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1y . .__pornsos T's fess expEPS Ly pott ways- osene 3 ay- 4 g most 11 of keros herever it 13 T yout ok gAY () can 40 Y Py lfi > ™ . ] ] § 5N LOOK FOR THE TONG BLUE CHIMNEY = — | EPERFECTION WE SOLICIT YOUR CHARGE ACCOUNT Don’t Fall Twice in the Same Place “When a man trips up he always looks back to see what caused his fall and marks the place as a spot to avoid,” says the Old Philosopher. You will pleasantly remember us if you PURCHASE YOUR FURNITURE HERE Back of every piece of Furniture we sell is the unqualified guarantee that you must be thoroughly pleased and satisfied with your Furniture before we consider the sale complete. We can save you 10 per cent. to 30 per cent. on Furniture if you buy now while the June Furniture Sale is on. Agents for White Mountain Refrigerators. Agents for Columbia Grafonolas. LOUIS HERRUP COMPLETE HOMEFURNISHINGS 1052-1054 MainSt., Hartford, Near Morgan St ic a word each day pays for a classified adv. in the Herald. - You get results. That’s what you want. ABUSIVE HUSBAND Tells How Gousinof “1. R hoed on Their Honeymoon. New York, June 7.—Mrs. Edith Hammersley Biscoe Roosevelt testi- | fied yesterday before Justice Clark of the Supreme court in her suit for a seperation from her husband, John Ellis Rosevelt, a cousin of Theodore Roosevelt. The litigants were married at the Washington home of Robert B. Roosevelt, the defendant’s brother, on Jan. 6, 1914, and five weeks later be- gan the quarrels that friends sought unsuccessfully to adjust, and which finally ended in the court action. After his wife sued Mr. Roosevelt { brought action to have the marriage annulled, and that action, tried first, resulted in a victory for Mrs. Roose velt. Then she sought alimony, say- | ing that her husband’s income was $40,000 a year, and that during their | brief married life togehter they had lived at the rate of $1,500 a month. She got alimony of $400 a month, | which she is still enjoying. Both Mr. and Mrs. Roosevelt had been married | before. He has two daughters by his first marriage. | In her complaint Mrs Roosevelt said that - her husband had treated her cruelly in Naples in March, 1914, | which was less than two months after their marriage, and that she had again | suffered at his hands in the Hotel | Savoy in London the following April, and again at their home, 818 Madi- son avenue, in this city, in October of the same year. Honeymoon Trip Unpleasant Mrs. Roosevelt testified that si® weeks after the mariage she and her husband sailed on the Adriatic for Alexandria. Asked if her relations with her husband were pleasant dur- ing the voyage, Mrs. Roosevelt re- plied, “Not at all pleasant.”” Then she told of the quarrel in the Naples Hotel after a day of motoring and sight seeing. She said she was very weary, and had retired early. About 10 o’clock Mr. Roosevelt awakened her, she said, and when she asked him to please let her alone he flew into a rage and choked her. She threatened to call for help and he then desisted. “Were there any marks on neck?” she was asked. “There were a great many,” she re- plied. “I spoke to Howard Meredith about it two days later, and Mrs. Meredith also saw the marks, because | they were visible in evening dress.” The witness explained that she had | met the Merediths on board ship on the journey over. After that they traveled together, going to Rome after leaving Naples, and then to London where they all put up at the Savoy. ‘While at this hotel, on April 10, 1914 Mrs. Roosevelt said she had spent the day shopping with Mrs. Meredith and at night the whole party went to a theater and then they had refresh- ments at the Romano cafe. They got back to the hotel about midnight. What happened then Mrs. Roosevelt described in this way: “During the evening Mr. Roosevelt acted in a peculiar way. He left the box and did not come back for a long time. At Romano’s he was moody and when we got to our apartment I told him that he had been very rude. That made him angry. He raised his voice and swore. I went to my room and he followed me using insulting language. I ordered him to leave and he grabbed me by the throat, threw me on the bed and threatened to break my bones un- less