New Britain Herald Newspaper, February 17, 1921, Page 3

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Boston Store O BFEAR-Y$:-BRAND ITTING YARN FOR SWEATERS AND DRESSES ‘ Wo are offering for a few dayy nly Bear Brand Knitting Yary in piftoen shadec. Spocial Sale, SKE OUR WINDOW DISPLAY. ULLAR 59¢ a hauk. Honn-mad- bat Has No Equal for Coughs Makes u family supply of veally éough medicine. Kas- prepared, and saves about §°. O."C."0."0 "0 “0."0 0. 0.7 O you have a severe cough or chest il accompanied \nth soreness, throat "’ lo, hoarsen: or dificult breathing, if your child 'nh s up during the ht with eroup you want quick this reliable old home-made Any drug; f'" ean supply ounces o ugar can use ¢ ‘d m’olmnuq ! D syru instea of sugar syrup, | rfl{ Bhis recipe makes a pint of mlly remarkable cough remedy. It tes good, and in spite of its low cost, ean be nded upon to give quick d lagting relief. feel this O, take hold of ritated me bronehial tubes wlth such pi rom? aso and certainty that it is really g nex is a special and highly comeen- ted compound of nuipe Norway extract, and is probably the best own means - of onrrnu‘ng severe ughs, throat and chest col ere are many worth jmitations this mixtu To avoid disappoint. mt, ask for “214 ounces of Pinex" h ful' directions and don’l ing elsq. Guaranteed to give tisfaction or_ money promptt nded. The Pinex Co. F; ‘DANDERINE” irls! Save Your Hair! Make It Abundant! < fow cents buys ‘“Danderin an application of “Danderine” not find a fallen hair or druff, besides every hair life, vigor. brightness, lor and abundance. you any shows more PRESENTS For Four Days Only Starting Sunday Evening [HE MEVLODRAMATIC TRIUMPH | AMENDED TARIFF BILL PUT ACROSS Passed, 43 to 30—Wilson Will Veto It Washington, Feb. 17.-— By a vote of 43 to 30 the senate last night passed the Ikmergency Tarift bill and ment it to conference, loaded down with a host of amendments tacked on aince the measure came over from the house Party lines were broken in the final vote, nine democrats from the \West and Southwest supporting the bill und four New England republicans opp« ing It. Had the democrats voted sul- ldly against the measure it would have been beaten, 34 to 39 As a veto by Presldent well nigh a certainty, reach him. the chances of its becorn- ing law are small, since if all the «en- ators, republicans and democrats, who are known to favor the bill were present and voting, they would be elght or ten votes short i necessary two-thirds to pass it @ veto The vote in detail was as follows: For the RBill—{3, Republicans, $4.—Ball, Brandegee, -Capper, Curtis, Full, France, Frelinghuysen, Good ing, Gronna, Hale, Johnson (Cal.), Jones (Wash.), Kellogg, Kenyon, La Follette, Lenroot, Lodge, McCorr:ick, McCumber, McLean, McNary, New, Penrose, Townsend,” Wadsworth, Wi lis. Democrats, S—Ashurst,- Ga Henderson, Jones (N. Myers, Pittsman, Ransdcll, Sheppard. Agalnst the Rill—30, Republicans, 4—Colt, Edge, Keyos, Moses. Democrats, 26—Beckham, Dial, Fletcher, Gerry, Glass, Iiarris, Harrison, Heflin, Hitchcock, King, Kirby, McKellar, Overman, Pomerene, Simmons, Smith (Ga.), Smith (8. C.), Stanley, Swanson, Thomas, Trammell, Underwood, Walsh (Mass.), Walsh ¢Mont.). Williams, Wolcott. Moscs Denounces Measure. A feature of the day's debate were the sharp attacks by Senator Moses of New Hampshire on his republican colleagues and by Senator Reed on the democrats who favored the bill. Senator Edge of New Jersey ‘also’ as- salled the bill. In the course of his caustic speech Senator Moses said that in private conversation with some senators, who expected to vote for the bill, they had admitted that the bill was inde- fensible. He called it unscientifis and designed only to “fool the farm- Wilson is over Borain, Elk Only two speeches in favor of | it, he sald, had been made in the fifty-six days it had been before the senate. Senator Moses offered as a substi- tute, for the bill the Tariff act of 1910. passing a real protective measurc. “I am trying,”” he went on, “to make an appeal to my friends. on this side of the aisle to support this amendment because it cannot be that the measure now be- fore us in the form Iin which it now stands and to which I can never give my vote can be adequately defended by anybody. ‘“The republican party cannot before the country with such a meas- ure. It is sure to be rebuffed at the other end of the capitol, and president, who was so strikingly re- buked by the voters of the country on election day, will now have his chance in dealing with this bill to excoriate the republican party be- cause of this misshapen thing which | they propose to send to him, and rightly