New Britain Herald Newspaper, February 25, 1916, Page 7

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NEW, BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, " Remedy Prescribed by Many Doctors Compound of Simple Laxa- tive Herbs Proves Most Efficient. Dr. W. A. Evans, Writing for the Chicago Tribune, makes the assertion that practically everyone, at sometime | or other, suffers from constipation. This applies regardless of age or con- aition in life The congestion of stomach waste in | {the bowels evidenced in arious | way bloat eructation of foful stomach gases, sick headache, langour, all indicate constipation, and call for frompt attention only to relieve | the present but also to avoid possible that follows | ucglect of this important function Harsh catharties and violent purga- tives should not be employed, as these afford only temporary relief, while they serve to shock the entire system. A mild laxative such . Caldwell" Syrup Pepsin is far preferable and i now the remedy generally used and prescribed by many doctors. It is free from opiate or narcotic drugs acts easily and pleasantly, without | griping or other pain and a safe effective family remedy. Mr. Chas Schell, 132 enada, Mi writes not discomfort disease MR. CHAS relief himself by us Syrup Pepsin and now keeps it on hand for family use. A bottle of Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin should have 2 place in every family medicine chest. A trial bottle ¢an be obtained, free | of charge, by writing to Dr. W. B. | Caldwell, 454 Washington St., Mon- ticello, Illinois. SCHTLL. ng Dr. Caldwell’s Church St., that he found ————— J—fiw HELPS Gash Grecer, Fruits end Vegefables | T@ AGHmG FEET 50 Main Sireet | Instant, retier for sore. der, calloused feet Business! 5 e ~Entire Stock and FixiuresForSale | i o ient oue e ises (oo b 1 Floor Seale. (i e 5 COL!I'IfGl‘ Scales. k“((‘:‘cvrn.a -cent box of “Ti at any 1 Butter Box. drug store and end foot torture for a net. | will fit fine and you'll only wish you 1 E]ectric Cofi‘ee ml” ‘hn(l !riml “Tiz"" sooner. Accept no 18 Tea and Coffee Cans. 1 Spice Cabinet. 1 Meat Block. 1 Cash Register. ! 1 Roll Top Desk. 1 Floor Truck. 1 8-foot Step Ladder. 6 Counters. 4 Paper Cutters. 5 doz. Meat Platters. ten- Your puffed up, chafed, and they need *Ti footstick! feet feel aching, 2 : PERFECTLY PASTEUR- IZED MILK SEIBERT AND SON, | Park Street, Near Staniey, 6 teams. Tel. connection. "A. B. JOHNSON. D. D. S DENTIST National Bank Bldg. Open Evening: I not | rise | of South NEUTRALS FACING QUININE FAMINE { British and Dutch Keeping Sup plies for Armies in Field (Correspondence of The Associated Pross) Wash., Feb. —1f the Buropean war continues much longer where are the people of the United States to | i ®et their usual supply of quinine? At the breaking out of the war sulphate | of quinine lling at about 2 }conts an wholesale. A 20 it sold for 40 cents; today it is selling for $1.50 an ounce. When is siated that during the ending June 30, 1914, the mal prior 1o the United States imported 000,000 ounces sulphate ine, then vs about and over 2.648,000 pounds of chin- | chona bark, valued at §464,000, it may be seen what such a difference in | price ms n to the count How European war sible? Simply Great | controls the hona bark try in her posses: in India, | ton, and Jam Holland | product v these are | sections of the world which have {wcn furnishing practically its supply { of quinine, in the form of chinchona i bark, for the last 30 or years. Great Britain is carefully husbanding the supply of this precious specific for the use of he nies and tho | of her allics. while the Dutch must | | e devended uvon to supply those | the Central ers. Armies the field nced vastly larger supply | auinine than wonld the same nuin- ber of men in ordinary occupatior hence a quinine famine for the the world. If the war continues, only will the price continue to but the serious question will be —where are we to get it at all? Story of Quinine. was when certain Amer where chona trees originated, supplied the world, and the story of quinine and how it was introduced into Europe is | entertainingly told by Edward Albes | in the current number of the Bulletin of the Pan-American Union, Wash- ington, D. C.. somew as follow: “Once upon a time—278 years ago, to be more exact—in her viceroyal | castle in Lima, Peru, a lady lay il | of a fever. She was the Countess Ana, wife of the fourth Count of Chinchon who at the time was viceroy | of Peru. News of the lady's illnes having reached one Don Juan Lope de Cannizares, the Spanish Corregi- | dor of Loxa, who dwelt some 230 | miles south of Quito, in what is Mow | the Republic of Ecuador, he despatch- | ed a parcel of a certain kind of | powdered bark to her physician, Juan | de Vega, with the assurance that it | was a sovereign remedy and a never- | w ounce, war, nearly of quin- | $650,000, respon- rBitain indus- Cey the the ions and and ic £ i o o of countri the chin- Time SPSIURC R - S ——— BRARBOURI B Rug and Drapery Co. %00 Trumbull Street, Oppesite th: Allyn Hoase, Hartford