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Was Greatly Distressed Says Local Lady Mrs. F. L. Wallace, 395 Chestnut St., This City Received Wonderful Results From Lax-a-Tone. If you are not known at and wish to get accommodation, the bank will require and indorser. Lax-a-Tone was not known in New Britain we did not simply tell the New Britain people what a wonderful remedy we have although we y‘ We have given you indorsements rom reputable peopie here and let them tell you their experience with Lax-a-Tone. In other words, we have not asked you to take our un- supported word as we feel if a rem- edy has merit that it can easily be proven and the proof of the pudding is in the eating. We have given you many indorsements of New Britain people and we intend to give you many more and keep on giving them to you until every man and woman in New Britain that are suffering from constipation, sour acid stomach, gas, bloat, dlzzy spells, torpid liver, sick and bilious headaches and those suffering from a rundown condition of the system with poor blood, blotched skin, bad breath, and furred tongue are thoroughly convinced that ‘Werbal Lax-a-Tone will help them, so do not delay but get in the health column and it will surprise you what one bpttle of this remarkable remedy will do. Mrs. Wallace, says:i—"“I have suf- fered severe distress from stomach trouble, would have sour stomach, gas, bloat and terrible headaches. I needed a tonic badly and am pleased to, state that Herbal Lax-a-Tone is a wonderful remedy for the above troubles.” The Lax-a-Tone man is at the Economy New England Drug store, 865 Main St., where he is introducing this remedy to the New Britain public. *Now I know” said Mr. Roberts,"whyyou didnot buy candy with your ten cents—mother promised tomake D&C doughnuts —didn’t she ?” “Yes” said little Bobby— “Mother says they’re so light 1 can have all I want.” DsC Is the Flour for me 10c & 25c SELF-RAISING Packages ADVERTISE IN THE HERAILD. a bank As know | NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, BECEMBER 1, ,1916. JOHNNY BULL MUST HAVE HIS RACING Let War Roar, the Turf Is Never Forgotten (Correspondence of the Asso. Press.) London, Nov. 20.—The flat racing ason in England, which ended with the first week of November, ounted quite standing that it was ac- successful notwith- ran into the third vear of the war. There were twenty- three meetings in England, eleven at Newmarket, four at Lingfield, thres at Gatwick, three at Newbury and two at Windsor. There will be jumping meets during the winter, but gs spe- cia] trains are not permitted and the sapply of petrol for automobiles is iimited, the crowds are not expected to be up to the usual standard. The king continued to lend his pa- tronage and appears in the final list of winners with purses aggregating $3,685 to his credit. All the classic races of the English turf were main- tained, although many of them did not come up to the value of the past years. The leading winning owner was E. | Hulton, a newspaper proprietor with | §86,820. The Earl of Derby, whose time is almost wholly taken up by his duties as under secretary of war, kept his racing establishment intact and was the second winner with $45, - 320. The Duke of Portland was third wus $40,025, Lord Falmouth was | fourth with $31,500; J. Buchanan, fifth with $25,425, and Lord D’Aber- non, head of the liquor control board NERVOUS BREAKDOWN Stamford, Conn., Nurse Tells She Found Health, Stamford, Conn.—“I am a nurse and suffered from a nervous break- down. I had no appetite and could not sleep at night, and nothing seemed to help me. By chance I heard of Vinol, and after taking the first bottle I noticed an improvement, and four bottles made me well and strong, it gave me a hearty appetite, so I can sleep soundly night or day I con- sider Vinol a wonderful tonic.” Edith R. Forbes, Stamford, Conn. The reason Vinol is so successful in overcoming such conditions is be- cause it is a constitutional remedy and goes to the seat of the trouble. It is the greatest strength creator we know —due to the beef and cod liver pep- tones, iron and manganese peptonates and glycerophosphates which it con- tains, all dissolved in a pure medi- | cinal wine. We have seen so many wonderful | recoveries like