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ooking anything I the cook that th you p else becausc strong. any more. eepers pre- bluchers now sale.—advt, of Meriden s city. jrear sold below w display. The | evening in the church basement. | ? box seat at the Lyceum will be the | 0., 271 Main St. A. Olson has 0.88 and Hilda ted administra- rnold Dressell orboat show in t the end of his chine at the hpany Saturday. rd Long of oicin at | of 139 Beaver to the police call her jJ. O’'Brien have in Middletown it with friends on his way to ns to spend sev- the Y. M. T. ournament will | evening. is confined to street by ill- committee in Singing socie- omorrow night p Daniélson on emas J. Smith nd the open- pf the T. A. B. this evening. girls met last Miss Kathryn et. [Kiett has been the | vile | | | }hnd not compelled him to do so. Chosen to preside at the Tincoln day dinner of the Third Ward Republican club at Bardeck’s hall next Iriday evening, The men of St. Joseph's pavish are | Organizing a minstrel troupe and ex- Pect to give an entertainment before Lent. The leaders of the movement are John F. Callahan, John L. Mc- Aloon and Benjamin Gaffney A montn's John Frawley St. Joseph ing at 8 mind mass for the late will be Celebrated at hurch Wednesday morn- o'clock, An anniversary mass for the late Daniel S, Murray will he celebrated Saturday morning at § o'clock. Attorney H. J. Calnen of Hartford delivered an interesting lecture at the meeting of St. Joseph's Holy Name society last evening. Superintendent ¥ of the B. Stone Corbin Cabinet L.ock company is hav- | ing plans drawn for a handsome res dence to he erccted at the corner of Russell street and Lenox place. Alex Ahlberg is planning the erec- tion of a three-family house on Sun- rise avenuc. Turner's Masquerade ball, Fri,, Feh 12th.—advt John Cantwell of the Springfleld Y M. C. A. training school was the week- end guest Thomas J Smith. Next Friday will be the last dayv for prospective voters to register for the spring election. Many alumni of Yale who reside in this city are planning ta to New Haven on February 22 for the alumni univers day. The Children of Mary of St. Peter's will hold a whist tomorrow A of Registrar go church first prize. Grace G. Rockwell was today ap- pointed administratrix of the estate of Margaret Greenwood by the court of probate Dr. George H. ered from his recent resume calling on his few days. Special Hosiery sale. 50c values to sell at a price of 25 The Farrell & O’Connor Co., 271 Main St.—advt. Bodley has recov- illness and will patients in TRIES TO COMMIT SUICIDE. James Keromides, of Beaver Inhales Gas But Not Enough. Although he inhaled gas with sui- cidal intent, James Keromides, of 9: Beaver street, did not inhale enough to finish the job and was taken to the New Britain hospital where he re- vived. In a note he explained that his wife is the cause of all his grief and woe and that he never would have maried her if his father and mother In- that but showed fault vestigation, however Mrs. Keromides is not at that he is a bad actor. RAINFALL: FOR JANUARY. According to the records of the water department, the precipitation at | January to- dates an: January 7 1.12 inch Shuttle Meadow lake in talled 7.12 inches. The rainfall were as follows: 1.2 inches; January 12 January 13, .82 inches; Januar 2.32 inche January 24, 1.14 The department is watching the rec- ord for this month closely, as in eb- ruary, 1914, there was no precipita tion. EARLY VHOLE CRAZY et. 24, 1014:— ‘“ all over his HOLE FAMILY jon. It looked | the arms and ! This trouble that it would It was always pould not sleep. for about two ing that time d gcuinol Oint- and it RE- nd before the d been used, we It hes been Fere cured, and the trouble.’