New Britain Herald Newspaper, May 2, 1919, Page 20

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N ORIENTAL RUG IN THE NEW HOME WILL BE A CHERISHED POSSESSION They're handsome and thoroughly practical. May Salc in progress on the Seventh Floor. HARTFORD. ' \ - A I Furniture Sale For New Home Makers Luxe for the Enduring Qualities That People Look For, at May Sale Prices Not a stone has been left unturned to make this the most notable of all our MAY FURNITURE SALES. . . . And one little visit to our eighth and ninth floors will tell you more than whole pages in the newspapers ever could. The bride to be, the matron of an established home, and gift buyers—one and all, will find a happy choice here at every turn, and the wise thing to do will be to come before that choice is limited. American Wainut Dining Room Suices Nine piece American Walnut Dining Room Suites, like cut. Regular price $315.00. Sale price $269.50. ()_lhk‘r ten-piece American \Walnut Dining Roc lar price $328.00. price $339.50. Mahogang Living Room Mahogany I¥ . price $275.00. rame Living Room Suites, like cut: Sale price $235.00. m Suites Sale price $285.00; regular prce $395.00 regu Others: Sle Regular price Regular price $3 $265.00. Sale price $325.00. Sale price $375.00. Regular price Chairs and Rockers Fireside Chairs and Rockers, like cut, tapestry covered: Regular price $35.00. Others: Regular price $39.50. Regular price $45.00. Odd mahogany American walnut, like cut. Regular price $62.50. Sale price $50.00 $55.00. Sale price $45.00 Sale price $: 2 5 Dressers, Sale price $39.50 and Regular pr Jacobean Qak ining Suites . Ten-piece Jacobean Oak Dining Room Suites, like cut, regular price $175.00. Sale price $125.00. i Other Dining Room Suites in golden oak, eight pieces: Regular price $110.00. Sale price $95.00. Regular price $175.00. Sale price $150.00. ¥ e - " i~ . Living Room Furniture Three-piece overstuffed Living Room Suites, tapestry covered. like cut: Regular pric Others: ) Regular price Sale price $262.50. Regular price $31 Sale price $285.00. American Walnut Bedroom Suites Sale price $200.00. 5.00. 310.00. 00. Mattresses at Reduced Prices Layer Felt Cotton Mattresses, in art ticking, all sizes, regular price $17.50, sale price $13.50. Others specially priced for this sale at $19.50, $21.50, $27.50, $29.50. White Enamel Beds W. E. Beds, two inch continuous post, cut, regular price $16.50. Sale price $13.50. Other W. E. Beds. regular price $17.50. $14.75. Regular price $21.00. Sale price $18.75. Brass Beds, regular price $22.50, at $19.00. Davenport Béds Davenport Bed and Mattresses, oak frame, imitation leather covering. Regular price $57.50. Sale price $39.50 Othe: Regular price $70.00. Sale price $60.00 ’ WITH AND WITHOUT CUSHIONS. $8.00 Chairs. Sale price $18.50 Chairs. $16.50. $22.00 $19.50. $29.50 $26.50. $31.50 $28.00. Sale price like Sale price Chairs. Sale price Four piece American walnut Bedroom Suites, like cut, regu- Sale price $225.00. walnut lar price $245.00. S Other four piece American $165.00. Sale price $145.00. o . ’ o Seven piece mahogany Bedroom Suites, regular price $275.00. Sale price $235.00. Sui i Chairs. Sale price Suites. regular price $ $15.00 Chairs, $13.50. Sale Sale price Chairs. Sale sustained in or arising out of his serv- ice in the Army, Navy or Marine 4 Corps invited to take the matter up with the federal board and every mpossible assistance will be given to thim to comply with all the formalities numbered about 350,000 men. He did not mean that the whole of these men were qualificd to receive train- ing, but from among those they Ishould expect to find a large number for whom training ought to be pro- a book which perhaps no one will read but which I, at all events, shall | be glad to have written.” It has been stated by those close to Premier Clemenceau that it was his | earnest desire to finish his present lest extent, and it would be supple- mented by work at the six or eight convalescent centers it was proposed to set up. ranted to disabled officers and near- y 600,000 o disabled men. About 0,000 new awards were being made each week in respect of men who were being demobilized, and they had to expeet more claims from men now { Glass of Hot Water . BI2,000 VETERANS This Number Is Being Increased 20,000 Each Week London, May 1.