New Britain Herald Newspaper, November 19, 1917, Page 10

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0L MAKES - WEAK ONEN STRONG Positive—Convincing Proof We publish the formula of Vinol | | | | | | to prove canvincingly that it has the | power to create strength. Cod Liver and Beef Peptones, Tron and Manganese Peptonates, Iron Ammonium Citrate, Lime and Soda Cascarin Any woman who buys a bottle of Vinol for a weak, run-down seondition and finds after giving it a fair trial it @id not help her, will ‘have her money returned. You sec, there is no guess work about Vinol. Its’ formula proves there is nothing like 1t for all weak, run-down, overworked, nervous men and women and for feeble old people and delicate children. Try, it once and be convinced. CHURCH NEWS Next Sunday, by proclamation the president, will be observed as’ ‘Armenian relief day in all the | churches. The people at this time | will have an opportunity of making an offering for these people. Special programs and music are being ar- | ranged at all the churches and pledge | cards have been distributed. of [\ South Congregational Church, The Woman's Home Missionary so- clety will hold a special sewing meet- ing on Wednesday at 1:30 o’clock. December 2 will be observed as Anniversary Sunday, in recognition of | the 75th anniversary of the church. | It has been deemed by the standing committee, in view of the war condi- tions, to dispense with the somewhat " extensive program at first proposed. | | Center Congregational Church. The church school orchestra will rehearse this evening at 7:30 o'clock. The following events are scheduled for Wednesday: Meeting of the Girl Bcouts, 7:15; meeting of the Boy Scouts, 8 p. m., and the standing com- mittee of the church will meet at the parsonage. On Thursday the Armenian Wom- en’s Bible class will hold a session at | $:30 o’clock; the Lafayette Sewing school will meet at 4 p. m., and the regular mid-week service followed by Red Cross work, will be held at 7:45. | The Women's Home Missionary so- clety will meet on Friday at 2:30 o'clock to pack two Missionary boxe: The church choir will hold a re- hearsal on Saturday evening at 7 o'clock. U Trinity Methodist Church. The Girl Scouts will meet at the | church tomorrow at 5 p. m. A class | meeting will be held tomorrow at 7:45, The Ladies’ Aid society will hold an . all-day sewing meeting on Thursday commencing at 9 o'clock in the morn- | ing. There will be an important meeting | of the Ladles’ society on Thursday at | 4 o'clock. i The mid-week prayer meeting will | be held on Thursday at 7:45 o'clock ad will be followed by Red Cross re- | work. . The union sewing meeting of the Red Cross will be held on Friday at the Baptist church. The Sewing school will assemble on } Saturday at 3 p. m. ' On next Sunday evening the service will consist of sacred Teadings and ! Thanksgiving music. Professor Wet- zel, of Yale university, will recite sa- cred poems and the chorus will sing Thanksgiving anthems. First Baptist Church. The Freestone club will meet in the | chapel this evening at 7:30 o'clock for | rehearsal. The annual sale and supper of the — e NO TRICK TO LIFT | A CORN RIGHT OUT Says There Is No Excuse for Cut- ting Corns and Inviting Lockjaw. Sore corns, hard corns, soft corns or any kind of a corn can harmlessly be lifted right out with the fingers if you will apply directly upon the corn a few drops of freezone, says a Cincin- | nati authority. It is claimed that at small cost one can get a quarter of an ounce of e freezone at any drug store, which is sufficient to rid one's feet of every corn or callus without pain or sore- ness or the danger of infection. This simple drug, while sticky, dries the moment it is applied and does not inflame or even irritate the surround- Ing tissue. i This announcement will many women heve, for it is said that the present high-hecl footwear is put- ' ting corns on practically every wom- | interest | meet in the parlor on Saturday at 7 | be in charge: | the topic ! similar beliefs. | nounced as misleading and false, and | ! Admissfon is free nervous . | { | 1 | | f The photograph shows some of the runners in a recent cross-country race. | The harriers found it tough to ne- gotiate some of the hills. One has already come to grief and is shown Dix and Camp Upton. sitting on the side of the path. Seven teams took part in the race, UNITED STATES SOLDIERS TAKE PART IN CROSS COUNTRY RACE IN VAN CORTLAND PARK, NEW YORK o e oty From the Junior National championship and w held in including soldiers from Camp Dixon |Cortland park. Women's Ald society will take place] COMING TO CARRY ON ' NORTHCLIFFE’'S WORK , on Wednesday afternoon and evening { beginning at 3:30 p. m. i The Junior society will meet on | Thursday at 4 p. m. The chapel will