frame Chairs with tapestry upholstering : $12.00 Chairs, sale price .$10.00 $13.50 Chairs, sale price . ..$12.00 $16.00 Chairs, sale price ..$14.50 $18.50 Chairs, sale price ...$16.50 $20.00 Chairs, sale price ...$18.00 $26.50 Chairs, sale price ...$22.50 $29.50 Chairs, sale price . TEA WAGONS Tea Wagons are one of the most useful and handy articles we have to offer in the gift line. We have an attractive selection of these and all are specially priced: $12.00, $13.50, $14.00, $15.00, $18.00, $19.50, $20.00, $25.00, $27.50, $30.00. ORDER NOW THE HOLIDAY GIFT There’s no gift that would be more acceptabl best made are the ones we feature, Globe-Wernicke. many sections you can use for your books. MUSIC CABINETS Music Cabinets newest styles, mahogany $7.00, $15.00, $21.00 in the birch, prices $9.00, $10.50, $16.50, $18.50. and $22.50. and Six pieces, mahogany, Colonial style; Bed, Chiffonier, Dresser, Dressing Table, Chair and Rocker to match; worth $185.00. Bedroom Suites at $150.00 Five pieces in William and Mary Period style; aqtique brown mahogany; Bed, Dresser, Chiffonier, Chair and ! Rocker; very handsome ; worth $175.00. Fumed Oak LIBRARY TABLES An excellent assortment of these in the light and dark fumed finish; some with end book shelves: $8.50 Tables, sale price . $12.50 Tables, sale price . $10.50 $17.50 Tables, sale price . .....$15.00 $28.50 Tables, sale price i e s e e aee s 388,00 $45.00 ChAirs, sale price ....oo-sssves=srasinnes 38000 PARLOR TABLES | TABOURETTES Specially priced Parlor .... $7.50 Tables in oak and mahog- Fumed Oak Tabour- any : $3.00 $5.00 $7.50 cttes, all specially priced, at 95¢, $1.50, $1.75, $2.00, Tables, now. $2.50 Tables, now. $4.00 $ Tables, now. $6.50 $8.50 Tables, now. $7.50 $11.50 Tables, now.$10.00 S IN GLOBE-WERNICKE BOOKCASES ! ¢ to the entire family than a Sectional Bookcase; and the Come in and let us demonstrate to you how few or how $3.75, and up to $8.50. Desk sections to match. $2.25, $2.75, $3.00 $3.50, G. FOX & CC TELEPHONE CHARTER 1580. HARTFOF 2 Living Room Suites Sale_Price §62 5 Four pieces including Settee, Chair, Rocker a Table in fumed oak, Jacobean style; worth $75.00. —Dining Room Suites Sale Price §139 ()( Jacobean or William and Mary Oak Dining Roo Suites ; Buffet, Table, Server, China Closet, 5 Side and Arm Chair; worth $169.00. Dining Room Suites Sale Price §137 Limbert’s Art and Crafts Dining Room Suites; te pieces, finished in gray fumed. Buffet, Table, Chind Closet, Server, 5 Side Chairs and 1 Arm Chair; wortl $157.00. Ladies’ Desks A superb assortment—the largest in the city out a doubt. Mahogany, golden and fumed oak. of the special prices: $7.50 Desks, sale price $10.50 , sale price $14.50 sale price $16.50 sale price $19.50 sale price $23.50 sale price $28.50 sale price $33.00 sale price . $42.00 sale price $59.00 sale price . $65.00 sale price with Some $6.50 .. $9.00 ...$12.50 .. .$15.00: ..$17.50 .$21.50 $25.00 $29.50 ..$37.50 ..$49.60 .$65.00 Desks, Desks § R | 0—01 THE TELEPHONE DIRECTORY WILL GO TO PRESS NOV. 30th. TO insure the entry OF HONORS WON Feats of Valor by British Soldiers Get No Mention (Correspondence of The Associated Press.) London, Nov. 12.—The bitter cry against the censorship neard from the front is that neither regiments nor in- of your number dividuals are allowed to gain any rec- in the next 1 — | GRANDPA DIDN’'T NEED CASCARETS FOR THE BOWELS and name book be certain to ar- range for telephone ser- vice before that date. Two hours a day sawing wood will keep liver and bowels right, who take exercise in an easy chair must take “Cas- cavets,” RESIDENCE TELEPHONE SERVICE You Costs but a few cents a week bERFECTLY PASTEUR- b IZED MILK 'SEIBERT AND SON, Park Street, Near .Stanley, 6 teams. Tel. connection. F You Want Good botued Beer, Wine or Liquors, * QOrder Same from PHILIP BARDECK, R5 Arch St. ’Phone 482-2 BOWLING Fubs and - Private Parles i 5 Accommodated. - ilding Nelson, Enjoy life—feel bully! Don't stay sick, bilious, headachy, constipated. |uemove the liver and bowel poison | which is keeping your head dizzy, your tongue coated, your breath of- fensive, stomach sour and your body full of cold. Why don’t you get a 10 or 26-cent box of Cascarets at the drug store and enjoy the nicest, gen- tlest liver and bowel cleansing you ever experienced. Cascarets work feeling fit and fine. Children need ognition or publicity for unusual ex-) This is one of the handicaps | | earlier months of the war the gov- ploits. a democracy meets in trying to con- with the war office censorship over of- ficial reports in this speech. In the duct war on the most modern lines