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B -« PRS ~~SALE-—Auction em ‘of 60 Acres, Approximately— ) Room House, 2 Barns—-Located Pn Main - Street of . Berlin, Conn. ant to the order of the Superior Court for Hartford I hereby give notice that I will sell as a whole at juction on the premises on the first Monday of March, 110 o’clock in the forenoon, the following described s:--A lot of land with the buildings thereon, situated in onn., and bounded north by land of Harriet Hopkins, igton Ecclesiastical Society and estate of Lucius Ben- Iy by each; east by land of Isaac Alling and Carrie E. partly by each; south by land of C.S. Webster and ebster and by land of Spencer Clinton, partly by each, , st by land of Harriett Hopkins, Catherine E. Churchill, /ebster and highway, partly by each, containing sixty 1es, more or less, said premises being now owned Freeberg. Premises have been appraised at the value of $11,500 e disinterested persons appointed by said Court. eposit of 5.per cent. of the purchase price will be re- e balance to be paid within fifteen days upon delivery after said deed has been approved by said Court. pd at Hartford, Conn. this 13th day of February, 1915. § / . STARKWEATHER GOMII‘I’I'I'EE\OF THE SUPERIOR COURT. > ‘ tate. IASO.000 | HEFUGES 615 ai Nunspert i Yillages. Assoclated Press.) [etherlands, Feb. 8 nine ' thousand 0 are enjoying e Dutch author- here, is an in- bt the war. The pt numerous sim- ‘centers spread pated on a sandy ine-woods re- cy in the treat- tuberculosis. It es formed of d. commodious f@mily has a 5 floors and ctric are large trades, wash- fidren’s. recre- fad with heating are four , wooden church pbout 2,000 peo- rdinary ailments seases, a dis- small libraries lly erected or bs already stand- ood and lent for Itable people. a Dutch mili- jdes the company Rll detachment of muscles back to r. EEdwards’ Olive ute for calomel, unnatural action jes or b{ merely stines With nasty, ves In fontlenellu re's assistance. ' Tablets open the s gentle, yet posi- y pain or griping Qlive Tablets are i of treatment old Tablets are a veg= d with olive oil, their olive color. opally acd have no ' bowels or stomach. 1 d RistS. pany, ..olizmbus, 1 St., Hartfor ° d. Conn. Mutual Building. Telephone, Charter 5749. county police and Belgian gendarmes patrols the villages. to keep order Tools . necessary to all the ordinary trades are provided and several small huts in each villages are fitted up as workshops. The men make or mend all their own shoes and clothes, while the women do sewing. Decorate Their Huts. It:ig interesting to observe the pride the refugees take in the decoration of the huts, which are separated by wide tracts of ground, Fach shack has received its name and the differences in the two Belgian races—Flemish and Walloon—can be marked at once by the inscriptions in low Dutch or French, A small proportion of the people are bi-lingual, but 6,000 of them only Flemish and the other 3,000 only French. Around the shacks, notwithstanding the sandy soil, some of the men have laid out little patches of garden. The authorities distribute daily premiums to those obtaining the best results in neatness and cultivation. In one place an excellent imitation of the Dutch lion is laid out in sand and green turf fetched from the woods. Religions in Camp. Four priests and thirty-four sisters are engaged in the religious and edu- cational work of the camp, and be- sides these there are men and women among the refugees who possess a high' grade of education and who give their services as readers to their comrades in 'distress in' the school- rooms after nightfall. A benevolent resident .of the district{also has pre- sented a moving picture apparatus for entertainment. 5 Sickness among the refugees has been little oonsidering the number of people and the circumstances under which they were brought together in a spot where no drainage or sanitary arrangements existed before their ar- rival. Only one adult has died since the camp was formed and that was a woman of over eighty years of age. Among the children, a number' have died of measle JACK TWIN A W MAN. He Knows When He's Had Enough Against the “Dublin Giant.” New York, Feb, 19.