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-+ NEW, BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1918. W BRITAIN HERALD daily (Bunday excepted) at 4:18 p. m., &t Herald Bullding, 67 Church St. red at the Post Office at New Britalm A8 Becond Class Mail Matter. iverad by carcter to any part of the oty for 16 Cents a Week, 65 Cents a Month. oriptions for paper to pe sent by mafl Payable in advance, 60 Cents a AMonth $7.00 a Year. only profitabla advertising medimum in the eity. Circulation books and press Toom always open to advertisers. He: ling’, 1a will be found on sale at Hota- New Stand, 42nd St. and Broad- New York City; Foard Walk, at- lantie City, and Hartford Depot TELEPHONE CALLS. ness Offce ftoria) Rooms PREVENTION AND OURE. en cases of poliomyelitis have n discovered in New Britain up to e, a very formidable number; but cause for hysteria. Sotentific hods brought to bear by the plth Department will prevent a ead of the disease, if at the same e the responsible oitizens of the do all in their power to aid in prevention. Unreported cases of potious diseases are things that must guarded against. The Health de- ment has time and again warned nst this. Parents of children suf- ng from any undue malady, from varranted nerviousness, from ex- fPve fever, should immediately call farafly doctor, It ts the simplest pg in the world to forestall an epi~ pic, according to men who devote ir lives to the practlce of medi- Resort to the old-time method ‘an ounce of prevention as against ound of cure.” UP-TO-DATE! CHILDREN, oor little Amertcan ohfldren! They coming in for a great deal of ad- oritiolsm In this day and gen- on. Out in Chicago the president [the board of education 1s after He criticises the manner in ch meny of them go to school. by do not follow the example set bn by thetr forbears, do these chil- n of Hyde Park High school. rs is not a lang walk to school in early morning hours with books pg over their shoulders or car- i in the old-fashioned book bag, jh initials or monogram worked on side, Instead, these twentleth tury American children are eled to the sohool doar in big, | 1f the strike lasted long enough, fam- ine would overspread the land. ibersome automobliles with a Iv- chauffeur at the wheel and a tman ready to pounce down the jment the machine stops and open door so the darlings can be helped without danger of breaking les or soiling shoes. It is a great for the boys and girls of 1916 en the conditions *hat surrounded ir grandfathers and grandmothers taken into consideration. Probably Jacob M. Loeb, president hicago’s board of education, s toa ere on the pupils of Hyde Park Eh. “You should see it on a rainy ;" he says, “At closing time the omaobiles are lined up there as if were a fashionable Teception, with chauffeurs to take the wrist tch boys home.” The poor children thus maligned: “They live for ir automobiles, their silk stockings, bir parties and balls, for dancing A pleasure,” continues Mr. Loeb. b1, what else is there for children h as the aforementioned, Take ay their automobiles, their silk bckings, their other luxuries of life, ke them walk a good mile or two school every morning while clad in ji-fashioned homespuns and there uld be a lively upward trend in the Jath rate of Chicago. However the erage man may sympathize with pampered sons and daughters of jaerican fathers and mothers, he st not place all the blame on the loulders of the youngsters. It s not eir fault if they miss the thrills that Ime to those children who must in jne manner or fasion emulate the lample of another generation. In pking for a solution of the prpblem, “I would like to edu- pried . Loeb says te the parents.” Parents of chiidren who go to pub- schools today should be educated. b matter much money the fam- the a public supposed to be how contains that exchequer e parents in school placed There should be tew ould know i pupils the same plane. are While: some the b class distinction. e enabled to roll up to school in limousines, there travel puse door are any must the olley their through e city streets in rain or shine. For e good of all pupils hould be made to the same landards. The place for the automo- fle is not front of the public hool. It may do very well to carry fldren ta and from their studies at at a public more wha on or trudge way democracy follow in private sckool, but in- Because of such t crop of rabid jtution, never. ractices we get our firs peialis There is a wealthy man in ‘ew York city who has the right idea, ith all his millions,—he is rated as mong the ten wealthiest men in the d States,—his children go tao the public schools every day, and they walk. In rainy weather they are al- lowed the luxury of a trolley car and an umbrella between them. They sit beside the children of fathers who cannot afford an automobile, yet they are belng educated in the ways and manners of a great republic,—same- thing