New Britain Herald Newspaper, November 29, 1918, Page 10

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10, Delicate Children Vinol is What They Need More than eight thousand druggists recommend Vinol because it contains in deliciously palatable form the oldest and most famous reconstructive tonics known to medicine. During the last sixteen years it has brought health and happiness to thou- sands of puny, ailing, anaemic childrer. HERE IS PROOF Middletc:yn, Conn. i “‘1 used Vinol for my little girl five | years old for a rundown. nervous con- ‘ | | Manvilie, R.I ““The whooping cough,—and later the measles left my little boy of eight appetite. thin, frail, ed all the time. After had failcd Vinol gave v appetite, restored his dition. She was thin, irritable all the time and had no appetite. In a week 1 noticed an improvement and now | she has a good appetite, has gained | in flesh and strength and is muci: 5 now ne woki pleasanter.”—Mrs. C. B. Wilkinson. s H. Hall. For all run-down, nervous, anaemic conditions, weak women, overworked men, foeble ol ncsuie and delicate children, there is no remedy like Vinol. HE LED THE TWENTY-SIXTH; NOW HE TELLS ITS STORY | s MA]. GEN. CLARENCE R. EDWARDS. ight By Harris & Ewing, from Paul Thompson, New York Boston, Nov. 29.—Pacing back and of forth for nearly two hours in the flag- with his smashing d traducing the cleanlincss al stories of our New | ! | to draped square ring of the Boston | “NEand :1111(‘\“;\1 500 New England Arena, surrounded by 10,000 folks | bhoys being locked up for being from all corners of New England, | qrunk!"” Gen. Edwards hammered out Maj. Gen. Clarence R. Edwards re- cently gave his full account of the men he had led into the war. the words. “Why, upon my was afraid they wouldn't fight! It was an occasion without com-| = The men laughed; the mothers ap- parison. Here was the one man who | playded | knew more about those men than| -and I have told you how they anyone else in the world; around him | fought, those fine, stout-hearted were those 10,000 mothers, fathers, | 1ads” he went on. wives, sistors and the others He had, for more than an hour: wanted to know about those men | ye had almost sung his joy at re. more than they wanted to know any- | counting the way battalions went thing else in the world. over the top, shouting, ‘“Hail, hail, And a proud recital it was; not a | the gang' Bere hurrahfeffaicibut§s e reatdmeasamed|iincass oo oui e o (URIERIRIRER o WHIcUwasipoRseaRont (IonIEhations |irromihis Longuckashtiic mumer ot mis Lig heart into the hearts which have | frjonas not his subordinates; = and been bravely waiting these 14 months. | voy; know how they fell in the ears Twice there were moments which | op t}e wives and sweethearts of those rose above the others in intenmsity.| very men Once when Gen. Edwards sent a sigsh | .yat little fightin' pearcat Jimmie of relier around the banked galleries | prown insisted on goine in * * With s asetzance Shat cas s 0} Ly Swede named MeCarthy took his the (28t ipivisionf were not ter | payonet, captured a Boche officer than in other divisions at the front; | onq fivé soldiers e G the General said he was sure of it e o T The other bright moment _came | ¥ mpay was the way his story ran. | The names of French towns and woods and farms: they rippled 'round tha Arena without being caught. I the folks were just as happy. The word, they were so good and so pure that I 3ut roof i men spoke of little jids of half platoons as if he 1 Be Better Looking—Take cen leading those hovs himself * Onve Tablets Courteen were wounded lightly; ight were gassed; we lost four.” Theay had cxpected he would talk of 1f your skin is yellow—complexion palli® sades and the division. But he ~—tongue coated—appetite poor—you have ced of men and croups he knew. It a bad taste in your mouth—alazy, no-good vorth the i in the cold feeling—you should take Olive Tablets. Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets—a substitute forcalomel—were prepared by Dr.Edwards after 17 years of study with his patients. Dr. Edwards’Olive Tablets are a purely vegetable compound mixed with olive oil. You will know them by their olive color. To have a clear, pink skin, bright eyes, no_pimples, a feeling of buoyancy like childhood days you must get at the cause. Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets act on the liver and bowels like calomel—yet have no dangerous after effects. ' Theres a regular meal in POST says @ 08_67 ‘They start the bile and overcome consti- - - pation. That's why millions of boxes are & e Meaty sold annually at 10c and 25¢ per box. All druggists. Take one or two nightly and an note the pleasing results, Good | | | | ( | | | | the NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1918, for the doors of the capacious struc- ture to be thrown open‘at guarier of seven Hundreds were pack on St Bo- tolpl: street when Capt. Thon Goode of Station 16 came down the roped thoroughiire with 75 police- men, led Dy ¥ mounted men Hundreas adn’t tickews; they had come with hepes. including **a woman | field with five rons in the war a patrchnan <1 the 1opes for G nd finally got her v ditorium was packed whe ihe limousine rolled ap & little afte N wilh the Gener party. Ir the door w two companies of the Ist Motor Corps drawn up in battalion ron* Licut. Col. John W. Decrow hrought them to present arms as the General pped inside the door and therc rted a young Roman circus. The Camp Devens bund had raced into position at the far of the arena d then it vaced through the march brouzht the State Guard troops ing around the wide circle of isles at cadence that just missed seing double time Gen. Edwards and Gov. McCall, abreast, following the National and State colors, tried f bit to keep up with the procession, but szave it up The crowd was on its feet, doing what 1 been advi g at the | i 1 The cheer lasted while they made | the cireuit: but it wasn't the school boy shrilling cheer the soft applause of mothe: deep, ap- | proving shouts of older nien i Gov. MeCall, Lieut. Gov. Coolidge | and Frederick H. Prince stood beside the small table m the center of the ring, while Gen. Bawards v forecarm to salute and faced i until he h swept the entire ¢ blage before cutting away his 4l There he was: the strong, straight soldier who had slipped away with | | our New England National ards- men a year ago last September. Only | ting close at h two days ago th clear press had published ph showing ing in a wooc photogt f orthern I eet Here 1 1t was this same Gen- eral standing with their folks sitting | at his feet. The war was over: he | | | | dont . uniforms had conte to tell them the story. that | > with the boys squat- | “To begin with o That's how he started, from the very begin- of that wonderful chapter in ! ingland history hacd scanned the faces as if wondering just what they wanted to Know. He looked into the faces of those mothers, young and old faces which showed that they had Dbeen watching mails and ¢ nalty lists for months and m watch for weeks | longer per He didn’t miss those in mourni Then his eves went again (o the box where they had gone first when he stepped to the platform, to the box in which Mrs. Edwards was sit- ting with relatives and Gov. R. Liv- ingstone Beeckman of Rhode Island. Ho spied. too, Maj. Thomas R. Mur- phy, adjutant of the 101st, just re- turned. “T don’t deserve thi he striding back and forth, and studying those faces. “But I take it as a tribute to as game a lot of men as ever pionecred in any great cause in history. Fate sent me here before them and those lads in the ranks ving the silent uncomplaining are your relatives. poken four or a dozen times today forgotten which.” His voice showed the strain of speaking in public and to relatives of the men since 9 yesterday morning. And the speaker’s stand was not well placed. At other rallies the rostrum has been placed at the end of the hall, last night it was in the center of the floor, and a speaker can face in only one direcion at one time. Hundreds could not hear and left later on. But his story was complete, from the telegram he received telling him take command of the 26th Bat- talion until the other order he re- ceived telling him to turnover the command a few weeks ago. “Are you reasonably s organize the Yankee division on s a new and tremendous basis in the allotted time?” Washington had asked him a year ago last summer, dubious over his chance cf obeying the sailing date order, Gen. said, and added: “'I am not reasonably sure—I am certain, was my reply, and what made me so sanguine was the spirit of service and devotion to duty I'd see throughout New England.” He was proud of the way the divi- sion went out from America, he first completely organized division under the new tables of organization,” and proud of the way they moved about in France. . ve Edwards ‘It took Congress and the newspa- | p and the greatest brains of the country to move an Army 10 miles in the Spanish War. The Yankee Divi- sion has moved seven times, with 64 trains and all the mmpedimenta and all, and when we went into Chateau- Thierry the trains came in an hour