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7 NEW, BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1916. THURSDAY MORNING FEBRUARY 3rd As might be expect- ed, a great many short lengths of all kinds of goods have accumulat- ed during the past ten days. These will be marked at prices cal- ‘culated to make an im- mediate clearance. PULLAR & NIVEN 7 IRISH RECRUITS. London, Feb. 1—From the outbreak of the war to January 8, the recruits raised by Treland numbered 86,277, ac- cording to the report of Baron Wim- borne, Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, published last night. He estimates that there are now about 400,000 unat- tested singlé men of military age in Ireland, but, deducting those in Tensible for agriculture, commerce, and the produgtion of munitions and thoge. medicaly-unfit-for service, con- eludes that the single men actually { evailable would hardly exceed 100,000, $8,000 TO DIVORCE WIFE. New' Haven, Feb. 1.—A legacy of §5,000 awaits Captain Charles Kendall Bush, an officer in the English army, provided he proceeds immediately. to secure a divorce from his wife, the danghter of the late Mrs.:May N. Bur- rows, well known in this city as the widow of Silas E. Burrows, and sis- ter-in-law of the late Henry Hotch- kiss. Mrs. Burrows herself makes this provision in her last will and testi- iment filed vesterday with the local probate court WHY HAIR FALLS OUT b Dandruff causes ! a feveris tion of the scalp, the hair roots shrink, loosen and then the hair comes out fast. To stop falling hair at once and xid the scalp of every particle of dandruff, get a 25-cent bottle of Dan- derine at any drug store, pour a little in your hand' and rub well into the scalp. After a few applications all dandruff disappears and the hair stops coming out. AT ONCE! STOPS - INDIGESTION, GAS, STOMACH MISERY “Pape’s Diapepsin” makes sick, sour, upset stomachs feel 1s on and gives relief. If you had some Diapepsin hand and would take a little now you stomach distress or indigestion would vanish in five minutes and you would feel fine. This harmless preparation gest anything you eat and out-of-order stomach lize it \your meals don't tempt vou, what little you do eat seems to fiil you or lays like lump of lead in your stomach, or if you have heari- purn, that is a sign of indigestion. Ask your pharmacist for a 50-cent ease of Pape’s Diapepsin and take little just as soon as you can. The will be no sour risings, no belchinsy of undigested food mixed with acid, no stomach gas or heartburn, full ness or heavy feeling in the stomach nausea, debilitating headaches, dizai- ness or intestinal griping. This w all go, and, besides, there will be no undigested food left over in the stomach to poison your breath with pauseous odors Pape’s Diapepsin instantly ates out-of-order stomachs, Neutralizes ac diges overco before or if regn- because it prevents~ fermentation and takes | kold of vour food and digests it just the same as if your stomach wasn't there. Relief in five stomach misery waiting for you These large from all drugstore minutes is at any 50-cent cases contain more than sufficient to thoroughly overcome any case of dyspepsia, in- digestion of any other stomach dis- turbance, in stomach, starts will di- § MRS, MOHR’S SON WITNESS AT TRIAL Attorney Lewis’ Lile Threatened by State’s Witness Providence, R. I, Feb. 1—Called as a witness in behalf of his mother, Elizabeth F. Mohr, who is on trial on the charge of instigating her hus- hand’s murder, Charles ¥. Mohr, Jr., her 10-vears-old son, gave testimony vesterday in support of the conten- i tion of the defense that Mrs. Moh instead of hating the doctor and w ing him out of the way, really loved him and hoped for ultimate recon- iliation. He declared that his mother had taught him to love his father and that he said prayers for him nearly every night The boy of George contradicts the testimony Healis, the chauffeur, who has turned stat evidence, that | murder plot was hatched in { Mohr’s home on the night of August He testified that Brown, one of the negro defendants in the case, and Healis were not in his house that night. Talkes Without Hesitancy. Young Mohr appeared to be very ht