that s never known by those held aloof from the common walks of Nfe. And yet they wonder why the crop of Abraham Lincolns is on the decline. SHORT MEMORIES. There is one decidedly characteristic of the American peopie; they are so prone to forget. Today they may be standing on the brink of a great precipice, shaking with fear lest they fall and be dashed to dissolution on the rocks beneath., Pulled from the danger either by their own or by some external force they forget on the mor- row the dangers that beset them the day previous. It is probably a good thing that this is so. It is not always a just thing, to be sure. It has not been a year since the entire nation was stirred to its very depths over the possibility of a war. The slightest turn of the finger meant that our young boys and men would be sent into the dreadful fray. Then it was that mothers and sisters and sweet- hearts sent up prayers to heaven that the thing might be forestalled. And, it was. The war was averted, by some aoct of Providence. Instead of absent places around the family hearth there is today the highest prosperity the land ever saw. The fathers and sons are left to pursue the even honor of their way. The moth- ers and daughters are clad in the happiness and Jjoy of well-being, In- stead of mourning for the dead. Less than a month ago the nation stood face to face with a general rail- road strike, a strike that was destined to tie up all the transportation of the United States. The men and women of the nation stood spellbound for very awe. There was no reckoning the possibility of such a thing. It was simply known that once the wheels of transportation were brought to a stand-still families would be sore pressed for a means of eking out an existence. Babies would starve for ‘want of milk. In two weeks or may- hap less ll immediate farm products would be out of reach. In a short while there would be no meat. And, These were the thoughts thal surged to the minds of men and women upon whom familles depended. ‘When the Prestdent of the United States dld the only possible thing that could have been done to avert a natlon-wide strike they thanked Divine Providence that the hour of suspense had passed. That was less than a month ago on the morning of Labor Day. Now, what is the condition? The probably has had an influence on its neighbor.—Providence Journal. A w York what we need is fewer drug stores. Maybe—but where would one buy toothbrushes and cigarettes and post- age stamps—and where would one go to have a look at the city directory? —Norwich Record. physician says that Now ters for we have to worry about oys- the New Haven Journal- Courfer insists that the “set” is a failure. That will lead to a scarcity and a higher price. Everything is conspiring to put up values.—Meriden Journal. The Louisville Courier-Journal wise- ly notes that Henry Ford, an Amer- ican manufacturer whose profits are said to be $1,000,000 a week, never has wasted time arguing that an American manufacturer must be pro- teoted against Huropean competition or starve.—Hartford Times. The New York stock broker who ralsed a $600 crop of corn on his Connecticut farm at a total cost of $112.560 seems to have discovered a shorter and a surer road to wealth than Wall street affords.—Springfield Union., . Success to Woodrow Wilson. That settles it! President Wilson has settled that railroad strike in the teeth of all the big business interests of this country, if you can believe what a senator from Arkansas sald before the senate's strike committee. And I do. We don’t belleve in changing horses in the middle of the stream of this world war and our Mexican situation, unless we are to get a mighty good new horse and know exactly what he can do, and that's more than anybody knows about Mr. Hughes. When you oonsider the child labor law that has been passed, and the mass of other progressive legislation which has been put into force through Mr. Wilson's influence, plus this big fact of the settling of the railroad strike in gpite of the machinations of Big Buslness to bring it off by stand- ing pat—thereby discrediting the dem- ocratic party—when you consider all these things In favor of Mr. ‘Wilson, and add to it our natural caution agalnst changing horses in the middle of the stream, the three editors of Nautilus can see the scales go clear plump down to the bottom on the Woodrow Wilson side. There is just this to be sald in de- fence as to democratic “pork”: the democratic pork Is spread all over the country and brings prosperity to an immense number of people who are pretty well starved when the repub- licans are running the country on an efficiency basis for the protection of Big Business. Success to Woodrow Wilson. —Blizabeth Towne, October Nautilus, s The Blackmail Act. (New York Times.) When the white slave traffic act, usually called the Mann act and which ought to have been called the