New Britain Herald Newspaper, December 1, 1916, Page 14

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Colds if ollowed to go unchecked frequently develop into TUBERCULOSIS, PNEUMONIA, CATARRH, TONSILITIS, BRONCHITIS. And dozens of other danger- cus but less well known dis- eases, such as infections of the inner facia passages, ear complications, etc., and mal- nufrition in children. Colds «re not necessary for any one dure for any length of " certainly not long wugh for any of the above dis- i1, that a prompt use of Lin- nine is made. This remedy i3 standard, a pure and whole- come emulsion of flax-seed oil, Ecalyptus, Irish moss, and other efficient preparations. It removes the cause of colds and keeps the system fit to resist the inroads of germs that overcome weakened and run-down people. Its body building qualities have long been recognized by physi- cians, and thousands testify to the good it has done and is doing them and their fami- lies. Take it at the first sign of a cold or when you feel physically unfit, IITALY 1§ FUTURE Many Amenian Firms Opening Houses for Oriental Trade Milan, Italy, Dec. 1.—The explan- ation of the increasing number of American firms settling in Italy is the realization that Italy is the future | gateway to the Orient and to the Near East, according to Charles F. Hauss, president of The American Chamber of Commerce for Italy. “Because of her geographical posi- tion, joining the north of Europe to the Orient,” said Mr. Hauss to a cor- respondent of The Associated Press, “Italy today offers better business opportunities for Americans in my estimation than South America or the Far East. She has a fine com- mercial strategic position and her government and people are actively this advantage of location. “Wartime Italy {8 far more pros- recent declaration of dividends show- ed earnings higher even than in peacetimes. It is also not generally known that Italy bought more pro- ducts in the United States during the past year than in any four other great countries. She bought over two hun- dred millions from us, as compared to eighty millions in England, fifty fifteen in Switzerland. She is selling to us something over fifty millions a vear, which is about her normal year- ly sales of before the war. Increase Business With U. S. “There is going to be much more business between Italy and the United States as this big fact of her geo- graphical situation is better appre- United inadequate to handle the cargoes either way. Italy has provided and will continue to provide abundant re- turn cargoes, such as her renowned silks, laces, furniture, alimentary foods, wines, cheese, her marbles, hematite iron, lead, and zinc ores. as well as certain other manufactures in which she excels. Be- fore the war Italy was laying the gound for a fine national merchant marine and right now during the war she is continuing that policy. “I have lived in Italy nearly eight of the seventeen years I have heen in Burope, and I can say that Italy has the most liberal government I | have ever lived under. Its laws, aware of the fact, and intend to push | | tive, capital and merchandise of all perous than is generally known. The | NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, DECEMBER I, 1916. BUILD UP YOUR BLOOD ' Tt is a hopeless task to try to Testora | | your health while your blood is defi- | . GATE 16 THE EAST 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 carrying capacity islessened because it isthe corpuscles in the blood that carry oxfgen and other needed constitus~ 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 di in which the patient be- | comes thin and pale Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills can pe used successfully to com- | bat the ajemia and build up thehealth and strength, “Building Up the Blood’” is a book= let, full of good information. Every mother and every growing girl should have one. Tt is sent free on request by the Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Schen~ ectady, N. Y. Your own druggist sella Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills. Priced0centa. kinds, especially semi-finished ducts and raw materials. “The war has opened her eyes to the latent capabilities she possessed financially as well as industrially, and she is going to keep on going ahead.” pro- ciated, and when both Italy and the | States increase ther number | of merchant ships, at present sadly | 'HERR' THYSSE in the Argentine, fifty in France, and : | Thyssen, in antebellum days coal and beautiful | N IS MODEST CROESUS Lives Simple Life in Spite of His | Millions (Correspondence of the Assoclated Press) | Hamborn-on-the-Rhine, Nov. 14.