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NEW. BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1916. DEMONSTRATION THIS WEEK BY MISS B. A. REED RANGE CLUB CLOSES SATURDAY NIGHT $5.00 Brings the Range Let Resinol Make Your Sick Skin Well That itching, burning skin can al- most certainly be healed! The first use of resinol ointment seldom fails to give instant relief. With the help of resinol soap, is soothing, healing ointment usu- ally clears away all trace of eczema, ring- worm, rash or similar tormenting, sleep-pre- venting skin-diseases quickly and at little cost. Physicians have prescribed resinol ointment regu- larly for over twenty years, so you need not hesitate to use it freely. Sold by all druggists. Is Your Toilet Soap Injuring Your Skin? Many toilet soaps contain harsh, in- jurious alkali. Resinol soep contains absolutely no free alkali, and to it is added the resinol medication. This gives it soothing, healing properties which clear the complexion, comfort tender skins and keep the hair healthy. LUSH KIDNEYS WITH SALTS IF BACK IS ACHING oted authority says we eat .too much meat, which clogs Kidneys. e glass of Salts when Kidneys hurt or Bladder bothers you. No man or woman who eats meat fegularly can make a mistake by ushing the kidneys occasionally, says well known authority. Meat forms ric acid which excites the kidneys, lhey become overworked from the train, get sluggish and fail to filter e waste and poisons from the blood, jhen we get sick. arly all rheuma- sm, headaches, liver trouble, ner- ousness, dizzin sleeplessness and rinary disorders come from sluggish idneys. The moment you feel a dull ache in he kidneys or your back hurts or if he urine is cloudy, offensive, full of lediment, jrregular of passage or at- ended by a sensation of scalding, top eating meat and get about four unces of Jad Salts from any phar- take a tablespoonful in a glass er before breakfast and in a w days your kidneys will act fine. his famous salts is made from the cid of grapes and lemon juice, com- ind with lithia, and has been used r generations to flush and stimulate to also in urine so i kidney: neutralize tha cids no longer causes ritation, thus ending bladder weak- ess. Jad Salts inexpensive and cannot jure; makes a delightful efferves- ent lithia-water drink which everyone hould take now and then to keep jhe kidneys clean and active and the lood pure, thereby avoiding serious idney complications, H. N. LOCKWBOD, al Estate and Insurance, REMOVED To Room 407, City Hall ’Phone 606-3 to You NA. COME EARLY New Britain's Biggest Furnifure Store Don’t Miss This Opportunity to Get Your Magee, the Stove with a Reputation l$1 & 00 a Week Dues Until Paid For T, ATKIN GIVES UP | HIS BELOVED GROG Drunkenness Is Fast Disappearing From British Army (Correspondence of the Asso. Press.) London, Sept. 18.—There isn’t any- thing like as much drunkenness the British army as there used to he. Lord French attributes much of this improvement to the great work done by the Young Men's Christian Associa- tion and kindred bodies. They have established innumerable substitutes for the canteen which Thomas Atkins has found much more attractive and much less expensive. They provide wholesome refreshment and in harm- less recreation for him. ligion, too—if he wants it. And re- It was the opening of a new Y. M. C. A. hut by Lord French that af- forded him the opportunity to tell how much the army had benefitted by such work. “I remember,” he said, “when 1 first joined the army—how long ago I don't like to remember—the only refuge of the soldier was the can- teen. In those days we had old sol- diers who used practically to live on beer. It used to be quite a common thing in those days for an old sol- dier to sell his food to the young re- If Too Fat Get More Fresh Air Be Moderate in Your Diet and Re- duce Your Weight. Oil of Korein. Take Lack of fresh air it is said weak- ens the oxygen carrying power of the blood, the liver becomes sluggish, fat accumulates and the action of many of the vital organs are hind- ered thereby. The heart actions be- comes weak, work is an effort and the beauty of the figure is destroyed. Fat put on by indoor life is un- healthy and if nature is not assisted in throwing it off a serlous case of obesity may result. When vou feel that you are getting too stout, take the matter in hand at once. Don’t wait until your figure has become a joke and your health ruined through carrying around g burden of unsightly and unhealthy fat Spend as much time as you possi- bly can in the open air; breathe deep- ly, and get from Clark & Brainerd Co., or any druggist a box of oil of Korein capsules; take one after each meal and one before retiring at night. Welgh yourself every few days and keep up the treatment until you are down to normal. Oil of korein is ab- solutely harmless, is pleasant to take helps the digestion and even a few days treatment has been reported to cruit and buy_ beer and live upon it. “I think it is something like thirty or thirty-five years ago since the founders of the Y. M. C. A. com- menced their beneficient work and the change that has come over the personnel of the Army during that time has