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SPECIAL SALES ‘ For Wednesday Morning FINE LAWN DRESSES 10 dozen latest, style dress three tier skirt, newest Quak- er collar; fine ' lawns, “neat, dainty patterns,36:to 44-inch, weorth $1.50. On sale-tomor- row morning at'9 o’clock. Fme quahty Perca]e neat | stripes, full = 'size, mccly trimmed, ‘fast color. A 75c| value. mornm . On! sale :tomorrow gat9o clock wm; Murder, ¥ lder, Col., July ZW——Judge ‘Nefl 1" ra.ha.m late yesterday ove: ed. 2 n ‘to. iquash the murder indict- against five labor leaders, grow- out of“coal strike disorders at the Hecla mine. He set the case for trial Al 23. The accused are Edward L. {Doyle, district secretary-treasurer e United Mine Workers of Amer- ‘W. T, Hickey, secretary of the, Efin Federation of Labor; J. 0'Con- preeid‘nt ‘and Fr 2~ quelflo, s tary of the Louisville .local and J. Cassady, pre.fdent or the La. tnnhte local union. i U.'s. NOTE AT LONDON' London, July 20.—The mew Ameri- .note on shipping which outlines | thé 'standpoint of the; United States . in ‘prize court procedure was receiv- ed ‘at the forsign’ office” yasterasy. T nofe. hag fiot 'yet . been: pap! but it is known that the American government refuses to recognize ' the validity of prize court decisions tak- en*undér’ réstraints impose@ by, Brit-! ish orders in council or . - municipal E:’ when_ they afféct American citi- PERSONALS ]El’l Walter F. Gr‘nt ol Woon!ock- R. 1. says she Has used’ Fl.ther %}:n'- Mericine in her family ‘of six ¥ flildren whenever they had colds or ghs “and results have been won-.| ‘ully satisfactory.” : \‘Miss Ellen O’Leary, Matron :of the. Children’s Home, in Lowell; Mass. says that she keeps forty eHildrsiwell. .| summoned by telephone and viewed tished ere! 1 Alleged German Sympatmzers Here Are Plotting Against Allies. Washington, July 20.—at the fn- stance of the British. government, the state department has called-on the de- cartment of justice to investigate the activities of certain German sympa- thizers in the United States who are 2Heged to have been employing un- iawful means to strike at Great Brit- tain. and her allies. Until inquiry has developed whether there is sufficient cause to warrant prosecutions, no names will be made public and officials of the departments as well as those of the British em- | bessy are reticent about discussing the matter. It is known, however, that information has reached the embassy concerning all kinds of plots, ranging from schemes to wreck bridges over wihch railroadd traing were carrying volunteers of the British army, to the incitement of strikes.at American in- dustrial plants making war supplies tor the allies. Involves Germans in Detroit, ; | One case in ‘which the British 'ga¥- ernment informed the state depart- ment it had evidence involving a wealthy ‘German resident of Detroit, Mich., who was alleged to have sup- plied money to certain - persons in Windsor, Ont,, to finance an attempt 1o dynamite a Canadian armory and a factory making clothing® for the Brit- ish army. Great Britain inquired whether. this case, if fully substanti- ated, would constitute miiitary activi- ty on[American soil constituting a breach of neutrality. All ‘the evidence furnished by the Eritish embassy ‘will be turned over to the department of justice,” which will conduct the inquiry through its bureau of investigation. ' This bureau and the United States secret service as well have been conducting wide- spread investigations on their own initiative and several prosecutions al- ready have resulted. It is understood that.stories of plots to blow up British ships at sea have been carefully looked into, and that scores of sus- pectéd persons have been under sur- veillance in various parts of the coun- try. Big Persons Named. According to reports, in official cir- cles; some persons of high repute in American ' business circles. have been mentioned in reports transmitted by the¢ British government, but their names are being guarded pending the outcome of the investigation. ENDS LIFE WITH BULLET. North Granby Farmer Shoots Him- self in Forehead. i Granby, July; 20~Lemuel Dewey, 83 years old, a life-1ong “resident of this ‘town, cdmmuted suicide -here Yesterday afternoon at his home in North Granby by shooting himself in the forehead with an old-fashioned pistol. He was evidently sitting on his bed before a mirror when he shot himself. . Dewey mad been boarding with a family named Smith whi¢h receiveo in return the free use of part of , his house and yesterday Mrs. Smith had gone to look at another rent in the RETR T Leading Men of Nation 1o Con/er in San Francisco qn,‘Kace 3etterment_. 