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Well Known Remedy Relieves Chronic Case Important Dispose of From the Stomach With Regularity, People frequently attribute to fail- ure of the digestive organs conditions that are primarily due to inactive towels, and apply remedies that from their very nature are more apt to ag- gravate than to relieve the disorder. When the bowels act regularly the stomach is in better shape to per- form its allotted tasks and can usually be depended upon. To keep the bowels in condition there is no more effective remedy than the combination of simple laxative herbs known as I®. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin which is sold in drug stores for fifty cents a Eottle. Dr. Caldwell has prescribed remedy in his practice for over a quarter of a century and it is today tke standard household remedy in thousands of homes. Mr. Thos. De- Loach, with the Department of the Interior, Office of Indian Affairs, at Washington, wrote Dr. Caldwell re- cently Dr. Caldwells yrup Popsin is the best laxative I have eny knowledge of and the cleaning to Waste this MR. THOS guaranteed by organ.” A bsttle of Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin should be on hand in every home for use when needed. A trial Dbottle, free of charge can be obtained by writing to Dr. W. B. Caldwell, 454 Washington St.,, Monticello, Ill. up its use relieves every Wednesdays CLLYDE LINE Saturdays TO FLORIDA Exclusive “‘One Class’’ Cabin Service means maximum comfort at minimum cost “New York to Jacksonville without change Tickets good going January and February. return limit six months. Correspond- ingly low rates to all Florida points. Wide choice of accommodations, including extra appointments of rooms en suite with private bath at slight additional cost. Mid-Winter Bookings Now Open ‘Write for full information and beautiful descriptive literature A. W. PYE, Passcnger Traffic Manager. CLYDE-M ALLORY LINES Pier 36, North River, N. Y. .Au thorized Tourist Of<c $3450 * $4330 Tueadans MEALS and BERTH INCLUDED BOTH WAYS Winter Trips and Cruises Separate and combined tours, 10 to 23 days, from New York to the American Mediterranean. HAVANA AND POINTS IN CUBA Interesting_in its foreign atmos- phere. Excellent golf courses; splen- did surf bathing. Modern hotels. NASSAU (BAHAMAS) A wonderful climate. Soft breezes and bzlmy air. ] i NO WINTER HERE The ricmuuque scenes and won- derful climate of lovely, tropical Porto Rico are only 4% days from New York., Go now. | 16-Day Cruise and 90450 Steamer your hotel all the way, from New York_to and around the island, stopping at principal ports, and return. 10,000-ton steamers especially equipped for tropical service. Sailings every Saturday under the American Flag. Write for illustrated booklet. PORTO RICO LINE Cruising Dept., 11 Broadway, New York Or any Railroad Ticket Office Or Authorized Tourist Agency Low rates of passage including meals and stateroom accomodations. Wite for information WARD LINE General Offices, Pier 14, E. R., New York or any authorized ticket agency or tour bureau RATS BRED FOR ZOO. Saves Scant of REDULTIONS ' THATARE REAL DAMONS - S3iE SALE 267 MAIN ST Budapest Ration Horseflesh for Lions and Tigers. 1Correspondence of tae Associated Fress. i Budapest, Hungary, Jan. 31. Rats are beinz bred for the Budapest Zoo in order to s of horsefl ve the scant ration h for the iions and tigers, whose constant roaring shows th» extent they suffer from the general shortage of food. Eagles, voltures and wild birds are fed exclusively At times when horsemeat has = | been unobtainable, goats and the le | valuable animals have been sacrificed save the lives of the beasts that ® [ once ruled the jungle. ut the herbivorous anima have | chestnuts have been substituted for A G t H m e‘\(‘xp(‘n.fl\'o hay. They have small lik- RPASS ALL. During Last Year. Herald.) Feb. 8.-—Connecticut leading the coun- (Special to the Washington, inventors are still try. More patents were granted, in proportion to population last vear in the Nutmeg State than in any other state, according to the annual report of the commissioner of patents sub- mitted to congress today. The num- ber of paten granted Connecti- cut inventors during the last year one to 987 inhabitants 3, The next best record was made by (alifornia, clear across the continent, where the patents granted last year averaged 1 to every 4 pecple. New Jersey, New York and Rhode Island have in- ventive population, report indi- | cates. The lowest record made | Mississippi, wher there was 1 paten- | tee to every 17,447 people. ing for chestnuts. A herd of ten seals { had to be killed, as n h could be | obtained for them seal meat went to feed the wild beasts. Two | polar bears were shot—one becausec ‘hn refused to eat war food and the the new dict it was deemed a mercy to finish him off. The bears added to S 7 A the privilege of shooting them was inonine brings relief, even .jctioned off to local sportsmen, one in the most stubborn cases, and of wlom paid $60 for the honor. the world of medicine knows no - i surer curative agent for bron- CONN. INVENTORS chial afflictions than Linonine. o e UGN When the throat is parched and 2 LTS (TR ) AT Men she lungs sore with severe colds the flaxseed oil in Linonine promptly relieves this condi- tion, and the other ingredients set to work to remove the in- flammation from membrane and tissue. AND IT DOESN'T MATTER WHAT FORM OF COLD YOU o HAVE, LINONINE IS WHAT | YOU WANT. | s FLAX-SEED;, Ry SO vl in the sta ! the an was by All druggists—25c¢. 