be open for Red Cross work at 5:30 o’clock on Thurs- day. The church night service will take place at 7:45 p. m. The class in Biblical literature will meet at the close of the church night service. On Friday there will be a meeting of the Sunday School Workers’ coun- cil, composed of the teachers and offi- ‘ cers of the school, in the chapel at| 8 p. m. : The Teachers’ Training class will! i p. m. There will be an institute for train- ing workers in the several branches of church work in Hartford on Decemi- ber 3 and 5. The church is asked 10 send fifty delegates. At the next meeting of the Cru- saders, the following committees will Games and decoration, Bryon Turner, Mrs. E. B. Cross, T Howard Covell, Miss Beth Eddy, M Bertha Hitchcock, James Coat “eats” committee, Misses Hazel An- drews, Florence Robertson, Ruth Con- nolly and Messrs. Arthur MacSpedon, Dexter Walcott, Donald Bell: devo- tional committee, Arvid Larson and Miss Katheryn Sheeky. Universalist Church, i Rev. Roger F. Etz, preached last evening at the Universalist church on “Is God a Failure?” Mr. | Etz denounces the theology and Teaching of “Billy” Sunday, and the | churches that support and preach | Mr. Etz read ex- tracts from Sunday's sermons. He also attacked the teaching of ‘The | Sunday School Times” which he de- having a pernicious influence upon the | minds of the young. Mr. Etz said that the Universalist church was the ) only church that proclaimed a tri- | umphant God, and a Victorious Christ, | who would ultimately bring all souls | into harmony with Himself. The music last evening was a special feat- ure and was exceptionally good. s MR. WESSEL TO SPEAK. LEducational Address in Grammar Schoal Hall Tomorrow Night. The first of a series of educational addresses presented by the United Parents’ and Teachers’ association will be given at the Grammar school auditorium tomorrow evening, at 8:09 p. m., when Morris J. Wessel, secre- tary of the Immigrant Educational ! Bureau of Providence, "R. I, will| speak on “The School House As a Community Center.” Mr. Wessel is chairman of the New England sec- tion of the National Community Cen- ter association and comes especially well qualified to explain the workings of this line of social service which has been successfully carried on in many New England cities, but has hitherto been neglected in New Br t- ain. Superintendent of Schools Stanley | H. Holmes, will introduce the speaker. | and the public is cordially invited to attend. KELTING RECOVERS. Former Local Boy, Prominent Movie Actor, Suffers Injuries at Work. George T. Kelting, formerly of this city where he lived with W. E. Allen on Arch street, has recovered from serious injuries sustained while at work with a moving picture troupe and has been discharged from St. Vincent’s hospital in New York. Of late Kelting has been on the vaude- ville stage as a cartoonist and has Leen identified with moving picture: {t was while riding a spirited ho in one of the picturts that he was thrown and injured. Kelting is the same man who on October 25, 1916, received injuries in Hartford when he leaped into the Park river and saved a Civil war | | veteran named Lewis from drowning. Fhots Feom’ Western Hwapoper tirtos Bri the United States on a special mission in connection with trade relations, to continue the work which Lord North- cliffe has been doing in this country. SERIOUS SHORTAGE OF BRIDGEGPORT COAL Gas Stoves Being Used in Bedrooms Because of Absence of Coal for Furnaces, Bridgeport, Nov. 19.—The absence of coal in this city and the fear there will not be a sufficient supply this winter have caused householders here to consider various plans for heating their homes. The indications seem to be that many persons will live this winter in an interior temperature mueh lower than that to which they were accustomed in former years. Several large rooming houses, light- cd by electricity, have been fitted with temporary systems of gas pipes, and gas heaters have been placed in the sleeping rooms because there was no coal for the furnaces. At one time not a sas heater or oil stove could be purchased here or in any near-by town, the entire supply having been sold out. In houses heated by steam and hot water, the owners are parily filling radiators with water and placing gas Albert Stanley, president of the | board of trade, is coming to | { Hartford, are selling their fine stock | {of suits at i week.. | Besse-Leland's, all prices. ! CITY ITEMS Good Overcoats at Besse-Leland’s, all prices.—advt. Men’s Working Gloves z5c, 48c, T5c, 98c up, largest and best stock at Besse-Leland’s, of course.—advt. St. Peter's church has purchascd three Liberty Bonds. The Kavanaugh shop. 40 Pratt St., mark down prices this advt. All kinds of warm underwear advt. at Warm advt. Several carloads of soldiers from ‘amp Bartlett at Westfield, Mass. sed through New Britain Saturda ht en route for southern training rmps, Caps at Besse-Leland’'s.