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No one thing gives so much real pleasure, to so many so long a time, at so little cost, as a Columbia Grafonola---‘the one in- comparable musical instrument.” Demonstration at any time in our store, or on approval in your own home. This COLUMBIA GRAFONOLA MIGNONETTE $100 On Terms to Suit. Other COLUMBIA Instruments from $17.50 to $200 COLUMBIA RECORDS last longer and play better than any other record on the market, and they will play on your machine no matter what make. BRODRIB & WHEELER 138 Main S(reet. Hallinan Bidg. people, for Tel. 974-4 WOOD-WASTE EXCHANGE. \ Manufacturers Decrease Costs and (n- crease Profits Utilizing Scrap Material | Washington, April 30.—The latest business-aid service instituted by the government is a wood-waste exchange. It enables lumbermen and manufact- _ floorséi/ze Cedar Qil = Polish Will make your daily dusting and cleaning a pleasure Mw?pdn-ib‘ in cornen SATURDAY SPECIAL—Large Size Mop and Bottle of Oil, 98c.. Medium Size Mop and Bottle of Oil, 68c. Get them at I. Porter Co.; Union Tea Co-; J. A. Andrews Co. MDOWN M on any purchase up to $15.00 ~=Generous terms on larger purchases. ‘We do as we advertise. Men's, Women's and Children's Clothing New York Styles—alterations The M;:ter Co. Largest Credit Clothiers in the World. 313 Trumbull St, Hartford. urers in the various wood-using indus- | tries to utilize each other’s waste to mutual advantage, aiming to effect a large saving in forest material as well as in money. The wood-waste exchange is being conducted by the forest service of the department of agriculture. More than forty manufacturers of wooden ar- ticles already have asked to be listed as having certain kinds of waste wood for sale, or as desiring to obtain their raw material in the rough or in semi- finished form from mill or waste: Twice a month the exchange sends out a crcular headed, “Opportunities ta Buy Waste,”" containing the names and addresses of factories having waste wood for sale, with exact in- formation as to species, sizes, forms and quantities. Similarly, another cir- cular headed, ‘‘Opportunities to Sell Waste,"” gives the specific require- ments of wood-using plants which de- sire to buy waste material. QUALITY CORNER. Our interest in you does not end with our selling you a Hart, Schaffner & Marx suit. We want to go further than that and tell you just what button on the ceat should be used to gain the right effect— just how the Coat should be high the trousers should be worn. Ser- vice with us does not put on—just how mean simply Try getting the money. us. | | | GUY FIICH, | | New Britain Representative | | : | The Stackpole-Moore- Tryon Co,, Asylum At Trumbull St,, Hariford | vice then l\vas that the furniture factory | One of the first waste solved has been that of a furniture maker in Michigan who wrote to the forest service asking how to dispose of sugar maple blocks and sticks which were cut off in the process of furniture making and which he had to sell merely as fuel. Samples obtained from him and the forest ser- located a scrubbing-brush manufacturer who used small maple blocks for brush backs. The resuit maker was enabled to sell his waste at a much higher price than it had brought as firewood, while the brush maker was enabled to buy brush-back material in suitable sizes at a much lower fig- ure than it had been costing him to buy maple lumber and cut it up. Firms which have been rput into touch with each other through the ex- change are expected to notify the for- est service when their requirements have been met; then their names are removed from the lists. Inm this way several concerns which early took ad- vantage of the plan have dropped off the lists; but as more manufacturers learn of the wood-waste exchange the lists are steadily srowing. SPORTING NOTE. Myer P. Caplan, sometime boxing impressario, has returned to tewn from Baltimore. A CHILD DOESN'T LAUGH AND PLAY IF CONSTIPATED If peevish, feverish and sick, give “California Syrup of Figs.” Mother! Your child isn’t naturally cross and peevish. See if tongue is coated; this Is a sure sign its little stomach, liver and bowels need a cleansing at once. When listless, pale, feverish, full of cold, breath bad, throat sore, doesn’t eat, sleep or act naturally, has stom- ach-ache, diarrhoea, remember, a gentle liver and bowel cleansing should always be the first treatment given, Nothing equals “California Syrup of TFigs” for children's ills; give a teaspoonful, and in a few hours all the foul waste, sour bile and ferment- ing food which is clogged in the bowels passes out of the system, and you have a well and playful child again. All children love this harm- less, delicious “fruit laxative,” and it never fails to effect a good “inside” cleansing. Directions for babies, children of all ages and grown-ups are plainly on the bottle. Keep it handy in your home. A little given today saves a sick chiid tomorrow, but get the genuine. Ask your druggist for a 50-cent bottle of “California Syrup of Figs,” then lcok and see that it is made by the “Cali- fornia Fig Syrup Company.” i rcunds, | although he was in the | ball nine came back strong, after its Dmbiems were | KLBANE AND CROSS BY SMALL MARGINS Formr Shades Leonarg and Latii Ouipoints. Hommey. New York, April 30.