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NEW SILK WAISTS A great showing of new and prettly e designs in Crepe de Chene and Pussy Willow silk Some plain, others fancy trimmed and embroidered, values up to $3.00, size 36 to 44, special $1.98 to $2.25. WASH SILK WAIST—Special lace and embroidery trimmed, long sleeves all sizes, at $1.50 value, special $1.25 , each, EDEN FLANNEL—For waists and shirtings, comes in a nice assortment of stripes in white,"tan and grey, also shades of plain grey, perfectly fast col- ors, unshrinkable, never sold less than 15c yard, 12%ec yard. SWEATERS—For men, women and children. Children’s sweaters, 50c up. Special values in wool sweaters at » $1.25 and $1.75, all colors. ANGORA AND PLAIN KNIT SUITS —2 to 6 years, all desirable colors, 3 and 4 piece, $2.50 and $3.00. LADIES ANGORA KNIT VESTS— Double breasted, soft, warm and com- ty, all colors, $1.50 each. JAPANESE SILK QUILTED VESTS » —Black only, $1.50 each. STAMPED NAINSOOK CORSET COVERS—Combinations, envelope chemise, night gowns, etc., all made and finished, well made, fine quality, material, covset covers, 25¢; envelope chemise, 50c, night dresses, 75c. FANCY TEA APRONS—and . Dressing Sacques, with enough mater- ial to work them, aprons, 25c, sacques COME HERE—for your Art threads every well known brand, can be found here. 8 PULLAR & NIVEN HARTFORD COUNTY JAIL. Representatives and Senators to Ix- amine Condition of Institution. Hartford,” Nov. 9.—The county cormn- »missioners have called a meeting of the forty-five representatives seven senators from this county in the general assembly to be held Monday at 10 a. m., to examine into the pres- ent condition-of the Hartford county jail, to considér plans for necessary repairs to the present jail or the de- sirability of building a new jail and tb take such action as they deem best. Senator Louis R. Cheney of this city is chairman of the Hartford courty legislators. Under an order from ne board of health, passed not long ag+ the commissioners have either to re- pair the present jail or build a rew one. A new jail, modern in every re- spect, could be built from $400,000 to $500,000 the commissioners think. The commissioners believe altera- tions to the present jail would cost from $150,000 to $200,000. The jail population is growing at such pace that more cell room is even now needed. . and Post Carpet Company 219 Asylum St., Cor. Haynes St., HIQ. | — Home Brighten- .ing Previous to Thanksgiving Company, relatives and neighbors mre always impressed when at this season of the year a new rug is lving on the floor—a new pair of curtains adorn the windows or a pair of por- tieres are hanging. All add attrac- tiveness and especiully at this time, {hen company is expected, the resuits are surprising and the remarks plcas- ing to the ear. RUGS CARPETS DRAPERIES WALL PAPERS (TRAUP QUARTET IS FIRST IN GOURSE Will Open 1915-16 Series of U. P. and T. Assn. Entertainments As the date for the opening of the winter course draws near, the cfficers of the United Parents’ and Teachers association are being reassured by the general public that the 1915-16 entertainments will be given even more liberally patronized than in the past. For two seasons the association has conducted entertainments of an interesting and educational nature. The attendance has been large but the association was handicapped to a certain degree by the fact that it had vet to make its mark in the world. It has now attained that end- proved itself worthy of support and has demonstrated beyond all ques- tion that its entertainments are worth while, not only from a social stand- point but also from the angle of in- struction and education. In selecting its artists for the en- tertainments, the association has gone to no expense or inconvenience. From a wide field, the selection has been narrowed down until the officers are convinced they have the very best there is to offer- The courses in the past have been well managed and well patronized. This season’s offer- ings should prove to be red letter events and the patronage should be as correspondingly heavy. No worthier object could be select- ed by public spirited men and Wo- men. The aim is not entirely for the entertainment of adults. The pro- ceeds of this year's course will be de- voted to the purchase of a transport- able motion picture machine for use by the children in the schools. This machine is highly recommended for its safety, convenience in handling and because the company manufac- turing it also provides films by which it is possible to bring before the chil- dren the best in educational subjects. The first of this season’s entertain- ments will be given in Grammar school hall on