New Britain Herald Newspaper, September 13, 1919, Page 6

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1o1a, Britain Herald. RALD PUBLISHING COMPANY, ¢ Proprietors. daily (Sunday excepted) at 4:18 t Herald Bullding, 67 Churoh St. s Year. Three Months. C & Month, d at the Post Office at New Britaln ®8 Second Class Mall Matter. TELEPHONE CALLS ss Office . Hal Rooms nly profitable advertising medtum in le “city. Circulation books and press m always open to advertisers. ember of the Assoclated Press. ssoclated Press is exclusively entitled tbe use for republication of all news edited ts it or not otherwise credited this paper and also local news blished herein. £ BUILD NOW PROPOSITION, cal men, ity, interested in building in have made an extensive can- of the lumber industry and allied the of re is any indication of a decre: s with idea ascertaining e price of building within a few s. Literally to a man, concerns t the country have advised the i that the scale of time will lette i rs he adied. INew prices present be The Britain not in answer plain their w0 people, were ness statements in which tions were candidly answered. il people have therefore decided se the columns of The Herald in rtising their lay of the been able to acquire. of the ds, which are more complete than warts and that they The atten- called to making information pubic is these editorial may be. /e are interested in the proposition home building in the city a ye for the betterment of the com- hity, as we have explained at some Eth. There no worthier n that of inspiring all ncially able willing is motive who are and to build nes to start work on them at rent situation once. may be remedied his plan, the truth of which is only evident. he Loan association, started by the nufacturers, the attempt to estab a series of statistics by other lo- men, and even the reassessment of ir movements to equalize and, all movement poerty possible, lower taxes are in support of a for which Herald time. has been for With Loan organization it might he well further into it the builders and lumber men have e preaching e the organization of look what plans to slained the advisability of building w. The Loan association, in its present hns, will make all arrangements for yone desiring a home in regards to All that prospective builder e cash required. the to ve a choice in lots and pick out the le of building he desires. ipulated that he nt. of the total of the investment h, of it first is ncees- ry is for It is also must have ten per of in the rest will be borrowed him on and second mor hges from the the banks and the coffe association. He must pay, on s home, an amount equivalent to one er cent. a month of the total number dollars represented in his property. ut of this the association is taxes, and the interest ortgage, plactg all redit on the second mortgage. The this upposing that own a lot that is orth one thousand dollars. and plan b place upon it a house that will cost will pay on his surplus to his scheme works out way. you ine thousand dollars. That makes the otal amount represented ten thou- nd dollars, which asy figure upon which to figure inter- ist. The loan association, established by the manufacturers, will obtain you we select as an rst and second four lot as the ten per cent have. mortgages, accepting payment hat The oans on the mortgage are at five per pay one per cent. cent. in you must originally ent. month, order that some e made to Twelve per cent but you must twelve per a vear, cash payments the mortgages. on ten thousand dol- amounts to twelve Out raay reduce lars hundred dol- lars interest at the rate of five per cent nine thousand have bor- This is four hundred and fifty a year of this must come on which you rowed. dollars. will probabls amount to two hundred and fifty dol- making seven hundred Five hun- Your taxes jlars a vear of fixed payments. per year, dred per vear, then, goes into paying off The next your interest will be decreased by five on the five hundred and in a short time you will your obligation. vear per cent remarkably awn your own home, Ten thousand dollars is more than {s necessary to pay for the average home but, should one figure upon five thousand, it is merely necessary to di- vide the above figures by two for a working plan. The presumption lIs that if ten thousand was expended it vould be put into a two or three fam- ily house. If one builds a three fam- ily house and an average of thirty dol- lars a month s pald for two rents, the owner_may own his own property in a few years by actually putting out gorty dollars'a month of his own y in payments, an amount which [ stamp out the prospect of owning the place they live in. There can not bhe that is self-evident a fairer proposi- tion It yourself, the than of the manufacturers. Follow the figures outlined subtract ayments each as above, vear and see how long it will take you to get a home of your own. BIRAM JOHNSON Senator ON THE sSTUMI Hiram “ Cali- foy Johnson, o fornia, undoubtedly of President