New Britain Herald Newspaper, February 20, 1918, Page 5

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:—_———‘——m - DISCIPLINE MAINTAINED IN FRANCE EVEN WHEN TROOPS ARE ON LEAVE, An M. P.—a member of the tary police squad—examining passes of two of our boys mili- atchful iha in eve on leave GOOD FURNITURE AT MODREST PRICES Good Furniture is so essential nowadays—and so easy to obtain. It is a fallacy tc regard superior home equipment as expensive, for much that is de- sirable is offered at very modest prices and it repre- sents, whatever the cost, a life-long investment. Our February Mark-Down Sale which is now in progress with reduced prices on practically every article in our store presents a wonderful rappiortunitv for you to acquire any articles needed to make your home comfortable and attractive at marked savings. Come in and see for how little money you can buy really good furniture at this store this month. G Fuller, WHERE 1S HIGHER THAN COMPLETE HomE FURNISHERS 40-58 FORD STREET WARTFORD AGENTS FOR GLENWO00D RANGES OVERLOOKING CAPITOL GROUNDS UALITY RICE. of | A | {and pain follows a | i | sciatica cure | | | | matism, tended by a sensation stop eating meat and get about four | injure; | blood pure. | kidney complication 1 NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1918, " [TCHING BURNING ‘SEES FATEFUL HOUR PIMPLES ON FACE = FOR PAN-GERMANS 4 Large, Red and Very Hard, o Blotches, Lost Sleep. Face Was Disfigured. HEALED BY CUTICURA SOAP AND OINTMENT — “By using perfumed soaps, my face 'was badly affected with pimples. The . pimples were large and red and very hard, and they festered very rmuch. They were in blotches and itched and burned all the time so severely that I irritated my face by scratching. I lost many nights’ sleep, and my face was disfigured. The trouble lasted for two months. “Then I used Cuticura Soap and Ointment, and I used two boxes of Cuticura Ointment with two cakes of Cuticura Soap when I was healed.” (Signed) Miss Mary Struthers, 1 Cross St., Beachmont, Mass., July 28, 1917. Keep your skin clear by using Cuti- cura Soap and Ointment for every-day toilet purposes. Nothing better. ample Eack Free by Mail. Address post: 8 card: *'Cutieura, Dept. R, Boston.** Sold everywhere. Soap 25c. Ointment 25 and 50c. FLUSH KIDNEYS WITH SALTS IF BACK IS ACHING Noted Authority says we eat much meat, which clogs Kidneys. Taxe xlass of Salts when Kidneys hurt or Bladder bothers you. No man or woman who eats meat regularly can make a mistake flushing the kidneys occasionally, -say a wall-known authority. Meat forms uric acid which excites the kidney they become overworked from the strain, get sluggish and the waste and poisons from the blood, then we get sick. Nearly all rheu- headaches, liver trouble, dizziness, sleeplessness disorders come from nervousness, and urinary sluggish kidne The moment 3 the urine is cloudy, offensive, full of sediment, irregular of pass or at of scalding, ounces of Jad Salts from any pha macy; take a tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast and in a few days your kidneys will act fine This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, com- bined with lithia, and has been used for generations to flush and stimulate the kid also to mneutralize the acdis in urine so it no lynger causes irritation, thus ending bladder weak- ness. Jad Salts is inexpensive and cannot makes a delightful efferves- cent lithia-water drink which eve one should take now and then to keep the kidneys clean and active and the thereby avoiding serious e ———— e — AH! BACKACHE GONE! RUB LUMBAGO AWAY "aill‘—"mm *}Vklt'k With Small Trial Bottle of Old “St. Jacobs OIL™ tub Ah! Tain is gone! Quickly 7Y lief from soreness, stiffness, gentle lamene with “8t. Jacobs O Rub this soothing, penetrating ofl right on your painful back. and like magic, relief comes. “St. Jacobs Oil” is a harmless backache, lumbago and which never and doesn’t burn the skin. Straighten up! Quit complaining! Step those tortuous “stitches.” In a moment vou will forget that you ever had a weak back. because it won't hurt or be stiff or lame. Don't suffer! Get a small trial bottle of old, honest “ut. Jacobs Oil” from vour drusgist f | now and get this lasting relief. i i | For Bilious Troubles That heavy headache, torpid liver, sick stomach, bitter taste in mouth, furred tongue, dull eyes and muddy skin, all come from a poor supply of bile. These unhealthy conditions are promptly corrected by PILLS BEECHAPI’ which stimulate the liver, regulate the flow of bile, sweeten the stomach, and renew healthy bowel action. A household remedy ap- proved by sixty years of pub- lic service. For every-day illnesses, Beecham’s Pills are a tested Remedy too | by | fail to filter | ou feel a dull ache in | the kidneys or your back hurts or if | rubbing | disappoints j cal polic Frankfurter Zeitung Warns Them ‘ Reckoning IS Goming (Correspondence of the Asso. Press) | Netherlands, Jan. 1 “did Hague, Pan-Germans could to make the war inevitable’ arc denounced by the Frankfurter Zc and arve warned that their hour | oning is coming, in an published in that aper. article is a reply criticism the Pan-German | brodt, who | entertaining | Retorting to the | ter Zeitung | pened in this | auestion by saying “The army which | beginning of the failed by | a long way in numbe: Masses “ men have had to ba added to it and | trained within a time far shorter than {hat which even wo contemplated. ‘ “The conception that England | sirea to seek a decision by arms in \nm» circumstances was the basis of 1 who what The Dy new ac € t spirit.’ ankfur- | what has hap- * and answered the an enlisted at the war | the Pan-German policy. They cher- jshed the idea of the imminence of this world because they longed for In the first number of the man New: t that time the chief or- of Pan-Germans, these words written, ‘the hour have for 1 hars the an werc { longed holy war.’ “It is impossible abroad but one iu Anvbody is eves s | we 15t uck; that it i { to 54 the | was desired | aifficult to see what | every nerve about. | did not go about with 1 that German except for | small group, did not wish for wa | what that small group, just ti | Pan-Germans. could contribute inevitable, that thes lnew wards making it | did. | “If we along with others have | reproach to make to oursclves it i that we did not carcfully watch the | doings of such people. They | talkers whom one thought a nuisance but did not take as seriously as the damage which they subsequently did proves that one ought to have donc | “The effect of Pan-German out- | bursts upon foreign public opinion not considered at the time but they alone can account for the flood of hate towards Germany which showed itself at the beginning of the war and which found the German public comparative unprepared. e could not understand it and we asked ourselves how it was possible Now have found out. Trom the writing of Baumgarten and other ! cations we have that ihe zond German people but the T earned 2 bad mame for G mans in the world. We are not yolish as to look upon the enems anzels. The consclousness of the nocence felt in Germany the 1 ginning of the war, though under- standable, was not justified for we see that agitation on the part | Pan-Germans wh they carried even beyond our frontier ated a false impression upon foreign public opinion, an impression that the Ger- man people and their government | were animated by plans for conquest {and deeds of violence, and this ! opinfon was encouraged hy chauvin- ists in those countries abroad. “German people do not know the | extent of the damage done to them { by the Pan-Germans. but the hour of | reckoning for them i ming."’ any were was we seen =0 now of Almost instant re- | DIFFICULT TO BREAK Germans at End of Wits in Attempt to Divide Their Slaves. (Correspondence of the Jan Asso. Pres) 25.—After more of effort the Belgium have Amsterdam than three ¥ Ger- man authorities in admit the failure of their attempt to drive a wedge between the two races and languages in Bel unity of Belgium still exis there aré signs that the Ger { have given up. at least for the time | | being. their attempt to break it up The authority for this statement is the German propogand ! Holland, the Toekomst, that the present policy nor-General in Brussels moderate”, and that < policy means ce.” The article ng the advocates of the forn to ‘'steer a mid ip their Adurishe; to which of the is Gover- “‘more Serlin approve: of maini concludes n polic and give rhotoric.” The attempts of the force the Flemish sels and Antwerp have completely failed ernment has had to beaten. The supporters man scheme amons the IR ulation are known “Activitists” and are very unpopular majority of their fellow Activists “demonstration vas ranged in Brussels recently and much exploited in the German Pres; at the time. But according to the i Tcho Belgo, the demonstration was ¢ rhetori “Instead of 3,000, the audienca was only 1,000 says the newspaver. “Moreover, onc-third of thosc Dutch ~nd another third partly in uniform. The proce: the market-place W as noteed by t crowd withstanding the protcction of the lo- Next time there mav be a | Activists are beginning to divide into Maximalists Mini- | malnists and are becoming very diffi- | ourse Germans language on declared and the confess itself | of the Ger- m pojp are gov as were | soon riot. Now the Largest Sale of Any Medicine i e e e o i the Javia: cuit for their German bosses to han- | dle.” . they | & g article | B de- | [ Pan-Ger- | to- Waltz Intermezzo from | Jewels of the Madonnd’' Wolt-Ferrari’s famous opera was first pro- d‘uc_ed in Chicago. Now, appropriately, the Chicago Symphony gives us the master in- terpretation of this vivid, sparkling Intermezza. A6014— $1.50 olambia Geafonola Price §215 With electric metor, 1807 L R P’hura. only Japanese Butterfly”in Love Duet Setting his scene to the magic of night and the flash- ing of fire-flies, Puccini has woven into this duct‘a“ the wonder and mystery of love. Miura, who records cxclpslvely for Columbia, has made the most of the music, soaring superbly ‘with Kittay to the final tri- umpbant high C. 49265 — $1.50 Al Jolson's Biggest, .Dixie Hit of the Day ““I'm all bound round with the Mason Dixon Line’’ —can you guess how Al Jolson would go to it? Well, just wait till you hear this record, for Jolson has gone you one better than you guessed! On the back the Darktown Strutters Ball,”” a negro jazz song that’s a riot of laughter. A2478 —75¢ “Owver There " — The Best Record Yet !{Crc’s.fhc record that sets the pace for “‘Over Ihere._ Arthur Fields, the soldier baritone, has sung this famous war song with the snap and dash of a bayonet charge. A2470—75¢ These are only a few high spots in the magnificent J\,}I:m'h Llst of Columbia Records. 71 numbers in all, ranging from opera songs and popular hits to dance music and children’s records. New Columbia Records on Sale COLUMBIA GRAPHC MPANY, NEW YORK Send some records to vour soldier. There is a Columbia Grafonola in his Y. M. C. A. or Knights of Columbus Hut. Gth and 20th of Every Month HONE C

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