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FORT IN HOSIERY In this Department you will find goods from the best makers, including McCALLUM SILK HOSIERY, “ONYX” HOSIERY, “HOLEPROOF” HOSIERY and many other brands. You get the largest assortment here and pay no more. OOTH'S BLOCK NEW BRITAIN. - NEW' BRITAIN DAILY HERALD. FRIDAY, JULY 24, 1914, JOTHING DOING AT BUCKINGHAM PALACE bonference Lasted Forfy Minates and There: Was No News. London, July 24.—The Bueking- m Palace conference met again to- y and held the shortest of its four ons. The meeting was called or 11 o'clock. The chairman, the Rt. Hon. James Lowther, Premier quith and Chancellor of the Ex- hequer David Llovd George, repre- fiting the Iliberals; Andrew Bonar w and the Marquis of Lansdowne the regular conservative opposi- jon;’ Sft''Edward Cerson and Cap- in James Craig, Ulster unionists and ohn Dillon, Irish nationalist, ar- d_at the palace at that hour, but business of the seéssion did not n until 11:30 as John E. Red- nond, through a misunderstanding, s half an hour late. | Discussion of the Ulster situation sted .only . forty minutes .and the nembers then left the palace. " No statement was given out as to the result of today's mesting but it vas expected that Premier Asquith ould make an announcement in the iouse of commong in the course of the day. The feeling was general in the jlobbies of the house of commons that the conference had failed in its imediate purpose and that no def- inite. agreement had been reached. [Members awaited anxiously the an- Inouncement. as .to the. actual situa- tion to be made by Premier Asquith. . According to the Liverpool Daily [Post, one of the leading liberal news- papers it ‘is frankly acknowledged today that the effort made by the conference at Buckingham Palace to mflcllo the conflicting views of the nationalists and the Ulster lunionists must be abandoned. The jpaper adds that the report of this unhappy result of the confer- ence of the leaders of the liberal, conservative Irish nationalists and {Ulster unionist parties will be pub- lished in the Court Circular this eve- ' PRESIDENT OF LAW LEAGUE. Chicago, July 24.—Edward H. Brink, of Cincinnati, Ohio, last night was elected president of the Com- mercial Law league of the United | Btates, holding its twentieth annual session here. e ————— PRIZE * FOOD, Palatable, Economical, Nourishing. : A Nebraska woman has outlined the prize food in a few words, and that from personal experience. She writes: “After our lonig experience with Grape-Nuts, 1 canot say enough in 4ts favor. We have used this food al- most continually for seven years. “We sometimes tried other adver- $ised breakfast foods but we invari- r;ly returned to Grape-Nuts as the most palatable, economical and nour- jshing of all. /%" .When I quit tea and coffee and Pbegan to use Postum and Grape-Nuts, 1 was almost a nervous wreck I was so irritable I could not sleep nights, had no interest in life. . After using Grape-Nuts a short time I began to improve and all these ailments have disappeared and now I am a well woman. My two children have been almost raised on Grape- Nuts, which they eat three times a V. ’da They are pictures of health and have never had the least symptom of stomach trouble, even through the smost severe siege of whooping cough thy could retain Grape-Nuts when all else failed. .+ »Grape-Nuts food has saved doctor bills Bnd has been, therefore, a most economical food for us.” Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read “The Road to liville,” in pkgs. “There's a Rea- | FILLS MILK BOTTLES ON STREET; IS FINED Milk and Food Inspector Starts War on Unsanitary Milk Dealers— Other Court Cases. Guilty of the unsanitary practice of filling his milk bottlées on the street Thomas Tuszkowski, who told Judge Meskill that he had been in the milk business for ten years and had never had any trouble before, was fined $5 and costs in court this morning. Milk and Food Inspector Dr. George T. Crowley arrested Tuszkowski at 5:30 o’'clock yesterday morning after he had detected him in the act of filling ten bottles with malk while his team was standing on North street. The inspector told of