and told his story without any hesitancy. He denied in cross-exam- | ination that he had ever said to his father: “You will get a bullet in your head some night on you way to Newport if you don’t stop going around with Miss Burger.” Yyoung Mohr denied that he told Mr Mueller, the housekeeper, that he could drop some poison into his father's coffee and kill him, or that he threatened to get into the house some night to chloroform Mrs. Muel- ler and the dog and then “fix” his father. The attorney general said that he asked these questions for the purpose of laying the foundation for contradiction of the boy’s testimony. Dramatic Movement. It was a dramatic moment in the afternoon’s proceedings when the boy walked smilingly into the courtroon:, stopping at his mother’s table for a moment to greet her on his way to the witness stand, where he told of his love for both his father and mother. He said that his mother “alwe wanted to make up with papa,” While he was telling the jury how his moth cried on the night his father was shot, Mrs. Mohr burst into tears. Among the defense durin witnesses called by the the day was William L. Kelihan, an insurance man, who testified that Dr. Mohr insured his life with ten 10-years-old boy as ben- eficiary. Miss Ella Hennon of North Adams, Mass., niece of the accused woman, said she was present at Mrs. Mohr's home on the two Friday evenings lasr August when, according to Healis, t} murder plans were being discussed, and that no negroes came to her aunt on these evenings. Mrs. Etta Barnes the landlady at Mrs. Mohr’s housc, also declared that no mnegroes can on these two evenings. Police Inspec- ior Armstrong of this city asserted that “because of her children” Mrs. Mohr .declined to testify against her husband in criminal assault case. Testimony of Youth. Mrs. Mohr's son testified that he re- membered the night his father w shot. He remembered that Healis came to his house that evening and asked if he would go to Newport with him. The boy went on: “He asked mother if I could go down with papa to Newport, that no one was going. Mother said I couldn’t go—that papa had fooled her before.” “Did your mother promise to give him any money or say to Healis that night, ‘Don’t be afraid; say its's a hold-up’?” asked Lawyer Cushing. a Vent to Hospital. The boy testified that he went with his mother to the hospital. Can You Thread A Needle, Hold.ng The 1hread An Inch From The End? Not To Be Able To Do This Is A Sign Of An Over- wrought Nervous Condition There is only one way to correct this: ¥ou must reach the cause of the trouble. Just because your hand trembles it does not follow that the | trouble lies directly in the nerves of the hand. The body is full of what is (known as ympathetic nerves.” Many persons are not aware that such nerves exist. They do not know that nothing goes on in any part of the body that cvery part does not instantly “know of.”” The closeness of th 'mpathy is familiarly illustrated by headaches, in- digestion, rheumatism, neuralgia, ete., when the part that hurts may not be the seat of the trouble at all. Almost € case of sleeplessness, nervous- | even dyspepsia, a “‘sympathetic strike” by brain, nerves and stomach, induced by the lowering of the gen- eral health. In cases of this kind nothing is more grateful than the | help and strengthening powers of a | remarkable discovery called Margo Nerve Tablets. Margo Nerve Tablets are a careful combination of valuable nerve feeding | elements that aim to reach and re- | vitalize with strengthening power for | the entire nervous system. Try Margo | Nerve Tablets today. Make the test for yourself and see if this is not so. The Clark & Brainerd Co., New Britain and other reliable druggists sell it on a positive guarantee to refund your money if these results are not ob- tained auickly and satisfactorily. Un- der these circumstances you must see how foolish it is to go another day | feeling as you do. N T A N N ENERAL CHE SENraon, pLeAsr N LB NET R E PERFECT BAK L CO. M:S;eu N \ \\ N s N ING POWDE OTHER is caLeful about what the children eat. RYZON is healthful, a new and better phosphate. for it is made with No one— particularly children—can live without