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ke | SERVICE --- SERVICE --. SERVICE i That is all you hear from the manufacturer and dealer. They usually mean that they will tighten the nuts and bolts, but Bloody - Noses am_i Black Eyesf not mention an extensive stock of parts. Far be it from them to mention this as parts cost money, especially their parts. Follow Clash With Teachers | § New Yark, May 13.—Erasmus Hall | § H /“\) s ‘»))B’“' ot 'j‘ - = = High school in Flatbush was the | 5 i 4 e {1 e Bcene of open rebellion yesterday, | § We have established branch e N - o e v When more than 400 pupils attacked oo ; ’ / & ~ > ur u = ea er ten male members of the faculty & iy 3 3 stationed at the main entrance to | stores at i - ‘ S . —lP i e BN &y | PUTNAM, M. R. Joy Garage prevent pupils from leaving the grounds in recess time. Several & o Q o : ; , {eachers were bowled over and many | § : ] <l S e g ! 4 4 - ¥/ boys felt the farce of teachers fists. [ ~ 18 e et X £ n Ty 3 . DAN]ELSON, C. H. Pellett The riot was the result of the . 3 D \ ; e - pupils’ campaign to have the lunch [ ew Drl ain - ) ) 5 ; . ; MOGOSUP. W. H. H d rooms taken from private persons A\G ¢ 4 . - 3 e . : £ ] v N o o eywoo and put under control of the general 1 _ Sl v A organization of the school, as they [ 3 k - . GRSr - : = 2 g : STAFFORD SPR‘NGS, Huds The pupils say they pay exorbitant | Qi . ® 3 ’ ; ‘ z 2 i / Garage COmpany prices for ordinarr food in small ? ; gl ; a0 quantity. They also complain that y i : x . : OC they must patronize the lunch rooms | | i - d ooy el g f ¢ R KV]LLE, A- M. Burke o1 bring thelr own food as no one | M ¢\ ; _ el . . | may leave school at recess time. { ; : 4 i } He ) f ¢ SOMERS Burke Auto A week ago last Monday several | : 2 Lo § e > s e e o | 0 e e = ' : BROAD BROOK, Cahill Auto S uth Man(:hes':er e i1 L Em s g b | WAREHOUSE POINT, J. J. Cah are in several other high schools. Horace Greeley, 3d, that he draw a | petition for pur to sign. Horace | irew the petition and 2,500 put down 3 e L e . = e : i ; e g i S THOMPSONVILLE, G. S. Phel their names. The pupils say they iried to present the petitian to Miss | § e Torrington ol , ety JETmpy et T 8 b & Company B. Gunnison, but she refused to ac- | - ! b : i “ h; | — e 8 SUFFIELD, Henry L. Cutler faculty heard vesterday that | GRANBY, E. B. Case roon came the boys met on the cam- pus and walked toward the entrance | singing school songs. Greeley i Lp the gate and p to the front. In the archway were | i} we also have 23 Sllb-dealers ten professors. There was a cry, COLLINSVILLE, S. E. Brown UNIONVILLE, Ward C. Parsol LAKEVILLE, John Smith SHARON, Morse, Stevens & Smi KENT, J. Henry Smith NEW MILFORD, F. J. Hosfor LITCHFIELD, Flynn & Doyle TERRYVILLE, Leor Bunnell SOUTHINGTON, Richard Ellic BRISTOL, N. E. Nystrom NEW HARTFORD, Maxfie Bros. ANDOVER, C. Parker Stearn When your buy a FORD have a chain of service “AROUND THE GLOBF’ yush, and the mass of pupils hurled ” i themselves at the defenders of the h C h diem ! 1 northern Connecticut who The guards steadied themselves, | id but the tide swept them from their ' | h h P d f d H th feet and they rolled upon the side- | M ave thousands o gliars wor walk clinging to a boy apiece. Mare " than a hundred boys gained the | [ fF d g tran o handred o sineo ine | of Ford parts continually in stock. campus with bleeding noses and i swollen eyes. The girl students | [ T h clapping. The insurgents outside marched to Flatbush and Church avenues, where | [ e they held an indignation meeting, Y g then in a few minutes returned to f: school. The faculty men were still on | guard at the gate and as the boys came they were seized and taken to | K the office of Miss Turner, though some escaped by another rush ‘in, : Miss Turner at her home last night | § declared that a few students violated the rule and went out, but denied that the faculty had guarded the | gate. She said the food petition had never been brought to her official notice, and that the school authori- Ask the other dealers to ShOW ties were ready to receive suggestions as to the lunch rooms. That the revolt is not over was in- . you their stock of parts before dicated by the talk of pupils after school, when it was generally agreed that all should bring their lunches you buy their car....