50¢, $1. NEW, BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1916. BABY'S WEIGHT BEST INDEX OF CONDITION Mother Should Weigh Infant At Regular Intervals First Year (Children’s Bureau U. S. Department of Labor.) Washington, Feb. 8.—The weight is perhaps the best index the mother has of his condition. The average weights of babies of given ages are Now pretty well-established, | and a weight noticeably lower than the average indicates a lack of devel- opment due either to deficient diet, or to illness, while an excess of fat may point to improper feeding. If the baby’s weight remains sta- for considerable time, or begins to fall off it is always sign that something is wrong; and the mother should seek the help of a good doctor, without delay. The average girl weighs pounds at birth, while boys average half a pound heavier. Should Gain Weight. During the first four da; may lose from one or two ounces to a pound, while waiting for the mother’s milk to be established, but he begins to nurse regularly he should quickly regain this loss. During the first month he should gain about three-quarters of an ounce each day; then up to the sixth month, from four to eight ounces a week, and from the sixth to the twelfth month two to four ounces a week, At three months the average baby weight from twelve to fourteen pounds; at six montns. fifteen to six- teen pounds; at nine months, seven- teen to eighteen pounds;: and at one year, twenty to twenty-one pounds. The baby thus usually doubles his | weight at five or six months, and at the end of his first years weighs three times as much as at birth, Most babies do not gain quite steadily, week by week. During short periods, owing to excessive heat, when the food is reduced, a baby may show no | gain, and may even fall off a little. | This condition should be temporary and he ought to begin to gain as soon as the disturbance subsides. baby's either tionary any a seven Bottle-fed Infants, Bottle-fed infants do not gain as rapidly during the first months as do breast-fed babies, but after the ninth month they are apt to gain more teadily because they do not lose weight as breast-fed babies usually do at the time of weaning. A very fat baby is not to be desired. Although mothers are prone to be- lieve that a fat baby is a healthy one, s is not necessarily true. An e clusive list of tain of the proprie- tary infant food 1y of sugar or of starch, 1pt to pro- duce excessive fat give impression of abounding health, since bones and muscles may thus be de- prived of their proper nourishment. Overfat babies are very uncomfort- ce consisting 1 is very and false HAIR COMING 9UT? Dandruff causes a feverish irrita- tion of the scalp, the hair roots shrink, loosen and then the hair comes out fast. To stop falling hair at once | and rid the scalp of every particle of dandruff, get a 25-cent bottle of Danderine at any drug store, pour a little in your hand and rub it into the scalp. After a few applications the hair stops coming out and you can’'t find any dandruft. MEALS WILL FIT ! NO INDIGESTION, GAS OR ACIDITY cat without fear of sourness, heartburn, belching or dyspepsia, moment “Pape’s Diapepsin” reaches the stomach all distress goes. If your meals don’t fit comfortably, or you feel bloated after eating and you believe it is the food which fills you; if what little you eat lays like 2 lump of lead on your stomach; if there is difficulty in breathing after eating, eructations of sour, undigested food and acid, heartburn, brash or a belching of gas, you can make up your mind that you need something to stop food fermentation and cure in- digestion. To make every bite of food you eat | aid in the nourishment and strength of your body, you must rid your stomach of poisons, excessive acid and stomach which sours your entire feres with digestion and many sufferers of dyspep- E headache, biliousness, con- stipation, ete’ Your case is { no different—you are a stomach suf- ferer, though vou may call it by some other name; your real and only trouble is that' which you eat does not digest but quickly ferments and sours, producing almost any unhealthy con- dition- A case of Pape's Diapepsin will cost fifty cents at any pharmacy here, 1 will convince any stomach sufferer five minutes after taking a single dose that fermentation and sour stom- ach is causing the misery of indiges- tion. No matter if you call your troubie catarrh of the stomach, nervousness ritis or by any other name— | remember that instant relief | s waiting at any drug store the mo- ment vou decide to begin its use. Pape’s Diapepsin will regulate any | out of order stomach within five | | minutes, and digest promptly, without | any fuss or discomfort all of any kird The of food you eat, able in the summer heat and other ills. ‘Well Rounded Body, A healthy baby has a well-rounded body, without wads and cushions of fat. or pendulous cheeks and pudgy legs. He has springy