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The Farrell & NEW, BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, JANUARY 25, 1916. O’Connor Co. GOING OUT OF BUSINESS Entire stock of Stein-Bloch and Shuman Suits and Overcoats, Raincoats, 0dd Trousers, Mackinaws, Knox Hats, Caps, Men’s Furnishings, and Trunks and Bags, to Be Sold At 1-3 to 1-2 Off Regular Prices Sale Starts Thursday, January 27, at 9 A. M., and Fixtures for Sale Goes to a Finish. ——WANTED— UTART TAKEN BY AUSTRIANS ost Important Trading Town in | Albania Lost to Montenegrins Berlin, Jan. 25—Scutari, in north- Albania, has been occupied hy stro-Hungarians troops, according an announcement issued yesterduy . the Austro-Hungarian headquar- rs. Several thousand Serbians who rmed the garrison, retired towards he south without offering any resis nce. The text of the statement fol- WEi— “Scutari has been occupied by Aus- o-Hungarjan troops. Several thou- nd Serbians who formed the garri- pn retired towards the south without sistance. Austro-Hungarians also ve occupied Niksic, Danilovgrad and lodgoritza. Lay Down Arms. *“The disarming of the country has en carried on up to the present thout friction. At several place he Montenegrins have not even ted until the Austro-Hungarians ipeared, but have laid down their frms before the arrival of the troops B order to return to their homes. At her places a majority of those dis- ed prefer internment to being jent home. “The population generally has re- fetved our troops in a friendly man- er and in some instances with c bmony. Riots such as occurred at odgoritza ceased as soon as the Austro-Hungarian detachment ppeared ““Italian theater: At periods in most childrens’ lives hey fail to relish their meals and refuse lo eat even the delicacies prepared to mpt their appetites. They lack am- bition, and growth seems impeded, which causes anxiety and worry. To compel them to eat is a grave nistake, because nutrition is impaired. [Healthful exercise in fresh air and sun- ine is important, but equally import- nt is a spoonful of Scott’s Emulsion ree times a day to feed the tissues furnish food-energy to improve fheir blood, aid nutrition and sharpen feir appetites. The highly concentrated medicinal- ood in Scott’s Emulsion supplies the elements children need to build up heir strength. They relish Scott’s—it is free from alcohol. #@cott & Bowne. Bloomfield, N.J. r- Ttalian advances 15-34 1 in the district of Iavarone and on the | Rombon slope were repulsed. No Peacc Negotiations. London, Jan. 25—The Austrian oc- | cupation of Scutari appears to con- | firm previous statements that no ne- | gotiations are now proceeding be- | (ween Austria and Montenegro, as, | according to the reports concerning the original Austrian offers of peace, it was understood that the Montene- grins were to hold Scutari as compen- sation for Austria’s occupation of Mount Lovcen. | Telegrams from Vienna assert that | no negotiations are possible until the Montenegrins have surrendered their | that Lord Robert Cecil, parliamentary under secretary for foreign affairs, had to admit in the House of Com- mons vesterday that the government had no actual knowledge of the pres- ent state of affair 1 Followed Desperate Battle. The occupation of Scutari, accord- ing to Italian reports, followed a des- perate battle that had been raging for the last two days, the Montene- grins making their final before Scutari. However, as they must have had but little artillery, most of their guns having previously been captured by the Austrians, they vir- tually had no means of making an cffective resistance. The -Austrians in | their invasion ‘are now in possession of all the chief ports and towns of | Montenegro and in addition the most |important trading town of Albania. Scutari was occupied by Montene- grin troops in June, 1915, it being explained in an official note issued by |the Montenegrin government strategic and political reasons impell- ed the Montenegrins descent on Al- bania. An additional reason given | was that other powers already had | occupied part of that country. | Important Trading Town. ! Scutari is the most important trad- ing town in Albania and has a popu- lation of 20,000. Tt lies on the ea bank of Lake Scutari and has been rebuilt since the earthquake of 1903. | During the Balkan war, Scutari was the object of contention between Montenegro and the great powers. The town was captured by Montene- grin forces on April 23, 1913, after a siege lasting seven months. King De€nounced Offers. to include Scutari in the Kingdom of Albania and King offered compensation, in money and territory, on condition that he up the place. The Montenegrin king declined the offers, however, and announced he would hold Scutari against the powers. As a result of his decision the international naval block- ade of the Montenegrin coast was ex- tended. Later the powers made another de- nd on the king and the monarch 1lly decided to evacuate the town, *h as occupied by am interna- tional force on May 14, 1913. Several | arms, but the situation is so obscure ! violent re- ; sistance on the Tarabosch mountains that | The powers previously had decided ' cholas had been ; months later the international troops were withdrawn. When, the Serbian army retreated before the invasion of their country by Teutonic forces some of the Ser- bian soldiers on crossing the Albanian frontier proceeded to Scutari where they joined the Montenegrins. Active Guerilla Warfare. Rome, Jan, 24, 3 p. m.