New Britain Herald Newspaper, November 11, 1929, Page 3

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[While fighting in the Argonne, a bul- | let sped into his right leg. And | gangrene set in. | Recently Parks underwent his| 33rd operation. Surgeons have em- | Iployed all their science in a futile | (ffort to prevent the spread of in- | Tection. Parks’ right leg has been | amputated. Five fingers—three on | ‘his right hand and two on his | have succumbed to the knife. Now | left foot is infeoted and a part | it was cut away a few days ago. | That battle on the wooded hills of | Pastern France probably < was of | little personal significance to park.«.} \ [ of But his battle today is another thing. Advance in Insanity And all over the earth Thattles are being fought. is disease or the handicaps im-| posed by the lo#s of limbs or facul- tics. The United Press, through its | bureaus on the two continents mos affected. has made a survey of this fearful phase of the war's after- math. In almost all combatant na- tions the story is the same: Hospi- tals are crowded with wounded eterans; insanity is frequently the sequel to years of intense suffering; pensions constitute a tremendous financial drain; the war is still kill- | ng men as surely as though they | rven now were under the fierce fire of machine guns. ! Tn the United States there are! 738 veterans in government hos- pitals. Tn addition. 43,000 veterans ™ho had claims to government com- pensation have died. This figure, of | course, fails to take in the vast| number of service men who did not | similar | The foe | | flelds ot and orphans. About $3,436,000 was appropriated for this work. According to the national statis- tics bureau, the number of war in- valids in the country at present totals 117,108, all of whom are re- ceiving compensation in one form or another. Virtually three-fourths of these men were disabled through wounds received on the field of battle. Distressing facts are cerning the outcome of savagery. But let us return Parks, there in that hospital wheel | chair. What does he about it? ““The government has done every- these con- mankind's to Dominick thing possible for me. A wound is all in the game. Would T enlist | again if there was another war? Sure—if they'd take me, JOURNALIST URGED TRIBUTE OF QUIET World Has Forgotten Man Who, Gonceived Two-Minute Silence . (UP)—Today the world stands still for two poignant minutes. TIts people will spread wreath of memory over the batt Flanders. Yet only and a few friends will Londor, Nov. 11 a his re- | member the man who, in a flash of | widow genius thought of this silent tri file such caims but who have suc-| 4 cumbed to other wounds. [ Askis oo Honand (G eoree ilongy fibersiiasts Je mien el A moticant g R SU ISR AL SR S vete is declini ; o e and 5 are T“\?ysGr.lsnc:m‘::(ivn;rm::xy:iox:gf 1922, Only a bare mound marks | from that malady, Feven years|BIS Brave in the tiny cemetery at Lt Y e R YRTS | Northwood, Middlesex. HMis widow, 20 the number was twice as great. Insanity, however, is on the crease. In March, 1922, there were | only 9,416 mental cases out of the ©1.000 in government hospitals. To- da * there are 13,798 neuro-psychia- ric: cases, rench List of Missing | Tleven years after the war, J'rance lists more than a quarter of a million men who have never h"flfl‘ heard from—men whose obscure fate has been complete extermina- tion in action, the unknown grave, the prisoners’ camp or desertion. | Of these, 2.500 are officers and | 400 are non-coms and privates. ‘ Pensions are being paid liberally, and the grand total to date of sums | expended both by the Ministry of Tinance and the Ministry of Pen- sions is about $214,400,000. | ’ The number of war wounded still | drawing pensions in Francc reaches | 1.030,000. Tnsanity has become so | widespread that every hospital for | its treatment is badly congested. | British Exponditures | In Great Britain, 11,873 men are | stoll receiving medical treatment | from the government. Of this total, | 6.049 are in hospitals as the result| of wounds or other diseases con- | ted during the war, while 6,330 e in medical hospitals. | Tn addition 1.584,550 persons re- | ceived last year $291,220.000 ‘pensions