En- couragement of Blackmail act, was reported by the house committee on interstate and foreign commerce, Rep- resentative Adamson of Georgia said that its provisions were “liable to fur- American people are again following the instinct of the race, or, seemingly, they are. They are asked by Charles HEvans Hughes the candldate of the Republican party to make the eight- hour day an issue in the present presi- bring in a Wilson a dential campalgn and to verdict against Woodrow whose action saved them from calamity that cannot be imagined. Mr. Hughes denounces the President of the United States for saving the people of the United‘States from dis- aster. He severely arraigns the President for ‘“selling out to the brotherhdods,” and for investi- sating. At that moment there was precious Mttle chance for investiga- tion. Action was demanded, and the President and Congress acted. Mr. Hughes knows that the Adamson bill carries with it a provision which or- investigation after the law goes into effect and, if there injustice, :t will be eradicated. The candidate of the Republican party takes up the case of the speclal In- not ders an is any terests against the American people and asks that the man who saved the common men, women and chil- of this country from starvation be publicly condemned. If the people follow the advice of Mr, Hughes they have shorter memories than we give them credit for. dren Kansas, a state where capital pun- ishment been abandoned, turns to a satisfler Georgia papers please copy. has now lynching a: of crime, FAC AND FANCIES, The net result of the cabinet change in Athens seems to be that the “ben- evolent neutrality” which Greece has maintained is still berevolent.—New York World. The Germans must regret that they produced that “Hymn of Hate” against England so early in the war. Now that the British are giving them real cause for hatred, the Germans find they exhausted the possibilities of the language long ago.—Philadelphia nish boundless opportunity Lo hold-up and blackmail.”” Such newspapers as Wwere not obsessed by the then prevail- ing myth of an international and in- terstate “syndicate” trafficking in wo- men took the same view, besides pointing out the inherent absurdity of promoting a police court offense in- to a federal felony by the mere cross- ing of a state line. Between the wording of the law ana the teport of the majority of the interstate com- merce committee urging its passage there was a direct conflict. It owed its passage to a misappre- hension or misrepresentation of its real language and Inevitable result, and to a sort of moral panic in con- gress, the reflection of the spasms of amateur sociolgists and mythmakers of the magazines. The transportation of a woman across a state llne “for any other immoral purpose” than forcing or inducing her to a life of vice became a felony as well as her transportation with the intention of that persuasion or compulsion. The federal government took a hand in the regulation of private morals. The blackmallers saw thefr harvest. Yor more than six vears the government of the United States has been their pal. i The federal authorities are now at work in Philadelphia and Chicago and other citles to secure the punishment of blackmailers to whom a federal law has given the invitation and oc- casion fort heir crime. The “syndicate” of white slavers is a figment of imaginative fly-gobblers, the “syndicate” of blackmailers Is a reality. Whether or not the gang of crooks, male and female, now falling into the net of the law numbers sixty persons, whether or not the profits cf their operations have been as great as some confessions are said to show. tho latest frult of the Mann act, follow- ing so many products on a smaller scale, should be enough to turn at last the gorge of a public whtch has been too patient with blackmail fostered by a hypocritical and dishonest law. No doubt the majority of the cases of blackmailing under the Mann act never come to light. The Hon. James Robert Mann has just been renominated to his eleventh term as a representative in Congr He will be the speaker of the sixty fifth congress. if it is republican. The countrywide extortion practiced “inder the act which bears and does not hon- or his name, the exposures of its sin- ister working in his own city, ought to be enough to persuade him, il he needeed new evidence, that the Mann act should be repealed. The scveral stat can take care of the morals North American, British Columbia has just voted for full suffrage for women. Washing- ton state, where women are permitted to vote, adjoins British Columbia, and of their citizens, and congress wnust be sick of a federal moral supervision that puts swag into the pockets of blackmailers. The Mann law should be wiped off the statute books at the next session. McMILLAN’S New Britain’s Busy Blg Store— “Always Reliable.” Dashing New Styles in Coats and Suits