—Active guerilla warfare is being waged by the Montenegrin troops on their re- treat southward, and particularly in the Tarabosch Mountain west of Scutari, according to reports received here todas In advance of the Aus- trian troops who are in pursuit, a number of Austrian aeroplanes have heen harassing the Montenegrins, fly- ing low and using machine guns ainst groups of the poorly equipped soldiers of General Martinovitch, WILL THROW FULL | WEIGHT INTO WAR i | Lloyd George Says Germany Will Soon Feel True Prodigious Ef- | i fort of England. ! - London, Jan. 25.—In an interview Daviad of out vesterday Lloyd the Minister given George, Munitions, UNABLE TO WORK— KISNEY TROUBLE VERGOME This is to certify that I, Jerome H. McCormack, of 317 Ivy street, John- i son City, Tenn., suffered from Conges tion of the Kidneys, so that at times 1 was obliged to move about the house with the aid of a chair and unable to work until T used bottles of your Swamp-Root. 1 keep | Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root in .my house at all times, as I know from experience that it is the best Kidney medicine T can use. Very truly yours, J. H. McCORMACK, Johnson City, Tenn. Sworn and subscribed to before me a Notary Public, this . March 31st, 1914, SAM. T. MILLARD, Notary Public. Letter to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y. give | | Prove What Swamp-Root Will Do For You Send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., for a sample size bottle. It will convince anyone. You will also receive a booklet of val- { uable information, telling about the | kidneys and bladder. When writing, be sure and mention the New Britain { Daily Herald. Regular fifty-cent and one-dollar size bottles for sale at all drug stores. three | gave the following view and the Germans “I think America should realize there were two Ge manys before the war. On the one hand there was the industrial com- mercial and intellectual Germany and in a most remarkable way she had blended the three elements. “Now that Germany was rendering a great service to civilization. It was conquering the world by the success of its methods and example. That conquest would have proved a very of Germany and all of us CROSS, FEVERISH CHILD IS BILIOUS OR CONSTIPATED Look, Mother! ed, See if tongue breath hot or stomach our. coat- “California Syrup of Figs” can’t harm tender stomach, liver, bowels. | freely realize alifornia this is their tive, because they love its pleasant ; taste and it thoroughly cleanses the tender little stomach, liver and bowels without griping. When cross, irritable, feverish, or breath is bad, stomach sour, look at the tongue mother! If coated, give a teaspoonful of this harmless ‘“‘fruit laxative,” and in a few hours all the foul, constipated waste, sour bile and | undigested food passes out of th(-' bowels, and vou have a well, play- | ful child again. When the little s; tem is full of cold, throat sore, has stomach-ache, diarrhoea, indigestion, | colic—remember, a good “inside ! cleansing” should always be the first | treatment given. | Millions of mothers keep *Califor- | nia Syrup of Figs” handy; they know ! a teaspoonful today saves a sick child after giving yrup of ideal laxa- Every mother her children Tigs,” that tomorrow. Ask your druggist for a 50-cent bottle of alifornia Syrup of Figs,” which has directions for ba- bies, children of all ages and grown- | ups printed on the hottle. Beware | of counterfeits sold here so don't | be fooled. Get the genuine, made by “California Fig Syrup Company.” | that | trial | raised by pply at Back Door Wednesday Morning at 10 o’ClocK.—The Farell & O'Connor Co. I I Ten Clothing Salesmen A blessing; it would have been saving of the ter- m which most of the evils of humanity are spread- As an ardent social confess I was learning a good deal from that side of Germany, par- ticularly in the direction of municipal and national organization. “But this is my other point; Side by side with this Germany which we ad- mired was the military Germany. These two Germanys could live together in rapid and beneficial development. This first Germany meant the permanent overthrow of old barbarous Germany, for in spite of the fact that it employed weapons of science and culture it was not the less barbarous. Mr. Lloyd George is the outcome of the war. Reminded of a dictation of victo made a vear ago he remarked that he was ill of the same opinion., “England,” he said, “is planning to put her whole weight into the war, and Germany will feel it very shortly. It is an effort such as England has never made before—a truly prodigious eflort. In the days before the war she had the greatest fleet in the world but now she has one of the greatest armies; and in a very short time it will be about the best equipped army in the world.” The question was put to him, how- ever, what he expected to see in the world if Germany emerged victori- ous. He outlined the domination of the pernicious ideal that might makes genuine the mea rible social ing. 1s of fr some waste confident of | right, a helpless Europe, a Germany in which the evil side had triumphed a Britain deprived of her fleet, and possibly a ‘“Monroe Doctrine faring a | no better than the fleet.” The minister of munitions declared the talk of the indus- trouble in England was great- exaggerated and that industrial was merely a bugaboo a few opponents of the con- seription bill. possible compulsion PUT CREAM IN NOSE AND STOP CATARRH Tells How To Open Clogged Nos- trils and End Head-Colds. You feel fine in a few moments. Your cold in head or catarrh in be gone. Your clogged nostrils 1 open. The air passages of your head will clear and yvou can breathe freely. No more dullness, headache; no hawking, snuffing, mucous di charges or dryness; no struggling for | breath at night. Tell your druggist you want a small bottls of Ely’s Cream Balm. Apply a little of this fragrant, an- tiseptic cream in your nostrils, let it penctrate through every air passage | of the head; soothe and heal the swol- len, inflamed mucous membrane, and relief comes instantly. It is just what every cold and cat- arrh sufferer needs. Don't stay stufe fed-up and miserable. reformer I | H not ! | G(;ETHALS AND GEN. | | | EDWARDS AT ODDS | Serious Differences of Official Nature | | to Come to Head at Wash- ington. | | Panama, Jan. 25.