making the arrest and said that he poured all but one of the bottles of milk into the gutter. That bottle he strained and exhibited the sediment which it contained, to the court. The accused tried to explain that he had only tried to fill the bottles on the street because one of his cans was leaking, but later he changed his line of talk and said, “‘Let him watch them all and not only me.” He de- clared that filling bottles on the street is a common practice among milk men. Tuszkowski admitted having been warned for this same offense once before. Probation has been continued in the case of George Matula. He told the court that he was perfectly will- ing to turn his pay over for the sup- port of his wife and family, but said in reply, when Judge Meskill ordered Probgtion Officer Johnson to draw his pay and thus save him from temp- tation, that men who employ him don’'t think that he is any good if he can't handle his own money. He said that he had found it hard to keep his job if it was known that he was a probationer. STATESMEN QUARREL. One Says He Would Curve Another Over Desk, Washington, July 24.—Represent- ative J. Hampton Moore of Philadel- phia yesterday charged Representa- tive J. Wesley Bryan of Seattle with making fun of the Jews, with being discourteous, having no sense of hon- or and with abusing the privileges of the house. Representative Martin Madden of Chicago leaped into the fray by declaring Bryan's mind was putrid. The row started because Moore dis-’ covered Bryan had inserted into the Congressional Record a speech he had never delivered and that it was a slam at Moore and his high protection tendencies. In this speech Bryan made Moore say at frequent intervals, “‘Peezness is peezness.” When Moore read ‘that yesterday he flamed with rage and in the house accused Bryan of mocking the Hebrew race. He ac- cused him' of stabbing in the dark and of making ‘‘statements at utter varfance with the truth.” As soon as Moore had quit, Repre- sentative Madden arose and said he had read in ‘that same _undelivered speech that he owned a farm of vast proportions because of “a rotten sys- tem of laws which allowed him to ac- cumulate vast acreages.” “This is the first time my integrity has been attacked,” he yelled, as he shook his fist in the air at Bryan, “and I resent it. If I had a mind as putrid as the gentleman from Wash- ington I would have it disinfected.” In the midst of it all the sergeant- at-arms sat with his back to the row, reading a newspaper. It was a very warm day. Bryan was recognized for a state- ment. He spoke of everything he could think of, praised Moore and Madden, said they were honorable gentlemen and that he never meant a bit of harm. “But when the gentleman Pennsylvania was talking I walked right over there by him, and if he had used the word ‘liar' I was get- ting ready to curve his form right over his desk.” The wordy war continued for twenty minutes, when Speaker Clark stopped it. from “Fun in & Schoolroom,” a one-act farce, will be given by members of the junior department of the Y. M. C. A. on Thursday, July 30, at 8:15 p. m. The admission will be ten cents, which. includes ice cream. PARENTS SURVIVE LATE JOHN: FORCE But Will Be Unable to Attend Funeral Tomorrow An unusual fact connected with the death of John W, Force, which was noted in last night's Herald, is that his aged father and mother, Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Force, of Newark, N. J,, survive him. Mr. Force's father is now an old gentleman of ninety years and his mother is ten years younger. Mr. Force was their only son and it has been their lot to watch him grow from childhood into manhood, surviving the great battles which marked the war between the north and the south a half century ago, be- come a successful man in his chosen trade and then to live to see that son die in his early sixties, Can’t Attend Funeral. Because of their advanced years it will-be impossible for the aged fa- ther and mother to attend their son's funeral and they will have to remain at home and silently mourn his loss, remembering him as they last saw him, well and strong. Runs Away to War. The career of Mr. Force has