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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1916. W BRITAIN HERALD ued dsily (Bunday excepted) at 4:15 p. m. st Herald Bullding. 67 Church St ntered at ths Post OfMce at New Britatm as Becond Class Mail Matter. Peltvered by carrfes to any rart of the ctry for 15 Conts a Week, 65 Cents s Month. to pe ment by mnil €0 Ceats a Month. he only crofitabla adgvertizing molium ir the oity. Circulation books and press Foom alwavs opcn to aavertisers. he Ferald will be founa on sale at Hota- ling's New Stand, 42nd 3t and Broad- way, New York City; Foard Walk aAt- laatic City, and Hartford Deoot. TAL® . PHOND CaLLE x2 On Sh “DO IT NOW.” d to say the re Charit sponse to the New ap- en- drganization”: Ip has not been Nor he toward lending a helping most of over there been anjy this desirous all In this city of souls there are of the misery. some sixty those who Tt means of will ousand the to read coming winter. Tt either leans them will be no warmth, ouse or clothing; it means there In the warm, delightful e sufferir ays of the summer and early fall, the their lot with When the north overty stricken bear me degree of resignation. d Boreas blows from Ihd there is not sufiicient clothing or el, lifc be - es miserable. It is the d aspiration of the Charity Or- so far as it 1 th condition. Those faithful orkers who devote their lives to this to balance the They cannot ac- much without the help of eir fellow And this help, Ip to the present, has been forthcom- It is the duty in ation to alleviate orthy endeavor try ales of humanity. mplish citizens. g in meager quantity. every man and woman in this com- bunity who has the wherewithal to nd a helping hand, to contribute to Fund of the Charity Or- This should not be de- rred nor neglected, for the appor- nity does not present itself forever. hfe at best is short, and the time to Ip our fellow beings is now, while The office of the Organization 1s e Dollar pnization. have the chance. ) Britain Charity West Main street, where the agent, iss Flsie C. Osborne, will accept any bntributions to the fund. THE MORNING AFTER. Two weeks from today the voters of be nation will go to the polls and cast ballots either for Woodrow Wil- In the neither of these two es- eir bn or Charles Evans Hughes. fent that nable gentlemen or their parties ap- al to some of the voters they will hve recourse to the other candidates rties seeking recognition. The party is still doing busi- hd T ohibition ss and the Socialists have a candi- Ltc in the field. The Progressive Is headless party with a vice-presiden- 1 candidate who is stumping the buntry for Woodrow Wilson. On the morning of November § the buntry will know which way the bople of this October day think, boause it is as good as a foregone pneclusion that the election could be boided today if the vote were taken. ose who make a business of politi- 1 prognostication claim that the Imerican voters have about made up eir minds which way to cast their hilots. The have esented, pro and con. The Dem- rats and the Republicans have pzed a heavy campalgn, although at questions been es it has been a very dull and un- teresting campaign. This because ere were so many outside interests msidered. Never before in the his. ry of the nation were so many for- len considerations injected into our pmestic politics. That in itself is hough to overthrow all the form eets. No man can say just what is e strength of the Republican party of the Democratic party or of the ogressive party, now almost extinot, of the Prohibition party. bre formerly described as rock-ribbed Men who have out openly There are many, epubli favor of Wilson o, who flock Republicanism because of Wilson’s rei policy. This not suited come from Demoaracy n has rtain factions ore are some who d war of should have wag the sinking of the Li nany the over invasion nd to vote for with going Aligned thering is another class, are they say. those who are peeved been let off so offenses against the these two united nited how tremes honestly be on e same students nature and It is inconceivable that men opposed ould be is to cac on the ted in poli- voters, who who ha ed the value of their pr standard, and who are going Republic not me votes by act as their consciences, spurred on by domestic thoughts, shall dictate. The aforementioned great gathering of Independent Ather- icans, are the ones who will decide the voter the outcome of the November elections. These are the men who cannot be i whipped into line by either of the two great partie who be stamped by the Republicans as Re- | publicans the They are cannot or by Democrats as Democrats. the men when the presidential roil for the appeals to vears around, vote and the ticket that best for country. man as the of the yvear there