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IS MEDICINE | WOMEN VALUE psitively Relievesthe | Suffering. ore Convincing Proof. en Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable hpound was first introduced its cur- e powers were doubted and had to roved. But the proof came, and fually the use of it le country. Now that hundreds of sands of en have experienced ost beneficial effects from its use value has become generally recog- d and it is now the standard medi- for w n’s ills. he following letter is only one of the sands on our files. pnnison, Texas. — “T cannot feel I have done my duty until I tell It Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable pound has done for me. I sufrered 2 female troubles so I could hardly around and do my work. I was nervous, and had dizzy spells, heat Jies, and headaches until life was a flen. My husband brought me a bot- [pf Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable ound and I soon began to improve. Jatinued its use and am now free ) all pains and aches that made life irden. You may use this letter in y you like for I want the world how what a grand medicine Lydia inkham’s Vegetable Compound is.” s. G. 0. LOWERY, 911 Barrett , Denison, Texas. rite the Lydia E. Pinkham Medi- Co., Lynn, Mass., for free advice, 'RINK HOT WATER | [BEFORE BREAKFAST | WILSON REBUKES Amateur Bom Strategy Try-. | Washington, Jan. His voice | showing indigna President Wilson | rply resented yesterday what he 2 »ffhand condemna- 3 1t National Guard | system of the country, embodied in | a memorial presented to him at the ¢ White House by a delegation from i the Maryland League for national| defense. The memo as signed by some of the leadi more, 1t asked the president mend to congress the en law providing for u and service. It also recommend in the me actment of a law to proper authorities to draft into the ranks of the regular army a suffi- cient number of men to police the | Mexican border. The memorial said the United States was in “actual 1 ¢ el of being involved in t war,” that Secretary given w toward the Vi na that | we ‘“have pract ¢ at this time available for our defense in case we are attacked by any of the arnied governments of the world.” I ed the resort to the use of the a for the defense of the Mex- ican border b, rting that “such a system is a disgrace to a civilized peopl Major Randolph Barton, spokesman of the delegation, read the memorial, and then Dr. Hugh Hampton Young of Johns Hopkins University read a statement on behalf of Drs. Welsh, ctment of a 1 training | ed him- to | ©time the en- | uthorize the | ‘ari tys you really feel clean, sweet and fresh inside, and, are seldom ill. ed tongue, foul breath or y headache; or, if your s sour and turn into gas and you have a real surprise await- ou. morrow morning, Immediately arising, drink a glass of hot with a teaspoonful of limestono hate in it. This is intended to neutralize and then wash out of stomach, liver, kidneys and ; feet of intestines all the indi- Jle waste, poisons, sour bile and | s, thus cleasing, sweeting and ying the entire alimentary can- ose subject to sick headaches, ache, bilfous attacks, constipation 1y form of ‘stomach trouble, are to get a quarter pound of lime- phosphate from the drug stors egin enjoying this morning in- ath. It is said that men who' try this become enthu- o and keep it up daily. It is a id health measure for it is more ant to keep clean and pure on pside than on the outside, be- the skin pores ' do not absorb rities into the blood, causing dis- while the bowel pores do. fi principle of bathing inside 1s ) ew, as milions of people prac- it. Just as hot water and soap se, purify and freshen the skin, | ot water and a teaspoonful of stone phosphate act on the sto- L, liver, kidneys and bowels. stone phosphate is an inexpen- white powder and almost taste- [YOME| (PRNNIED HIsH-0-ME) DS CATARRH, ASTHMA, back. Sald and guaranteed by 5 Clark & Brainerd Co. iss RUBY GLOSS Shows the Easy Way to @l Good Housekeeping DUSTS, CLEANS, POLISHES Your Furniture, Piano, Woodwork, Automobile, Finish- ed Floors, and all Varnished Surfacen. Clear, pure and free from any m. Will not gather dust, as it gives a hard, dry, bright loss; & brighter ustre than wax and easler to use. FOR FLOORS TUSH bney willy refunded. AN A, ANDREWS &CO0. 