New Britain Herald Newspaper, February 19, 1919, Page 5

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Are used to flavor one Jiffy-Jell dessert. The juice is condensed and sealed in a vial, This is one of our best fruit flavors., Compare. it with the old-style quick gelatine desserts. 10 Flavors, at Your Grocer’ 2 Packages for 25 Cents 21 PIMPLY? WELL DONT BE People Notice It. _Drive Them Off s with Dr. Edwards’ Qlive Tablets mply face will not embarrass you ml? Ioggyer if you get a package of Dr. Edwards’ Olive ‘szlets‘ The skin should begin to ‘clear_a;tte: you have taken the ¢ tablets a few nights. i t‘nCleanse the blood,the howelsand theliver with Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets, the suc- cessful substitute for calomel; there's never any sickness or pain after taking them. Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets do that which calomel does, and just as effectively, but their lctéon is gentle and safe instead vere and irritating, Y c‘fi; one who takesd Olziv‘;e T: abltetut is ever cursed with “a dark brown taste,’ @ bad breath, a dull, listless, “no good” feeling, constipau‘oln, f(ox-pu‘l liver, bad isposition or pimply face. dssg)x: Edwa??j;} Olive Ta:leta.nrg a purely vegetable compound mixex with olive oil; you will know them by their olive color. Dr. Edwards spent years among pa- s tients afflicted with fiver and bowel complaints, and Olive Tablets are the immensely effective result. Take one or two nightly for a week Bee how much better you feel and look. 20c and 25¢ per box. All druggists. ’ LIFT OFF CORNS! Apply few crops then lift sore, touchy corns off with fingers—No pain! = N 7 ! | Doesn’t hurt a bit! Drop a little Freezone on an aching corn, instantly that corn stops hurting. then you lift it right out Yes, magic! A tiny bottle of freezone costs but a few cents at any drug store, but s sufficient to remove every hard cora, seft corn, or corn between the toes, and the calluses, irritation. Freezon eryv of a C derful is the sensational discov- acinnati genius, It is won- DRINK MORE WATER IF KIDNEYS BOTHER less meat and take Salts for Backache or Bladder trouble— Neutralizes acids. acid meat excites the kid- ther become overworked; get ache, and feel like lumps of urine becomes cloud, the irritated, and you may be seek relief two or three the night When the vou must help them he body’s urinous waste or real sick pergson shortly. vou feel a dull m ¢ in the gion, you suffer from back- k headache, dizziness, stom- 3 sour, tongue coated and you feel rheumatic when the sveather is bad i} meat, also get from any of Jad Salts; ful in a glass of breakfast for a few days and your kidney then act fine. This is made from the acid lemon juice, combined has been used for clean clogged kid- stimulate them to normal so to neutralize the acids » it no longer is a source of thus ending bladder weak- Fat siuggisl in idneys flus vou'lj At fi kidney re twinges drink lots of water; pharmacist four take a table- water before ounces nd with lithia, and generations neys and artivit n urin irritation, Dess Jad Salts is inexpensive, cannot in- makes a delightful effervescent lithia-water drink which everyone should take now and then to keep the kidneys clean and active. Drug- gists here say they sell lots of Jad Falts to folks who believe in over- oming kidney trouble while it is only iwrouble, to without soreness or e o WAR TIME PHRASES ARE NOW FAMOUS “They Shall Not Pass” and “La- fayette, We Are Here" Feb. 17.—The war has dramatic or New | developed York many :pigrams Looking bhack of four years of that the majority of thess phrases, laconie ths slogans, terse statements | persper ive appears grew out of tense crises in battles, moments when over fighting or marked historic e {e of nations hung in the balance. | Take for the slogan, | “They shal not During the| emendous fighting ia front of Ver-| when the thely great desperate drive broah“ | through the French battle lines in| {1216, this saying passed from lip to! lip among the Freach soldiers gath- ered there in a long-drawn battle to check the terrific onslaught of the | Germans. How it originated 1s not ‘.[4‘ r. Some have attributed it to Marshal Joffre, others to Marshall Petain who was in eommaad of the! French fighting forces at Verdun.| Others believe the saying originated | with the men in the ranks. At aay! event they adopted it and for months| while the Germans vainly threw their | hattalions upon the stubboraly de-| fended forts around the French the saying, “They shall not pass, came the watchword at Verdun. they did not pass. To Americans the senteatious utter- ance of Gen. Pershing when he placed a wreath on the tomb of La- fayette in the Picpus cemetery in Paris conveyed a significance and an inspiration. “Lafayette, we are| here,” was all he said, but to the American as well as to the French-, man it was better than oratory. It} meant to the Americaa, “We are here for business and our business is to fight.” It thrilled the hearts of Gen. Pershing's people at home and the modesty of it filled them with a glow of satisfaction. Another dramatic phrase which stirred the patriotism of the Ameri- can people was that attributed to an American commander at Chateau- Thierry when he responded to the advice of French commanders to re- treat by declaring: “The American flag has been compelled ta retire. This is unendurable. We are going to counter-attack.” These statements have been attributed to both Major Gen. Robert L. Bullard and to Major Gen. Omar Bundy. Some observers have regarded this incident as the turning point of the war. From that i!lmn the Americaas advanced. The | vietory of Chateau-Thierry followed ind thereafter the German army re- treated. Vice Admiral