New Britain Herald Newspaper, October 11, 1918, Page 3

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AT levest FRIDAY, OCTOBER !1 e NEW BRITAIN LY HERALD \‘ - 1912, HARTFORD e, Boston Store, YWE TOOK THE TIP Now It’s Your Turn BUY LIBERTY _ We have just placed on sale 60 PIECES ACME PERCALES 36 Inches Wide Light, medium and dark in the most attractive designs that have made their appear- ance on the market in many months. At Extraordinary Sale of the Famous GOSSARD CORSETS THE ORIGINAL AND TOPNOTCH FRONT-LACING AMERICA. OMETHING over six months ago we were advised to buy heavily of Woolens. We sized up the situation in advance and made big purchases of Suitings and Over- coatings—AND WE BOUGHT. ESULT: You'll see a most remarkable stock of Men’s “and Young Men’s Suits Here Now. Fine Worsteds in every color effect that could be desired and these prices bring biggest possible values. *30 *35 *40 and *45 Each of these offerings represents a saving of at least $5.00. Get that. CORSES IN Gossard Pre-eminence Never More Fully Assured Than This Beason. In view of the fact that in! a great many cities through- out the country no Percales can be bought under 50c a vard, this should be a good‘ opportunity for economical buyers. AND ON SATURDAY WE PLACE ON SALE. 535 Pairs of Gossard Corsets A Big Speciaj Purchase and MARKED AT TWO PRICES ONLY $275 $375 The Regular Prices of These Corsets are $4.00 to $8.75, Anther item of interest is a small lot of “Bates” PLAID GINGHAMS swell designs and colorings > ~ 38c. . These goods are very scarce.; WINTER OVER C 0 AT S ON'T believe all the high price talk about Overcoats. There’s comforting information for you at Hollanders’. Just see the great Overcoat display $1 8 to $50 Nereiat s o s S R Some Sitk lined—some full lined. All the good models—Ulsters included. We're putting out some corking good Overcoat Specials HOLLANDERS’ “THAT DEPENDABLE STORE” 82-88 ASYLUM STREET, HARTFORD. THE DAYLIGHT STORE ROM these splendid woolens we’ve had put up for us a stunning Suit proposition at $25. Some special this for Men and Young Men. Seeit. Try it on. Complete Range of Sizes. Gussard Corsets, the original front-lacing Corsets and known the country over for their superior style and wearing qualities, are only on very rare occasions available at less than regular prices. The Gossard company is very jealous of the reputation of its Cor- sets, and puts quality before everything else. Any Gossard, regard- less of its price, offers an unequalled wearing service. The new McCall goods are in. PULLAR § & NIVEN | Glass of Hot Water Before Breakfast a Splendid Habit Open sluices of the system each morning and wash away the polsonous, stagnant matter. Get Your Suit Here and at As we are sole agents in Hartford for Gossard Corsets we seoured this big lot representing & large part of the company's surplus stock today at such price concessions that we can sell them at these two phenomenally low prices, $2.75 and $3.75 a pair. Corsets usually $4 to $8.75. All sizes. Models for all types of figure. Adjusting Gossard corsets is simplicity ttself. est ease and produce the correct figure lines. They give great- At $2.75 (for this sale only) pink broche, pink coutile models, for short stout figures up to 36 size. Low and medium bust in pink and fancy coutile. Other models for other types of figure. The Corsets are regular $4.00, $4.50, $6 and $5.50 Corsets. Your At $3.75 many different models, low and medium bust, ‘;Vhita and pink. Corsets with rubber inserts back and front. Best mater- jals, the same you would usually pay from $6 to $8.75 for. Favorite THIS SALE IS FOR SATURDAY, MONDAY AND TUESDAY ONLY. OCOME SATURDAY, Price If you've been thrown into a panic by what you have heard and read HERE'S WARMING, SOOTHING RELIEF Those of us who are accustomed to feel dull and heavy when we arise; splitting headache. stuffy from a cold, foul tongue, n acid stomiach, lame b , can, instead, both look and feel as fresh as breath a daisy al- ways by washing the poisons and tox- | ins from the body with phosphated | hot water each morning. | We should drink, before breakfast, a glass of real hot water with a tea- spoonful of limestone phosphate in it to flush the stomach, liver, kidneys | YANKEE WOUNDED SHOW GREAT GRIT Hospital Visitors See Exhibitions ‘ : B FROM YOUR RHEUMATIC ACHES o' my pals, when we saw a mess o Squareheads hiding out in a ditch. “All right,’ says I, “Take that for the Lusitania, and that for the Tus- cania and that and that and that for them Belgium babies! And we threw every grenade we had with us.’ “The man from the north of Ire- land, who hasn’t been an American citizen very long sighs and says, ‘Sure | 1 like to sea’. lie here and think o' the And the one who tells me he} fas as I was concerned. I said, ‘Yon take me to some one that can talk my talk and then we’ll see.’ So they brought me here and the doctor looks me over and says the reason why they didn’t cut was because the chunk of iron was too close to my heart, and so I couldn’t stand to take either. ‘However’, says he '‘if you're game enough to let me do it without knock- out drops—'. So I says, ‘Doc. I'm your man.’ For prompt relief from Rheumatism, Neumfgia, or Lumbago, you can depend on Sloan’s Liniment. The warming, soothing, counter-irritant effect is the quickest way to overcome the inflammation, swelling or stiffness. A few drops go right to the sore part, draw the blood from the congested placeandremove the cause of the ache. Sloan’s Liniment makes rubbing need- less. It is easier and cleaner to use than plasters or poultices. It does not stain the skin or clog the pores. A bottle of Sloan’s Liniment is ail you need for quick rest and relief from the pains of sprains, bruises, backache, stiffneck, and most forms of rheumatic twinges. Generous size bottles at druggists about soaring prices, just compose yourself — you can still buy clothes here at your favorite price. | The great penetrating power everywhere. was born in Damascus and can speal | [pECeEratas; of and ten yards of bowe the previous day’s indigestible waste, sour bile and | poisonous toxins; thus cleansing, sweetening and purifying the entire aflmentary tract before putting more food into the stomach. The action of limestone phosphate and hot water on an empty stomach is wonderfully invigorating. Tt cleans out all the sour fermentations, gases, waste and acldity and gives one a splendid appetite for breakfast and and it is said to be but a little while until the roses begin to appear in the cheeks. A quarter pound of lime- stone phosphate will cost very little at the drug store, but is sufficient to make anyone who is bothered with billousness, constipation, stomach trouble or rheumatism a real enthus- iast on the subject of internal sanita- tion. Try it and you are assured that vou will look better and feel better in GUARD YOUR HEALTH Keep your feet warm and dry. Wool Sox will do the trick. All sorts from 85¢ to { feur of Great Bravery Washington, D. C., Oct. 11.-—Carol Corey, in a communication to the National Geographic society, gives re- markable pictures of the spirit of the wounded soldiers in American Military Hospital No. 1, at Neuilly, a | suburb of Paris. A part of the com- munication, which chronicles a visit to the two wards maintained in this hospital by the members of the so- ciety, is given as a bulletin of the war-geography series which the so- ciety heen issuing to the Ameri- can press from its Washington head- quarters for four years: “‘Got any chocolate?” begs one wounded soldler who is able to sit up in bed. He doesn't look more than seventeen but insists that he'll be nineteen next Tuesday. He's got what he calls three ‘scratches’, and throws hack the covers to exhibit a leg bound up like a mummy. I can't help thinking that I'd hate to have ‘scratches’ like his. “‘But, gosh! It was worth it as- serts he. ‘If yow'll stay with me a minute T'll tell you about it. “‘I was a motorcycle despatch | ! bearer, so they let me carry a forty- five. T was pumping up a flat tire when I heard my captain talking to a man in French uniform. Now, you | see, T know a lot o' German. All of | a sudden this bird gets tangled up in his French and begins to fill in with a few Kaiser words. ‘““‘Ha, Ha!' says I to myself; ‘so that's the little idea.” 1 went straight up to him and I says, ‘You're a spy, that's what you are’ Just like that! And he never denied ft, but started to beat it. ““The captain stood in the mid- dle of the road, with his mouth wide open, as I started to run after the Dutchy. He could run some, let me tell you When we got to the first turn there was a big military car { painted just like a French one. What | do you know about that! A man in- | side throws open the door, and then | I got husy. Bing! Bing! says I. and he went down like a lump o' dough. ‘“‘“The fellow in the car jumped out, hauled him in, and the chauf- started on high. The live one stood up in the back seat, and out o' three shots he made three hits. Whoopee! This is the life!’ How the War ‘Gets’ Some, ““Funny how this war ‘gets you, soliloquizes a soldier young in years, | but old in experience ‘Why, when | I was at home I couldn’t watch my | father kill a chicken. Now? Huh! Once I was racing along with some { shows us what's | really only the rim. seven languages compares his chil- dren to ‘bloomin' roses’. The red- faced fat boy yawns, ‘Oh for a dip at old Coney’ and a fourth asks the nurse if it's true that only seven died last night. “Patch Me Up Quick, Doc.” “A shoulder, now abmost well is being dressed, and {he surgeon’s mouth twitches cver so little as he hears, ‘Patch me up quick, Doc, and i i | | | Geographic Ward No. 2, I take a few | minutes to jot down some of the things | | | 1 “‘And he never wiggled a chimes in the nures. “‘But,’ says Arthur, ‘T didn’t care for it much when I heard him saw.’ Visiting the Wounded at Neuilly, “As I step into the corridor to go from Geographic Ward No. 1 to toe,’ 1I've promieed to bring next time. Here are a few of them: One detailed map of the Amercan front, one small comb get me away from here—I'm needed ! and mirror; one jar of jam (straw- somewhere else.’ | berry); one cheap volume of Shake- “The funny little Frenchman who | spear (any play); two bars of a cer- answers to the name of 'Blondy’ has complete charge of the phonograph. ! He hardly waits <or one record to finish before putting on another. Wondering why he should be her: T am told because he's got the habit.’ | He's been in the hospital so long that no one has the heart to send away. Visiting the Wounded at Neuilly. “Anyhow he's such a help. ‘But vou ought to see him limp when the major comes around!’ “:Only one thing worries me,’ an- him nounces a faint voice from the nearest cot. “The top of my tin hat and the top of my nut sailed away together, and if they don’'t give me back that | helmet I don’t care what becomes of me.’ “‘You ought to wear your soovneer ‘round your neck, like I do’ .ad- admonishes another. He boastfully left of a button— His tunic w Bullet said ‘Howd says he, ‘but not open when Mr. Pretty good work,’ good enough.’ “JTrom the pocket of what he calls his ‘kimona’ a proud owner pulls out a piece of hard tack. In its center is a big chunk of shrapnel, and my attention is called to the fact that said hard tack is still intact. ‘And then they expect a tooth to crack it he snorts. “Doc, I'm Your Man.” “The two enormous, open-windowed tents are crowded to capacity, and | dotted all about the wide immacu terrace are men in roliing chairs. Only one of them I8 in bed, and the nurse stops before him because she wants me te meet the boy known to all the hospitals as the finest soldier {in any army. “Tell her about yourself,’ she or- | aers. “rwWhy, there" nothing to smiles Arthur, ‘except that T was wounded about a month and a half ago. They kept me in a French hos- pital until day before yesterday. They told me there was nothin' doin' as tell’, | | | { | tain kind of soap; one good lead pencil and some funny post cards; one guide book of Paris and one nail file, GET RID OF THAT PERSISTENT COUGH If you are subject to weak lungs, heed the cough as a warning. ECK- MAN'S ALTERATIVE in stopping the cough. In addition, it is a valuable tonic and health-builder in such cases. No alcohol, narcotic or habit-forming drugs. Twenty years’ successful use 80c and $1.50 Bottles at all drug- gists or from manufacturer. Postpaid. ECKMAN LABORATORY, Phila- delphia. rouble spoil your good time Resinol heals sick skins When your friends notice that your skin is disfigured orblotched; if you have pimples or eruptions; if you just have to scratch that itching place, regardless of where you are or who is with you—don’t be discouraged—let Resinol Ointment and Resinol Soap help to heal your sick skin, and enable you to have a clear, soft complexion. 1 Doed by doctors for many yew. Soia by all e A SO SR T KD may aid you | PEOPLE REQUIRE A CHANCE To relieve the Monotony of life. Otherwise they fall into the treadmill sort of existence which is apt to become mentally depress- ing. Next to traveling among new surroundings the most effectual way to accomplish the purpose is to have your room repapered with a new style of paper, new window shades and some changing of furniture, you will feel a wonderful renewed interest in your home. Physicians have given this advice, with sur- prising results. Look your rooms over and decide which ones need a change then call and select a paper that will make your room cheerful for the coming winter months. (Ask to see the new soft grey coloring in Brenlin Window Shades, while you are in our store.) RACKLIFEE BROS. CO. INC. 250-256 PARK STREET NEW BRITAIN, CONN. exts 1$20 to $40 And the quality is here together with the price. ASHLEY BABCOCK CO. BUY LIBERTY BONDS panis | Influenza Fortify yourself agains it bv taking FLAX-SEED o = Builds Up. Strengtnens, Restores Vitality. Two Sizes—60c and $1.20. At all drug stores, VSE THE CLASSIFIED COLUM FOR QUICK RESULTS.

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