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NEW, BRITAIN DAILY HERALD. TUESDAY, MAY 2, 1916. “Xt certainly does make cooking easy” Complete Gas Range attached to the end of Coal Range. > ‘a' WOoD |} Glenwoods are Brim Full of Good Things The Glenwood Balanced Baking Damper is far ahead of any other—it is as positive as the turning of a rail- road switch—open to start the fire, closed to bake— ‘just this one damper for kindling or baking and best of all, it can’t warp or stick. The Glenwood Revolving Coal Grate is easy to shake at all times, and. simply fine for removing clinkers. It is triangular in shape, with three different sides for wear. The Ash Pan rests on a roller bearing frame—just open door and it rolls out at the slightest touch, neat and clean. NEW TREATMENT FOR SWOLLEN VIENS Swollen veins are dangerous and often burst. Sufferers are advised to get a two- ounce, original bottle of Imerald Oil (full strength) at any pharmacist and start in to | reduce the veins and bunches at once. Physiclans recommend kmerald Oil; it Is used In hospital practice and a small bottle will last a long time because It is very con- centrated. Apply night and morning with the soft brush as directed until the swelling is reduced to normal 1t 18 s0 marvelously powerful that swollen used steadily. Clark & Bralnerd, Riker-Hegeman Drug Stores can always suppiy yom. POST CARPETCO. 219 Asylum St., Cor. Haynes Street, Hartford, Ct. This Is the Season for Interior and Exterior Painting The home owner or property who entrusts this important wor us is assured work of the most factory nature. It's work that re- quires care in order to do full justice ! to every detail. Our Workman Are Experienced Men of expere results are our kind of workmen— they are the kind to every detail. of the highest quality and g Do It Now--Drop Postal or 'Phone transporting the Australian Australia is about wheat crop is particula ing to the Australian growers who in- creased their wheat ar the previous season by about 50 per | cent., in spite of the fact that they had to pay much higher rates for seed, | fodder ana labor. e who work for good | 1at do full justice The paint we use is ranteed. | The Glenwood Shelf Under Oven Door is not station- ary—it automatically raises and lowers as oven door is opened or closed. It is always level with oven bot- tom-—a great convenience when basting meats or re- moving food. The Glenwood Sectional Top is interchangeable— cross pieces can not warp—a wash boiler can be placed at the back as well as in front for quick heating, leav- ing thé front holes free for cooking. Glenwood Tron is smooth and perfect—the easiest of any to clean—a real delight to the most exacting housekeeper. J. M. Curtin ® Company New Britain WHEAT HELD UP. Australia Has 3,000,000 Tons She Cannot Export. London, May 2.—The problem of wheat crop is just now occupying the atten- tion of the government and the shir owner: 500,000 tons of which only about 500,000 tons have | so far been brought to Kurope. To glands, and even goitre disappear when | the remainder this year would require about 700 voyvages, and it difficult for the owners to find suff cient ships owing to the general scar- | city of tonnage. The distance from Australia is about 12,000 miles, as compared with the 3,000 miles which separate Canada from this country. The difficulty in transporting th o . How’s This? We offer One Hundred Dollars Re- ward for any case of Catarrh that can- not be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Hall’s Catarrh Cure has been taken by catarrh sufferers for the past thirty-five vears, and has become known as the most reliable remedy for Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure acts thru the Blood on the Mucous surfaces, ex- pelling the Poison from the Blood and healing the diseased portions. After you have taken Hall's Catarrh Cure for a short time you will see a great improvement in _your general health. Start taking Hall's Catarrh Cure at once and get rid of catarrh. Send for testimonials, free. I". J. CHENEY & CO.. Toledo, Ohio. Sold by all Druggists, ibc. | eral other Canadian provinc: r disappoint- over that of GIRL “ERRAND” BO Shortage of Youths Being Felt n Canada. Winnipeg, Canada, May 2.—There is a big shortage of errand boys and ¢ in this province and in sev- as a re- sult of the war and so pressing has fice boy T | become the situation that many big The exportable wheat surplus of | business houses are substituting girls for the whistling lads who so many vears held sway. One reason for the shortage lies in the fact that boys more than 16 vears old are eligible for army service and a large part of them have enlist- ed. Another cause is due to the school laws which in this province and in other districts compel the at- tendance at school of boys 14 years old and younger. The problem has been solved here | by the telegraph companies who are employing crippled soldiers for mes- senger hoy work London, May At an inquest on a woman who died from illness brought on by the news of a Zeppelin raid, a physician declared that when the raids were in progress the vitai- ity of people was lowered and they j valued at $63.500 and caught severe colds. “They have a ‘structur sense of impending