been an interesting one. He was born in Newark, N. J,, about sixty-two years ago, and was a boy of but sixteen summers when the war broke out In his veins flowed the warm blood of patriotism and believing the cause of the north to be the just one he ran away from his home, disregarding his parents’ wishes in his desire to serve his country, and enlisted in the 3T7th New Jersey volunteers. He served through the war and participated in several of the big battles and when the war was over and he returned home he entered into what proved to be his life's work—that of an elec- tro-plater. Twenty Years Here. * For the past twenty years ~Mr. Force had been a resident of New Britain and was well known, having a large number of friends. At one time he was in the employ of Scoville Man- ufacturing Co., of Waterbury, and after working for them he entered the employ of the Holmes, Booth & Hayden company, also of the Brass City., There he remained for twelve vears and then came to Traut & Hine's, where he worked for ten vears. Fifty Years a Plater. Following his stay there he went into business for himself in Newark, but soon sold out and for the past five vears he has had charge of the plat- ing department at North & Judd's, and on July 1 of this year, after hav- ing completed fifty years of contin- uous service in the plating trade, he took a leave of absence. Wife Died Seven Months Ago. It iy a peculiar colncidence that it is just seven months ago today that Mr, Force's wife died suddenly after being sick but seven hours. The shock of her death proved too great for him and since that time he had been failing gradually. Since last Wednesday, while he was able to be about with assistance, he had not recognized anybody and Sunday night he became unconsclous and never ral- lied. Death came at 9 o'clock yester- day. Surviving Relatives. Besides his aged father and mother in Newark, New Jersey, he leaves a sister, Mrs, Marian, of Patterson, N. J.; a son, W, H. Force, of Newark, N. J., and two daughters In this city, Mrs. Arthur Baldwin, with whom he lived, and Mrs. L. E. Wilcox of Wood- land street. Mr. Force was prominent in Grand Army circles and was once a mem- ber of Stanley post. He was also a prominent Mason and belonged to the New England Order of Protection. The funeral will be heid from his late home tomorrow afternoon at 2:30 o'clock, with the Rev. J. E. Rees of- ficiating, and included among the many mourners will he his old father and mother, grieving alone in their Newark home, unable to attend the funera] of their only son because of 00 Sale | NOW IN PROGRESS JOHNBOYLE CO. 3 and 5 Franklin Square TWENTY YEARS SPECIALIZATION IN THE PRODUCTION OF MILK FOR INFANT FEEDING, and other high grade dairy products, available for the citizens of New Britain. The well known - CLINICAL NURSERY MILK (Trade-Mark) produced by the Vine now deliver daily. Hill Farm Company, Orders may be ’phoned to the DICKIN- SON DRUG COMPANY, telephone 330, or mail to VINE HILL Elmwood. FARM COMPANY, their own feeble health, Interment will be in Fairview cemetery. The pall bearers will be representa- tives of Harmony lodge, A. F. & A. Stanley post, G. A. R., and the N. PASSENGERS ROBBED. Bandits Obtain $2,000 on California Raillroad Car. Los Angeles, Gal., July 24—Dep-; uty sheriffs were hunting the hills rorth of Los Angeles early today for two or possib ed train No. cific company worth Park, passengers in two cars of more than $2,000. Two men did the work of robbing the passengers, but a third man, who ap- peared from the smoking car, as the two robbed the train, and i said to have kept in advance of the rob- bers during operations, is believed to| have heen an accomplice. The bandits dropped from the train as it slowed up at Hewitt, a small station .about ten miles north of Los Angeles, Both voung, quickly. ¢ three men who board- of the Southern Pa- last night near Chats- and robbed of the but they men appeared to he worked coolly and | Anniversary Sale at Riker-Hegeman': Tomorrow the Riker-Hegeman drug store celebrates the first anni- versary of its opening in New Britain, Just one ago the store was | formally opened to the public and its | success in the past year is undoubt- | edly due to its modern methods of | conducting a safe drug store and its service to customers. It is the cu tom of the company to commemorate | its advent in a city, by conducting | once a year a special anniversary sale, the features of which are free souve- nirs and special reductions in all de- partments. Preparations for tomor- | row's sale have been going on alll this week and F. 8. Grady, the man- ager of the store, promises the } vear people of New Britain the greatest | sale in this line of merchandise in the history of the city.