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Sufferers! NWYORKOF EROPE Let Me Release You Forever From the Cruel Bondage of Steel Springs, Elas- tic Bands, and }.eg Strap | Let Me Show ¥ou How Vou Can! \ \W\ Lock Your Rupture X, Get My Illustrated Book FREE. Take the trouble to sen@ me your name and address and get this book. Be curious enough to find out what the wonderful SCHUILING RUPTURE LOCK is like. Find out how and why it LOCKS the bowel in the abdomen where it helongs and then stands guard over the iuptured opening day and night and provents the rupture coming down. Find out how this ingenious RUPTURE LOCK does this so ecasily and comfortably that the wearer soon forkets © has on a suppor{. Find out how and hy it is that once this iock fx fitted to tho needs of the wearer, It does not slip out of place, no matter how much he may puil, tug, twist, squirm, Uft. run. jump. cough, sneeze or strain. Tind out how this Lock helps Nature to heal rupturcs —aund about the scores of people who say It hay completely cured them of Rupture. Find out how you can obtain one of these Locks and So ¢ CAN’T Come Dowss Why be the over-burdened slave of an il-fitting, ever-slipplng, torturesome (russ? Let me sl rou, prove to you that yo can be free from the troubie, annoyanc and misery your old-fashioned truss or a plinnce is causing you. Let mo tell you show you. prove to you what The Wonderful Schuiling Rupture Lock. has done and Is doing for persons who tried for years and could find nothing that would give them comfortable and successful sup- | port Doubtless some of your ruptured friends moment enfoying its benetits 1 1 to take my word. 1 want you to lovestlgate and judge for yourself. Send mie your name and address plalnly | written on the coupon below, or write me a letter or post eard. Let me send you ab solutely free my illustrated book and trial offer. Do this mow, right now while vou have the addres e you and are think- Ing of it Test It Yourself Without Risk - ing a Penny. on Rupture, } 8enad me your name and | address today—right now, Name right off, and let me sond you this Free Book, Triul Offer, names of people who have tried the SCHUILING RUPTURE LOCK and full Director, SCHUILING RUT 505 E. Georgia § Please send me IRE trial offer plan and full Indlanap in plain varticulars concerning it “BISHOP NILAN ISSUES LETTER ON LENT Priests of Diocese Sent Note With In- structions For Regarding Iloly Season By Faithful, Rt. Rev. John J. Nilan has ad- dressed a letter concerning the ob- servance of Lent to the priests of his dlocese, which is printed in the * tholic Transcript” as follows: Episcopal Residence. Hartford. Conn., IFeb. 9, 1915. ear Father: The holy season of Lent should be observed by the faithful of this dio- cese in accordance with the following regulations: 1. The sick and delicate are not bound either to fast or abstain. 2. The aged and persons under 21 years of age are not bound to fast, but must abstain on abstinence days. —y 3. The abstinence days for the la- boring class and all members of the household of laborers are I'ridays, Ash Wednesday and Wednesday and ‘ Saturday of Holy Week. 4. 'The abstinence days for all oth- er persons are the Wednesdays and Fridays, and the second and last Sat- wirday of Lent. " 5. All who are engaged in an ex- hausting occupation are not restricted to one meal a day and may eat meat at all meals except on abstinence days. 6. Both meat and fish at the same meal are not permiteed on any day of Lent ¢ 7. Those who are bound to fast are allowed to take only one full meal a day. In the morning, how- ever, they may take a cup of tea, cof- fee or chocolate with a plece of bread. At evening they may take a collation. At this collation it is law- .+ EMIL H. R. VOGEL, Voice Culture 179 Glen Street Tel. 33912 t only 100 & copy. Published prices 25 to §1. 