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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1918. News For Women Readers = *My little doughter and myself both use Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin and find it invalu- able as a remedy for constipation. I would not be without it.” '(From a letter to Dr. Caldwell written by Mrs, Will H. Thomp- son, Ripley, Ohio.), A mild, effective remedy for constipa- tion that is peculiarly adapted to the needs of elderly people, women and children, is the combination of simple laxative herbs with pep- sin known as Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin. It brings natural relief, without griping or strain. DR. CALDWELL’S yrup Pepsin The Perfect Laxative Sold by Druggists Everywbere 50 ¢zs. (3=) $1.00 A TRIAL BOTTLE CAN BE OBTAINED, FREE OF CHARGE, BY WRITING TO DR. W. B. CALDWELL, 459 WASHINGTON STREET, MONTICELLO, ILLINOIS dish to the list that can be made with | corn. ~ H - with honey use one to three cupfuls of pples can be baked without sugar. | In preserving cupful of honey ‘water. agreeable ineapple gelatine is an ge. Sun-drying is one of the most sat- isfactory and cheapest methods of rains are the cheapest foods We | gqrying. eat. | R fets can be baked just as pota- | It Is Well to add salt to lima or Pave. ‘.Qn'nng beans when they are partly g1y ! cooked. reen eorn soup can he made | e rice stock. { To keep salad greens crisp, wash - { them, put into an airtight can and | foiled rice with cheese sauce is a | set in a refrigerator. tute for meat. = Ixcellent cookies can buckwheat, so that the need never be empt of jar be made cookie eviled shrimp can be made very h like deviled clams. 1l well-ordered diets should be | Cottage cheese and guava jelly bd on the essentfals. | spread on barley bread make novel g | and delicious sandwiches. lain French salad dressing is best { ————e will be found ps—used in- Soda-fountain straw valuable on camping t | stead of drinking cu theese salads. ruit and milk sherbets are titutes for frozen ereams. whole barrel of dried rhubarb be tied up in a paper bagz. good As far as possible see that the re- frigerator is filled with one piece of ice. Tt will melt evenly. Always wash fruit jars pshed potato loaf makes an ex- and covers nt meal with bacon and peas. very thoroughly in clean, soapy wa- — ter before using. gardeners should save as much —_— as possible for next year. For making salad dressing most beater rn omelet adds another delicious satisfactor o Dover egg and a conical-shaped bowl. You get these dishes © with ¢ e Save the Coupons and Get These Dishes Each carton of Parksdale Farm Eggs contains a coupon. When you have 25 coupons send them to us with only $3.75 (cash or post office money order), and we will send you fully pre- paid the handsome 42-piece Parisian set of dishes shown here. K There are no finer eggs packed, and reasonably priced too. Big, meaty eggs—their fine flavor betokens their source. ASK YOUR GROCER FOR THEM. The dishes are high grade—guaranteed by the maker. The design is a handsome floral pattern in pink, blue and gold. The illustration shows every piece. It’s easy to get a full set of 112 pieces. Save 25 more coupons and send $3.75 and you will receive the second set of 35 pieces. Then for 25 more coupons and $3.75 you will get the last set of 35 pieces. The same coupons are packed with Wedgwood Creamery Butter—Ask your grocer for it. Send money and coupons to P. BERRY & SONS Ine. | 1 i tle service for me when I was as { which | shaken. | his servant had only tle girl w: | | tn the fewest possible words | presence is a menace. { to make his report. REVELATIONS OF A WIFE What How Lillian Played Her Part. “Malay hal peated, looking -cast father Allen Drake in my re- at as- shment. tou “Whom do vou Kato, my Japanesc boy? “Well! If you call about one-six- teenth Jap blood a Japanese, I mean your boy,” Mr, Drake retorted. m h more than that in his mongrel veins but what he has is sct- mean ? sure he tled in his brain and his facial cl acteristics, so he passes for the orig- inal very well.” “T'm sure you n Drake,” my father with touch of stiffness r. “I've known of the hoy for a long time, known him to be trustworthy, and he claims to be a fu “Nevertheless, ,"" Mr. Drake ed, “he is the same lad that I half kil time in the Philippines to keep him from performing that lit- one Have you ever noticed a long, slanting scar on his neck and chin? 1 gave him that in twisting the kreese he had in his hand up out of the way of my own precious tummy, for which he was aiming. He's a bad egg if ever there was one, treacherous as the devil, and for sale, body and soul, to the highest bidder in the neighbor- hood.” His words were convincing, author- itative. I saw Dbelief, remorse, alarm creep into my father's face, from the little remnant of color it ed receded, leaving him pallid, Lillian’s prescient distrust of rritated him, but this calm, convincing knowledge over- whelmed him. Pos “But this is terrible, Drake,” he said. “If this be true, he knows far itoo much of what we're doing, although, of course, I've never made a confidant of him. But he has been my messenger, and he has had count- opportunities to betray me.” “Where Did You Sec Him?” “And if he hasn't vet done it, it's because nobody has yet overbid you,” Mr, Drake replied cynically. “But where did you see him?