William 8. Sims, commanding the American naval forces in European waters was asked when the first Yankee warships ar- rived in England early in May, 1917, ; “When will you be ready for busi- | ness?” He replied, “We can start at | once. We made our preparations on the way over.” There was a dramatic moment, a eat crisis in the world’s history vhen Gen. Pershing placed the Am- | erican army under the command of { the then Gen. Foch who had just been made commander of the Allied forces, but none of the phrases that Gen. Pershing used were widely quoted as epigrammatic. One which might so have been selected was the words, “All that we have are yours. Dispose of them as yau will.” The retort of Major Charles Whit- tlesey, commander of the “lost bat- talion” of the American army in the Argonne Forest when the Germans surrounded his isolated command and their commander demanded its sur- render was one of the war's historic phrases. “Go to hell,” he replied. The first great battle of the war, the | battle that the Marne, elicited from the lips of Marshal Joffre the words: “The hour has come to advance at all costs; to die where you stand rather than to give way."” General (afterward Marshal) Petain inspired his weary troops at Verdun by an order of the day concluding with the words: “Courage, we will get them.” | General French = example pass. made to e Germa And| Foch, commanding the rmy in the first battle of the the onward sweep of the German s. In a memorable message to Joffre he seid: ‘“My right is crushed. My 5 in retreat. I am attacking v center.” He did attack and { drove a wedge through the German lines that started their retreat to the Aisne. The people of Paris were stunned by the rapidity with which | the Germans advanced In their first rush toward the French capital. The railway stations were besieged, but the great majority of the people knew they must remain. In this tragic mo- ment General Gallieni, military com- mander of the city, inspired confidence | and cheered the faint-hearted with his watchword, “Jusqua bout,” or “To the very end.” The populace took up the cry, and Gallieni with his army played a signal part in hurling back the le- | gions of von Kluck at the Marne. No 1 inspiring, but born of less | tragic circumstances was the saying of General Gouraud, who, upon enter- Alsace and Lorraine, declared: “The day of glory has come.” i Field Marshal Sir Douglas Haig, | commander-in-chief of the British | armies in France, gave utterance to an appeal in addressing his soldiers which stirred a responsive chord in{ the hearts of the allled peoples | throughout the world, For three | weeks the enemy had battered fl-m’ Trench lines in a desperate effort to separate them from the French and drive through to the channel ports. 1 3aid: “If is inadmissible that our flee! | slde with Monastir and a part of Serbia were stopped the Germans at | Marne, had been almost overwhelmed | ing Strassburg after the liberation of | i Day after day the British had been NEW BRITAIN driven back. On April 13, 1918, Mar- | shal Haig called upon his men for one BEAT []FF i last effort. ‘‘Every position must he " held to the last man,” he ordere There must be no retirement. Wi Two Men of 29th Divisio Unustual Daring and Comegy our bhacks to the wall and believing in the justice of our cause, every s must fight to the end.” When Vice-Admiral Sir Ros: Wemyss went to tell the German com- mander of the naval terms of the armistice one of the Teuton admirals 18.—The fight one or " should been be given without havin beaten." “It bad only to come out,” was the . laconic retort of Admiral Wemyss, York, Later when the surrendering Ger- | a7 IRt made the : man warships were escorted by the o 1s iustrated 1 tro R British fleet, into British waters, Ad- Michael J. Feeney, of Col miral Beatty's historic signal, after tho i Ty wae cnemy fleet had been moor: read ion, who, with his “buddg@s “The German flag is to be hauled named Brady, put a German squad tof down at 3:57 and is not to be hoisted | flight by hurling stones at them. Thé/8 £E2 3 rithout permission i ted in a lotter received |t fise sy Spurning t Lieutenant T. J. B. German ambassador's invitation ang commanding officer, the Central Power ho vouches for its authentic ity. Lieu- Lang volunteered from Jersey while Feeney's home is in Bay up New Feh. American .2 rivate .y 9th Div G. incident is re: from Fir i thell i when offered to Greece as a Germ bribe, replied: “You ask me to dishonor my signature, to dishonor my country and to vielate its obligations toward Ser- bia, and, as remuneration, you o me part of the corpse of that which T am expected to kill. My country, . 18 too little to commit so great an infamy."” _ninth Division was in ng in a wooded district in “Feeney and running mate Brady were occupying the same bunk- hole in the woods i L “There was just some tangled | Huns a fows h or n « .. and at the Waldorf-Astoria A fact: The Waldorf in New York is but one of the many hotels all over the country, where Fatima is the largest-selling cigarette. The same thing is true, for example —at the Astor, New York, where over 200,000 Fatimas are sold every month; —at the Willard, in Washington; —at the Gibson and the Sinton, in Cincinnati; —at the Copley Flaza, the Touraine, the Parker House and Young’s, in Boston; —and at dozens of other leading hotels (and clubg, tco) all over the country. Logett e MyensTstaceo G, FATIMA A Sensible Cigarette NOTE —At such places as these, low price doean’t count., Fatimas lead in sales, not because of their iow price, but because men PREFER them to higher-priced cigarettes. Thoy prefer Fatima’s taste; and they find that Fatimas treat them right.

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