New Britain Herald Newspaper, October 6, 1916, Page 7

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Your Facto;y Roof should be fire-resisting inside and out, giving you a lower insurance rate and protection against flying sparks. It should be permanently weatherproof and practically repair-proof. For such a roof we recommend the use of the genuine ,Pranounced “RU"as in RUBYol n RU-B2R-01D ic the ideal roofing } ecause it meets the most exacting requirements. ment of underwriters and fire de- 3 partment officials the world over as a safe roofing. b And RU-Bz2-0!]) i+ permanently weatherproof and water-proof, and seems wear-proof. Foundries, rail- roads and chemical works employ it under conditions wherc sparks and fumes would soon destroy _ other roofs. tar or asphaltum oils. i \\\ f '/ \’\\ 7777 COSTS MQRE -WEARS LONGER, Hundreds of It has the endorse- of their roofing. “Ru-ber-oid Man ™ on every roll. It contains no coal - Green. NEW BRITAIN, CONN. U-BER-0I0 Roofs are still watertight after more than § 20 years of hard wear. §_The U.S. Appellate Court has ! enjoined imitators from using the name “Rubberoid or any similar name as the trade name or brand We sell the genuine, with the (shown above) ‘We have it in slate gray and in Tile Red or Copper Come in and examine it. THE W. L. DAMON CO. Lumber, Coal, Masons’ Supplies and Roofing _..X//// NN\ ——— 7 \ THE ChARM OF THE HOME The Charm of the home lies in the good taste with which it is furnished — the which it surrounds your family, the makes upon your friends. After all, it is the thought with which the furni- ture is selected, not the price that is paid for it, that turns houses into livable, loving homes. environment impression with it Here you will find a well-selected stock of good dependable furniture and home furnishings moderately priced. COMPLETE HoOME FURN ISHERS #0-56 Fonn BTREET HARTFORD WHERE ALITY IS HIGHER THAN PRICE. very AGENTS FOR GLENWOOD RANGES OVERLOOKING CAPITOL GROUNDS FURNITURE F CHARACTER Really fine Furniture of artistic design used to be found only in the richest households. Nowadays wood- workers have learned that beauty of design can be combined with economical construction, and the re- sult is that we are showing today a most remarkable line of beautiful furniture at prices that any one can afford to pay. ’ FREE FREE FREE A waterfront with every Household Range 5 purchased this week. LOUIS HERRUP COMPLETE HOMEFURNISHER 1052-58 Main Street NEAR MORGAN, Hartford | received | Belgium, NEW. BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1916. SEGRET JOURNALS FLOODING BELGIUM Once More Pen Proves More Pow- erful Than Sword Havre, Oct. gian government authorities here have France, information of the contin- ued appearance of patriotic papers at Brussels and throughout in deflance of the German censorship and despite all the efforts of the German military police. It is one of the mysteries of the Ger- man occupation of Belgium how these secret papers can be published, where they engrave their cartoons ridiculing the Germans, and how they set the type and circulate the papers. There is a price of 50,000 marks on the head of the editor of the Free Belglum, but it keeps on appearing just the same. Several of the sup- posed editors are said to have been shot. One man was sentenced to twelve years hard labor, others to three and eleven years, and a wom- news | «n, Madame Scheupens, to flve years. But each time that a supposed editor is imprisoned and the German au- thorities feel the trouble is ended, the paper appears the following day more lustry than ever with a.cartoon mak- ing fun of the prosecution. A file is kept here of these secret papers, as a matter of curiosity. Free Belgium, which has given the most trouble, prints the following notices under its title: “A bulletin of . patriotism, submit- ting to no censorship whatever. “Price per copy elastic, from zero to infinity. “Business office Not being handy to have an esta:blished address, we are installed in a movable automobile cellar. . ‘“Advertisements: Business being nil under German domination, we have suppressed our advertising page and counsel our patrons to keep their money till times get better. ‘“Telegraphic address: Care German Commander at Brussels.” A recent issue of Free Belgium gave a cartoon by Baemaker, adapted from Gustave Dore’s Scenes in Hell, show- ing woman and children in agony as they are trampled down by a soldier in German helmet, the face of the soldier being evidently meant for that of the Kaiser. Another cartoon, entitled “Love’s Chagrin,” shows General von Bissing, the military commander of Brussels, trying to find the editor of rFee Belgium in cellars and attics, while the editorial rooms, business office, etc., are depicted on wheels. A big sun, labelled Free Bel- glum, smiles down derisively at von Bissings vain efforts to capture the