New Britain Herald Newspaper, November 15, 1918, Page 6

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1918, GOLDENBLUM Mi LINERY ( 188 MAIN ST., . C. A. BUILDING. Branch Store 863 Main St., Hartford (Over Harvey & Lewis’ Store.) B SAT. K The Most Complete Assortment of the Very Newest Colors and Combinations at Special Reduced Prices for Saturday 45 New Styles to Choose From. ~ The Largest Selection of Novalty Shoes in the Stale Brown kid and grey kid, high cut, military heel, lace boots with cloth tops to match $ 3 * 50 Large aisortment of trim- med and tailored Hats. Reg. value up to $4.00. Special for SATURDAY S ONLY s 1 °98 IN Big lot of nobby tri Can’t be beat. Reg. value, $4, $5 and Special $ 2 - 98 Large assortment of pretty Ostrich trimmed Hats. Reg. value, $7, $8, $9. $4 98 Special For Saurday Only . ... 98¢ " med Hats. Black and brown French kid, ex- tra high cut lace shoes with hlgh and | low heels, hand welted $ 4 9 5 Soles; arpair’ oo 5.8 These smart shoes are not oniy made for style bat also to give extraordinary good service, THE COMBINATIONS. Grey kid, Havana brown, Field Mouse and taupe kid with cloth tops to match. Also Cham- pagne, Ivory and Grey washable Kid. Children’s and Misses’ Tams Come early for best cheice. SHOP EARLY AND CAREFULLY A Few Timely and Useful Suggestions. LOOR LAMPS, TABLE LAMPS, WASHING MACHINES (1900) ELECTRIC CLEA NERS (Eureka) ELECTRIC IRON | . TURNOVER TOASTER, W I gh WARMING PADS,S, ) GS m & Sfi \ELECTRIC HEATERS (Majestic) SEWING MACHINES (Western Elcctric) ELECTRIC VIBRATORS (La Vida) IRONING MACHINES (Simplex) We are agents for the famous G. Lamps. ARRY & BAMFOR 19 MAIN STREET. Battleship grey kid lace shoes, ex- tra high cut models. $ 5 45 Dr. Herricks new comfort Shoes, French Kid with hand 2 AR turned soles. Special at Extra high cut 10 button Spats all colors, special a pr $1.50 Full line of CHRISTMAS SLIPPERS at SALE Prices. Buy Early ! /4 SPECIAL—Children’s Gun metal and tah Mahogany Calf | Shoes i toays . $1.98 Most wonderful assortment of Dr. DEAN’S Infants’ and Children’s fancy Shoes. MEN’S AND BOYS’ SHOES Men’s dark tan Calfskin lace shoes, Boys’ Gun 'Metal all hand sewed. : $5.00 andBox Caif Shoes Apair ... .. .0 New Showing RED CROSS SHOES for Weoemen E. Mazda W. L. Douglas Shoes Vici kid in Blucher and Straight last styles A pair ... ——ASK THE CLERK FOR UNITED GREEN TRADING STAMPS— JERN BOOT SHOP 168 MAIN ST. They’re Beauties! $8 and $10 shoes offered elsewhere have nothing on them! Two new factories are now de- voted exclusively in mak- ing these master bench- made ' creations. They look the world and all like a London boot- maker’s handiwork. Clean-cut s a cameo. See them! They are other if necessary, yet vastly apart as far as any mutual or sided disturbance was concerned. REGULAR CLUBIN |1 2oz lm y corps wm(h took a part in the St. Mihiel fight. } less than an-underground \um offices, sleeping quarters, electric far | enthusiasm prevails in Alsace-Lor- ong- | raine. Thousands of Germans are { leaving these provinces. The German At the end of the big corridor was | authorities #re being hooted by the the kitchen, compact to the point of | crowds. French and American troops being a kitchenette. When the cooks | are expected daily. finished each meal the side streets — Get Rid of That ree dark holes in the ground that might have veen old shell craters or anvthing else. one American prominent It is little city club, baths, lights In reality the mud and grass cover- ing was nothing but a concealment of a thirty-foot “ceiling” of reinforced concrete, the black holes well camou- flaged entrances leading down a | restaurants, kitchens, could suddenly be transformed into of orderldes and messengers and many 1 little cosy dining rooms, each with its b M et ro-English asgt; invisible eyelets; high nrchy low com- fort hee sasppy m: 35 00 eriticat Bae bl 1n black - $5.00 Soe the New Fall Styles for )w.,..-‘ they will amaze you, wonder values at $6.00! The Boy! Let us show you these wonderful Newark Boys Shoes we sell at $2.50, $3.00 and $3.50. park Shoe Stores Co. ' LARGEST IN THE WORLD--297 STORES IN 97 CITIES, NEW BRITAIN STORE 324 MAIN ST., Open Monday and Saturday Ev enings. Near R. R. Crossing 297'Stores in 97 Ctes | suffer! A1l Gomforts of Home in St. Mihiel Dugouts Taken With the American France, Oct. 28, (Co: The Associated Lress underground equipped with Troops in spondence of | An amazing shelter or dugout many luxuries is the LOT OF RHEUMATISM NOW, RUB AWAY PAIN Here's Instant Reliof! Limber U p Sore Stifi Muscles and Joints With St. Jacobs Liniment.” Count fifty! Pain gone. Rheumatism is “pain only.” Not one case in fifty requires internal treat- ment. Stop drugging! Rub misery right away! Apply soothing, penetrating “St Jacob’s Liniment” di- | rectly upon the “tender spit” and re- llef comes instantly. “St. Jacobs Liniment” is a harmless rheumatism | liniment which never disappoints and can not burn or discolor the skin. Limber up! Stop complaining! Get a small trial bottle of ““St. Jacobs Lini- ment” at any drug store, and in just a moment you'll be free from pain, soreness, stiffness and swelling. Don’t Relief awaits you. “St. Jacobs Liniment™ has relieved millions of rheumatism sufferers in the last half century, and is just as good for sciatica, neuralgia, lumbago, backache | sprains and swellings. the | other appurtenances, of hotel life. Its occupation has permitted the staff of this corps to operate in close touch with the fighting troops much more closely behind the lines than such a corps ordinarily ventures From the outside the place was so inconspicuous, standing about two | hundred yards from the road, that ninety-nine out of a hundred motor- ists would have driven by without seeing it at all. The one h would have seen mere | 3 [\llmn in the muddy plain with two FEEBLE 4GED WOMAN 75 Years Old, Weakened by Pneu- monia—Vinol Restored Strength. Winchester, Va.