1 RAC BET ‘Prof: IRVING FI Just what effect this European war will have on the advance toward human verfection through eugenics and euthenics will be discussed at the national conference on race bet- terment, to be held in San Francisco Aug. 6. ' Dr. David Starr Jordan at at the head of the executive com- | mittee and will be one of the speak- ers at the conference. Others who MENT BUILDMG € EX { ~ S L4 POS TlOfis : Governor FERRIS, will deliver addresses are. Luther Burbank, Proiessor Irving Fisher of Yale, Edgar L. Hewitt, director . of United Statés bureau of ethnology; Dr. J. H. Kellogg and many others of prominence. It is admitted by lead< ing eugenists ‘that the war abroad will delay the introduction of eugeén- ics as a fundamental "law. Some claim, however, that the war wiil oS ie S‘n’éor ;OWNSEND bring a survival of the fittest, which may, after all, redound to the ulti- mate betterment of the race. The first national conference on race bet- terment, held in Battie Creek, Mich,, in . 1914, was ¢haracterized by many ‘seénsational addresses, and it is an- ticipated that the San Francisco meeting will be equally as rull of in- terest. ATROCIOUS “AD” IS SEVERELY REBUKED Secrétary Redfield Scores Offenders vicinity. It is thought that knowl{ edge of this ‘was the reason for : tha deed. Just after Mrs. Smith returned she heard: a shot but did.not dare to go. into the bedroom: She ran® to neighbors and one of them returned and found the man lying on the bed with his head on the floor. Dr. A. J. Weed, "the medical examiner, was the body. STORM KILLS TWO. Fifteen Other Persons Injured— -/Chauntaqua Tent, Wrecked. | York Pa. July 29.—A severe wind- storm wrecked a Chautauqua tent at Dallastown, near here, yesterday, Kili- ing two men and injuring fifteen other persons. More than 500 were under the canvas and the entertainers were: | in the midst of their program when the storm broke. The gale carried the tent forty teet, where it 'was de- posited 2 mass of ‘wreckage. R.'Guy Hess and Dr. E. S. Mann were killed. Most of thos hurt, in- cludiog men, women and vchildren, W@ trampled in the panic that en- sui All are ‘expected to recover. REMED’.BERS INSTITUTION. New Haven, July 19.—Various pub- lic. bequests are made in the will of ‘Mr8. Katherine M. Sizer, filed for pro- bate today. The Masonic home at Wallingford and the American Sea- man’s Friend society are each given and strong by giving ‘them Father John’s Medicine whern' they, 2 caugh or get run dewn, or, ¢Frank Bennet, of 239" Sma Stree; North Adams, Mass, says 'h rie .Yohd’ il pounds while takihg Pather edicine as a body builder." i ?al?sme ami luslram 1$8,000, the New ‘Haven Colony His- torical Society of New Haven and the Young Men’s Institute of New Haven $6,000 ‘each, ahd after bequests to relativées and friends are carried there s provision for a bequest to . the Congregational Church of Feed- ing Hills, West Springfleld, Mass., and additional bequests to the Ma- sonic home and the Seaman’s Friend Socfety. ‘The estate totals about $76,000. INVENTED | DYNAMITE STORY. Reading, Pa., July 20 —Harry F. ‘Wastbrook, who last week reported that he had found a piece of pipe containing twenty sticks of dynamite on the Pennsylvania track near Al- toona, Penna., was arrested here Sunday night and yesterday accord- ing to the police confessed he had Finvented the story in the hope of gets ttmg a reWnrd TO EVACUATE WARSAW. London, July 20, 3:36 a..m.—The “Morning Post's’” Budapest corre- " For Publication of Advertisement of Polsonous Acid-loaded Shells. ‘Washington, ' July 20. ———Letters of reproof, written by Secretary ' Red- field were sent yesterday to the Cleve- land -Automatic Machinery company of Cleveland, Ohio, and the “Ameri- can Machinist,” a New York trade magazine, dealing with the publica- tion of an ‘advertisement of poisons ous, acid-loaded shells. it was an- nounced by the department of com- mierce that President Wilson, after looking over the letters prepared by Secretary Redfield, directed Secre- tary Sweet to forward ‘them. The letter to J. P. Brophy, gener- al manager of the Cleveland concern characterizés the advertisement question as ‘“‘atrocious” and says— “At a time when every instinct o patriotism calls for calm and sel> restraint, when’ sobriety of statement is almost a suprems duty, vou, as you admit, to gain notice to an vertisement, draw a picture of human misery as a means of earning a profit through the sale of machines to pro- duce it.” In his letter to the Hill ing company, publishers of the “American Machinist,"” Secretary Redfield wrote: “The time is one ot world on fire, and we alone of the FACE COVERED WITH PIMPLES ‘ALL HER LIFE But Miss Got a ‘Beautiful Com- plexion® at a Cost of Only $2.00 Nov. 23, 1914:—“All my life }ny face was covered completely with a mass of pimples, blackheads and blotches, T spent 2 lot of money on numerous remedies and treatments without success and no relief at all. I tried so many things that T was afraid my case could not be cured. Resinol Ojntment and Resinol Soap seemed to do me good right from Sthe