of { ernment had an official “Eye-Witness" secrecy. The Japanese army in the war against Russia was the pioneer in this policy. The Japanese carried their attempts to keep the enemy in the dark so far that none of the sol- ! diers wore any regimental marks on their uniforms. enlisted men have been made popular heroes through this war, and no regi- ments stand out conspicuously in the | public eye, although officers say that | several of them have achievements to their credit equalling the charge of the Light Brigade at Balaclava. So far as the regiments of the old army, “The Little Contemptibles,” are con- cerned, more than a majority of their | members have figured in the casuality lists months ago. No Credit to Irish. John Redmond, the nationalist lead- er, cited one of the grievances of Ire- land in the debate which followed Pre- mier Asquith’s speech on November 2, He said: ‘“How could it bring help to the enemy to let the people of Ireland of Scotland, of England and of Wales know what their own regiments are doing?”’ He said that the landing at Sedul Bahr in April, which was the most /difficult operation of that battle was carried out by the Dublin Fusil- jers and the Munster Fusiliers but that Ireland had no knowledge of their work except in letters from the few surviving officers. He continued: ““That kind of thing is doing us untold mischief in Ireland. One of the Dub- lin Fusiliers was known as the ‘Pals.” | It was made up of well-educated young men from the universities. 1 know scores of families in Dublin who are in terrible anguish over the death of their children. I have seen num- bers of letters from survivors who speak in the highest terms of the gal- lantry of those lads. Referring to the landing at Suvla Bay, Mr. Redmond said, I have re- ceived communications relating to the Tenth (Irish) Division not from men in the ranks of subalterns, but from officers of high position, which I dare not read to the house- I have felt it my duty to send them to the war of- fice and the prime minister. Sir Ian Hamilton is back here now, and some day these things will have to be in- quired into, and when they are known I think it will be found that never in your military history have troops been subjected to such horrible suf- ferings, or have shown such gallan- try as the Tenth Division commanded by Sir Bryan Mahon. Yet not one word of recognition has been written | about them.” lwhile you sleep. You will wake up _ 172-174 ARCH STREET, this candy cathartic too. Mr. Redmond dealt particularly Very few officers or | i in the fleld to fill the void. caused by the prohibition of war correspondents, {and to attempt to satisfy the public demand for descriptions of the work of the British army.. His messages, however, were robbed of nine-tenths of their possible interest by the ab- sence of the names of tand individuals. Since a | number of British have been permitted at army quarters during the past the official “Eye-Witness” has withdrawn, are under the same restrictions writing mostly in generalities. limited head- been A SPOONFUL OF SALTS RELIEVES We eat too much meat, which clogs Kidneys, says noted authority. If back hurts or Bladder bothers, stop all meat for a ‘While. When you wake up with backache | it generally means you have been eating too much meat, known authority. Meat forms uric become sort of paralyzed When your kidneys get and they and loggy. sluggish and clog you them, removing all the body’s urinous waste, else you have backache, sick head- ache, dizzzy spells; your stomach sours, tongue is coated, and the weather is bad you have rheuma- |tic twinges. The urine is full of sediment, channels often g« Bore, water scalds and you are oblig- ed to seek relief two or three times during the night. Either consult a good, reliable phy- sician at once or get from your phar- macists about four ounces of Jad Salts; take a tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys will then act fine. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and.lemon Jjuice, combined with lithia, and has been used for generations to clean and stimulate sluggish kidneys, also to neutralize acids in the urine so it no longer irritates, thus ending blad- der weaknes: Jad Salts is a life saver for regutar meat eaters. It is inexpensive, can- | not injure and makes a delightful, ef- | fervescent lithia-water drink. ACHING KIDNEYS | { organizations | correspondents | season | but the newspaper men | of | { and dull misery in the kidney region |1 when | cloudy, ! says a well- | acld which overworks the Kidneys in | their effort to filter it from the blood ! must relieve | like you relieve your bowels; | SIGNS OF WINTER | ON WESTERN FRONT Troops in France Have Felt Touch of Approaching Cold But Are Prepared. (Correspondence of The Associated Press.) Boulogne, France, Oct. 30—Signs are plentiful that winter is close up- on the troops in the North of France. The nights are already cold, far too cold for comfort, and the character- istic winter night-mist from the marshes is in the air. The trees A Powertul Physique Is a valuable asset, but— Strength of body must be combined with a healthy, ac- tive mind, to make for success. It is well cstablished both body and brain arc nourished and rcbuilt daily from food each taking up the particular clements required. that Grape Nuts FOOD made of wheat barley supplies nutriment of the grains, in- cluding the vital mineral clements necessary for build- ing stout bodies and active brains. and malted all the rich Grape-Nuts food supplies rich, nourishment, but and casy to digest. “There’s a Reason” —Sold by Grocers not only well-balanced is delicious ;'al'e not yet bare but the leaves that | remain have turned to a sere yellow while the roadways are covered with fallen leaves which the soldiers here Iand there heap into little piles for | a fragrant warming fire. | It is evident that there is to be an- | other winter campaign; robbed, how- ever, of much of the horror of last yvear’s ordeal in boggy trenches and along impassable roads. In northern France, at least, winter will find the | rival armies well prepared to receive it. The wet mud, the ice-cold water | knee-deep in the communication | trenches, the ooze and discomfort of the dugouts, will be the exception rather than the rule this year. The shelters, even in the advance trenches will generally be fairly livable, thanks | to the plentiful use of concrete and to dealers, spirits are chosen in pi erence to beer for drinking at hoj as they are easier to carry. For Coughs and Cold Even Stubborn irfi Dangero Bronchitis Yields to Linonine. Flax-Seed Oil and Moss, two of Linonine’s inf portant ingredients, are wel known agents, separately, i thé treatment of coughs an colds, emulsified, iogethe with other curative remedies in KERR'S FLAX-SEEI EMULSION, they form aj irresistible preparation fo the immediate relief and | prompt cure of all forms o | coughs and colds, even bron: chitis, most stubborn of all coughs,yields to its healing properties.. Try this famous old family remedy and exp rience the comfort it brings to those who use it. The purest and safest of all remedies it builds up the body and re- stores vitality at the same time it is relieving the system of coughs, colds, bmnchiti:i = and all forms of throat an BRITISHERS USE LESS BEER. (Corresnondence of the Assoctatea Presss | IUNZ troubles. London, Nov. 14—A statement made public by representatives of the Brit- ish liquor trade shows that the rigid restrictions on the sale of alcoholic beverages imposed rince the war be- | gan, have curtailed the sale of beer about seventecn per cent. But, on the | other hand, there has been an increase in the sale of spirits of nineteen per cent. Drinking across the bar, it s added, has lessened to a marked de- The above familiar trade-mark on gree, but the “bottle trade” has in- ‘!‘\('!’)’ package—all druggists, 25¢, 500, creased correspondingly. According ' $1.00, i tar, and the skilfull employment of | drainage. | Moreover, the armies will be prop- | erly and amply fed. The British sol- diers will again don their sheepskins, | supplemented by ample supplies of warm caps, sox and heavy boots of rather better type than last year's. Many of the trenches now have brick floors and practically all are drained and protected against land- | slide by timbers. The great problem of the winter will: be the billeting of all the new divisions which have come out since last year. In the villages well behind the firing lines, every out-building and old barn has been requisitioned, cleaned, repaired and made into shel- ter against the wind and cold. But nearer the firing lines most of the buildings have been smashed into | ruins, and although they were usable for housing purposes during the sum- mer, they are plainly impossible after ! mid-November. - The problem is being { dealt with to some extent by build- | ing of portable houses and huts, but 1the armies grow too fast for the car- penters. The work of the aeroplane observers | gets more difficult as winter ap- proaches. The fogs of the late autumn | cling to the ground in little patches | well into the day, while the evening mists make observations difficult soon after mid-afternoon.