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BOSTON STORE We Close Wednesdays Dur- ing July and August at 12:30. 'EXTRA VALUES stdeboard Scarfs Squares. b} | In Bureau, and Cluny lace edging with embroid- ered center, cluny lace edge and cluny insertion, variety of styles, hemstitched edge and embroidered center and plain hem stitch edge, 18x50 inches, 50c each. Silk Girdles in variety, a big range of colors, all the latest styles, 50c and $1.00. Special, Large Tango Hair Pins, with' RhineStone settings, variety of styles, shell and amber, 10c epch. Suit Cases, big values in straw and rattan. Look! Look! at the special value we are selling at 98c; worth $1.25. Straw Rattan and Leatheroid Cases, 98c to $4.00. ¢ Plcnic Straw Cases, 12, 14, sinches, strong and well made, brass catches, 50¢, 65¢, 75¢. each. 16 two Hand Bags in straw matting, dur- able and strong, 14 inches, good for shopping or traveling, two brass catches, 48c each. Kimonos, long and short, big var- iety, dainty patterns, good assortment styles, short 25¢ and. 50c, -long 50c and $1.00. ‘PULLAR & NI Every one should do it now.:. Get ' a ‘Fly Swat. Free with Naugh- ton's: Mothet’s . Bread or fifty cents’ worth of goods at our store. This fly swat means sure leath to the fly; no sticky paper, no poison paper all you have to do 1is use it. N trouble. A child can use it. Cut out the name Naughton from our Mother’s 3read wrappers. Bring five of them to your nearest grocer or maik| them to us and we will return a Fly Swat. " NAUGHTON'S 361 Main Street. “2 Telephones.” RESINOL HEALS ITGHING EGZEMA ‘The Easy Way to Get Rid of Torment- ing, Unsightly Skin Eruptions. It your skin itches and burns with eczema or other tormenting, unsightly skin trouble, dmlpg wash the sore s]wfl with Resinol Soap and hot water, ry, and apply a little Resinol Oint- ment, ahoon phatiugly antly, no . di duilld ;‘uuf&h{a:hep le, and hea! ns af is because tt':cg bl:sthlng, ...fl..gflg Resinol medication strikes right into the surface, arrests the as: tion of tho disease and lets the tor- tured, /inflamed * skin almost al- restoring it o perfeot health— , ‘easily and at little cost. y and Resinol Ointment 2 in even fin;e n' cases of R packe " j-and piles. 'Pre- for over mineteen ”a qui Reainol NEW BRITAIN ~*JLY HERALD. THURSDAY, JULY 23, 1914. 08" HLLIRD'S WIEE 1S WEALTHY She Recewes $1,250,000 Fro Father’s Esta.e. New York, July 23.—The late James Everard, the brewer, had only one child, Olga Julia Everard, who is the wife of Robert Hilliard, the act- or. One of his chief aims in life seemed to he to make his daughter happy and provide for her comfort. The father, of course could not fore- see in advancing his chauffeur, Wil- liam Williams, in the social scale by making him his private secretary that this advancement might have any relation to the happiness of his daughter. Unwittingly the father contributed to the romance, with the quent meetings between the private secretary and Miss Everard. In 1909, when Miss Everard was eighteen years old, she eloped with ‘Willilams, and when Mr. Everard heard from them they were husband unfortunate -ending that followed fre- ! and wife and were in Atlantic City, asking for forgiveness. Mr. Everard accepted Williams as his son-in-law. Up to the day of his-death, May 31, 1913, Mr. Eyerard was never aware that the marriage proved an unfortunate venture for his daughter. All details of her marital troubles were purposely kept from the brew- er because of the probable bad effect it would have had on his peace of mind and health. The Williams separ- ated a month after the death of Mr. Everard. Mrs. Williams sued for a divorce and obtained a decree. She was married to Mr. Hilliard in June. The great solicitude of Mr. Everard for his daughter is revealed in the testimony taken before Pereival E. Nagle, transfer tax appraiser, who filed yesterday the appraisal of the estate. Mr. Everard left a gross estate of $2,765,366. Mrs. Hillard's share is two thirds of the residue, which gives her more than $1,260,000. But the testimony had to do with provision made by the brewer in his lifetime. Several years before his death he created a fund for his daughter, to which from time to time he added until it amounted to $150,000. Fear- ing that her husband, Wailliams, would compel her to give him the money if he knew of the existence of the fund, she kept it a secret, David