% my father asked. “He requested perm sion to go away for a little while this evening, and I—knowing that you were coming—was glad to grant it, so | he didn't open the door for you."” Mr. Drake looked at Lillian, and she took up the explanation. I glanced at her heightened color understand- ingly. It always embarrasses her to relate an instance of her own superior judgment “You will recall that we thought it best to have Mr. Drake come to our house first, then through the shrub- bery to yours, ignoring the fact that it was she who had suggested the arrangement. “And Kato, evidently preparing to profit the letting down-of the bars be- en the two families, was talking to incidentally, 1 have ang around all hav Mr. ved. I tw William—whom, instructed to let K he wishes—T man Drake see him, him had heard the sto: Malay servant and the averted kreese, and thought it worth the chance. Shadow Brings Bad News, My father rose, and with the court- ly foreign touch with which he invests his treatment of women, he crossed to Lillian’s side and raised her hand to his lips with a ceremonious bow. “Dear lady,” he said, “I am etern- ally indebted to you, not only for your forethough, but for your forbear- ance. 1If I had but listened to you the other day ‘Why he may have over- heard the list of figures which my lit- repeatin, Lillian smiled, and then she told of her coup in turning the key upon Kato when he had slipped into the broom closet upon her opening of the door. It wal tory Mr. Drake knew, for we had discussed Kato thoroughly before we came into my father’s house, but my father's face showed the relief he felt. “That's one danger " he commented, ot he.” avoided any “but his very What is to be w done?” He turned to Lillian with a percep- tible anxious deference to her opinion. “I.et him have the run of the two houses as he will,” she replied promptly, “He won't make a move that isn’'t accounted for. For instance, he is being followed tonight, and af- count of every move he has every person he has seen.” made, fillment of her prediction brought sor- row and heavy anxiety to all of us. It was almost midnight when Kato [ returned, and later still when the man detailed by Lillian to follow him came Lillian and I had waited up for him, I against her urg- ent wishes, but I couldn’t sleep while such an issue waited. And the report was that the man to whom Kato went straight as an ar- row, with whom he was closeted for | hours was Harry Underwood, and that | Grace Draper and | an n unknown wom- scription of whom fitted were present at the inter- the de Mrs. Allis— view! The panel veil is a long rectangle to be thrown over the head before donning the hat. ‘shh 5. STANLEY HORVITZ, uptometrist 327 Main St. Optician a | she said deprecatingly, | ter he returns I shall have a full ac- | She was a true prophet, but the ful- Allen Drake Knew of Kato and | Due to the large number of men | farms the Cross with cows wounded or sick in 1ce, the nced | loaned by the neh government. | for increased supplies of the above | will establish a model experimental | named articles is great and ever in- | dairy, which in addition to gardening | creasing. Six million articles re | and cattle raising will give convales- | needed now. The need is urgent. | cents useful recreational employment. | This amount cannot be bought, and | The manure from the dairy, it is | must be supplied from houschold | pointed out, will be very valuable. to | \ \ N stocks, if supplied all, to reach | the garden, which, because of the | France in time to relieve the present | climate, can he kept in cultivation | ture of Chas. emergency. during the entire year personal super Hxamine now your home stock of — sheets, hand towels, bath towels, CITY ITEMS s Fust-as handkerchiefs, and napkins, and as . heaith o much as you can spare, give. The T A articles should be white, strong goods, | | | | i | i | cotton, or linen. Send to the RRed C : nue and headquarters, 21 Washington street. | oy = ooy 000 <80 i 2 W son of 128 1t street and Miss m{g}'r‘:[ l;fi{““j“"o T;:‘fl(\x:...:f.’:.,V,C?.]:,. nling of 15 Kelsey | relief of Constipation, hospitals in France have proved so |*'% ey ~ s kit o R meeting of the Catholic Women Al & h 0 Cross has sent a representative to this | Benevolent Legion of St Mary's similation of Food; givin Sourniry o sure ten expert market | church will be held Wednesday even- gardeners to direct such activities at | il The social planned by the legion } Ki d all American hospitals in France. To |1 n postponed. e | The n convalescent soldiers th wrdens | Mrs. Bertha Prelle of EaLei | offer useful and interesting occupa- | Wood stret is seviou: ill