asnirant the nomination the of election, Republican party for the United States in the that of 1920 is making remarks are far less excusabla than those his opponent in the Treaty fight the vindicate that ths President started the calling of nan.es. Personalities when he is descending to abuse of tha President using, fo himself, the explanation are rapidly bacoming the major part of the argument on the covenant and are heing uscd and forecasted in party fights to a greatoer We good extent than ever before. doubt it mental whether the very much, tasie to question ability of the President when the League is being discussed, whether we agree with him or not. Mr. made Johnson started his speech, in St. Louis yesterday, e not in a highly exemplary ated, that of manner. in effect, he would employ the ainst President Wilson weapon personalities the latter had as against the Senate. Then he followed his opening with this expression “The pe demonstrates sonalities he employe; of weaknoss the weakness wuse and perhaps ths of his intellect also.” Which, we believe, shows the Sen- ability to practice what he incidentally the ator's preaches—and the of follows. puts spite upon argument which The American people, de=pite the that porsonal toward argument, 50 little apathy an has developed but matter far arted for who s it, or feeling, still against attention no logical argument of has been dis await a Their i bt that the League Nations. acted from inasmuch they ekpect little it as bitterness, but safe to sav it wishes Yo is may be recalled by anycne who éliminate politics and ver- extend partia- the subjeet. If the President sonal jealousy and a mentary argument on the Senate is to follow the otler that they to outdo in maledictions will the faith of their Johnson and each tr each ‘inl are losing follow Senator may have a ing, 500d argument, buj he has discounted of information. it the minds one who seeks for in every THE STRIKERS RESTAURANT. Striking Omaha cooks and waiters out have opened up a restaurant for the relief of their trade and also as a protest against high prices as they are said to exist in other eating places are selling with such a dinner, the They a high meat wou'd priced on menu, satisfy any man at prices as low as forty cents per meal. The won- it. Instructions would der'is, how they do from these same cooks he preciated by ap- “housands of small cafes the United States, and homes in viding they are not actually selling at pro- a loss, There are any number of keepers who will anxiously inquire of methods of of bread tha strikers as to their procedure in beef, supplying an order roast with potatoes and and butter, for forty cents, and pork chops with trimmings, for thirty cents. Iven in the homes, where the cost of labor in turning out a meal is not fig- it problem to serve things at this price. Then we are told that the union expects to make a small profit on its experiment. There catch somewhere, there must be. We imagine that the wages of the strikers are not being paid in the union restaurant, also that the buyers of the meats are serving for nothing. Otherwise it seems that the ultimate ured, becomes a is a consumer would be forced to pay more for what the union is producing. If it can prove that union wages may be supplied to each man wha is working in, or for, the place and that a profit is made on the meals, after the rent of the building and all overhead ex- pense has been added it has certainly done something for which mankind will give its hearty thanks. Please tell s how you do it and let us see an expense sheet, if you do not mind, cooks and walters of Omaha FACTS AND FANCIES. Among the citles shing has eaptured head the list as th —New York Sun, er- must won, which ew most Gen, York easily “The ealm onlooker,” says Senater Iteed “‘will recognize in the president’s utterances *‘only the vapors ef anger,’” Who teld the senaior whai the calm onlooker wlill recognize?—New Evening Post, than Street Lawlessness is less illiteracy unsound education.—Wall Journal. Chairman Hays says that the president is pounding a stone wall, his | ol in house- | York | { phrase used to run.—Springfield Re- publican. Austria, signing a ‘“brute force” treaty, have the consolation of knowing that that is the sort of treaty she set out to make some other na- tions sign.—Manchester Union. can Naming the profiteers will help, as was shown during actual hostilities. Greed dreads publicity.—New York World. I’rices, the o} eral 1t the in orve nion of the fed- board, are g¥ing down. takes financial experts to discover reduction.—Kansas City Times. re Mr. Plumb's ship plan seemed |in a most promising | then William J. Bryan indorsed it.—Houston sovernment-owner- be moving along fashion. And out and came Post. | Communists won the recent election in Petrograd with ease. Those who had government jobs voted to hold them, and the six other people were afraid to vote—Wichita Beacon. | i | | Between strikes and high prices the | public is getting so nervous that it, " too, m strike.