Tuesaay evening, No- vember 16. The artists selected are the Traup quartet, instrumentalists. The members of the quartet are members of the Boston Symphony or- chestra and their program will be cer- tain to please. Number two in course will be the Tempo quartet of Hartford. Hardly a man or woman in Connecticut has not heard this wonderful vocal or- ganization. Finished artists, each one, the members have won an envia- I | ble reputation in the world of music. ;Fhe quartet will be heard on January i, A motion picture exhibition will be the third of the course. Tickets for the entire course are now in the hands of the school chil- dren and the first exchange for . re- served seats will take place Friday evening at 7:30 o'clock at Crowell's drug store- MUTE ASKS UNION WAGE AS WITNESS Hyman Kaplan, Unable to Make Himself Understood. Demands $1 Instead of Sixty Cents. Many complications arose in police court this morning in the case which Hyman Mechlin of Olive street was charged with slaughtering calves within' the ‘city limits in violation of a state aw. One Hyman Kapan, a deaf mute, who is said to have been the only person who saw the actual slaughtering of the calves, was sum- moned as a witness, A Hartford interpreter, proficient in the deaf and dumb language, was hired to interpret for Kaplan but when he started to do so Kaplan threw up his hands in dismay. The interpreter was talking English sign language and he could only under- stand Jewish sign language. Various other schemes were tried and fially prosecutor Kett tried to get Kap- lan to answer written questions but it was found that he efther could no: not read English. He was finally called from the stand. Mechlin convicted himself, for al- though the state had plenty of in- direct evidence it was unable to pro- duce any direct evidence without the aid of the mute. Officers Malone and Rival told of visiting a barn in the rear of 23 Olive street Sunday noon and finding several slaughtered calves on ‘the floor covered with canvas. The bodies were then warm. Meat Inspector Radcliffe told of visit- ing the place Monday and finding evidence that the calves had been killed there. Mechlin admitted kill- ing the calves but said he did it at a slaughter house and then brought them to his place to dress them. He OUR YOUNG WOMEN are so often subject to headache—are languid, pale and nervous—because theirbloodisthin or insufficient. They are not really sick and hesitate to com- | plain, but they lack that ambition and | vivacity whichistheirbirthright. They domotneed drugs—but doneedthetonic and nourishment in Scott’s Emulsion | that makes richer blood, fills hollow I cheeks, suppresses nervousness and es- tablishesstrength. Nourishmentalone makesbloodand Scott’s Emulsion is the | essence of concentrated hourishment, | free from wines, alcohols or opiates. If mother or daughter is frail, pale or nervous, give her Scott’s for one month and see the betterment, It has a wholesome, “nutty” flavor. Avoid substitutes. At any drug store. Scott & Bowne, Bloomficld, N.J. in 154 It has- SEND NO MONEY Nation-Wide Factory Distribution of High-Grade Alum- inum Ware for Advertising Purposes Ten Thousand Homes to be Benefited by this Great Expenditure— One of the Most Remarkabhle Offers Ever Made in the History of the Business World Your home can be brought within the reach of this great distribution if you will act quickly. The positive limit is ten thousand of these aluminum sets— the three pieces exactly as shown below—the pieces you have been wanting to complete your kitchen equipment. Self-Basting Roaster, 10 inches in diameter. The top fits tightly over the bottom, holding in the steam, which at all times fully surrounds the meat, automatically basting it and keeping the natural flavor in the roast. The two parts of the roaster are made to serve many other purposes when used separately. Coffee Percolator, with a capac- ity of 2 quarts, or 8 cups. Everybody knows that perfect coffee can be made only in a percolator. The water asitboilsrises and then slowly perco- lates through the coffee at a temper- ature just below the boiling point, thus extracting only the delicious flavor of the berry, and producing an amber fluid free from sediment. Combination Tea Kettle and Double Boller. The newest time and fuel saver. The tea kettle has a capacity of 6 quarts. The inset compartment is used as a double boiler for cooking cereals of all kinds, warming up soup% stews, etc., and steaming puddmgs an other foods. The kettle is fitted with a cool, clean Alaskan handle, and can be used with or without the inset. This entire set is made of high-grade, heavy gauge aluminum. No finer finished ware ever left the