first. I used two jars of Resinol Ointment and some Resinol Soap, the total cost being only $2.00, and this completely cured my case. sessor of a beautiful complexion.” (Signed) Mabell Ayres, Stone Moun- tain, Va. Every druggist sells Resinol Sozp and Resinol Ointment, and physicians spondent reports that the gradual evacuation of Warsaw has been or- ‘dered by the Russians. have prescribed them for twenty years in the treatment of eczema and other "qnfin‘ skin troubles. | in | great nations are outside of the con- flict. At such a time, when straint and calm is the duty of every citizen, your columms were open to statements calculated to arouse wrath and kindle excitement as the resuit has shown. I trust the offenge against SIX OF FAMILY LOSE THEIR LIVES IN FIRE humanity and against that self-comn- trol which is a patriotic duty may not be repeated.’" The' investigation by the depart- ment of commerce developed thatthe Cleveland ' concern had for ' sale a machine, which was not primarily designed . to turn out poison-aeid shells, but which could be , used .for that purpose Y LUMBER INDUSTRY CONVENTION OPENS Federal Trade Commission First Hand Information Regarding Given, Conditions by Manufacturers. ad- | Publish- ' My skin is | without a blemish and I am the pos- | Chicago, July 20.—First hand in- formation, 'concerning conditions . in the lumber manufacturing = industry in the United States was presentéd (v | members of the Federal Trade Com- mission, which opened a two days’ convention. President Downman gave the com- mission a statement of conditions in the lumber industry in which he sald" in the last eight years had a period of “demoralization.” % The hearings are 'a part of 'na- | tlon-wide series arrangéd toward de- ' veloping American commerce. On | Wednesday the commission will hold i a session here, Thursddy in Cincinnati and on Friday in Indianapolis, = re- turning to Chicago on Monday to re- sume its inquiry. Later sessions will be held in many | of the large cities of the west to. the | Pacific coast. 3 In outlining the purposes: of the convention, Edward N. Hurley of Chicago, twice chairman of the com- | mission said: i “In the judgement of the best bus- iiness brains of this country there never have been favorable an oppor- tunity for American commerce to seek and find foreign markets for its products as at this juncture. “With the prospect in view of get- ting the facts regarding our followlng trade possibilities the commission has | entered upon this investigation. The market is there and there we must | develope 1t.” i JITNEY TOO MUCH. Charleston, W. Va., July 20.—De- claring that jitney bus competition had ceriously affected its business, the | ' Charleston Interurban Rallroad Com- rany vesterday asked the public ser- ’P.B.fié'z% ~ Victims Suffocated by Fumes of Blaze thdt Damaged Thrce Story Tene- Mass. Chélses, Mass., July 20.—Six mem- bers of .a family on the top floor of a three story brick tenement house on Bacon street, were suffocated in a fire whigh damaged the building early to- day.. They were Michael) Jankowshi, Mrs. Jankowski and four of their six ‘children: -Mary, 18 years old, Sophie 16, Helen 10, and Joseph 8. The other two children and four lodgers were rescued. The fire started on the ground floor and.a dense voiume of smoke rushed through an air shaft. Some of the victims evidently had been awakenea and tried to escape by a stairway, but succiimbed to the fumes and sank o the floor. The family living on the floor cscaped without difficulty. second floor was unoccupied. ment at Chelsea, ground The ARREST AUSTRALIAN SUSPECT. © Montreal, July 20.—A man ‘|vnl‘ the name of Dementro Morello, said to be an Austrian and in. whose pos- | session explosives and incriminating documents were found, was arrested vesterday while measuring the Angus shops of Canadian Pacific. railway whete munitions of war are made, Store Closed Friday Afternoons Unuj HEADQUARTERS FOR THE BEST Fur Women’s Sl Boots--Pumps--Colonials- $5.00 to $6.00 $6.50 to $9.00 A Trade Paradox Price of leather soaring. Price of shoes takes a drop. Yes, in spite of higher cost of leather, we've siiced off a part of the regular prices of all our remaining . summer shoes for women. SOROSIS SHOE MAIN FLOOR. SECTION, SCIENTIFIG BODIES T0 SELECT BOARD! Daniels Invites Them to - Name| Go-workers for Edison, Washington, July 20,—8ixteen American scientists, to form, with Thomas A. Edison as chairman, the advisory board for the proposed bu- reau of invention in the navy depart- ment, will be selected by leading scientific societies of the country, Secretary Daniels announced yester day he had written to the presidents | of eight societies asking that two members be selected by each organ- ization to become members of the board. Following are the socleties addressed:— American Chemica] Soclety, Presi- dent Charles H. Herty, Chapel Hiil, N. C.; American Institute of Electric Engineers; President Paul M. Lincoln Pittsburg; American Institute of Mining Engineers President Benjamin B. Thayer, New York city; American Mathematical Soclety, President E. W, Brown, Yale University; , American Society of Civil Engineers, President Hunter MacDonald, Nashville, Tenn.: American ' Society of Mechanieal Engineers, President James Hartness, Springfield, Vt.; American Aero- | adopting “this & July Clearance Values S Values $: NEWEST MODEL NEWEST LEATHH NEWEST €O Only one troubl in every style. and save money. [N Our sales ‘corps i fit each foot with & rect size and Sage-Allen & HARTFORD extend the gentlem vitation of the d Begin as Son as ““We are anxious to possible and it .y nish me the it will help the of the advisory. oty phatic approval of agrees entriely wi soclety should be way and that no. ting the kind of mi be devised.” ' TEMPO v by arisen over the an for an increage in Directly or 000 men are in which machinery. stroyed have been | tary authorities th Basil® advices eides that umiess am nautical Soclety, Acting President Frederick W. Barker, New: York eity; Inventors’ Guild, President Edward V. Weston, Newark, N. Y, Wants Representative Men. “Much depends on the personnel of the commission,” Mr. Danfels said in announcing his plan, “and 1 have been desirous tirst of all that it should be made up of the ablest men in the country who have demonstrated their leadership in their . profession. It would be comparatively easy for any well-informed man to select half a dozen names which would immediate- ly suggest themselves,, but the desire was to have a committee that would not only in themselves ensure high service, but as well be representative of the inventive and engineering tal- ent of their society. “‘After consultation with eminent men in the navy and civilian life, I have decided to ask eight societies having large members each to select two members who will ake up the advisory committee. In this way 1 feel sure we will have the hearty co- operation who make up their mem-. berghip. The members of these socie- ties will naturally see to it that theis most . eminent representatives are chosen. We shall, therefore, obtain for the mavy the direct advice of those selected to servé on the com- mittee, and also the interest of ail the members of the societies which make the selection.” No Final Limitation, Mr. Daniels explained that the se- lection of the ¢ight sociéties did not exclude othér organizations of the same character which, it might ' be | found advisable to call upon later, Dow't Think Al Ales Are Alke Taste P. B. Ale—there is no other like it. - The P. B. kind of brewing does it. Selected maltand hops. Plenty of them. And ripe, sound and mellow., P.B.Ale and Lager are invigo- rating tonics as well as deli- cious table beverages. For Sale By Write for' booklet, “Good Cheer of vice commission to allow it to gis- continue ‘traffic on two of its lines, | ome of them an interurban. 0Old New England.” BUNKER HILL BREWERIES, Boston | Established 1821 | | said that | which the committee would aid. | operation by selecting representatives | th | vour organization, as there is no final limitation on the membership of the committee. He socleties of marine engi. neers in many cases composed largely of present and former navy officers, had not been included for the reason that navy officers would constitute the new bureau within the department Letter to Presidents. In his letter to the presidents, secretary wrote: “I am writing to ask the member~ ship of our soclety to give practls cable and vajuable ald and needed co. the of thir body to serve as membars of advisory committes . T am going to ask, by a poll by letter of your members or Iin whatever WA seems to you most/certain of securing the men desired by the majority -of to choose two of vour members to serve on this board, and it will give pleasyure. when you have furnished me these names to tried many ts and got little relief. Remedy and got In telling of her case manent intest] bottle of your di ©on an absolute, tactory money with ¥ rergement was ures would be The Krupp to have granted g of the employes, about a tem i workmen still appear | and many have left would greatly effect nitions and for this ? Inhabitant of Alvill, to o Paris, July 20.—A spatch forwarded by respondent of the H says: “The inhabif scaport of Asla Agragyti numbering most all Greeks to evacuate the eity interior of Asia Min of the city are not their homes 'for an . without offering some “This news is © discussion in Athens & is beginning to lopk with anxiety.” Was Mrs. W. B Mass., was a vietim ble which tortu Then she N"’f “For years T hvh with stomach trouble. no relief. Then, like & above, 1 heard of your for it; being cured. my friends nd -fter a M ot Ywi A e s o i Mayr's Wi and around th )r - <78 NS