disaster,”” he said, , “knowing that other people are suf- fering and not knowing what will hap- | pen to themselv: MOTHER GRAY'S SWEE” POWDERS FOR GHILDREN, A OertainRelicf for Feverishness, Constipation, Headnche, Stomach Troublcs, Teething Disorders, and ‘Destroy Worms. They Break up Colds ’rrn;leMnrh in 24 hours, At all Druggsts, 2icts, Don !nc_cerl Sample mailed FREE. Address, anysubstilute. A. S. OLMSTED, Le Roy, N.Y. Lovers of KRA ut can. buy 9 — and ée‘i;/é it any ‘dayl the year—always perfect ' { like i Get one and you’ll be glad ever after. OFFICERS ELECTED. At Mecting of Sunday School Board of M, E. Church Last Night. The Sunday School Board of the Trinity Methodist church met last night and a considerable amount of business was transacted. It was voted to purchase the stereopticon lantern, | which has been here for some time on trial. The envelope pledge system will be used in handling the finances in the future. Officers were clected as follows: Superintendent, €. L. Wood; secre- tary, Howard Draper; assistant sec- retary, Raymond Bradbury; financial secretary, Walter Westerly; chorister; Olive Waters; adult superintendent, E. E. Agard: senior and intermediate iperintendent, H. L. Hancock; junior superintendent, Miss Mary >hley: primary superintendent, Mrs. Fred Hewett; beginners' superinten- dent, Mrs, M. D. Stockwell. APRIL BUILDING $148,115. During the month of April Building Inspector A. N. Rutherford issued permits of a total value of $148,115. There were eleven brick buildings twenty-three sting $75,690 and twenty- eight additions costing $ . Permits were issued vesterday to Dohrenwend Brothers for a garage for Mrs. Theresa Stanley at 58 Park | Place. The building will cost $800. The Ulinski Building Company was granted a permit for a frame addition at 352 North Burrit street, the prop- erty of J. Drizelski, Real butter from a real creamery and at a real price. 35 cents. only at | the National Butter Co., 133 Main St n't helo it if other people don't 11 we want for our goods is fair price. National Butter Co., { 133 Main street.—advt. FOR PROTECTION. Paris, May 2.—The largely in- creased exportation of heather from | Denmark to Germany was supposed | to have been due to the need of the Germ for a substitute for forage. It was also said that tea was made from the heather blossoms. A Ger- man soldier, native of Schleswig, now explains that the heather rlaced in front of particularly exposed trenches and set a fire on the approach of gas clouds. The burning heather heats the air which, in expanding, disperses the peisonous vapors, he says. | aside from this | vill in its CLARKE PHILIPPINE BILL IS DEFEATED Overwhelmed in House After Long ‘ Battle-Administration Setback | Washington, May 2.—The adminis- tration encountered its sharpest de- feat in the house last night after one of the bitterest fights of the session, when on a number of roll calls and | divisions the house consistently by large votes rejected the Clarke amendment to the Philippine bill giv- | ing the islands complete independence | within four years. This was one of the issues on | | which Lindley M. Garrison resigned as secretary of war. He had said | that the Clarke amendment marked a cowardly abandonment of the islands, and urged .the president to oppose it. At the time the president was expected to use his influence with house leaders for the elimina tion of the amendment, but at the Tecent party caucus a letter from the president was read giving his ap- proval to the amendment. The rejection passed the senate was effected by the | solid republican vote with the aid of | thirty democrats. The house then, having taken the situation in hand, rejected the entire senate bill and | substituted the house measure, with its vague preamble holding out the hope of ultimate independence of the islands. After that, on motion of Mr. F ald of Brooklyn, demo- cratic chairman of the committee on | appropriations. the house instructed its conferees to azree to no provision fixing a definite time limit for the evacuation of the islands. The bill as adopted by the house, vague preamble, simply provides the islands with a new system of government in which | the natives would have a larger share. This bill follows the lines of the senate bill as prepared in the com- mittee on the Philippines. The | Clarke amendment, which never won the approval of the senate commit- | tee, was offered on the floor by Mr. Clarke of Arkansas, president pro tempore of the senate. The senate administrative features came nearer the wishes of the war department than the house bill, and some of these features may be re- stored in conference. Yesterday gave another illustration of the democratic leadership in the house. Representative Claude Kit- chin of North Carolina. the majority leader, apparently did little to stem the anti-administration revolt. Mr. Kitchin voted with the administra- tion, but did nothing toward extract- irg the demccrats from the disagree- able position in which they found themselves. The administration fight was led by Mr. Garret. Mr. Sabath, and Mr. Jones, and under this divided ieadership the bill was defeated on every roll call, Thirty democrats—most of them from New York—joined with the republicans and defeated the ad- ministration forces at every turn. The house passed the original Jones bill approved by the lower chamber in the sixty-third congress, which rrovides qualified self-government for the islanders, and contains an im- rlied promise that eventually the Filipinos will have their freedom. The final rout of the administra- tion forces, who had fought since 11 o’clock in the morning to save the senate bill and the Clarke amend- ment, was engineered by Representa- tive John J. Fitzgerald. After the senate measure had been deecisively rejected Mr. Fitzgerald offered a motion instructing the conferees. Administration democrats filibus- tered ineffectually against the Fitz gerald motion, An attempt was made to adjourn the house because the so-called Tammany democrats once more jcined with the mi After defeating the admini move to adjourn by a majority more than 50, the house voted 208 to 149 for the “previous question” on the Fitzgerald motion. The align- ment was practically the same on all votes. Mr. Fitzgerald's motion in- structing the conferees to accept no provision in conference that fixes a definite date for the relinquishment of the islands then was carried. The record vote against the Clarke amendment was 213 to 165. Mr. Fitzgerald’s motion ties the hands of the conferees in advance of the conference between the two todies. It is possible that no bill will emerge from conference. Representative Michael Conry of New York, who left a sick bed to vote with the Tammany democrats against the Philippine bill, collapsed as the final vote was taken near midnight jast night. He was assisted in a Falf-fainting ocondition from the stuffy house chamber where he had emained for thirteen hours KEEP THE KIDNEYS WELL Health is Worth Saving, and Some New Britain People Know How to Save It. Many New Britain people take their lives in their hands by neglecting the kidneys when they know these organs | need help. Weak kidneys are respon- sible for a vast amount of suffering and ill health—the slightest delay is | dangerous. Use Doan's Kidney Pills —a remedy that has helped thousands of kidney sufferers. Here is a New Britain citizen's recommendation. Mrs. A. Cowlam, 84 John St., New Britain, says: “I have had more or less trouble for yvears from my kid- neys and at times I had severe pains in my back and sides. Doan's Kid- | ney Dills did me a great deal of zood. | The pain and soreness was soon re- | moved and I felt much better.” Price 50c ,at all dealers. Don't simply ask for a kidney remedy—get Doan's Kidney Pills—the same that Mrs. Cowlam had. Foster-Milburn Co. Props., Buffalo, N. Y. of the bill as it‘ Consistency OU want a motor car that will serve you consistently. You want to know that your car can be relied upon day in and day out. You want high mileage per gallon of gasoline and freedom from repairs and readjustments. And you want “these things, not occasionally, but ‘continuously—day after day. On these qualities the Maxwell has made good. It has proved its worth. When the Maxwell stock touring car set the World’s Motor Non-Stop Mileage Record a short time ago it travelled for 44 consecutive days and nights and its performance was con- sistent. j It went about 500 miles each and every day. It went within a small fraction of 22 miles to every gallon of gasoline. It went the whole dis- tance of 22,000 miles—probably fur- ther than you would travel in two years—without any repairs or read- justments. Every one of eight tires (two sets) went just about 9,800 miles and the others finished in good shape. For consistency and relia- bility this record far excels anything we ever heard of. You can get a Maxwell, an exact duplicate of the record breaking stock car and if you order now you’ll have it for the fine, early summer days. Don’t put it off, as we can’t get any guarantee on future ship- ments from the factory. Phone us for demonstration TODAY. Touring Car, $655. Roadster, $635 Prices F. O. B. Detroit E. C. DENISON (GARAGE) 430 MAIN STREET DISTRIBUTORS FOR All Siz>s day. A DKINS PRINTING CO. %" CONSTIPATION: 1s the big trouble in every serious sickness — causing depression of spirits, irritability, nervousness, imperfect vision, loss of memory, poor sleep, loss of appetite, etc.—stop it with a regular course of SCHENCKS MANDRAKE They act promptly and freely, but gently, thoroughly cleansing' the bowels, comforting the lating the liver—the specific for indi- gestion, headache, biliousness, heart. burn, flatulency. T Purely vegetable. £ 80 YEARS' CONTINUOUS SALE PROVES THEIR MERIT. J. H. Schenck & Son, Philadelphia CLEAN INK DAVIDS' ELECTRO-C HEMICAL BL BLACK WRITING F LUID. All sed! and coagulative mat ter is taken DAVIDS' INK before it gets into the Every ounce of ink is forced through a of cloth weavings seven layers thick. It is clean, clear, easy flowing; does clog or cause gum to form on the bottd the inkwell or on the p en. Use with fo: pen and all pens. BUY DAVIDS' INK here. Try a bott] We guarantee it to be “pure” i BOWLING, POOL, LIQUORS AND CI OLSON’S C/ (Successor to Hilding } 172-174 ARCH § RINTI In Many Different Lan BY SKILLED UNION i COMPOSI Office Hours: 8 a. m. to 6 Mondays and Wednesdays Tel Mgr’s Res, 179-5. Foren stomach, stimy- Plain or Bugar Coated. EASTERN PRINTI 53 CHURCH STF