works. When these ten thousand sets are placed in ten thousand homes, ten thousand housekeepers will be telling their neighbors of the victorious fac- tory-shipment idea of the Quaker Valley—and that is the gigantic advertising campaign we have entered upon. & rpose of the hen you and your neighbors learn that you can get all your home furnishings direct from the factory at prices much lower than those of retail stores; when you are made to feel free to return at our expense, anythin, that does not exactly please you; when the same credit accommodations are extended to you as to a merchant—then you will be re ar Quaker Valley customers; and that is why we are making the following remarkable offer on this complete, high-grade aluminum set. Simply sign the coupon at the and return it to us AT ONCE. money with the coupon. We will ship the set by express or parcel post direct from the factory to your home. If pleased and delighted, remit $1 a month till the special get-acquainted price of $6.45 is paid; other- wise return within thirty days at our expense. Quaker Valley Mfg. Company 112 Mill Street Aurora, igh Sen nt(; from the factory to my home. arrival. Name.. Shipping address. QUAKER VALLEY MFG. COMPANY 112 Mill St, Aurora, Hlinois If this coupon reaches you in time, ship the three-piece aluminum set direct Iam o pay nothii ill the {’e’fit‘gl an:o;th till L‘hhx special fact en e 5] x ? willthen et ¥ UM Tt ory-to-me price of $6.45 is COUPON but the express charges on ays, and if [ am pleased and deli ited, I paid; sesansesasscaressacseesaeane i Shipping charges to New Britain will be ouiy 43 Cents. { Coupon No. 331, Nov. 9 | could not explain how it was that the bodies were warm Sunday noon as he claimed to have killed them early Saturday night. Judge Meskill imposed a fine $20 and costs, After the case was over Kaplan, the mute refused to accept the us- ual witness fee of sixty cents. Hel made it plain that he was a union furrier employed at Meshkin's fur- rier establishment and he wanted union wages for his time. He would accept nothing less than $1, he said. He didn’t get it. ENGLAND TO DELAY REPLY T0 U.S. NOTE British Maritime Law Writer Severely Criticises Document of London, Nov 9.—The reply to the note which the American government addressed to Great Britain on the subject of the detention of American ships and interference with American commerce on the seas, it is an- nounced here, will probably not be ready for several weeks. Meanwhile, the note has aroused much discus- sion and been the subject of some un- favorable comment by the Britisa press and public. Thomas Gibson Bowles, one Iengland’s best known writers maritime law, speaking yesterd: reference to the American note, that in many respects, he regarded it as ‘“ungenerous and unfair and un- candid.” Hits British Ioreign Oflice. He was equally severe in his stric- tures on the British foreign office, which, he declared had “imvited and propounded new rules of sea warfare on new principles, without warrant either from the recognized law of na- tions, or from any international in- struments.” The contention of the United States that Great Britain had not cstab- of lished an effective blockade he re- garded as just as this contention. alone 'ne found worthy of consideration in the note, with the exception of the complaint respecting detained ships subsequently released, as the innoceat were forced to bear the expense of de- tention. This Mr. Bowles said, was unjust, though he thought the matter a small one as compared with the great issues involved. Grey Was Wrong. “I do hold,” he said, “that in the order-in-council, especially in the sug- gestion that it establishes an effective blockade, Sir Edward Grey has gone wrong, that he has undertaken to harass neutrals by metaods in a way not sanctioned by the law of nations. So far, I agree with the note. Never- theless, the note, itself, is in many respects ungenerous, unfair and candid, and the United States mu remember that we are fighting for our lives and the liberty of the world and that this is not a time for quibbling.” Relative to the protest against ships being seized and taken into port mere- ly on suspicion, Mr. Bowles argues that it is ridiculous to think that they can be effectively examined at sea. Mild Treatment of Case. The Hague, Nov. 9.—Commenting on the American note to Great Britain, the Nieuwe Courant, the leading news- paper of The Hague, says: “If the extracts of the American note reaching Holland give a correct rendering of the Washington govern- ment’s intentions, American has taken up in a very mild way the task of act- ing as the champion of the rights of neutral nations.” BUYS COLLECTION OF AMERICAN STAMPS New York DealersSecures $200,000 Is- sues From Estate of Late Karl Of Crawford. New York, Nov. 9.