apart, and the last train was two minutes late.” He told of taking 264 drafted men along, now they had been lightly blamed for evervthing that went wrong for months, and how they turned out ‘‘some cf the finest in the whole command.” He took Coast Artillerymen from his district, and when Washington asked where they were and how he dared to do it, *T replied, ‘O, T didn’t know * * » = they have sailed * * * ' and the war department telegraphed me not to do it in the next war.' Speaking of one of the men sent by | Maj. Gen. Hodges at Ayer, | his friend, he said: “I'll have to quietly tell you that one man got to Westfield with a wooden leg.” Arriving overseas, “it wouvld appear that no one expected us,” he went on. “We had various vicissitudes that I dare tell you about, but those men will tell you when they get their off. There weren't trucks cart food or firewood; in- and engineers went to enougn to rantrymen Ex-Pres. Taft, Fox's theater, Dec. 16. —advt, 2 ( USE RESINOL FOR {ast 1 “I wish it was possible for everyone who suffers from constipation to know cbout Dr. Caldwell’'s Syrup Pepsin. Tt is pleasant to the taste, docs not gripe, and the result is sure” (From a letter to Dr. Caldwell writ- ten by Mr. R. A. Laney, Alexandria, La.) Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin is a com- bination of simple laxative herbs with pepsin, pleasant to the taste, gentle in action and posi- tive in its effect. It relieves constipation quickly, without griping or strain, and is a standard family remedy. — DR. CALDWELL’S Syrup Pepsin The Perfect Laxative Sold by Druggists Everywhere 50 crs. (7)) $1.00 A TRIAL BOTTLE CAN BE OBTAINED, FREE OF CHARGE, BY WRITING TO DR. W. B. CALDWELL, 459 WASHINGTON STREET, MONTICELLO, ILLINOIS building a camp and hospitals,” he said, “even to the sewerage system. so that they needn’t niake pigsties thei billet His own tour of Allied Armies an thie schooling of his men he recitc and came to the glorious chapter o his cision to take the whole divi sion, instead of a few battalions, u: to Chemin de Dames to learn Boch tactics “There’'s only one instructor in thi that's the Boch a Frencl eneral had told hir nd Gen. £a ards had his inen to go right up to teacher “They put their barrage down on our ‘green men’ ar they didn’t even lie down. They crouched, with the apnel spattering from their t: and when the barrage lifted cen lads jumped cp-and mad a lct of prisoners of those Poclies. “And those men in the 1 I nev- brough tucked er such shots. They down Boche sharpshoote: away in trees in ihree day w Ex-Pres, ox’s theater, Dec advt. HOW MRS, BOYD AVOIDED AN OPERATION Canton, Ohio.—*‘I suffered from a female trouble which caused me much suffering, and two doctors decided that I would have to go through an operation before I could get well. “‘ My mother, who had been helped by LydiaE. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- pound, advised me mitting toan opera- tion. Itrelieved me from my troubles 80 I can do my house work without any difficulty. I advise any woman who is afflicted with female troubles to give Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- pound a trial and it will do as much for them.””—Mrs. MARIE Boyp, 1421 5th St., N. E., Canton, Ohio. Sometimes there are serious condi- tions where a hospital operation is the only alternative, but on the other hand 80 many women have been cured by this famous root and herb remedy, Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, after doctors have said that an operation was to try it before sub- | Lgvd:ga E. | URIC ACID IN MEAT JufyJel Flavors in Vials In Jiffy-Jell the flavors come in liqutd form, in vials. They are made from fresh, ripe fruit. They give to Jiffy-Jell desser s a wealth of fresh- fruit taste. With Jiffy-Jell you can make a delicious dessert in an instant. It comes ready- sweetened,soitsaves your sugar. And it costs but a trifle. A single package serves six. There are 10 flavors, but we sug- gest Loganberry or Pineapple. Try it today. It will bring you a new conception of gelatine desserts. 