New Britain Herald Newspaper, November 15, 1916, Page 9

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMB ER 15 1916. . ExtraPower lf You Want It Most everybody does in an automobile. Sometimes on a hill. Sometimes in passing the car ahead. Sometimes in mud. Sometimes in Sand. Sometimes when you are in a hurry. The 5-pas- senger 6-30 Chalmers has it plus--extra power. Though rated as velops well over 45 h. p. 30 it de- The cost for the extra power is nothing. The quality car at a quantity price ---$1090. The A. (All prices f. 0. b. Detrsit) . Hine Co. 314-316 Pearl St., Hartford | Hall returned the same wrathful “They haven't told me anything ALONG T0 A PARSON PR Some one asked about it, not one solitary thing. The young man came to my home a year and a half ago as the family chauf- feur, and that how my grand- him if his cheuf- iy 1 | feur was good looking. (Chaulieur Elopes With Grand- | “Wwen, now, 1 wouldn't consider nirn . | good looking. The best way to put Y. . | it is to say that he was a good chauf- daughter of His Employer | reur> daughter met him.” Captain Hall went on to say that | Clark asked for a vacation of three ) days last month, but didn’t come back New i when he said he would. Horatio Hall, York, Nav. president of the First 1B Ty and the 15.—Cag Leaves for Better Job, National bank all most of the evening of Huntington, “Then I reccived a note fram him in which he said he had have to leave,” added the banker. R spent yesterday afternoon but he would “r 0 was sorry answering found a better job and telephone. lling him up o find out whether it was really true that his chauffeur, Ralph Clark, married randdaughter, Marie E. Eall. To all these inquiries Captain | ™ BREAKS A COLD IN A FEW HOURS Folks kept c: haven’t heard anything and I don’t want to eithe nce then, had his & First dose ‘of Cold Com- pound” grippe miser) Don't stay stuffed-up! Quit blowing and snuffing! A dose of “Pape’'s Cold Compound” taken | every two hours until three doses are | taken will end grippe miser: { break up a severe cold either in the head, chest, body or limbs. It promptly opens clogged-up nos- rils and air passages; stops nasty ischarge or nose running, relieves < headache, dullness, feverishness, throat, sneezing, soreness and stiffness. “Pape’ quickes costs only Goodness, gracious, mer- cy me! Jim's going to bring home guests for dinner and there is not a thing in the house—I know! I'll phone the grocer quick!—forD& C — and we’ll have hot pudding and rolls— they’ll like that, D8 "~ the Flour f-- me IO(-!\- SELF-RAIST Packages Cold Compound’ is the urest relief known and 5 cents at drug stores. | It acts without assistance, tastes nice, and cause: no inconvenience. Don’t accept a substitute. YOUR NECKWEAR ALWAYS. Rerier, Pickhard! & Dun 127 Main Street ’Phene 317-2 How to Select Your Corset We e now showing the NEW MODELS in GOSSARD CORSETS—Suitable for all types. For IDEAL TALL and SHORT SLENDER FIGURES —IDEAL LARGE ABOVE WAIST and BELOW WAIST LINE—IDEAL TALL and SHORT HEAVY FIGURES— IDIEAL ARCHED BACK and SHORT WAISTED FIGURES —Wonderful results are possible if you select the right model—Come in and be fitted. Opp. Arch WOMEN’S COATS for AUTUMN and WINTER WEAR —The very newest in belted and semi-fitting COATS—in Wool Velour and Bolivia Vicuna Cloth. IN'S DR :S OF SERGE, SILK AND SATIN rg the latest note in fashion. WOM! 'S SMARTLY Tr\[}A()lllCl) SUITS—A par- ticularly noteworthy offering at $12.50, $15.00, $17.50 ana up to’ $45.00. WOMEN’S WAISTS—Exclusive Models of Georgette Crepe, Silk, Lace and Lingerie. GLOVES, gOSlERY, MUSLIN UNDERWEAR, KNIT UNDER' WOM —Expre Leaving Captain Hall registering | grandparental anger, one discovers the bride in her husband’s little apart- ment at 361 Sterling place, Brooklyn. She is guarded by the janitress and a few neighbors who are thrilled by the romance. Mrs, Clark resolutely de- clined to see any visitors who were not introduced by friend Over the tele- phine last night she said it was true that she was Hall's grand- daughter and ny that her husband his chauffeur. Be- vond that she had nothing to say. Young Clark—he is only two vears older than his bride—obtained a job as driver for a wholesale pro- visicn firm in Manhattan after he gave up his place in Huntington. He said vesterday that he didn’t want to disen ge, but added that they with his mother-in law, Mrs, Hall. at the Ster ling place address, Mrs, Hall we present at the marriage service. According to the Brooklyn records Clark obtained a license on Octohe 13. Two davs later the marriage v performed by the Rev. Dr. William H. Kidd of the Hanson Place Metho- dist church, The bride’s grandfather is one the wealthiest men of Huntington. He was head of the Maine Steams} company before that concern was taken over hy the New Haven railroad interests. Now he is the largest stockholder in the First National bank of Huntington. Clark was known in Huntington as Ralph Ireland. His wife refused to explain why he had used that name when employed by Captain Hall, we GOLD AND PETROL HARTFORD ONE-PRICE CLOTHING CO. 114-116 Asylum St. Hartford, Conn. H. O. P. COATS| FOR MISS AND LADY, $13.95 to $65.00 Plushes, Velour, Broadcloths, Bolivias and Chinchillas in all the plain colors checks and fancy mixtures. Some with Fur trimming and some plain. The kind with style and quality. We’re ready now to show you the hands?mest Coats you have ever seen. Coats of wonderful style and unmistakable quality. The variety of these is extraordinary. SPECIAL VALUES AT $15 $18:50 $25 $32-50 | ALL SUITS REDUCED INVAST QUANTITIES Precions Metal Used for Bullels Away Up North New York, Nov. 15.