muscles, and is alert, active and full of life and mo- tion, In order that the matter may be in- formed as to the baby’s progress, he should be weighed at regular inter- vals throughout at least the first year. Ifor the first week or longer, he should be weighed every day; during the first six months, once a week; and later once in two weeks. Breast-fed Babies, Breast-fed babies may be weighed just before and just after a nursng to determine how much milk they are getting, and to find out whether or not they neecd supplementary feeding. They should be weighed in exactly the same clothing both times, and to determine the daily gain, at the same hour each day The best scales are ordinary plat- form balance scales such as are used in grocery store A special basket or pan which fits on the platform, and which will hold the baby comfortable is desirable. Spring scales are less accurate but are cheaper, and are bet- ter than no scales at all. Most coun- try households have enough general use for a good scale, so that usch a purchase will not be an extravagance. Many city mothers have the advantage of heing able to go to an infant wel- fare station where the baby may be weighed as often as desirable. In these cases it is easy to keep a care- ful record of the baby’s growth. The Children’s bureau has published a bulletin called Infant Care, which contains directions for weighing the baby and also a chart for recording the weight. This publcation sent, free to all who ask for it, addressing the Chief of the Children’s Bureau, U. S, Department of Labor, Washing- ton. D. C, § from prickly OPPOSE PLAN FOR CONTINENTAL ARMY Connecticut Congressmen Prefer to Develop National Guard (Special to the Herald.) Washington, Feb. 8—The adminis- tration’s plan for a Continental army composed of volunteers control the seems to be cline. Very under the of federals government the de- few members of congrs very much on are in favor of the Continental army plan as originally proposed by Secre- tary of War Garrison and approved Most of the prefer to take national guard or second line of d the state troops improved by the ent and perhaps paid 1nd controlled by it. members of the Connecti- cut delegation in congress are among the men opposed to the Continental army plan, who include scores democrats as well Representative Oakey of onal district, for instance, much prefers to have the federal gov- ernment develop the national guard. Representative Tilson, who is a mem- ber of the committee on military af- fairs of the house and an old na- tienal guardsman himself, firmly be- lieves that the national guard offers the only satisfactory basis as back- ing for the regular army in the line of national defen: Tilson Plan Mr. Tilson's committee is under- stood to be strongly opposed to the continental army plan and it will report some kind of another measure after hearings are concluded. Other Connecticut congressmen will be guided, doubtless, to a considerable extent, in thei titude towards the forthcoming preparedness legislation, by the opinion of Major Tilson, who has something of a reputation as an authority on military matters. It was for that reason that he was asked by former President Taft to go down to the Mexican border several years ago and observe matters with the reg- ular army encamped under practically war conditions. Representative E. J. Hill agrees with Mr. Tilson that the thing to do is to develop the national guard, in- stead of throwing that overboard in favor of an untried Continental arnry scheme. Representative Glynn is not yet ready to commit himself whether the Continental army or the national guard should be preferred in working out an adequate preparedness plan. Hill Dyestuff Bill. Mr. Hill is quoted as saying that the ways and means committee will soon; be reporting his bill for the protection of the American dyestuffs industry. If he puts over that propo- sition despite the constitutional disin- clination of democrats for tariff pro- tection, it will be voted a very clever stunt for Mr. Hill and for Connecti- cut. by President Wi nembers of a chance on state son. congress the militia as a fensie were especially if isted federal govern by the latter Several Against SHAD FRY FOR CONN. Hartford, Feb. 8.—John M. Cramp- ton, superintendent of fisheries and game, is making arrangements to go to Washington within a few days to arrange with the federal authorities for the use of the car in which the ten million shad fry siven Connecti- cut by the state of California will be shipped across the continent to this state in the early spring. Mr. Crampton said today it ha been sug- gested that the tribut to the Connecticut River be closed in order to protect the fry for a period of | vears, and that shad spawning might | not be interrupted and that in all probability a bill to that effect would » introduced into the general Iy rssem- at the next session RYZON Makes Happy Meals Use RYZON, the Perfect Baking Powder. Result? Happy family! This will repay you for using RYZON. RYZON will make good or your money back. RYZON.is made with a new and better phosphate. Man cannot live without phosphates. Modern recipes call for standard leve! measurements. So do RYZON direc- tions. If you prefer to-use heaping measurements, use RYZON exactly as you awould any other baking powder. %-1b. tin, 18¢ 1-ib. tin, 35¢ I QUARANTINE. The prosecution is the new inspec- last De- | court vesterday. said to be the first Visitors Will Again Bo To regulations, governing i ) ¢ e was State Sanatoria. | tion. The | cember. 