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W BR!TAIN DAILY HERALD | DflCWR BN P Vel B ’r‘. c ] Worth Up to $2.98. | | I | Hats Trimmed Free During This Sale } 188 MAIN STREET Y. M. C. A BLDG. OLDENBLUL MILLINERY COMPANY THREE DAY SALE elayed Shipments Result in Tremendous Millinery Bargains! Every woman knows of the trouble to receive promptly shipped _mer chandise. and right h hem at this ¢ csmbnanmcnt we are forced to experience nother delay. Thursday, wear due early in S('pu-mber _have qn!y arrived. BUT IT IS TO BE MOVED THIS RUN-DOWN WOMAN ViNOL And She Got Well—Her Nervousness Disappeared. Flint, Mich.—*I keep house for my family of six and got into a gencrally ! run-down condition. I was weak, nervous and could not sleep, and had heagache a good deal of the time. My doctor prescribed Vinol and it | made me well and strong. I am a good deal less nervous and can sleep nights.”—Clara 8mith, 1213 W. 4th Ave., Flint, Mich. We sell Vinol on a positive guaran- tec to make nervous, weak, run-down women well and strong or return their All shapes, all shades and your choice at 50c—it's a leader so select yours at once. Worth up to $2.98. The papers full of it Goods for Fall and_Winter AT ONCE. The lowest of all low money. Try it anyway. The Clark & Brainerd Co., Stores. John J. McBriarty, the country. m—— Drug- gists, Liggett's Riker-Hegeman Drug Nathan Noveck, W, H. Russell and at the best drug store in cvery town and city in CUT OUT MEATS IF KIDNEYS ARE TROUBLING YOU Uric Acid in meat excites Kidneys and Irritates the Bladder. Notced Anthority says we must flush Kidneys with Salts 1f Back hurts. ‘We are a nation of meat eaters and our blood is filled with uric acid, says & well-known authority, who warns us to be constantly on guard against kidney trouble. The kidncys do their utmost to free the blood of this irritating acld, but become wcak from the overwork; they get sluggish, the eliminative tissues clog and thus the waste is retained in the blood to poison the entire system. When your kidneys ache and feel like lumps of lead, and you have stinging pains in the back or the urine is cloudy, full of sediment, or the bladder is irritable, obliging you to seek relief during the night; when Yyou have severe headaches, nervous and dizzy spells, sleeplessness, acid stomach or- rheumatism in bad weather, get from your pharmacist about four ounces of Jad Salts; take a tablespoonful in a glass of water be- fore brealkfast cach morning and in a few days, your kidneys will act fine. This famous saits is made from ‘the acid of grapes and lemon juice, com- bined with lithia, and has been used for generations to flush and stimulate clogged kidneys, to neutralize the acids In urine so it is no longer a source |\ of irritation, thus ending urinary and bladder disorders. Jad Salts is inexpensive and cannot injure; makes a delightful efferves- cent lithia-water drink, and nobody can make a mistake by taking a little occasionally to keep the kidneys clean #nd active. A CLEAR COMPLEXION Ruddy Cheeles—! R W Says Dr. Edwardn, a Well-Known hio Physician Dr. F. M.Edwz:dsfiorl’lmw scores of women for li WiEh altve o, e o ive oil, naming Olive Tablets' You will know them their olive oolor. kY These tablets are wonder-workers on the liver and bowela, which cause a normal c&n’{ ing off the waste and poison- 'ous matter ia one’s system., "mhavnapalctam,unawlook.dnn eyes, pimples, coated tongue, listless, no-good fieeluu. iucuve bowda,r iwards’ Ofive Tal -ml note the pleasing Theusands of wom well as men take Dr. Edwards’ Ol.l T o) ve a!gets—thnuo- all out of lnru. nightly tm' a fine } umiuttokeeplnthepnkofmdlm Anldmwm 10e and 25¢ per 1 can’t rest, I can’tsleep, and most of all, I hardly dare go out, for when it starts ftching, 1 llmply m to scratch, no matter where I am.” “Don't worry a bit—just get a cake of Resinol Soap and a jar of Resinol Ointment. Use them according to di- rections and 1 am sure you will get pt relicf, and that your skin will g: all right in a few days.” Resinol Ointment is 80 nearly flesh-colored that it un be used on exposed surfaces without attracting undueattention. Contatts nothing thatcould irritate the tenderest skin. Resinol Ointment and Soap are sald by all druggists. FOR Qm ml The one-plece gown promises to be in demand, especially with the woman of slender proportions. The waistline in this instance is marked by a sash girdle of self-material with facing of lighter colored silk. The combination here is two tones of brown, the em- broidery being worked in the lighter shade, GONSPIRED WITH GERMAN AGENTS Wool Shipped to Sweden Really Was for Germany (Carrespondence of TV[Asaodated Press) London, Oct., 15.