are more of them the Th these voters than good interes ever before. They have silently sat by and listened to the arguments of the spellbinders, the orators, and the debators. They have ed forth and | have heard all that could be sai They have heard the | pro-Germans and the pro-Allics | Democ i seen all the issues dra one way or another. the And “There is entirely too much foreign influence being brought to bear in this cam- paign. The domestic problems of the United States are of no concern to European Countries, and it is up to the Independent voters of Ameri- ats and the Republicans. they have said to themselves, to see that first, fore, America is considered last and all the time. There- we will say nothing, but cast our votes on this side that stands for all those things that are American, the side that caters to no foreign clique or clan.” Just which side this is will be shown conclusively on November 8, the morning after the night of the first Tuesday after the first Monday. NO WAR EXISTS. It was Colonel Roosevelt who coined the phrase, “Peace is now raging in Mexico,” ostensibly to show by his sarcasm that an actual state of war exists between the United States and the country to our south. It always evokes great mirth when an orator, in addressing an American audience, shows that there have been more Americans killed in Mexico than were killed in the entire Spanish war. A climax is then produced by swinging the arms and shouting, “And they say we are not at with Mexico!” | which is supposed to prove conclusive- 1y that we are at war with Mexico. Because of the nature of the Persh- ing military expedition into Mexico | it became necessary for the Judge Advocate General of the United States | army to make a decision on the ques- | tion of war; that Is, whether a tech- | nical state of war exists where this | punitive expedition operates. This de- cision had to be made in order that it might be determined just where an American soldier war in or | any other crime, there being but the choice between a United States Mili- tary court and M The Judge Advocate der, using the Boxer precedent, the McKinley administration marched into Pekin, isting between this country and Mexi- co. There was no war existing be- tween the United States and China when American troops jolned the troops of other nations to subdue the should be tried the event he committed murder a tribunal. General, can Crow- uprising as a | when American troops in | | O el | A Psalm of Life. Tell me not in mournful numbers, Life is but an empty dream! TPor the soul is dead that slumbers, And things are not what they seem. says there is no war ex- rebellion. That was sixteen years ago, but the cases are almost identical, with the exception that America is now the only nation holding troops in Mexico to quiet the aftermath revolution. of a of war existing between the United States and Mexico the situation is such that ‘While there is no actual state American soldiers must be protected under the law. The decision reached by General Crowder is, in that part of Mexico where the American com- mander, Pershing, holds his troops in readiness to quell the disturbances of an outlaw and his followers, “the conditions under which the field oper- ations are being conducted” the Ametican soldiers to be ered as they might be in time of war. This enables the United States gov ment to maintain jurisdiction over its warrant consid- fighting men. Mexico It prevents the soldiers in from being tried for civil offenses before a native judge, just as during McKinley's administration an dec laid down prevented being identical Judge soldiers on by the Advocate American from brought before some Chinese mandarin and to ex probably sentenced ution “HIS PEN OR YOUR LIF days of old more In when college than they are today one of the perennial topics brought forth was that the de- bates were popular this: Resolved, pen is mightier than the word. i orator had battled aw on the related that once after a young y for more than side of this fairly succeeded that an hour negative had the argument, and l'in convin judges the sword at time was mightier than the ont cing a very simple questior “Did you ever hear of anyone signing lcheck with a sword?” whereupon the pen, his adversary came to the and ruined the whole show by a who, | judges award to the affirmative. That all another e appencd a back in when checks were placed over and above all other things, With ption of ready cash. With the war in Europe another value i the and the a debater to step for- the possible exc been placed on sword, pen need; ward and ask a few more questions s0 as to give it its rightful place. In- deed, the champion of the pen seems to He Detroit have been found. is an editorial the New paper of independent politics, who in calling