—Baltimore Herald. J‘ The Wood Thrush. | Al mornings and all eves, | Weil hidden in green leaves, The melody he weaves | Is ever entrancing J It sets the heart a-dancing s0 And bids the spirit's wings Fly up to mountain Beyond a world grieves. sprin that sighs and [ And yet the common cares | Of humdrum life he shares | The while he boldly dares | The midday haunts of duty, IForgetting songs of beauty, To feed his little flock, Which done, he doth unlock Ain his most melodious airs. il this life of mine Were like, O bird, to thine, | My cup were filled with wine To each occasion suited; Yea, I were spurred and booted The stony roads to ride And then, at Sweet streams to vine ! —lLaura Blackburn Tribune. COMMUNICATED Another Nlr{(;(‘|' on "‘l“’x'()l eve, beside walken strains di- in the Chicago Britain, Sept. of The MHetald, Dear Sir:—Will you be kind enough publish a word from another sol- dier on. the all-important question of this hour, prohibition? Ighave recently returned rance wearing the stars the gallant 2d division “over { As a former resident of New 'now living inYSpringfield, M 1 still feel interested in my old home town, and on reading the recent com- | munications on prohibition, 1 felt prompted to register, in your paper my agreement with Dr. Mann and my | absolute disagreement with “Sincere” | and my fellow-soldier friend. I corroborate my soidicr-friend's !accurate knowledge of how the Irench and English stimulated their fighting men, and how Uncle Sam'’s men, who felt the need of it, were not excluded from the sources of supply which flowed to their foreign fighting brothers. I do not infer communication hibition ‘‘won | low-soldie modest Conn., 10, 1919, } Editor L i | to from with there.” Britain, won from Dr. Mann's that he claimed pro- the war,” as my fel- implies; out Dr. Mann's claim that prohibition helped fo win the war And is it not true that prohibition helped to win the war, in spite of the , free flow of stimulants to the armies in Irance?, | The fact is that war-prohibition came too late to become operative on the 1]7;\((lofioltl does not argue against | prohibition: rather does it prove that | the leaders of our great nation, from | their standpoint of inside observa- | tion, saw the need of arresting the | evil tendency of intoxicants upon the soldiers; hence the crystalization of the highest leading thought in the war-prohibition edict. | Whenever, in times of great stress | and special need, a nation is called | upon for her best, compulsory self- i sacrifice must supply the lack not met hy voluntary self-denial, even as the selective draft had finally to be | resorted to, to compensate for the sad [1ack of volunteers. | Not all brave soldiers of our war- | ring nation fought in France. If the valiant boys who went over were | entertained in France with convivial { hospitality, and many were glad for the special inspiration of spirits | served in the trenche: is vet true | that prohibition had 1ts good effects {on the people behind the lines at home. . The millions of civilian-soldlers home suffered the heavy hand of pro- hibition upon them for the sake of us at the front, long before the spe- cial enactment against alcoholic stim- ulants came into effect, Thousands upon thousands found | the prices upon the necessarles of life prohlbitive; and very cften, govern- ment prohlbitfon against the home use of such things us we needed at the front, demanded totil abstinence at home; and all this war-time legis- lation in behalf of thosa of us at the front was enacted by the government at home without the direct volce of the milllons who suffered under it and without the complaint which many a returned moldier now makes against the gevernment's institating prohibi- tion without the vote of the soldier in the field, I am one of the lieve (hat supplying strong drink proves nothing ugainst prohibition; and on the other hand, T believe that prohibition entorced throughout the world, would preclude the future need of soldiers, ~as a sober world would not precipitate war There was a time, ‘when, in good old New England, many u “ood par- | | | it soldiers that soldiers with he- HERE'S A PENNY Co LADN DowN AT “THE 2 PROVED THAT SHE WAS VEEN MUCH BEHIND THE TIMES WHEN SHE GAVE JIMMV A PENNY FOR RUNNINGE AN ERRAND — THANK Sou VERN MucH | MU LITTLE MAN — FOoR. NVour BANK. - ’ / nlf 1 / . AW, CoME. ol THEY AN’ Y AUTTIN' Do’ WITH A pEnY WHAT YuW DO WITH GONNA Y GWE \TTo A BLIND MAN P Ml 1 5 & / draught of good old New rum; but today that does for the beneficence of rum in pulpit, nor do preachers today lieve that the spirits which intoxicate, cqual the sobriety of the great Spirit, which inspires, in the trenches, as in the pulpit. not argt the be- CLEON R. RUSH, Battery B, 12th Field Artillery, The Second Division Sincere Has a Word. Dear Sir:—should you think that vour readers may not have tired of the subject of prohibition I should like to publish a few comments lating to the letter in your