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WEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD: FRIDAY, JULY 3 1014, Maple Hill Strong Hold on GrowsStronger EveryDay - CAREFUL THINKING and particular home builders are “seeing e light” and are buying home sights in Maple Hill. They realize le Hill his more real easy-to-see advantages than any other prop- cent to Hartford and New Britain. They know that, good as it v, it will be twice as good next year and five times as valuable five om now. Maple Hill has its pretty streets facing beautiful Robbins Al other stréets are in keeping with the best you know in New Good Features to Know About Maple Hill Good School System Good Water ' Good Trolley Service to enjoy. Spend part of either day at Maple Hill and think of what iconcerns Y s the. home you ought to own. Take trolley to Theodore St., Maple Hill For ect, the prices and the way we’ll treat you. You’ll be very people ™ tlnt New Britain will ever call her own. RepreseniaZves will their vady in r pocket, for you may wish to buy on the spot. $10 will and who ri dependence of landlords by starting a home of your own DUNG REALTY COMPANY duct our-sales’ New Britain, Connecticut. Sg ! 111 Church St "Phone 1353. neighbors in acknowledgment of their | pathize, but a few years later he em- HEART FAILURE CLAIMS BRITISH POLITICIAN Joseph- Chamberiain Was Picnser in Great Britain of Tariff Reform. London, July 3——Joseph Chamber- lain, prominent for many years as a “ leader in British politics, died here last » dicott of Massachusett: night. Death came as a surprise, as the cendition of his health was-not pub- licly known to he any worse than at any time in the past two or threc years, The ‘cause of Mr. Chamberlain’s &eath was officially announced today to have been heart failure. Although he had been gradually sinking since Tuesday, the members of the family had’ preferred that his desperate con- dition should not become publicly known. Mrs. Chamberlain, who ~was the daughter of the late William C. En- secretary of war in President Cleveland’s, cabinet, never left her husband's side since he was stricken with paralysis seven yearg ago, and she and her stepson, Chamberlain, were with him aeath occurred. Last Public Appearance. Mr. Chamberlain's last . public ap- pearance was at a garden party on the grounds of his Birmingham home on May 6 last, when, with his wi¥e end son, he received several hundred constituents. Mr. Chamberlain was wheeled out on the lawn and ap- peared very emaciated and fechle when he lifted his hat to friends and when FreefromFlies Cows give less milk, P horses do less work whert tortured by flies. -Keep your stock free from thes % discase breeding pests by spray- ig them with jives animals immediate relicf and saves moncy and trouble. Does not taint jilk. Inoffensive to animals. It 15 Days Back to please you. Get 3 can now_ Quart, 35¢; Gal,$1.00; 5 Gal,$400 €. W. LINES vC(). Austen salutes. Mr. Chamberlain was the pioneer in Great Britain of tariff reform, and the sreat advocate of imperialism. For thirty-eight vears, with a brief terregnum, he represented Birming- ham in parliament. In 1906 his career of stormy activities were ended by a stroke of paralysis. The blow fell when he was in the midst of a strenu- ous campaign for the establishment of a protective tariff with preference for the British colonies, and just after his : ! cunstituents had celebrated the thir- tieth anniversary of his first election. Pathetic Onlooker. Since that day the strong fighter had been an invalid, a pathetic on- locker at the political game, pic- | tured always with his loyal wife be- side him. His chief consolations were the growing political prominence of | his son Austen Chamberlain, and the loyalty of his constituents. Birming- ham would not depose her leader, al- though he was’ no longer able to rep- resent her upon the floor of the house of commons. In each election he was . returned to his old seat, and appeared afterward in the house but once, where amid respectful silence, : he rade his way to the speaker’s desk on | the arm of his son and took the oath | of office. January 5, 1913, Mr. Cham- | berlain wrote to his constituents, re- | signing his seat, and saying: | I cannot hope again to do my work in parliament, and I feel that our | services of a younger man.” Opponent of Gladstone. While his greatest claim to fame i was his determined and brilliant ad- vocacy for years of a protective pol- | icy for Great Britain, the citadel of { free trade, he will also be bered as the bitterest and forceful opponent of Gladstone | | i most i [ that statesman's efforts for in | Rule for Ireland; as one of founders of the '; and as the minister whose ‘in South Africa involved his | country in the greatest war it haa | experienced since the Crimean con- flict. but blotted out the two Boer republics and made South Africa “a'i fed:t From the day he left University college. London, to enter his father's screw factory at Birmingham, Chamberlain devoted his best ener- gles to “the principles of constructive reform.” It was in 1868, just 's after his birth in London, that received his baptism of public as town councillor later serving as ¥ or for successive terms. He gave his whoie time to the cause of municipal T form, and what had been previously ione