or allowances from the ministry. . Ninety-six Belgian world war Veterans are still in hospitals, sana- | toriums or asylums, | At the same time something like | 526,180,000 13 paid out every three | months in war pensions. Late statistics in Ttaly. are not | available, bat it is estimated that | close to 200,000 injured soldiers are | receiving pensionis or free treatment. | ‘This costs the Ttalian government | approximately $31,380,000 a year., At the close of the war, there| were 50,000 tuberculosis victims | among the Italian armies, but this| figure since has dwindled to about | 15,000. ! Of the Allies little Roumania was one of the hardest hit. Only 1,000 veterans today are lodged in that country’s hospitals but that mere handful contrasts grimly with the known number of wounded who Walks Miles Daily - | Without Getting Sore Feet A Cleveland letter carrier, a popular veteran, suffered so greatly from sore feet that periodically he had to lay off and stay in bed until his tired, aching, painfully swollen feet got well enough that he could resume his route, It bappened that among his ‘“‘cus- tomers” was a well known pharma- .ceutical manufactory whose chemists had just perfected a balm containing organic iodine (a new scientific die- covery) and other powerful antiseptic, astringent, germ-killing, healing medic- tion for the relief of sore feet. They decided to test it out wiw their friend, the postman, Results were almost miraculous— far beyond their fondest hopes. The new halm instantly soothed, relieved the aches and pains tbe old man had suffered nightly. In a few days all awelling had vanished, corns and cal- louses had disappeared. Now he walks Lis daily miles with youthful sprite- fulness and perfect comfort! | McCulloch’s Foot- Balm Tt is deli- cately scented and doesn't stain clothes, hose or bed liven. It worked wonders with the old postman. It is guarenteed to bring YOU relief—or money back! Try it—TODAY. At all good drug- gists. s in- |the E | “Cannot we spare some fragment of | mere ehell. | terms with “Ching” Johnson, | are alrcady without the services of | This amazing prescription is called | | | me months ago, was tramping mountains of south Wales six days a week trying to carn a living in the insurance business. | It s told that Honey suggested the two minutes’ silence in an article | lin the London Evening News, May | §,1919. When he was earning a liv-! g in Fleet street under the nom de | plume of Jarren Korrester. | After referring to bonfires stretch- ing across England in the manner of izabethans, Honey proceeded, those hours of peace and rejoicing | for a silent tribute to the mighty dead? Individually, yes, but na-| tionally? 1 ask five little minutes— five silent minutes of national re-| membrance—a very sacred conces- ion.” | The official rehearsal at which Honey was presqnt showed that five I minutes would be too long for great crowds to retain an immobile silent attitude and two minutes then was fixed. | Two years after his suggestion was adopted Honey fell ill of tuber- | culesis and was unable to bear the | strain of jonrnalism. His end was hastened by the cifects of his war scrvice. He never desired fo be connccted | | efficially with the great silence, ac- | cording to a fricnd 'who gives a graphic description of the last time he saw him. | “‘Sitting before the fire."” he writes, | “he was bent and frail although he | was only 36 years of age. Each vio- | lent fit of coughing racked his body which consumption had reduced to a He sat there with his overcoat buttoned up to the chin. “I think the fact that he lived to see his idea adopted gave him in- | finite satisfaction. i HOGKEY LEAGUE PLAY WILL OPEN THIS WEEK Four Contests Are Scheduled to Be Played on Thursday, Starting | ( Day of Campaign. New York, Nov. 11 (UP)—The National Hockey League season | opens this week with four contests scheduled for the first day of play. | Thursday . | An_ early favorite for the cham- pionship is the Boston club, winner last year. | One drastic change has been made in playing rules. Tt will per- mit forward passes in all zones. | Col. John Hammond of the New York Rangers has yet to come to | star | defense player. Since the Rangers ‘Taffy