issue of September 9th by Dr. Mann. Of course there are two sides to a ques- tion, and he who hears but one bell hears but one sound. As Mr. Mann quotes, “Prohibition cannot be en- forced.” When Napoleon Bonaparte placed a new prince upon the throne of Milan, and its surrounding district, he said to him: *See that you make and in order that the people may he able to observe them.” He was not even emperor at that time. He was simply command- er-in-chief of the Italian expedition, al great man and a good man. His intellect was never equalled and I don't belicve it ever will be. So now, then, gentlemen, you can see why the law of prohibition can never be en- forcad. s to Mr. Mann's fears that I may be an enemy of Christianity, they are quite without foundation, but may I be permitted, in this con- nection, to remind the zentleman that his Master must have had a pretiy poor opinion of water as a heverage for a wedding feast when He turned it into wine. That all thcse zentlemen consider that they are making great sacrifices for tho benefit of mankind I oughly believe; so did Don Quixote of Spain, but their efforts are unavail- ing because they don't start right They ecannot remedy faulty conditions that exist in the most of our saloons. You cannot make an establishment for the sale of dope into what it should be, just hecause old Jack Webb printed “Cafe” on its win- dow panes! The difficulties are seen in the efforts of “our rulers” to regulate the high cost of living: and there is a clamor for the stoppage of immigraticn for a period of four vears. In connection with the ques- tion of the high cost of living I'll say that this country ought to be the happy home of a population of four hundred miilion pecple properly dis- tributed all over the land. And this is the way to properly distribute them all over the land: Begin Washington and pass one more new law—do it in a week or two—it shouldn’t take any longer. At any plice in Euarope where tickets ure sold the agent shall say: “Yes, Jo- hann, you can go straight to Idaho, Montana, etc.'—any zone where la- bor Is scarce the others are verboten Stamp his ticket and have him sign, wish him luck and take his coin. It would then soon not be very long before he should be able to buy a cauliftower and a peck of brussels sprouts for his dinner Instead of do- ing the fox-and-the-grapes act as we Oliver Twist our way home o a meal of bread and butter. But to get back to our subject, gentlemen, with your kind permission, I do not believe that prohibition ought to prevail, Li- censes should be cheap and easy to obtain so that yvou may creats a healthy competition in the business. Customers would bestow their pa- tronage upon the places which should be properly conducted, Standard measures and quality ought to be enforced No offi- cial supervisor either a {eeitolaller or o toper etired offi- cers or veteran soldiers are wenerally appointed to such positions in FFrance and not alone their job but their pensions also depend upon the effi cient and honest performance of their duties. The writer had once to com- plain against a saloon keeper in St. Cloud. It was a restaurant and I re Just,— ame standar at all times. should be n son, found special inspiration fo. his a_yery liberal was directed to the mayor. I found him working on a building, and he 5 1 Lngland } { emporium and read i 20th “enough thor- | me to that] riot act. 1 cents for a The with the forty of eight. returned to me from the landlord's That came right dcwn had been chavged bottle of wine instead ihirty-two cents with profuse apoiogies “mastroquet’—that's a toy little nickname over there. was about 1886 Gentlemen, legislature, in a light saving act mn r. You may will fall on your nose. January may be o beauatiful day but for the revulsion of feeling. have to do it all over again. that here twenty years ago. a silly issue for a presidentinl tion, and may bring Uncle Sam say to himself, “Lord, what a fool was freak day- the air | the look You We Its elec- to ) & is the prohibition class with when you called a spit in the it out may saw al Yours truly, SINCERIS neral Pershing’s Modesty. (New York Herald.) One thing above all others which impressed the people who joined in the welcome tribute to General Pershing w modesty on all oc- casions and all circumstances. The plaudits multitudes, the cheers from admiring throngs are to make any ordinary in- dividual swell with conscious pride selfish emotion. General Persh- ing, however, is made of better and! sterner stuff. le has the poise and If-control, the rare gift of being great by showing himself modest and uming. Truc greatness is al-| ways modest, and the hero of the A.| 5. 