2 Packages for 25 Cents At Yoar Grocer’. Jiffy-Jell —Waukesha, Wisconsin SATISFYING RELIEF FROM LUMBAGO Sloan’s Liniment has the punch that relieves rheumatic twinges ‘This warmth-givin, congestion= scattering circulation-stimulating rem- edy penetrates without rubbing right to the aching spot and brings quick relicf, surely, cleanly. A wonderful help for external pains, sprains, strains, stiff- ness, headache, lumbago, bruises. Get your bottle today—costs little, means much. Ask your druggist for it by name. Keep it handy for the whole family. The big bottle is economy. Sloan’s Linidiment Kills Pain 30¢, 60c, $1.20. CLOGS THE KIDNEYS necessary —every woman who wants muie a Glass of Salts if Your Back to avoid an operation should give it a fair trial before submitting to such a trying ordeal. If complications exist, write to Lydia ! E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass., for advice. The result of many years experience is at your servic After Baby’s Bath 10,000 nurses will tell you thai nothing keeps the skin so free from soreness as Sykes Comfort Powder Its extraordinary healing and soothing power is noticeable on first application. 25c at the Vinol and other drug stores The Comfort Powder Co,, Boston, Mass, BAD SKIN TROUBLE Considers Recovery Remarkable. Brooklyn, N. Y., Aug. 14.—"For al- most six years I have suffered from a | severe case of skin trouble which be- { the channel i ounces of Jad i from | juice, Hurts or Bladder Bothers You —Drink More Water. If you must have your meat every day, eat it, but flush your kidneys with salts occasional a noted au- thority who tells us that meat forms uric acid which almost paralyzes the kidneys in their efforts to expel it from the blood. They become sluggish and weaken, then you suffer with a dull misery in the kidney region, sharp pains in the back or sick headache, dizziness, your stomach sours, tongue is coated and when the weather is bad vou have rheumatic twinges. The urine gets cloudy, full of sediment, often get sore and irri- tated, obliging you to seek relief two | or three times during the night. To neutralize these irritating acids, to cleanse the kidneys and flush off the body’s urinous waste get four Salts from any phar- macy here; take a tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys will then act fine. This famous salts is made the acid of grapes and lemon combined with lithia, and has gan with swelling and intense pains | been used for generations to flush and in my knee. Then my legs became in- | Stimulate sluggish kidneys, also to flamed and sores broke out, | which | neutralize the acids in urine, so it no plo N 8 g "1 | longer irritates, thus ending bladder itched and burned terribly day and | weakness. night. I tried many remedies, mn} Jad Salts is inexpensive: cannot in- gained no relief. I even spent six|Jure, and makgs a delightful efferves- months in the hospital, and the doc- tors wanted to amfPutate my leg. At tried Resinol Ointment and Resinol Soap and obtained relief from the first application. My knee is now well, and 1 consider the c e remar ahl as my trouble was very serious i (8igned) Mrs. Henri Mauer, 116 Hooper Street, | All druggists sell Resinol Ointment | Resinol Soap. and FEx-Pres. Taft Fox’s theater, Dec. 186. cent lithia-water drink. —advt {LOOK On Page 8 and Read the News Ad of the Big Doings at LAZARUS store ‘Tomorrow ! NERVES ALL ON GLOBE CLOTHING HOUSE Established 1886 ; Lo Copyright 1918 Haxt.sduflner &) lats It sounds good when we mention Hart, Schaffner & Marx Clothes $25 and higher, Insist on quality in your Christmas gifts. House} Coats $4.00 to $12.00. Bath Robes $4.00 to $10.00. These make substantial gifts, Boys’ Skating Caps $1.00, $1.25 and $1.50. 25 3 ) e PO TENSION A mother in the home, or a man or woman at busi Pl ness, with nerves undone and the system generaif§ feeling the strain, should find wonderful help in . SCOIT'S EMULSION Powerful sedatives or strong medicines are habit! forming and dangerous. The logical help isa fo of nourishment abundant in tonic properties. Scott’s brings strength to the body, through nourish ment that is felt in every part. If inclined to be] ! nervous, the logical answer is—Scott’s Emulsio 8coit & Bowne, Bloomfield, X, j. 8 “California and the} Golden Gate” Lecture, and magnificent colored views of Amer- ica’s most beautiful and interesting state. Red Cross Hali 427 West Main Street SUNDAY EVENING, 7:30 Come and spend a cheerful Sunday evening. ALL WELCOME, PATRIOTIC MUSIC. RENIER PICKHARDT & DUNN 127 Main St. Opp. Arch St. Phone 1409-2 ALL OUR SUITS AT REDBUCED PRICES $10 Off on Some and $7 50 Off on Other‘s' New Knit Goods, such as Children's Sweaters and Sets, Tams, Toques, Mittens, Leggins, Bootees, Caps, Ladies' Knit Jackets, Skirts, Shawls, Scarfs, Cardigans, Sweaters, Tams and Gloves. New Aprons Suitable for Christmas Gifts. Muslin Underwear, Silk Underwear, Corsets, Infants’ all kinds. Flannelette Gowns, Pajams and Skirts, - r\‘m\- Purses, New Hosiery, New Bondoir Caps, New Handke chiefs,

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