— Clarkson, 1520 Resinol Oint- and physicians or 20 years in foubles. N0 HEADACHE OR RALGIA PAIN Get a 10 cent package of Dr. James’ Headache Powders and don’t suffer. When your head aches you simply must have relief or you will go wild. It's meedless to suffer when you can | take a remedy like Dr. James' Head- Tescriptions ! ache Powders and relieve the pain and neuralgia at once. Send someone to the drug store now for a dime package of Dr. James’ Headache Powders. Don’t suffer! Tn a few moments you will feel fine—headache gone—no more neuralgia pain. Telephone 161 B. L. Protass, D. D. DENTIST 252 Main Street, Holmes & Hoffman’s Bldg. You Have the Girl the Valentines to Send Her. STATIONERY DEPT. KINSO uG Co., 169-171 MAIN STREET St., | | Port vou."The Bridgeport prosecuting a | lived apavt he has contributed | and now owes a surgeon’s bill of $231 | woman | would PREFERS JAIL 10 SUPPORTING WIFE James Nile Says His Betier Half is Domineering and Crabpy. sitting on morning, 10 thet Judge James T. Meskill, the police court bench this gave James Nile an opportunity carry out his oft repeated threat he would go to jail rather than con- tribute towards the support of Hhis ! wife, for he ordered him to furnish a bond of $350 and pay his wife $6 per week for a year. In default of this he is sentenced to jail for three months. ile either declined or found it im- possible to meet these and, true to his threat, went to jail, in | lien of providing for his wife. | Personalitios indulged in ! some extent by the hushand and w | when they testificd agninst cach other in court. Mrs. Nile declared her hus- | | band earncd good but drank and that the straw which broke the | camel's back was when he gave her | thirty-five cents on a Monday and in- { formed her she would have to live on ! that until Thursday. In his turn Nile | ; 1id he didn't support his wife because | ! she wasn't worth if. She is a crab, he asserted. As a third party in the te timony George W, Klelt o were money Prosecutor show requirements | i to | offered some evidence to that | Nile had an affinity in the person of a mysterious Chicago woman and that | he has also spent conside | on a New Britain mar i who, unfortunately both { her husband, is bound | matrimony. I | Called Her Domincering and Crabby. | Mrs. Nile, who came here from | Bridgeport to prosecute her husband, | said she had been married twelve | years and has a daughter cleven vears old. During the past year and | n half that she and her husband have | littlo | towards the daughter's support _but nothing toward his wife's welfare. Last Saturday she approached her husband | and asked him Yo support her and he replied, “I'll go to jail before I'll sup- 1ible money ied woman for her and by the ties of attqrney has warned Nile timbs about supporting his wife and letters from him to Nile w intro- duced as were letters from Nile to his wife in which he declined to help her. During the past six months Mrs. Nil- has had to undergo two operations several which she has no means of paying. A vear ago last May she and her hus- band had their final tilt wheén he gave her thirty-five cents on Monday and told her it would have to last until Thursday. “He told me I was a and he couldn't stand it o have to get a divorce,” M Nile said her husband had told her. | “Why don't vou support your wife?"” Prosecutor Klett asked Nile. | { “‘Because I feel she isn't worth sup- | porting. 1 tried to do right. I fur- nished good homes for her but she al- ways crabbed and drove me out,” he domineering | had agreed replied. Nile so said that he and his wife to separate and that be- fore this time her brother had told | him it was impossible for any one | to get along with her. “Where are you working?'" | asked. “At Russell & Erwin's.” “Are you getting $26 a week?" “l should say not—not in . replied Nile with surprise said he earns $3.75 a day. On Friday his wife told him he | could have a divorce on one condition and on Saturday she told him she'd | make a monkey of him, the man tes- | tified. Interested No Married Woman, “You bought a bracelet for another | woman in town, a married woman, at | Christmas time, didn’t you, Nile?" he was this He | timony | queried the prosecutor. ITedging, Nile replied that he didn’t | think that had any bearing on this | case. Dbut the prosecutor insisted that Nile on denied married went. | money city, In spending woman more a in this one letter he sent to his wife a tioned and under the | it would go to show where his money | mysterious Chicago woman was men- | INTERIOR DECORATIONS | Please be advised that this is work that can be done all through the winter. Picture Framing, Wall Paper, 3 and 5 Franklin Square. his house when she found acter of the woman from er had left out the cha the Windy City. FFurnish a bond of $ and