been something very little short of miraculous. Those who ! have served all those years in the Army can realize it better than any- body else, | “A few ars before the war com- menced this improvement began to manifest itself in a most extraordin- ary manner, and especially with re- gard to the diminution of crime. ¥ remember that we used to have strings of defaulters outside the or- derly rooms waiting to be punished for drunkennes You hardly ever see a drunken soldier now, and in many other directions the work of these institutions upon the spiritual and moral development of the sol is very marked and has been clear proved. “When T was commander-in-chief in France for some eighteen months I realized what these institutions have done for soldiers. It was on the fields of battle that the men showed what different men they were. Thi war has demanded more in the way of nerve and courage from our men than any war that has ever happened in the history of the world. The most constant courage has had to ho exercised every moment of the duy and night. No bit of ground is secura from the long range high explosive shells. But through it all our men have shown a magnificent courage, One cannot but remember that the old soldiers of the past were splendid, but they certainly never surpassed the splendid courage that has been shown in this war. One cannot help think- ing that perhaps it is to be traced to the work of these institutions, GERMANS ARE USING CARRIER PIGEQONS 4 { Lehind Somme Front Are Succession of Bird Stations Where Waiting Me engers Arc Held, Behind the Somme Front, Sept. 29, | —-Scattered along the German lines in France, but s eral miles to the rear, | ion of ‘“carrier pigeon | tations,” which form an effective link in the German scheme of defense and in times of extreme stress can become well nigh a2re a succes invaluable. Espe- cially is this the case when al] other af communication from the with the v are de- mear tront trenches stroyed. In the trenches are kept cages of trained pigeons. The birds are kept constantly in practice so that in times of emergency they will go without fail to some station to give ward of disaster that might have been tele- rhoned had not the telephone connec- tion been shot away or otherwise de- stroyed. The messages are written an tiny pieces of paper, enclosed in thimble- like aluminum containers which are attached to a leg of the bird, and the fliers are redeased. If longer mes- sages must be sent, or maps have to be transmitted, these arc enclosed is larger container which is attached res show a noticeable reduction in weight. to a sort of harness that can be put over the bird's head and fitted tight to its body. CAPT. ASTOR GETS $7,000,000 AS A WEDDING PRESENT Captain John Jacob son of Baron A Astor, second stor of England( for- OO Oh! Nora’s mak- ing pie. Yum! Yum! We can eat all we want °cause Norah always says: “D & C crust is so loight it won’t be hurtin’ yez.” She says: D8 Is the Flour for me 10¢ & 20c SELF-RAISING Packages ’ | the merly William Waldorf Astor of New [ lated repeatedly, but these were set at York;) holdsacomm on in the First Life guards of the British army has been wounded in the war. Captain Astor is thirty years old. He was mar- ried on August 28 this year to the widowed Lady Nairne. Ier husband, and | the second son of the Marqu of Lansdowne, was killed early in the war. She is a daughter of the late Lord Minto, who w and governor general of Canada. tain Astor received recently from father a gift of New York amounting to $7,000,000. his property CHILDREN DODGE . GERMANIC SHELLS Youngsters in Rheims Attend Lessons ‘While Bombs Arc Bursting Overhead. Asso. 15. daily average of 1,800 pupils above and below during the 1 eighteen intermittent hombard- ngle injury or accident has happened to any of the scholar: Classes have to be interrupted for da at a time, but the fact never lessens the zeal of the teachers or diligence of the pupils, though the enemy not more than 000 vards off. To large extent the classes are the cellars and wine-caves of the town, in some instances in caves two stories below the surface of the street. There the air is more humid and there is less light than in the or- dinar, hoolroom above ground, but otherwise there little difference in the conditions or the routine. Press.) With attend- (Correspondence of the Rheims, Irance, Sept. a ing school, ground, in Rheims months under ment, not a is a held in is When a bombardment begins some of the children show signs of fear; not alw for themselves but for father or mother whom they think must be in danger. When the bom- bardment has completely cecased the children are dismissed and sent home. The streets are then safe excepting the exterior boulevards where the children are warned not to go. Some of the school scenes are trag- others comic notwithstanding trag- ical surroundii A class will be| at work w wddenly a servant opens the door and calls out that “they are bombarding close by.” A second or two later the noise of a shell bursting on a nearby house makes the smaller children tremble and ¢ At once the classes are led down into the cellars, some of them carried by soldiers who have come in off the street to avoid shell splinters. TUAN CHL-JUI POWE IN PEKIN GOVERNMENT Chinese Leader Has Become Stalwart Force in Celestial Military Affairs Despite Efforts of Encmies, As respondence of the Sept. 1v.—Premier £ Chi-jui is constantly strengthening his hold upon the Peking government, In spite of efforts to displace him, his popularity has increased. He s generally recognized as a stalwart military leader who is equal to the present emergency. Rumors of his ible resignation have been circu- s viceroy of India | Cap- | | | rest by a letter the premier has sent to a friend who wrote urging him to con- tinue in office. 1In this letter he sa “Your kind view that may retain- ing or my resigning office is virtually i connected with the affairs of state serves only to make me realize how incompetent I am. Tuan's career has so far been exceedingly strenuous one and full of unpleasant turns. As the result of many hard- ships suffered, it was once his inten- tion to live a retired life, He would follow in the footsteps of the ancients and spend the rest of his days in the deep forests. It happened, however, the country was thrown into endless difficulties, and Tuan was compelled by the people, for internal and ex- ternal reasons, to abandon his seclu- sion. “He has asked himself this ques- tion: ‘What shall I say to excuse myself if I suffer the country to be plunged into perdition after having had a hand in the making of the re- public from the very beginning’? This view led him completely to change his mind and to throw himself into the whirlpool, FHe swears that he will not retire until the causes of trouble in the country have all disap- peared. He boasts not that he, an old and stupid man, can be of much an use to the country; but he believes ! fully in the words of the Buddha: ‘Who will enter hell, if I do not?’ In patriotism he flatters himself that he is not much in the rear of others. And fortunately the wise people of our day are capable of understanding him. THOUSANDS OF SICK WOMEN Helped Every Year by Common Sense Suggestions Given Free i by The Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co. For forty years women suffering from all kinds of female ills have been writ- ing the Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co. of Lynn, Mass., for advice. Thus they receive common sense sug- gestions drawn from a vast volume of experience, and thousands of sick wo- men have been saved from untold suffer- ing, as letters like the following clearly show :— Newark,Ohio.—‘‘Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound has made me a - well woman. Your Sanative Wash is just the thing to overcome female weaknes I have told young mothers as well as older ones about your reme- dies, and what they have done for me. I think Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegeta- ble Compound saved my life, as my health was very bad when I wrote you, but now I can do my own work and have not had a sick day since I began taking your remedies. 1 keep the Compound and Liver Pills on hand all the time.”’—Mrs. GEo. THOMP- SON, 24 Sherwood Court, Newerk, Ohio. ‘Why don’t you write for free advice? Address Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co. (confidential), Lynn, Mass. “Whether attempts are made to lead him astray with the offer of an empty honor or to intimidate him s threats, he assured that your young brother will stand unmoved under all circumstances. He begs thus to pour out his heart in reply to your heart- felt ing - = ~ ONLY POWERFUL MEDICINE WILL END RHEUMATISM matters not whether you have had agonizing pains from rheumatism for 20 years or distressing twitching#¥ for 20 weeks, Rheuma is strong enough and mighty and powerful enough to drive rheumatic poisons from your body and abolish all misery or money back. Clark and Brainerd Co., and all druggists sell Rheuma on a no-cure- no-pay basis for not more than 50c¢ a bottle, and after you take a half teaspoonful once a day for two days vou should know that at last you hav obtained a remedy that will conquer rheumatism. Tor over flve years throughout America Rheuma has been prescribed by broad-minded physicians and has released thousands from agony, pain and despair. MULTIGRAPHS LETTER Fac-eimile of Typewrlting done 1a 1, 2 anad 3 cclors with signatures. Letter Heads Printed. THE HARTFORD TYPEWRITER CO., ING 26 State Street. Hartford, Conn Quality Corner DRESS UP “Where stranger’s hundred one fellow char: read read cter in his face, it in his get- Merchant v up”—The Self Made If any of vou solid business men think that this “Dress Up” idea isn't important, we ask you to answer this one ques- tion: How many of the peopla you deal with in business know you intimately? The lar percentage are strangers, arer b they ? They can’t know the real a “you;” you haven't time to gt well acquainted. The Merchant ri people are compelled their opinion of appearance Your Clothes ure of your succegsful must and to b must 1 end value. that N rde most fo: vour o you from point out success the me look well dressed; cessful, you dollar you s most To be suc vou ke ev return its ut- in STAGKPOLE-MOORE- TRYON GO, ylum St, Ag HARTFORD, 115 Trumbull