—Christian Le- den, the Norwegian explorer and cthnologist, has jumped from the snow huts of the Eskimos to the | who Waldorf-Astoria—‘‘some contrast,” he O OI I OR RIS ORRCRRORNORORSR N Remove pain misery as many thou- sands of others have done, by apply- ing Minard’s liniment, an old, reliable pre- scription. No other rem- edy acts so quickly or effectively. It is pure and antiseptic, won- derfully soothing, and is the most effective 2 remedy for rheumatic pains, soreness and stiffness of joints and muscles, lameness, sore hands, tired, aching feet, pains in chest, sore throat, and for sprains, strains and bruises. You cannot afford to be without it. It can- mot possibly harm or burn the skin. says—brings back from the great Ca- nadian barren grounds northwest of Hudson Bay native tales of vast gold | deposits and pertroleum fields in un- | explored regions north of the Arctic circle. “I did not see the gold,” he said. Native friends of mine told me about it, but they didn’t know it was gold. They were returning from a hunting | trip of 700 or 800 miles with some secimens for me, but thei and they had to throw believe to be gold away. They told me of a ledge where the metal dropped off in pieces, and from what they said I should judge the veins must have been very rich. One of them had a harpoon, the point of what I { which was made of the yellow metal. They told me also of an Eskimo who used in his gun bullets that he had yammered out of gold.” for the petrolcum, Mr. Leden the Eskimos objected seriously to the smell of the cil, although they were accustomed to strong odors. E kimos, he explained, never take a bath. He declined to give any idea of the location of the gold deposits other than to “It would have taken me two yea more to have gone where the gold is.” Mr. Leden travelled with tribes of Tskimos for three years, principally to study the native music, which has neither major nor minor. The great- est master of music, he said, is the man who uses the fewest number of notes. The only instrument Eskimos have is the drum. A coast boat on which Mr. Leden started on his trip was wrecked in Oc- tober, 1913, and he lost all his sup- plies. He was the only white man in the party. He returns with an ethnol- 'ogical collection for the Museum of | dogs died | | Chris tiania, Norway, and the Geolog cal Survey of Canada. He purposes to lecture In New York. ————————————————— GIRLS ! TRY IT! HAVE THICK, WAVY, BEAUTIFUL HAIR Every- particle of dandruff disappears and hair stops coming out. a moist cloth through hair and double its Beauty at once. Draw | taking | | | i Your hair becomes light, wavy, | fluffy, abundant and appears as soft, lustrous and beautiful as a young | girl’s after a ‘“Danderine halr | cleanse.” Just try this—moisten a { cloth with a little Danderine and carefully draw it through your hair, one small strand at a time. This will cleanse the hair of dust, dirt and excessive oil and in just a few moments you have doubled the beauty of your hair. Besides beautifying the hair at once, Danderine dissolves every par- ticle of dandruff; cleanses, purifies and invigorates the scalp, forever stopping itching and falling halr. But what will please you most will be after B few weeks' use when you will actually see new hailr—fine and downy at first—ves—but really new hair growing all over the scalp. If you care for pretty, soft hair and lots of it surely get a 25-cent bottle of Knowlton’s Danderine from any drug- gist or toilet counter, and just try it. Save your hair! Beautify it! You will say this was the best 25 cents you ever spent. BE Ju DoOWN ST 15 MINUTES — GETTING NERVOLS 20 MINUTES — [00KS AT PICTURES AN wALL LooKs AT PICTURES oN OTHER \WALL- it You Want Good Bottled Beer, Wine or Liquors, ' Order Same from PHILIP BARDECK, 185 Arch St. ‘Phone 482-2 PRINTING In Many Different Languages, BY SKILLED UNION MEV Moderate Prices. LINOTYPE OOMPOSITION, Office Hours: 8 a. m. to 6:13 o5 m. Mondays and Wednesdays to 8 p. m. Tel Mgr’s Res, 179-5. Forcman 330.12 THE EASTERN PRINTING CO 63 CHURCH STREET_ C. EBBESEN. MGR. . PHILADELPHIA DENTAL ROOMS 193 Main Street Jver 25c Store BEST WORK AT MODERATE PRICES Office Open from 8 A. M. to § P, M. Sundays by Appointment. F. E. MONKS, D. D. S, Georgiana Monks, D. D. S. o 631 BY BRIGGS Loows AT wWATCH AFTER TRIRTY INVTES ACES FLOOR 35 MinuTES LOOKS AT A BoOK RYBBERS ARAUND 40 MiNUTES 45 MINUTES SHE ARRIVES

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