New Britain Herald Newspaper, April 6, 1917, Page 15

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Shestnut Street Resident Says That, He Received Wonderful Results From - the, Famous Remedy, Lax-a-Tone Mr. John Schweitzer, 391 Chestnut St;, This City, Is only” .One t_pf Many: Endorsers of Herbal Lax-a-Tone. Mr.~J.' R. Martin, the Lax-p-Toné pert at the Economy New Jngland Drug /Co., 365 Main St., saye that jany New Britain citizens are endors- the new Herbal Tonic, Lax one, and he is glad to refer as to T the merits of this remedy to your _ own friends and neighbors and wants g people of New Britain to remem- that he is going to use home peo- I8 from now om. This is something " ‘that is unheard of ag/a rule in adver- sed medicines as most of them use de testimonials. That Lax-a- 'one is a superior remedy for ‘consti- 9 lon, sour acid stomach, bilious at- t#cks, gas, bloat,. nervousness and that all-tired-out, run-down feeling will be attested to by vour own friends and nedghbors. Mr. Martin says " “he today bublishes the signed testi- mial of Mr. Schweitzer, who says: % T" have been a sufferer for a long time with malaria, any one who has suffered from that troyble needs no introductien to the miserable symp- toms. That tired-out feeling you feel more dead than alive, no ap- petite and absolutely no a¥abition. To make a long story short, I have taken Herbal'Lax-a-Tone and I find it an ex- cellent remedy and am glad to recom- mend it.” Such statements as the above are bound to carry weight and at least are #onvincing, so all sufferérs from ‘this malady and those suffering from indigestion and symptoms given first paragraph will get excellent' re- sulfs with the use of Herbal Lax-a- Tone. The Lax-a-Tone man is at the Economy New:England Drug Co., 365 Main St., where he is introducing this remedy to the New Britain publi¢. Hey will remain until 10 p. m. Satur- day evenings for those unable to see him during the week. | BEST PLACE TO GET FASTER CLOTHES; MEN AND WOMEN gse bear in mind that you, can buy Easter s atas low prices as' at any other store in town. You can wear these stylistt clothes and enjoy’ waut till ‘afte On any purchase of $135 or lcss, $1.00 down géts the cigthes; then pay as yOu wear, $1,00 a week, Liberal ms on larger purchases.—Menter, _ TERMS: ", gay while wearing little ‘each- payda e now: Men?g £ _-Men s and Young Men’s Suits, $15 to $25. Women’s Spring Suits, $15 to $40. \I’EN'S DEPARTMENT $22.00 15.00 6.00 3.50 10.00 Boys' Sults 1.50 to ' WOMEN’S DEPARTMENT <+ 300 to 00 to Millinery . 2.50 to ONE PRICE TO ALL—CASH OR CREDIT ALTERATIONS ARE FREE ‘WE: DO AS WE ADVERTISE s o B ‘137 Allyn St. L] Father Time with his hour-glass takes the meas- of tires -with everything else. 3 of them the-tires must have the goods in -them; 3 gmhermore they must have constant care. Such care is Jack’s specialty. That’s just what he’s in business for. Jack s tire service means tire economy. ¥ To' get the - miles Flat Tire ? CHARTER 4641 That’s the Remedy ENTRUST YOUR TIRE TROUBLES TO US THE AUTO TIRE CO. ? JACK THE TIRE EXPERT _Hartford. where | in | [ties declare, was mérely a Nevertheless, the tragedy is ‘weeks ago she suggested that | tries BEAUTY STIRSFJAPS | MURSER OF GERMAN | TRAFFIC IN MEXICS 10 BE IW IMPROVED Irma Yon Saldern’s Deatly Not | Many Railroad Lines to Be Ex- Connected With Polltlcs Tokio, April 6.—Japanese authori- ties assert that there is no evidence that the recent murder of Mrs. Irma Von Saldern, daughter of Vice Ad- miral Eduard Von Capelle, the Ger- man minister of navy, was an act of vengeance upon the German chief, and say that the murder was committed undoubtedly by a Japanese burglar. The fact that the crime oc- curred at a time when Germany's wunrestricted submggine warfare was holding world ‘interest, the authori- coincidence. widely dircussed in <diplomatic circles. Irma Von Saldern was a beautiful woman of twenty-eight* yvears who passed her time in seclusion near the German prisoners’ camp at Fukuoka, the southernmost island of Kkushu. Her' husband, Captain Siegfried Von Saldern, was one of the most pronf- inent German officers taken prisoner by the Japanese at the surrender of the German fortress at Tsing-tau. Von Saldern was a member of a well known German family with a seat at Dessau and his marriage with the daughter of the German minjster was a happy one. In China, Lap- tain Von Saldern was ‘an intimate friend ,of Governor Von .Waldeck, the comm:!nder of Tsing-tau fortress. Af- ter the capitulation Mrs. Von Saldern, with her two children, followed hér husband to Japan and rented a fash- ijonable Japanese house near the compound in which her husband was an officer-prisoner. There she lived quietly, rarely leay- ing her, children except to visit her husband* and some of his officer friends during their illness. A few she leave Japan with one of her boys, to