8.—The state tuber- | under cattle made Admitted sale Hartford, Feb. closis commis terday decided to remove the antine against the admission of vis tors to the state tuberculosis sanatoria, in force since the outbreal of the eni- demic of grip. It was said the epi- demic had a serious effect on pe sons afflicted with tuberculc troubles. In many instances through- out the state where the disease had e been arrested the attack of the grip ™ =k made it active again and in some the effect was fatal. There are today 529 the sanator There on at its meeting yes- WOMEN NOW TEAN quar- | == — i Females Seen on Streets in Vienna Often Performing Laborious Work. Vienna, Feb. 8.—Not a week passes in Austria without women appearing is in some new occupation, Women teamsters are now to be seen on the often performing laborious work. The big dairies are employing them to deliver milk to the retail branches, and they are also driving agons. A choco e factory is eisht vacancies in the shacks but none sending out neatly uniformed women in the infirr Where the most ad- wagon drivers. Business motor vanced cases are placed The com- £0ns being driven by women mission has a la waiting list of ad- necessity of pro- be brought to embly patients in are twenty- wa- are chauffeurs. In the big petroleum works women are doing all or wor filling cans loading them on the wagons, and { then going with the drivers and de- i livering the cans at house, and col- lecting the bills. The will vanced cases. viding m the atte at the ne: re room kinds tion of the t sessio general SOLD QUARANTINED COW Wallingford, Feb. §.—Fo cow before it had been released from quarantine by the cattle commissioner, | where it had been placed for exam- ; ination for tuberculosis taint, G. W. Cooke of East Wallingford was fined $100 and costs after a hearing before Judge O. H. D. Fowler in the borough | | i S PANAMA MAY ‘Washington, wanted by the CEDE SITES. Feb. 3ig gun sites United States at the approaches to the Panama Canal probably will be ceded to this coun try by Panama. The willingness of Panama to grant the desired sites, e == which are essential in carrying out { plan of Gov. Goethals to extend tH canal fortifications, is indicated in Al gotiations now pending between th ate department and the Pana tion. The Panama authoritiesy is said, have indicated their willing s to sell these places at prices thi and land owners ag nes government upon GOOD NEWS any New Britain Readers Hay Heard It and Profited Thereby “Goods news travels fast,"” and many bad back sufferers in New Bri ain are:glad to learn where ral may be found. Many a lame, wel and aching back is bad no mol nks to Doan’s Kidney Pills. O ns are telling the good news @ their experience with this tested re Here is an example worth read 526 Church St, Ne “One of my famil has found Doan’s Kidney Pills goo for kicney trouble. There is no be ter medicine to be had for prins acro the small of the back; it always brinj relief. It is a pleasure for me to red ommend Doan’s Kidney Pills.” Price 50c at all dealers. ask for a kidney remedy Doan's Kidney Pills—the same th Mrs. Helen recommends. Foste Milburn Co., Props., Buffalc, N. Y. Helen SH Don!' To 520 Residents of Connecticut (including y ourself) Within the past nine months there has grown up in Greater New York a business revolutionary in its method, which is destined to be one of the largest and most profitable of its class in the United States. Arrangements are now being made to extend this business to Connecticut and to permit 520 residents of the State to take profits out of it---BIG profits. Nine months ago the All-Package Grocery Stores Company, a chain-store business, opened its first retail store in the Borough of Brooklyn, Greater New York, and sold at low prices pure food put up in sealed, sanitary packages, plainly marked as to the net weight. . The sales of this store grew from $162 the first week to $735 the twenty- fourth week. The Company opened other stores in Greater New York-~fifty of them---and still the demand for “All-Package” service increased. - Now this Company is increasing the number of its retail stores to 1,25‘0, ex- tending its business to Connecticut, and will share profits with 520 residents of the State. Perhaps you would like to participate, personally, in the financial success of this business. Profit-sharing---through stock ownership--is becoming a feature of modern business, you know. Awall events the Company would like to mail you, without cost or obligation on your part, their book “Feeding the Millions”, which explains the reason for the remarkable success of this business, and how you may take big profits out of it. If you reside in Connecticut, write to the >All-Package Grocery Stores Com- pany, 217 Broadway, New York, stating that you would like to be informed regarding this profit-sharing opportunity and you will receive by early mail, full details of their very interesting plan.