I obeyed him.” Mrs, Roosevelt said she called the Merediths on the tlephoné and that Mr. Meredith went away with Mr. Roosevelt while Mrs. Meredith re- mained with her. “I was very nervous,” she said, “and my gown was torn off my shoulders.” Bitter Quarrel at Sayville | After a five months’ stay abroad Mr. and Mrs. Roosevelt returned to th country and lived in their town house | until May, when they went to their summer hom2 at Sayville, L. I. Another quarrel occurred between them on Oct. 3, 1915, on the veranda | of the Sayville house. She had dined | with the Robert B. Roosevelts on the adjoining estate, her husband having | refused to go with her. This quarrel grew out of a difference of opinion as to how the coming winter should be spent. Mr. Roosevelt wanted to jour- ney leisurely through some of the southern states, stopping wherever he pleased and as long as he pleased, but Mrs. Roosevelt did not care for such | a trip. Mr. Roosevelt, the wi?ne said, grew very angry and used insulting | language, and Robert B. Roosevelt rebuked him for using such language in the presence of ladies. Under cross - examination Mrs. Roosevelt denied that she had ever | been in the habit of going to teas and luncheons at Sherry’s and Delmonico’s | and not returning home until late. She said that before their marriage Mr. Roosevelt told her that his income | was $60,000 a year. Concerning her | relations with her husband’'s family Mrs. Roosevelt said: | “I never was on good terms wi[hi his family, because they were always talking about money.” After an affidavit from the Mere- | diths was read, corroborating the part | of the testimony in which they were involved, the case was adjourned. your U. OF C. GETS $3,000,000. Gifts for Past Year Announced Hon- orary Degrces Awarded. Chicago, June 7—Gifts aggresgat- ing almost $3,000,000 have been re- ceived by the University of Chicago the last year, President Harry Pratt Judson announced at the graduation exercises. Of this amount $9,000,000 was from Hobart Willlams, former Chicagoasy ) - ! &mmu “um\“ g . 0 “ now of Rhode Island, and §500,000 from La Verne Noyes of Chicago. Degrees were conferred on 789 per- sons. Roscoe Pound, dean of the Harvard Law school, received the y degree of LL. D.; Henry C. president of Oberlin college, C. Bitting of St. Louis, de- grees of D. D, and W. H. Welsh, pro- | f - of pathology of Johns Hopkins University, of) LI D Joba P, Rackefeller, Jr., appearing the degree | | | et i ‘ in behalf of his cipal speaker. father, was the prin- HORLICK’S THE ORIGINAT, MALTED MILK Cheap substitutes cost YOU same price At va%vY Vi 74 A VA4 A A U B A 4 TA AU AT VA T "nnbnnum.muu""uuhrl"nu WA W VA, W Y V.d W VAW W Vi Vi WA V4 Vi v Vi A VA W Bl PETIT =YL VA ¥ Vi ¥ Vi KA AS WALV T GVAYAN Y, %% NRLYi5 %A % AT a4\ 4 VAVA Vi ) , Vi % 4 VAV W Arwm ey A i YaTa a0 DA o s W4 VA Y4 %4 VA W,V VA4V w4 e v v TN SN D AN AN AT AT ALY AT A Y T N A e A0 00 L% A7 A AT AT AT AT ANAT AT RV AT A REREERERRGR ST IIN N . 0a AU A VAU TAS U o YAVAYA U U A VAV VA Va%TA%% 7 ANUUdY AAAAURY S SRR ERRRAR AND S TR AV AT ALY AR RN DISSES Sow Bl Ay A A0 AD ("4 V5 VA AV Y YAV ¥ AR K YA VL YaAUTH A MUY YA WAt an o DA WA PAATA VAL You can’t smoke fine words or pret- ty pictures. Good tobacco is what counts—in a ciga- rette. ZIRA would not have won the leadership over many older brands of 5 Cent cigarettes, if we had not used “better tobacco to make them famous.” Thousands of smokers would not be buying ZIRA Cigarettes in preference to more costly brands, if we had not used “better tobac- co to make them famous.” The better tobacco and how that tohacco is handled — alone are responsibie for the amazing success of ZIRA—The Mildest Cigarette. CONTRACTOR D! An hour later Patrolmd Gllmartin found Binr bo! the road front of St home, in Centr venue about three miles from home. A bullet hole was temple 1 beside the bod volver exploded g The police believe through worr He was 42 Bronxville Man Found With Bullct Wound in Tempie. AD IN ROAD. [ | | in | | New York, June 7—Alfred Binns, a contractor and real cstate operator, of New York, left his home on Saga- more road, Bronxville, yesterday telling his wife he was going to office ,and walked briskly down t road. n one