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ASK FOR and GET " HORLICK’S THE ORIGINAL MALTED MILK Cheap substitutes cost YOU same price.. ITGHING, BLISTERED SKIN-ERUPTION ALL HIS LIFE, NOW CURED Nov. 19, 1914:—“All my life, until about a year ago, I was troubled with blisters and sores over my entire body. The itching and burning was terrible, and T could hardly sleep. I used many treatments that were unsuccessful and did not give me any relief: I-started using Resinol Ointment and Resinol Soap and they helped me wonderfully. I WAS RELIEVED AT ONCE,and after about two dozen applications I can say that I was free and cured of that awful disease. My skin now is as clear as anybody’s.”— (Signed) Geo. Whitcher, Jr., R.'F. D. No. 54, Caledonia, N. Y. Resinol Ointment and Resinol Soap are sold by all druggists. IS YOUR TOILET SOAP SAFE? Many toilet soaps contain harsh, in jurious alkali. Resinol Soap containg absolutely no free alkali, and to it is added the Resinol medication. This gives it soothing, healing properties ‘which clear the complexion, comfort tender skins and keep the hair healthy. For Coughs and Colds Even Stubhufi and Dangerous Bronehitis Yields to Linonine. Flax-Seed Qil and Irish Moss, two of Linonine’s im- portant ingredients, are well- known agents, separately, in the treatment of coughs and colds, emulsified, vogether with other curative remedies, in KERR'S FLAX-SEED EMULSION, they. form an irresistible preparation for the immediate relief and Prompt cure of all forms of coughs and colds, even bron- chitis, most stubborn . of: all eoughs,yields to its healing properties.. Try this famous old family remedy and expe- sjence 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 {he system of coughs, colds, bronchitis, and all forms of throat and lung troubles. The above familiar trade-mark on every package—all druggists, 25¢, 50c¢, $1.0 I — Quality Corner Every business has a per- sonality, just as every individual has; you know a man and like or dislike him for his personal- ity. The personality of the '®stackpole, Moore, Tryon Co. may be best indicated by our desire to see that every cus- tomer gets complete satisfac- tion. 1In everything we sell our entire organization is a unit of service, efficiency, energy, re- liability are the things we want o show you. N APPRECIATE M-T QUALITY 1-T Quality will be re- membered long after the holi- days are forgotten. Most pleas- ing memories of the giver will be brought to mind through the constant use of the gift. “ps Suggestive to a man’s liking— tasteful holiday boxes contain- ing a most varied assortment of haberdashery, such as Scarfs, Mufflers, Gloves, Hose, Hand- kerchiefs, Pajamas, Shirts and Waistcoats—ranging from 50c to $25.00. The Stackpole- -Moore Tryon Co. ASYLUM AT TRUMBULL STREET, HARTFORD, FORD PEACE SHIP WOMEN NOT NAMED IN DISAGREEMENT MRS, ROSIKA ER When reports of disagreements on Henry Ford’s peace ship, Oscar IL, as she neared Europe, on the matter of indorsing or condemning President Wilson’s ~ preparedness program, reached America some misguided misogynists jumped to the conclusion that the women on board were to blame. But most of the reports did not mention the women. Prominent among them is Mrs. Rosika Schwim- mer of Hungary, secretary of the In- tenational Woman Suffrage alliance, ta whom, according to many accounts. Mr. Ford is indebted for the idea of sending a peace mission to Europe. GREECE HAS STRONG MILITARY TRADITION Gen. Dousmanis Real Military Genius of Country (Correspondence of. the Associated Press.) Athens, Greece, Nov. 30.—Should Greece enter the European war arena | some interesting military figures will | e added to those already in the mar- | _tial limelight, for Greece has seen quite. a few. wars since “the- “middle | nineties—indeed, she has seen little | clse, and there has grown up among a certain class of the Greek people a strong military tradition. To the average Greek the great military figures of his country is Con- stantine- I, the King of the Greeks. But his greatness rests rather on the tenacity and enthusiasm with which he has constantly kept at the busi- ness of building up a Greek army and the personal courage with which he has taken the active command of his country’s troops in the last two successful wars. That he is a mili- tary genius in any sense, none of tue real military men of the country pre- tend. The real military genius*® of Greece in the as yet merely Balkan sphere of his activities, is General Victor Dousmanis, General of Bri- | gade, Chief of the General Staff of Greece. In Greece only the king is a fleld marshal—and Constantine 1. is field marshall not only of Greece, but of Prussia as well. B . Has Made T:apid Strides. For his age, General Dousmanis has made rapid strides to arrive at the supreme effective command of- the | army of 66,000 men in time of peace | and, roughly, 350,000 men in time of { war. He was born on August 20, Greek calendar—September 2, our calendar—1861, on the Island of Cor- fu. He has been a professional soldier i all his life, graduating from the mii- { itary school and entering the regular d | army at once as a second lieutenant in 1883, where he had a rapid rise in the engineering branch of the ser. vice. ‘When the disastrous war with Tur- key was undertaken in 1897, Dous- , manis had already been a captain ' seven years. He was attached to the General staff of the then Crown Prince, now the King. As much be- low medium stature as the king is above average height., as dark as the king is blonde, as silent and unsmil- ing as the king is expansive and , genial, the two were in great con- trast, though General Dousmanis ' is seven years older than his sovereign Throughout that war and the long vears that followed in which Prince Constantine planned and effected the | regeneration of the Greek army, Dousmanis was his right hand man. They shared and still share the same ion foror belief in the Prus- em, and despite the training of the Greek army as a whole by a Trench military