phosphates. Use % not satisfied. level measurements. = any other baking powder. Modern recipes call for standard If you do not use /evel measurements, use RYZON exactly as you would use YZON next time you bake. Money back from your grocer if you are V4-1b. tin, 10c 15-1b. tin, 18c 1-1b. tin, 35¢ “I couldn’t cr he said, “but Babe, my little sister, cried and ma- mma cried hard that night.” “Did your mother tell you to hate your papa or to love him?” “She told me to love him and be g00d to him. ? said prayers for papa every night.” He said his mother “always want- ed to make up with papa.” “Mamma loved papa and dreamecd of him nearly every night,” the boy added. He then told of seeing his father in a hammock with Florence Ormsby at Newport on Decoration day of last year. Mrs. Mohr bowed her head and secemed to be in tears while her son was narrating these detaiffs. Spied for Mother. On cross-examination the boy said he knew where Miss Burger lived as his father had pointed out the place. He admitted that he spied on the doc- tor for his mother. “I told mother everything out,” he said. He = he heard Miss Burger ‘‘dearie’ admitted t I found his father call 2 his playmate, Robert Pettis, told him his father, (Mr. Petts) was once shot in heayl. “And didn’t you say to vour father at the dinner table one night, ‘If you don’t stop going out with Miss Bur- ger you'll get it where Pettis got it’ 2 asked Attorney General Rice. “No, sir.” Lawyers Life Threatened. William H. Lewis, of counsel for the negroes, complained to Assistant Attorney General Phillips last night that a negro whom he named, had threatened his life. The man, he said, had been summoned as one of the state’s witnesses, but had not been used. MILKING GROTON AND STONINGTON RAILWAY Sen. Hewitt Makes Charge At Hearing Held Before Public Utilities Commission. Hartford, Feb. 1—"“The is milking the Groton and Stonington Street Railway Company, and there is no use in beating around the bush,” said Senator B. H. Hewitt, of Ston- ington, in addressing the public utili- ties commission yesterday at hearing on the petition of Jennie L. Hewitt and twenty-four other school teac ers for a reduction in the increased company | trolley rates on the line of the com- pany, which was said by the senator His remarks was brought out by the objection raised by former Rep. C. L. Avery, attorney for the company (o the question asked by the senator for the purpose of bringing out informa- tion to show who w: in control of the Groton and Stonington company, leased by the Norwich and Westerly Traction Company. “Show who is doing the milking,” replied Mr. Avery. The question was temporarily excluded by Chairman Higgins. The objection the petition the income warrant it. By agreement the scope of the hear- ing was enlarged so that there was an inquiry into the rates on other barts of the company's lines. to the granting of was on the ground that of the company did not TWO STEAMERS LOST AT SEA. New York, Feb. 1.—The White Star freight steamship Bovic reported on her arrival here yesterday from Manchester that she had picked up wireless messages indicating that two steamships have been recently lost at sea heretofore unreported. One was the Apalachee, a British tanker in the government service, the other is an unknown steamer whose crew was rescued by the steamer Finland. to be subjected to a milking process. | | OUR NAVY READY FOR MMEDIATE WAR But Army Not Large Enough for Peace Duties, Says Wilson Chicago, Feb. 1.—The United States as made preparations for immediate war as far as the navy is concerned, although the present naval force is in- adequate in size, President Wilson de- clared last night in an address before several thousand persons in the Aud- itorium “We king of the preparcdness plans of here. mean business,” he said in spe the dministration “We have given to the present fleet of the United States an organization such as it never had before, I am told by Admiral Fletcher,” the president said. ““And we have made preparations for immediate war so far as the navy is concerned.” Our Army Inadeguate. The army, the president said, as at Present constituted, not large enough, even for the ordinary duties