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NEW BRITAIN DAILY : osidn Store SPUD IN S0 QUAKER- ~— KRAFT CURTAINS AND YARD GOODS Have rapidly won their way MACH WORTH TWO IN BIN Ornaments for Cellar Washington, Jan. 10.—The Amer- jcan potato bin is filled and over- flowing, Our spud supply has never been so large. But the cook isn't using into popular favor. We have the Made-Up: urtains from $2.00 to $5,00 a Pair Goods by the yard, very| desirable for window and| door use, in white and Ivory | shade. ~ 35c and 45¢ a Yard. 1‘ Marquisette Curtains in| white and Arabian, trimmed ; with edging and insertion From $1.75 to $5.00 a Pair. Sun Fast Materials for Over Draperies. A good selection of Cre- ronnes for Bags, Pillow Tops, etc, 25¢ to 75c. [ and into the kitchen. Railroad Men These men know from experience that Sloan’s Liniment will take the stiffness out of joints and the sore- ness out of muscles—And it's so convenient! No rubbing required. § It quickly penetrates and brings re- lief. Eas; to apply and cleaner than mussy plasters or cintments. Always have a bottle in the house for rheumatic aches; lame back, sprains and strains. Generous size! bottlesat all drug- FISSs mewn, Sowre & e Sloan’ . Iiniment You Don’t Know About WALLACE IRWIN Unless You Are Well Versed in Modern Literature You Don’t Know That His Jap i [ table and be eaten. ! you do try to sell. the potatoes. A full potato bin is a mighty fine thing—if the potatoes are put to their proper use; that is, eaten. t there is occasion for some anxiety over the slowness of the cook. The [ full bin will be of no benefit if the potatoes remain in the bin. They must get to the kitchen and to Otherwise the bin might as well be empty. The big potato crop has not been moving into consumption this winter. The bulk of the supply is in storage | and is belng marketed very slowly. This is an abnormal conditon, very serious one—because it has a direct bearing upon the most serious question in the world—the question of winning the war. If the potato bin is emptied during | will | mean that by eating more potatoes we | this winter and next spring it eat less bread and therefore have more wheat to send to the soldiers who are fighting for our freedom. It will also mean that the bin will have room to receive the new potato crop | But if we fail to empty it | next fall. this winter—that is, if we do mnot, at once, commence to eat more potatoes than we have been eating, and com- mence to market the potatoes that we have been hoarding—the mark by glutted when the new crop comes next summer. If this happen will be more potatoes supply will go to waste. In turn, this would discourage producers and possibly prevent the planting of liberal acreage, resulting in a short- ened potato supply a year from now, | at a time when food needs will be even more urgent than they are now. r What can you do about it? You can help empty the bin. can get more spuds and less Unless you do eat more potatoes than You you have been eating the bin will not | be emptied. Market Steadily. And if you are a farmer or a mid- | dleman now holding potatoes in stor- age you can market them, get them to moving, get them out of the bin Responding to this appeal will not mean the sacri- fice of your personal interes All are asked to do potato holdings gradually, during the winter and spring, present surplus will have been eaten before the. new crop begins to move about the middle of next June. Your prospect of loss—if holding potatoes— is not in me: to market now and ti to sell slowly. It is in fa g to do this that you stand to lose. For if the bhin is not emptied by spring vou may find a glutted market when con- crop is in sight, there remains a heavy hang-over of the old crop, and there is a scramble of the holdings to unload all at once—there can be only one effect on prices. So, commence to sell your potatoes now, Mr. Holder. toes now, Mr. Consumer. And prepare to plant another big potato crop next year, Mr. Farmer. But the latter gentleman can not reasonably be expected to heed the request if he sees the present potato supply going to waste. So the situ- ation really hinges now upon two fac- tors, the consumer and the holder— some farmers, of course, being in- cluded in the last category. will carry out their part of the po- | tato program it will mean that we | will have more food for the armies. e e CHILDREN CRY OUT re feverish and don’t sleep well, constipated and have symptoms of worm mothers will find quick relief in Mother Sweet