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THANKSGIVING OFFERINGS A remarkable selection of the very best makes in SILVERWARE, CUT GLASS and CHINA at last year’s prices, you will be surprised how far your dollar will go in our store. | Our Victrola Department is complete in every respect, all the latest models, from~ $20.00 up, at very convenient terms. A SUGGESTION: Reserve your VICTROLA early, and you will not be dis- appointed, many were last year. Step in and Henry Morans, Jevelr 321 Main St., New Britain, Conn. A R R plg I 1 T FOR SALE. Modern 3-Tencment House of 18 Rooms in Fine Repair With Extra Lot and All Improvements. H. N. LOCKWOOD, Real Estate and Insurance OITY HALL A MILD, PLEASANT Se CIGUB Saturday Sale OF SLIGHTLY USED AND SHOP WORN Talking Machines Every instrument is guaranteed to be in perfect running order, and will be sold SATURDAY at these ridiculously low prices. If you have been thinking of getting a Talking Machine this is your opportunity. COME QUICK FOR FIRST CHOICE 2 GRAFONOLAS ................ each $15.00 With Records and Needles. ~ Worth $30. — 2 GRAFONOLAS ................ each $10.00 With Records and Needles. Value $20. 1 GRAFONOLA 55 With Records and Needles. Mahogany Finish. Value $100.00. : 1 NEW CRESCENT TALKING MACHINE .. $75 A beautiful cabinet instrument in Mahogany Finish. Worth $110.00. 1 VICTOR TALKING MACHINE ........ $8.00 With Records and Needles. 4 CONQUEROR INSTRUMENTS ..... each $5.00 Worth $12.00. 5 EDISON PHONOGRAPHS ......... Each with 100 Records. EDISON CYLINDER RECORDS '+ 25 for $1.00. T ———— OTHER BARGAINS NOT LISTED HERE. EASY TERMS IF YOU WISH. DISCOUNT FOR CASH. each $6.00 BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1917. BACK TO THE Wo0DS GOES ARTHUR WoODS Mayor-Elect Hylan Has No Inten-' tion of Retaining Commissioner New York, Nov. 9.—Mayor-Elect John F. Hylan, it was sald vesterday, has no intentlon of retaining Arthur Woods at the head of the police de- | partment. Friends of the mayor- | elect said that he expected to find a | man after his own liking who mea- sured up to the job to succeed the police commissioner before January 1, when the mayor-elect assumes office. | Unless Judge Hylan had received the | resignation of Commissioner Woods by the time he was ready to appoint | his successor, the police commission- | er, it was saild, would be asked to | retire. At the headquarters of Judge Hylan | persons who enjoy the confidence of the mayor-elect sald last night that' he regarded the administration of the police department under Commission- er Woods as having been one of the ! vital issues in the ‘campaign, even | though less attention was paid to it! by Judge Hylan in his speeches than | to some other branches of the Mitchel H administration. The Wire-tapping epi- | sode, which aroused such a storm of protest in certain quarters at the time of the charities investigation, and in which the police department under Commissioner Woods was directly concerned, was condemned hoth by OXMOOR Tammany Hall and its organized al- lies, the Democratic Fusior commit- tee and the Business Men's associa- tion in their platforms. Judge Hylan, it was said, felt that he was bound by the terms of the platformx on which he was elected. ' Tt is the belief of Judge Hylan's friends that Commissioner Woods will follow the usual practice and submit his resignation when the change of administration occurs, even though a provision in the New York city charter provides for a five-year term, which in the case of the pres- ent incumbent does not expire until April, 1919. But even should this! belief not prove justified, the charter provisions relating to the police com- ionership are regardea by Judge Hylan's friends as sufficiently plastic to provide the mayor-elect with the means of creating a vacancy at the head of the police department when- ever he desires to do so. It was said at Hylan headquarters | last night that the mayor-elect as vet | had not given serious consideration to the task of finding a successor for | Commissioner Woods. Reports indi- i cating that the police commissioner- ship would go to a “‘good Tammany man,” of whom some have been named in the speculation over patron- age, and that Charles 1. Murphy, leader of Taminany hall, wes particu larly anxious to have his wishes con- sulted in the filling of thix office, was said both at the headquarters of Judge Ilylan and at Tammany hall, might be discarded as without jus- tification. Judge Hylan, it was said last night ! by his friends, was keenly alive to the fact that mayors stood or fell by the public verdict on the administra- | tion of the police department, Lead- | er Murphy also, it was asserted, was not oblivious of the fact that, while Judge Hylan was mayor, Tammany | Look and Feel Clean, Sweet and Fresh Every Day | Drink a glass of real hot water before breakfast to wash out poisons. Life is not merely to live., but to live well, eat well, digest well, work ep well, look well. What B orious condition to attain, and yet how very easy it is if one will only adopt the morning inside bath. Folks who are accustomed to feel dull and heavy when they arise, split- ting headache, stuffy from a cold, foul tongue, nasty breath, acid stomach, can, instead, feel as fresh as a daisy by opening the sluices of the system each morning and flushing out the whole of the internal poisonous stag- nant matter. | Joveryone, whether ailing. sick or