17, the guest of New York and| the nation, possesses this attribute to greal degree. i General Pershing’s brief address at the banquet tendered him was aj model of eloquence, of consideration | of others, of generosity to the men | under his command and of apprecia- . tion of the real causes of the war and the patriotic efforts of the American’ troops to win. He took no credit to | himself, according it all to his hrave men. That modest address suitably marked the end of a perfect day and the end of a perfect occasion The Passing of the Straw Hat. and his under from and una a a | i (Providence Journal.) ! Not until the fifteenth of September | will the aprocryphal bell clang out the | doom of the 1819 straw hat, but al- ready it is disappearing from siyht— withdrawing to dim closets, the top hooks of the hat tree or to the refuse barrel of the hat dealer, with whom we have left it in exchange for a fall style of sterner stuff. It was less than four months that we first tried on our straw then fresh and crisp, before merchant’s triple mirror. 1t was hat, the a dalnty, natty thing, typifying the joy- our outdoor season, the good old sum- | | agn’ | I careful of it of eggs. We time. e as If it were a basket blew the dust—real or imaginary— from any piece of furniture on which we deposied it. It sat so lightly, so jauntily, upon our head that some- how it gave us a sence of cheerful- ness and renewed youth, The putting on of autumnal hat ylelds us no such sentlments. We submit to the change rvegretfully, as u matter of necessity, Oh, that it were always May and straw hats always the mode | And ways a on the large size mer were as seasonal the straw hat is in nuisance, Tt hard to head unless one gets an extra that makes him look like a4 Down Ilast farmer on a holiday The back seat in an automobile is no place for A man wearing a straw. The open trolley invaded by brisk zephyrs that compel us to hang on to the hat hold it awkwardly in our lap. cloth cap, the Alpine or Fedc even the derby, preferable in this respect. But what of it? If our prefernece for the straw illogical, no matter. When we put it away, we have a sigh Summer is gone or fast going; the time of the furnace fire and the over- coat is near at hand. A great waste of chilly weather stretches betweenl ~ yet many keep or The type ra is is | reign us and that happy da shall go to the hatter and say to him: “What in straws Alas for the ent the hat that was b a short five months ago or worse. The dirt is g Its silk lining /is | stain initials are dulled. It 1 last rose of summer. we are not careful, it ing alone. For every ¢ pre S0 w | a diminished number of it panions Idict public bell hat on the of no edict, of the straw proaching its end. N | | i Al I I when we | once more have you got condition of ight and fine It is vellow round into it ed. Its gilt ooks like the And soon, if il be bloom- day now sees s lovely com thoroughfare r no bell, the is swiftly ap- 4 25 YEARS (From the Herald of T AGO ha. Date.) September 13, A petition came hefore council last evening from A. J. Sloper asking for a sidewalk, cu in ffont of his street. The se against P. S violating the no-license Iz in Hartford yesterday o the A Bristol gentleman is @ picnic ground on {1 electric road between Fa Hartford. 000 in the enterprise. Peter Long and Miss Elizabeth Hal- linan of Bloomfield, married October 2. The Hotel Russwin wa in town to pass the build Work on the Cherry will be commenced in th as the plans have all bee National Happer A heartiess landlord and children evicted fro in the rain—a Hartf, named Koenig turn not paying two months The czar is for peace six years has he alluded monarchs are speeches—never since peace of Europe been sq In a burning launch— of a dozen imperiled Fahey, his friends picked from Shelter up by a Watch for clals at the Store, Cor. Main William Fortin, the Navy for two of the panies the NC-4, the Atlantic fiver. The par New Haven on October H. J. Zahnleiter, viol sumed teaching. Studio, —advt. Tuesday New Bri who vears, Time to clean your hats now. wait for the rush. Con Advt. Frank Dainesl sold t the Camp Real KEstate co tamlly house at 189 Wi to Danlel Marcus. Alph ter, through the same his home at 20 Liberty Edith A. Porter; Ludy sold a two family hou street through the same Charles Goldstein, and and Miss Bessie Beach family house on West I’ Peter George. The Kenilworth club fall social activities wit Booth's hall on the eveni 6. Music will be furni Alpha xtring orchestra Excellent vanilla, peac ice cream advt The first meeting of t the Sunshine society Monday afternoon at thelly Sovr R G A A1 requested to be present, He expects to lay family making people- family and a party island—their at the mercy of the flames. CITY ITEMS and Elm recruiting party which accom- famous McEnroe's, West Main St. will 1891, > the common rb and gutter residence on Grand McMahon for ww was nolled ngbayment of soon to open ie line of the rmington and out $40,- J.. will be s the only one ing inspector. street sewer e near future en drawn up. rings. poor woman m their home ord landlord out for rent. —not once in to war—other bellicose has the ) secure timely rescue | Joseph of oft craft 1870 steamer frail spa- tain Bargain Sts.