New Britain Herald Newspaper, November 12, 1918, Page 2

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1918, Keep Up the I HARTHRTES Christmas Spin Vish a message of Cheerfulness— with Holiday Greeting Cards. > in and see our fine selaction It pays in every way-—not il the last minute. THE I6kinson Drug Go. Stationery Dept. 169-171 Main Strea! : 'Ji‘?“l‘ ‘LLU T T ST whole history of the world. The Luke Horsfall Co. 93 ASYLUM ST, MARTFORD. ® Famous OIld Recipe § for Cough Syrup Easily and cheaply made at home, but it beats them all for quick resuits. Thousands of housewives have found | that they can save two-thirds of the money usually spent for cough prepara- tions, by using this well-known old recipe for making. cough syrup at home. It is simple and cheap to make, but it really has no_equal for prompt results. It takes right hold of a cough and gives | immediate relief, usually stopping an ord'mnrx cough in 24 hours or less. Get 215 ounces of Pinex from anjy druggist, pour it into a pint bottle, e add plain meumd sugar syrup to make a full pint. If you prefer, use clarified molusses, honey, or_corn syrup, instead of sugar syrup, Rither way, it tastes good, keeps perfectly, an lagts a family a long time. It’s truly astonishing how quickly it acts, penetrating through every air pas- safie of the throat and lungs—Ioosens and raises the phlegm, soothes and heals the membranes, and gradually but surel the annoying throat tickle and dreade cough disappear entirely. Nothing bet- ter' for hronchitis, spasmodic croup, whooping dough or bronchial asthma. ' Pimex is & special and highly concen- trated compound of genuine Norway pine extract, known the world over for its bealing effect ca_the membranes. Avoid disappointment by askinq your druggist for “214 ounces of Pinex” with full directions and don’t accept any- thing else. Guaranteed to give absolute satisfaction or money promptly refunded, he Pinex Co., Ft. Wayne, Ind. | has recelved some beautiful silks from RUB LUMBAGO PAIN OR BACKACHE AWAY Instant relief from pain, backache, sorencss, stiffness, sciation with #8t, Jacobs Liniment,” Back hurt you? Can't straighten up without feeling sudden pains, sharp rofres And twinges? Now listen| That's lumbage, seiatica, or maybe from & strain, and you'll get biessed retisf the mement you rub yeur baek with seething, penstrating "Bt Jacobs liniment!” Nothing elss takes out soreness, Jameness and gtiffness so quigily, ¥eu simply rub it en and eut comes the pain, It is perfestly harms leds and deasn’t burn or disorder the Bleis, Limber upl Den't puffer! et a smail trini bottie from your drug stors and afier using it just emes, you'll forget that yeu ever had baskashs, lumbage er peiatier, hessuse your back will never hurt or eause any moys migery, It never disappeints pnd has been resemmended fey 60 yoaws, ftep drugping kidneys| They den’t epuse baekaohs, hesause they kaye ne wnorves, therefere ean nat pain; OF HUNS’ WEAKENING Local Olicer Comments on First Plea for an Armistice Charles F. Hart has received the following letter from his son, Captain Charles E. Hart, Jr., recently cited for bravery by Major General Traub | of the 35th division in France, in | which he comments upon the official | receipt of the first attempt made by Germany to secure an armistice: What do you know about the Boche? He is licked and done for. | He iIs beating it for the Rhine and | fighting like a she-bear over her cubs to save them. Meantime, by cracky, | they bite the dust and say *“Mr. Wil- son, what you say goes.” A virtual surrender. But the devil is so crook- ; ed and tricky that I cannot believe the good news yet. It seems incred- ible that he has got his tail down so soon. Three months and he is done! | It seems incredible. Oh, the fighting | isn’t over yet by a long shot. We are pushing him as hard as possible right now, and pray God for the sake of the future we will continue to do so Il an actual understanding is reach- ed. The people at the head know, and won’t stop till the right time comes, Looking back on the recent offen- #lve and the whole war I have seen since entering the line last February, I am amazed at the few real impre slons it has left on me. That is, vivid pictures of what has gone on. It is, fortunately, an ensemble more or less indistinct, and the horrors do not stick