Abel, another defense ace, they | will be all but out of the running | unless the holdout Johnson signs. | Abel has gone to Chicago. Lionel Conacher has been named manager of the New York Ameri- | cans Games for the opening night, Nov. Rangers vs. Maroons at Montreal. | Black Hawks vs. Leafs at Toronto. | Bruins va. Cougars at Detroit. Canadiens vs Senators at Ottawa. | Games of Nov. 16 | Maroouns vs. Pirates at Pittsburgh Americans vs. Senators at Ottawa. | - 5 | The latest sporting development | in democratic Germany is a tennis touranment arranged for the ball | boys of the Mannheim club. USEE. HERALD CLASSIF] D ADS [ vers | pneumonia, | Sredk | throat and lungs. | soothed. Sneezing and coughing is whom the news was broken hy two sisters of charity Mrs. Brady's companions on errands of merey i the poorer sections of Austin. When Mrs. Brady came out of t jail she declared she would stand by her husband “in all his trouble Went to Football Game Brady's attorney asserte Rrady went Saturday to the University-Baylor football later with friends who w ing. Miss Highsmith, stenographer for | the supreme court commission of appeals, was stabbed to the heart with what was deseribed as a inch knife soon after she alighted from an automobile in front of her | apartment. The only witness, Frank Graham, Jr.,, a student at the Uni- ty of Texas, refused fo tell his story to anyone except the county attorncy Says He Heard Quarrel Just before the stabl i McNama inside the apartment house, heard a man and a woman quarreling on the front porch. Then he heard a scrcant, he said. He ran out and wrested a knife from Brady's hand. Brady said, had | one finger cut but said nothing. Of- ficers who arrested him said he | eemed in a daze Brady formerly w nty attor- ney of Tracis county, embers of the third court of civil appeals, as- nt attorney general, and an at- torney for the > banking board during the administration of former Governor James k. I'erguson, his friend. aduate of the University of Texas, he has been interested in the been s of university’s affairs. He also an active worker in the Kn Columbus. PLANE PILOT KILLED N SCRANTON CRASH Tries Triple Spin and is Unable to &t Ship, Falling 150 Feet to Ground. Scranton, Pa., Nov. 11 (P-—Harold Pope, 21, of ewark Valley, Tioga county, N. Y.. was killed whe his airplane crashed at the Mid-Valley airport. six miles north of here, yes- terday. He was 150 feet from the ground doing a triple spin and was unable to right the plane after the third spin and it fell upside down. Pope had flown to the Mid-Val ley airport from Binghamton, Y., to participate in an air mec sponsored by, the William Hen Post, American Legion. of Olyphant. He was granted a pilot's license about a month ago after completing a course at the Binghamton airport. He was flying a plane owned by T. C. Walster, of Binghamton t State P:)lice‘ri;eAx:liseizc "Wine in Southington (Special to the H ) Southington, Nov. 11 ine state policemen swooped into Southington Saturday night early, bent on a scarch for liquor, Three places were raided simultaneously about §:15 o'clock but in only one did the po- licemen secure any evidence. FFive barrels of wine in the cellar of a place conducted on Center | street by John Landino, were con- fiscated and the proprictor was placed under arrest. He was releas- ed under bonds ' of $500 for trial. The wine was loaded onto a truck and- talien back to Hartford by the state police squad. A pool room in the Landino place was visited without any success and no evidence was found at Asklar's restaurant across the street. how to clear a dangerou HAT starts as a sniffle or head cold often develops into sinus or “'middle ear” infection, mastoid abscess. gripps, pleurisy, chronic ca- Even if you are too busy to “stay home and take care’ of the cold— take no chances. A little 0Z0 MIST on your handkerchief and deep into the lungs will destroy the germs in nose and throat that are fighting your health. 020 MIST is & marvelous, new vaporizing _liquid. produces a. Pleasing pine-woodsy, germicidal va- por that you inhalo. Five healing medicaments are deposited in nose, uickly the cold erms are destroyed. Instantly you Foel religt. “The ‘air passages ‘st cleared. You breathe easter. Irritated membrancs of nose and throat are relleved. Soon you find your cold has dried up. You'te breathed it away! Ask for OZO MIST at rour local dr 8. Fifty centa tie bottle, Get the original 0ZO MIST—use it to- night. 