at her tion, and have been of great practi- | home. e ’ cal service according to reports from | A special meeting of Clan Douglas France ses of shell shock | Will be held tonight at 8§ o’clock ir In many c the doctors have Other patients, agreed work is one of the best however, Jjoy the outdoor activities and have hecome so attached AMERICAN RED CROSS NOTES! Marri to Louis linen shower that farm restorative greatly en- | many to the soil London, Oct | | | | their [ | Red ochecs 1O. U, A. M. hall, FATHERLAND PARTY NOT BEININD CHANCELLOR. e he issued Hartford ave- 'he Fatherland The Kind You Have Always to deceive you in th = (d in Use For ‘Over 30 Years Bought has borne the sk H. Fletcher, and has been made under his Allow no one Counterfeits, Imitations and cod’’ are but experiments, and endanger the Children—Experience against Experiment. What is CASTORIA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Caster Oil, Pare- goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. Opium, Morphine nor other marcotic substance. more than thirty years it has been in constant use forthe Wind Colic and | Diarrhoea; allaying Feverishness arising therefrom, and by regulating the Stomach and Bowels, aids the as- sion for over 30 years. Flatulency, You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of THE CENTAUR GOMPARY, REW YORK CITY. that they have announced their in- | e e e tention of obtaining farms on b e S o e ke | T e of the Reichstag on Saturday, held a | The gardens, moreover, provide | P.eeting and ed resolutions to re- | quantities of fresh green vege dlen |t by “\"‘j‘ pos: Mv_m ins the peace ! Fashions come and go, but the rose | to buy two or three commonplace to the diet kitchens and especially | Offer of Prince Maximilian. the new | yemains the fashionable touch of col- | things. certain American vegetables ot .;“‘?"'}"“]_‘“"”‘)‘“‘“‘;I a "“}‘”“ 10 ot | ©F for the girdle of evening gowns. | e common in France but very popular | Z00¢0 ‘&]\‘“‘“ Lol SRR EE TeL ! e GET RID OF THAT with the patients. egraph' Co. | The same type of dress—the soft 3 I The garden attached to Base Hos- 1 N S | dress—may be put on at noon and N R pital No. 6, for example, produced | A TQ | worn or all occasions, even at the If you are subject to AR L e ey heed the cough as a warning. more L [ | ! MAN'S ALTERATIVE may tables in less than three month s Pt { > i - > e e { — | A becoming hat of dark blue Geor. | [® StOPPINg the cough. In addition, = L . { Butterfly bows of extreme height = = of dark blue Geor- | i3 5 valuable tonic and health-builder stocked with radishes, potatoes, beans | 5 gette crepe is fashioned on sailor lines v i1 lettuce. Included is a large | Perch on the tops of crowns of close- | 2 > No alcohol, narcotic or and lsttuce. Included 1s o large |BEC: 98 HO€ F { and trimmed with a knotted velvet othing ituadiiTrcat planting of green corn, which will i = St AT ! ribbon. fuil e G enable our boys to enjoy corn on the | o H S IRAR 5 S cob, a vegetable practically unobtain- { Tricolotte, combined with either | - It is always better to b e cloak | o 200 4nd $1,50 Bottles at ah draf s P A < to buy one cloak | pigts or from manufacturer, Postpaid. able in French markets. i wool or jersey, broadcloth or e is | or hat with really heautiful lines and | BCORMAN IABORAT\)I‘VX - 7 In connection with one of these !a fascinating combination. wear it for two or three seasons than e S 1 T I d ph > Most Complete c “Three in One Ran e Yet Produced. Lever ell the way down, placing the burner in position to heat the oven for either buking or roasting with gas, on & special insulated oven rack. Showing burmer in position in the oven for broiling with special broiler and drip pan. Raising the lever, lifting the burner entirely out of the way, for use with a coal or wood fire — this automatically shuts off the gas. Push the lever full down and it drops the burner into a position where it will heat the oven to any degr:e desired. Push the lever half down and the gas burner is in a position for broiling (with a specially designed broiler and drip pan for your convenience). for coal; five burners for gas.) The MAGEE NATIONAL RANGE embodies the most modern and clusive ideas in iron and white enamel Range Construction. (Four holes WEIANT, Heaters GAS or COAL or WOOD THE SAME OVEN is heated with either gas, coal or wood, slone or in combination, as preferred. This exclusive MAGEE method saves both time and fuel, and offers quick and positive results. Raise the lever and the gas burner closes into the back of the oven out of the way, for heating with a coal or wood fire. The Top Gas Burners Light Auto- matically —no matches— ¢“just push the button!** The MAGEE NATIONAL RANGE is really a gas, coal or wood range in one, and offers the utmost in service in a very compact form., (The range is but 46 inches over all.) ex- Werite for descriptive circulars MAGEE FURNACE CO., Inc., BOSTON, MASS. It contains neither healthy and natural sleep. The Children’s Panacea—The Mother’s Friend,