editors. La Patrie is another of these se- cret newspapers. It announces under its title that it is a “non-censored journal, appearing how, where and when it pleases.”” Another line states that it is in the second year of its publication. The bitterness of this paper is shown in a standing line car- of ried at the head of its editorials, re- ferring to the Germans as “‘barbarians and liars always.” A recent num- ber showed the Germans ‘“en route for Calais’ by way of the Yser river, with the bodies of German soldiers slaughtered by the Belgians, floating in the river. L’Echo, another of the secret jour- nals, announces that it prints “what censored journals dare not and can- | not say.” A recent number gave the speech of Premier Asquith in the house of commons, declaring there would be no peace until Belgium was free. The editorial was headed: “Teuton Pirates and Vandals.” Other secret newspapers are La Verite and the Flemish Lion. There is also a Weekly Review of the French Press, giving articles which have been prohibited from being pub- lished in Belgium. Illustrated books also continue to appear, with hand- some engravings and colored maps, 6.—The Bel- ! BUILD UP YUUR HLl](l[I Tt is a hopeless task to try to restora your health while your blood is defi- cient in quantity or quality. The blood circulates throughout’every portion of the body except the hair | and nails. It takes the nourishment from the food and distributes it to the various muscles and organs; it takes also any medication that is administer- ed through the mouth. The blood is the only means by which medicine can reach the nerves. If the blood is thin its carryingcapacity is lessened because it isthe reg corpuscles in the blood that carry oxfgen and otherneeded constitu~ ents to the various parts of the body. Dr, Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People increase the red corpuscles in the blood. They enable it to absorb more oxygen, to carry more life and strength to the weakened organs. In any ‘ase in which the patient be- comes thin and pale Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills can be used successfully to com- bat the anemia and build up thehealth and strength, ¢‘Building Up the Blood’’ is a book- let, full of good information. Everg mother and every growing girl shoul have one. Tt is sent free on request by the Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Schen~ ectady, N. Y. Your own drngxst sella Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills. Price50 centa. ASK FOR and GET HORLICK’S THE ORIGINAL MALTED MILK Cheap substitutes cost TOU same price. HAND-CARVED FRAMES For Photographs, Trays and Mirrors. The J. C. Ripley Art Co., HARTFORD. Branch Studio 103 West Main Street, New Britain, Conn. giving the Belgian story as ‘against the German. Even a secret press bureau has been set up at Brussels, which issues typewritten sheets comparing favor- ably with those from the official press bureau at Paris and London. The editing is well done, showing that there must be capable men to gather the material and put it in shape. The sheets, mechanically, are even better than those issued at Paris and Lon- don, showing there must be a large and first class duplicating process somewhere beyond the power of the Germans to discover. The Belgian officials themselves do not know how this work is done, and it is simply incomprehensible how all this editing, publishing, printing, cir- culating, getting the requisite white paper and ink, drawing cartoons, en- graving and lithographing, and all the innumerable details of getting out newspapers, weeklys, books and a press service, can be accomplished in secret with the German police straining every nerve and offering prices on the heads of editors. It takes courage and ingenuity to be an editor i Belgium under lhese con- ditions. LUXURIES NO MORE ON GERMAN TABLES Country Not Starving But Many Complain of Food (Correspondence of the Asso. Press.) Stockholm, Sweden, Sept. 17.—Ona thing after another has disappeared so gradually from German markets since the war began that the very existence of certain luxuries and some things were were once considered necessities has been forgotten. It was the ex- perience of a correspondent of The Assoclated Press, who had been in Berlin since the war began, and for many years before, to find, upon his arrival in Stockholm, the butchershop Real Food-Substance In Corn Flakes NEW POST TOASTIES are a substantial food. They are crisp in cream — each spoonful delicious with true corn flavor and a delicacy of taste positively exclusive. New Post Toasties are untouched by hand in the spotless factories where they are made. They’re tak- en crisp and full of flavor from the ovens, and put up in wax-sealed cartons which keep moisture out and - flavor in. Housewives find a new meaning for the word “delicious”—a new delighg they first