New Britain Herald Newspaper, May 8, 1918, Page 3

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, MAY 8§, 19 18. Boston Store Have You a Friend in THE TRENCHES? If So This Item Will | Be of Interest to You:| - 25 DOZEN HEAVY GREY WOOLEN SOCKS Extra Long Tops, Made | "Especially for Trench Wear, Sizes 10to 111-2 AT 75¢ A PAIR -0— PULLAR & NIVEN FLUSH KIDNEYS WITH SALTS IF BACK IS ACHING Noted Authority S we eat' too - much meat, which clogs Kidneys. Take glass of Salts when Kidneys hurt or Bladder bothers yon. ™\, No wman or woman who eats meat regularly can make a mistake by flushing the kidneys occasionally, says a well-known authority. - Meat forms uric acid which excites the kidneys, they become overworked from the strain, get sluggish and fail to filter the waste and poisons from the blood, then we get sick. Nearly all rheu- matism, headaches, ver trouble, nervousness, dlzziness, sleeplessness and urinary come from ‘sluggish kidneys. The moment you feel a dull ache in the kidneys or your back hurts or if the urine is cloudy, offensive, full of sediment, irregular age, or at- tended by a sens of scalding, stop eating meat and get about four ounces of Jad Salts from any phar- macy; take a tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast and in a few days vour kidneys will act fine. Fhis 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 kidneys, also to neutralize the acdis in urine so it no lunger causes tation, thus ending bladder weak- Jad Salts is inexpensive and cannot injure; makes a delightful efferves- cent lithia-water drink which every- one should take now and then to keep the kidneys clean and active and the blood pure, thereby avoiding serious kidney complications. “Semon can't make all the Tce Cream so he makes the Best.” Do You Know That You Can Buy SEMON’'S "ICE CREAM At Axelrod’s Pharmacy Do You Know That Semon’s Ice Cream Is Purer, Richer, Better! Do You Know That no matter what part of the city you live in you can have it delivered at your door. JUST ‘PHONE 1366. Do You Know That notwithstanding its perior quality the prices no higher. NowItIs UptoYou Aselrod’s Pharmacy Park and Bigelow Streets, “ 'Phone 1366, su- are [ quet on Sunshine Soctety. 1Zave you had & kindness shown1? Fass it on. "Twas not meant for you alone. Pass it on. Let i travel down the vears, Let it wipe other’s tears, Till in Heaven the deed appears. Pass it on. an 3cito—Good cheet, Flower—Coreopsis. Colors—Gold and white. sent to 11 weeks. of flowers were the past few urgent need of a large tunic carriage pre- know of such please and it will be called Gifts homes durin It you telephone 308 for at once. Twenty-three articles were distrib- uted by members to needy ones. Bear in mind the convention at Hartford, beginning on Wednesday evening and continuing until Satur- day. Interest will be great and aside from meetings there will be a ban- Thursday evening and whist dance on Friday evening. It i that a large number will at- Delegates from tho local so- will he Mrs. E, B. Proudman, Mrs. L. M. Barnes as alternate. Ninety-one oranges were sent to the hospital since the last meeting. There are four wheel-chairs, three air cushions and four pairs of crutch- es idle at present, Do mot forget the meetings of the Red West Main street, on The next meeting will be May 20 when reports will of the- convention. A voung boy, 15 or 16 years of age, desires board in the country where plenty of milk and eggs are available. The price must be reasonable and conditions such as to make for a re- turn to health at an early date. Com- municate with telephone 308 for fure ther particula and hoped tend. sewing rooms, Wednesdays. held on be given GO TO WORK Being Detailed This Weel to Connect- icut Shipyards. Hartford, May being detailed to vards this week by Leo A. Korper, state director of the United States Public Service Reserve and they rep- resent the first group of men who have been called into service since the enrollment of the United States Ship- yard Volunteers began early in Feb- 8.