of the worst governed cities in | England, became a model for mu- nicipal reformers. Entered Parliament in 1876, In 1876 he entered parliament, be- ing elected without opposition as a | liberal from Birmingham. In his early vears in the commons he sat among the home rule liberals with whose aspirations he was supposed to sym- - in- | city and the constituency need the ' remem- | Home | the | Liberal-Unionist | Joseph ' of Birming- | phatically disabused his' associates In the house of any notion they may have had of his belief in separate | government for Ireland. | *"In less than four vears he was a ! cabinet minister, entering Gladstone's government in 1880 as president ‘of the board of trade, and in less than a decade his hold on popular opinion | was almost as great as Gladstone's. | SANTO DOMINGO QUIET. | President Zamer's Forces Expected Today to Start Action Against Rebels. Washington, July 3.—Commander Carter of the gunboat Castine cabled | the navy depatment last night that hs had arrived at Santo Domingo city | and found that rebel-besieged capital quiet. | Captain Eberle of the armored cruiser Washington, at Cape Haitien, ! Haiti, reported that a small rebel | band attacked a fort near Cape | Haitien the night of June 30, but after firing a few scattering shots retreated. | His dispatch said it was rumored President Zamer's forces were. due at ! Grande Riviere yesterday or today for action against the rebels, COLLECTION OF TAXES, The following is the record of Tax ! Collector Bernadotte Loomis for the month of June: Taxes, $62,543.20; in | June 1913, $33,785.64; sewer as- sessments $624.25. in June 1913, $614.92; street improvement fund, $178.13, in June 1913, $873.04; street sprinkling $1,126.56, in June 1913, §$963.83; total $64,472.14, in. June 1913, $36,237.43; in increase for June 1914 of $28,231. i Events Tonight Keeney's theater, motion pictures. Fox’s theater, motion pictures. the vaudeville ana Meeting of commissioners, board of charity Svea Social club meets at 90 Arch street. Southwest cottage praver meeting. | Meeting of the Y;ng People's so- ep WPI'NC.E?)GTQ R'S OFFICE. ciety of the Swedish Bethany church. S§5-DIAGRAM OF SCENE OF 4 'y 5% AR | MURDER. of officers of Valkyria PHOTOS© 1014 _BY AMERICAN PREES. ASEOCIATION ol I+ | which has startled this quiet little Long Island town. Mrs, Bailey was apparently shot to death by a revolver aimed through the window of the doctor’s office early in the evening after she left her handsome home. at | Hempstead to consult him about her Installation | lodge, O. of V., Admiral Schley lodge, meets in Bardeck’s hall. husband. was an health unknown to her Dr. Carman said Mrs. Bailey utter stranger to him. He claime he thought the bullet was meant IM* him, but he escaped it, he said, be cause he ducked in time. Mrs, Car-| man admitted that she was jealous of her husband and had installed a dictograph in his office, so that she could listen to what was happening when he hud women patients. I O. D. H 8, Mecting of New Britain Loyal Order of Moose. i Freeport, N. Y., July 3.—Who killel Mrs. Willlam D. Bailey? Why was Mrs. Edwin Carman Jealous of her husband, Dr. Carman, in whose con- sulting room Mrs. Balley was shot to death? . These questions. are await- ing answers in the murder mystery Sons of Veterans meet in G, A. R hall. lodge, 1. O. O, F., | A. M. hall. . Stella Rebekah meets in Jr. O. U. | McKenzie, of Plainville, who IDECLARES MOTHER IS HIS ONLY BOSS Michael Culiinan Revolts at Having Erothzrs Beat Him. Impressing upon the court that he has but one boss, and that is his mother, and that he just won't have his three or four brothers fighting him and “beating his head off” did mot carry much weight with Judge Man- gan this morning, for he nned Michael Cullinan $5 and costs in court today, but discharged him on an additional count of breach of the peace. Officer Willlam Hart was calied to Bond street last night by a member of the Cullinan family, who told him that Mike was home raising a rumpus. When the officer arrived his man was sitting on the front steps with his shoes off. Mrs. Cullinan told him that she wished he wouid take her son for three months, as he had drunk for a year and Wwas no good. Cullinan told the judge that he wag not drunk yesterday as he had worked until 5:30 o'clock and then did not have any money Sleeps in Automobile, Ernest Peterson, a Bristo] yeuth, likes to sleep in class when he im- bibes too freely and as result of this failing he was arrested by Dr. George, P. Crowley last night when he foun him dozing peacefully in the back d of his automobile. Dr. Crowley his machine in front of Fox’s theater Jast night and when he came out he found Peterson asleep in the tonneau, =0 he brought him to the police sta- tion The accused admitted the charges against him, but said he didn't know how it happened, as all he remem- bered was that he met a chum, had a few beers and “got under the weath- er.” He was fined $3. Placed on Probation. Probation for two months, in which time he must pay a fine of $5 and costs, wag meted out to Rhoderick ar- rested by Officer Massey in Central park last night. The man was laying face down and was unable to look out for himself. SAFE AND SANE FOURTH Protect Your Eyes. S. STANLEY HORVITZ Optometrist and Optician. 321 Main Street. away been