well, should each morning, before breakfast, drink a glass of real hot water with a teaspoonful of limestone phosphate in it to wash from the stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels the previous day’s indigestible waste, sour bile and poisonous toxins; thus cleansing, sweetening and purifying the entire alimentary canal before putting more food into the stomach. The action of hot water and limestone phosphate on an empty stomach is wonderfully invigorating. It cleans out all the sour fermentations, gases, | waste and acidity and glves one a | splendid appetite for breakfast. While ! you are enjoying yaur breakfast the | water and phosphate is quietly ex- | tracting a large volume of water from | the blood and getting ready for a thorough flushing of all the inside organs. | The millions of people who are bothered with constipation, bilious | spells, stomach trouble, rheumatism; others who have sallow skins, blood | disorders and sickly complexions are | urged to get a quarter pound of lime- stone phophate from the drug store ! which will cost very little, but is sufficient to make anyone a pro- nounced crank on the subject of in- ltcrna.l sanitation. | department would arouse & storm of | that organization. | preparing to go away for a rest, as would be on trial, and that any at- tempt on the part of Tammany hall to lay violent hands on the police resentment at the very beginning of the new administration. Among the friends of Judge Hylan the predic- tion was made freely yesterday that the mayor-elect would make clear to the political leaders that he did not need any help in picking a new police commissioner. A statement made yesterday by | County Clerk William F. Schneider, chairman of the democratic fusion committee, which body was largely in- strumental in making Judge Hylan the nominee for mayor, was regarded as not altogether vold of significance. ‘Wants Hylan to Be Foot Free. “The appointment of a police com- missioner should be left entirely to the mayor,” said Mr. Schneider. “The political organizations which wers behind Judge Hylan's candidacy should scrupulously avoid any divid- ed responsibility in the administra- tion of the police department. Tam- many’s political foes have always made the police department an issue in city electlons, and the course of Tammany in relation to police ad- ministration has been disastrous to The selection of a police commissioner should be under- taken by Judge Hylan solely on his own responsibility and without any interference or advice by politicians.” ' Leader Murphy did not appear at Tammany hall yesterday.. It was learned that the Tammany chief was is his practice after a hard-fought campaign. In his absence Congress- man Thomas F. Smith, secretary of Tammany hall, did the talking. Constipation Makes Baby Uncomfortable When its tender little organs are bound up with a congestion of stomach waste in the bowels, Baby is a mighty uncomfortable morsel of humanity, and reflects its dis- comfort in’ its disposition. If Mother will just give it a tiny dose of a mild laxative, such as Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin, the sti vill quickly loosen and , 2and her child be nor- 's Syrup Pepsin is ble for children, ins no opiate or ng a_combination e herbs with pep- gentle in action, and very palata- sell Dr. for fifliy cents hot ree of be obtain Caldwell, 456 Wash- o 5 5 ington St., Monticello, Illinois. AUTO LIVER HORACE 1. HART Reliable and Reascnabie Servive . 1930 ckard Limousine Rates $2. $2.30 and $3 per hour Trips Arranged GARAGT 596 ARCH STRE —a safe corrective now and then, for your health’s sake. Otherwise, poisonous waste materials may accumulate in the system and cause you considerable illness. Better be safe than sorry. To keep the bowels healthy, the liver active and the stomach swet, there is nothing that is quite so good as an ) a good, old, time-tested remedy that you may buy with confidence and use with benefit, in keeping the system in good order. Composed entirely of medicinal herbs, these family pills act pleasantly on the bodily organs, without causing any disagreeable effects. So gentle, a child may take them, both men and women. so effective they help They enjoy the largest sale of any remedy in the world because they are so safe and so dependable. If you have never tried Beecham’s Pills as a tonic and corrective, buy a box and use them NOW “The Largest Sale of Any Medicine in the World” At All Druggists, 10c., 25c. Directions of special value to women are with every box “Know How” That's It That’s what makes for excellence in the art of tire salvage. Jack’s repair men are all adepfi, traified in the school of experience. Flat Tire ? CHARTER 4641 ENTRUST YOUR TIRE TROUBLES TO US A THE AUTO TIRE CO. JACK THE T 137 Allyn St. IRE EXPERT Hartford Ladies’ and Misses’ Coats New Lot of Ladies’ Coats, with beautifully Fur | - trimmed Cuffs, Collars and border. effects. $10.00..$35.00 Latest styley. Ladies’ and Misses’ Suits Many desirable models in Ladies’ Suits—tailored ; effects and combination trimmed. $15.00 .. $35.00 Ladies’ and Misses’ Dresses' Large Variety of Ladies’ and Misses’ Dresses for” home, street or evening wear. SKIRTS S s WAISTS........... $10.00 .. $27.50 98¢ ... 81.50 to $10.00 to $35.50 BOYS’ SUIT SPECIAL CORDUROY SUITS WITH 2 PAIR OF PANTS. l OTHER BOYS’ SUITS. i 1 BRENNANSri: Near Franklin Square, GATELY & BRENNAN 47 MAIN STREET, New Britain.