—Carpenters are onnecticut ship- x carpenters were sent to work in the shipyard at Groton and thirty-nine have started work at the shipbuilding plan at Gildersleeve. Di- rector Korper will continue sending volunteers into the shipyards all this weel, including some to the plant at Hog Island and the barracks and Wwarehouses at Schenectady, N. Y. Superintendent Clifton E. Daven- port of the Hartford office of the United States Employment Service and his two assistants are engaged in interviewing volunteers adaptable for shipbuilding work that has the first call. Housing conditions in the com- munities adjacent to the shipbuilding plants are investigated by Director Korper before men are called into service. TKabbi Wise, South Church, Thurs- day night—advt. K. OF C. PATRIOTIC. Abandon Usual Concert War Rally. Hartford, May A sacrifice of custom will be made at the Knights of Columbus state convention on Mon- day, May 13, in Norwich when, a great public war rally will be held instead of the usual festive ‘“‘concert and ball” which marked the opening night of former conventions. The patriotic event will be held in the Norwich town hall at 8 o'clock in the evening. The fraternity has gen- erously offered half the program to the Connecticut Red Cro Colonel Isaac M. Ullman of New Haven, chairman for the Red Cross second war fund drive, has accepted and has arranged to have an eloquent speaker address the meeting. Captain Hazel- woad, who has recently returned from will deliver the Red d Ball For for preserving, purify- ing and beautifying The Complexion Hands and Hair Especially when preced- edbytouchesof Cuticura Ointment to pimples, redness, roughness and goan«:h'ufi.“flzI r sample 2 by mail ad. AR o0 - Sowo 26e. REECHANS PILLS Keep the stomach well, the liver active, the bowels regular, and the breath will be sweet and healthy. But let poisons accumu- late in the digestive organs, thesystem becomes clogged, gases form in the stomach and affect the breath. Correct these conditions with Beecham’s Pills. They promptly regulate the bodi- ly functions and are a quick remedy for sour stomach and Bad Breath Rargest Sale of Any Medicine in the World, Sold everywhere. In Boxes, 10c., 25¢. HIT U-BOAT CAPTAIN Nova Scotian Gave German 100 Per Cent Down East Jolt on Jaw and Dived Overboard to Freedom. An Atlantic Port, May 8.—To have felled a German U-boat commander on the deck of a and then to have made submarine his escape experience of Captain D. J. McDon- ald, the tall, ruddy Nova Scotian skipper of the three-masted schooner John G. Walter, now at the bottom of the Atlantic. His quickness in diving overboard and the timely ap- arance of an allied destroyer saved him. The captain told of his experience late yesterday when he srived on an American steamship. The schooner, he said, was on her way from a Canadian port to Kng- iand when she fell in with a sub- marine. The U-boat commander, er ordering the crew to take to their boats, sank her with bombs. He took the captain off, however, and or- dered him on board the TU-boat. ‘While some of the German crew were bringing over some of the steres taken from the Walter the two captains stood on the deck and watched the proceedings. “I guess you will have to make a visit to Germany,” the German naval officer said. Captain McDonald did not immediately. He waited a few sec- onds, and then his fist shot out and caught the German on the point of the jaw. As the U-boat commander fell stunned the Nova and went head first over the side. “I swam under water as long as I could, and when I came up I was fortunate enough in emerging in such is the reply a position that one of the small boats | was between me and the submarine.” The under-sea boat moved about the small boats intent on locating the skipper. He said that there was wreckage floating about, and that he was fortunate, when he dived again, in getting behind some of it so that he was hidden from the submarine. The search was still on when a de- stroyer hove into view and the Ger- mans hastily submerged. WANTED IN ORDNANCE DEPT. Typists, Auditors Stenographers, Accountants, Bookkeepers, and Others Needed in Bridgeport Office. Hartford, May 8.