-fjarf\ the prices and boycott the lunch rooms. o ; | & : ) d A 20 o . BUENOS ATRES TO CELEBRATE, of same. 5 o ‘ X 3 4 i B y i fiurs at On Buenos Aires, May 13.—The com- mittee in charge of the organization | of the National Centenary Bxhibition | to be held in the month of July, is | now in full operation. The Exhibi- tion will be held in the spacious building situated at Forida and Sar- - ) i %) g g miento streets. A large number of y ¥ Gy 5 ; local industrial and comercial firms, | o . i also a number of North American, | \;}7 B . - : Brazilian and Uruguayan concerns | gt e f Home Office, Hartford, Conn. ‘MN BRANCH, 22 MAIN S boys had decided to leave school ! ° : g 3 3 S E : S e e e : { L) A MR S Ty Rl e 4l SIMSBURY, Curtiss & Prowe AT JAP UMBRELLA EXPORTS. i Tokio, May 13.—The expor: trade | in Japanese umbrellas is rapidly in- - creasing. In recent years the exports regulation of the church in Chihua- timated that at least ono million per- [ socialists endeavored to offset the |submersible to superdrea ??Dun'ed (,hn \;l"e to $8.500.000 and VlLLA Noral sons saw the demonstration. preparedness spirit by circulation | were dressed for mepegb is year the figures are hec: At e illarealtt 5 : v : £ 2 % 8 C 3 g expected lOk A proclamation by Villareal in thc 20,000 YWomen in Linc. among the spectators of circuiars. | only vessels without colors be exceeded. Manufacturers in Japan st r of PR < 5 i i simmer of 1914 on the trehtment to Twenty thousand women are in | 2¢r0ss Fifth avenue from the review- | submarines built by an stand the Woman's Peace Party are now overwhelmed with orders | hHalsi % ated f given followers of Huerta, createc S z ing g 5 - e R e e N e e DRye : o the pageant. Workers in 200 occu- S8 i L company for the British gof much interest in Mexico as it W Ipmmm. lawyers and other profession- | TUN& out & banner with the inscrip- |and interned at the local ‘ tion: “There are only one hundred |the duration of the war tries in the South Pacific because of interpr. : 3 i preted as meaning an expre ey i T o o e D b ey ! S Az DEeR o al men, city officials and city em- 1 : 5 D & of the general attitude of Constitu e el ou A ) e thousand of you. You are not the land an 2 i and Europe generally. only patriots. Two million familics, | tional chiefs on the subject of 1uc the National Guard in uniform ! five hundred thousand mine worke AUCTION ! . which was causing much speculaticn . e T ey - Has Been Soldier, Statesman and | 2 sorics, “oe tng: e amens zor- |Parade of 146,000 to Arouse |ihousende of veterans of the Spanien | 205 o iaried aber of Ameriee axe | we witl s TCTIONE 2 opposed to what you and Wall street | Dickerman Bros. Co., Rivers AI-M[]ST BA D i eign nations. Villareal opposed the . iotic F TS G L 1 e e Ed wish of part of the Constitutionalist C D RO, G 77 70 lare marching for. Are you sure you | Milldale. Cc 21 = WIT IIOILE ewspaper | party for drastic punishment of those ny § Patrlo lOA ervor | The marchers were divided into | 2Te right.?” 191 A ’-nm",‘uim\(\l\ d,]:: T‘hay ! who had opposed the party and said e =t e | The had ceiesdithe anty andisel sixty-four divisions. The hour —set 25 head Holstein Friesia A, S A A T || o D T for the start was ‘1‘-“( a. m., and it Navy. Yard Thronged headed by Aggie Colantha- areal has had a busy career as sol- | General Villareal is known s a stu- New York, May 13—New York's |I§ l""““‘}““‘””“”l "}““' ']' t division “"{ loem; bulls, Pietertje Co | rea i S A A reach the disbanding point unti Boston, May 13—The Charlest Meibloem. Herd consists o dent of economical and social prob- |belief that the nation should are | ot o . 