New Britain Herald Newspaper, January 18, 1918, Page 13

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1 H LADY PINK TOES HAS HER INNINGS There women to have ugly, painful corns is no excuse today for Nuarter ounce vone recently hiati che Apply a Upen a tender 1 und instantly, e Eoreness disappears and shortly you will find the corn or cillus, so loose that you lift it out, root and all, with tho fingers. Just think! Not one bit before applying freezone or wards. It doesn’t even irritate surrounding skin. #ard corns, soft corns or corns be- Yween the toes, also hardened callises tn bottom of feet. just scem 1o shriv- el up and fall off without hurting a particle. It is almost magical. of the ma dru discovered by a Cincin- ist drovs of freezone ing corn or callus immediately, all fey this of pain after- the | Start Tomorrow ;J' and Keep It Up Every Morning ’ Get In the hablt of drinking a | glass of hot water before breakfast. We're not here long, so let's make our stay agreeable. Let us live well, eat well, digest well, work well, sleep well, and look well. What a glorious condition to attain, and yet, how very casy it i If one will only adopt the mgrning 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 tie whole of the internal poisonous stag- napt matter. Fveryone, whether ailing, mvell, should, each morning, before breakfast, drink a glass of real hot ‘water with a teaspoonful of limestone phosphate in it to sh from the stomach, liver and bowels the nrevious indigestible wast bile and nous toxins; thus cleansing, sweetening and purifying the entire alimentary canal before putting more food into the stomach. The hot water and limestone phosphate on an empty stomach is wonderfully ih- vigorating. It cleans out all the fermentations, gas + and acidity and gives one splendid appetite for breakfast. While you are enjoying your f the water and phosphate quietly extracting a large volume of water from the bidod and getting ready for a thorough flushing of all the inside organs, ' The millions sick or ur action of of people who are bothered with constipation, bilious spells, stomach trouble; others who sallow skins, blood disorders and sickly complexions are urged to get a yquarter pound of limestone phosphate from the drug store. This will cost very little, but is sufficient to make mnyone a pronounced crank on the subject of inside-bathing before break- tast Resd waai rataer Lynca desiged, nor Sai pleurisy 1 rundown condi A my general hould, and a m on not aid hea bronch me greatly sulted mended Linonine finished the first the cough wind 1 commenced strength. Hearts deysement. I recommend it to all are in need of a builder, or who suf from physician who Beforc »ottle T i had prove prearved entirely in flesh and my GEEain Linonine ha bronchial or lung troubles REV. H, J. LYNCH, Peter's Church, 1905 pastor St 1886 Linonine h rective coughs, disthse the for all bronchitis and w many, many years. It Father Lynch's time, If cough heen most of remedy forms colds, was best in hest now to improven ' iin in a Look bring or have already will bring ahout a <ort time for familia ¥OR THE CLASSIFIED COLUMNS. n to im- | en- who Danbury, of | asting | i it is or colds threaten rapid ill be yourself vde-mark. IAPAN 1S SEEKING WILITARY CONTROL o1, Jenks Counteracts Viscoum! ishi's Remarks About Sincerity New York, Jan. 18— While Vis- | count Ishii was proclaiming the hon- est intentions Japan with regasd to Ching said Dr. dcremiah W. Jenks in a statement to the American pr )y “Japan was secking military control in China and was trying to share in the exploitation of China's remaining iron mines ‘Information coming to me from authoritative sources is to the effect that at the very time that Viscount Ishii was making his most eloquent addresses in this country erting that apan had no intention of over- reaching other nations and that Japan invariably kept her promises nd agreements Japane agents in Pek- were crowdir Chinese govern- by every device known kilful negotiators to close a the manufacture o ing ment ! to those reement officials for arms. This practically | Chinese arsena J ment and the | ese oflicers to t agreement involve the handing of the Is to Japanese manage- ppointment of Japan- | ain the Chines army | These provisions are substantially the ‘:un(\ as some of those' in the noted ’valp Five of the Twenty-One De | said to over is nands of 1915 which the Chin President, Yuan Shih-kai, declared were subversive of Chinese sovereign- the pressure of world iblic opinion influenced the Japan- to drop at that time. Apparently, according to the re- haste and the demand for s crecy in these late negotiations, just in 1915, were urged upon the Chinese officials. “Many of the friends of China questioned the usefulness of the sing-Ishii agreement, because have doubted the sincerity of in carrying out the provisions garding the open door. “Private letters from both Chinese and foreigners emphasize the strensth of the drive that the Japanese aye making in China with apparently t} full intent of securing for themselves great advantages now that will make it difficult at the peace negotiations the Allies to mak arrange- on even terms for the maintc ance of the open door. “New is being made ecure Hanese intage cxploitation of remaining i of China of which Japan secured control. So urgent is effort. ipparently so contrary the spirit of the Lansing-Tshii ement to the policy of the 1 door that