Powders for Children, the rd remedy for 30 rs. They a to give and children like them. Thc cleanse the stomach, act gently on the bowels and break up colds. Relieve head- aches and teething disorders. We have 10,000 testimonials. Ik _your druggist and ashimura Togo Presents a New Class of Humor Unless You See The Famous Sessue Hayakawa —IN— The Story of Hashimura Togo LYGEUM OW PLAYING School Boy | be sure to get Mother Gray's Swe | ders for Children, Cough Nearly Gone & in 24 Hours That’s the usual experfence with this home-made remedy. Costs little—try it. 3 @ 000,000, 00,.0.06,00.0,00,008,200000) Anyone who tries this pleasant tast- | inz home-made cough . syrup, will quickly understand why it is used more nomes in the United States and Canadn, than_any other cough remeédy. lhe way it takes hold of an obstinata iving immediate relief. will make ret, that you mever tried it bes 1t is a truly dependable cough | | Temedy that should be kept handy in | every home, to use at the first sign of a | cough during the night or day time. Any druggist can supply you with 214 ounces of Pinex (60 cents worth). Pour this_into a pint bottle and fill the bottle with plain granulated sugar gyrup. The total cost is about 65 cents and you have a full pint of the most effective remedy you ever used. | " The quick, lasting relief you get from | this excellent cough syrup will really | surprise you. It promptly heals the | inflamed membranes that line the throat | and air passages, stops the annoyingz throat tickle, loosens the phlegm, and foon your cough stops entirely. Splen- did for bronehitis, eroup, whooping cough | and bronchial asthma. Pinex is a highly, concentrated com- | ?ound of Norway pine extract, and ia | famous the world over for its healing | effect on the membranes, To avoid disappointment ask for 214 ounces of Pinex” with full directions | and don’t accent anything else. A guar- tee of absolute satisfaction or money romptly refunded goes with this prep- aration. The iimex Co.,, It Waynm Potatoes Made to Fat Not As| the | HERALD, THURSDAY, JANUARY 10, 1918. et may | there | than | the bin can hold and some of the at bread. | to market your | you are | com- | If when the new | s it | And commence to eat more pota- | If they | in | and a | T it These Australian machine gunners are in a hole formed by a shell-shat. tered trec. They are having a pot- GHUREH AS AID T0 - FOOD BOSS HOOVER | | { Pulpits Help Spread Propaganda Washington, Jan A ration 10. 1917, Early in the the Food Ad- official | ! | 1 month of 1st, minis Lat ome into being. in that same month the ministers every denomination in the couns| ¥ were in Washington offering to dof Whatever they could to help. offers were zladly accept returned heme three day irmed with inspiration, a = doubled \ Sory it | campa If therc who dia ve food, it was h fault of the minist pel was widely and this one certainly And the ministars ask congregations even Their and they later X church why ov metnbe and how: fault not o for it ever godd ncerely preachefd was 4 of thejs more than mere} to save food; they asked them to keep § hot at a Boche airplane. The photo- | & weekly record of the food saved. | aph was taken on the Flanders These report 28 Imostiintrica R | £ront. detailed and asked for a record of the W foods not It will mean another big potato plant- ing next year. This year's potato crop is 442, 000 bushels, according the latest figures of the bureau of crop estimates of the United States department of criculture—the largest potato crop tnis country has ever produced. the potato production wi 3,000 bushels, we ,000 bu vear winter 50 more the potato bin than we had last win- | ter. Good Only to Lat. ‘What is the value of these potatocs —not in dollars and cents, but in terms of the oniy real value any- thing possesses th -its potency in helping win the We can't put these potatoes in cannon and shoot them at the Prussians, We an’'t send them to France. ¢ have no war value unless will eat them and unless you will sell th They arve a liability i asset if they remain in They will help us the ead helping unless, right now those who i comr v sc days S5 the war of us wa, hola- market nc to ad ions, potatoes them, and eve comiiic eat more potatoes and less by n aside from war conside owers and should their expe ence to potato i e pro hold- ind the others now remember ience with 1914 crop. That crop was held dur- ing the winter and moved slowly into consumption, guite he present crop i g marketed slowly. A result, in the 