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Boston Stm'e% Have you taken advantage of the bargains we are offer- OUR BIG ANNUAL SALE No odd lots, no odds ends, no seconds. Our entire stock of first quality reliable merchandise at greatly reduced prices. Now is the time and herc is the place. Everything at sale prices for the balance of the month. Goods delivered day after purchase. and PULLAR & r ‘} Hot Water for Sick Headaches Tells why everyone should drink hot water with phosphate in it before breakfast. any kind, is caused by “which means self- poisoning. Liver and bowel poisons | called toxins, su ed into the blood, through the lymph ducts. excite the | which pumps the blood so fast t it congests in the smaller arteric eins of the head producing vio- | ent. throbbing pain and distress, call- €d headache. You become nervous, d spondent, sick, feverish and miserabl grade salt. It is made entirely from | inviting ingredients. In the second | place you cannot distinguish it when | aspirin or the bromides which tempor- arily relieve but do not rid the blood | irritating toxins. ss of hot wafer with a tea- | \estone phosphate in it i dache of ntoxication ¢ a while, will net only wash these poisons from | vour system and cure you of head- ache but will cleanse. purify and freshen the entire alimentary canal Ask your pharmacist for a quarter pound of limestone phosphate. It inexpensive, harmless as sugar, and almost tasteless, except for a sourish ! twinge which not unpleasant. If you aren't feeling your best, if ongue is coated or you wake up with 1 taste, foul breath or have colds, igestion, billiousness, constipation er sour, aclid stomach, begin the phos- hot water cure to rid your teni of toxins and polsons, Results are quick and it is claimed that those who continue to flush out the stomach, liver and bowels every morning never have amy headache or know a miserable moment. is od Strictly Fresh Egsg AMERICA, THE LAND OF OPPORTUNITIES ,Rev. F. W. Keese Tells Evenlng | School Classes Value of Educatwn Rev. Frederick W. Keese, himself a native of Germaay, but a citizen of the United States for the by the night school as promoted in this country, ed the pupils of the evening es at the Gramir ng. He told of periences and impres teners the value of spoke as fallows instructor in workshop arith- id the other day that the lack the most elementary some of the in his charge pas vears gradu education choice, and a system af address- school upon his lis- education. He metic s of knowledge of arithmetic displayed voung men and women is astounding. ‘The other day he had no little trouble i1 convincing one young man that there were onc hundred hun- dredths iu an inch. He next asked his pupil how many thousandths he koned there were in one inch. After gazing long and earnestly at his scale, the vyouth answered: ‘By Jimney. There must be millions of ‘em.' “Twenty-seven years ago a young iend of mine came over from Ger- many. He was a handsome fellow and had a good trade. Very soon he be- came acquainted with a charming American girl. He really fell in love with het. He thought the world of her. On lover's night (Wednesday), the greatest of all the American in- titutions, he never missed calling on her. One night he did not meet his 1 beauty. He went home and a sleepl night. He brooded over his misfortune the whole follow- ing day. Finally a mean little devil told him that the girl did not caye for him any more, because she had found out somehow, that his father was not a rich man or a professional man, but only a stongyeutter. In other words he came fram poor parentage. “The thought came to him that it would be best to write her a letter. He could speak some English, but he never had written a love letter in that language. He obtained a German- English dictionary and set himself to work. According to the German lan- guage his father was ‘ein steinhauer,’ but what was that in English? He found it in the book. The next im- portant ward was the English for the German ‘licht.’” He found that, too. His intention was to induce his sweet- heart not to give him up because his father did not fill a high position, as SPECIAL BARGAINS FOR SATURDAY Straw, Georgette hats special $ 2 9 8 Clearance of all satin hats $1 9 8 up. All Velvet hats almost given away, special $ 1 .00 and up. Latest in Georgette Straw combinations, very dressy hats, trim- med free for Saturday. Reg. $5.50 $3 98 Special . Goldenhlum 69.. Chalicnge Milk . ..16c. can Pure Lard ........27c. Ib. Best Storage Eggs 57c. doz. RUSSELL BROS. 301 MAIN STREET Millinery Co. ~—188 MAIN STREET— Y. M. C. A. Building NEW BR WOMAN 80 ILL COULD NOT WALK LydiaE. Pinkham’sVegetable Compound Restored Her to Health. Perth Amboy, N.J. — “For three i yenr'z 1 suffered with a severe female and a pain in my side most of the time. I had dizzy spells and was often so faint I couldnotwalk across the floor. The doc- tor said I would have tohavean operation. I read about Lyd E. Pinkham’s Vege- table Compound in my newspaper, and Now I am better, feel stroag, have no pains, backache or dizzy spells. Every one tells me how well I look, and i tell them to use Lydia E. Pinkhara’s Vegetable Compound — that is what makes me feel well and look well. I | ecommended it _to my sister and she | using it now. Youcan use this letter | if you wish, for it is certainly a grand remedy for a woman’s ills.”’ — Mrs. | MARTHA STANISLAWSKI, 524 Penn St., Perth Amboy, N.J. For forty years Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vogatablv Compound hasbeen overcom- ing such serious conditions as displace- ments, inflammation, ulceration, irreg- ularities, periodic pains, backache, diz- ziness, and nervous prostration cf women, and is now considered the stans dard remedy for such ailments. that fact should not throw a bad light on him. He wanted to write: ‘My father is a stone cutter, but that fact shauld not throw a bad light on me.’ But unfortunately he wrote: ‘My fath- er is a stone fighter but that should not throw a bad candle on me.’ But the workt was yet to come. After he had read his heart's utterances over and over again another little devil told him that he had not addressed his Susie in a winning manner. . He had written ‘My dear little girl’ | Again he consulted his dictionary and he discavered that dear and expei- sive had about the same meaning and so had little and small. In his ears these words sounded better than those | previously written and he started h new letter this way: ‘My expensive small girl.' Well, this was too much for Susie’s dignity and right away she ‘canned’ him. So, friends. this was the ‘end of an unperfect day’ and explains very explicitly the great nead | of education. Ignorant Men Are Helpless. “The education of a man is like the changing of raw material into the manufactured article. The uneducat- ed man is comparatively helpless and worthless. Training, skill and effi- | clency enter into the more general | term education. The getting of education is by slow and inapprecia- ble degrees. The reason it is .ot more general is because it costs too much time and application “Scores of applicants for a $15 oy $18 a week job have been turned away from a certain shop in the last 12 months, while other positions, paj ing $20 to $30 ‘a-week, have gone begging for men. The latter require a degree of advancement which not very many have the patience to ob- tala. The difference between the men is that some have not passed through the process of being manufactured, while others have. “A watch spring. sells for This manufactured product can ccured In the shape of raw material at the ore deposits for almost nothing. A visitor is permitted to pick up cnough ore as souvenirs to make him airly wealthy if he could sell it as vatch springs. This is an illustration of education. The raw ore of the mine may be the Hottentot of Africa. The watch spring is the Theodore Roosevelt. “The young girl who sits down to the piano to take her first lesson does not attract much attention because of music. She picks up the notes one at a time and strikes two wrong ones to one right. Ia later vears her skill as a planist tells what education has dane. Education stands between the baseball pitcher, who cannot throw a ball anywhere for certain, and the one who can put it over the plate when the batter thinks it is going somewhere else. What are we? We are babi plus growth and educa- tion. What are our foremen and su- pers in the shops? Laborers they are, plus education TUncle Sam Gives All a Chance. Now, the questian arises, who will glve an ambitious young man or woman who is a foreigner an educa- tion? I do not know of anvone who is more interested in that sort of than Uncle Sam s, aad you all know who he He is your and my best uncle; he is the unclo of over 100,000,000 people and I tell you| he is a dandy, I became acquainted with him cars ago when he shooic hands With me ia New York city. 1] | did not know what happened to me | when I saw the Statue of Liberty | smile down at me and then turn 1hf,i light 02 and show me the way in the | dark until I reached land. In that minute I was politically born again. Can I forget it? No, never! I re- { member that I looked around, but T was not alone. 1 could have kissed the land of the free and the home of | the brave then and there, for I was so happy. Fifteen years later I really did it while T was on the prairies in $1.50. be | Oklahoma, and I thanked God that 1[ I eajoyed the greatest privilege a man can enjoy, being a citizen of the | greatest country in the world, Amer- ,ica. You ask me what the American people have done for me? Every- | thing that counts. I came herc as an unbeliever, too proud to think of God, | religlon and church. But when I saw that the people went to church With- out being forced to do so, I deter- mined to leara about religlon and T | 8ot it, too. An elderly Yankee lady ndvised ma one day to go to evening echaol in order to learn the English language, J - remember that the | tencher asked me for my name and Out our everstock of ) Weather conditi A Few ot Patent leather lace boots with fawn tops, Men’s tan U. S. shoes, Munson last. $3.95 Boys’ shoes, all sizes to 6. $1.98 A REAL MONEY SAVING Women’s felt Juliets, trimmed, black and grey. an | |8 She made me spell it and then she added, ‘That is not your name." She pronounced it correctly and I had to repeat it ove and over again before I knew my own name which sounded very much like a new name in this new world. That v some fundamental start, all right, it not? Enjoyed Evening School. “T loved to go to evening school be- cause the teacher made studying ap- petizing for me. This ldeal teacher tried to help me along and to please me, and of course I tried to please her in turn. I almost got crazy about her. I abandoned reading newspapers printed in German and I grew in my own estimation when traveling in trolleys with an English newspaper under my naose. Irish cooks and laun- dresses in the houses of the upper ‘400" In New York taught me the ‘Irtsh idiom’ of English I think I was the amusement of those girls, because they always in- upon taking that grocery boy along everywhere they went. Never- theles little Danish girl who was a lady's maid, ‘took the cake.' We went out frequently. She knew Eng- lish just as much as I did She could not