—aadvt. SUFFRAGETTES WANT | TO SEE KING GEORGE Went to Buckingham Palace With Mrs. Pankhurst’'s Petition and Were Arrested. London, July 24.—Two suffragettes belonging to the British nobility, Lady Barclay and the Hon. Miss Edith Fitzgerald, were arrested today at Buckingham palace, where they made persistent attempts to present to King Ceorge a letter written to his majes- ty by Mrs. Kmmeline Pankhurst. The latter demanded a personal in- terview with the king and claimed that the suffragettes should be given the same right to an interview as cer- tain militant men, namely Sir Edward Carson, Captain James Craig, John Dillon and John E. Redmond, who had, it was pointed out, been invited to Buckingham palace by the king on his own initiative, The two women arrived at the en- trance to the palace this morning car- rving a large scroll prettily draped with purple ribbon streamers, They steted that they had. a petition to resent to His Majesty. The attend- ants, however, persuaded them to leave, but they returned later and an- nounced their determination to re- main until they were given an audi- cnce with the king. The police then took the women in custody and con- dncted them to the nearest police sta- tion. Land Sale At Russwin The Title Realty and Co., with offices upstairs at 308 Main street, begin tomorrow, July a ale of one hundred or more choice home sites at Russwin Park. This land is located in the east part of New Britain, a clean and attractive part of the city. The feature of owning your own home site is the fact that for the small payment of one dollar a week you can possess a lot valued at from $115 to $2 All the modern improvements are available, Valuable and useful pres- ‘nts given away on the opening day. —advt. Park, Development l 93.99 ASYLUM ST. Connecting with 140 TRUMBULL ST. Our Great Annual [40c Off the $1. {Wall Paper| oon, Saturdays at ® P. M., Other Days at 6P M Tremendous Reductions On SEASONABLE and DESIRABLE MILLINERY desirable dress Fridays We Close at Peanut Hats, the finest quality, in the shapes. Regular $1.50 values. Sale price, 98c. White Chip Sailors, small and large sizes. Sale price, 26c and 46c. White Hemp Saflors and Dress shapes, $1.76 values. Sale price 98c. 8 Genuine Panama Hats, all the latest shapes. and $5.00 values, le price, $1.98 and $2.98. White Soft Felt Hats, in both large and small sizes. Very special at 48c. y ltalian Hemp Hats, in black, latest dress shapés, Regular 42.00 and $2.50 values. Sale prices T5c and 98c. CHAS. DILLON & CO Importers, Wholesalers and Retailers of Fine Millinery Hartford. most Regular 76c vAlues. roll on side. Regular Regular $4.00 Men's Furnishings Attractively Priced Saturday PAJAMAS In Madras, Percale, Soisette and Finished Twills. Regular $2, $2.50 and $3 quality, now $1.65. MEN’S SILK HOSE Genuine 25 cent Silk Hose, now six pairs for $1.00. FOUR-IN-HANDS Pure Silk Four-in-Hands, 50 cent value, now 35 cent, three for $1.00. $1.50 and $2.50 Pure Silk Four-in-Hands, now 85 cents. Tubable, Rubable Four-in-Hands, 50 cent quality, 35 cents, three for $1.00. Summer Necessities Pyramid Fly Catcher, the proper bait for flies. 2 for 5c. Hang them anywhere. Kalamazoo Ice Blankets save your ice. 10c each, 3 for 25c, Mosquito Cream, an agreeable safeguard against insects bites and stings, 25¢ tubes. THE DICKINSON DRUG GO. 162 and 171 MAIN STREET Special-—— | MID-SUMMER SALE | | SUMMER DRESSES SUMMER SUITS SUMMER COATS SUMMER SKIRTS SUMMER PETTICOATS AT GREATLY REDUCED PRICES. SPECIAL SALE LADIES’ SHIRT WAISTS Value $1.00, now ............ Value$].25,npw Barnes’ Block. New Britain, Conn.