1915, with new crop in ding trie realized But the amble glutted es of ed to starch nts a barrel—not bushel. This an cconomic any waste of foodstuff at any time but it didn’t imperil the future of the | United States of America. To waste | foodstuff now does endanger very existence of our countr w food now is to in hor the hideousnc Belgium. That is what if we waste the enor now American toes ve spring of ght, everyone to unlos t once. that he 1 held camc he 1 h too too mar potatoes were ab- and there many at 30 Q werc 25 and (v was loss, the we 10us potato ¢ the in bin YAQUI INDIANS RAISING TROUBLE Are at Unrest Although Attempts Are Hade to Pacify Them iermosillo, Son., Correspondence of Pu The Yaqui the trouble-maker Mexico for outbreak is ber which dminis other leade | Starting along the g early read Mex., The Indian hs of northwestern tions and his recent one of a 1 num- oceurred the of nd ene but have ions a Madero Diaz with Rio Y the Bronco Y qui in southwe: in September, the revolt to many of the allied including the Mansos Yaqu have been peaceful in the past who derived their names from fact they worked with their the hwe stern ora has ] tribes, | who and the har in sout rich Yaqui River ley tern Sonora the TIndian s had its center. The Ing of up- n CREAM FOR CATARRH OPENS UP NOSTRILS Tells How To Get Quick Relief from Head-Colds. It’s Splendid! In one minute your clogged nostrils will open, the air passages of your head will clear and you can breathe freely. No more hawking, snufiing, blowing, headache No struggling for breath vour cold or catarrh will Get a small bottle Balm from your dru a little of this healir cream penetrates through every of the head, soothes the inflamed swollen mucous membrane and relies comes instantly. Tt's just fine with a cold | comes so quickly. dryness. at night; be gone. of Bly gist now fragrant, your Crea Apply antiseptic, nostrils, 1t Don't stay stuffc atarrh -up or —Relicr + ! and Mexican federal troops have been you | rather | who was air passage | im.’f(»rnm consumed, { whole and by the weck. but separate f and teal by eerson <on. get lutely accurate account of foods u ved and wasted is pratically impos- unable to make any great headway in ' sible, but th reports conie as ve conquering these warring tribesmen. | as possible to doing it, and further- The revolt reached its height after| more they from substantial, rep- the fall harvests of corn, beans and | resent American homes. zarbanzo had been rvested. Store- During > first three months 20,000 liouses where these crops were put | churches took part in this “Food Wil f away for the winter were loated and | Win the War: Don't Waste Tt cam- the Indians extended their field of | paign, and for the last two month | operations far into the north toward made e FHlermosillo, the capital, Ammunition | complishea nd rifles were smuggled across the | gy »nora border for them and a number : of engagements fought between tne ! Yaquis and the federals resulted in the | routing of the government troops. The basic cause of the unrest among the southwestern Mexico Indians is the land problem. At one time th | Indians owned and tilled thousands of | acres of the most fertile land in the republic which was watered by the 37 riv These lands were grad confiscated by the ious go \ents and parceled out to favorites | of the ruling powers. he Indiz claim they were given inferior lands in place of their origin: holdings and upon toration of these | holdings. One American com- now controls 300,000 acres of | in the Yaqui country much of | claimed by the Indians. tribes were orig cultural people with bent in the mountains during They tocky, many the tr merican Ind Figh heen one thei iions, 1 have warpath either in their or for various de nrents tor 15 ye During the days of he Yaquis wer towns of Potam, Vacum, Bacum, La | ! Colarada and Suaqui Grande have cenes of various Indian raids, od meal, and by 1 an ab: To been come ve check w on ac- showii as a4 whole but in general church may he The, v Ch is results of the are not what is true of said to be true of story of the Wirst rch of Iast Orange, de. interesting n- obtainalle one the I'res- Ipeople in this congregation co-operat- ing has steadily increased; I number of wheatless church-alone keeps up+that record, and the |saving within the year will be a.i and meatless | terial help to-the Allies. more than proportionally | A similar calculation A wasteless meal is mere- [used in figuring the saving of m ly a matter of opinion but