this right here in New | Britain caused by Vin™ that we feel | perfectly safe in offering to return { money in every such case where Vinol | fails to benefit. { The Clark & Brainerd Co., Drugists; Ligett's Riker-Hegeman Drug stores; John J. McBriarty; George M. Ladd; | W. H. Russell, New Britain. Also at | the leading drug store in all Connec- | ticut towns.” How ‘ REMOVES SKIN AFFECTIONS | One package proves it. Bold and guerantced by ahove Viaol druggists GnCold Wet Weather SAVEA-DOLLAR Work | and ¢ o Shoes R AL ‘v } { | ! f' The Newark Shoe MakerS: { i EN the thermometer is hover- . ing around 30 or below—it is then that the need for all Shoes like Newark felt keenly. weather is Newark Work and Storm Shoes will keep your feet dry and warm on rough winter days. | Try a pair—tomorrow. America’s Greatest Shoe Vaiue NewarK Shoe NEW BRITAIN STORE, 234 Other Newark Springfield. ‘When ordering by mail incl ——229 STORES IN 97 CITIES—— Stores Nearby:—Hartford, Open Monday and Saturday evening e | 2202% Storm good the The The Newark Shoe Stores Co. NewarK Shoes For Boys, $1.50, $2.00 and $2.50.. Stores Company MAIN ST., Near R. R. Crossing. Waterbury and ude 10c—Parcel Post Charge Hope 4im ost Abandoned When She Found Remedy Dr Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin Relieves Chronic Case of Long Standing. After a long period of suffering with liver and bowel trouble that brought on piles, during which she had tried many remedies without obtaining re- lief, Mrs. Mary J. Jewell, of Berrien Springs, Mich., heard of Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin and obtained a bottle from her druggist. This simple, inex- pensive laxative compound brought almost immediate relief and Mrs. Jewell wrote to Dr. Caldwell about her case. In her letter Mrs. Jewell says, “I had tried so many things for the piles, without being helped at all, I had about given up hope of ever being any better. I knew it was the condition of my bowels that caused them, and after I had taken a bottle of your Syrup Pepsin I knew it was just the medi- cine I needed. I am very grateful to you for sending me the little book— the advice and instructions it gives would teach anyone how to get well and how to keep well.” Dr. Caldwell’'s Syrup Pepsin is a combination of simple laxative herbs with pepsin, freec from opiate or nar- cotic drugs, and is mild and gentle in its action, bringing relief in an easy, ——————— natural way, without griping, or other pain or discomfort. Druggists everywhere sell Dr. Cald- well's Syrup Pepsin for fifty cents a bottle. To avoid imitations and inef- fective substitutes be sure you get Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin. See that a facsimile of Dr. Caldwell’s signature and his portrait appear on the yellow carton in which the bottle is packed. A trial bottle, free of charge, can be obtained by writing to Dr. W. B. Cald- well, 455 Washington St., Monticello, Tllinois. during the war time, is sixth, with $23,260. The winning jockey was S. Donoghue, who 'had 43 mounts first past the wire. Picturesque Features, A day’ racing at Newmarket, known as ‘‘headquarters” of the Eng- lish turf, retained this fall many of the picturesque features of pre-war days, with some distinctly novel at- tractions. The crowds were perhaps a bit more subdued although English racing throngs never have quite the same exuberance, or the same ten- deacy to “ride” a winner home as one cets on the tracks around New York, Latonia or Louisville. The win- ners here take their winnings with a :alm and somewhat disdainful self- assurance, while the losers lose with ne disposition to *‘grouse’ or ‘“‘grouch’ as it would be rendered in “Amer- Newmarket lies seventy miles northeast of London, but this is not :counted a great distance when a snlendid big motor car has been suc- cessfully requisitioned and the day's program offers a card of seven well- flled races, The way leads out the famous Sev- en Sisters Road through Epping Vil- laze and its royal forest which, just a few weeks before the war start- e¢d, rang and echned with the chor- used volces of thousands of German singers. The old English inns and public houses along the road always are a source of interest to visiting Americans because of their quaint construction