—Swedish army officials Were accused of conspiring to furnish millions of dollars worth of wool to Germany, in the course of an actlon in the Prize court here ths week. The case concerned a shipment of 1,500 bales of wool, consigned to tho Swedish army, but destined, accord- ing to the attorney gencral, for a German firm in Leipzig. The ship- ment is valued at $700,000, being only one of several seized en route from the Argentine Republic, Intercepted documents, produced in court, showed that the wool was not intended to remain in Sweden. That the Swedish army had no intention of using the wool was indicated, it was asserted, by the fact that its Tepre- sentatives made no apperaance in the court and put in no claim to the cargo. It was stated in court that the Brit- ish authorities had in the past, al- lowed several shipmenis of wool similarly consigned to the Swedish army administration to pass, in the confidence that the official nature of the consignees rendered it possible to accept their assyrances. ' “Is this a case where the wool was consigned to the army administration without its knawledge,” asked the presiding judge, “or is it a case where some unauthorized person used the name of the department?” The attorney general replied, court will ‘be able to judge of the practicability of anyone using the name of an official department with- ‘out some afficlal in authority be- coming aware of the fact. The in- tercepted letters show that this is a, part of a very bad business, a deli- berate scheme to pass wool into Ger- many at a moment when Germany is suffering from a great scarcity of that necessary commodity for war purs peses.” The presiding judge, in glving his verdist, condemning the entire ship- ment as a lawful prize, sald: “The intercepted documents show that the “The wool was intended for Germany. How it came about that the name of a neutral government was used by the real consignee we do not know, and it is not for us to make abservations in the matter. We can only express OUCH! MY BACK! RUB LUMBAGO PAIN AWAY Rub Backache away with small trial bottle of old “St. Jacobs Oil.” When your back is sore adn lame or lumbago, sciatica or rheumatism has you stiffened up, don’t suffer! Get a small trial bottle of old, bonest “St Jacobs Of” at any drug store, pouzr & ttle in your hand and rub it right | on your aching back, and by the time | you count fifty, the soreness and lame- | nees is gone. Don’t stay crippled! This soothing, , penetrating oil needs to be used only | once. It takes the pain right out and ends the misery. It is magical, yet absolutely harmless and doesn’t burn the skin. Hotmu elss nu'p- lumbago, sciati- backache rheumatism so 'HE OLABSIFIED COLUMNS | )rormm It n-nr disappoints! prlees on the llnm& of millinery is to Eakc it move. Every article here !a in style and of the very highest quality. Friday, Lyons Velvet Hats $1.98 WORTH UP TO $3.50 These are the high quality sonable and stylish Velvet Hats. Cholce of the best shades and of course the best cluded. shapes are Trimmings of Sale Days the Balance of the Week! 3 Prices on the Smartest Trimmed Hats Special $1.00, WORTH UP TO $2. TABLE NO 1.—Here we show the new arrivals in up-to-date trimmed tailored hats, See them, that's in- chic is no word for them. our advice. Choice at $1.00. All Kinds 1-2 Price GOLDENBLUM MILLINERY COMPANY, 188 Main St, Y. M. C. A. Bldg.j VELOUR COAT WITH BEAVER COLLAR SMALLEST SAILOR IN' ORCHESTRA But, At That, He Plays the Big- gest Bass Viol Now (Correspondence of The Assoclated Press.) < Base American Flotilla in British Waters, Oct. ‘The smallest Ameri- | can sailor in the whole European flotilla the place of honor in the | orchestra at the Sailar's club house here, and plays the biggest base viol that has ever been seen in Ireland. He comes from Chicago, and his in- strument cvertops him by a clean two feet when they are standing side by side. When he is seated, he |is completely hidden beyond the instru- ment. There are thirty-five pieces in the American orchestra, and by special arrangement with publishers in Ameri- ca, they receive proofsheets of all the latest American music and are play- ing it in their hut on the shores of Ireland almost before it has appeared It may not be true that (‘clothes make the man,” but it is easy to see that an article of clothing is making this young lady happy. And no won- der, for ghe is wearing a smart little velour coat. The snug-fitting collar of beaver in this girl's coat not only adds to its attractiveness, but is also utilitarian. out surprise that the repute of a neutral government has been em- ploved to get absolute contraband into Germany. We find that the destina- tion of the goods was Leipzig, and they are condemned as contraband destined for the enemy.” in 'w York. The orchestra leader is a pay-clerk on the flagship of the flotilla who de- votes several hours each day to prac- ticing new music with his ambitious musicians. They must learn a new ! set of music each week to go with the «Ver-changing bill of entertainment provided for the sailors. The leader is an organizer who has by sheer perservance whipped into shape an orchestra that delights the men of the flotilla. British and American