For Saturday we offer the following extraordinary values. Make it a point to see these items advertised from our Ready-to-Wear Dept. WOMEN'S TAILORED SUITS Saturday at $14.08 each. Navy, Afri Black. n Brown, Green and WOMEN'S AND MISS[ES’ COATS Saturday $10.98 and $12.98 cach Coats reveallng many new style features. SILK AND WOOL DRESSES Saturday at $7.98 each. in all the Autumn shades. POPLIN MANY ATTRAOTIVE COATS FOR CHILDREN Saturday at $3.98, $4.98 to $8.98 each. Many of the new Coats and Suits are fur trimmed. SILK T of plain and changeable taffeta. urday at $3.25 each, FFETA PETTICOATS Sat- NEW AUTUMN BLOUSES The new modes revear combinations of plaid silks and georgette crepes, plain silk taffetas and georgette crepes. Saturday at $1.98 cach, NEW VOILE BLOUSES Saturday $1.98 and $2.98 eac WASHABLE GLOVES | for Street Wear. White Doeskin | Gloves, tancy emb. backs at $1.25 pr. WASHABIJE CAPE GLOVES Priced $1.25 and $1.50 pair. in pearl, ivory, tan, gray, biscuit and putty shades. silk Gloves, Chamois, Lisle and Chamoisettes, that are washable, 50c, 59¢, 75c, 89c, $1.00 pair. WE SHOW THE WAY when it comes to new styles in Neck- wear. See our line. NIS” SHIRTS AND BANDS Carter’s Alma” garments, in wool and part wool, 25¢ to 60c garment. INFANTS' VANTA VESTS No pins, no buttons, real baby com- fort In Vanta garments, 350c to $1.00 garment. . MILES AND MILES OF NEW HAIR RIBBONS Plaids, Roman Stripes, Light and Dark Flowered, Plain Taffetas and Moires for school opening. 17c, 19¢, 25¢, 20¢ to 59¢ yard, FRENCH IVORY Our Holiday shipment hag arrived and go oh sale Saturday. FRENCH IVORY SETS Priced $3.50 to $13.50 Large variety of French pieces to complete your toilet. 25¢ upwards. Choose from Shoe Horns, Button Hooks, Picture Frames, Clocks, Glove Stretchers, Perfume Holders, Mani- cure implements, Soap Cases, Powder Jars, Hair Receivers, Trays, Mirrors, Brushes, Combs, etc. D. McMILLAN 199-201-203 MAIN STREET. Ivory Priced Strength {s Calm. (Washington Gladden). A life haustible, whose resources are inex- whose power Is resistless, ought to be a peaceful life. The strong soul is always a quiet soul. There is no surer proof of power than calm. The feeble physique fldgets and flut- ters and is never at rest: it takes strong man to hold still. A weak wrist can pound the piano; it is only the iron muscles of a Paderewskl or a Holmann that can touch the ke 80 softly that they only murmur as in the music of a dream. “The moun- tains, s the psalmist, “bring peace to the people;” that is because ‘“‘the strength of the hills is his al To be filled with the strength of God s to know “the peace of God, which passeth understanding.” a The New 10-Cent Piece, (Brooklyn Some time this month, pos Standard-Union). ibly in a few days, the new 10-cent piece the Philadelphia mint is striking off will make its appearance. A of 250,000 to be 10,000 total are and about will have this year's date on them. n the obverse side the dime { will bear the figure of ancient Greek woman and the reverse will carry the familiar emblem of Roman magisterial authority, the fasces—a coined an WISE, SMITH & CO., HARTFORD REPIECIAL, SAILLKE TWO HUNDRED AND FIFTY STYLISH FALL AND WINTER COATS FOR WOMEN AND 518 98 MISSES, REGULAR $22.60 and $25.00 COATS SATURDAY CHOICE AT o Twenty-seven different models carefully selected so that they have the maximum of style at a price several dollars lower than you will find such handsome coats in any other store in Hartford. All models feature the full wide sweep and many have semi-fitting lines. Some are trimmed with fur col such as natural raccoon, others are trimmed with plush. The materials include wool velour, fancy wool plush, seal plush, Scotch mixture cloths and chinchilla in every new and stylish fall color. A wonderful selection to choose from. STYLISH COATS OF VELOUR FUR TRIMMED COATS OF WOOL PLUSH $20.00 Skunk opossum fur is used to trim the collar and cuffs of these rich coats which are made of a fine wool plush lined through- out with Sols’ guaranteed satin The very wide flare hangs straight from the shoulders in graceful ripples and all together make this a very attractive as well as practical coat. WoM 'S AND MIS FALL AND WINTER $1 3.98 In a number of mixture mater- WOOL $16.98 These three-quarter length coats have a yoke back from which hangs a very full ripple flare. Chase’s beaver plush is used to trim the collar, cuffs and pock- ets. These coats are shown in all the fall colors, including the Russian green and earth brown. lals. These coats are made with an extra wide flare hanging straight from the shoulders, rag- lan sleeves, turn-over cuffs and a deep pleated cape collar. WOMEN'S You will appreciate the extreme value that is in these stylish suits which are made with a three-quarter length coat having the full wide sweep. The skirt is in a wide circular model and the material is a very fine quality poplin which is shown in all the deep, rich colors that are popular for AND MISSES' TATLOR-MADE §' bundle of rods with a projecting ax | blade, fall wear. WOMEN’S AND MISSES' FUR TRIMMED TAILOR-MADE SUITS OF GABERDINE $22.50 These very smart suits are made of a very fine quality wool gaberdine. The coat has a panel pleat extending from the belt in the back and is made with a very wide full ripple flare. Fur is used to trim the collar and cuffs and the skirt is made in a new tailored full flare, FUR These attractive suits have a handsome in a new and supremely stylish model. at the walst from which extends an unusually full ripple flare. The front is fastened with military loops and buttons and the skirt is made attractive model. We offer these in all the new colors that are stylish for fall wear. AUTUMN S OF STREET FRENCH $12.98 Chic dresses that will please you because of their simplicity. They are made in a full straight liné model with a wide em- broidered girdle, triangular patch pocket and are trimmed with a hemstitched white serge collar and pointed cuffs. These are offered in Russian green, navy, blue, mountain blue, Bur- gundy, earth brown and black. W "Phone orders Charter 8050, and Mail Orders promptly filled. | WISE, AFTERNOON DRESSES OF SILK CHAR- $ 1 5 '00 MEUSE .... Dainty frocks in this fashion able material made with corded skirt and and walst corded to match, daintily trim- med with contrasting gold thread ornaments on walst and These frocks are espe- cially pleasing in the deep, rich collars which are now so sty- lish. sleeves sash. HARTFORD collar SMITH & CO. TRIMMED BROADCLOTH SUITS ... of fur and are made The coat is made with the yoke in a new SMART DRESSES OF FRENOH SERGE COM- BINED WITH SILK CHAT MEUSE AND CHIFFON . $18-98 The skirt of this attractive mod- el has a deep yoke of char- meuse embroidered with gold thread. Blouse is in a jacket effect of serge with sleeves of silk chiffon, making one of the smartest dresses that we have offered this season. The ma- terials are of the best and in- clude all the wanted autumn shades, Our Restaurant is an ideal placo for a light lunch, a cup of tea or substantial re- past. OUR DAILY AUTOMOBILE DELIVERY INSURES PROMPT DELIVERY OF YOUR PURCRHASES Daily Delivery in New Britain, Elmwood, Newington, Cedar Hiu. Maple Hill and Clayton. _ James Howard Gore Tells of Roumania Peasant Life Washington, D. C., Sept. 22.—A vivid picture of the Roumanian peas- antry, whose country has been drawn into the destructive vortex of the Bu- ropean war after many months of va- cillation, is presented in a communi- cation to the National Geographic so- clety from James Howard Gore. The society today issued a part of Mr. Gore’s article as a war geography bul- letin, which says: “A Roumanian village looks its best in the spring, when nature, awakened from the sleep of winter, is green and fresh. At Easter the cottages have been white-washed and the doors and window frames freshly painted in bright colors. The thatched woof has been put in order, ang in its entirety the cottage calls to mind the black- eyed country girls with their glisten- ing strings of maulti-colored beads around thelr necks; ‘The Roumanian peasant women oné meets by the roadside arc the fairest among their Balkan neighbors, and this natural gift is most apparent under conditions best calculated for its preservation. Their dress is varied and elaborate. The foundation is a sort of shift reaching to the ankle, the upper part embroidered with colored cotton, usually red or black. Over this is a petticoat, which, in its material and detail, reflects the taste and buy- ing power of the wearer. On hLer head the peasant woman wears a scarf of cotton tissue with silk stripes if her means permit, and on gala occasior she puts on a prighter kerchief, orna- mented With a fringe or a row of spangles. Both men and women seem partial to having their heads covered, € n in the house; but it is not regard- cd proper to eat without removing the hat. “In no part of Burope do the peas- ants hold so tenaciously to their dis tinctive costume as in the uplands of Roumania. It is, in fact, almost an assot in nationalism, and its vnifying influence was emphasized some years ago by the late Dowager Queen, wide- ly known as Carmen Sylva, when she herself put on the native dress. “While wheat is the great staple of this agricultural country the soil is equally adapted to corn (maize) and would be called upon for greater crops if the demand should justify it. The ease with which corn can be con- verted Into substantial food tempts the people to give little attention to the form in which it is prepared for con- sumption. Polenta, a sort of mush, can be made of corn-meal and wa- ter, and if time or energy he lacking, it will be placed on the table insuffi- clently cooked. Although many be- lieve that this is the cause of the greater part of the pellagra so com~ mon