0Z0 MIST FOR COLDS I “Rellet with every breath” company, Mrs. Byers and M Mrs. Andrew W Johnson Louis were the victims The Jolinsons had entert and of for Reservations tined the Pittsburgh couple outside the city and were returning with them when | €Nt announc tarlindy the bandit car forced to the November final day |side of a lonely road. Byers and|on which automobile rogistration Johnson were forced to walk some |numbers will be reserved: upon re- | distance and stand in a driving rain | quest of applicants. After {hat d while rin necklaces and other |the numbers will be assigned in {valuables were taken from their |the order,most convenient to the wives, department Mrs. Byers valued her elry at | Advance s for $43.000 and Mrs. Johnson lost $20.- | numbers 3 €00 worth. The men were forced | Noveraber was an in- to hand over approximately $1.000 | crease of 753 o number of in cash, a ring and a cigarctte case. |carly applicatio in the previo “Drive north and don't look year. It is ex it abo back.” the bandits warned as they 000 requests wi d by sped away it Approxir ) o1 to apply for SCHMELING AGREES 10 2 ment cle Geeman Heavyweight May Meet plications in thes ks, Of | o 1 leagt these m tha 000 were in [ o Pl Jack Sharkey in Atlantic in the last two and in the fnal |11 ; ). he tot was more IO AL A Y Month of March, R \‘m IR B s e e Chur Berlin, Nov. 11 (UP)—Max| A review of the weekly totals in | .\m]r\‘ | v Schmeliy German heavyweight, [the final wecks of last year indi- et o St AT has agreed to meet any opponent, to CA10S the e AL g e A b Gt be named by promoters of a bout to | M ind fo Blatrations LGN South Congr ‘- o be held next March in the Atlantic |Until the final rush just before o R Cily Auditorium. A proviso that|January 1. In the week of Novem-| Saturday nig : > Schmeling would receive $230,000 or | T ARiiRanplicL lalol per cent of the gross gate, is at- | {100 Sovsubey tached 1o the #greement ldiads i he German ring star accepted “°MPCT 4 > slat i terms after Joe Jacobs, his Ameri- | c¢tmber e e e can representative came he | L R urge Schmeling to agree. Sponsors| 10 the last four working days of chester, Wa of the bout are Billy Duffy of New | Year more registrations were e Of‘ ',""‘ York, and Herman Taylor and Bob- |1%81¢d than in all of October :'\'” B by Gunnis of Philadelp November and the first week of "“"(,”‘ | obs announced he hoped to December. Prior ol December e = & | Jack Sharkey of Boston as the sec- | e largest ISt onianyl (5 e e ond man in the ring. he fight | 92Y Was 9.539, Dee. 24. On Dee. | FL ST \tional, Cen “ would then go 15 rounds. The win- | 7 e e T cran. Method Baj ner probably would be recognizea O the follos e ST D aie by the New Jersey boxing commis- | "ered 12.625, Nosl o alatoats . sion as world's heavyweight cham. |SPECtVelY or (of e S e i [ pion it was understood. e AL D Boston, Nov. 11 (Up)—yucx Yale to Broaden Its e s e Sharkey willing cet Ma e ' C e e SHheiinatat AL j'o;n-”x:y iy \[:1\‘ Baniar uptey (he(‘k}l[) St lbon ony RHL drsarlicr e mansser fonn mckel| mnen anvend Not (DR sseln lsasiire Lo Phieopening Baig g0 e g manesy BUCk- 15 sehool professors are preparing morrow nizhit lay at 1 “;I;“]‘j‘“on?"‘%lv m“'v‘““:fl““"{“m""“"‘ to broaden the scope of their usual | follow captains. R Lienhard sanaion 1 study of bankruptey cases to include | Balcunius. A. Aronson and Ted I | € detailed investigation of the con-|rence will moet to orsaniz e i tributing causes and resuits of b o 1 « The municipally-owned clectric ness failures, according to a st following plant in ¥Ponca City. OKkla. has ment by President James Howlar ind from this cleared more than $¢54.000 in Angell of the University. « last cight years. The study is be FOUR CIRGUITS FORMEDAT Y Twenty-Two Basketball Teams {0 Play in Leagues This Year BLAME CIGARETTE BUTT FOR FIRE IN HANGAR Ihree Planes Destroye by Flames at Brainard Vield. Hartford—Two Youths to b Questioned. . R o) . i L] — = - i I . ’ V ( NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1929. 