so, because the bill does not represent the traditional position upon the tariff. Calls Measure “Misshapen Brat.” shouid tha bil' | M.), Kendrick, | Payne-Aldrich | If the country was | ‘to havo tarift legislation, he favored | protectionist | KO, the | republican ' it was other nations te retaliate. Fenator MeCumber of North Da- kota, who had charge of the measure, the are -with retorted te Benator Moses that latter was unwilling to s farmers, feeding the world, the bene- fits of protection which he asked for New England. Mr. McCumber ex- pressed himself as weary of this dis- ecrimination and deteymined to have the farmers henefit from the tariff What the Bill Provides. Among the new duties added by amendment yesterday were 30 cents a flaxseed, 10 per and other finished 60 cents a gallon and 70 cents re of less than fi was bushel on valorem on shoes leather products on olives in bulk olives in containe zallons. The duty raised from 20 bushel. while a duty of 2 pound was placed on lemons. A duty of 2 cents a pound was voted on condensed, preserved and sterilized milk and a duty of 5 cents a pound on sugar of milk Cherries, in a raw state in brine. or otherwise, would be taxed 4 conts n pound. An amendment by ator Spencer to put a duty of cents a pound on sunflower seed was voted down As the bill s these ready named v Wheat, 40 cents a bushel. Corn and maize, 15 cents a bushel Flour, 20 per,cent ad valorem, Potatoes, 25 cents a bushel Beans, 2 cents a pound. Peanut: 3 cents a pound. _Rice (cleaned), 2 cents a pound. Sugar, 1 cent a pound. in addition i to the present duty. Cheese and its substitutes, 8 centsa pound. Butter, § cents a pound. Fresh milk, 2 cents a gallon. Cattle, 3 per cent ad valorem. Sheep of under 1 year of age and over 1 year, $2 a head. Fresh or frozen beef, veal ton and pork, 2 cents a pound. Other meats, 26 per cent ad lorem. Cotton with a staple of 1 1-8 inches or more is taxed 7 cents a pound, a are also goods made of it. The wool taxes vary according to grade from 15 to 45 cents a pound. The tobacco taxes range from 35 cents a pound for unstemmed filler tobacco to $3.50 a pound for stemmed leaf tobacco. on apples cents cents a lation, he said: Now, he said, nothing but an {invitation to preserved it al- house those roes to the duties beside mut- va- HAS SLEFPING SICKNESS — S. Earle Livingston, War Veteran, Expected to Recover West Hartfard, Feb. 17.—S. Earle Livingston, son of Constable Liv- ingston of Pleasant street, who is ill of sleeping sickness, is reported as being slightly improved last night. Mr. Livingston, who saw much serv- ice in France with the twenty-sixth Division was taken sick nearly three weeks ago and it was first thought the illness was the result of gas re- ceived in the war and it was not until Tuesday that the physicians de- cided that he was a victim of the sleeping sickness It is believed that he has a good chance for recovery. { He is under the care of Dr. Walter R. Steiner and Dr. §. V. Kibby. FUUR DUGIUKS GAVE HER UP Through a Neighbor’s Advice This Woman .Wu Restored to Health by Lydia E. Pinkbam’s Vegetable Compound Kenosha, Wis. —*‘1 suffered with a female trouble and at last was in bed for six weeks with what the doctors called inflammation of the bowels. Four of them said I could i Aneighbor “It is a bill that grew out of an | unwise yielding to pressure which was applied at the other end of the capitol. It js the offspring of a union between thé cotton fields, the sugar cane brakes, the rice pattle, wheat flelds. It is a misshapen brat at the best. It is lopsided, it is blind, it is deaf, it is bandylegged, and it suf- fers from congenital economic rick- P Only Moses and another senator supportéd the proposal to substitute the Payne-Aldrich tariff. Senator Edge declared the bill went the wrong direction. Amendments, made In the senate, had put the bill out of the class of emergency legis- and the ! . | “Throw my medicine away and keep on with the Pinkham medicine.’ I did and it cored me. If more women would take your medicine they would not suffer so. 1 have recommended the | Vegetable Compound to lots o and they have satisfied. MARY PSTOCK, 2704 Wisconsin St., Kenosha, Wisconsin. When a woman is beset with such symptoms as irregularities, inflamma- tion, ulceration, a displacement, back- ache, headaches, benrmg—d Wn pains, nervousness or “‘blues’’ she should treat the cause of such conditions by taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound the standard remedy for Bronchitis, most stubborn of all cough,s yields to its healing properties. Try this famous old family remedy and experlence the comfort to 30 cents a | i l cent ad | | | ranchers, i radiator to quench his thirst, | mount. His arrival came as the 63§ army aviators who had combed Texas in search for him since last Friday had almost given up. Lieut: son was on his way from Douglas, Ariz., to Ilorida to make an attempt at a trans-continental flizht in 24 hours on Woehington's birthday, A strong north *vind drove him from his course and then his engine choked, stopped before he could chose a land- Ing, and damaged the wings on striking the ground. The trip back to civilization was made t of the time through a h‘r- rific sand storm. MISSING AVIATOR TURNS UP, UNHURT Lt. Pearson, His Wrecked, Floats Down Rio Grande on Plane Improvised Raft. Sanderson, Texas, Feb. 17.—Soldlers walked guard today outside the hotel room where Lieut. Alexander Pearson, Jr., had the first real rest since he left El Paso last Thursday on a flight in an army airplane to San The | soldiers were to keep intruders away Uniform in rags, worn out privations suffcred $2.378,000 FOR ROADS, Appropriation Will Be Recom- mended at State Legislature. Hartiord, Feb. 17.—Rejection of six bills for including local roads in the trunk line system of the state, construction of which would cost the state a maximum of $2,378,000 will be recommended to the legislature by the committec on roads, bridges and s. Five others involving an ag- ate cost of $1,371,000, will be fa- bly reported, in addition to state highway department bills appropriat- ing 00,000 for extensions to the trunk line system and $1,000 for ex- tensions of state aid highways, Half} n im- of the $2.000,000 appropriation will matched by the govermment for be use on federal aid roads. Antonio. This face unshaven., in the ! from Texas' most desolate waste lands, 23 year old aviator rode into last night on a horse 1derson borrowed from | Less than three Paso he made 20 p. m. nyon, some 95 mile For three days he food, taking water hours’ flight from a forced landing at vor from the: airy On th Rio Grande stream on he was discovered and & fourth day he struck the and floated down the provised rart a by ranchers w o zave him food HAREG To Stop A Cough Quick! Use a Double Treatment Take HAYES' HEALING HONEY to heal and soothe the sore and tender tissues and lining membranes inside the throat. \ Apply GROVE'S O-PEN-TRATE SALVE to chest and throat to allay ,fever, reduce inflam- mation and relieve conges- tion. The healing effect of HAYES' HEALING HONEY inside the throat combined with the action of GROVE'S O-PEN- TRATE SALVa through the pores of the skin soon opens the air passages, heals all inflam- mation and stops the cough. Just ask your druggist for a bot- tle of HAYES' HEALING HONEY and you will find a box of GROVE'S O-PEN-TRATE SALVL enclosed therewith. The cost of the cembined treatment is 35c. (Give it one trial.) “HIGH All of our ———PAIGE—— THE MOST BEAUTIFUL CAR IN AMERICA A Suggestion to the Sportmen of E have stated on several occasions that our new seven passenger ‘‘Lakewood 6-66" is a car without a legiti- mate competitor. By that we mean that it very distinctly outclasses every car in its own price field. By that we mean that it can be compared with only the fin- est and most expensive motor vehicles on the market. This is a broad and sweeping statement—very important if true, and very improper if founded on anything less sub- stantial than facts. But we are sure of our facts and the time is at hand when you can confirm them. Practically every reputable Ameri- .can motor car is now on exhibition at the Hartford automobile show. We suggest that you visit that show and compare the “Lakewood” with any car— at any price—and form your own conclusions. New Britain So much for the facts that can’ be established indoors. ‘We next suggest that you for- get entirely about standards of beauty and move to the real testing ground of mechanical fitness. Take just one demonstration in the “Lakewood” and judge it from the standpoints of power, speed, acceleration, spring sus- pension and general motor efficiency. Get the facts—actual lapsed time of the tests—and make a recordon the demonstration card furnished by our Dealer. Then take a second deron- strationinany othercar,atany price,andcomparetheresults. That is all we ask—and we make no prophecies whatever in regard to your ultimate con- clusions. In any fair, legmate, stock car tompetition the *“Lakewood” will tell its own story—and you must be the judge. Come, sportsmen. Let us show you the mettle of a real thoroughbred. All models will be exhibited at Auto- mobile Shows throughout tlp= country PAIGE-DETROIT MOTOR CAR ( COMBH

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