attention to all the fun that has been had that has had just two tools he could use—his pen with his brain behind it, or your life.” “That the President had,” contends this champion of the pen. “He could he | sena had writer on a over note-writing, Wilson says “President is all send notes, He the tools of diplomacy, or to use fathers or could human lives. either had he Amgerican and brothers and sons—of whom you like- would have heen | “Now, one. aside would from partisan prefer- you prefer a first—his pen or your life? President Wilson tried his pen first. If the pen had failed | through any weakness in its handling, he would have had to fall back on the bodies of American offered as sacrifices on the altar of battle, | “But the notes did not fail, because were they ences, which President to risk men, they not weak notes, and were not written by a weak man.” The argument seems to be that when the pen is in the proper hand it is mightier than the sword. And it is a mighty good thing to have it in the right hand. FACTS AND FANCIES, Any small boy knows more about bic big sister in a minute than a man can find out during a year of court- | ship.—Chicago News, New England always can show:| something out of the ordinary. It has a railroad company, the New Haven, that is unhappy in spite of the largest annual gross earnings in its history.—Springfield Republican. A lot of men talk about the prin- ciple of the thing, but for really standing up to it, has anyone excelled John M. Parker, candidate for vice- president on the bull moose ticket.— Milwaukee Journal. An employment secretary of the| Y. M. C. A. says the office boy as we have knawn him will soon be extinct | as the dodo. Prosperity is killing him off, His father can afford to keep | him in school. The kind of boy who will profit by the opportunity for| further education will be merely a delayed asset to the working world. A London man fust back from the States says that a little girl on the train at Pittsburgh was chewing gum, Not only that, but she insisted on pull- ing" it out in long strings and letting it fall back into her mouth again. | ‘Mabel! said her mother in a | harrified whisper. “Mabel, don’t do that. Chew vour gum like a little lady.”—London Opinion. Life is real! Life is earnest! And the grave is not its goal; Dust thou art, to qust returnest; Was not spoken of the soul, Not enjoyment and not sorrow, Is our destined end or w But to act, that each tomorrow Find us farther than today. Art is long and Time is fleeting, And our hearts, though stout and brave, Still, like muffled drums, are heating Funeral marches to the grave, In the world’s broad field of battle, In the bivouac of Life, Be not like dumb, driven cattle! Te a hero in the strife! Trust no Future, howe’er pleasant! Let the dead Past hury its dead! Act—act in the living Present! Heart within, and God o’erhead! Lives of great men all remind us |7 We can male our lives sublime, [ And, departing, leave behind us TFootprints on the sands of time— Footprints, that perhaps another, Sailing o’er life’s solemn main, A forlorn and shipwrecked brother, Seeing, shall take heart again, Let us, then, be up and doing, With a heart for any fate; Still achieving, still pursuing, Learn o labor and to wait, — Henry Wadswarth Longfellow. The Bridegroom’s (Utica Press.) The bridegroom comes in for scant attention in reports of weddings. About all that is said of him is that he wore the conventional black, while the bride’s costume is described in detail. But an Ohio bridegroom got his just deserts. In the account of his wedding it was said that the bride “‘was dressed in a conventional wedding gown of white,” but that “the groom wore a flowing black coat with an elaborate white vest deco- rated with real pear! His shoes were of black with real luce shoe- strings. Tmported gray broadcloth t 3 of the cut and make, white gloves and a white cravat of fine India linen, together with collar, shirt and handkerchief of similar material completed his perfect cos- tume.’” “Dress.” 3 tost Viser t to use | | hard pressed consumer disturbs. I to WHAT OTHERS SAY Views on all shies of timely questions as discussed in ex- changes that come to tho Herald Office. Going Up! (New Haven At least of the war coming painfully evident. The butch- jer, the baker, and—though we have not inquired, we doubt not—the can- j dlestick-maker, are all expecting such increased returns for the necessities of life that the problem of the do- mestic commissary department has be- come a somewhat alarming one., Be- ing the humble ultimate consumer, if it ever was a privilege and a joy, has ceased to be anything but a daily shock.’ Voiceless defenseless, the man of modest income has been obliged to sit by and observe the boosting of prices all along the line. Meats have jumped outrageously Laying in the day’s supply of bread and milk has come to he a disturh- ing experience with the cents tacked on or about to be added. ~When tho humblest restaurants of New York, the poor man's refuge, added on a nickel and charged Hfteen cents for that important article of food, “ham- and,” the epicure of limited income quite naturally rebelled. When pie went from five to ten cents a cut, misery found a haven in many a lover of the good things of life. While the small minority who are profiting by the war may not feel the sting of it, the as vet unchecked rise in the cost of living s beginning to play havoc with a larger class whose incomes have not shown cor- responding increases. And the worst of it is that the way out of the dilem- ma does not yet appear. Exports of meat and flour to the warring nations Will presumably continue so long as the natfons persist in thelr warring. What immediate and ultimate effects the return of peace to FEurope will have upon this situation, is not as clear as we might wish it to be. The present fact that a shortage of the things we need to sustain life is bring- ing about an increasingly acute prob- lem for the ultimate and generally The probability that reliet will not come for some time yet does not tend t» lessen the gloom. It has heen well sald that gigantic waste in one part of the world has to be distributed in some form to most other parts of :t When the present Buropean struggle is over the economic results of it apt to prove doubly those who still way. Journal-Courier). effect in thi, the oce: one country across n is be- are to for convinecing have a storiach Keys and TV 3 From “Le Figaro” of Paris, by way of the cultured New York “Evening Post,”” we get a French observation the effect that the real meaning of many words depend upon the age of their hearer or user. ‘he clinch ing proof is furnished the word “key.”" At twenty: A contrivance open things with. At fift; A contrivance used to shut things with. Isn’t that one of saddest truths of life? everyone we meet may be a friend, every new change an opportunity, every mew day is a chance to see and know and go ahead In later year: we must hook on to our tried friends with a grip of steel, as old Polonius told his son, for every newcomer m be an enemy. We must d ourselves in inst the evil possibiliti change and provide ourselves bombproofs of property and in which we can take refuge ceaseless pombardment of the days. This distinction is observable in every field of human activity Pusiness suf- fers because too many lockers-up are at the head of rporations which should be enterprises but are not. The mental earm of these fellows is fear and gloomy forebodings are an editorinl staple of the financial paper United States is alway in crisis, a man walking seems o (e vs on the point of falling down. All governmental circles are full of these ans to whom the law is a preventive, legis- lation a barbed-wire fence, and the executive a censor. Once in a while a Roosevelt or a Tom Johnson will energize the whole tribe with the electricity of leadership and we will get some glimpse of the things that the power of a people might be turned to achieve. Blessed is he who can get the wisdom of fifty while keep- ing the heart of twenty, and for- tunate is the community that follows such leaders. In heaven we'll all he twenty-——meanwhile, what do you do with vogr keys? Pointed Paragn (Chicago News. You'll not catch any spare the rod. n by used to the wisest At twenty and with rosition »yin the fish if you Friendship and confidence plants of slow growth. are The turtle is slow, but he gets there in time for the soup. says that hunger acts to original thought. A poet mulant as a seldom all the Women swers to pound. care about the questions they an- pro- A man who seeks damages in court is apt to get more than he’s looking | for. i e | A man in trouble will believe a good many things he wouldn't give a thought to any other ime. The man who doesn’t know a wom- an until after he marries her may re- gret the acquaintance. Two of a Kind. | (Detroit { “Everything 1 ha owe to my wife.’ “I'm almost like thing 1 owe in this bought.” Free Press.) this worla T you too. world Every- my wife | fied | shrapnel, o | | of nu | ting impor! COMMUNICATED. REGOLO NERI DENIES IT. Contradicts ~ Statements Regarding His Arrest for Violating Liquor Law. New Britain, Conn., October 24, 1916, Editor of the Herald, City. ! Dear Sir: It was stated in your Berlin news of your issue of October 21, 1916, in an account of my arrest, while driving a motor truck contain- ing kegs of heer in the town af Berlin, “when he - (Nerl) saw the state officials he immediately opened the the throttle in an attempt to speed away.” Whoever told your corres- pondent that, was wrong in his state- meent. T dld not see the state officials before my arrest and I would not have attempted to get away if I had. I thought I was within my right, and | J certainly had a right to be on the highway with liquor, if not to deliver liquor. Tt also stated in t article that T had figured in a similar case in Avon two ¥ ago. That is a mistake. The case referred to in Avon was not similar. I was not the person ar- csted. T have never been fined in court before, T have never even been arrested hefore. In this case in Berlin, I was driving the truck myself. I was not repre- sented by an agent or a person in my | employ. T thought, as T had a license, 7 had the right to deliver personally an order given to me for liquor but could not deliver liquor throush an egent. After my arrest it was ex- plalned to me that the law applied to me, so I pleaded guilty and paid the fine. REGOLO Rebuilding a Battered Face. (New York World.) Battling late champion lightwe is reported to h his face, | contes b \ttered in former prize-ring b he contract—or perhaps we should say the articles—requires the beauty doctor to remodel the pug list's cauliflower ars, symmetrize his disintegrated nose and shape up his lips, made pendulous by upper- cuts. Thig faclal timated, ha to the pugilist is inconsequent reconstruction, it is in- bcen ordered with a view 's remarriage. But that al. Many of the great ces of history and some of the best Jusbands have been homely men. In the casa of most veteran prize-fighters there Is more need to remove the rav- ages of time than the ear-marks of their trade; for these a little arnica and a bit of surgeon’s plaster usual suffice. The important thing is the prece- dent set by the pugilist. Why should not any man who is dissatisfied with his face have it improved and beauti- by {he surgeon’s art? That art has performed marvels of facial res- toration in the war hospitals of Fu- Men with faces riddled by with their features shot way, have been biance of themselves by the Iknife, and thie experience has brought plastic curgery to its highest state of develop- ment. Why should the art be allowed o languish after the war? There are in its use in to make men beautifu and the 5 credit for setting the rope. Things Done. (Collier’s Weekly). Some forty places in our country, heing from Ashtabula to St. Augus- tine, are run by city manage This means that our everlasting American of municipal government is tackled successfully by jon one of the oldest an traits: that joy of ach e- ment that thrilled in Tubal Cain's heart when he hung up the first piece of good lron work, banked his fors- problem now beir calling into a and thing eat. business in the baser sense how (anyhow) making money, but it is business in the better sense of get- ant things well done. The | has a free hand and a He therefore can buy rings cheaper, hire and keep more yle men, and help them turn out ults. , The citizens (or sharehols can sce what he is accomplishing in the visible conditon of the public property such as streets, sewers, parks, cte.; can check the accomplishment against the costs, as kept in accurate acconnts and revealed in clear and brief reports. Then they can back him up or get him fired as need is. The politicians cannot undermine the active civic power by dividing respon- sibility, creating independent offices and confused jurisdictions, but must ! either keep their hands off or else buck the task of firing the head of the town. American common sense has asserted itself, and the new meth- od w (Wide-awake citizens may apply for detailed Information to Mr. O. E = fana Niazara Falls. 7., or to the Bureau of Mu- nicipal rch, New York - City) As the ye yo by we will have plen- ty of »s of trained men starting ! as mana of tank villages and ris- | ing to run big cities with pay and re: ognition proportionate to their work A lot of dynamic energy now being | trained in our enginéering schools will be turned directly into making our towns better places in which to. live. | That is what towns are for! fire ing Running a city is not © manage job of his own. stic April’s Analogue, | (Providence Journal). | Landscape artists, whose business it | is to watch Nature ir all her moods | and record them, say that October the analog a marked the two mo milarity exists between We are accustomed to think of them being radically different, vet yesterday morning, ple, had much of the character | and charm of the spring month | The air was warn, though througi it ran a spicy draught of chill, and even the flaming leaves of the maples wore reminiscent of the red buds six months ago ! It may be that the sun on its south- bound journey, having reached the point it touches coming north in April | hs. for NERI. ‘l to reconstruct | restored to a sem- | went home to get some- | of