3 | T T need care in an fnsti . | ! i w R STILL MAKES total nun\h:r of nu-al‘xls‘;“lo.-nTLZr?‘fic, \‘ Torrington Driver Is Priest’s T b t R d Wh Bt Shpi 3 ‘m-‘[ Girl SCOut News | The wounded officer receives an | | i S |t | . ompsione nemove en (i dsalmoy BReod (sl INR[]AI]S []N HEALTH-,avmgc Dension of about $30 a | Kflled\ Near /:\ insted || Wink ovlowiis, 1. Franiss, i ; g i Merineton e Ya Ao h o naEs girls under the supervision ( only $1.80, | v :rflll; n, 43, 0;4 vJ(:l}“‘n\..,l)oh. . vas 9 orm Eme ery Or ured Zoi . 3 or S 1 of Charles Abel spent Saturday ‘ | And the Central Powers ! oRTe L op e Nisitas F afternoon learning abott trees, and The Central Powers, of course, | S STasned aealio e Jalling tena & . 4 the value of fuel, weather signs, and i ] ) z £ ¢ the Bancroft bridge over the Malden. Mass., Nov. 11 (®)—With | years az ¢ 1 e i Thousand ) I J also are paving in manpower and | ¢ Held e Topi 0 2 Beneocieinastoy e e e S noinis of the compass by. ob- | § in Htos 11ta S, Many s ars pavins in mansower and Former Texas Judde, Held for |& v v rilroud facks, | (e ramoval o e stone over e s 1 “Sho ad te envis g ( Take the case of Germany: MHI‘deI' I “Sh Ckedu gt b R, A P R b S 1so learned how to | 00 Pension er ears % ) [ 0| 1 of Oneglia & Gesvasini of | [the Holy Cross cemetery, w ing be | though sh i et Pt it the end of May, 1929, the| J Torrington and was formerly || 100.000 pcople viewed yesterday | had rom paralys St ctodly S itont e amd 1 e BTl L whlchgoticlel fe- || supervisor of construction with || after recent reported miraculous | for scve : omas, 17 | = o) arshd A e B, | Br the vnited Press. uredjaretavallable 207,685 wounded (/0 ANl 0 R e e ||| tHe atate tniahwav A chas i ant cures there, police and cemetery of- | of Watc Rita., Che o e Us A 1 = Faie st A N’ Eleven years ago today~-at the|German vetcrans were receiving Sl S0 Wt i 5 e : November 24, this group | e h day|compensation in one form or an- |cused of stabbing to death a supremc i s o2 elte, 8ot Manc N. H ! e — \ izain spend the day with Mr. b m‘""“‘;l ":nol‘]"fh i‘f‘;’;‘s‘ s | other. | court stenographer, John W. Brady. | A ey S L L L : : 4 Abel will cook over an open Suns of wartare were silenced and | FLOSpltalization. once the biggest | formen civil appeals court judge and enacted e e e e Bl b P]E“W o Action in PhySIC'dl - Eoedeneal e claglng "B\ " Such wholesale carnage as the world | i‘;:"?':n"n'w’fig;d anvathe O roumeny | nationally known barrister, denica worked up {0 a religious forvor by | A n vesto Denar This Week e e nteree and I 4 2 | with the wounded | g 2 N £ 4 i ap \ o 0 nterest and | in its zrou\:lous h|s{tiory had mever|, ;" disabled veterans, is no longer | today In his Jail eall all knowledg ‘»y.m l\"\b‘]ru‘;vn‘o!& of e erippled | waiting at % ik L])dllm&fl[ IR i At st geangeLnologanten 5 pressing necessity. At the end of |of the murder. Brady was charged ancasichaomersonsiing ey weee | withi _— o The Armistice halted organized | ik [ cured. Fourteen poli - 5 bioi : ' butchery, but it could not stop the |JUNe ODI¥ elght hospitals and two |yesterday with the slaying Satur- [ : i - s : i i mber of f NUffering of. thoss whoss lives wore | Sanatoriums were being ‘operated e e Aot ighnlesnern on a a0 i . i s 1 gifts | spared bot Whose Bodtes ware mo | by the government, while eight other | Wt LA > f . 5 Lol arsuy y e { . : : to give s R Do ol similar institutions remained under | 2 S y ldren Swe « . <t me mada ’ deprived them of a quick death was | ppon erder from the Ministry of | ighsmih's death or the event Wemen in Auto the young pric S ! e T i ke 1RO LR, | merciful or mereiless. 8ok, . | immediately prior thereto. The for- ) olds 5 I Propped up in a wheel chair at| APProximately two and a half per| o0 0 ™07 Cig " as “shocked” e —— - = | ghest s 0 08 Sigh o P o < 4 = | cent of the annual budget of the | = % ey gy B 18 ) Min Richter e Walter Reed hospital in Wash- | : : |when he learned murder charges| St TLouis, Nov. 11 (UD)—Under- ; o . ! Richte b) ¢ bngton is Dominick Parks, Fleven | HunBarian government is being set |y o5 8 Pt SR o 1 Balle o gy S0shs |aside cach vear to care for Hun-|'?f £ERIDS ; . 