1e Charlestown and cial ¥ prepare | 14.39 o'clock tonight. Reiien lot of fancy individuals, brd dier, statesman, newspaperman I b Al S i e ems. e advocated suppression Oof | for war was expressec RN vy Yard, in forty vessels of Started with Blist Pimpl authority on agrarian, soclal and re- | 4o gocial evil attributing to it many LaasoxT H ek Ty Demands for a place in the parade [ . 1. G above bulls, Your opportun arte istery Pimples. ! ; : | the socia 4 g to i vl e e it e : v ; war have heen assembled, was visii- | g e o et A ligious problems in Mexico. 1% Mo troubles of ihe henieyme 5,000 men a men marchins | so greatly cxceeded the time and | foundation stock of the bes tched so Badly and Hurt so Ho helped Ricardo Flores Magon |He studiea thoroughly all aspects of |\ ONC Of the greatest procossions |space that the promoters were com- ed by thousands of persons today in | These Cows are heavy milk ! QLB N A NasDec ever assembled for the promotion of e reject 60,00 5 i 1th a “Navy * pro- | all have large udders, in 8 Was Almost Crazy. e i in Tos | the social evil in Switzerland on a | CvC A% I '%’me:m‘:) )r‘_vufl( \o.gx,l‘r' .mpluu.unfi_\_ connection with a “Navy Day" pre S1lflve acpeladaas i . s .| Vis Curope. e - 3eginning a he atte at he am, arrange: 5 : e ) lividuals ¢ I — Angeles to revolt against Porfirio Diaz | 5S¢ 0 Turope Twenty abreast, filling the streefs | SPRitis of Mo : : I8 SerrauRed ity thefNassa ol ey o dling that (s Hlsht, tRog southern tip of Manhattan Island, the Aux S 7 . Auxiliary of the Naval Relief socicty. | from calve seven year & In his work as soldier, General | . & - ek from curb to curb, keeping in step | divisions fell in line at intervals all 1 to get the best, May 1 HEALED BY CUTICURA | pbetore Francisco Madero took the | Viilareal took an active part in tho |t A : Among tt incipal 1 a < 5 | s 2 > pé C 1 ] W ey v rer roa o Y, | A ng I’ ipa P! strationrs | chance feldantazitation whichtresultedlin | canipalens faboul I Monierey it iiho 1(/! ]; llllnm ic. ;f\o& of two hundred | the way up lower Broadw Cente mong the principal demonstrati nancel B he beeny My »ands/ the parade that began this | and Lafayette street and Fifth avenue, | of naval preparedness were the man- M} : - Farm located at Dickerman® four or five Mexicans spending some | SUmmer of 1914. I ornine twililias . 12 ¥ ¢ SOAP AND OINTMENT : 4 E et = - | morning will last for 12 hours, or |nearly to the reviewing stand erected | euvers of the L-1, representative of | NAer €L 0 #E OBt ime in 2 federal penitentiary longer. in Madison Square. the latest type of submarines in tho | MIUCRC: | A0, THO miles ¥+ United States navy and the launch- D& he Meriden andl B 4 Sharccnwithi o oiai oo itaen e Many business houses are closed e . . “I had cczema which started with blis= | noutrality 1a the big trouble in G ile the city lives itself up to its ”r‘n \\;d y llmnm('m Miicial ing of a torepdo by the torpedo boat "‘" t({xl&l;.n !'d..v. door every tery pimples along the edge of my hair and Withi Magon Villireal editeal Re sickness— causing. depromion of elebration of Preparedness Day. The Sroy trom o ontaining | gostroyer O'Brien el Green . ne r from W went all over my head. It itched so badly | goneration, a Mexican paper pub spirits, irritability, nervousness idewalks from the Battery to Ffty- |thousands of spectators, Major Ger- | ™‘my " qopy ships, ranging from | Z0Mes P res s enera . A Mexica - SR, i s sness, \inth stree E i fni > leral Leonarc ‘ tear Admira Sk ; rom farm, Ches o and burt so that I was al- | i hoq in Los Angeles in /support of imperfect vision, loss of memory. nth street, the start and finish of ral Leonard Wood, Tea sl A L Shsshice cai 3 most crazy, and I could not | (2" U iR SRS T D e Poor sleep, loss of appetite, etc.