'We guarantee satistaction o return A Room, or Concert use. Forelgn and American composers, ‘We casry the line, Catalog—iree, " GOODWIN'S KLENO CLEANING FLUID For removing Grease and Spots from Silks, Woolens, Gloves and all kinds of deli- cate fabrics. Does not leave +a ring. Pint Bottle. ! ONLY AT v | pRUSY {CoRN ] HARTFORD, CONN, ful to use figsh, eggs, cheese, butter and milk, but the quantity of wolid | food should not exceed ten ounces. | Meat is allowed only at the principal | meal of the day. This meal may be taken in the evening and the colla- tion at noon. 5 On Sundays no one is bound to fast or abstain. The faithful should be reminded that the law which formerly obliged everyone both to fast and abstain on all the days of Lent has been modified for the present only by special als- pensation of the Holy See. 1n granting this dispensation the soverelgn pon- tiff requests that those who take ad- vantage of it shall substitute other good works, e. g., giving alms to the poor, abstaining from intoxicants and attending the Lenten exercises in the church. The customary exercises are the Rosary of the Blessed Virgin, Sermon, Way of the Cross and Bene- diction of the Blessed Sacrament. Yours sincerely, JOHN J. NILAN, Bishop of Hartford. CLAIM SHARE .OF ESTATE. 'wo Daughters Taken from Californi- an By Their Mother. 1.0s Angeles, Cal., Feb. 13.—The will of Elliott M. Best, who died near | here recently, said he had searched the country vainly for his two daught- ers, Kthel and Alice, who were taken from his home. thirty-five vears ngo by their mother. He left half of his | estate of $17,451 to them, but stipulat- ed if they were not found the entire | property was to go to his housekeeper. Yesterday letters wero received hy the probate clerk here from the two daughters, now living in Rochester, N. Y., claiming their share of the estate. ASA STILE; AGROUND. Japanese Cruiser Held Firm at En- | trance to Turtle Bay. San Francisco, Feb, 13.—The Pacif- ic Mall steamer Pennsylvania, which arrived here yesterday from Mexico reported that the Japanese crulser, ‘Asama, was still aground at the en- trance to Turtle Bay, Lower Califor- nia, last Tuesday. t a distance of six miles, the Pen- ylvania made out the disabled war- | ships and two vessels, which appeared | to be collie standing by. HELD FOR DEATH, Boston, Feb. 13.—Wright A. Ed- mundson, Jr., a Cambridge boy, aged 14 years, was arrested today, charged with having inflicted the stab wound which caused the death of 15 year old John 8. Goodwin last night. Accord- ing to the police the Edmundson boy aamitted that he had fought with young Goodwin while they were walk- ing on Park street and had hit him with his pocket knife. The fight, he said, followed a quarrel at a rehear- sal of a church choir of which tho | boys werc members. He declarcd he acted in self defense, EXPULSION AROUSES SPAIN, Madrid, Via. Paris, Feb, 13, 4 a. m.— T'he expulsion from Mexico by General Carranza of Jose Caro, the Spanish minister, has created a profound im- pression upon public opinion here. All the newspapers discuss the inci- dent at length and comment forcibly «on Carranza’s action. Meetings of the cabinet and council have been called Loy today to consider what stevs shall | he tuken. MAY RETAIN CONTROl. Washington, Ieb. 13.— Retention of control of the Pacific Mail Stcamship company by the Southern Pacific cailroad was authorized today by the interstale commerce commission in | | 1t§ first decision under the provision PRICE 25¢ Bottle —50¢ | of the Panama canal act requiring railroads to give up competing steam- ship lines cxcept when joint ownar ship and operation w found by the commission to be of puplic advantage, FIRST WOMAN TO REGISTER. Chicago, Feb. 13.—Miss Margarct Cunningham of Indianapolis swim- mer, was accepted in the Central as- soclation of the A. A. U. today as the first woman amateur athlete to regis- ter under the new national ruling. Harness. | Great Gcrman_rcny Trading Heart of Empire. Washington, b. C., eb. 13—A pic- ture of Hamburg, which is described as the “New York of liurope,” is drawn by the National Georgraphic society in a statement prepared re- cently. It follows: “Hamburg, the great German city | on the North sea mentioned so often | in press dispatches these days, is the New York of Germany, in fact, the New York of Europe. It has the same proud confidence of vast riches and a great commerce, the same cdreevless insouciance about things and people, the same restless wealth hunger, and the same unemotional aloofness from the stranger. Much as American boys flock from all over the country to try fortune in New York German boys turn toward Hamburg, the city-state which is the trading heart of Germany. Then, too Hamburg and New York are the greatest of all seaports. Hamburg, prior to the present war, did more business than any other port in the world except New York. Islands of ¥oreign Soil. “Both Hamburg and New York 1ire islands of foreign soll in