further his education and try to re- turn to Germany. Her husband urged her to remain. She consented. One morning, when a donvestié en- | tered, she found Her mistress stratch- ed upon the floor of a bedroom, life- less. An electric cord bound flghtl) about her neck showed.that she had been strangled to death. The police reconstructed the crime in this way: The assassin entered armed with a poignard or short sword afl stabbed her. When she became unconscious or helpless,- he cut the electric wire or cord which connected the lamp with a wall fixture and, making a noose, choked the woman to death. There were evidences that burglary was committted. The next act of the tragedy came three days later, -twenty-four hours aftér the funeral of Mrs. Von Sal- dern. Captain Von Saldern was, inconsolable. The fact that he had urged ' his \wife to remain preved upon his mind and, apparent- 1y he did not forgive himself. About the hour of his wife’s murder, he detached from the wall of his house an electric cord similar to that with which she was strangled, fixed it to the chandelier in his salon and com- mitted suicide by hanging. The press maintains silence cerning the tragedy. The police are making every effort to discover the murderer. I’;\I:.\('E TOO EXPENSIVE. N MexXico City, April - 6.—Plans are now under consideration for simplify- ing and cutting down the plans of the new legislative palace.” Work on this great building which is intended to hguse the. Mexican congress and waich, as projected, ‘would have been tiae largest legislative building in the world was begun under President Diaz. - The steel framework of the buildifig wasfcompleted, but no work has been done on the building since 1910. It is egtimated that it would cost $32,000,000 to_complete the build- ing under the original plans and it is proposed to simplify these plans and utilize the work already done to form part of a less profentious.struc- ture, \ R. R. CAR GOES TO MUSEUM. Mexico City, April 6.—The. private railway car formerly used by Pres- ident Benito Juarez and later used by President Lerdo ‘de Tejada has been presented to the National Museum by General Herlberto Jara. The car which was made in England over fifty years ago,/is a beautiful piece of workmeanship the interior decoratiofs representlng incidents in the life of St. Patrick. When the Constitution- alist army left Mexico City for Vera Cruz'in 1914 the car was pressed into use and - has heen in opgration throughout the campaigns since thu time. NOW OFFICIALLY DEAD. .London, April 4—The latest group of British prisoners returned from Bermany /includes three “den(’(" S0l diers, that is men who were long ago officially reported dead and have heen so entered in the records of the War Office. For a fortnight three sol- djers have been paving daily visits to ‘Whitehall in an endeavor to persuade the government that they are alive ond entitled to collect their back pay. . The War Office declares they are dead as far as the payrolls are concerned and must remain so. Only a special grant from parliament can improve their situation. GREAT BRITAIN \ DOG COUNTRY. London, April 4.—An unofiicial es- timate of the number of damestic animals in various European coun- shows ~ that Great Britaif 4 governments. naval cqn- | possesses more dogs than any olhe:‘. nation. The nwmber of British dogs is given as slightly over 4,000,000, as campared with 2,800,000 in France and 1,100,000 in Germany. fended by Government Mexico City, April 6.—Rapid /und immediate extension of railroads in Mexico is projected by the departiment of communications and public works in conjunction avith the various state Arrangements’ already have been begun to complete the line from Santa Lucretia, on the Isthmus of;Tchuantepec line, to Merida, Yuca- tan. This line when completed will form the connecting link in the north, and south route from Ciudad Juarew: on the American border, to Megida. It will run. through San Juan ‘;aa- tista in Tabasco and Campeche. The state of Yucatan, one of - the ‘most prosperous in the republie will finance the new line in conjunction with varl- ous electric lines connecting with it. This’ right of way formerty was con- trolled by a concession to foreign cap- have advanced and that one must pay almost DOUBLE last year’s prices. This is due to the consequent! high cost. ital but the wnces-lon was declared forfeitea becduse tl\e holders falled to complete the work according,to its terms. & Anether projected line will ¢onnect the ‘Atlantic and Pacific coasts of Mexico traversing the country from east to west from Tampico, the main Atlantic oil port, to San Blas.fita.te of Nayrit, formerly the territory of Te- pic. This route will link up Aguas Calientes, Zacatecas and other im- portant cities with the line of the Southern Pacific ofiMexico which now hag extended 'its llne from Nogales to of the city