it is reported that Dr. insch, the American Minister, has definite protest to the Chinese inst the making of agreement as that proposed Japan, on the ground that it would violation of that policy. ‘And all of this, if the reports ar. true, while the elqquent viscount ws assuring us of the sincerity of Ja- panese protestations of friendship and unchanging poliey of hon- her promises and and which ports, have Lan- they Japan re- for any ment to th on effort also ady in the mi has not v is 1 and to and 1d¢ vovernment 1 such of Japan's orably agreemonts.” A sitnation standing by of excitement the \rms-Alliance Loan recalling that 1915 over Group V of the Demands prevails in Chi The demands of Group V all in on China’s sovereignty. the treaty rights of other powers and the princinle of equal opportunity, but if t had been acceded to it would have been litile more damaging to China’s niegrity than the present proposed \lliance Loan. In this propos- Japanese demand the Fenghu an iron mines: control of Chi- arsenals, monopoly of supplying China’s army. and the ap- pointment of (Japanese) military ad The mine area involved holds richest Japan already has a hare in the Chinese iron mine modern methods, and { is estimated that the consummation of the proposed contract would give Japan 100,060,000 leaving Chi- 27,000,000 her future in- closing wroused i Twenty-One na fringed Arms «l the na's arms to visers. ore. la China’s controls or control of « ked undc ton for timate development of other nations. inst the deal i in China take to concede Japan’ only 1 dev yosides loor to leg wrees 1 feeling eso mers would he to violate present tional ur tandir NORWAY IS BITTER. Ameriea Allies Inerense: ninst and in to a Jan. 18.— Feeling and Christiania Norway ' ACLEAR COMPLEXION | Ruddy Cheeks—Sparkling Eyes | | —Most Women Can Have | azainst America Says Dr. Edwards, a Well-Known Ohio Physician Dr. F. M. Edwards for 17 years treated scores of women for liver and bowel ailments. During these years he gave to his patients a prescription made of a few well-known vegetable ingredients mixed with olive oil, naming them Dr. Edwards” Olive Tablets. You wili know them by their olive color. These tablets are wonder-workers on the liver and bowels, which cause @ normal action, carrying off the waste and poison- ous matter in one’s system. If you have a pale face, sallow look, dull eyes, pimples, coated tongue, headaches, a listless, no-good feeling, all out of sorts, inactive bowels, you take ome of Dr. Edwards® Olive Tablets nightly for a time and ncie the pleasing resuits. Thou Js of women as well men suc- NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, JANUARY 18, 1918. Refuse Substitutes aceticacides WRESTLING IS JUST AS MANLY SPORT AS BOXING, THOUGH NOT AS POPULAR that the reformers never howl against ange wrestling. They go the limit to slam boxing hey bring out their hammers against | 3 Reg. U. 5. Pat, Off,) is a guarantec that the mm.:g r of salicylicacid in these tablets is of the reliable Bayer manufacture, | mana | ban unday baseball and horse racing, but, | rule, they make much nimper a the mat game. ccording to our best littlie reformers, is brutal. Baseball on Sunday, and horse racing are demor- \dizing. We have the word of the re- formers for it, which doesn’t make it animous by a whole lot, but they to velp. Wrestli when ed, is just as much a hox though not as wrestling, as it was conducted in the recent international tournament in New York, was a knock to itself. Still, no one made much of a howl except a couple of w tlers, who protested against losing part of their anatomies. “Strangler” Lewis, as a never s inst Boxing, ur *ontinue properly conduct- manly sport popular. But as who was much [ | | | | | tected by rules which leave no open- S e wfiifimflrBuy Only True Aspirin i it §=i§n - SERaRE GERMAN: Cross From B th 1 evidence in the recent tourney, uses at he calls a headlock. It just to escape being a twin for the strangle hold, which is under the | but because there was no rule | 8 ainst Lewis' hold he was allowed to | away with it to the point whera | came close to taking Wladek | Zbyszko on a personally conducted | tour to a world unknown. The head hold is apparently more dangerous than the strangle hold. Tt is so dangerous that Zbyszko became unconscious from the effects of it, and everyone who saw the match agrees that it should be barred. Wrestling is very much a man's sport. It requires ability to stand an | unlimited amount of punishment and | it requires men of great strength, but it should be cleansed of such things the head hold. It can get along | without them, and the promoters should see to it that the game is pro- as ing for bone-crushing methods, less degree against the other Entente Allies is bitter. It is re- ported herc that America demands the stop; of Norwegian export to Germany in return shipments iin to Norway, refuses o or prowmise uy rowing for hut rantee Norway supplies Th they are asking Germany b the Norweg S should offend tailing supplles at America,and o risk empty-handed by America, after all. Reports that Denmark is receiving provisions and other goods from America are received with amaze- ment and some The Nor- wegians say it is an open secret that the Danes have fed Germany duri the whole period of the war, while the rwegians ciaim to be compara- tively innocent. Yet, they say, Den- mark is favored by America and the Allies, and they ask why. The Germans are making opportunity for propaganda. why cur- of bein left requc anget most of the RACING AT PINEHURST. Pinehurst, N. € 18.