—Johnny Kil- bane, \featherweight champion, and Leach Cross of the East Side were the winners of the ten-round bouts at the Federal A. C. last night. Kil- bane fought Benny Leonard, a light- weight, in a so-called handicap bout, but the handican was nothing to brag about, for Kilbane weighed in at 128 and Leonard at only 130. The cham- | pion had the best of six of the ten | and Leonard had the other four—first, fifth, eight and ninth. Leonard might have beaten thae champion with a litle confidence, but | | | even when he was having the best of | the going, apparently, he would shut | up like a clam and clinch for all he | was worth. This made the fighting | very hard for both of the boys, but| especially for Kilbane, for the latter | could not get his jabs and hooks | working to any great extent. In the first round only three blows | were struck and Leonard scored all | of these. In the fifth the local boy cut Kilbane's left eve with a right| hook and in the eighth he landed the best blow of the fight, a straight right hand to the chin. Kilbane did the most of his execution on jabs and short left and right hooks at close quarters. Cross met Jackey Hommey, and lead in all but two of the rounds, the fourth and | ninth, he did not win by an overwide ! margin, Hommey kept coming at | Leachie from gong to gong and sent | over many a resounding wallop. The | dentist's ring generalship and experi- | ence were too much for Hommey. | DARTMOUTH BEATEN. Green Comes Out on Small Fnd of Pitchers’ Battle, | Hanover, N. H., April 80.—Dart- | mouth lost its third straight game | vesterday, dropping a pltcners’ battle between Slater and Perry to Syracuse, 2 to 1. The score: i Syracuse 000100100—2 Dartmouth 000000100—1 3 Batteries—Slater ana Morgan; Perry and Wanamaker. h. e. 2 1 1 MAHAN HOLDS VIRGINIA. Paves Way for Victory for Harvard Nine. Cambridge, April 30.—The Harvard defeat by Bates, against University of Virginia yesterday, beating Jack Ryan's boys 10 to 2 and putting the runs over with a combination of twelve hits and seven errors. Eddle Mahan ~vorked splendidly for so cold a day, the southerners making only seven hits in all, and in only one inning get- ting in any combination. The score: T h e 101000000— 2 7 7 033210100—10 12 0 Ehrmen, Virginia Harvard Batteries—Gammon and Frye; Mahan and Harte, TODAY IN PUGILISTIC ANNALS. 1909—Billy Rhodes lost to Joe Gorman in ten rounds at Kansas City. This was the last important ring bout in which Rhodes participated. Billy wag born in St. Paul forty yvears ago, and developed into a very promising welterweight. Throughou: the middle west, where he did most of his fight- ing, the German boy was looked upon us a coming welterweight champion, and he might have reachell the goal except for his sessions with Billy Papke. When he first met the Illinois Thunderbolt at Peoria 1 1807, Billy had fought a draw with Joe Walcott in Kansas City, defeated Rube Ferns and knocked out Tony Caponi at Leavenworth. After a ferocious bout of ten rounds Billy triumphed over Papke, but in a second meeting at TDavenport a little later the Illinois boy held Rhodes to a draw in fifteen rounds. Rhodes took such a beating that he was never the same afterward, and from a championship contender he became a third-rater, and retired frcm the ring after his defeat by German in 1909, 1883—Maurice Sayers, boxer, born in Milwaukee. | 1901—Terry McGovern knocked ont Osear Gardner in fourth round at San Francisco. lightweight UNANIMOUS FOR “TIPPY.” License Committee Puts Its O. K. on His All-Star Show May 11. The committee on licenses of the j common council met last night and unanimously voted in favor of allow- | ing “Tippy” Fay to canduct a boxing | show in this city on May 11. The card will be staged at Hanna's ar- | mory. This is going to be an all-star af- \fah" of the highest order. There will be three twelve-round bouts with | warm favarites in each and a capacity house should greet the boxers. Barry | Hill of Brooklyn will meet Jimmy | Riley of New York at 115 pounds, | Jimmy Taylor and Young Sharkey, both af New York, will clash at 118 | pounds and Frankie Nelson of Jersey | City and Fighting Johnny Burt of | New York will display their talents at | 133 pounds. OUBS VS, PIRATES. | The Cubs of Bristol will.play the | Pirates Sunday afternoon at Hart's tot. The game will be called at 2 o'clock sharp. Schmidt and Mack will form the battery for the Piratea. CLOTHING GN CREDIT. WOMEN'S DRESSES New smart Dresses in Serge, Silk, Pop- and Crepe-de- $13.50. WOMEN'S COATS. lin Chine, that are serviceabi The newest models and materials, tailo $10.75. <= ,WOMEN'S HATS. Large assortment. Reasonably priced. LADIES’ SUITS ——— In all the latest sand, putty. Belgian Belted effects on coats; pleated and plain tailored full skirts. Special values. 