Take Advantage of the Last Week of the DISCOUNT SALE Special Bargains in DOMESTIC RUGS All Sizes ONLY $2.00 For a CAW'S Self-Filling Foun- tain Pen with Safety Clip;a 14-kt. hand-finished gold pen, pointed with Genuine Iridium, and a hand- somely engraved hard rubber holder. Absolutely the best value in a Self-Filling Fountain Pen ever offered. Can be refilled in a few seconds from any inkwell. (See Illustration.) and one filling will write about 25 pages of note paper. Come in and see our fine line of CAW'S “Safety” and *“Self- Filling” Fountain Pens. They're made by the pioneer manufacturer and backed by 38 years’ reputa- tion for superior quality. The Abbe Hardware Go. 279 Main Stre [ 1y failing specific in cases of intermit- | tent fever. He knew this to he truc | from both experience and observa- | tion, for prior this event he from a severe K of n old to suffered fever and had been Indian Malacotas, v revealed the remarkable pro perties of this bark. Since then he | had observed its effects in many other cases—so he knew whereof he spoke. The remedy was tried, and the Count- | ess was cured. The name given hy the aborigines to the tree on which grew this wonderful bark was “‘quina- quina.” Introduced Into Europe. “In 1640 the Count of Chinchon re- turned to Spain with his wife. She | cured ho had | thus Jump from Bed in Morning and Drink Hot Water Tells why everyone should drink hot water each morning before breakfast. woman, half the nervous, despondent, days headach dull and unstrung; some days really in- | capacitated by illness. It we all would prac bathing, what a gratifying change would take place, Instead of thou- | sands of half-sick, anaemic-looking souls with pasty, muddy complexions should see crowds of happ v-checked people every reason is that the human | system does not rid itself each day of | all the waste which it accumulates | under our present mode of living. For every ounce of food and drink {aken into the m nearly an ounce of waste material must be carried out, else it ferments and forms ptomaine- | like poisons which are absorbed into | the blood. Just as necessary as it is to clean the ashes from the furnace each day, | before the firc will burn bright and hot, so we must cach morning clear | the inside organs of the previous d accumulation of indigestible ws and body toxins., Men and women, whether sick or well, are advised to drink each morning, before break- fast, a glass of real hot water with a teasponnful of limestone phosphate in | it, as a harmless means of washing | out of the stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels the indigestible materlal, | waste, sour bile and toxins; thus cleansing, sweetening and purifying | the entire alimentary canal before putting more food ino the stomach. Millions of people who had their turn at constipation, bilious attacks, acid stomach, nervous days and sleep- | less nights have become real cranks about the morning inside-bath. A | quarter pound of limestone phosphate Why is man and time, feeling worried; some ice inside- we ste | will not cost much at the drug store, | but is sufficient to demonstrate to any- | one, its cleansing, sweetening and freshening effect upon the system. | son | ed | Artillery, Statt;érwffo'r v & z:ia Is 10 PBe FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 1 | | | nic’s Heroes Unveiled Soon O MEMORIAL TO TITANIC'S DERD. - & Work on the mammoth memorial to the men of the Titanic who went down order that women and children | a chance for their lives is rapidly completion, and it is expect- memorial will be placed in | in Potomac park, Washing- | in have nearing ed the position The memori: a man stand- arms. The The design yne Gertrude city. about March 1. consists of a figure of ing with outstretched figure is of heroic size is the work of Mr: Whitney, formerly Vanderbilt of New Yor ton | took with her a quantity of the heal- | bark, and thus was the first per- | to introduce it into FEurope. Sub- sequently some of the Jesuit misson- aries in Brazil sent parcels of fhe powdered bark to Rome, whence it was distributed by the rdinal de Lugo to other members of the fra ternity throughout Europe. 1t 1 therefore often called “Jesuits’ and sometimes rdinal’s Something over a hundred y ter the Countess of Chinchon had in- troduced it into Spain, Linnaeus, the great Swedish botanist, in making his remarkable classification of all known trees and plants, to com- memorate the service rendered to mankind by that lady, named t he genus which vields the bark Chin chona, and quently still - further i I the name by ing it and plar ing a ars of- in i of to th amil ¢ the Chinchonacease, the Chincho ipccacuanas and tl now known which includes but also the not onl coffees In their native Ecuador, Bolivia, and Columbia, the trees flourish in a cool and equable temperature, on the slopes and in the valleys and ravines of the moun- tains, surrounded by the most ma jestic scenery. never descending below an elevation of 2,500, and ascending high 9.000 feet above the hen in good soil and under favor able circumstances, they