—With an ad- vantage of neight, reach and weight in his favor, Jim Coffey, the Dublin Giant, last night fought one of his best battles and he stopped Jack (Twin) Sullivan in the sixth round in the Fairmont A. C, The battle was a good one while it lasted and though Sullivan fought well it was evident that Coffey was too much for aim. Jack cried enough in the sixth. He did not quit cold, but simply admitted that he was beaten and wisely re- frained from being battered any more than was necessary. It was only after he had been put down for.a count of seven in the fifth and seemed on the verge of going down and out that the Boston boxer remarked enough. What was probably the best battle seen in the Bronx district in some | time was witnessed when Benny Leonard 4nd Patsy Cline got together in the semi-final. Each of the light- weights proved that he was very close to. champlonship calibre. ) The battle was a slam-bang affdir all the way, but the boys 'at times also displayed cleverness. It is cer- tain that a return match will be made, for it was an even break last night. PREDIOTS MERGER. KFastern and New England May Join in 1916. Mass,, Feb. 19.—Manager Lou Pieper says that out of all the chaos that has arisen in minor league basebal throughout New England, in- dications are pointing strongly to a ague next scason, when the agreement of the New Eng- land elrcuit expires. “It looks as though another year might see the merger that has been agitated during the winter,” sald Pieper. This is the last year that the Mur- nane clubs play under the agreement, and he believed that the best paying towns of the Eastern ‘assoclation and the New England league will be lifted up into one compact circuit. Only two members of last year's Lynn team have signed contracts, They are “Wheat” Orcutt and Charlie Flaherty. The others have until March 15 to sign. If they do not act by that time they are liable to sus- pension. END INDIGESTION OR STOMACH PAIN IN FIVE MINUTES “Pape's Diapepsin” makes sick, sour, gassy stomachs feel fine. ponn IR Time it! In flve minutes all stom- ach distress will go. No indigestion, heartburn, sourness or belching of gas, acid, or eructations of undigested food, no dizziness, bloating, foul breath or headache. Pape’s Diapepsin is noted for its speed in regulating upset stomachs. It is the surest, quickest and most cer- tain indigestion remedy in the whole world and besides it is harmless. Millions of men and women now eat their favorite foods without fear —they know Pape's Diapepsin will save them from any stomach mis- ery. Please; for your sake, fifty-cent case of Pape's from any drug store and put your stomach right. =~ Don't keep on bein miserable—life is too short—you not here long, so make your 3 agreeable. Bat what you like and digest it; enjoy it, without dread of rebellion in t tomach. Pape’s Diapepsin belongs in home yway Should family eat samething. which don't agree with them, or In case of an get a large Diapepsin vour one of the attack of indigestion, dvspepsia, ga tritis or stomach derangement at dqay. time or during the night, it is handy to give tho quickest, surest reljef Every Wife in New Britain Wants Her Husband "To Make More Money To live in a better house: to wear better clothes—to dress her children better: to edu- cate them. And she can tell him how. Fifty other wives did by new ideas—not theories, but actual ideas, and all as simple as A, B, C. ‘These wives are telling how they did it in the great series, “How I Helped My Husband to Make More Money’’: six of them in the March LADIES HOME JOURNAL On Sale Tomorrow Fifteen Cents a Copy, of All News Agents Or, $1.50 a Year (12 issues) by Mail, Ordered Through Our Subscription Agents or Direct Boys Wanted to Deliver on Routes. Apply to Our Sales Agent E. H. CHATFIELD, 285 Main St., New Britain, Conn. THE CURTIS PUBLISHING COMPANY Independence Square, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania brilliantly now as nerly, There are so many other demands made on charitably inclined personsg thut many of the blind have been turned and there is scarcely enough left to guide those who urc { tors or applause from the audience, and though there were brilliant Ih:hH‘ Kaiser’s Daughter Heads %o v v ~ Relief Work for Orphans ;- ity i o money the and @ | left large of the were “We