New Britain Herald Newspaper, September 27, 1918, Page 13

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Lift Ufi ifl'@fis" F:eezone is W:agi(,’ Lift any Corn or Callus right off with fingers—No pann‘ {Drop = little Freezone on an aching | tiny bottle of Freczone for a few cents, nily that corn stops hurt- |sufficient to rid your feet of every then you lift it right out. It |hard corn, soft corn, or corn between pesn’t hurt one bit. Yes, magic! the toes, and calluses, without sore Why wait? Your druggist sclls a |nessorirritation. Try it! No humbug} { bn, A5 VICTORY BONDS Help Uncle Sam Win the War. Double Your Previous Subscriptions to LIBERTY “BONDS. HOME BANKING & REALTY CO. ' Have You Seen the New Fall Styles (’ in STETSON Self-Comforming Berbies? I This self-conforming idea is a Stetson specialty. It gives you the touch of formal style that belongs to ja.derby—with the soft hat ease on the head. [ Very light and flexible—put it on and wear it out of the store—needs no breaking in. P consider this an invitation to look over Stetsons $5.00 and up. Conn. Derbies $3.00, $3.50, $4.0 RAIL:2:OAD AR CADE, NEW BRETAIN Two Stores ithese hats and try them on. 900600000 = Think Of It-— $5.00 !—See Them! 'HE glove-like fit of these charming NEWARK Shoes for Women and their classic style will appeal to the most critical tastes. The VALUE we give in them at $5 will absolutely AMAZE you. Much to your surprise, you will find them identi- cal in style, quality and value to many offered elsewhereat $7 and $8. May we show you— tomorrow—what a teally BEAUTIFUL shoe you can buy at NEWARK stores for $5.007 Y Autumn Grey Kid, | Touis all - leather heel with num olate, inch . o m B alumi- nine 125 Now Stylos in Newark 3hoog for Mon now on display, $3.50 up. Same model in Havana Brown Kid The NewarK Shee Stores Co. 324 Main St., Near R. R. Crossing v and Saturday Evenings. New Britain Store, Open Mond | who is in position to tell why. | Russian engineer who built it. i built gl | his last | along the foot of the Altai mountains | me | last two hundred miles is within the NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, HURMANSK RAILWAY! ALLIED STRONGHOLD Parallels Finnish Border and. Built With View to Defense | " m | ‘Washington, 5 now mm-nnmg into > north. They are Archan, . The Germans have | lled upon Finland to move them. Presumably, in any > the Germans themselves will try ta And, from the map, the v Murmansk railroad, parallelling 5 border as it does for al- entire length, seems to offer vulnerable of open flanks. e Germans themselves know * than that, T Murmansk rail- Wbout as far as possible from an open flank. And just now | s at least one man in America | That | | of in tinst most it > most is Vladimir Goriachkovsky, the big Tt was month two years of wa absolute need o port on the Arctic. chosen for the > he was an engineer who ady solved many problems— work had been a railroad in less than eighteen n after nearly found the and it was known that the Mur- mansk would be a road of many And when it was planned T a moment was .t it was a railroad sooner or later might be a | e object of attack. | s on Schedule Time. , to look at it only as a It runs from Svanaka, the ' line junction east of Petrograd, | six hundred miles north to Kola. Ifg would Deli But, railroad retic Cire only Arctic and Kola is the world's road terminus. To build tk Murmansk in a year and a half—it was finished in November, 1917,—100,000 men and 15,000 horses were put to work. And in one sense it is an American railroad. For it was built with American materials. Three years before the marines | reached the White Sea, our ships and our freight-handlers were going there with rails and construction machin- ery. When no pick would open the frozen ground, great fires were built to thaw it for brigades of American steam shovels, When it was found impossible to get supplies through from the south for the construction camps, America was drawn upon for the n ed flour and bacon. And, from first to last, it was found pos- cible to let everything rest and de- pend upon American business system. In this wa When a railroad is to be built in record time, work must begin simul- taneously along almost