2 MAIN STREET. You Wan: Good :Bottled Beer, Wine or Liquors, Order Same:from PHILIP BARDECK, ch St. ' "Phofi#*482-2 and | Finney, and other members of the group of Johns Hopkins medical s entists, urging ‘compulsory militars training to improve the health of the voung men of the country. President Wilson listened courte- ously and patiently to the reading of the resolutions and then surprised his | visitors by the vigor of his dissent, He | objected to the manner in which the memorial attacked the National Guard system of the country and the effects of the use of the militiamen along the Mexican border. The President’s Reply. “Gentlemen,” he said, “I do not need to prove to you or anybody my | deep interest in this subject. I will frankly say to you I would have been | more impressed by this memorial if it had been expressed in-more re- | strained language. From some of | the unqualified statements in this paper I must frankly dissent. I think it due to my cqlleagues on the hill (the Capitol) to say so at this off- | hand condemnation of the system | which they adopted after long debate | upon the urgency of many of the leading citizens of the country; it is | the least that I can do. You do not | commend a cause which deserves thé most serious consideration by = pre- senting it as you have presented- it. “These things impress me the more PREMIER TERAUCHI AND CABINET MAY BE FORCED OUT 4 IELD.MARSHARL TERAUCHI A - | Japan is confronted with an in- | ternal political crisis, like its allies in | the war. The opposition to the ad- | ministration of Field Marshal Count | Terauchi has opened a vigorous cam- | paign on the ground that the Terauchi | nonpartisan cabinet was formed in | violation of the spirit of the consti- | tution. The constitutional party { which has a majority in the house of peers a under the leadership of | | Viscount Kato, former minister of | foreign affai has joined hands | ! with the Nationalist group in the | lower house for war against the pre- mier, | The battle will be fought out in the | diet. Count Terauchi and Viscount | | Motono, foreign minister, delivered | | addresses in defense of the adminis- tration. The Japanese press expects the out- | come of the crisis to be dissolytion land a new election. ing to Run the Army | latter VGLUNTEER CABINET :: | vou rvice NEW BRITAIN hat we have heard from the Unquestionably ed and will i but it can \ad without compuls ce and compulsory does not meet the dif have alluded to. in the army of the brief United ates withdraws men from civil pur- uits just as much ice cept the recent serv- No servic with profes- does. army on the border a standing DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, JANUARY 26, 1917. sional oldiers prevents that »us consideration with the country, sional and frequent rawa d we in Washington, of course, men from civil purs t may | share and feel the reat tides of be inevitable, but what you are pro- | opinion in the United Stg ing does not meet the difficulty | sure that, speaking, if T ch you condemn These for the members of the ho are of the utmost in & ntatives and the culty and are not to be settled X | all bus of doing the w cathedra. And vet, notwith: for the defense of the count the fact that 1 think you ha must and 11 be done, but we must too far, T will say to you t se debate by having too dog- ‘ourse, this will have my m. “n opinion as to a method. 1s consideration. It is receiving know that you will understand the spirit in which T make that pro- test and this statement.” The memorial was signed by such prominent Baltimoreans as Henry Stockbridge, judge of the court of ap- peals of Maryland; Alexander Brown, William L. Marbury, a ¢; Robert Garrett, W. Bruce, David J. Lewis, Wil- liam TIngle, banker; Phillips Lee Goldsborough, former governor of I Maryland; John B. Ramsey, and oth- 3 T Y 70 Years Old and Not A Wrinkle Counntess de Chevanne says her astonishingly youthful appearance is due to Creme Tokalon (Roscated). Absolutely prevents formation of wrinkles. —— Acts on wrinkle ready formed, in three weeks Success guaranteed or momey funded. Scld by All leading drug and department stores 'WHY MASK THE TRUTH? Why Should The Public Be Kept In The Dark? Why Not OUT With The Facts So That Every Man and Woman May KNOW What Is Ahead And Prepare For That Which Is To Come? ERE ARE THE FACTS! Read Every Word That Follows and Act As Your Own Judgment Dictates. ‘America is going begging for leather! The nations of Europe have gobbled it up until there is no more left to gobble! Dazzled by European gold—the tanners have sold, sold, sold until they not only have no more to sell, but have sold a good part of that which should have been kept for OURSELVES! The warring nations need food and clothing the