—"I am a farmer's wife, 75 years of age, and pneumon- ia left me in a weak, run-down condition, so I could hardly keep about and do my work. A neighbor brought me Vinol and it has built i up my strength so fast that I think it is the best medicine I have ever | taken. Mrs. (Jennie Chapman. | There is no secret about Vinol.— wh owes its Auccess to beef and cod | liver peptones, iron and manganese ! peptonates and glyceroposphates the oldest and most famous body- building and strength creating tonics. Sold by The Clark & Brainerd Co., Druggists, Liggett's Riker-Hegeman Drug Stores, John J. McBriarty, Na- than Noveck, W. H. Russell, and Druggists everywhere. P. S.—For children’s Eczema, Saxol lsu\-n is guaranteed truly wonderful. | they | this main street led minor stre sloping runway to the brilliance of the electrical lighted interior. So s the whole constructed that an enemy shell of big calibre would scarcely do more than chip off a piece of the topMnd no ator bomb could ever even hitting directly, do much damage. Inside parallel with the road and traversing the le h of the dugout, was a wide corridor—the ‘“main street” of the institution, in which the commanding general rubbed shoulders with the orderlies nd messengers as went from office to office. Off ts run- rear and being used, for economy of space, as sleeping rooms for the enlisted men at night. Ar- tificial ventilation provided for the constant purification of the whole dugout, clean and sweet. Off the small streets, and off the big one too, were the offices, constructed likewise for economy of space. Each was about ten feet wide and quite deep, with a narrow table running the length of the roon t which sat the officers and their a stants, working, working, all the time, answering the telephone every moment or so, giving instructions and receiving reports. Instead of having the operations de- partment in one building, the intel- ligence in another and others scat- tered in as many more, all were here together, in offices with walls as nearly sound-proof as possible, under a ceil- ing just high enough to enable a tall man to walk or stand without stoop- ing, so close together that a moment could put one in touch with the ning to the and the smell throughout was long wooden table and narrow wooden benches. In less time than it takes to tell the general's mess was ready, the superior officer’s mess and all the others. No sound could penetrate the great concrete roof, and the great bom- bardment that opened the St. Mihiel “show”’ sociated I'ress correspondent who was can attest. Yet outside the building the cannon were going “great * and the whole nlght was thun- Blfl G HOOTED. Switzerland, Nov. 14, (By ‘The greatest Great for Children. You don’'t have to cut down on your children’s saaff of life, bread and but- ter, just because butter is high. Spread Benefit Brand ‘“Sweet Nut'” Margarine on their bread—it's just as nutritious as creamery butter,—looks and tastes the same when served. But “Sweet Nut” Margarine is only 32c a pound, about half the price of butter. Its daily use in the family is an economical thrift saving. This de- Iiolous broad spread {8 made from white cocoanut meat nnd pasteurlzed milk and does not contain a particle of unimal fat. “Sweet Nut' Margarine is sold only at the Direct Importing Cov's yellow front stores, 277 Main St., 866 Arch St., New Britain, where Benefit Brand Teas, Coffees and Gro- cery, Speclalties are retailed aa wholesale prices. Look Kor Our Store in Your Towws could not be heard, "as an As- | Persistent Cough eakening, persistent cough or cold, eatening throat or lung affections, with Eckman's Alterative, the tonic and upbuilder of 20 years’ successful use, 8¢ and $1.50 bottles from gists, or ECKMANiABORATORY, Philadelphia Stop that RESINOL CLEARS | | | ples began to appear on my | head, i AWAY EMBARRASSING Pl 4PLES pim- fore- and spread so that people re- marked about them, and I didn't like to go anywhere on that account. I tried various creams, soaps and skin remedies, but nothing seemed to help me. A friend of mine who had the same trouble told me she cleared her skin with Resinol Ointment and Resi- nol Soap, so I tried them. After the first application all the redness and soreness disappeared, and after two or three applications my friends be- gan to ask me what I used, my face looked so much better. “Now I can go to places without being ashamed of those awful pim- ples, and I will never be without Resinol Ointment and Resinol Soap.’ (Signed) Miss Jessie Torrance, 67 Beech St., Rutherford, N. J All druggists sell Resinol ment and Resinol Soap. March 30.—*“Some time ago Oint-

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