—Serious differ- ences of an official nature which have arisen during the last few months be- tween Major General George W. Goe- thals, governor of the Panama canal zone and Brigadier-General Clarence R. Edwards, commanding the United States troops in the zone, are to come to a head at Washington when these two officials reach_ the capital, ac- cording to Governor Goethals. They | sailed yesterday for the United States on the steamer Calamares. Governor Goethals said before his departure that criticisms alleged to | have been made by General Edwards | had reached the secretary of war and | that the secretary had requested in- | formation on the subject. The gov- ernor replied with an official com- munication in which he detailed the troubles at considerable length. Governor Goethals declared that General Edwards had had much to ¢ regarding the administration of | ffairs on the isthmus, especially with | reference to the methods and cost of construction of many military build- ings under canal jurisdiction. It is understood that Governor Goethals 5 resents many of the criticisms General Edwards alleged to have made relative to the form of the canal government, General Edwards | believing, it is said, that the mili- | tary and civil authority should be | vested in one person, instead of sepa- | rated as at present. General Kdwards, before leaving Panama, said that Governor Goethals | had been misinformed but otherwise | i he declined to discuss the subject. | Governor Goethals further announced that he intends to give General Bd- | wards ample opportunity to make whatever statements he thinks neces- sary before the secretary of war and the congressional committees. S0 is | e e | i COMPULSION BILLTO | HOUSE OF LORDS | Third Reading Passed in House of Commons By Vote of 383 to 36— May Prorogue Parliament Friday. London, Jan. 25—The military serv- jce bill passed the third reading in | the house of commons last night, 333 { to 36. The bill was sent to the house | of lords and given its first reading. | | The second reading will be taken in| the house of lords on Wednesday, and | ment will probably be prorogued | The fact that the minority against the bill was virtually only a third of | The government accepted an ! reading without that on its first reading is considered a great triumph for Premier Asquith and for Andrew Bonar Law who di- rected its course and although last night's debate showed that many labor members are still suspicious, there 18 no doubt that general opposition to the measure has diminished enor- mously since its introduction and that the feeling of the country is strongly with the government. Mr. Bonar Law, in his speech wind- ing up the debate, remarked on the wonderful change since the first read- ing of the bill, which he said, was & compromise between those who thought that it went not far enough and those who believed it went 100 far. The bill passed through the report stage without serious modification. amend- shoulll & it ment that capital punishment not be inflicted for refusal to obey call, to the colors. The principal discussion turned up- on safeguards against employing the measure for industrial compulsion, many of the members expressing su picion regarding the attitude of David Tloyd George had not participated dn the debates on the bill. On the motion for the third read- ing, Sir John Simon, the former home secretary, asserted that although the government had done much to meet the objections to-the bill it had failed to allay the fears of those who be- lieved the bill was a mere prelude to jndustrial compulsion and had also failed to meet the case on the scientious objector. Therefore, he was unable to recommend that the bilk should be allowed to pass its thind division. He stronge ly deprecated, however violent oppo- sition to the bill once it became a law. An Old Proverb. It used to be proverbial that man (and it is certainly no less of woman) is either a fool or sician at forty This means every intelligent person must 20 much about caring for his health that by the time he is vears of age he can almost oned as a physician Why, then, is there much talk by doctors against “self-medication”¢ A woman can recognize all ordinary ailments without calling on a doctof. If they are ailments distinctive to her sex she generally knows enough 0 use that greatest of all remedies fof such ailments, Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and likewlse she is famillar with the standard remedies for other diseases. \ every trug phi- that learn own forty be recks —advt. Notice. To Creditors and Noteholders: The First National Bank of Plaige ville, located at Plainville in the State of Connecticut, is closing up itg affairs. All stockholders and others creditors of said assoclation are theres fore hereby notified to present thelr notes or other claims against the ag- sociation for payment. A. A. MacLEOD Cashier,