some- | | nsually the sickest | cate, | stanaing 1o also adds to the April-like aspect of | the world. The angles of sunshine | and shadow on Westminster strect ars | identical with those of last spring. | As October is thus the analogue of April, so November is the analogue of March. Next month the northwest winds will scatter white clouds across | the sky exactly after the March fash- | fon. The fields and woods, srrim“‘d! of their green, will wear their bare | and brown March look. And, if we shall find that December and Febru- ary have many moods in common. | Thus the months range themselves in an interesting relationship on either | side of midwinter. | | MARK TWAIN ON COOKING. Humorist Knew What Was and What | Was Not Worth While. (Exchange.) In one of his entertaining autobi- raphical talks Mark Twain said “the north thinks it knows how to make corn bread but this Is a gross superstition,” and went on to charac- terize northern objection to ‘“hot iread’ “another fussy supersti- flon.” These observations followed a Gescription of that “heavenly place for a boy,” his uncle’s farm in Miss- ourl: “The house,” he wrote, “was a | double log one. with a spacious floor | roofed in) connecting it with the | kitchen. In the summer the table was set in the middle of that shady breezy floor, and the sumptuous meals—well, it makes me cry to think of them.” This is a partial list of | vhat they gave him to eat: *“Fried | chicken, roast pig, wild and tame tur- | ieys, ducks and geese, venison just | Killed, squirrels, rabbits, partridge, prairie-chickens, biscuits, hot batter- | cakes, hot buckwh cakes, hot | ‘white bread,’ hot rolls, hot corn pone, | vegetables, buttermilk, ‘clabber’ melons, pie, apple dumpling, peach | cobbler—T can’t remember the rest!” | Superiority was attained the method of preparation. “The way he things were cooked,” he sald, was perhaps the main splendor, for instance, the corn bread, the hot bis- vits, wheat bread, and the hicken. These things have never heen properly cooked in the north-— in fact, no one there is able to learn the art, so far as my experience goes. Perhaps no bread in the world quite as bad as southern corn bread, nd perhaps no bread in the world 1s quite as bad as the northern imitation of it.” Experienced as he was and writing as late as 1907, Mark Twain did not secem to recosnize the chief | | | through | fried | is | Catarrh Cannot Be Cured with LOCAL APPLICATIONS, as they cannot reach the seat of the disease: Catarrh is a local disease, greatly in- Quenced by constitutional conditions, and in order to cure it you must take an internal remedy. Hall's Cas tarrh Cure is taken infernally and acts thru the blood on the mucous sur= faces of the system. Hall's Catarrh Cure was prescribed by one of the best physiclans in this country for years. It is composed of some of the best tonies known, combined with some of the best blood purifiers. The perfect com- bination of the ingredients in Hall's Catarrh Cure is what produces such wonderful results in catarrhal condi- tlons. Send for testimonials, free. ¥, J. CHENEY & CO., Props., Toledo, O. All Druggists, Te. Hall's Family e i HAIR COMil Dandruff causes a feverish irrita- tion of the scalp, the hair comes out fast. To stop falling haid at once and rid the scalp of every particle of dan- druff, get a 25 bottle of Dander- fne at any drug store, pour a little in vour hand and rub it into the scalpe After a few application e hair stops coming out and you can’t find any dandruff. Pills for constipation. EAT BIG MEALS! NO INDIGESTION OR BAD STOMACH Malkes and “Pape’s Diapepsin” omachs stror healthy at Instantly stops sourness, heartburn, acidity, dyspepsi weak on gases, There would not be a case of indi- gestion or dyspepsia here if readers | who are subject to stomach trouble | knew the tremendous anti-ferment and digestive virtue contained in Tape’s Diapepsin. This harmless pre- paration will digest a heavy meal without the slightest fuss or discom- | fort, and relieve the sourest, acid somach in five minutes, besides over- coming all foul, the breath. ‘i Ask your pharmacist to show you the formula plainly printcd on each 50-cent case of Pape’s Diapepsin, then you will readily understand why this. promptly overcomes indigestion and | removes such symptoms as heartburn,* | a feeling like a lump of lead in the | stomach, belching of gas and eructa- nauseous odors from trouble with northern corn bread, which is the persistent use of coarse vellow meal instead of the finer, sweeter and more delicate white meal. Northern cooking alone, however, is too often at fault in the case of rice, | which is boiled with too much water | until the grains are entirely dissolved and it becomes an paste. The north, Mark Twain further | onserved, “seldom tries to fry