In one’s mind unless one dwells | on them. i I used to wonder how people could | stand the horrible things that take place; but now I can see, and can understand the men who after a fight and a sleep and a feed can sit down to talk and laugh and even sing. It is, I suppose, the adaptability of the human mind to his environment. My only regret is that I can’t see, or rather, may not see, the war car- ried into Bocheland; and see their towns and homes made the rotten holes and hovels that they have made of France. Perhaps something will slip and they will pull some crooked deal, and the war will go to Berlin. In many ways it would be better for the world if the Boche could have a vear of his own dirty crimes; and if | he doesn’t make peace, God help him! This move, If peace doesn’t come, will simply add oll to teh flame; and nothing could stop the Boche army from annihilation of one kind (surfender) or another (death). The world for half a century will scorn and curse the Boche for what he ls; and in polite society, (that is in all | society except where money counts for more than the soul), the Boche will be an outlaw, a social leper; and “Made in Germany” will be a curse | to any man or thing, If that is hate, we've got it; and T | hope it will be taught to our chil- dren and children’s children, in or- der that the world may know, de- { epise, and protect itself against bru- | tality, crime, and power as the God of the human race, Let us recognize i the false god, Kultur, and preach him,—what he is, does and would do {if he had an opportunity; and Xkill | him now, for always We know the human race and its forgiving nature; its loathing to har- | bor ill against any other beins, its | tendency to say live and let live. But this wo must fight: Against Kultur, | against the Boche as a Boche who will wait a lifetime to lull into se- curity the easy world, till he has it in his power, to impose his will upon it. He is sly as a leopard and as patient as a mule to get his will. He almost did it this time. Only a mis- | caleulation, a slip in judgment by his bestial brain, made him fail to ac- complish his task, and be master of the world, east and west and all. Now | he is down, let's kill him and his| kultur for good and all. | That sounds like a lecture, but T got started and couldn’t stop. T hope many will realize this and will preach it till it iy spread broadcast through | the world. We are too kind-hearted and too forgiving to rcmember. But the Boche will remember, and plan! One cent sale Thursday, Friday and Saturday, at Clark & Bralnerd’'s Drug store, 181 Main street.—advt. Bt. Elmo lodge K. of P,, will meet tomorrow evening and degree work and other business will be taken up. | A large attendance is expected. Miss Marie Smith of Smith street various foreign countries, The silks are the gifts of her brother, Thomas J, Bmith who 1Is on the U. 8, Chsstoer, Leland Hoar who has recoverod | from n rceent nttack of pneumonta, | has returned to his ship at Hoboken, N, J. This ovening at the ¥, M, ¢, A, nn entertainmant and rocial will be held by the employes of the Btanley Works, Landery Frary & Clarle will presant o musieal program Thursday evening, Cards haye boen received by loenl friends of Hugena Clerkin, fermerly with the “Harald” and now in France as a ¥, M, O, A, secretary, ‘Gene’ says that he has heen in the drive in Argonne, pnd that the work of the Ameriean troops was eenspicuous, The eendition of Leuis Krachanfels and Caspar [Stefanofsii, the New Hayven men whe were injured in an automepile aceident in the Btanley Quarter Funday is jmproving and at the hespital it is believed they wiil regover, The 3Feman's Homa Missionary | seeiety eof the First ehurch will meet tomevrew at £i30 p, m. in the church | ehapel, at whiel time pollections for | the missienary pox will ba received, The jadies are Row werking for Mr, and Mrs. Payne ef Center, Neb. ... and at the Medical Officers’ Training Camp,Fort Riley,Kans. A Sact: Among the thousands of physicians and surgeons, from all sections of the United States, in training at Fort Riley, Kansas, for service here and overseas, it turns out that Fatimas far and away outsell every other cigarette—day in and That fact speaks for itself. Lrgedta M punsstioncoCn day out. A Sensible Cigarelle Fatimas please the taste, of course. But —they leave a man as fit as a fiddle, : should smoke wmore than usual. 