Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
(7 7 fer ncea & Baby Ideal emédy for Nursing i.ohers (INTINUOUS HflRRl]R‘ pound of Simple Laxa- | Herbs Safe for Baby and Mother. tipa cond the « Ve 1d Bana most peopl help fiof the bowels. fid purgative to relieve cons th ition that | n\nl(ll - time or ulating the arsh cathar- uld not be em- pation, as their temporary while they stem unnecessarily. nl that can be used with tiniest babe and equally effective for the strong- stitution is found in the com- i of simple laxative herbs Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin in drug stores evervwhere ¥ cents a bottle. This is an jpusehold remedy and should be ¥ family medicine chest T Jlow, 18 Leslie St., Caldwell, fnex; I , and also Tt 48 the anly medieins I cert my baby, it myseif. been in the nursing. BE able to take without af- | well, T have | T1L. EVELYN BARSOLOW used it for all four children and it is | |, fine; they like it and ask for it.” A trial bhottle of Dr. rup Pepsin can be obtained, W, SURE TO SEE AT Fox’s Theater This Week Friday & Saturday EDISON FILM “The Voice of the Violin” Music for this film will be furnished by Edison’s greatest invention—the Edison Diamond- Disc Phonograph Courtesy of C. L. PIERCE COMPANY 246 MAIN STREET here are many kinds of coal and all sorts of roofing. We carry the best of each; coalthat absorbs heatand burnsreadily—RU-8ER-0[) roofiing that repels heat and cold -proof and fire-resist- }!u-azwcm isa gecod investment. t lasts for many years without re- and is permanently water- proofed with a combination of high grade animal and vegetable fats. The high quality of RU-BER-OI has been unvarying for 23 years. THE W. L. NEW BRITAIN, 2 \\\.\\\\\_\——__,////// R (] O TR OOFINGT] cos1's MORE - WEARS LONGER % 5 CITY Q¥irikEriess Coal and: Watertight Roofing You can get them both here. selected for free-burning qualities and our roofing is the kind that puts an end to repair bills. Our coal is specially We sell the genuine Pvanounced 'RU"us In RUBY, R-OI} The long life of RU-BER-0I0 is demonstrated by the fact that hun- dreds of roofs covered with it more than twenty years ago are still weatherproof. We have RUW-BER-OI} in Slate Gray and _in beautiful, fadeless colors—Tile Red and Copper Greer. The “Ru-ber-oid Man” (shown above) is on every roll of the genuine, Drop in when you are in the neighborhood. We'll be glad to show you the real RU-BER-0I0. DAMON CO. o CONN. =2 \N N Caldwell’s | free of | B. Cald- | h horses dying in one imn , Monticello. L AN IS \\\ g | too mu NEW, BRITAIN DAILY SERBIAN RETREAT A | Amerioau Eye Witness Saw §0,- 000 Perish in Storm (Correspondence of The Associated Press.) Rome, Italy, March Haller, formerly of the States Cavalry, who was one of few Americans in the Serbian retreat, journey to the declares that during the 21.—Henry | sifth United | Podgoritza in Montenegro in a four- days snow storm more than thousand men died “They died they he said, “that | all along carts went | Nobody ! the they The | At one seventeen ense puddle | | unable to pull themselves out. | Dying Asked No Aid. i “I saw hundreds and th | ragged men, with tneir feet h to wear shoes or to them, crawling alo for mi | their hands and kne through | blinding snow, finally stopping dying soon afterwards. They never | made ¢ appeals for help. It wouldn't have been any use. Besides, | they were too far gone, to know what | | they were about, that dyir | Their last effort to keep going W merely a mechanical operation. Of course the great mortality all alon | our route was due to the barren na- | ture of the country we were traveling | with no shelter for but a comp: | tively few of us. There were even i forests where we mi have felled | trees and build temporary quarte { Our fires for the most part | small, with barely cnough wood t water.'"” 50,000 Austrians. visit to Buda- so fa fell every few yards the road. The wagons and right the over their bodies ht of trying to turn out of | but there were so many | could not but drive over them roads were full of mudholes. | place T saw no less than nds of wollen k on on the and | were were | to Haller, pest when the war be who was on i i | | , enlisted in the Austrian army and was serving as he by the Serbs and [a bugler six months later, when, was taken prisoner | then finally was marched with 75,000 | other Austrian soldiers across the | | mountains into Albania and ‘‘therc fifty | | turned loose on the shores of the | Adriatic to fight for life against chol | era, fever : | 1idd Halle vo hundr Serb army and men and abo w-five t "and Austrian Not min more than a hundred and fifty thous- and of the whole 1 t over the | mountains. 1t v because th Austriuns or the Bulgarians pursucd | us, however, with much wctivity. We . died merely aus. of disease, hun- ger and exhaustion. Murdere By Albanians. “The worst part of the journey be- gan at the Albanian frontier- Al- banians have in times past been badly | | treated by the Se: and they this chance to suare old scores. They shot, killed, robbed, and murdered us at every step of the way. For instance, | at Linn, some Serb officers and a | company of stragzlers on ‘horseback were met in the miadle of the road by a few peasants and ordered to give | up their horses and’ their money. It was plain highway robvery and they refused. The peasants ran away and within a couple minutes more than thousand shots were fired out of { the hushy hillside, killing most of the Serbs. “The food problem was terrific cven Albania. A half pound of bread was sold ten dinars, about two | dollars. As I had a little money at Sturza 1 bought five ponnds cf oka Had I not heen zble to wet beans, I would today man. 1 had just said to my can't go any further,’ when I pe ed a peasant woman to se¢ll me the beans. I ate beans tw making a sort of soup cut of them, putting in a little salt. Ar that [ was far luckier than the fellows who had to boil harness leather for five or six hours in order to make the hot water taste like soup. I w men act like savages, ealing pieces of brown pape 1 thous- prisonc took | | | in Heroic to Womoen. “There were perhaps not more than two thousand women amoug the treating horde with us ~nd it fact worth recording that they kindly treated and given comforts were who were otherwis 5 feeling. I have such men, gaunt, staggering along, half-naked, with a few pieces of clath for shoes, unable to speak, with left to stop near a dying cut a stringy steak from straighten up for a momen: ne: of the women’s carts and smilingly tender their last mouthiul o food to some of the women. 