in Roumania, it is difficult to per- suade the peasant to exercise greater care in the preparation of polenta or substitute for it some of the many palatable dishes that can be rade from corn. “Cooking, unfortunately, is not cul- tivated as it should be, and the people seem to be content with simple fare and a sameness that ylelds but little to the seasons. Gardening 1s lookéd upon as petty farming and 10t worthy of the attention of a man who calls himself a farmer; in fact, so few Roumanians have gardens that they are called ‘bulgarii,’ since the greater rt of the vegetables grown are in the hands of immigrant Bulgarians. The soil and climate of the country are adapted to as wide a range as can be found in our Middle Atlantic states, however. ‘“The climate of Rouman not so mild as might be expected from the low latitude of the land, it being the same as that of northern Italy. Com- ing under the influence of the Medi- terranean on the west and the moun- tains to the north and east the king- dom is subject to the extremes of a subtropical summer and a winter the Hungarian plains. ‘Roumania,’ vs Carmen Sylva, ‘has only three sensons, and of these one alone— autumn—is fine; in these parts there is no spring.’ “The Roumanian is not a man, and his main interest lies in farming. Even the selling of surplus grain usually takes place at his farm to the itinerant buyers, for ho seems to be wary of the town mer- chant, and rarely trusts himself to the wiles of the city, except on the occa- ston of the annual fair. “The higher classes in Roumania-— the descendants of the Boyars, the landed aristocracy and the rich citi- zens—use in general the French lan- guage In thelr daily intercourse, re- serving the Roumanian tongue for those cases where it is prescribed by law—in the parliament and in the law courts. As this restriction does not af- fect the women, those of higher rank take but little interest in the native melodious Roumanian and would not deign to write the least important note in the language. The proximty to Austria, and the Influence of the Fo- henzollern rulers have brought the German language to the Roumanians of siege for four days. “The propaganda in behalf of the use and development of the native lan- guage is making headway, howover, as evidenced by the forcible interrup- tion by Roumanian students of a play in French by a ladies’ charit- able' organization in Bucharest not long ago. The outburst resulted in rloting which kept the city in a state of siege for four days. , “Qus of the great esomomic weak- trades- given of | | Omit all the | | | ! overwork nesses of Roumania arises from the fact that the rural population which works so arduously during the sum-* mer, has practically nothing to do in winter. During the idle months they spend for daily necessities all they earned when work was plentiful.” A Time for the Two Bears. (Commerce and Finance.) We have a friend who is fond of telling how his elderly mother toolk" him aside when he was about to be married and advised him always to keep two bears in his home if he | would be happy. When he asked her what she meant she explained that the animals she had in mind were “bear” and ‘“for- bear.’" > The homely story ls one that we Americans might well lay to heart just now. In both our foreign and domestic relationships great forbear- ance m oon be necessary to avoid quarrels, and quarrels are invariably ruinous and nearly always lead us to do many things that we afterward regret. BIG EATERS GET KIDNEY TROUBLE SAYS AUTHORITY mm(‘qu;-r—nl_nr Salts .to flush Kidneys if Back ¢ hur Take a meat from dlet if you feel Rhematic or Bladder Dbothers. The American men and women must guard constantly against kidney trouble, because we eat too much and all our food is rich. Our blood is fllled with uric acld which the kidneys strive to filter out, they weaken fronx become sluggish; the elim- inative tissues clog and the result is kidney trouble, bladder weakness and a general decline in health. When your kidneys feel like lumps of lead; your back hurts or the urine [ is cloudy, full of sediment or you are obliged to seek relief two or three" times during the night; if you suffe with sick headache or dizzy, nervous spells, acid stomach, or you have rheumatism when the weather is bad, get from your pharmacist about four ounces of Jad Salts; take a table- spoonful in a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys will then act fine. This fa- mous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia, and has been used for™ generations to flush and stimulate clogged kidneys; to neutralize the acids in the urine 8o it no longer is a source of irritation, thus ending blad- der disorders. Jad Salts Is inexpensive; cannot in- jure, makes a delightful effervescent lithia-water beverage; and belongs in. every home, because nobody can make a mistake by having a good kidney flushing any time.