—! One of the most impartant wheels in the German war machine is August | steel magnate of the first rank but now, in view of the industrialization | of war, general field marshal of the industrial army, and collaborator and | confidant of Hindenburg. He is small | and frail, but powerful as an indus trial leader. Notwithstanding the tremendous scope of his work he| clings stubbornly to old-fashioned methods where he himself is con-| cerned. He will not tolerate a stenographer for his personal use, but writes all| | needs of the dual monarchy Austria “Snapped” Decorat ew Emperor ing Soldier| YRRV T7 TR R R TR U AL DL Y 2 GLOBE CLOTHING HOUSE Schaffner Suits and IR TR (AUSTRIAS NEW EMPEROR , CHRRLES FRANCIS JOSEPH (Q¢t1eft) DECORATING SOLDIER) Tllustration shows, at left Emperor Charles Hungary, who has j ancis Joseph of Austria- st succeeded the late aged Emperor ¥ Jomeph, decorating an Austrian for valor of the war, An Austrian writer refers to the new emperor as clegant, cheerful and full of temperament, and in a work devoted chiefly to the ps rancis soldier , speaks of influence likely to come into his people ““with the freshness of love at first sight.” archduke seemed tao inherit the terest in military affairs of his father, the late Archduke Otto, who was con- as chologital | He remarks that the in- stantly in the company of officers and was generally popular in the army; | but other evidence has been presented | to show that soldiering is one of the things the new emperor likes least. He has been reported—with what credibility is hard to s as having seen “The Merry Widow" fifty times in fifty days. He was until called | away by the critical condition of Francis Joseph in nominal command of the Teuton armies operating on the Transylvania front or Roumania. Aside from this, since the war be- gan, Charles Francis has been under- going a course of intensive training far his prospective dutles as em- peror. Overcoats Copyright Hart Schaffner & Marx Wonderful Display of CHILDREN'S MACKINAWS | AND OVERCOATS $5. L 2 MEAT EATING EXPENSIVE. Much Could Be Saved by Giving Up Habit Slightly. London, Dec. 1.—A million pounds or $5,000,000, could be saved in a though severe, are just, and when you his letters by hand. His correspon- get to know Italians and their cus- fortnight if everyone would agree to larger than he| Sold in 5, 10, 25 and 50 Ib. cotton bags Tell your grocer that you want cane sugar and name it— Domino Granulated. Then you'll get the best cane sugar, of highest sweetening power, quickly dissolving. Packed at the refinery in cotton bags. Sweeten it with Domino Granulated, Tablet, Powdered, Confectioners ——n GRANDPA DIDN'T NEED CASCARETS FOR THE BOWELS I'wo hours a day sawing wood will keep liver and bowels right, You who take exercise in an easy chair must take ‘“‘Cas- carets.” Enjoy life—feel bully! Don't stay sick, bilious, headachy, constipated. Remove the liver and bowel poison which is keeping your head dizzy, your tongue coated, your breath of- fensive, stomach sour and your body full of cold. Why don’t you get @ 10 or 25-cent box of Cascarets at the drug store and enjoy the nicest, gen- tlest liver and bowel cleansing you ever experienced. Cascare: work while you sleep. You will wake up feeling fit and fine. Children need this candy cathartic too. Wfll- PR Ul toms you will realize what great strides they have made in science, in- dustry and commerce during the last forty years of a United Italy. Nilan, with its more than 600,000 inhabi- tants, the heart of industrial Italy, has a record of growth unique in modern European history. Its popu- lation has increased fifty per cent. in the last ten years, due to the wealth and hustle of her business men. “All of the American firms now in Italy to my knowledge and belief are prospering, some even more than previous to the war. “It 13 no more difficult to organize a separate company here than else- where, though it would be well be- fore settling for an American com- pany to first carefully try out the fleld by actual trial of its goods on the Italian market. Obviously, for some kinds of goods a separate com- pany is not advisable, as in the case of goods light in weight, of small volume ,and of a certain value, since such goods may be sea-shipped and easily entered, if the tariff is not high. “Ttalian tariffs are not oppressive, and they are always specific, never ad valorem. This, of course, means that the higher the value of the mer- chandise the easier it is to export to Italy. “Ttaly welcomes American — NO ACID STOMACH, SOURNESS, GASES OR INDIGESTION In five minutes your sick, sour upset stomach will feel fine. i initia- “Pape’s Diapepsin’”’ neutralizes acids in stomach and starts digestion. Take your sour, out-of-order stom- ach—or maybe you call it indigestion, dyspepsia or gastritis, it doesn” matter—take your stomach trouble right with you to your pharmacist and | oner of war cannot be sure that his ask him to open a 50-cent case of | gtatements do not become known to Pape’s Diapepsin and let you eat one 22-grain triangule and see if within five minutes there is left any trace of your former misery. The correct name for your trouble is food fermentation—aocid stomach —+food souring; the digestive organs become weak, there is lack of gastric juice; your food is only half digested and you become effected with loss of eating, vomiting, nausea, heartburn, pit of stomach, bad taste in mouth, constipation, pain in limbs, sleepless- headache, nervousness, dizziness many other similar symptoms. If your appetite is fickle, and noth- ing tempts you, or you