and still, quainter names. There are the “Fighting Cocks,” the “Bill and Horseshoe,” the ‘“White rTeart,” the “Coach and Horses,” the “Three Tun and scores of others. The English countryside is beautiful at all times of the year, and in the autumn months the grass is as green in the flelds as in the spring. *“Six Mile Bottom,” is a welcome station along the way, for from there to New- market lies a six mile stretch of ar- row-straight road which invites a speed limited only by fear of the county constable. Newmarket, somewhat slow and sleepy by general disposition, is alive ard throbbing with excitement on rocing days. The road from town to track is fairly clogged with all manner of ve- Picles. One finds wartime racing is a bit cheaper than the ordinary sort and entrance to the grand stand is to Te had for one pound with two shil- ilngs extra as a war tax. The stand not large, for England takes its racing in the open—on the broad lawns and in the open air paddock. Betting goes on “as gsual”, with the bcokmakers calling their odds in a manner calculated to attract and per- snade. Tn return for a five pound note, or a one pound note, or perhaps your “two and six” in silver, you get a »it of numbered pasteboard, which nay or may not be worth preserv- i Spectators See No Starts. Newmarket is not a race track in the American sense. The grand stand and surrounding enclosures = seem rather a gathering station set in the midst of never-ending fields of won- derfully green and velvety turf. But to the right there are the familiar white rail fences which merge the several slants or straightaway courses into the home stretch. Witnessing tne start of an English race is not vouch- safed to the spectators, As it is a mile race the horses start a mile away from the grandstand. If it is a mile and a half race, they start a mile and a half away. The tracks here are built for racing, not to afford a spectacle. The racegoer must be content with the brief struggle he sees in the last hun- dred yards or so and the flash past the winning post. Ewven this thrill is denied when occasionally the finish line is moved a furlong or so up the track to conform to some century-old tradition During an afternoon’s racing this year one could see on the tracks all the colors long familiar to the English rses, the primrose of Lord Rose- the black, white cap or Lord Derby; the white, black sleeves, of the Duke of Portland; the .vellow, black cap of the Duke of Westminis- ter; the blue and yellow hoops of Baron de Rothschild; the dark blue and buff stripes of the Barl of Jersey, the light blue and pink sash of Major Waldort Astor, and the scarlet of Lord Decies, who married Vivien Gould. Jach racing throng contains share of khaki. officers on inland duty or home from the front on leave. Many of them, like Major Astor ,own horses which are entercd for the vari- ous even = The return to London from Newesstle its by motor clearly makes up for any thrills that may have been wanting at | thetraclk. rush along the road to cover as many miles as possible before the fast-set- | ting sun robs the land of its protecting | rays and night closes in. For head- | lights in times of war are taboo and | the motorist must grope his way! through the darkness as best he can | by the pale flicker of his screened ! sldelamps. Some of the English| chauffeurs have become adepts in the ' dark and speed along at twenty to thirty miles an hour, swerving sud- denly now and then to avoid a dark- ened wagon or a motor bound in the ' opposite direction. To the novice from abroad this running through the blackness of night and the narrow escapes from collision are anything but reassuring. The outskirts of London may be | reached within that first half hour of darkness in which the searchlights of ity’s aerial defenses play in prac- tice so that they may be skilfully de- rected against any intruding Zeppelin that may venture over in the later reaches of the night. = Sweeping in from the country the spectacle of the searchlight canopy over the city is one never to be for- gotten. The blazing white beams shoot from every angle, and some | more powerful than the rest appear | to be impiously struggling to pry their, way into the very mysteries of Heaven | Great, broad bands of dazzling | itself. daylight, they flash their dark and mystic space. They cross, interlace, turn and sweep with an effect that no pyrotechnic display ever way into First there is the hcadlongi i ! Hartford, | Britain some sweeping opportunities i to WE SOLICIT YOUR CHARGE ACCOUNT 10-piece William and Mary Jacobean Dining Room Suite, con- sisting of Buffet, Table, Serving Table, China Closet, 5 Chairs, 1 Arm Chair, regular $135.00, Sale price $98.00. 