pay vour wife $6 per week for a yvear xo to jail for three " months, was the ultimatum delivered by the court. In Saturday and Again Today. Paul Paquette, in Saturday and was placed on proba- tion and promised to keep out of saloons, was found in the Hotel Bron- son cafc before the ink on his proba- tion card had hardly dried. He v re-arested for violating his bation and this morning it was re- voked. He will have to pay a fine of $12 and costs Wanted to Forgive Husband, Stopping in the middle of her tes- against her husband, who was arrested on her complaint for as 1lting her, Mrs. John Sukodowsk of South Main street. said, “I want to forgive him for all he has done. He is a good man and don’'t go in saloons often.” The whole trouble started, she s when her husband wanted to go out to get a pail of beer. She tried to stop him and they pulled each othe to and fro She got mad and had Gustave Carlson arrest him. The judge granted her request and the couple were reunited in court. Two Other Cases. or who was court aid, Stanley Dominick, one of a party of | Majrisech. | Russfans, and Charles one of two Austrians, got into an ar- gument in a Main street saloon Sat- urday night, Outside Charles was hit in the head with a beer gi and he accused Stanley of hurling it. Of- ficers Richardson and M. Mechan ar- rested the two principals. In court Stanley said it was another man who lived on Glen street-and who threw the glass and the case was adjourned unti] tomorrow to see if this stranger is a myth or a reality. Charles was discharged. William Parkinson. «a vouth, was in court for Officer Axel Carlson a the depot. Judge Me vouth to take the pledge and drinking. Te imposed a fine of and costs and suspended sentence, Plainville re. d him at 11 ordered the $5 NO PURCHASING AGENT. Comptroller Hanford T.. Curtis attend the meeting of the charter vision committee tomorrow night will express his views regarding plan to have a purchasing agent the city, Mr, Curtis does not lieve such an official is necessary and believes it would be sufficient mit him to pay bills on which the city would reap ben through cash discounts, He says that little be gained by these discounts and thi little could be taken carc of by just as easily as by a purchasing agent. will re- for he- is Native cggs 33c doz. TRusscll Bros. advt, TEACHERS' CLUB TICKETS, At 7:30 o'clock this evening the tickets for “The Russian Honeymoon,™” the drama to be presented by the New Britain Teachers' club in the High *hool auditorium on Thursday even- prosecutor's [ ing, will go on exchange at Crowell's questions Nile admitted that his moth- | drug store Iam a Traveling Man- with a wife and little family that I see once a week. Since the inauguration of the Western Union Day Letter and Night Letter service my wife and I have exchanged Night Letters regularly. My wife says these daily notes keep her from being lonesome. I am assured daily that everything is 0. K. at home. THE WESTERN UNION TELEGRAPH CO. Interior and Exterior Painting, Varnishes, Brushes, etc. THE JOHN BOYLE COMPANY pro- | drunkenness. | stop | and | the | to per- | to ! him | tanad | given by them during the ve Sign Painting, New Britain, Gonn. | LECTURE ON MARCH 1 i . Tyon, of Baston, 0 Disss Ways for International Peace. | “The awakening of to an intere Iiuropean war has caused an the people of America :t in world peace and jus- tice such as heretofore has not been known,” says Dr. James L. Tryon, of Boston, the director of the New Eng- land department of the American Peace society. “Everywhere” he adds, “there is a demand to know what hope | there is in the possibility of the estab- lishment of a new international tem.” In answer to this demand, Tryon has been giving in New land a lecture on “World Federation and Police,”” and will give an address | here on the evening of March 1, at the | Y. M. C. A. in connection with the | regular supper of the New Britain | Commonwealth club . | Discusses. All Plans. Tn this lecture he discusses plans that have recently been proposed by American and European publicists for the future peace of Europe and of the world. He introduces his discussion | of the international situation by de- | seribing his journey through Germany { during the stirring scenes of mobili- zation, when