13,000 PARADE TG TUNE GF VICTORY Shouting, Cheering Crowds Cap- ture City in Delirium of Joy A monsier parade, surpassing even the Red Cross and the ilthu Burritt parades, held in this city, gave vent to the patriotic enthusiasm of 15,000 marehers yesterday afterncon, The | parade took bhetwoan two and twe and one-haif hours in passing, and tho many signs, dummies of the *‘Beast | of Berlin", ‘and pairiotic floats were cheered along the long line of mareh, From t(ha blowing of the whistles before 4 o'clock yesterday morning until midnight 1ast night, impromptu parades gprung up in different parts | of the eity pund marching through | Main street with tin cang and with flags tools en numbers, The hig, for- | mal parade assembled at 280 jn the afterneon, empioyeos of the various | factories meeting at the faetery gates | and organigatiens at their usual meet- ing places, Practieaily every auteme- bile ewner in the city participated and the factory trucks were decorated, | cach to tell of their part in the war. Many Floats Are Seen. Among the many floats was one ar- | ranged by the employes of Peck & | gultan in ethgy, dragged on the Young's factory, to represent Victory, | Belgium, Italy, France and England. | In the float were female employves of the factory attired in Red, White and Blue, and signs were carried by the girls explaining the float. The float | | was cheercd continuously along the | lne of march as were the other floats | showing the “Maids who made the hand grenades” and the autos and teams boaring ‘‘kaisers” suspended with ropes or with swords suspended | over their throats, An nuto in which were Marine Ches, O'Neil and Private Dewey Ralander, both Invalided back from France n khort time ago, was wildly cheered, The line of march was from tho stato armory on Arch strest, to Maln and down Iranilin Square crossing Whiting streot, to Maple to Park; thence through HElm street and Hart- ford avenue, Ii then procesded niong North gtrest and threugh Bread to Gold, dewn Orange And Lafayette, up Beaver and down Main, The parade halted at Clty hail, wiere the band played the Biar Bpangied Banner and then went through West Main teking | side streets to Walnut Hin park where the parada disbanded, New Filag in Line, For the firet {ime in a parade, the ' flag of the new Czecho-Slovak nation | appeared in line. Several hundred former residents of Armenia under the Sultan marched, and behind one of the cars in this division was the ground. The Polish division, as usual was one of the largest, and the many Polish societies, some of them in uni- form, were wall represented. The United Lithuanian societies and the Jewish organizations were present in large numbers, Much Music in Parade. Music for the parade was furnished { by the Universal band, Philharmonic band, the Boys’' Club band, the T. A. B. Drum corps, the K Ington Drum corps and the City band, Several factories had bands and drum corps | formed for the o slon Throughout the parade the factor- | fes whistles were blown the | chimes of the South chtv played by Organist Joseph C. He Much credit is due the police the excellent way In which the a was handled, ~Although tho were packed no nceldents were re- ported und atnotlme was the parade heild up heenuse of the ~rowds, Order was maintained throughout the day | in the same way, Richard Pinches, who has been apending a furlough in town, has re- turned to Camp Devens, Stearns Cables That He Italian Army Pursuing Enemy. Mrs. Y. Stearns of Maple street has e The DIET During and After The Oid Reliable Round Package s/ "gé‘ e co- A siouon. suEKs, o has crossed the Piave with the torious Italian armies and is safe found River With | who is in ' cities in France and Italy INFLUENZA Horlick’s Malted Milk Very Nutritious, Digestible The REAL Food-Drink, instantly prepared. Made by the ORIGINAL Horlick process and from carefully selected materials. Used successfully over Y century. Endorsed by physicians everywhere. Specify HOI‘liCk’S The Original Others Are Imitations Lieutenant Stearns received his com- ' ion in the Red Cross service in 1918, and was sent overseas a short time later. Ile has been from her son, | engaged in canteen work in various S —

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