—The chief of the Pinehurst Jockey club’ ~ meeting yesterday was the Ad- rtisers flat a three and a hal? eve won by Julian T »f Washington on George Top- hy F. C of New Jan ture rac fons ut tishop ridden evens (pparently finished with Geor but the jud or, thoroughhred Mel jockey in The en 1 k np. The inst a LANNIN BUYS York one-time owner of has purchased salisbury BIG PROPERTY. 18.—J. J the Ne Jan Lannin Boston Red property of Long the club, on ho 5oa Golf Ly Dove- Known polo player. BEGIN ON SALTS AT FIRST SIGN OF KIDNEY PAIN We Eat T Much Meat, Which Clogs | Kidneys, Then the Back Hurts, Glass and alt Flushes nds Bladder tation, says of Kidneys Ir Uric acid in meat excites the | neys. they become overworked; get | sluggish, ache. feel like lumps of | lead. The urine becomes cloudy; the bladder is irritated and you may be | obliged to seek relief two or three | times during the night When the | kidneys clog you must help them flush | off the body's urinous waste or you'll be a real sick person shortly. At first | you feel a dull misery in the kidney | | and on, vou suffer from backache, sic dizziness, sour, tongue cf rheumatic twinges is bad. Eat also ounces of poonful hreakfast stomach and when the gets | feel weather | § ed you drink any pharmacist Saits; take a of days act fine from the combined with for s meat, from jad in a gl for a few il ther | lots of water; | four table- | water before vour | This acid of | | | and kidney ts i a lemon and has used n clogged Kidneys them to normal activity, the cid in the urine source of irritation, famous made i heen genera and so it | thus | stimulafe 1o nentral long weakness s xpensive, cannot in- | & makes a delightful effcrvescent | lithin-water drink which everyone should take now and then to keep the | kidneys clean and active. Druggists | here say they sell lots of Jad Salt | folks who believe in overcoming kid- | ney trouble while it is only trouble. The Hague, Netherlands 1dless gler. weather, ered crossing the frontier into Holland wearing no underclothing and women wearing only a mantle. ir way anty store turn dure, adopted ican the kid- | i) Hartford One Price Clo} CIOTHES and Wearing Woq ens, But Are Detected. Jan. 18. tric the advent of had been are the Prior to Germans to supplement th ment at near the border, homeward clad thence to in the customs authorities the equally novel If such travelers found wedring clothes, these are treated GERMANS PURSUE AMEIY{CANS. London, Jan. 18—A party of Amer- officers who recently trav- eiled from I'rance to London told the embassy army officials that the end of their trip. They of the smug cold discov- They were on rather some Netherlands re- genuine woolen or cotton underclothes instead of the substitute materials wherewith Germany is in these days arraying it- self. To counter this method of proce- have method of stamping the underclothes of all per- sons who regularly or frequently cross the frontier. subsequently imped smuggled goods. are un- Germans pursued them from the beginning to were ved fj raid PORTO RICO STRIKE ENDS. Cigar Makers Return to Work Gaining Demands, After i 18.— San Juan, Porto Rico, Jan. Fifteen thousands cigar makers and tobacco workers have returned to | work in the nineteen factories of the | Porto Rican American Tobacco Com- pany after their representatives signed an agreement with officers of the com- pany. | This ends the longest and most | general cigar strike the island has | ever had. The wage increase pro- | vides for the payment of $1.50 per | thousand advance on all sizes and shapes of cigars while the stripper were granted an increase of approxi- mately 50 per cent. The increased wage will amount to more than $600,- | 000 per year, it is estimated. The | strike had been practically continu- | ous since the middle of last Septem- | ber and caused a loss estimated at | clears out the air pas | the entire head feel fine $5,000,000. ontinues to sh its disgust- | BOMs wherever civilization exists. Every year the already enormous sales of this really scientific tneatment for catarrh grow greater, and the present year should show all records broken. If you breathe Hyomei daily as di- rected it will end your catarrh, or it won’t cost you a cent. If you have a hard rubber Hyomei inhaler somewhere around the house, get it out and start it at once to for- ever rid yourself of catarrh. The Clark & Brainerd Co., or other good druggist will sell bottle of Hyomei (liquid,) s breathe it and notice how any you a rt to quickly it ges and makes Hyomei used regularly will end catarrh, coughs, colds, bronchitis or asthma. A complete outfit, including a hard rubber pocket inhaler and bot- tle of Hyomei, costs but little. No stomach dosing; just breathe it. It kills the germs, soothes and heals the inflamed membrane. THE CURRAN DRY GOODS (. SUIT COAT AND SALE \ Extracrdinary THE BALANCE OF OUR SUIT AND COAT STOCK AT PRICES BELOW THE COST OF MATERIAL. THEY ARE ALL OF THE LATEST MODELS AND BEST OF MATERIALS TO BE FOUND IN THE HIGHEST GRADE GARMENTS. THEY ARE A LOT OF FINE SUITS AND COATS PUT IN ONE LOT AND OFFERED AT —$9.90 THEY WOULD BE A BARGAIN AT $15.00 TO $20.00. THIS IS ONE BIG OPPORTUNITY AS WE WANT TO CLOSE THIS ENTIRE STOCK OUT AT ONCE. OTHER DEPARTMENTS OFFER SOME REAL VALUES.

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