M. Neuberger, for many years attorney for Mr. Everard, told at the hearing about conversations he had with the daughter while she was the wife of Willlams. One of these talks took place two years be- fore the death of Mr. Everard, and Mr. Neuberger quoted Mrs. Williams as saying, “If my husband ever finds out that I have this very large amount of money in the bank that father gave me I would not have it very long, because I would be draw- ing it out.” . Mr. Neuberger said that Mrs. Williams.could not draw any of the fund created for her without her husband knowing it. “He always knew what money she had,” said Mr. Neuberger, ‘“and where she had it. He always suc- ceeded in taking it away from her,” He said Willlams compelled his wife to give up many valuable pieces of Jewelry, which he hypothecated, keep- ing the proceeds. One these articles was a pearl necklace, valued at $6,- 000, which had been a present to Mrs. ‘Williams. Williams borrowed $1,500 on the necklace and kept the money for his own use. Besides disposing in like manner of effects -of his wife, Wil- liams, according to Mr. Neuberger, also compelled his wife to sell her ef- fects and give him the money. Mr. Everard's custom of hoarding gold coin in the safe of his brewery was also brought out at the hearing. He often kept as much as $80,000 in gold in this manner, and in the panic Qf 1907 he had more than $300,000 in gold stored away in his safe, which he offered to several banks to help in relieving the situation existing at that time. The estate of Mr. Everard was al- most equally made up of personal property and realty, the personalty amounting to .$1,620,790 and the realty $1,143,575. Under the will his widow, Mrs. Mary M. Everard, of Stamford, Conn,, receives shares of stock in the James Everard Breweries valued at $61,000 and one-third of the residue. Several nieces and nephews were remembered in the will. SUFFRAGFTTES BREAK WINDOWS They Also Savagely Assault Officers. Belfast, Ireland, July 23.—A crowd of militant suffragettes yesterday created a wild tumult in the assize court and vicinity when Dorothy BEvans, an official of the Belfast branch of the Women's Social and Political Union, was brought upfor trial on the charge of having in her possession explosives for the purpose of com- mitting a felony. Miss Ewvans was arrested in the house of the lord mayor of Belfast. The disturbance caused by the suf- fragettes, who broke windows and savagely assaulted the police, was so great that proceedings had to be sus- pended for a time. Police I COP REGAINS MEMORY, Bridgeport, Conn., July 23.—His mind a blank since July.2 Edward F. Smith of the New York police depart- ment recovered shortly before 17 o’clock last night in Seaside Park, off the Sound, inquired his way to police headquarters and made known his identity. He turned in badge No. 4829 and complained of a severe headache. He was placed in & deten- tion room until the arrival of rela- tives from New York, This Bride Will Cross Atlantic in Power Lifeboat Sailed by Husband A trip across the Atlantic in a thirty-six foot power lifeboat is not a Jjourney that many horeymoeon couples wculd enjoy. In fact, Efnar Sivard, a New York naval architect, and his young wife, Signe Holm Sivard, will be the first ones to attempt ft. They expect to sail from the Battery July 26 and go by way of Boston and Hali- fax to St. Johns and cross the ocean from that point to Queenstown. The Sivards were married recently. In order that the young wife may ac- ecmpany her husband on the trip she will muster in as cook. The crew will include a navigator, a wireless opera- tor, an engineer u.z_:d‘o,‘na saldlor, ,“;'l‘he‘y‘ CIRCUS MAN ROBINSON TIRED OF IDLE LIFE May Go to Work Agair—Says Freaks are Short Lived. New York, July 23.