of Tepic. Notice has been given by the partment: of communications to the Southern < Pacific company that it must, continue its line from Compost- ela to Guadalajara, according to its concession, Yand begin_this work of construction at once, or the conces- sion under Wwhih the tompany oper- ates in Mexico will be declared void. The’distance involved is not great but construction involves several conipli- ‘cated’enginkering problems, including iwo 1ong tunnels through the oun- tains! © The original concessioff pro- vides for a bonus of 500 pesos per kilometer". (about three-fifths gf a mile( from, the government to company for construction of this line. The department of communications in ity warning to the Southern Pacif- ic company declares the government will offer every aid in the building of the line including financial assist- ance and expediting of supplies. / de- 'ompostela a short distance south the. Ké 2ps Her Cblldren In Pepfpct Dr. CaldwelPs Syrup Pepsin the Family Laxative for . Many Years. d Mrs. Aug. Doellefeld of Carlyle. NS recently -wrote to Dr. Caldwell, at Morfticello, IIE, that she has used Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pe in her home for a number of years, and would not be without it, as with it she has been able to keep her four children in per- fect -health. « Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin is a combination of simple laxative herbs with pepsin thdt acts on the bowels in an easy, natural way, and regulates the aetion of this most important function. Nearly all the sickness to which children are subject imtraceable to vel inaction. and a mjld; depend- abléTIaxative, such as DrCaldwell's Syrup Pepsin should have a place in every family medicine chest. 1t i pleasant to the taste and children lik: it, and take it readily while it is equally effective for Dr. Caldwell’s Syru in is sold in. drug steres everywhere for fifty cenl a bottle. To avoid imitations and ineffective substitutesibe sure you get Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin. See ‘.i N that a facsimile of Dr. the vellow cirlun in which is packed. trial bottle, to Dr. W.'B. Caldwell, 455 | ton st., Monticello. Illinois. ‘Copyright 1917 b The "Newark Shoe \"Stores Co. oreYouPaytS—*b $1forSh0es- is you start out to buy a new pair of shoes for Easter, you will find that prices enormously everywhere, scarcity of leather and its There is no relief in sight in the price situation—in fact every indication pomm to further heavy advancesm the near future. But before you $6 or $7 a pair for shoes, READ EVERY WOR%F ‘THIS, for it points the way OUT of paying such prices for the present at least ‘We are probably the largeat prodiicers of popular- priced shoes in the world. stores throughout the Umnd Stata million pairs a year., Realizing t through our 257 far exceeds three that prices were due for a big advance, we made our contracts in 1915 and 1916 sufficiently large enough to see us through until the mddh of 1917. Asa result of our foresight, we escaped the The Newsark SKoe penalty which ‘Ask For No. 352—Men’s Tan Blucher Oxford— . medium ' high toe—a smart up-to-the-minute model, not too extreme yet in perfect style. \ $2.95 is worn and praised by more than Three Milllon Men., 1t is sold through our own 257 stores in 97 United States. 238 Other Smart Styles for Men at $2.50, $2.95 and $3.50 N Icading cities of the Ask For Men's Tan Cordovan, straight lace— others paid for waiting, and as a able to give our customers ‘the SAME REMARKABLE VALUE as we ALWAYS gave them, Tomorrow our .windows will reveal a digplay of fashions and values for EASTER that absolutely surpasses any exhibit of the kind we have ever shown. You will see Shoes Worth $3.50 for $ 2,50 Shoes{Worth $4.00 for $ 2,25 Shoes Worth $5.50 for $3,352 238 styles are here for ¥our choosing—ranging through all the variations of style and leather combina- tions now in vogue. by 323 By all means see! this wonderful display before you buy anywhere—and if you can afford to buy TWO pairs, by all means do so—for. the NEXT time you buy, perhaps prices will be much higl Come tomorrow and save $lto $2 by your entapnsa Ask For No. 360—Men's Tan Calf Oxford—English last. A dignified model and one of the most clean cut styles of the English tendency we have eve produced. For Your Boy! We are otill oo lar lines of Boy’s NE! g;o.. at $1.75 and $2.50 a lnir Nm you pay advanced l'ieu elu- where, take our advice and bu sturdy shoes at - - 31.75 and 82.50 4 NewarK Shoe Stores Company NEW BRITAIN STORE, 234 Main St. Near R. R. Crossing Other Newark Storcs Nearby:—Hartford, Waterbury and springfield.—Open Monday and Saturday cvenings.—When ordering by mail include 10c—PARCEL POST CHARGES Caldwell signature and his portrait appear ¢ the bott free charge, can be obtained by writ ‘Was)

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