—The collection of American postage stamps made by Alexander Edward Lindsay, the Barl of Crawford, has been p chased by a New York dealer and ls famous un- now in this country The collection is said to have cost the late earl $200,- 000. It was sold by his son who suc- ceeded to the title. In addition to the stamps the col- lection contains a complete history of American postal issues, in which the stamps are traced from the artist's original drawing to the finished issue. The earl arranged his collection and wrote the history of it while traveling about the world on board his cruising yacht, the Valhalla. In addition to the American stamps he owned also | a collection of British stamps and an- | other of miscellaneous issues of which both have been sold. How to Have the Best Cough Remedy and Save $2 by Making It at Home Cough medicines, as a rule contain a large quantity of plain syrup. A pint of granulated sugar with 15 pint of warm water, stirred for 2 minutes, gives you as good syrup as money can buy. | Then get from your druggist 21 ounces Pinex (50 cents worth), pour into a pint bottle and fill the bottle with sugar syrup. This filves you, at a cost of anlg 54 cents, a full pint of really better cou; syrup than you could buy ready made for $2.50—a clear saving of nearly $2. Full directions with Pinex. It keeps perfectly and tastes good. It takes hold of the usual cough or| chest cold at once and conquers it in 24 hours. ~ Splendid for whooping cough, bronchitis and winter coughs. It’s truly astonishing how quickly it loosens the dry, hoarse or tight cough and heals and soothes the inflamed mem- branes in the case of a painful cough. It also stops the formation of phlegm in the throat and bronchial tubes, thus end- ing the persistent loose cough. Pinex is a highly concentrated com- pound of genuine Norway pine extract, combined with guaiacol, and has been used for generations to heal inflamed membranes of the throat and chest. To avoid disappointment, ask your druggist for “215 ounces of Pinex,” and don’t accept anvthing else. A guarantee of abgolute satisfaction, or money prompt- Iy refunded, goes with this preparation. The Pinex Co., Ft. Wayne, Ind. ey Newest Models in Winter Apparel for Women and Misses Hundreds of New Designs in Coats, Suits and Dresses arri during the past week. Never have our stocks beepn wiore ed plete. Every conceivable Style, I"abric and Shade cAn be found this superb collection, all attractively priced. Fur Suits, F Trimmed $22.50. ' Model Fur Trimmed Zibeline Coats, Broaddd $19.75. New Plaid $22.50. Plush and Corduroy Coats, $25.00. Fur Trimmed Coats, $27.50. New Sharkskin and Cassimere Velour Coats, $29.50. New Great Coats, $25.00. Raccoon and Squirrel Trimmed Coats, $37.50. Chinchilla Plush Coats, $35.00. Leather Trimmed Bolivia Coats, $45.00. Poplin 8 skating § Coats, Choker Collar Suits, $25.00. Military Braid Trimmed S $27.50. Jaunty Beaver Suits, $29.50. Beautiful Embroidered 8 $35.00. Suits of Striking Individuaj $39.50. New $42.50. Copies of Imported Mod $45.00. Fur E4q Broadcloth it Trim Riding Coat Mod (INCORPORATED) HARTFORD LD DOMINION LIN #7 Delightful Short Sea Trips i Affording Pleasure and Rest > NEW YORK TO OLD POINT COMFORT, NORFOLK & RICHMOND, VA. K Special 4.Day, All Water Tour ' : Sl A [ ey e Including all expenses afloat and ashore from Fres 357 Novh Fiver, N Send for illustrated pamphlet No g¢ . BROWN. Gen'l Pass. Ast. L O0DROW, Tra. Mar- ”» THE MOHICAN MARKE S e H { deere 4 MOHICAN DAY WEDNESDA 9 TO 11 A. M.—HOURLY SALE—3 TO 5 P. M. et SHOULDERS 1 1136 SMOKED 17t 7o EVAPORATED MILK g GUARANTEED EGGS oz 27¢ 8 quarts ONIONS for 15¢ Bargains for All Day Wednesday PRIME LEAN CHUCK ROAST .. . . .1b 1215 VERY FANCY SHOULDER ROAST .. .......1b 14 SPECIAL SHORT RIB ROAST ............1b 15 FRANKFURTS and BOLOGNA ........Ib 12Vq RIB AND LOIN LAMB CHOPS ...........1b 17 FRESH GROUND HAMBURG ..........1h-121/¢ FANCY ROAST OF LAMB . Senicecnty SV 3 ats ONIONS MOH. CREAMERY "pgéfxiflvéfr“.n o 19¢ BUTTER’ § Ib e « 8¢ | Pure Lard, 21bs 23¢ Very Fine Quality This ...4 qts for 9C 1 peck POTATOES Sale Only 2 qts ONIONS, all for 29c MEADOWBROOK CHEESE, . b 20¢ MOHICAN SPECIAL COFFEE . 1b tin MOHICAN SPECIAL TEA—ALL KINDS .11btin 35¢ 1 pound GQc—1 -2 pound 30 c—1-4 pound J5¢ Pink Salmon " =< 10¢ | Wist, Shaker Salt "¢ e} SARDINES IN OIL, 1-4lbtins . ... ....7for 25¢ CAROLINA HEAD RICE, FINE VALUE ..1b 8¢ Mohican Brand TOMATO SOUP 2 cans for 1§¢ SEEDLESS RAISINS .. 2 packages for l 5 c SUNBEAM PURE HONEY.... 6 oz bottle (¢ YELLOW CORN MEAL ............. 5ibs 13¢ OAPE COD CRANBERRIES .... YELLOW o TURNIPS .