mission, King Con- stantine and his chief of staff have succeeded in putting upon the officers of the army a thoroughly Prussian stamp. : i Chief of General Staff. | During the successful war against | the Ottoman empire in 1912 the then Lieutenant-Colonel Dousmanis was | again attached to the staff of Crown | prince Constantine and when the lat- ter became king he was made chief of the general staff, a post which he | held through the war against Bulgar- | ia and has held since. In addition, | he was also his sovereign’s aide-de- camp in the war and he tells a story which the king himself confirms that the two were with the young crown Prince George watching the battle of Kilkich from behind a cemetery wall ONDER CLOTHES ALWAYS NEVER MORE NEVER LESS Made in our own factory in New York and distributed throughout 38 branches in United States. We eleminate the Middileman. You save 5 to 8 dollars WONDER TROUSERS NEVER MORE ALWAYS $ @75 NEVER LESS Made in our own factory in New York and sold direct to consuimers Wonder Clothes Shop Co. HARTFORD BRANCH, 507 MAIN STREET Open Evenings Until Christmas when a rifle bullet struck the gold wrist watch on Prince George's arm. clipping the watch off neatly 'and smashing it beyond repair, though not even leaving a scratch on the prince’s wrist. Both the king and his chief of staff believe in being where they can see what is going on in a battle. Speaking of the honors which have from time to time been bestowed up- on him, it is characteristic of General Dousmanis that he could only re- member two—that he is commander of the Order of the Savior—a Greek order—and wears the grand cordon of the Crown of Prussia. Gen. Entirely Different Tp Gen. Entirely Different Type. eral Constantine Moskopoulos, Gen- eral of Division, and commander of the third Greek army, with head- quarters at Saloniki. He is an older man than General Dousmanis, having been born in Constantinople during the Crimean war, in 1854. He, too, is a professional soldier, graduating from the military academy in 1877 and entering the artillery corps where he shortly made a name for him- self in the Mountain Artillery corps. General Moskopoulos is a specialist in taking mountains. If Greece should ever enter the war he will be most useful to the European commanders in showing them how to get over trackless peaks. He has no appear- ance of a rugged mountaineer, how- ever—dandified, agreeable, -talkative, little man with up-turned, waxed blonde moustache, gold wrist watch and half a dozen heavy rings on his fingers. Nevertheless, at the battle of Sar- andapoulo, in the war against Turkey in 1912, already a general of division, he received the order from the Crown Prince Constantine to cross Mt. Kan- vounian and attack the the rear at Sarandapoulo. Why Tolerate Catarrh? ‘You have noticed, no doubt, that any cold aggravates nasal catarrh, and the flow of mucous amazes you that such objectionable matter could find lodg- ment in your head. To ignore thic catarth when the cold subsides is wrong because it continues to slowly injure the delicate linings of the nasal passages and clog them up. ‘To correct catarrh, cleanse the nos- trils frequently with a solution of warm water and salt, insert vaseline on re- tiring, and take a spoonful of Scott’s Emulsion after meals for one month. Scott’s acts through the blood to feed the tissues, and contains soothing glycerine to check the inflammation and heal the sensitive membranes. Scott’s is pleasant to take. Scott & Bowne, Bloom#ficid, N. .. His men 15-30 Turks from | ! a similar fashion ingle file, and ma a line fourteen miles long. He reac ed Rakhovo in the evening and tacked the enemy the following mo ing at seven o'clock. The struggle was one between mountain guns and field pieces, and General Moskopou- los' mountain artillery won the day, twenty-four of the Turkish pieces fali- ing into the hands of the Greeks. In the General cross- ed Mt. Vernious for the battle of Cos- tanja and Mt. Litzi to attack the fortress of Vesanjoul. The story is told that at Florina General Moskopoulos appeared sud- denly before the city and sent word to the Turkish commander couched in the following terms: “‘Surrender or 1 shall attack at once with all my divisions.” The Turkish commander as amazed. He had no idea that were so many Greeks in the vicinity. “With all his divisions!” ex- claiméd the poor Turk. “‘Allah’s will be done!” And he surrendered thirty cannon, a regiment of and several thousand misce fantry. Just One Divisi ieneral Moskopoulos had jus on. Possibly the best known of Greece's warriors is General O. Douglis, Gen- eral of Brigade, commanding the fifth Greek army with headquarters at Jouina. Until recently he was Minister of War in Venizelos' ill- 1 arred cabinet, and counted a very able man. Comparatively young, he too had made a reputation in the |as to the invincibility of the Cen three rs Greece has waged since |empire:=. For the present, therefd 1897. Affable, courteous, more widely | his influence in the Greek military travelled than most Groek soldiers, | tablishment is in eclipse. But shol having been one of his country's rep- | Greece join the Quadruple Ente resentatives in the London-Balkan | there is little doubt that he would conference as well as a military ob- | once become the leadinz martial server at French manoeuvres, he in- |ure of Greece. clined to disgrace with hik colleag General Dousmanis and Moskopot Out of Sorts HAT IS, something is wrong with baby, but we can’t tell just what it is. All mothers recognize the term by the lassitude, weakness, loss of appetite, inclination to sleep, heavy breathing, and lack of interest shown by baby. These are the symptoms of sickness. It may be fever, congestion, worms, croup, diphtheria, or scarlatina. Do not lose a minute. Give the child Castoria. It will start the digestive organs into operation, open the pores of the skin, carry off the foetid matter, and drive away the threatened sickness. Genuine Castoria always bears the signature of W