serve (New) for the family—when Post Toasties Sold by grocers everywhere. All The fur trimmed in the latest styles. PAY AS YOU WEAR. Women’s and Misses’ Suits $15.00 to $35.00 Including Velour-Checks, Gabardines, Pop- lins and Broadecloth, in all colors, plain and THE NEW WAISTS $1.50 to $5.00 GATELY & BRENNAN 47 MAIN ST., New Britain, Ct. Favored Materials and All The Popular Colors In The Seasons Most Charming Styles SUITS, C OAT S DRESSES For Ladies and Misses Our plans for providing our numerous patrons with the season’s best clothing have developed into an elaborate display of gar- ments of the most charming and stylish char- acter. With prices advancing in the wholesale mar- ket, we have, also, through our system of buy- ing for a large chain of stores, been able to offer this merchandise at regular prices, which fact is a guarantee of extra value obtainable only at this store. Jusi Come In And See What $15 Will Buy In This Store j BE BETTER DRESSED LITTLE | EACH WEEK. Women's and Misses” Coats $7.50 to $30.00 Including a varied selection of Plaids, Plush- es and Wool Velours, in the latest style effects. THE NEW HATS $3.00 to $7.50 OPEN AN ACCOUNT. 47 MAIN ST., New Britain, Ct. and grocery windows filled with food- stuffs he had seen scarcely a sugge: tion of in Germany for many months, and the restaurant bills of fare also | served as pleasant reminders of ante- bellum days when the German restau- rants, as much as those of any couli- try, were prepared to supply a great variety of foods. Germany is not starving and there is no fear there that it will, but the people are doing without far more things than they realize, having be- come so gradually accustomed to the loss or curtailment of certain edibles. Bacon—which the correspondent had | not seen in Germany in months—is plentiful here, of course; butter, lara, and olive oil, seen in the grocery shops, offered a really irresistable ap- peal to one who had scarcely known them for so longl There were dif- ferent cuts of pork; the correspond- ent had had a small portion of pork twice in three months. He found many kinds of bread, while the only kinds he recently knew were rye mixed with potatoes and wheat mixed with rye. There was real coffee, which one cannot obtain even in the best hotels or millionaires’ homes in Germany. Real French-Fried Potatoes. The taste of French-fried potatoes was almost a new thing, for no Ger- man household has enough fat to mit indulging in this luxury. Witn baskets of bread on the tables in ho- tels and restaurants, and no bread- card required as a condition precedent to partaking it seemed almost ir- regular and cven wasteful. An or- der for maccaroni brought a quantity greater than a household of two per- sons can obtain in Berlin for a whole | week. A single order of cold meats | contained more than the amount al- lowed per capita in Germany for a week. ‘What, then, it may be asked, ar the Germans eating? The answer bread, potatoes and other vegetables, one-half pound of meat weekl it can be obtained, and fish, fresh and smoked. The d ance of the legumes—Ilentils, peas and beans—has been especially felt by the poorer people. A few beans and peas are occasionally to be had, but | disappeared in the first weeks of the Greater Berlin, declaring that ti hungry “You shall not be lowed to starve (verhungern),” the mayor, “but you will have to hungry (hungern)”. but the poorer s undoubtedly the spirit & people, who either get nothing but Y i all but an insignificant m potatoes and bread or who not of the Germans. Thej know how to make the most of what that they will not starve, they do get, complain of the monotony are willing to make the sacri of the fare and that they are continn- Fatherland implied in ally hung; A number of women of words. #And they are this class, some weeks ago, made a to make this sacrifice small demonstration in front of th2 s has been illustrated, they} city hall of one of the municipalities how great it is, of were only a negligible quantity of which the Germans were very fond, war. On this food, one cannot starve, if it can be obtaineq, isfied they for the mayo better not realize just e 10c, 18¢ and 35¢ Where Cooks and Scientists Agree Phosphate is as necessary in your food as salt. It rebuilds body tissue—you cannot do without it. RYZON, The Perfect Baking Powder, is made with pure, crystallized monosodium phosphate, a new and better phosphate. And all good cooks who have tried RYZON agree that it is ““The Perfect Baking Powder.” The baking knowledge of 10,000 women and many famous cooking experts made the new RYZON Baking Book. Edited by Marion Harris Neil, illus- trated in colors, the RYZON Baking Book is the first complete manual of baking powder baking. Al- though priced at $1.00, yox can get a RYZON Baking Book by using RYZON. Ask your grocer.

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