—Speaking at a eonference of the faculty of insurance §ir L. Worthington Evans, the pen- sions minister, gave a resume of the svork of his department in regard to the traininz and treatment of dis- mbled soldiers and sailors, and the grrangemen’s for dealing in the fu- fure with these victims of the great av@e. The minister, who has already svon golder opinions by his sympa- thelic handling of difficult cases, made some interesting statements. Over 12.000 pensions had been in hospital. At the time of the armi- stice there were 550,000 men in hos. pitals at home and abroad. this number had been reduced to about 200,000. Many of these would become pensioners. He estimated that there would be at least 700,000 tem- porary pensioners, an unknown num- ber of whom would become en- titled to permanent pensions. Arrangements were being made by the ministry of pensions to take over orthopsedic hospitals from the army and to estallish out syrrounding towns and districts, un- der the direction of the surgeons at- tached to the hospita Similarly treatment would be provided in hos- pitals and out patient clinics for cases of nervous disease. jiving some unpublished figures re- lating to training, he said he esti- mated tha® the classes falling with- in the terms of the pensions warrant A Message to RNothers OU know the real human doctors right around in your neighborhood : the doctors made of flesh and blood just like you: the doctors with souls and hearts : those men who are responding to your call in the dead of night as readily as in the broad daylight; ood that Fletcher’s Castoria has done, is doing and to tell you the they are ready will do, from their experience and their love for children. Fletcher’s Castoria is nothing new. We just want to impress upon you the importance an_experiment. ;?buying Fletcher’s. We are not asking you to Your physician will tell you this, as he knows there are a num- ber of imitations on the market, and he is particularly interested in the welfare of your baby. Genmine Castoria always bears the signature of M%g_‘ Today | tient clinies in | vided. For example, there were 24,- 000 men who had each lost a limb by amputation, and 128,000 who had re- ceived some injury, either to a leg or an arm, not necessitating amputa- tion; 36,000 who had suffered from neurasthenia, 60,000 suffering chest complaints, including tubercu- losis; 39,000 suffering from rheuma- tism, 54,000 suffering from heart trouble, 10 000 suffering from deaf- ness, and there were 1436 blind men who had received training at St Dunstan's and Newington house, Edinburgh. There was, therefore, a large clientele which training. Up to the present the ministry of pensions had trained or had in train- | ing 24,000 men. New schemes were required and a great extension of the training faoilities was necessary. As to the future the cabinet had de- cided that industrial training should be placed under the charge of the ministry of labor. There had been some dissatisfaction expressed by lo- cal war pensions committees at this change being made. But he thought the transfer was right. The ministry of labor was charged with training not merely the disabled, but apprentices and other able men, and that ministry was charged also with the finding of employment, not should receive | i 1l merely for the disabled but also the : fit and well. The minister of labor had the machinery in the employ- ment exchanges throughout the coun- try to enable them to carry out his duty. Moreover, the negotiations with the trade unions necessary be- fore any tra‘ning scheme could be set up was best carried out by the min- istry of labor. In future, therefore, the ministry of pensions would confine itself to training during the time when a dis- abled man ctill required medical care and attention. Training in the hos- 7 their from | Pisabled Soldiers HELPS MEN MAKE OUT THEIR PAPERS Assisted to Obtain Compensation by Federal Board for Vocational Education. May 1.