—Advt. has been in is & member trans- ty will be at} 6. Inist, has/re- Booth's MBlk. Dou't n. Hat Co— oday through mpany a two' nthrop street 1onzo B. Por- ‘ompany, sold street to Mrs. vig Ulrickson se at Hart > company to C. (. Beach sold a two earl street to will open its h a dance in ng of Otobher shed by the h and coffee he season of be Meld 30 o'clock at members are | a | ““just WAS TORTURED “0R TEN YEARS With Terrible Stomach Trouble Until She Tried “FRUIT-A-TIVES”, 8507 Sacto Ave., Sacramento, Cal. “I had Stomach Trouble for 10 years, which became so bad that I got Stomack Cramps two or three times a week. After years of terrible torture, T read about ‘Fruit-a-tives’ or Fruit Liver Tablets, and sent for a trial box and wrote that it was the last remedy Y would use—if ‘Fruit-a-tives’ did not telp me, I would die. After taking the trial box, I felt better, so kept on taking ‘Fruit-a- tives’ fornearly a year, and am thank- ful to say ‘Fruit-a-tives' saved my life. It also saved a friend from an operation for Stomach Trouble, after he had given up all hope of getting well”?, Mgs. F. 8. STOLZ. 50c. a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size 25e. At all dealers or sent on receipt of price, by FRUIT-A-TIVES Limited, OGDENSBURG, N. Y. EAST BERLIN BOY PHYSICAL INSTRUCTOR Robert J. Vance to Dircct Athletics At Springfield, Vt., Commun- ity Club. Robert J. Berlin, one of the best players in the world, pointed director of ball and bask ckball at the Community club at Springfield, Vermont. This club is composed of the finest athletes in the state and Mr. Vance's appointment to the position was due to his recog- nizea ability as ster athlete. He has played basketball all over the United States and has had an ‘envi- able rccord wherever he zone, being in constant demand by all the prominent teams of the country. M. Vance resigned from the National Acme of Windsor, Vermont, where he one of ithe officers of the cost department. He played on the Namco team which won the up- per Newx England championship i In conjunction with his position as director of the community club, Mr. Vance will take charge of the cost department of one of the large man- uacturing plants in Springfield. Be- sides being an exceptional ~athlete “Bob"” is a very good business man, but always finds time to th game. There are many here who wil remember {he spactacular playing of Bob’'* on the “Y” foor here and it is always stated by the followers of the game that “Bob” has never had a peer on the floor. Bob got his early experience at the old hall in East Berlin known as Athletic hall where he uscd to get the inhabitants there dizzy, ringing the basket so cften. The hall is stil¥ there but the baskets have been re- moved as thc interest in the game died out when Bob went out inte larger ficlds. He comes back to the town often to visit with his mother who still resides there. It was only a few weeks ago that he was here for a visit and he went down to the hall to try his skill at the place where he spent his boyhood days, but the haskets have since been removed and the gym is now a dancing and con- cert hall. Bob lIs yet unmarried and states that the only sirl he ever cared about and ever will care ahout is his little white-haired mother down there in the little town of East Ber= lin. He has sent for his mother to join him at Springfield as soon as shg can sell the old homestead, which is quaint little place in a quaint little town. Many will regret the going of Mrs. Vance and *“Bob” from the town but he wiil long be remempbered the little tow-haired who couldn’t keep still.” Vance, formerly of Bast has been ap- bas! has company was play is as oy Thirty thousand married Canadian live in Canz " Cleaned the Poisons from his Evsfem’ A MASSACHUSETTS MAN GRATEFUL, Somerville, Mass. A well-liked citizen of this city has suffered In the past, writes the following to Dr. J. . True & €o.1 “1 have taken all laxatives, but none of it cleaned the my sye- tem ne vour Elixir—will to use hereafter considering the had “off me. as I feel eplendid ayvatem needed was a real cleaning your Elixir gave—-other taken marely passed through (Na on Requet) Dr. True's English girls hayes iers and Wil kinds of polson from know what effects it Al my which only physies 1 hay my bowel tiousands 6% .years. wetually lasting w0 doctors go, but DR, ily Laxative apd given the id has relieved the last Elixir during preseription loctors come and Elixir. The Fa Worm Ixpeller, which was by Dr. True. i& as of old, the best frietd to be found vour medicine closel Symptoms of Worms: Swollen_upper Ipy deranged stomach. gour stomach, offensive breath. hard and full belly, with occasional gripings and pains about the navel, pale face of leaden tint, eves heavy and dull twitching eyelids, itching of the =ose, fiehs ing of the rectum, short dry cough, grindfng of the teeth, little red poinis sticking out on the tongue, starting during sleep. fever. No Harmful Physicians. AT ALL DEALERS. True & Co., Auburn, Me. ne a Drugs—Recommended Dr. 3 basketball « &

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