as a delegate to the | | Church Peace congress that met at | Constance. He, with a party of Amer- n, English, and Scandinavian rep- | regentatives passed through (ologne and Flushing to T.ondon. Student. Dr. Tryon speaks from point of a liberal minded internation- | alist who has spent many vears in studying the problem of international peace, during which he has partici- | pated in several European congresses. | He has been a frequent contributor on topics of international law to the Yala | | T.aw Journal, and recently addressed the Yale T.aw school on the question of International Police. Among the places at which he will speak in Connecticut are West Hari- | ford, before the Men's Union of thoe | Congregational church; New Britain, at the Commonwealth club; Bristol, First Congregational church and Rockville Teachers' club. At Bristol and Rockville he will give a stercopti- | con lecture on “The Century of | TPeace."” Arrangements for his visit to other | places in the state are being made by | President Wilbur F. Gordy and Sec- | retary €. M. Geer of the Connectie | Peace society, Hartford, under whos auspices Dr. Tryon will malke his tour. This will extend from February 23:d to March 3d, inclusive ic Is Well Known the stand- OPPOSITION TO PAON SAL Councilman Is Said to Favor Abolish- ing Water Roard. | If Councilman Paonessa attempls at the meeting of the charter re- | vision committee tomerrow night to wipe out the water department, it is expected that he will meet with con- siderable opposition. Councilman Paonessa is said to have made the statement that the water board could easily be dispensed with. Just at this time it is believed by many taat such a move would be inimical to the best interests of the | city. Ior several years the water commissioners have been working with a view to developing the big water reserve in upper Burlington and it is not considered the best of judgment to abolish the board at leass until this great work Is completed. ENGINEER HALL WILLING. City Engineer William Hall is will- ing to take charge of the engineering in connection with the development of | the water supply in Burlington 5% | was rumored that Engineer Hall did | not belive he should be asked to han- dle the work. Mr. Hall stated today that he helieves the city engineer should have complete charge of the work. 1f necessary, experts can be called in, but he believes the city en- gineer should oversee all ce- garding engincering work DANCE ed of local e a al evening at TI. The High S. BOYS TO GiV Plaza cluh, comix scho-) will gi dance Thursday Holmes and Hoffman s hall. The clul is founded purely on a social basis and entertainments will be frequently the yneh's Thursday night. will furnish the music first ore to be estra Native eggs 33c doz. Russell Bros o | | also | was in THE BIGGEST VALUES YOU HAVE EVER SEEN IN Men’s Overcoats at $7.50 Fomerly sold for 16.50 to 30.—all real ce our Asylum St. Win- Radical Reductions in Boys’ Overcoats One Lot Worth $16.50 to One Lot Worth § Hovstulls “IT PAYS TO RUY OUR XKIND” Connecting with 93.99 ASYLUM ST. BIG BAYONET ORDER, Placed With Bildings and Co. Hartford. Hartford, Feb. 8.— The Billings Spencer company, it was learned yes- terday, domestic order for the forgings for 50,000 bavonets. All three parts, blade, guard and pommel, arc being made at the Billings and Spen- cer plant. They are made that they may be used either as bayonets or small swords. The bayonets bout two long. The torgin being shipped from the Billings Spencer factory to another plant, where they are assembled, The factor- y's forging department working overtime to fill the order. The Billings & Spencer company had an order for 25,000 stir- rups and is expecting an order for cavalry spurs. It is making quantities of machinery and tools that are eventually finding their way abroad. Not long ago this plant shipped thousands of automobile wrenches to England. Sixty drop hammers, costing about §2,000 each also have been shipped to England Spencer of & has are feet s arc and is Russell Bros ative eggs 33¢ doz —advt, “MOVIES" VS, BABY. ' interfere with the baby baby This was evi- dently the motto of one mother who attended a motion picture show at a local theater last evening. The mother for the first raund of pictures in its carriage in the entrance. The youngster cvidently felt piqued at being left alone and while the performance was going out unleashed several lusty howls The baby became annoying that the management flashed a request the screen for the mother to report at the box affice. The “movies” were too magnetic, however, and the voungster was left itself to sleep If “movies give up the leaving her haby on to cry aid by dvt. Connecticut farms, 33 osga vight Russell New from ne Rros.