— Good 1l prie Overcoats —advt. at Bessc-lLeland's, An anniversary mass was held this rorning at 8 o'clock at St. Peter’s hurch for Mrs. Fugene Paquette. will be a requiem mass at St church tomorrow morning ock for the late Mrs. Soph ‘ontois. Largest stock of Silk. and Wool tiufflers at Besse-Leland's.—advt. Good Overcoats il prices.—aavt. Mrs. Starr W. Andrews observed her 50th birthday yesterday at her home, West Main streei, when she en- tained a number of her fricnds. se present were Mo, and Mrs Dyson and family, Mrs. C. J man and family, Georze Scheidl from Camp Devens, Leon Morton the 22nd New York regiment, E. Andrews, Mason Andrews and Mr. Mrs. J. W. Eastwood. Men's Working Gloves 25¢, 48c, 98c up, largest and best stok Besse-Leland’s, of course.—advt. Good Overcoats at Be: all prices.—advt. at Besse-Leland's, of 2 at se-Leland's, WILL TAKE STAND, President of Cubs Intends to Stick to Price, Despite Hoover. Havana, Nov. 19.—President Meno- cal, it is understood, intends to take a stand in favor of smaller Cuban sugar interests for a price of 4 3-4 cents a pound, free on board at Cu- ban ports, instead of 4 1-2 cents as proposed by Herbert G. Hoover, U. S. food administrator. In well in- formed sources it is reported that he may place an embargo on sugar ex- ports, no matter what the destination if the position of the sn 1 interests STENOGRAPHERS This Fact Is One of Serious Measures, Commissioner Says. New York, Nov. 19.—A scarcity of stenographers and typewrite for tubes beneath them to get heat in that | government work, causing serious de- wa have keep warm any but the lower floors. Fireplaces in modern houses, in- tended merecly as ornamen have been brought into use for utilitarlan purposes. The difficulty in getting | wood for fireplaces has led many men to learn the beauties of open fires from salt-saturated logs, as they have been gathering driftwood from the shores of the sound for this purpose. The recent decision of the coal committee not to limit the price charged here has raised hope that coal will soon come and nobody seems to worry how much he will have to pay if he can but get i ASK FOR and GET Horlick’s The Original Malted Milk Substitutes Cost YOU Same Price. In other houses the upper floors | lays of many important war and navy been cut off from the heating | department plans, was declared here stem and no effort will be made to | today, to have become one of the great war problems by Harry C. Coles, representing the U. S. civil service commission, who said there is an ur- gent call from Wushington for 5,000 typists and shorthand clerks at sal- aries of $1,000 to $1,200 with chances for promotion. CHRISTMAS SHOPPING., Boston, Nov. 19.—Evidences of the Christmas spirit will be less marked than usual in the shopping district of this city next month. The department stores have agreed, as a war economy measure to do away with exterior Xmas decorations and to confine in- terior decorations to a modest display. SHIPING CONFERENCE. Boston, Nov. 19.—A conference of New England shippers, called for the purpose of bringing together those who would be affected by proposed changes in freight rates in this terri- tory. was held at the chamber of commerce today. The event was Cross-Country Van OVER THE TOP AND INTO THE TRENCHES OF These remarkable photographs of a raid on the enemy trenches by picked French troops in the Champagne sec- tor were taken by a KFrenchman al- ready decorated with the Croix Owing to the urgent need of ships for transatlantic service, freighters in use on the Great Lakes are being re- de j our THE ENEMY WITH PICKED his camera trenches to the moment they returnesd [ digging the | with four prisoners, the térx:zle:apse(l Tl i flicer who took | was only three minutes an rty sec- | ;:;::n;;:s;;‘:t enAng:ment said: “The | onds. The enemy's line was bout 90 Deair we believe, holds a record for | yards away. Besides the dGermilx_nla; rapidity. From the moment when | they captured our men had to ki picked troops leaped out of our Guerre, who calmly used while his comrades werc several who refused to surrender.” | CUTTING LAKE STEAMERS IN TWO FOR PASSAGE THROUGH WELLAND CANAL LOCKS TO ATLANTIC fitted for the work. At the yards of the American Shipbuilding company at Cleveland these lake ca are being cut in two parts to permit their passage through the short locks of the Welland canal to the Atlanticr The photograph shows the bow of tha steamer North Wind. The General All-Around Cleaner Nne Cent a Word Each Day Pays for a Classified Adv. in ~ the Herald. You Get Resu Its That’s What You Want.

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