their active . Before the war, Hamburg was Iinglish and French in tone. In Ham- burg alone, of all the German cities, the people earnestly drank tea be- tween four and five o'clock in the afternoons. Iverywhere else in the Fatherland, coffee, sweet-breads and rich cakes served punctually at four o'clock. Both of the world's first ports are cosmopolitan to a point of wild confusion; every tongue and custom being native to their man- ner, the common denominator for the reduction of a world of peculiarities being found in their counting houses and exchanges. “‘The city-state, Hamburg, has an area of 160 square miles, and is ex- ceedingly rich in agricultural, meat, dairy and fruit produce, while the city proper covers barely 29 squere miles. The city is a great commission house for Germany and for the world, an enormous part of the em- pire's import and export passing through its warehouses. Only one harbor on earth rivals that of Ham- burg for nervous, contlnuous com- motion, and that harbor is8 New York. No Old-World Piquancy. “There is little old-world piquan- ¢y about Hamburg. It is as strictly a growth of business and oversea trade as is the city of New York. Such buildings of historic interest as there are in the city such art and bohemian life as it possesses, are so effectually crowded into the background by high office bulldings congestions of cum- bersome freight drays and sirens ana smoke at the harbor front, and the peculiar expressions on every hand speaking of ‘deals,’ of ‘profit and loss,’ and of ‘cent per cent’ that they remain unsuspected by visiting Americans, who feel themselves more thoroughly a proper part of Hamburg than of any other German city, not excepting Ber- lin. There are few statues, few muse- ums, few marvels of architecture, few things of any genre whose belng is derived less from proctical advantage than from sentiment. “Residential and business Hamburg lies upon the north bank of the Elbe, while the south bank and indenting it for thousands of yards are hundreds of channels, and harbors, canals and slips, worked out in the great weird tangle of wharves, warehouses, pas- senger plers, elevators, bridges rail- ways and all manner and description of ships and products for shipping. Many millions of dollars have been.spent in the development of this marvelous harbor. Nearly 40,000 vessels, both river and oversea, clear from this har- bor during a year's course in‘normal times. The Inner Clty. “The inner, or business city, is com- posed of an ‘eld’ and a ‘new’ town. The new town, modern in every wa arose out of the ashes of that part of Hamburg destroyed by the great fI; of 1842. The ‘old’ town, is for the most part, a warehouse district, and it is pierced by numerous canals. The pride of Hamburg is the beautiful promenades around the Binnen Alster | @ lake made by the spreading of the Alster river within the heart of the city. Iacing this lake, upon the Neuer and Alter Jungfersticg promen- ades, are the luxurious hotels and cafes of the city. The lake is a milo in cleumference, and is dotted with steamers and row boats carrying Hamburg's pleasure-bent populace.” e ———————————————————————— Stomach Troubles Quickiy Uured. Pcoplo go on suffering fram little stomach troubles for years, and imag- ine they have a serious disease. They over-cat or ove nk and force on the stomach a lot of extra work, but they never think that the stomach needs extra help to do the extra work. If these people would take Tono. line Tablets regularly they would be a great big help to the stomach in its strain of over-work. No mutter what you eat or drink Tonoline tabs sweeten your sour stomach and stop gas belching in five minutes. The heaviness disappears, and the stom. ach is greatly aided in its work of di- gestion. Tonoline Tablets not only promptly relieves all distress, but if taken regularly will absolutely cure indigestion Ly | building up the flabby, overworked walls of the stomach and make thom strang enough to digest the m hearty meal. $1 for a 50 days’ treat- ment. Mailed by American Proprietary Co., Boston, Mass. Riker & Hegeman Co. T WELSBACH KINETIC GAS BOWL Greatest Advance in Gas Lighti in Recent Years 507% Cylind Increases Efficiency Requires No Chimney or Effective, Comfortable and Artis Self Lighting Attachment, No Matches Needed These Lights Are Now on Exhibition at OQur Display Room New Britain Ga --Light Company: 25 West Main Street