—Positions open for office workers in the execu- tive headquarters of the Bridgeport District Ordnance Office, at Bridge- port, according to information given out today by representative Civilian Personnel nance Department. Persons interest- ed in this patriotic employment should correspond with Mr. Korper at the State Capitol, Hartford, or with Lieutenant Thomas Hewes at No. 181 State stret, Bridgeport. The classes of employes needed at present are stenographers, typists, countants of all kinds, bookkeepe: auditors and persons who are familiar with the keeping of graphical charts of production and persons who can do the minor grades of office work. A new local civil service board of- fice was opened this week in connec- tion with the Bridgeport District Ord- nance Office. It is prepared to re- ceive applications for the positions of sub-ingpectors of munitions and killed laborers on munidons. Tt will 1so be the duty these applications, to maintain lists of eligibles and to certify eligibles to the various army inspectors of nance in this district which includes the entile state and the western coun- ties of M wchusetts. are Leo A. Korper, special for Connecticut of the Division, Ord- ord- BOSTON ANXIOUS TO SERVE. Ma, Boston in two provided more trained response to the call for the ordnance than any other city in the country, George Sagen- drop, head of the department’s civil- ian division here, gaid to- day. Of 86 applications for appoint- ment interviewed yesterday by Cap tain Hugh Pastori, 60 were accepted has draftsmen in bureau personnei South Church, Thurs advt, Rabbi Wi day night. Scotian turned | of this office to rate ! LIKE THE THIRD LIBERTY LOAN HOFFMANN'S VICTORY RBEAD WENT OVER THE TOP We are now using our new formula for “Aunt Delia’s Victory Bread” and as one lady expressed it, “It makes you forget that you are eating war bread, so fine it is.” You surely owe it to yourself to try a loaf of “Aunt Delia’s Victory Bread” today. Your grocer sells it. HARTFORD MAY SALE OF HOUSEFURNISINGS e O . - b ARTICLES | | THURSDAY. IDED IN EVERY HOME FRIDAY PRICES SATURDAY — | THURSDAY | FRIDAY | BATURDAY W Get Supplies. A Chance to Secure Wise Fconomic: Some New and Cons Kitchen We are introducing our Housefurnishings floor, with a sale for three Thursday, Friday and Saturday,, of] things that every housewife needs at the lowest possible prices. Everything new and depend You will find this a pleasant place in which to shop, with excellent service venient new section, lower| In HOFFMANNSBAKERY 62 West Main St. Two Stores, 95 Arch St. Star Cloak |Suit House SKIRTS AND DRESSES WILL OPEN SATURDAY, MAY l1lth At 9:30 A M. With a Complete Line of Ladies’ and Misses’ Cloaks and Suits See Our Advt. in Friday's Paper Experienced Salesladies Wanted Good Salary Paid censese.10C o ECHO TOILET PAPER LUX ... 5 cakes for a package. KUTTER CHOPPER chops all kinds of ol or cooked, and all kinds of vegetables, into clear sut, uni form pieces, regular price $1.66 Sale price ; FOOD Fine grade Crepe, 4 oz rolls, meat, jnii regular price 5c a 7 rolls WELCOM for e OAP PYREX GLASS COOKING WEAR—FOR BAKING Pyrex is ready for immediate vice and may be used for an; foods baked in the oven. ;Our stock is complete. Tk wre is super: jor in mar w and everyone likes it who tries it. Not expensive; either prices ranging from 12 1-2¢ to $2.00. AND SERVING. FLORENCE 'OIL COOK STOVES All Done at Once ISCUITS, baked potatoes, a savory roast, soup, and coffee—all at once, Suchis housekeepingwithaFlorence. Until you own this wickless oil stove, you are a slave to kitchen drudgery. The Florence burns kerosene—saves coal. v The Fuel Administration authorizes us to say thatit considers the use of Oil Cook Stoves and Oil Heaters at this time a very important help inthe necessary conserva- tion of coal for war purposes. ¢ Come in and let us show you how { simply it works. Save Coal ABENTS FOR GLENWDB® - RANGES OVERLOOKIRG CAPITOL @ROUNDS COMPLETE HOME FURNISHERS 40-58 FORD STREET WHERE "QgAUTY UARTFORD 1S “HIGHER THAN PRICE. INOL Americas Choice A Used by the Army ard Navy. Theshine thatstands the weather. Preserves and softens leather. SummorA HOME SET Send one to your soldier boy to dust and iS3 polish his shoes. Ask Nearest Store BLACK—TAN— WHITE—RED Don’t Forget Your Best Friend on \ Mother’s Day A 'l;he lnl!ial:x dledcrerl that on this noble eatival we should exrpress. i with flowers. Send Mother o <"t ROSES—Thereare many inexpensive w?nhcnu to rléooselfrom For those who wish to spend a little more we suggest the queen of all flowers— American Beauties—with long stems. SPRING FLOWERS in Baskets or Grow- ing Plant, id i i ‘White Flowers for your own personal use, VOLZ FLORAL CO. 90 West Main St. ) Place Your Ord Now for, Sunday, May

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