are in touch with blind. But they did not seem to mind ! people,” said Miss Holt, | it The RBoy s kept not only to malke | lines, formed , stood on one | self-supporting. | another’s . did clephant walks | phone girls, nearly and cathe wheels, clad in little | at the Lighthouse, are blind and in white suits, and only many ¢ we have, through ou: would a boy for clinic, restored partial sight to thosoe hand and hold it a moment to be sure | whose cases were tnought to be hope that he there. The teacher of If there is suffering among th the socuts, Grant H. Longenecker, is | normal men and women In Now blind, too, but that does not prevent | York now, imagine what it is for the corps from going on long hikes | these blind people, thousands of them and doing just what other Boy Scouts | without anything but begging to fall do and in many cases even more, back upon. We are in urgent need of As for the girls, they wore fancy | fundg to carry on this work frocks and carricd fairy wands and | “Our pupils holding | were as sprightly us the 1ost ambi- ble positions in the Long Island hos tious fairy. The pital, Corporations, offices, very small indeed and not etc. We have a worksinop for men learned to find the in | a vacation home, classes of all kinds heart,” as Holt calls it. She|a gymnasium, dances, conceris clung to the older “fairies” and partics, clubs and entertainments of | Miss Holt, and when she was brought kind burean has down among the audience nid her | given out 17 for entertaifl- face and cried at the strange hands us to the that wanted to fondle her | opera zone blinfl The Lighthouse, according to Miss us for help Holt, the secretary not burn s wage earners actors, scouts part audience 7,700 bling “and we them eflicient bu Stenographers, telc all the employe st nes occasionally grope his comrade's | less, e responst smailest had light one was vet | business Miss Our ticket 506 ticke!s ments, ranging from the cire From the refugees have come to They all have | every war doos me EXTRAORDINARY VALUES IN HOUSE FURNISHINGS S8 SLIDING COUCH WITH MATTR An unexpected value—one that will bring many customers, Best quality throughout. Worth $8.00 and $4 98 4 . $2.25 ,, $1.98 $34.00 Stewart Stove, Newest Model, Nickel Trimmed $22.50 SUPREME RUG VALUES New floor coverings for your home—you can use new pieces and this sale should be y: pportunity 1o get just what you want wnd at the price you want to pay. The scason's newest and many are the new patterns for spring. 9x12 Tapestry Seamless Brussels Rugs for #x12 Avminster Rugs for 8-3x10-6 Axminster. Rugs for 9x12 Wilton Rugs for . 8-3x10-6 Wilton Rug for 88 8498 now 50 National Spring Guaranteed A No. | $3.00 Soft Top Well Made Mattress colorings The Duchess of Brunswick, was Princess daughter of who | the duties of young motherhood up to only | the time the war began. She was , N forced then to turn her attention from Wilhelm is T o her own nursery to those of her royil heading the work for the relief Tathii's pednie. Ah the R fall and winter the duche \ 1wuch of her time to relief work e pic- ture show her with her little child £10.98—Worth 16.00 $16.98 $20.00 $12.00 $37.00 Victoria Luise, Kaiser and war care of orphans causcd by the war. Since the birth of her baby daughter last March the duchess was busy with 0—Worth DRIESSERS Below are a few prices for onk dresscrs—ofl cours other finishes, $8.00 Dressers $10.00 Dressers ... $12.00 Dresses we have all It took realize Sprightly Blind Fairies. (New York Sun.) Boy Scouts tumbled about the stage at 111 East IFifty-ninth street yester- day afternoon. -They were not ordi- nary Boy Scouts, but to have seen them no one would have guessed it. A troupc of little girls performed ! lo were rows of children who h in the *“Toy Shop.”” a one act plav | their < turned away from the s 1y, sometaing, the some time what they waiting for The stage was like any other stage, the only difference being that there | was a wooden rail beyond which the | players could not pass. In the gul- | waiting for spectators to were i $7.50 seen written by Isham-Witzel, and after ! and laughed only when there wy each scene they would stop expectant- particularly loud thump from the ac- 1090 Main Strezt, Hartford, Opposite New Grand Theatre