belch gas or if food lies like a lump of lead on your stomach, you can make up ypur mind that at the bottom of all this there is but one cause—fermentation of undi- gested food. that your stomach is as good as any; that there is nothing really wrong. Stop this fermentationh and begin eat- discomfort or misery. Almost instant relief in waiting for you. It is merely & matter of how soon you take a little Diapepsin, e, V| R A dence is large, much can attend to, along with his other | duties at his office. So he takes what | is left over home with him to his only | luxury, his castle home near Kettwig, | and after dinner finishes it, if it takes until the wee small hours of the morning. Despite his enormous wealth he has never personally owned an automo- bile, nor will he ride in one to save| his own time. He goes and comes from his home to his office on foot| or in a street car. He wears a modest, dark colored business suit instead of the formal “morning suit” so general- 1y affected in Germany, and looks less llke a multi-millionaire than the average clerk. From the very outset of his from comparative poverty to great riches, and above all to very great renown as an industrial leader, Herr Thyssen has steadfastly refused titles of all kinds. In the late 60s he founded an iron establishment in Duisburg with his]| total capital of 8,000 Thalers (ahout $6,000) and in 1871 moved his plant to Muelheim on the Ruhr, where there later came iInto existence the plant “Deutscher Kaiser,” which today in-! cludes one-tenth of the coal lands of Westphalla and gigantic steel mills. Just before the war there were em- ployed some 20,000 men and the coal fields contained some 370 millions of cubic meters of coal. He is now the principal owner of half a dozen huge industrial projects in the Rhineland. climb JUGGLE WITH TRUTH. ‘War Prisoners Try to Please Captors, % | pinch of sait. appetite, pressure and fullness after | o Rumanian Jew, griping in bowels, tenderness in the | o5 5 private. ness, belching of gas, biliousness, sick | 31most flew into a rage. Or | not see why a Jew should fight for a you feel bloated after eating, or your | the Central troops would get to Buch- Prove to yourself in five minutes | geemed to heartily agree with their ing what you want without fear of | forbids that they be questioned, but But Statements Cause Suspicion. (Correspondence of the Associated Press) Toerzburg, Transylvania, Nov. 11.— Prisoners of war being not unwilling to please their captors, their state- ments must be taken with a large Though there be no officer of the enemy present, the pris- the powers into whose hands the for- tune of war has placed him. The Associated Press correspondent was able to interview here today two score Rumanian officers and men who had fallen into captivity near Rucar, some twenty miles south of No Central power officer was within earshot. One of the first men questioned was a man of some edu- cation and standing. He had served Unblushingly he sald that he had looked for a chance to surrender. Question why, the man He could government which in times of peace gave him no vote and no part in the affairs of his country. He hoped that arest in a few days and hang them all, especially Bratianu and Take Jonescu who had so needlessly involved the country in war. Six other Jews were a little timid in their expressions but spokesman. Captured officers are non-interview- able as a rule. The code as well as tact one of them, a tall handsome fellow of about twenty-five, gave it as his opinion that the war was “une sale affaire’—a dirty business. ; PASS DRASTIC REGULATIONS. Belgium Officials Define Just Where Certain Language Can be Used. (Correspondence of the Associated Press) Nov. 14.—The administering that work- Brussels, Germans have been things in Belgium so most of them have able knowledge of the various guages that prevail there. Accord- ingly the chief authorities in Brus- sels have issued new and drastic lan- guage regulations for all their sub- ordinates. In towns or districts in which the Flemish language preponderates, it is in future to be used solely both in spoken communications and in official Belgium, long now acquired a lan- The permit ts, letters and notifications. only exceptions to this rule French to be used when a reply has been specifically requested in that language, or when the original letter of inquiry was in French. In Greater Brussels the authorities may make use of either French or emish, yet from the first of Janu- 1917, all communications from authorities of the various sections of Brussels to the outlying Flemish dis- }m ts must be in Flemish. All noti- | fications and public notices are to be | issued in Flemish, with French trans- lations accompanying them when de- sirable, German is to be allowed only in sections of Belgium where it prevails as the “language of the country”. ATy, ‘Tiw Franklin Enclosed Cars 58688868 & [5ER88H50 Bling \ CLEIEE 88 B BBlya G] 1§ Witim st ¢ 5 Franklin Brougham. HE motorist who thinks of the enclosed car Weight, 2540 Pounds. Price, $2700. as mainly a winter and city car, ought to see the Franklin Enclosed