1world haunts were invaded today by : : 5 S ' vears and eleven days ago he was| & e A el i | The first person admitted to the : 4 5 g ot un 2 whole man. But on the nekt day, | 527Vs world war invalids, Widows |, . ccq man's cell was his wife, to | Police secking four bandits who yes- o ; 1 " LEADING SCORERS <h Injuries Have Ended His Foothall Caeeer Al Marsters s Sl i Pront A oug uries I jed his r Al Marster: Dart. Atio| players in indi- ig the Associat- s cight major show Marsters heading the pro- th 198 points in six games. pla 91 is Gens eesec, who sat in the m crushed nrday, nnessee regu- that contest condition for nderbilt on Satur- vith o in cach of the Dartmouth: south, ennessee Pacifie 1sh. State southwest, as: Missouri Val, Rocky Mt.. Pomeroy, Ix. Bausch, Kansas; Big cr. Minn buffalo of Java is no slowest beast of bur- worid WELL KNOWN HARTFORD MUSICIAN PRAISES BON-TONE Mr. Norent Tells How Stomach Trouble Was Ended and Complexion Rl s (T e Cleared. { 10 tigated which Sl oW discouraged men and $hat won Bon-Tone and receive ) A lief from such ailments as stomach, Kidney, liver and bowel 1€ disorders: rheumatism, neuritis and o el {o BUTYOUSDeSS, they want to help chamics pescnn |{housands of. other sufferers, s The P e v tell the public about the re- a5 withouba niolos 1 merits of this great rem- 1 yout. $10,000 Js why so many, many Two vouths Who were faken nio |PEOPIe of all ages are endorsing ¢ hangar by Ronald Blanchard, | Bon-Tone it oot Shlesing o o 10 what Bon-Tone did for Mr. Rt e I L un 15 Norent, who resides at wor hips BUY oW F O c = o 58 WEST MAIN ST. PHONE 1199 R CHRISTMAS NS TUESD AY MORNING ORR “THE HOME OF BEAUTIFUL GIFTS” JACKAWAY’S GIFT SHOP BURRITT HOTEL Our Annual Fall Clearance Sale ADVANTAGE DEPARTMENT {40} I A BUY NOW FOR XM D ALL OF THIS WEEK “ | < ‘ome in and select your gifts 5 F luring Our Annual Sale. A Now is the Time to Select small deposit will secure any . CHRISTMAS GIFTS : RO wrticle for future delivery. A timely event for the thrifty house- = —— wife. Stock up on your needs for that Thanksgiving Dinner AR 2 i $10.00 Buffet Sets = = €2.00 e 1 gold band ... Nov S7.95 CROWN B $8.0() Buffet Sets EISRE DUCAL (0 Duifet s . i o1d band . xov $5.95 WARE £15.00 Italian Pottery (6] [ fienri xov $10.5C o] I’j}(}t;-\ - $18.50 Italian Pottery = i 1TICH Bl s Sidisse | $12.00 s-Picce Clock Set, black gold ~ow - $6.95 & | R $12.00 y».; d]n]y Gold Band % $9 00 e , : : toblets Now . All 0dd S o) Sots £9.00 Ter doz ched d 55 | v $6.00 [ Ladp || T T | PiSas Gold $14 8" \ll/I\I]JI\ S8.00 = -l ‘\ b L | ets DO 4 Price s I B $1.00 Swedish Crystal s || R S stod | Pieces .. Now 50¢ = $5.00¢ End Tad | Vases, Bowls, Candy s T Jars voo $1.00 2 Lainps { ostoria Buffet = $4.00 Totiery Sets Now $2.98 ; M Grill Plates— # 00 Vanity s B ail colors ... Now 69¢ WIN 00 Chine Service Platos— A Qe L Brass G KA fow only vow $2.95 TUMBLERS {1.00 T e { Sterling Silver on ('rystal Picces, 5 1 : AL Reduced €)Cr for e 1 & ANl Titched Yostoria in colors or $1 | All T | 1l Neduced o 2 | Crystal, ALl Reduced ] Koy BUY NOW FOR 00 A Now Now $1.29 $2.25 $1.79 $1.69 $Z.89 $1.89 $1.98 $1.00 79¢ 39¢ 65¢ B MI. WILLIAM E. NORENT 142 Jefferson street, Hartford, Conn. who is a musician in one of the Lea Orchestras in Hartford. He says “Bon-Tone certainly brought wonderful change in my condition md I recommend it heartily to any- one ing as I did. JFor about t s, my stomach had been 2 great deal of trouble, Iivery Ia wed to lay lika mp of le n v stomach, sour and ‘ rming ga rloate 1 as drum. and m short-winded would beat so fast that L ould burst, and oftem 1 would have to sit up an@ t for hreath. Also, ortly Ty P | would ion in my nd a so bitter o i my mout uld 1 night's sleep eeling was also les A and list due to the fa aly onstipated. T was greatly discour- 1zed 1 worried over my condi- tion blood “Ron-Tone so much good for other rd people that 1 decid too. Four bot- 1s made me feel very way. My stomach ny lowels have been 1 my has a health single pimple, so thankful. 1 no in the evening stra, ny L can truly sa aftor Tone 1 worked this There 1 in New Britain & Hanson’s Drug Store, 30 Church street. Come n and let 1 tell you what others think of this great remedy,

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