—Col. John F. Robinson, the. veteran ecircus pro- prietor, who retired from active busi- | ness two years ago, has arrived at the Martinique on his way to Atlantic City. Col. Robinson, who has just rounded out his seventieth year, said vesterday that he practically had quit work five years ago, and since then he had been absolutely miserable. “Why?” he repeated. ‘Nothing to do; nothing in the world but to have a good time. I 'tell you it's a mis- erable existence, and I shouldn’t be surprised if next year I broke over the traces and went back to work. “How long have I been in the show business? All my lifé, and before, I was in the ring when I was only eighteen months old. But my mother rode a ‘high school’ horse only four or five hours before I was born. ‘“Have there been changes in the circus business? Yes,” with a sigh. “The circus business was at its best before the trolley cars took to leav- HOW T HELPS SORE, TIRED FEET Good-bye sore feet, burning feet, swol- len feet, sweaty feet, smelling feet, tired feet. Good-bye corns, callouses, bunions and raw spots. No more shoe tight- ness, no more limping with pain or drawing up your face in agony. “TIZ”is magical, acts right off. “TIZ” draws out all the poisonous exuda- tions which puff up the feet. Use “T1Z” and for- get your foot misery. Ah! how com- fortable your .feet feel. Get a 25 cent box of “TIZ” now at any druggist or ! department store. Don’t suffer. Have good feet, glad feet, feet that never swell, ncver hurt, never get tired. A year's foot comfort guaranteed or money refunded. expect to make the trip in about a month unless the weather proves too unfavorable. The lifeboat is asserted to be noncapsizable, nonsmashable and practically nonsinkable. The boat is expected to weather any sed. Sivard seys the only danger is in being run down by an ocean liner. While the lifeboat was constructed especially for this trip, she differs only in size from power lifeboats of the same type de- signed for actual use on ocean liners. She has a length of thirtyssix feet and a beam of twelve feet, while the lar- gest similar craft previously built is thirty feet long and ten feet wide. Her upper structure is fitted with 'a ing the big towns and going out along the country roads. That was the time when in every medium sized town in the country folks looked upon circus day as the one big oc- casion of the year. Nowadays almost any farmer boy can do a day’s work, hop on a trolley car, ride thirty or forty miles into town, see a good moving picture show, and be back in bed at home by midnight. The re- sult is that the day of the little circus is gone, and only the very best and biggest survive, “This has been a disastrous circus year. Not a show has made money. Everything connected with a circus has got too expensive. Billboards, salaries, feed, and transportation are almost fifty per cent. higher than ten | years ago. “The day has passed when any circus can make a lot of money. I do not recall what was the best circus yvear 1 had, but the best the Barnum & Bailey circus had was the first year ! after they got Jumbo. Mr. Bailey told me himself that they had cleared a million and a half dollars that year. { I should cut that in half, for, although i I who say it am a showman myself, when circus and theatrical men talk figures it is necessary to divide at least by two. “A rival of mine used to tell me of clearing $2,000 on a performance, and it used to make me blue until T learned that he used to double his fig- ures when speaking of his receipts .So I wired my manager to quadruple his when he made his reports. One day I got a wire that receipts had been $20,000, and this nobody would believe. As a mater of fact they had been only $5,000. “Those figures always came back to plague us in some way. They were good to feed the public on, but the towns would be sure to jump the price of the license the following year. If on a fairly good day we did from $2,000 to $3,000 some of my agents would get to boasting that we had done $10,000 to $15,000. When we went back the next year they would charge_us $400 or $500 for the license that the year before had cost us only $26 to $50.” “What becomes of the freaks in circuses?” Col. Robinson was asked. “Now, that is a question I have never really gone into. But it is an interesting matter. Most of them are thrifty folk, and I believe they put away a comfortable sum to retire on. Still, you must remember that being unnatural they are apt to be short- lived.” Col. Robinson, who handled many elephants, was much interested in the case of Gunda, at the Zoological park, whose chains lately attracted a lot of comment. “A bad elephant should not be al- lowed to live,” said Col. Robinson. “Some day he is bound to do some- thing terrible, and he ought to be put to death. An elephant is a dangerous beast, even when he may not intend to'be. A scared elephant can do'as tiny cabin for the captain and his wife and sleeping quarters for the crew. The craft is built of galvanized steel, with