same as we do—and the only way we can keep any for OURSELVES is to pay American manufacturers as much as EUROPE is willing to pay. And that’s what we have been doing—and we will have to g()dNTINUE doing it for sometime even AFTER the war is settled. There you have the answer why everything is costing you 8o dearly these days. Now, then—look what’s happening in the SHOE industry. The prices for leather have taken such enormous advances that shoe manufacturers have been: obliged to raise prices higher than they have ever been in the history of the United States! And they are predicting that Shoes that were $4 a pair in 1912 will cost EIGHT dollars a pair before the end of 1917! In fairness to the public why not OUT with the facts and TELL the people about it NOW—so that everybody may have the chance to buy for future needs BEFORE FURTHER enor- mous raises in prices come? You’ve ALREADY had a sample of what’s coming. Cer- tain manufacturers and retailers are telling you in the news- papers and magazines that shoes at $4 are a thing of the past; that they are now going to cost you $6, $7 and $8.00 a pair! And WE, who are paying for this nation-wide campaign of enlightenment,—WE ALSO will have to charge you MORE in the near future, the SAME AS OTHER BIG CONCERNS. But before we DO raise our prices, we are going to GIVE EVERY- BODY A CHANCE TO BUY AT OUR PRESENT LOW PRICES—the LOWEST, at this moment, in the country. There- fore, while our supply holds out, you may buy: She NS 25o/0 Shoes Worth $2‘95 $3.50 $4.50 for - Shoes Worth $5.50 for - Smart Styles No, these are NOT reduced prices, BUT THEY ARE LOW- ER THAN PRESENT WHOLESALE PRICES. And before the end of this year, unless conditions change very quickly, the shoes we are offering you TODAY at $2.95 will cost you $5.00 per pair! You ask how can we sell you a shoe, for example, at $2.50 today, of the same high standard as we have been selling all over the United States for years, when the same article costs $3.50 at WHOLESALE? Because WE had the foresight and the courage to go into the market BEFORE THE PRICE OF LEATHER WAS KNOCKED INTO A COCKED HAT! In 1915 we contracted for enough to last us until the middle of 1917.—ELEVEN MIL- LION DOLLARS WORTH. At this moment we have made up—and in process of manu- facture NEARLY THREE MILLION PAIRS of NEWARK SHOES. Were we not as big as we are—and as powerful—and as foresighted—we would be in the same boat with the rest. * * * You know that it requires no big advertising campaign to sell flour at $4 a barrel when there is an unlimited and unquench- able demand for it at $10 a barrel. And by the same token, it isn’t necessary to spend money advertising Shoes at $2.50, worth $4.00; or Shoes at $2.95, worth $4.50; or Shoes at $3.50, worth $5.50—for we can sell every pair we’ve got and have more takers for them than we have shoes! But this is how we look at it: We’ve got the Shoes, and even though other manufacturers tell us we are fools to sell them at these low prices, when we could get the ADVANCED prices just as easily and STILL be under everybody else—WE ARE NOT GOING TO TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THE SITUATION. We figure that by acting on the principle that “one good turn deserves another,” we will gain tremendously in the GOOD WILL OF THE PUBLIC—and that in the end our profit will be the GREATER by having made thousands of NEW loyal cus- tomer-friends by sticking to this policy. . With a string of 257 NEWARK Shoe Stores in every prin- cipal city in the United States, you can see that it won’t be long before the present available supply of these NEWARK Shoes at $2.50, $2.95 and $3.50 is absorbed. So we urge upon you NOT to put off your visit here a single day, but to come TOMORROW —and come prepared to buy a YEAR’S supply if you possibly can. If you can’t afford to buy more than one pair tomorrow— we will gladly reserve as many extra pairs as you wish for delivery a week or so later. And don’t forget the BOY. You don’t want to pay $2.50 latetr‘s%ns[f)or Shoeds that"cosé $1.75 now, or $3.50 for Shoes that cost $2.50 now—do you? ut that’s what you’ll have t YOU DON’T ACT NOW. i SR So come TOMORROW—and you’ll never regret it. Smart Styles For Men flnd Boys Operating 257 Newark Shoe Sto;'e: In The United States—The Greatest Enterprise of its Kind in The World. ——NEW BRITAIN STORE— 324 MAIN S’i., Near R. R. Crossing Other Newark Stores Nearby : Hartford, Waterbury and Springfield. Open Monday and Saturday Evenings. When ordering by mail include 10c Parcel Post Charges.‘”