—stop 0 parade, arc crowded. It is es- | Nathaniel B. Usher, commandant of Auctioneer’s Notice: As th sleep, and had to walk the | O a ped plan a So- it with a regular course of the New York Navy Yard, a Mayor man Brothers are interested| . cialist commonwealth which it was h : oo n o 4 | busir floor at night. My hafr all [ o85St cOmT frars el Mitchell reviewed the parade. r § | Dusiness they have placed th fol out and T was almoss | ended fo -:r::.\ln'r ‘m Lower kol A A ek aiatbooy of (el marcninz | B 9 j | herd of Holsteins in my han| bald. I was in the house for | nances for which were collected by thousands was composer of emploves | B for the high dollar a v ~ Magon's partisans. After failure of | F - nd wi two weeks. o G il 60 2 We offer One Hu lin shops and stores. In addition di- | 8 serve. This is a very choicd o 6 e ] ndred Dollars Re- || 7 (bt ino.commonweatth projrt, Viarer § MANDRAKIE § s 5 by sstbetn T |sisons wirt eompocen or topriints”| § ANIMAL FERTILIZERS § | eatai, ot il incesiors o “The trouble lasted about became an ordinary street lahorex in peich S Soiir Shihh veoes. Ak Bt Taniy 3 ot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. s of the theater and allied arts, | | istered or cligible to be, but S - joine : : Il % nd Tankage, & . bu wreatments, but they did nov do me any | LOS Anseles but later joined Madero Hall's Catarrh Cure has been taken |o , architects, clergymen, bus. | § o g__) neglect it has never been good. Then I got a cake of Cuticura Soap | and was sent as his agent to Barce- e L e fon MRt clNpast ren, banke 2d brokers, phy- | § “Made in Connecticut any one attending this sale and one box of Cuticura Ointment, and in a ]"r{?‘-”“m“‘"-‘ : ; as the most 23\ab1é“55m§5’5°§2? sicians and surgeons, and public | @ SEOR. @ | judge of Choice Cattle will rd few days 1 saw little fine hairs coming. areal has been known as a Hall { scl hz or the owners are Now I am entiroly healod and have mo | Strong antl-clerical and has advocated |8 :::Ky“i,fg;’;"?g{ '""ld f'e.ely"t’}‘,‘t el na T ons et T e et fm"‘]‘ ; : e Connecticut Farms | s v’):‘v At neni marks of any kind.” (Signed) A. Freniers; | radical reforms in the Catholic S R b e pelling the Poison from the Blood and | I% f¢ WORIE " SeClon were Leafl | § rrisbies Fertilizersfor all crops aremade § | it is one of the choicest herds Plantsville, Conn., July 29, 1915. Church in Mexico. He opposed for- [ lating the liver—fhe specific for indl- B et i caased POTtions. CLopiELenceranaeis fantstident | of Animal Tankage, Bone, Blood and High fered for sale at Public Aucti eign born priests in Mexico and whe gestion, headache, biliousness, heart- s fter 3 se taken Hall’s Catarrh |from the department stor s Grade Chemicals; and in fine mechanical e or sale at il g pries A a n L T eadad . Cure for a < syt e e W s ¥ conaition. Free booklet. New England States; your = & be well spent attending this| Sample Each Free by Mail | 1. o 5 5 oy 2 . . was governor of Nuevo Leon he Purely vegotablo. Plain or Sugar Coated.” preav imnrovementi@ingy f Ny 4 ) . gar Coated.” 2 IOy your general fense, @ romen's Prepare. 8 With 32-p. Skin Book on request. Ad- | was the first Constitutionalist cxecu- 80 YEARS' CONTINUOUS SALE & 2’\‘“‘_{}'1;“ Start taking Hall's Catarrh Y‘!: "h:”all‘i‘gnfl/w 1\\ onen :1’“1\”1‘ THE L. T. FRISBIE COMPANY this herd is of the best blood dross post-catd **Cuticara, Dept. T, Bos« | tive to espouse strict rules for con- i LTI Ee e | L St G SR O R || B B S New Haven, Conne Wi n T e ton.” Sold throughout the world. duct of his church in his territory. =S suNelonckidSon, Tillade pina S ) F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, Ohlo, | Anti-Dreparedns e ez | vicinity,. ROBERT M Vilal follow Co il e 5 T esrn) Eola b: o e » Ohlo. = Sedneasib0UIS RIS yneer, 1026 Main S ilal followed these rules largely in : v all Druggists, 7o, (e Woman's Peace Larty and the | tioncer, 1026 Main St., Hart