naval and British military offlers of high rank are among the most apprecia- | tive in the audiences of every Friday and Saturday night. Moving pictures are always a part of these shows, the comics being es- | whose loud guffaws are in themselves enough to produce a laugh. The new- est feature, suggested by the orches- | tra. leader, is the singing by the en- tire audience of the latest American songs. The words are thrown on a | large screen and are sung with a will by the sallors. | "In these audiences of between 500 and 600 there always is a generous |pectnlly welcomed by the sallors MOTHER OF THIRTEEN TELLS WHAT This is from the mother of thirteen children. of her boys have gone into the army, and some are on the She says, in a letter to the U. S. Food Ad- battleships. ministration: WAR MEANS— Some _pbands of red, blue, yellow and black ‘“We mothers have given our sons and made no com- plaint. This is our patriotic duty. If it is the duty of the government to tear from our bosoms the sons we love 30 dearly, and send them to the battlefields in France, surely It means to decrease and grief.”’ to do anything to ‘Will you do nothing ment makes you? Or izen of the world’s do it of your own ought tot it is the dutv of the.government TO MAKE THOSE WHO HAVE NO SONS SAVE FOOD. We have given our sons :0 the Army and Navy, and our daughters to the Red Cross. Now are you going to do anything te lessen our burdent [ want to let you know what war means to the mother: her days by sorrow Now are you going lessen her burdent unless the govern- will you, being a eit- greatest democracy, volition because you $6.00. Children’s Hats lncluded YOUR CHOICE AO9c¢C sprinkling of British sailors and sol- | diers who are urged to avall them-“ selves of all the privileges of the club- | house. They can even sleep there aver- night in large dormitories pravided for all men in either branch of ser- vice who may have over-night liberty from ship or barracks. For a clean, comfortable bed and a shower bath the nominal charge of a shilling made. price, New scenery made in London is the latest addition to the club. It was put in place by the flagship’s penters whose handiwork is seen in many parts of the club. done thelr first share work leaving the United States by erecting a stecl hut to house the moving pic- ture machine and its operator. fire laws required this little detail. The only discordant note in con- nection with the club comes from the native population because they are not permitted to view its wonders. They must be content to stand out- | side and listen to the music and laughter of the happy men in uniform It was explained to them that their | own town council asked that the pub- | lic be barred. The request was made | at the behest of the proprietors of the | town’s twa little picture theatres who | saw a threatened loss of patronage. COLORFUL, WITH MOLESKIN CROWN | The popularity of the turban never wanes, especially when it is made on lines particularly suited to the tastes of the majority. This model strikes 2 new note In that it is bullt up with velvet trimmed round and round with strands of gold cord. The crown and tiny bunch of ‘grapes are made of moleskin. Special $1.98 WORTH UP TO $5.00. TABLE NO. 2.—And still another show- ing of trimmed tailored hats at this won- derfully low price of $1.95—if they were here a week ago the price would be at least and Saturday Special $2.98 ‘WORTH UP TO $6.00. E TABLE NO. 3.—An unmatchable assort- ment of the most stylishly trimmed hats of the season—all smart and extra choice ‘Worth up to $6, now $2.98. Mattcawan Velours $3.98 This present shipment qellyed as it 1s represénts’ | the last call—and here’s the special price, '3...» The best qunli(y and thé finest shades. is | The best food ashare is cooked | i on the premises and served at cost | car- | The iron- | workers from the same ship have 2lso | since | The | WHEN YOUR NEWSBOY FAILS TO LEAVE YOUR ERAL UNION And paper will be sent promptly to you by messenger. We want you to have the HERALD every night to make sure that it is delivered to you we have ranged with the WESTERN UNION to have a me! senger boy rush a copy to your home. This service given at our expense. It will cost you nothing. We' want you to be satisfied and when you are we fi cel ~mply compensated for whatever effort we may ma’ for your benefit. : SO, IF YOUR NEWSBOY FAILS TQ LEAY THE HERALD BY 6 O°’CLOCK °PHONE WES ERN UNION. YOULL GET A COPY SOON Al’s Not So Simple thought she was * Food Administration conservation speech, war; if we anpply ‘zh.y csn win.’* ', not 30 simple w, A who thoughtful, heard = official say in a food ‘‘Food will win tac really, it isnot. - Wehvsgottohavegmwnhnngothhnm wo havo got to have ships, we have got to have money. But the guns can’t be fired. the men cannot icht, the ships oannot run, the money will avail nothmg thm.il a0t food behind them. Food WILL win tho war. Lnokolfoodwfllmtaw The lady misun: