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ston Storei uesday Morning We all Put On Sale TWO CASES Bleached rkish Towels a heavy two thread at the lowest prices Hl in year. e are the famous | “FAIRFAX" the most serviceable els on the market. . 27¢c each 37¢ each pay you to stock p at these prices. pecial value in TAIN MATERIALS white and beige. ee designs in each. At 25¢ a yard. cCall Patterns. JLLAR NIVEN TOH NAIU TURNS OUT ITSELF. drops of “Outgro’ upon the | cas and ordered the construstion of a | new park to be ounding the Ingrowing nail nflammation and pain and so* the tender, sensitive skin th the toe nall, that it ocan trate the flesh, and the nail turally outward almost over 0" is a harmless, antiseptic tured for chiropodists. How- rone can buy from the drug ftiny bottle containing direc- Making Poerare tired and achy— bad back? Do you suffer headaches and “all worn out?" Likely neyw are to blame. Lame- rp, stabbing pains, annoying urinary disorders mptoms of weakened kid- pon’t wait for more serious S Get back your Health and Use Doan’s Kidney Pillls. ke tell thelr merit. Ask your s & New Britain COase. Moore, Main Street, sa: Hdnoy Pllls have -always satistactory for uch d tired back, or when 1 bent e;:: ighten again. j* were dark in color, bura- assing too often gt night. T pox of Doan’s and was soon ttor.” s of different variety. , Pepper and other Vegetable plants reasonable. !;PH SANTELLE REAR GREENHOUSE DNSTIPATION b of memory, | mane flying in the wind and the left back- | ‘,elo--n-d him dictator and in the bat" { tle of Ayacucho, his troops consecrat- ed forever the “Liberty of Sun\hl I Americ An armistice signed there- | after acknowledged the independence | of the whole continent from Spain. | | Bolivar planned in 1824 t ate e | & confederation of states form { Mexico, . Colombis E ‘e ezuela, Peru, Chile an called a congress which met at ama, said to have been the first con- gress of nations ever assembled in the vorld ' “to interpret treaties, put an end to differences, give council in con- flict and unity in national dangers.” Bolivar then went to the region called Alto Peru und created a new (Continued from First Page) entered ih competition by some of the Wworld's most famous sculptors sev- eral years ago. It was to have been unvelled in 1915 but was postponed owing to the war. The statue takes the place of a former figure of “the George Wash- ington of South America,” erected in 1886 as a gift from Venezueln and republic named Bolivia in his honor, later removed to make way for a bet- | 1© which he g constitution. Re-! ter lMkeness. Together with the de- | 'Urning to Venezuela in 1825, ha signs of two other artists, chosen by | found the country in civil war. Ac- | the American Art Commission, all | €used of aspiring to the title of king three were sent to Caracas, where he resigned the presidency of Colom- Mrs. Farnham's was selected as the bia and in 1827 retired to private life. final cholce by a commisgion appoint- ed by the Vemezuelan government. Is Big Statue. It stands 16 feet high above a 16- foot pedestal, and depicts the “liber- ator,” who wrested from Spain the independence of five countries—Ven- ezuela, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru and Bolivia—sitting erect on a spirited horse. The animal's neck is curved | by the reins holding him in check, his office he accepted the presidency and served until his death at San Pedro near Santa Marca on December 17, 1830. Bolivar's body was removed to Caracas in 1842, During his life Simon Bolivar re- ceived many honors from abroad. In 1825, the family of George Washing- ton, for whonf Bolivar had great ad- miration, commissioned General Laf- avette to present him with a portrait of the great American, together with some of his medals, a lock of his hair and a number of letters from Wash- ington to his wife. front foot projecting in the act of charging. Bolivar, whose likeness was fashioned by the sculptress from an old photograph, is dressed in full uni- form and looks forward into the dis- tance as it enchanted by a vision. On the front side of the pedestal is the cost-gof-arms ‘of Vencbuela ;un- derneath which is the Inscription: “Simon Bolivar—El Libertador.” On the right side, under the coat-of-arms of Colombia and Perd, is this inscrip- tion in Spanish: “Libertador de Ven- ezuela Neuva Granada, Ecuador e y Peru, y Fundador de Bolivia.” On the left side, under the coats-of-arms of Ecuador and Bolivia, is this Spanish inscription: “Nacio en Caracas el 24 de Julio de 1783—Murio en Santa Marta el 17 de Diciembre de 1830." On the back Is the inscription: “Ven- ezuela a la Ciludad de Nueva York.” Photographs of the statue wers mailed to Caracas some time ago in order that it might be displayed in newspapers in South America on the snme day the figure is unveiled here. Venezuela, by a government decree more than a month ago, in token of further friendliness toward the Unit- ed States, gave the name of Washing- ton to an important avenue in Cara- FACE REBATE SUITS. District of Columbia Landlords May Have to Pay Money Back to Tenants. Washington, April 19.-—Washington landlords who have ignored rent-fixing decisions under the District of Colum- bia rent act today faced the prospect of rental rebate suits involving hun- dreds of thousands of dollars as a re- sult of the decision of the 17. £. Supreme Court yesterday holding the act.consti- tutional. Members of the district rent commis- sion declared today that of a total of approximately 5,000 decisions handed down 50 per cent. of them had been Millions Use “Gets-It” g s Corns Completely. lvdr-;,tl:‘od mhem needs to know called Washington Park In which a statue of George Washington is to be placed. In addi- tion the old Washington Park will be renamed after Henry Clay. The efforts of two continents, spon- sored by two sovereign nations *‘to perpetuate the memory of great men" ure unique in the history of Pan- American relations. The New York colebration, emphasized by the prés- gy ol ence of President Harding, Secretary > Hughes, officers of the United States | Sqsbons Getitto the sramnas tai army and navy and Latin-American - > diplomats including Dr. E. Gil-Borges, .v(..,... lan forelgn minister and a dis- tinguished delegation, will be espe- clally notable. There will be a parade to Central Park where, following the unvelling, President Harding is ex- pected to outline the attitude of the administration toward Latin-Ameri- can republics. Big Celebration. A luncheon at which toasts will be offered to the presidents of all Ameri- ean republics will precede the parade. In the evening a dinner will be given at the Waldorf-Astoria by the city of New York in honor of Dr. Gil-Borges and on Wednesday, the 20th, the Pan- American Soclety of the United States has planned a luncheon in honor ot the Venezuelan delegation and the Latin-American diplomatic corps. | | History records the fact that Simon Bolivar intended to create “the Unit. ed States of South America’” He was @ statesman as well as a soldier ana a century ago advocated the abolition of slavery and arbitration of interna- In 1805 when Ead Your Corns With * Gets-It.” less corn and callus remover. no matter how deep rooted, anlekly when "GO.!S—R" arrives. erfully simple, yet simply wonderful, because all soreness stops with the first application. Get rid of your corn and vur‘lhm th-l'fl;. Big shoes simply make corns grow bigger. _Your mop back if “Gets-It” fails. Insist on tgz genuino, Costs but a trifie everywhere. Mrd. by . Lawrence & Co., Chicago. SolM In New Britain by The Clark tional controversies. & Brainerd Co., Crowell's Drug Store, ican Revolution were abroad, Bolivar, who was then 22 vears old, swore in the Monte Sacro of Rome to his professor and belov- ed tutor, Don Simon Rodriguez, “to glve liberty to the new world.”” He consecrated his life and fortune to that great task. Born in Caracas on July 24, 1783, his parents wealthy and of noblea blood, he was sent in 1799 to Spain to gontinue his studies. An uncle, Este- ban Palaclo, introduced him to the Spanish court in Madrid. Young Simon thereafter became an associate I of the Prince of Asturia, later Ferdi- Sure Relief ( For Achin, Callous, RED @ TOP CALLOUS B8 PLASTER Takes out soreness, re- A duces swelling, soothes/ absorbs hard Corns, ions pain, and 'D‘hhl-1m com- ’ort from the v.’yw start. nand VII. One day while at play Bol- | A% e, w0 peison, mo danger ivar and the future king camae to blows and Ferdinand wus worsted. “Who could imagine that 20 years Jater I was to knock him down again and deprive him of his richest do- minfon?** asked Bolivar. When 18 years old, Bolivar, after visiting France in 1801, married Maria Teresa Toro. She was only 18 and dled at the end of a year. Tha next seven years Bolivar passed in Europe and the United States. The form of the American government deeply im- pressed him and when he returned to Venezuela in 1809 he described it as | “guperior to any other government,” | starting sgon thereafter to fight for | the liberty of his native land. H Bolivar's Activitiea Bolivar participated in 1810 in the | first rebelfion of Caracas, in which he ] n 8%e, money-back sarantee. Mailed 'where Kinex Cor: Rutiand. ¥t Sed by s The Fair Dept. Store, Main Dickinson Drug Co., Main St. And Druggists and Shoe Stores gen- e For Coughs, Colds, Bronchitis. the ideals of liberty born of the Amer- | geoing Pharmacy. pread 3 commanded a small troop. He fought [ 111 Experience has the Spaniards for two years and in e 1913 at the head of 500 men, by an demonstrated that .medlcme avdacious move captured the Ven. | KNOWS no surer healing agent ezuclan capital. Spain sent mors | for the inflamed mucous mem- froops and Bolivar was driven out, |1 f whereupon he started a “war to tha ‘rancs of nose, throat and leath” and rallying many thousand S | Aiherents within 5 tow Jeara freed | 1'% PECHELS. 333301"0‘; i highly recommended by | the whole territory of tho Spaniards. The “liberator’* then begmn his physicians. TRY IT. At your drugeist’'s (the trade mark campalgn o free other South Amer- 'u above, on every bottle) 60c and ed on June 29, 1821, in his election as president of Great Colombia, a unlon In {822 | he began his warfare against the ! Spaniards in Ecuador, his lieutenant, Gengral winning the battle or Tinchincha, «which freed that coun- s fenn provintes and his success result- $1.20. ot Colombia and Venezuela, [NLD) Called again to assume the cares of | . Lives to See the Prescription He Wrote in 1892 the Worlds Most Popular Laxative Remedy Founder of Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin, the largest selling liquid laxative in the long past Biblical old age, but hale and hearty—Still sees patients daily—Wonderful achieve- ment of a “country doctor.” HEN I started to practice medicine, back in 1875, there were no pills or tablets or salt waters for the relief of constipation, and no artificial remedies made from coal tar. The prescription fop€onstipation that I used early in my practice, and which I put in drug stores in 1892 un-. der the name of Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin, is a liquid remedy, and I have never had reason to it. I intended it for women, children and elderly people, and these need just such a mild, safe, gentle bowel stim- ulant as Syrup Pepsin. I am gratified to say that under successful management my prescription has proven its worth and is now the largest selling liquid laxative in the world. The fact that over eight million bottles were sold by druggists last year proves that it has won the confidence of mothers whose chiolp interest is the health of their children. It'is particularly pleasing to me to know that the biggest half of those eight million bottles were bought by mothers for themselves and the chil- dren, though Syrup Pepsin is just as valuable for grownups. The price of a bottle holding 50 aver- age treatments is sixty cents; such a bottle will last a family several months. I have never made a secret of what is in Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin. It is a compound of Egyptian Senna and other simple laxative herbs DR. W. B. CALDWELL TODAY Born Shelbyville, Mo., March 27, 1839 Began the manufacture of his famous prescription in 1882 Pharmacopoeia. I consider S; Pepsin toda in the ser?::s 82nd year of nz;ugge, x?:‘! did h{ 1892, the best remedy a family can have in the house for the safe relief of constipation and its accompanying ills, such as headaches, bilious- ness, flatulence, indigestion, loss of appetite and sleep, bad breath, dyspepsia, colds and fevers. Millions of families are now never without Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin, and I believe if you with pepsin and pleasant-tasting aromatics. will once start using it you will also always have These ingredients are endorsed in the U. S. a bottle handy for emergencies. TRY IT Send me your name and address and I will send you a free trial bottle of my Syrup Pepsin. Address me Dr. W. B. Caldwell, 513 Washington Street, Monticello, Illinois. Everybody now FREE and then needs a laxative, and it is well to know the best. Write me today. e == 7 N - . . Keep Efficient by Keeping Well H This Letter Will Tell You How "I suffered terribly every month, and was always tired and nervous, and had indigestion, ahd often could not do & thing, 1 was this way about two years,and had to stay home with my mother. I tried several medicines. then I found a book of yours, and mamma told me to try the Compound. So I got a bottle of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, and it certainly worked wonders with me. I have taken six bottles of it, and am still taking it when I feel the need of it. "I have already recommended it . -to anumber of working girls, who are taking it. Iam working now,and \stand up all day and feel fine. Iam glad to say twat Pinkham’s medicine did a lot for me and for my mother, and we only wish we had taken it a long time before.”—Rosk ScHOEFF, 4876 Annunciation St., New Orleans, La. his letter is but one of a great number received every year from women, young and old, and from almost every walk of life. These letters testify to the merit of Lydia E. Pink- ham’s Vegetable Compoung., : Miss Schoeff, works for her living, but on account of sickness was obliged to stay at home for two years. During this period shesuffered terribly at times. She tried several medicines without finding relief. Finally she tried Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, and in this letter tells what it did for her. The Vegetable Compound contains no narcotics or harmful drugs, and can be taken in safety by any woman. Your liveli- hood may depend on your healtg. So try Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compoun LYDIA E.PINKHAM MEDICINE CO. LYNN, MASS. FRITZ & BERNDT LAWN MOWERS SHARPENED ALL KINDS OF EDGE —TOOLS REPAIRED— 3 Avold the Rush. Call Now ! 31 Greenwood St. Tel. 153-12 “OXY” WELDING CARBON ‘BURNING STEAMSHIP TICKETS FOREIGN REMITTANCES 'TOALL PARTS OF THE WORLD| GEORGEANUIGLEY 237 MAIN NEWRRITAI STREET PSS ASEMEN ULLETI Specials Tomorro Towels from 12V;c 79c. Best values in t city. Ladies’ Knit Unig Suits for 39¢c. Ex sizes. Ladies’ Vests, 12l5¢ 79c. o Children’s Wrappd from 10c up. Children’s. Petticoa 232 Waist Cobrhinatio Also' Drawer and Wa Combinations. Boys’ Wash Suits 95 Every day is bargain d in our Bargain Basem Besse-Leland El Always More Value for Less Mon: © OW N Don't buy milk that comes fro known sources and especially atf time of year, as there is always q { number of ' small dealers blossg forth in the Spring like the wild f and Jast only a short time, then nice day when their customers ! pretty well supplied with tickets, | bye small milk man until next when he will try again. Better buy your milk from one v you know. / Our milk comes from selected farms ynd is carefully handled also pasteurized which makes it duct whese purity and richness is lutely unexcelled. .You’re safe you use our Pasteurized Milk, 7 Quarts for J. E. Seibert & § steuriz_edilk &Cre = e JUS RE v A large supply of Goldfish, G Globes, Aquariums, Ornaments Supplies. Also Baby Chicks, Purina Ch Feeds and Pratt’s Baby Chick NEW BRITAIN BIRD STO! Telephone 1121-3 CATARRHAL DEAFN MAY BE OVERCOME If you have Catarrhal Deafnes head 'and ear noises or are o hard of hearing go to your dri get 1 ounce of Parmint (dd strength), and add to it 3 pinv water and a liitle granulated Take 1 tablespoon four times This will often bring quick religf! the distressing head noises. & nostrils should open, breath easy and thé mucus stop dr the throat. It is easy to ppes little and is pleasant to.tal thohnl‘