Cars and get a demonstration of their year-round road ability. Built in five different types: Sedan, Brough- am, Cabriolet, Limousine and Town Car—every one of them weighing under 2700 pounds. They give ease of control, and economy never before realized cars. Franklin direct-air- comfort, safety in enclosed cooling — no water to freeze or boil—insures uninterrupted, troubleless service winter and summer. And what is more, Franklin Enclosed Cars are so perfectly ventilated and protected from sun-glare and dust, that they are setting a new standard of comfort in summer touring. Whether or not you are thinking of a new car any time soon, by al | means get acquainted with the utility of Franklin Enclosed Cars. UNIVERSAL AUTO COMPANY Charter 6650 338 PEARL STREET go without, meat on one day each week, says the newest appeal to the public to cut down their meat con- sumption made by the National War Savings Committee. Last September a Board of Trade committee making a similar appeal for economy, urged the public to agree to one meatless day each week, but apparently it has fallen on deaf ears. At population of this country now eats about 500,000 pounds worth of meat every day, according to figures com- piled by the war savings committee which finds that this is due to the habit of eating meat—beef, mutton, pork or bacon—two or three times a day. “Excessive meat eating is a bad habit,” adds the committee. “Noth- ing so radical as going without meat of any kind for a whole day is needed. People who eat meat twice a day should cut down the meat eaten, tak- ing more fish, dried beans, peas, etc., and cheese, and those who eat fish and several kinds of meat at lunch and dinner should have only fish or one variety of meat.” Those not engaged in physical toil are especially urged to cut down their consumption of megt Besides the heneficial effects of the health, the appeal reasons that the demands upon shipping would be les- sened, the supplies could be more evenly distributed, and a further in- crease in prices could be avoided To The Sunny | GULF CCAST | Along the sunny shores of the Gulf of Mexico, on the coasts of Florida and the southern states are some of the world's finest winter resorts. Spend a few weeks there this winter. The journey is pleasant and inexpensive on fast Mallory Line steamers direct to Key West Tampa Mobile Galveston Affording excellent connections for St. Petersburg, Havana Miami, Palm Beach and all Florida and Gulf Goast resorts. New “Heary R. Mallory,” largest in coast- wise service, and other big steamers; comfort- able staterooms, some with double beds and private bath. Unsurpassed cuisine_and sevie. or reservations and literature address A. W. PYE, Passenger Traffic Manager COLYDE-MALLORY LINES Pier 36, North River, New York present high prices the civilfan | or call upon Local Rallroad Ticket Agents i | and good hair “The regular use of Resinol Soap for the toilet, bath and shampoo, can usually be relied on to keep the complexion clear, the hands white and soft, and the hair healthy, glossy and free from dandaff. 1f the skin or scalp is already in bad condition, 2 short treatment with Resinol Ointment may first be: necessary to restore its normal health. Resinol Soap and Ointment are sold by all druggists. For samples free. write to Dept. 13-P, Resinol, Baltimore, Md. Look and Feel Clean, Sweet and - Fresh Every Day Drink a glass of real hot water before breakfast to wash out polisons. Life is not merely to live, but t| live well, eat well, digest well, slee well, look well. What a glorious conaif | tion to attain, and yet how very ea: | dull and heavy when they arisi | cleansing, it is if one will only adopt the mornin inside bath. Folks who are accustomed to fel stuffy from a cold foul tongue, nasty breath, acid std mach, can, instead, feel as fresh as daisy by opening the sluices of th system each morning and flushing of the whole of the ‘internal poisono stagnant matter. Everyone, whether ailing, sick well, should, eac* morning, Befo breakfast, drink w» glass of real h water with a teaspoonful of limeston| phosphate In it to wash from thf stomach, liver, kidneys and bowel the previous day’s indigestible wast sour bile and poisonous toxins th sweetening and purifyin) the entire alimentary canal ’Eofo putting more food into the stbmach The action of hot water and limesto; phosphate on an empty atomach wonderfully invigorating. It clea out ~Il the sour fermentations, gase: waste and acidity and gives one splendid appetite for breakfast. Whi vou are enjoying vour breakfast water and phosphate is quietly ting headache, | tracting a large volume of water 1roi] the blood and getting ready for thorough flushing of all the insid organs. The millions of people who a bothered with constipation, biliov spells, stomach trouble, rheumatis others who have sallow skins, blog disorders and sickly complexions & urged to get a quarter pound of lim | stone phosphate from the drug sto which wil cost very little, Rt sufficient to make anyvone a " prd nounced crank on the subject internal sanitation. P e e

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