a water tight deck about six inches above the load water line. The space between this deck and the bottom is subdivided into numerous water tight compartments, several of | which may become filled with water without in the least endangering the boat. It is equipped with a thirty-two horsepower four cylinder engine and | gasoline tanks that will enable it to | remain at sea for many days. It has also a Marconi wireless apparatus with a radius of from fifty to 100 niiles. ———eee much harm as a bad elephant. If Y had my way no eclephant should be allowed In a street parade. It in- volves too much risk.” UNJUST IN PRINCIPLE. Industrial Accident Board of Massa- chusetts so Characterized. Boston, July 23.—In the first an- nual report, issued yesterday, the in- dustrial accident board declared that | there was no longer any denial, worthy of serious consideration, that the employers’ liability system is “unjust in principle, inconsistent with modern industrial conditions and wholly unworthy of any humane and irtelligent people.” The actual loss to wage earners employed in the industries of Massa- chusetts as a result of incapacity due to industrial injuries from July 1, {a loss of about $10,000 each working | day. Of this amount $2,631,085 was a loss to wage earners who were in- sured, and $334,140 was a loss for which the injured emploves or their dependents received no compensation from insurance. PRIEST RESCUES BOY. Freeport, L. I, July 23.—Father Theodore J. King, rector of St. Boni- face Roman Catholic church at Belli- mere, L. I, dived from a pler at High Hill beach yesterday afternoon into twenty feet of water and rescued four- | year-old William Baring from drown- ing. GAS ON THE STOMACH Flatulence, or gasinthe digem'va.tnn Is an annoying accompaniment of intes tinal indigestion and connt.lpuion. Asa| rule it indicates that food is being retain- | ed in the stomach and intestines longer than nature intended. When colicky pains accompany the presence of gas the need of a gentle laxa- tive to clear away the offending food resi- due is imperative. If the condition of | constipation i8s not quickly corrected s | coated tongue, eruptions on the skin, headaches and backaches soon show that | the poisons have found their way into the circulation. The use of the gentle laxative pills, Pinklets, will not only banish these un- pleasant symptoms quickly but, if used regularly for a reasonable time, will Teally covrect chronic constipation. | Pinkletd arenot like harsh purgatives , that leave the bowels dry and in the end worse than before. Pinklets gently assist i nature, never gripe and are so small and easy to take that they are known as the dainty laxative. Your own druggist can supply you with Pinklets or they will_be sent by mail, S:n aid, by the Dr. Williams Medicine ., Schenectady, N. Y., at 25¢ per bottle. Bend for the book ‘‘The Dainty ive’’ telling how to treat constipation, 1912, to June 30, 1913, was $2,965,225, | Seasonable Neckwear ' Hints Novelties in Organdy Organdy Chemisettes are among the leading mid-sum- mer attractions at the Neck- wear gection. Vestees of or- gandy also in splendid styles and values, prices running up from 30c. Innumerable styles of dainty organdy collars which are correct for wear with coats and dresses, at 25¢ and up. An especlally good value in a plain hemstitched lawn collar at 25c. Then there are organdy col- lar and cuff sets at 50c. Other Novelties OTHER NOVELTIES New cords for the neck 10c and 25c each. Spun silk scarfs, black and white at $1.50 and up. at Net Chemisettes We would like your opinion of the beautiful chemi- settes and vestees which we show 1. variety. They are ad- mired by all who see them, Very pretty styles at 500, Others at higher prices. A choice plain net chemisette st $1.00 that is especlaly finesfit-. ting. All slzes. We have a very pleasingflow neck chemisefte at 50e, with frills. Lovely new venise lace ocol- lars in white and ecru at 50c. Crepe de chine tles, all the new color effects, Particularly handsome are the Dolly Vare and ombre shades. At net den 50¢. Cream lace collar and cuff § sets ut $2.00 and up. Fine neckwear for men. Have Your Furniture Re-covered - Have it done while you are away for the summer; it will be a pleasant surprise for yon w hen you return in the fall to find your Furniture looking like rew. If you cannot call in person skilled estimator will visit your telephone ‘Charter 1090 and a home and submit an outline of what should be done and its cost. Our workrooms are on the p and sanitary. remises, well lighted, commodious We will accept your order now for making up Draperies and Hangings as well as re-covering Furniture, FREE DELIVERY DAILY IN NEW BRITAIN AND PLAINVILLE. Bage-Allen & To. Hartford, Cenn. SUMMER CLOSING SCHEDULE. sStore Will Close At 5 o'Clock Daily, Saturdays at 6. OLD LADIES PLAY RACES. Cincinnati, July 23.