the psy- |for-the reason that it is-impossibld chological effect alone saves food. { tell just how often on.an average Suppose these East Orange families | American family has meat, proba { contained on an average of five mem- | not three times a day, probably tw bers each. The Food Administration ;is a better average, yet this estimates that a family of five con- |does tell us definitely what the fal sumes approximately one pound of |off in meat consumption has been. flour a meal. Therefore, it is fair to | Th churches have shown beyon: say that this one New Jersey congre- | doubt that voluntary economy is ation saved in one week--the week of | possibility. And they for their : 604 pounds of flour, or al- | can anwer *“yes,” most emphati pounds of flour to a bar- |to the question “Has anything been. most 14 barrels. Now it takes | complishd by moral suasion? , others byteri: Jersey. an hardly probably typical membership, number is made up of a few very rich, a very poor, but in the main well to do, well employed, sturdy average Amer- ican citizens, patriotic, law abidir d mostly small property owners. Study this three weeks and draw your own conclusions Nor.. *Nov. 10 7 reporting ch week ! increasea. qui Iy report a insist the r o tribal pany Families o 196 which 7 "i ITALIAN TROOPS HOLDING THEIR LINE ALONG PIAVE RIVE aqui hunting winter. are of of 45 its on interes overs President Diaz, ed of much | nds by Gen- | governor of were deport- state by boat to the hot i lands of Yucatan and to Tres Marias Island, off (s t of Tepic. This was one of the chief grievances which 1sed the Yaqui war. This war con- | tinued until the outbreak of the Ma- dero vevolution when the Indians with Mad against their enemies of the old federal re- onora. ed from the joinec swvorn inc The | auri ch of the hara fighting dero and ubsequent | revolutions. pecially at Caolaya, | where they were General Obregon’s mainstay when Villa and his powerful army attacked the entrenched pe: tions of Obregon’s Carranza force. The Yaquis were given much of the | credit for this victory, which .*h:l‘—; tered Villa's dream af political. power | { and drove him back to the borde At A 1 Pricta, Sono the Yaquis | again aided in defeating Villa and | causing him to revert to his guerilla | 1 campaign, which included the = a | Wbel and Columbus, N. M., m b sacy Ger Plutarco FEl undertaken a “mailed fist” campaisn against the Yaqui Indians in Sonora to suppress the present uprisin He has interned the peaceful Yaquis in reconcentration camps and h or- | dered all others hunted dJdcewn and | Killed Wholesale deportation the hot-lands of Mexico have ¢ heen | threatened. { The Yaquis classes One which ighters tribesmen the “mansos’ Numbers de to 1ceful ways, comm Calles has | | i | | the Italian s0 line L river of troops wh o arc s the Piave 1o 50 ¥ i L into two Yaqui,’ of the | of the includes divided is the “bronco includ the fierc ind the sturc The other class * or peaceful Ind of attempts have convert these Indians to President Madero had of Indians visit him in Ve: Lat com- mission to treat with the trihol 1 ers. But the Indians claimed were not given back their s and were soon on the present uprising is said of the government to be the most | atening since the davs of Diaz. ‘ | are FLOWER LOVING PUBLIC OF NEW BRITAIN We are publishing a monthly magazine entitled “Floral Maga- zine”, which we are issuing to the public free of charge once a month. This magazine will tell you how to keep flowers, plants, when to plant and how te grow plants and flowers, and various uses flowers may be put to and how to arrange them. In order to receive this magazine all you have to do is i your name and address at our store at 92 West Main street, and will be mailed to you free of charge once a month. . | VOLZ FLORA peror W 92 WEST MAIN STREET lantic by his U-boats. i [ ¥ heen they warp: by h offi- | The thr the fhe FOOD PLEDGE ARMY. About fifty per cent. of the families of America had signed the United States Food Administration’s pledge cards on January 1, according to fig- ures announced in Washington, the to- tal being 11,034 The campaign for additional signatures is still bein waged in many parts of the country | here in Connecticut, which lacks | than 2,000 igners to make 200,000 families pledged, it 200,000 figures will be | ttur | ind s its al of is rtain that the reached in the near CONSERVE YOUR SUGAR. goes to waste in the boi- n tea cups sweetens Sugar tha tom of Americ the dreams of much as su bottom of