—~The question of compensation from the War Risk Insurance bureau is the prime requisite to be settled first, and upon this depends the future of the dis- abled man whether he is to receive the free vocational education the gov- ernment provides. Under the law and the ruling of the War Risk In- surance bureau, there must be a min- imum of a 10 per cent. disability be- fore the disabled man can have the training. The matter ruling from the War Risk Insurance bureau is one which has proved most confusing to the injured man, and many cases have come to the attention of the federal board of where disabled Washington, | men have hesitated to make applica- tion for either the compensation or training on account of not under standing the procedure involved therein. The Iederal Board for Vocational Fdueation, through its vocational ad- visers and others of the staff in each of the 14 district offices, has realized that assistance would be greatly wel- comed by the disabled men and has been helping these men to make out applications and obtain rulinz from the War Risk Insurance bureau To April first, 12,053 men have re celved this assistance and the claims have been filed with the War Risk Insurance bureau. nied in 175 cases. | peace conference is o | “and I have finished take a rest that, after fifty years of . of obtaining a | Compensation has . been awarded in 5,934 cases and dsr; Any man who is ital would be devsloped to the ful-|suffering grom. injuries or sabikities | requisite to having his claim passed upon with reasonable promptness. FRENCH PREMIER Clemenceau ixpects to - Become Author as Soon as Confer- ence Is Fnded. May 2.-—Premier will write a book cer Paris, ceau, too, problems recently [ +ha “As soon as the have been solved,” peace he said my task, well earned shall write OVER-ACIDITY of the stomach has upset many a night's rest. If your stomach is acid- disturbed, dissolve two or three Ki-moIDS on the tongue before retir- ing and enjoy refreshing sleep. The purity and goodness of Ki-moids guaranteed by SCOTT & BOWNE MAKERS OF SCOTT’S EMULSION 192 I think I have { turn to health Clemen- | after the ; lin April, 1918, task and retire. remarked upon recently as being ex- traordinary and the virility and vigor of former days has been evident. Americans who have called upon the French premier following his re- say that he is full of humor and enjoys a jovial existence. WOMEN London, WORK HARD. May 2.—Women's groat work during the war is shown by a | board of trade report which says that | in July, 1914, there were 3,276,000 women employed, and since that time 0,682,000 offered their mostly replacing men. The age of women workers in was 37, ] s | “My! But They're Tasty!” The verdict of every house- wife who serves her family with OtloSiahls ""ReadytoEat Meals” There’s a reason for the purity and piquant flavor of Otto Stahl’s Boiled Ham,Meat Loaf, Rouladee Frankfurters, Bacon, Tongue and Bolognas. They're cooked by expert chefs Sold by all first-class siores OTTO STAHL'S 2332 Third Avenue New York services, percent- His vitality has been | industries | Before Breakfast a Splendid Habit Open slulces of the system each morning and wash away the polsonous, stagnant matter, —— Those of us who are accustomed to feel dull and heavy when we arise; splitting headache. stuffy from a cold, tongue, nasty breath, acid stomach, lame back, can, instead, both look and feel as fresh as a daisy al- ways by washing the polsons and tox- ins from the body With phosphated | hot water each morning. We should drink, before breakfast, a glass of real hot water with a tea- spoonful of limestone phosphate in it to flush the stomach, liver, kidneys and ten yards of bowels the previous day’s indigestible waste, sour bile and poisonous toxins; thus cleansing, sweetening and purifying the entire | ailmentary tract before putting more food into the stomach. The action of limestone phosphate and hot water on an empty stomach is wonderfully invigorating. 1t cleans out all the sour fermentations, gases, waste and acidity and gives one a spiendid appetite for breakfast and and it is said to be but a little while until the roses begin to appear in the | cheeks. A quarter pound of lime- stone phosphate will cost very little at the drug store, but is sufficient to make anvone who is bothered with biliousness, constipation, stomach trouble or rheumatism a real enthus- iast on the subject of internal sanita- tion. Pry it and you are assured that you will look better and feel better in Xevex-y way- shortly, foul

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