the whole nd the tools and rails, the k and pplies must be de- is in anywise pos- sible to the particular section for which the re designed. Well, when the right-of-way was located, it was found that at various points on the road there were adjacent points on the coast of Kola Bay and the White Sea where it might be possible for ships to make a landing. If they could do it, and make their deliveries exactly as per a previously arranged schedule, whole months could be >d. And our ships did it. -Despite , submarines waiting for them , and iccbe impeding traffic within, they made their deliveries as per schedule . Not a day was lost not al. The bacon and the st rived together. If the Murmans! promises to be one of the most useful roads on earth, America can claim at least a part of the credit for its being there. Reindeer Trails and Marshes. But why can it not be flanked and cut from inland? The answer lies in the nature of the gepuntry. It is absolutely wild and i tuglly impas- 8 It is much like northwestern Canada. There is the me amount of game. When our bo are not fight- | ing, they can fish and shoot There the‘same lack of all roads. The spa reindeer trails—reindeer sledded in ! the first French ammunition—are the | the German will find in that re ke Onega north th kes and marshes. F indeed, the marsh ble. {1y, even if a German army | Lake | marshes. | the allies reach the la SIGK WoMAN | Ihrn between the railroad and Finls “And a ma thousand ally unbrolen nibal, two ¢ all thir those few the ye wsed in war m syrinthine ways, only wolves scem able to thread them. And the wolves abound. To protect their hors nd cattle in | immer, the natives em on the ands found in the bizgzer lakes. And | whe the building of the road, certain German prisc used in the construction d themselves | y to run for it, at most three bring them baclk es, are @ cause- vail | of their worl in general, t proved in. Where the All this, the summer. In f Onega it isn't true at : the winter, when solid ice should fu nish road be In both cases the railroad is vulnerable. But, as will soon be seen, it is a vulnerability that | need give us little cause to worry | The Murmansk is sub-arctic only in a geographice se. The last reaches of the Gulf n modify the climate and there is mor Oon the large lakes the ccumu- lating w t of snow often forces the ice beneath the . which cannot make for the best of m ¢ thor- oughfares. en in the m: the invading army would be digging out the other half, enough Ice Ts Bad however, What of did get | through, it could stay only for the winter. From February to November its connections with it e would be severed absolutely. During the months of ice-sledding it might of course pile | up supplies and munitions enough to | carry it through the rest of the | But under the strain and | modern fighting that is unlikely. | Henceforward, too, the Prussian mili- tary imagination will probably be le: sanguine than it previously had hee o much for the regions north of Onega. What of the country to the south of it? From Petrosovosk on the lake, the line continues south to Svanka, 114 kilometres east of Petro- Between junction and capital | o open plain, and the Ge / now reach Petrograd at any time. Could they get across the Murmansk road from there? The 1,000 Ton Barge to the Rescue. | They could not. F in, extend- ing miles below IL.ake Onega there are once we and we shall no drain of NOW WELL longer need rail transportation. the eastern Onega opens th interior ¢ bar; | fr | things which r | stroy. Took Lydia E. Pinkham’s | : Vegetable Compound. |§ Read Her Letter. | Potterville, Pa.—‘“ For a long time I was bothered with pains in my side, and was so weak from my trouble that I could not do any lifting or hard work of any kind. 1f I tried to straigh- ten out when lying down it seemed as though something would tear loose. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- pound has restored my health and I am quite myself once more.”” —Miss HAzEL CHUBBUCK, Potterville, Penn. Thousands of womendrag along from day to day in just such a miserable con- dition as was Mrs. Chubbuck, or suffer- ing from displacements, lrregularltxes, inflammation, ulceration, backache,side- ache, headache, nervousness, or ‘‘the blues.”” Such women should profit by Mrs. Chubbuck’s experience and try this famous root and herb remedy, Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, and ‘fiir:id relief from their sufferings as she 1d. For special suggestions in regard to H)ur ailment write Lydia E. Pinkham edicine Co., Lynn, Mass. The result of its long experience is at your service. FOR SKIN ERUPTIONS " Nothing heals and clears the skin of infants and children like Sykes Comfort Powder | w | which contains harmless antiseptic healmg I ‘ngredients not found in any other powder. 25c at_the Vinol and other drug stores The Comfort Powder Co,, Boston, Mass. 1918. From ide of great the protected first of Rus Their hu steel been her main They are among those solutions do not des PEOPLE nals ht car They 400 Main St. as America's coal And where the lati tons, Russia’s barg sand. All are §g may .be easily 3 which they mo the Gulf of ’d the Cag) S Very Good Tuna Fish can BEST PURE 33¢ 28¢ 49c 25¢ 39¢ Best Comp. Selected EGGS Libby’s Brand Dressing laree bot Mazola Oil Pint Can doz 15¢SA y Very | Coffd Our TEA Best | TEA Best SAL. Best P SALMO Karo SYRUP 15¢ Washing POWDER 2 pkes 13¢ Very Good Pork 25C and Beans 2 cars Fancy j A. KATTEN é IMPORTANT ANNO v, We Are Offering the Following for To;;mrro $29.75 WINTER CATS $19.75 One hundred sumptuous winter coats made of all woel velour and Arherican Pom Pom in all the prevailing shades as Bur; Navy, Plum etc., loose swagger belted models collars of same material so you can wear your ndy, Reindeer, Taupe, Khaki, ith seal plgsh collars, others w1th wn furs—values up to $29.75. Introductory price $ i 9 . 7 5 150 HANDSOME SERGE DRESSES Up to $22.50 Values p to $29.75 Values $15.00 © $19.75 Beautiful Fren;:il Serges in a choice of every desirable style—from the .cute shert v style & waisted effects that delight the heart of the young girl to long straight line specially adapted to the more matronly women, braid trimmed and plain, some with little touches of brightness in vest and buttons. Sizes from 16 to 44. Values up to $22.50 Introductory price Clever Women’s Suits, fur trimmed and untri nd materials 1{ in all the newest shades.za aiues up to $29.75 E v $ ]— 3 '@0 Introductory price WS SUITS _ ned and $23\ 75 Upwards $19.75 fond i 200 Georgeiie Waists, $4.50. Va'ves up to $8.50 Just to acquaint you with our- new merchandise plan, we are offering 200 really beautiful georgette waists, others strictly some exquisitely embroidered, tailored—whites, fleshes, blacks and svit shades—only two hundred of them—so we advise quick response—values up to $8.50. Introductory price Our furs were purchased montbs ago, direct from the big fur max kets in New York and St. Louis, reputation stands behind o Wolves in taupe and poirct. Natural Raccoon Coats. member Katten' battleship grey and black. poiret. Muskrat Coats. $4.50 Re- ry fur he sclls, Specially priced. China wolves in taupe, Black foxes, long silken haired in black, taupe and HELP UNCLE SAM AND YOURSELF, BUY A LIBERTY BOND. A. KATTEN & SON H. 0. P. Ciothes 4-116 Asylum St., Hartford SALURDAY | “More for a Dnarihana Dllar Can Buy Eisewhere K bPEC}ALS Mohican Greamery BUTTER 1556, 315 ST62 | 30c | EGGS .. OLED, Swilt's Premium 1 33" ¢ ; liA\ PBERRY HOUR SALIiS 24c 3 ']‘( l ’4 M. Smoked Shoulders 1b S APPLE ER TT-P M. Rib Roast Beef HOUR SALE PANCAKE FLOUR, Aunt Jemima MINCE MEAT, Moh. Brand BEANS, All Kinds Dried . ... SOUPS, Moh. Assorted - bot 20C GOOD TABLE SYRUP ... PURE COCOAN FRESH SHREDDED COCOANUT | b DINNER BLEND ates Food Administration License Number G-08535 Shoulder Veal Roasts “LAMB SALE ~— Fancy LEGS LEAN LOIN ROAST .... Soaoos 1Y 2 7c Shoulder Roast Beef FRESH GROUND HAMBURG SLICED BE VER SWING w 28¢ 2w 16¢ - b 4 220 a. m. to 11 2. m. Hour Sale] s m::m?‘!:«:}nm 280 Senien AT c e MATCHES, Ohio BlueTip .... 17¢ 3 boxes CHOICE STEWING FOWL .. FANCY ROASTL FOWL .. (.'. b 45 C '{:;;:nl;(;&*i e m37c POTATOES Large White Jersey Sweet POTATOES Lima, Wax, Green String BEANS New PRUNES or RAISINS . FRESH NATIVE > bunch 1 Zc T 4 g MO BONELESS BOSTON ROLLS . FRESH PLATE 36C 1h35¢ LARGE JUICY LEMONS ...

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