—Two raids made today in this city by the police dlsclosed the fact that several women past the age of three score and ten have daily been playing the races. The raids resulted in the conviction of two women in the municipal court, both of them being charged with hav- ing race slips. in their - possession. Immediately following the conviction of the Chief Copelan issued orders to his detectives to scour the city in crder to put a stop to the practice of gambling by women. IN STERLING LIVES A GIRL Who Suffered As Many Girls Do—Tells How She Found Relief. Sterling, Conn.—*‘1 am a girl of 22 years and 1 used to faint away every TSR month and was very weak. I was also | bothered a lot with read your little book il ‘ Wisdom for Wo- | men,’ and I saw how others had been Pinkhora’s Vegeta- ble Compound, and decided to try it, and it has racde me. feel like a new girl and I am now relieved of all these troubles. I hope all young | girls will cot relief as I have. I never felt better in my lifc.”’~1liss BERTHA A. PELOQUIN, Box 116, Sterling, Conn. Massena, N. Y.—“I have taken Ly- dia E. Pinkham’s Vogetable Compound and I highly. recommend it. If anyone | wants to write to me I will gladly tell her about my case. .I was certainly in & bad condition as my blood was all turn- ing to water. 1had pimples on my face | and a bad color, and for five years I had been troubled with suppression. The H doctors called it ‘Anemia and Exhaus- ' tion,” and said I was all run down, but | Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- ' pound brought me out all right.’’ — Miss two women ACTOR SLAPS MOTHER: FATHER CANES Son Tries to Make Complaiat B Police Won't Listen. New York, July 23.—Lowell man, an actor, was walking di Broadway yesterday afternoon with | woman when at 47th street he met parents, Mr. and Mrs, John She; of 316 West 128th street. Within few moments the crowd that gaths saw the young man caned by hig ther and then arrested for stril his mother. ” According to Mrs. Sherman, & woman with her son was Grace G fleld, daughter of Richard = Ca the gambler, who after her div from Martin Hanna, of Pro resumed her maiden name. DM the fracas Miss Canfield disappess in the crowd which was so large th trafic in Broadway was blocked, Mrs. Sherman said she took ' son by the arm and begged him her speak to him, but the man shook himself free. Bitter followed, and then Mr. Sherman, police say, applied his walki g with lusty vigor to the actor's Then came the blow to the moti face, and the police interfered. At the West 47th street young Sherman, who sald he twenty-five and lived at 6523 112th street, was charged with He wanted to enter a counter ¢l of assault against his mother, face bore marks apparently made fist, but the police wowld to him. He said hig her L holding money belonging to him, * At the night court lawyers senting both the mother and appealed to Magistrate Marsh. to low the charge to be withdrawn, court had the actor arraigned then dismissed him. The young man left the court companied by several men frii and made no effort to speak to parents. Outside a man who said M represented the mother appre him and tried to patch up the g rel. There was another scene, tather and son came near to b Several times the father shook his f in the actor's face, but friends fore the young man away when he stel Lavisa MYRES, Box 74, Massena, N.Y. | Young Girls, Heed This Advice. | Girls who ave troubled with painful or ' irregular periods, backache, headache, | dragging-down sensations, fainting | spells or indigestion,should immediately seek restoration to health by taking Ly- | angrily toward his parent. Mrs. Sh man gtood by erying. 1 tev. and Mrs. C, W, Barreit Pound Ridge, N. Y., are visiting Mj Barrett's parents, Mr. and Mrs, ¥, Barrett of South Main street. dia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. Barrett is the pastor of the Ridge Circuit M, E. churches,