- ALL COME enthusiasts announcement WILL, MEEF New Britain ire interested in the that a series of open chess nights has been planned by the Hartford Chess clul, which has a number of this city. The series will nesday night when Charic will meet all challen ously. These open nights will be held every Wednesday evening when one of the club sharps will attempt to defeat all who care t mateh their i against him chess members in Wed- Pasternack simultane open ors Russcll Bros 33¢c doz Native eggs advt, FARM FOR INEBRIATES. Judge John H. Kirkham will repre sent the Connecticut Prison ocin tion at a hearing in the s on February 16 at 2:15 o'clock on the proposed establishment of a form for inebriates. Judge Kirkham is heartily in favor of the movement and his views on the matter will doubt be weighed carefully because his experience with inebriates as dep uty judge of police court pital stato no large | nmmnn, 140 TRUMBULL ST. JAPAN TO ENFORCE DEMANDS O! esident Gra Peki tion t China has anese cable r ister tc cial ef commi too ser joth urging President Japan are let wighes | oppose | gression of China’s sovereign | requirement miliati ed tha tends to grantir would but sty The | tained it Was quirement negot tries n mine t tries to ture of K Stat k ed from and China Virtu receive Guthrie at at Pek to wha notwitl gotiatic some t Boiled poache PERS, Bros., Turkey Rom that th Italian government for of deida sul whe The saluted sulate Alexand the diately ilinry cor Nautive is desired R | portunity of moderating her demands | without discussions strietly e Turkish N CHINA Ynan Shi Kai Inmtends o nt Some of the Concessions to Mikado. Feb Military ac its demands upon threatened by the Jap according the believed ng, China 8 enforece been government nessage from » Tokio It rcles here inication should not fously public to a Chinese min in off that the be taken is however and Yuan force what s China would be unable tc her, but refuse to grant hu ng concessions. It reporte t President Yuan Shi Kal meet some of the demands ng Japan such concessions be given to any other ibbornly resisting any men newspapers Shi Kal to selze Dby is in- country trans rights wernment is observing Japan's that secrecy be main in conducting negotiations, = to give Japan every losing prestige, hington, Feb, & Japan's re- that China keep secret the fons between the ow being carried he relations of these y each other, following the prevents the es government for the nowing vhat the between Japan two to two coun- coun on deter cap! Unit present demands an® au-Chau v comprehend ially no information ha d from either Ambassador Tok Minister Reinsch ing, giving definite idea t the demands of Japan inelude hstanding the fact that the ns been progress for ime be io or ny ne scrambled o1 Natf cat fresh Main street d, or raw doz advt Russell 301 YIELDS TO ITALY British Consul and Gives Up Salutes Talian Flag ¢ Feb 1t is announced Yemen to authorities in retion the in en complete sa Ho nsulate British therc Itali removing th n o« and » had taken refuge at Hodeida Sunday 1 the the anthorities the Ttalian | The British ler Rtichardson emony, but 1eft the afterwards ruiser. The onsul corg vas present at ity Britieh imme on a AuX incident is now Why Are Ten Tons of Quinine Used Every Year? his enormous quantity of Quinine alone (representing about 1-30th of all the Quinine produced in the world) | is required for the preparation of Laxative Bromo Quinine, Seven Million (7,000,000) Boxes of which are used every year because of its extraordinary merit. Whenever you feel a cold coming on think of the name Laxative Bromo Quinine —but remember there is Only One ‘«Bromo Quinine’’ That Is Laxative Bromo Quinine USED THE WORLD OVER TO CURE A COLD IN ONE DAY Look for this signaturd on the box. Price 25c. . “