of peace. . The president repeated his warn- ings that no time must be lost in| strengthening .the defenses of the na- tion. He declared that the govern- ment was doing everything it could for preparedne i “When I see some of my fellow citi- | zens spread tinder where the sparks are falling, T wonder what their ideal | of Americanism is,” the president said. America Cruelly Misjudged. America, the president said, had been cruelly misjudged by the nations | now at war. “I know that on the other side of the water there has been a great deal of cruel misjudgment with regard to the reasons why America has re- | mained neutral. Those looking at us from a distance do not feel the strong pulses of ideals and principles that| are in us. M ion of Pcace. “They do not feel the conviction of America that our mission is a mission | of peace and that righteousness can- not be maintained as a standard in the midst of arms. They do not realize that back of all our energy we,are a body of idealists much more ready to lay down our lives for a thought than for a dollar. “They suppose, some of them, that we are holding off because we can make money while others are dying, the most cruel misunderstanding that any nation has ever had to face—so wrong that it seems almost useless to try to correct it because it shows that the very fundamentals of our life are not comprehended understood.” Rulers Caused War. Rulers, not public opinion, brought about the present war, Mr. Wilson de- clared. thank God there is no man in the United States who has the authority to bring on war without the consent of the nation,” he said or Assert Principles of Law. “The task of the United States has been to assert the principles of law in a world in which the principles of law have broken down. “We are not now thinking of in- vasion of the territory of the United States,” the president declared. “That is not what is making us think. We are not asking ourselves shail we be prepared only to defend our own home and our own shores. that all we stand for? to keep the door shut securely against our | standing. enemies? What about the great trus- teeship set up for liberty of national government in the whole western hemisphere? We stand pledged to see that both continents of America ure to be left free to he used by their people as these people chcose to use them under a system of national, pop- ular sovereignty as absolutely un- changed as our own. Americas Growing Together. “At this moment the Americas are growing together upon that handsome privilege of reciprocal respect and de- fens: Detailed plans for strengthening the army and navy, and the aviation corps and for making munitions and arma- ment by the government were out- lined. The president spoke for nearly an hour. The auditorium was a white and blue, swung in festoons from rails and boxes, Back of the stage hung the American coat of arms on a field of blue. Man ur Four galleries beside were white with faces. Many hai sought in vain to obtain tickets ana Wi turned aw Twelve hundred police held in cheek the sidewalk throngs, clearing the street entirely of traffic between the hotel and the aua- jtorium. A brass band played po lar and national ai The meeting was opened with prayer by Iiev. Albert Joseph McCart- ney, the president and the audience Mr. Wilson was introducen by Frank C. Caldwell, president of the Industrial club. riot of red, ed Away. main floor FOUR FUNERALS IN HOME, ‘Waterford, Feb. 1.—Funeral vices were held simultaneously r- ves- terday from the Matthews home for four women of the household, all of | whom died within the past three days. Thursday Mrs. Lavinia Matthews died and Sunday morning—Iess than forty- eight hours later, Mrs. Elvira Daniels, Mrs. Matthews’ sister; Mrs. Mary Chapman and Mrs. Mary Muhger, all of whom made their home with Mrs. Matthews, passed away. Pneumonia ‘was the cause of all the deaths. Mrs. Matthews was 75, Mr: Daniels 71, | Mrs. Chaprman 74 and M Munger 86. Mrs. Daniels’ hushand died two weeks ago. Yesterday afternoon at the old Jordon Baptist church, where these women had worshipped for many years, funeral services for them were held at 2 o’clock, Rev. ‘Wolfenden officiating. {Kidney