9x12 Brussels Rug, regular $23.50, sale price .........“$17.50 9x12 Brussels Rug, regular $32.50, sale price ......... $25.00 9x12 Axminster, regular $35.00, sale price ............ $27.00 4-piece Walnut Bedroom Suite, consisting of Bed, Dresser Dressing Table and Chiffonier, regular $125.00, sale ... $89.00. No. 12 Cylinder Parlor Stove, regular $12.98, sale ...... $9.50 Agents for Household Ranges. Agents for Columbia Grafonolas. LOUIS HERRU 1052-1058 Main Street, Hartford has attained. It is difficult to reallze that these marvels have been called into play by the grim business of war, rather than to thrill and mystify in tho spectacular brilliance of their display. By the time the twisting, tortuous streets of the inner city are reached | the searchlight trials generally are at| an end, and once again comes the slow ! groping through the gloom. A day of war time racing is a day of striking contrasts. | Bargains at Hartford One Price. In another column of this paper, Katten- and Son, of 114 Asylum, offer the ladles of New purchase suits,—garments that are worth as high as $25, all go at the reduced price of $15. Remember these are all new modish suits, and a selection of any of them will be 11 worth whil advt. ASK FOR and GET THE ORTGINAL MALTED MILK Chesp substitutes cest TOU came peten. CHRISTMAS Don’t be worried abou t the proper gift, because this store holds hundreds of things that are not only proper but useful as well, . g mired by yourself, your fri home. ifts for the home, to be ad- ends and visitors to your When in Hartford come in and roam around—a revelation awaits you. " THE FUNI-BRUCF @ ASYLUM B2 HARTFOR1 The Paints We Offer are the very best known to the trade. They are warranted both by the mak- ers and by ourselves. There are spe- cial paints for every use. For ex- terior painting or indoor embellish- ing. For floor staining, for furniture polishing, for enameling bath tub or sink. 1S to the vurpose. best sort to use for your For Sale by CROWLEY BROS,, 491 Main St. HORLICK’S We shall be glad to advise you | $12.00 The 2£ Autographic For Pictures 2 % x 4 % inches. The elongated shape, used horizontally is right for land- scapes—it doesn’t waste film on sky and foreground. It is right for portraits when used vertically for it gives the high, narrow picture. And this elongated shape in‘the picture makes possible a slim, thin, easily pocketed camera. Capacity ten exposures without reloading, Kodak Ball Bearing shutter, working at speeds of 1-25, 1-50 and 1-100 of a second and the usual time actions. Has brilliant reversible finder, two tripod sockets, black leather bellows, covered with fine grain lcather, well made and beautifully finished. No. 2C Autographic Kodak Jr., meniscus achromatic lens, $12.00 No. 2C Autographic Kodak Jr., with Rapid Rectilinear lens, $14.00 All Dealers’. EASTMAN KODAK CO., ROCHESTER, N. Y. Fumed Oak Mission Furniture For Living Room Furniture of this type is finely adapted for use in Living Rooma because it is built for everyday use, is practical in design and is fure niture that will contribute in largest possible measure, to solid coms= fort and thorough “livability.” Mission furniture is ideal from two standpoints—it is easy care for on account of its clean-cut lines, free from ornamentation, and it is economical because in it one may depend upon utmost sers vice. this store. There is no sham about the Mission Furniture to be found in It 1s Furniture made of sturdy material, honestly built, and beautifully finished in the rich nut brown fumed color. We specialize on this type of Furniture and right now we have a particularly fine showing which we invite you to see, ¢ COMPLETE HOME FURNISHERS #0-66 FORD BTREET HARTFORD 6 2ol WHERE QUAL 1S HIGHER THAN PRICE. WA il N AGENTS FOR GLENWOOD RANGES OVERLOOKI QarivoL GROUNDS