understand my Ger- man and I could not understand her language. What should we do? Well, there was only one th to do, so Josie went with me to e\flnlnz svhnol In no time we knew what we were talking about and we enjoyed that heartily (Central Park in New York and the ‘Silvery Maoon’ ow all about it.) “The next lesson in the process of my transformation, education and es- timation of all that is American, I learned in the Singer Sewing Machine ) beth, N. J I did not ything about shop life, but I that I dreaded i ise I thought it was slavery, the pat- tern of the old country Instead of that I found that, bench-hand as I I was treated very democratic- My foreman and treated respectfully and my fellow-work right at home. I nt of 1 told her. kn knew be was, ally me ers made me feel count the years which 1 s as a ttme of which I spealk great satisfaction. *“When I was to school again to polish up the three years in a Jearning brought me in scientists, and I found polished gentlemen just democrat- the men higher up in Industry. I tell you, friends, it makes one feel good when professors encourage you all the time instead of telling you that you are not worth ‘two cents,’ as they delighted in doing in old Germany Comes to New Britain. “New came the time for me when T had a chance to feel the pulse of the so-called 'leading peéple’ of a whole community, I came to the Hardware Ity which I call the peelal Clty.’ A4 not take very Jjong at all betore the peaple seemed to like me because 1 trieqd to he a good boss with of ag time I ‘inner higher e I wenf wanted man.” My this contact these as highly gun metal school there ! institution of | with | | ning classe s tra high cut Taee Goodyear welt." 83 .62 Army extra strong $2. Children’s tan heavy lace shoes, hand sewed. Goodyear : welt, Men’s gun metal lace shoes Men’s tan heavy waterproof, $2.98 Misses’ gun metal lace shoes with cloth tops, all sizes to 21/ shoes, 98 $1.98 fur OPPORTUNITY ON Children’s Jersey Leggings a STANDARD MAKES OF SHOES Men’s one buckle heavy Arctics. $1-49 p:ir | N BOOT SHOP , | sort of a fellow and, above ail showed them that my heart was right, | beating for America. After yea tabsence I came once more to our in- | teresting city | “You ask me: ‘Do vou like shop life | again after you spent several years of a life where no one had a right to tell you what you shiuld do or what tell you what you should do or what ! the time for you?' I surely do, cven ! more than ever. “Friends, T vou liv spend money along. I have ! { late mong people me to help you traveled to and fro and I do not h all to say that no city like New Britain with sood-willed people. Think of ening schools! All the chances are yours to get an education. You are the kind of people New Britain wants ause you are willing to Amer nized through and through, You re ambitious and studious and you deserve to be counted among our good inhabitants. “Think movement every one of on sitate at the be anization ago I wre the o of the Ameri t months T read about anization of this movement in our I said to myself, ‘New Britain me; I want to go back East and do my bit to help such a most worthy cause along You- dame here fror all countries of the‘world. Take it for granted, my friends, that you did not come to America perchance. Abraha call: ‘Go forth out of thy country, and from thy kindred, and out of thy father’s house, and come into the land which I shall show thee.’ (Gen. 12:1.) This same call £ to you, Abraham blessed. You went of this land, ‘where flows' Uncle { who had ion of was nzs honey an and the and went, milk for volunteers Americaniza- from far (1l and You, called heart the us who came answered to vou Jdl of They themselves friends, cepted their invitation t to this school, and I tell y have chosen a good par great war has come to a who regret but one t that we were not horn a—1look up to Old Glory to know that our boys m wide world free for way the put come that vou “The and the whole de- mocracy. “Our great eve- teaches Europe. world president at this time in and the great men of the old sit spellbound and listen to words of Justice and righteousness that make old Europe shake in its boots. God bless him!" LetCuticuraBe YourBeautyDoctor Qintmege %8 & {0, T1 Talcpen 25, 1 drogwiaty; Boap 28, Ofnem ample each free HARTFORD. THE BIG WALK-OUT IN NEW YORK Make it Possible For Ug to Obtain These EXTRAORDINARY JRESS VALUES LOT $15 00 Sell at $18, NO. LOT NO. 1 d 9158 Sell a Y Dres: and. $16.50 s Made to and $29.5 de to of Women's Dresses in “1pn, dresses on hand Thosc York the st engaged in the manuf. take icture New must their spring orders with an because of ke, and must play it safe, disposing of al] and waiting for the strike to 1 ity course. Being on the ground, were able to make advantageous get Here They Are 3 Poplins, we purchases and you the benefit Braid around Beal trimming iful E pr the waists, on the sleeves, down adcloths, high qu fine Around the skirts, the front, silhouette Soft rows and rows, down the back, >fusion. in many models. Colored color embroidery also on the drop and effe belt ts. Embroidery the panel novel at the in many designs on cuffs NERVES ALL ON TENSION? A mother in the home, or a man or woman at busi- ness, with nerves undone and the system generally feeling the strain, should find wonderful help in SCOITS EMULSION Powerful sedatives or strong medicines are habit- formmg and dangerous. The logical help isa form of nourishment abundant in tonic properties. Scott’s brmgs strength to the body, through nourish- ment that is felt in every part. [f inclined to be nervous, the logical answer is—Scott’s Emulsion. Scott & Bowne, Blogsfield, N, d. -