Medicine Dissolves | Gravel Stones | Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root sells | well with us because it invariably pro- duces good results in Kidney, Liver and Bladder troubles. We sold a dol- lar bottle to one of the inmates of our Soldiers’ Home near here, and ar ter using it he brought in about one dozen gravel stone, some as large as a pea, which he had passed. Ha states that he obtained wonderful re- lief from the use of Swamp-Root. ERNEST A. BROWN, Lafayette, Ind. Personally appeared before me th 28th of July, 1909, Ernest A. Brows, of the Brown Drug Co., who subscrii- ed the above statement and made oath that the same is true in substance and in fact. i DAVID BRYAN, Notary Public. Letter to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y. 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. New Shirts, One of ers of high grade shirts. and other materials; with from 13V/5c¢ to 18. 69c and 89c. They are rrench cuffs; extra full body—perfect fitt_ing. manufacturers guarantee that the colors will not fade. We show a fine assortment of patterns. All sizes Dage-Allen & Lo. (INCORPORATEDY HARTFORD infroductory Sale of Men’s High Grade Shirts the Leading Makes, 8%c for This Sale We have received, for sale on Tuesday, a display] of men’s shirts, from one of the leading manufacturs All new, of the latest ded signs for Spring. Made of percales, woven suisettes, stiff or The! reinforced yoke, These shirts will be put on sale at two prices, less than are usually asked for odds and ends at clearance time. ; See window display. Owing to the very low prices at which these shirts will be sold we cannot send them C. O. D. or on approval. None exchanged. 34 $4330 Tuesdass Fridays MEALS and BERTH INCLUDED BOTH WAYS Saturdays Exclusive ‘‘One Clas: ingly low rates to all Florida points. extra appointments of rooms en suite 36, North River, N Winter Trips and Cruises Separate and combined tours, 10 to 23 days, from New York to the American Mediterranean. AND POINTS IN CUBA Interesting_in its foreign atmos. phere. Excellent golf courses; splen- did surf bathing. Modem hote! NASSAU (BAHAMAS) A wonderful climate. Soft breezes and bzlmy air. Low rates of passage including meals and staterocm accomodations. Wiite for information WARD LINE General Offices, Pier 14, E. R., New York or any authorized ticket agency ortour bureau Beer, Wine or Liquors, Order Same from PHILIP BARDECK, 185 Arch St. 'Phone 482-2 Linonine A Great Home R emedy for Coughs Linonine brings relief, even in the most stubborn cases, and the world of medicine knows no surer curative agent for bron- chial afflictions than Linonine. When the throat is parched and te.e lungs sore with severe colds the flaxseed oil in Linonine promptly relieves this tion, and the other ingredients set to work to remove the in- flammation from membrane and tissue. AND IT DOESN'T MATTER WHAT FORM OF COLD YOU HAVE. LINONINE IS WHAT YOU WANT. ATl druggists—25c¢, 30c, $1. If You Want Good Bottled | and Colds| condi- | deesdays CLYDE LINE TO FLORIDA Cabin Service means maximum comfort at minimum cost. New York to Jacksonville without change i d February, return limit six months. Correspond- ket o o Moade pouts. . Wide chotos of accommodations, including with private bath at slight additional cos! Mid-Winter Bookings Now Open Write for full information and beautiful descriptive literature A. W. PYE, Passenger Traffic Manager. CLYDE-M ALLORY LINES v Au thorized Tourist Offices, New Britain, THE CURRAN DRY 600DS (€ Our Big Sacrific Sale of Cohen Stoe with our Annual Clearin Sale 'FXTRA SPECIAL FO | WEDNESDAY OU | BARGAIN DAY. | Window Shades in Holland assorted celors, 50c an 75c shades. 39 . Wed:, speirve. s A.G. { Turkish Towels, bleached 10c value. 76 | Bleached Pillow Cases, 45'bj 36, worth 14c. Wed., at : 10 ' Silk Dress Shields, assorteg sizes, worth 25c. 10 ~ Fast Color Apron Gingham worth 8c. : Wed. at, yard . ... 6 " Muslin Under Garments, if Skirts and Gowns—somé Combinations, 79¢ value. Wed.,, at.. 49 > Heavy Flannelette Kimong Cloth, worth 12%4c. 8 Children’s Gingham Dresses; 2 to 6 year'and 6 to 14 yean Worth up to 89c. -— 49¢ Coat Rack for sale that caj with the Cohen Stock.. #