chicken, and this is well; the art can not be learned north of Mason and Dixon, nor anvwhere in Rurope. This not hearsay, In Europe it is imagined custom of serving various bread blazing hot is that is too broad a spread; custom of the south, hut it less than that in the north. In the rorth and in FBurope hot bread is | considered unhealthy. This is prob- | ebhly another fussy superstition, like ice water is unhealthy’ The widely | expertenced American humori Pointedly added “It scems a pity that the world should throw away so raany good things merely hecaus | they are unwholesome. I doubt if God has given us any refreshment which, taken in moderation is un- wholesome, except microbes. Yet there are people who strictly deprive | themselves of every eatable, drinkable and smokable which bas in any way | acquired a shady: reputation. They pay this price for health. And health {5 all they get for it. How strange it is: it is like paying out your whole fortune for a cow that has gone dry.” But do they secure health, ter paying the full price of self- denial? Certainly the persons who talk most ahont wholesome food ar or the most deli often they are no doubt victims of over-indulgence eatinz of whatever one en- the most safe as reasonable of all rules. Nowadays an enormous con- sumption of “hot bread” is by means confined to the southern states and it would appear that this “super- stition” has in great part gone the way of other notions failing to stand | the test of time and experience. that the kinds of American’ it is the is much even and yspepic Moderate joys is probably well as the most no The manufacturers of hosiery are complaining of a shortage of needles, due to delay of shipments I“urope, Darn it!—Providence Journal. KOT DUE 10 SEX ALOWE from | New Britain Women Have Learned the Cause of Man Pains Many women have come to know that sex isn’t the reason for all back- cches, d headaches and urinar disorders Mea have these troubles too, and often they come from kidney eakness. To live simply, eat spar- ngly, take better care of one's self hd to use Doan’s Kidney Pills, i Lound to help bad kidneys get bet- ter. There is no other remedy so well-recommended by New | people. Read this cas Mrs. J. A, McGrail, New Britain, says Mysterious and Aches. “l have used of April; that is, that| pHoan’s Kidney Pills off and on for | Guite awhile whenever “hed or has felt weak. ems to be brought on By continual and exertion. Mornings my ick sometimes feels lame and stiff 1d when I stoop over, the pain seems catch me. Doan’s Kidney have never failed to relieve trouble.” Price simply ask Doan’s Kidney Pills—the same that Mrs. J. A. McGrall had. Foster-Mil- | burn Co., Props. Buffalo, N. ¥ my back has his trouble 5Cc, at B Te for a ¢ remedy-—get atrocious gummy | is | it is experience speaking. | but | Britain | 423 Church St., | tlons of undigested food, water brash, | acidity, nausea, headache, biliousness | and many other bad symptom: and, | besides, you will not nced laxatives to | keep your stomach, liver and | testines clean and fresh If your stomach is sour and full of or your food doesn’'t digest, and | vour meals don’t seem to fit, why not ot a 50-cent case from ycur druggist 1 and make life worth living? Absolute | relief from stomach misery and per- fect digestion of anything you eat is | sure to follow five minutes after, and one case is sufficient to rid a whole family of such trouble Surely, a harmie inexpensive preparation like Diapepsin, which will | always, either at daytime or during it, relieve your stomach miser i and digest your meals, is about handy and valuable a thing as you | could have in the house in- | besides, ead What Father Lynch Said b L] ; YAl o Linonine cured me of bron- chitis, built me up and re- | stored me to heaith. It is a good, wholeseme medicine which I am pleased to recom- mend. REV. H, J. LYNCH, | Pastor St. Peter’s Church | Danbury, 1886-1905. - And the Sisters of Mercy: It gives us pleasure to tes- tify to the healing and build- ing properties of Linonine. We have found it efficacious in cases of bronchitis and lung troubles, also as a builder and strength restorer. We confi- dently recommend its use to | others suffering from similar’ affections. SISTERS OF MERCY St. Peter’s Convent, Danbury, Conn. Both of these testimonials given more than ten years age Linonine has been the most effective remedy for all forms of coughs, colds, bronchitis and wasting diseases for many, many years. It was best Father Lynch’s time. it is best now. If coughs or colds threaten to bring you low, or have aiready done so, it will bring about a d .improve- ment, and you will be yourself again . in a very short time. Let us suggest that you give Linonine a trial. Your druggist has it in three sizes, 25¢, 50¢, | $1.00. were,~ Pills |