'The treatment of the women on this dreadful retrea the most wonderful, the re- is a were whatever soldi to ev by These poor women in the their homes had in many c unable to bring enough clothes cover them. Often they were with- | out stockings or underskirt or shawls or cloaks. time and time again diers take off his overcont it upon some one of these ,and seem almost ashamed to look upon her shivering body as he made the offer. Then he would search along the road for hours until he was able some dead man of his clothes e that which he had so freely What Haller regarded as nis most saving device ever | put in a stove BAKE CHECK KINDLE One Motion Three Positions Three Results and you can only get The Single Damper— an exclusive Crawford in- vention—with one motion of a Cool Knob— governs fire and oven—and makes good cooking with a Craw- ford Range automatic. The draft is so perfectly regula- ted that the fire can be kept as you wish — night and day continu- ously. The cool Knob controls fire and oven with one motion. You can't forget. The Single Damper makes “best cooking™ a habit. No scorched or under- done food. A Craw- ford makes a poor cook 0od cook—because “Knob" does the thinking. Saves Trouble HERALD, FRIDAY, MARCH 24, No cold corners in the oven. Even heat. Every ounce of coal puts the heat where it belongs. Less Coal— less expense. The patented Single Damper and 19 other unique and distinctive devices make the Crawford the World's Best | Range. Your Dealer will tell you all i about them. Gas ovens {f destred; end ( Single) or elevated (Double) . 0. MILLS & CO. 80 West Main St. remarkable experience was the of a mad soldier dying from tion. “Clothed only in a ragged un- dershirt he was running barefoor down a sr -covered Albanian road straight as an arrow bellowing as he ran,” he said E on and on down that roac nothing yet wonderfully avoiding stumbling over the hodies of other dead and dying soldiers and the meat-stripped of the army hor wh blocked the Suffe: as T myself was, I turned and v-atched | this strange figure. At last a halg | down the road he pitched for- | passed him later T saw he stone dead.” Mother With Babe Hung. “Other than that incident there is one other that will stick in m ory I live," s mem.- | so long as “This was the hanging of a mother by the Austrian troops before made a prisoner. We wers | across a rough courtry near | © when we stopped near aller, Serh drink. ment also went to get a he arose from the a shot from the ot was by a stood at tk sprin That She | door, an ola shotgun in | one hand, a baby in the sther “One of the upmnu m(‘nrul her hung. There noth do but execuie her. ced about her led to the neares was this, in came fired was he made appeal. did nm cry out. t her hanging there in the win<. i 1f was picked up and sent to ths prison camp, to be cared for. Through the efforts erick, among the Austrian prisoners, Haller | body 1916. A guarantee OU have heard and read more or less about the demoralization of the dye-stuffs and textile markets due to the war in Europe. We want to say this: Our clothes are guaranteed to be satisfactory to the wearer; and this guarantee is given without reservation, modification or exception. Any man who sells our clothes is definitely author- ized to extend to any man who buys them, our unqualified assurance of satisfaction; which means colors, ail-wool fabrics, the quality of other materials, the tailoring, the fit, the value at the price. And the money-back if you are not satisfied. Hart Schaffner&Marx Good Clothes ‘Makers We extend this unqualified assurance of satisfaction to every purchaser. GLOBE CLOTHING HOUSE The Home of Hart, Schaffner & Marx Clothes. cued from starvation at Du o later Ambassador I Rome interested himself in the I am going bac & citizen clared ler. to expr my feeling for the \H\v m people that are grown in the United e ~ | ance written by For Your Insurance and Surety Bonds Avoid trouble by having your insur- a man whe how. Go to DWIGHT A. PARSONS, Booth's Block. knows | | 185 Arch St. If You Want Good Bottled Beer, Wine or Liquors, Order Same from PHILIP BARDECK, 'Phone 482-2 Two Score Years of Telephony ORTY years ago, Alexander Graham Bell spoke over the Ffeeble instrument he had: invented, to Thomas A. Watson=— only two telephones in the world and a hundred feet of wire. Recently the same men spoke to each other from the Atlantic . to the Pacific over the Transcontinental Line—more than fifteen million telephones in the world and nine million in the Bell system. Twenty-one million miles of telephone wire connect every state the union, and the wireless telephone has extended speech across our ocean boundaries. A chorus of twenty-eight million Americans is brought into perfect unison daily by the Bell System, that unifier of the nation and harmonizer of distant peoples, which brxdges distances, outraces * time and makes a whole nation one community. SOUTHERN NEW ENGLAND TELEPHONE COMPANY