4 e e GIRLS" COATS ForSchool and Dress wear. Ages 6 to 14. $5.50, $6.50, 87.50. 47 Main Street Near Franklin sq. The music lovers af New Britain will read with interest the announce- ment of a piano recital in Unity hall, Hartford, on Monday evening, May 10, by Harold Bauer, one of the world’s greatest pianists The remarkable vague of Bauer in New York is amply demonstrated by twenty_one appearances during the season in that city alone, each before capacity audiences. Mr. Bauer aroused tremendous en- thusiasm when he appeared early in the season as soloist with the Boston Symphony Orchestra in Hartford and his return for a recital is in response to a popular desire to hear the great artist again. The program will include sitions of Beethoven, Bach, Schumann, Chapin, Ravel, Debussey and Saint- Saens. Reserved seats may be abtained from Gallup & Alfred's Music Store, 201 Asylum St., Saturday morning, May 1. Mail orders accompanied by check will be filled and reserved seat tickets returned. Prices as follows Orchestra, $1.50, orchestra circle, $1.25, gallery $1.00. THIS WOMAN WAS VERY UNHAPPY Physically and Mentally Worn Out—Tells How Nervous | and Crying Spells Werev Ended by Vinol. Monmouth, Ill.:—*‘I was weak, worn- out and nervous. I had no eppetite and was getting so thin and discouraged, one day I just broke down and cried when a friend came in and asked me what was the matter. I told of my condition and how nothing I took seemed todo me any good. Vinol was suggested. I got a boftle and before it was half gone I could eat and sleep well I | continued its use and now my friends say I look ten years younger, and I am well, healthy and strong. I wish I could induce every tired-out, worn-out, | nervous woman to take Vinol.”’—Mrs. HARRIET GALE, Monmouth, IIl. There are many over-worked, tired- out careworn, nervous women in this vicinity who need the strengthening, tissue building, and vitalizing effects of Vinol, our delicious liver and iron tonic, and so sure are we that it will build them up and make them strong that ‘we offer to return their money if it fails to benefit. Vinol is a delicious rrepmfion of the extractof cod liver oil and peptonate of iron and contains no cil. The Clark & Brainerd Co., Drug- gists, New Britain, Conn., and at lead- ing drug stores everywhere. styles and shades— blue and checks — 12 A compo- | well red and fine BOYS YOUNG MEN'S SUITS. All the new mixtures in the newest models stylish and le. Great values at, $15.50-818.50 $22.50. ’ SUITS Well made Suits for the boys that will stand wear the them New 58 " * Soop ?ays the MANCHESTER CLUB HERE, The Ploneers will bats with the Manchester team Sunday after- noon. As this team’'s showing in the Valley league last season was good ghould be ahle to give a good account of itself Sunday. The Pioneers will use Winkler and Johnson in the and McKeon and Noonan will hold up the catching end. The Pioneers have picked the team that is o represent them this year. cross In making ter, sugar, milk and molasses should be melted together, then added to the dry ingredients. are bound S§nappy mixtures, creful manner, E€nglish models for the young man and conscrvativy can styles. . EK Bill it | box | ginger bread, the but- | the rough youngsters to give $3.50-$4.50-$5.50 MEN'S SUITS spring styles in plain taflored in $ m Ameri- MEN'S in the spring There is no case of imjg | sight capable of benefit lenses which we cam the fullest extent possibies We can prove its truth | tical demonstration and satisfied patients. Broken Lenses Re A. PINK Fivesight Specialist and Optician, } Office, 306 Main St. 1 College Ices, Ice e T We | Storrs’ Founta Cream Soda I Lunch Drinks of the Quality are making a Specialty of] Chocolate Syrup used in our Col- lege Ices, Ice Cream Soda and Plain Cream Soda. Qur claim is that we are serving you the Finest Chocolate in the. city. Come in and try one late Drinks and Manager o of our Choco- be convinced, Storrs’ Fountai 297 Main Street JOSEPH F. FLYNN f Fountain