become large forest trees; on the higher elevations and when crowded and growing in rock ground, they frequently run up to great heights without a branch; and at the upper limit of their zone they become mere shrubs. The leav in the finest species are lanceolate, with a shining surface of bright green, traversed by crimson veins, and pet- ioles of the same color. The flowe: are small and hang in clustering pan- icles, like lilacs, generally of a deep roseate color, paler near the stalk, dark crimgon within the tube, with cur hairs bordering the laciniae of the corolla, and give forth a delicio fragrance. Ahout years ago Markham, the English traveler, succeeded in securing a quantity of seeds and plants of the various valuable species of the chin- itat, in Peru, Sir Clements scientist and chonaccae, which were taken to India | for the purpose of starting chinchonn | Marked success followed and subsequent plantations were arted in Ceyloa and Jamaica. The Dutch cessful in their efforts in Java. Tho plantation product drove out the for est product from the world’s market —and the world has depended upon these countries to supply it. plantations the experiment, Still - Show Commande ish Casualty Lists Heavy Toll Amon ~Officer (Correspond 5s.) 11 month London, Feh the casualty lists for ol show that the killed during that and 40 missing—a Taking a number from and wounded totals which included in the killed, the since the beginning of the gregate 087 of which 7, been Kkilled or died, 14,15 and 1,772 missin During January heavy among the ing in the Persian and Balkan thea- ters of war. The Indian contingent lost 56 killed 133 wounded ¢ mi Kents 9 killed, 22 wounded; A ians, 12 killed, woundec shires, 10 killed, 22 wounded; ch, 6 Kkilled, 17 wounded; Field 11 killed, 37 wounded; E 12 killed, wounded; York- 11 killed, wounded; Can- nuary 310 officers month, 647 wound- total of 1,024 the missin have since c; Itics British army lost 157 have wounded the 1 regiments oper: 6 = gineers shir were suc- | month, 6 offi- 14 wounded the killed 42 during having een ng. Brigadier-General lieutenant-colonels Brigadier-General talled cer Fitton and six were killed and Harvey wounded. OPPOSED TO TEUTONIC SNATLS. (Correspondence Feb. of The —Bur n Associated Press.) i | | Paris, undy snails, | ot fond, ll‘vur;:\\m!y. says Dr. Berillon, an au- thority on the subject. Before the | war large part of those consumed in Paris were imported from Bavaria; some of them are now coming from Switzerland, and riotic snail cat | ers demand that they be seized at {he frontier on suspicion of Teuton origin which Paris| epicures are so have not always come from Wi inol REMOVES THE CAUSE OF YOUR MONEY. BACK. IF IT FAILS How a Camden Electrician'Recovered | Camden, N. J.—“T had a deep-seated cough, a run-down system and my lungs were awfully weak and ‘sore. Iam an electrician by occupation, and my cough kept me’'awake nights so I thought a% times I would have to'give up. 1 tried everything everybody suggested and had taken so much medicine I was disgusted. One evening I read about Vinol and decided to give it a trial. Soon I noticed an im+ rovement. 1 kept on taking it and today I am a well man. [he soreness is all gone from my lungs, I do not have any cough and have gained 15 lbs. in weight and I am tellin, m"y ¢ friends that Vinol did it.””—FRANK HiLLMAN, Camden, N. J. Vinol succeeds because it removes the deep-seated cause | — by building up the whole cm}s(xtflt ional system. Vinol contains the two most efficient tonics—peptonate of iron and all the medicinal elements found in the cod’s liver, but no oil. , Delicious to taste, — agrees with every one. f The Clark & Brainerd Co., Druggists. New Britain. AT THE LEADING DRUG STORE WHEREVER THIS PAPER CIRCULATES-LOOK FOR THIS SIGN o R ae ca BICYCLE DAY TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 29th Bicycles (regular $40 50 less coasterbrakel ONLY we will sell Pierce ster brake equipped and $22.5 ONLY but deposit of $5.00 will secure bicyell to be called for within 30 days. If you need cycle day. On this day value) for § , COB8 Sales e for CASII at above price. Bicy a Bicycle buy on I HADFIELD-SWENSON CO. 21 MYRTLE STREET, NEW BRITAIN CONN. A R | | 1 | ACCOUNT. SOLICIT YOUR CHAR Your towards placing you at peace with mood but your “malke-up.” If you are dissatisfled wit gest some effective and “homey” We have everything for 1052-54 MAIN ST., Can Be adians, Royal 9 killed, wounded. Th Flying Corps casualtics to- 250 PARR home surroundings can either yield s or—accomplish nothing at ail depending net on your from weariness harsh or harmonious, ar The the world. can be reated by your furniture or furnishings let us sug= change. the interior effect c things to make a pleasin room 'S FOR HOUSEHOLD RANGES, COMPLETE HOMEFURNISH HARTFORD The Latest Spring Styles in Wall Papers Seen at RACKLIFFE’'S NEW WALL PAPER DEPT. The best 1916 patterns at the price of Call and look them over. IRackliffe Bros. Co. Inc. STREET. the ordinary. NEW BRITAIN

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