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v ADMIRAL CHADWICK J roups ¢ ully and Jahelithe et SUaE | packa ith a procise state- | H !_‘ AT Al i (,‘ ‘; ‘ Uv, Nty ‘vt‘ 1 !A 4] ; draft executive is ordered | N o eacnoral boutd < Yiac O of [, § Navy's Mos record of d nency or ¢ . | et The local board must | il n trant Must Be Compiled |52 s o et T e e | Brilliant Leaders "o« c C ma e eds but not con- ctired, at Newport, R 3 L D e o) Bl B s e e S R ¢ L { by the Century Association which re 1 he of the Local boards are to examine all ir t<:lx-.-~1 NQ‘anu message to that o e ] e m.‘“,(.::“"“ | their files for cach | 5 : \ ) o hoa 3 erhs student \oet upon the front ristrant a cover sheet upon v T of which at least the following ntri is nt. addre: order n number, sistrati serial o1 : im e ; '”;” s Joard and code number he 1ocal heard. All classification 9 <o he carefully examined There are also nu- ities which the local to perform according to ards in this ¢ records have all be going over the papers wnt will therefore casior. Both boards arc well ca up on their work and may be ame to report their records com- work ach re sum- not | pletc but be- the ar nation they will he made ietailed and acc is this true in of delin Alfred Swanson, one of rate finest” a member of ( 102nd regiment, is home from France nts some of the 10t been for er participati 1d the nced R tablel paktle srpetuation n v( »“” eracy A veteran of the Tt trouble. Swanson was one } 7 boys that left this city ) who have | company, ol to Camp tt, New Haven, he “shoved ¥ for I7 in September ance’” he saw Chemin-des-Dames, Seiche- action t prey, Ch u Thierry, St. Mihiel anc the Ar T He was wounded with January Wl or district shrapnel and still limps about with | =hall be addre h corres- | the aid of a ca nd no pa r document _ o all be sent to a local or v S except by state head SAGL OSE . the state in which the The pool team of New Britain ted. All correspondence jerie F. O. . went down to defeat e L ekl o 1906, the hands of the Hartford aerie these boards sh 1 he ad- v < of this In this city vesterday afternoon. The \so keep One satisfyving thing in the afternoon’s pondence Sport was the vietory of Fred to th= local or di Pick Swanson over James De ocal hoards are instructed to Monte. “Hockers” Gammerdinger of their reports to the state Hartford refereed the games yester- oard after they have closed all the day and on next Sunday when the teams h again in Hartford Michael strict and 1 T. Kerwin will be the referee CURRA ' JANUARY SALE ~ CONTINUE ' Good Bargains in Every Department f: 81x90 Bleached Sheets ........... $1.00 | $5.00 Colored Bed Spreads ........ $4.00 ¢ 19c Huck Guest Towels ........... 15¢c 25¢ Huck Hem-Stitched Guest Towels 19¢ 59c Heavy Huck Towels, large ..... 45c 59c Bleached Mercerized Towels, large 50c $1.80 Mercerized Hemmed Napkins .. $1.50 Nl Mustin Underwear Marked Down $1.00 Gowns or Combinations for .... 79c $1.25 Gowns or Combinations for .... 98¢ $1.50 Gowns or Combinations for . ... $1.19 $1.75 Gowns or Combinations for . ... $1.39 $1.98 Gowns or Combinations for . ... $1.50 Unusual Values in Coats, Suits, Skirts, ‘Waists, etc., on Second Floor. i TRADE AT The Curran DryGoods Go. 381-383-385 Main St. New Britain tainin dressed to state tate. The state hoar fr separate file ail cor ridcords risory hoarc P R TS TR mplying with the in- | detailed accuracy and | .} Ensor Chdwick, retired, N. §. N, en- | forest. | i‘ at H. 8. Emmon’s cafe, NEW BRITAIN DAILY: HER nd writer on | | naval 2 r Admiral Chadwick will have most enduring fame, al- though he served during the Spanish- American war as chief of staff {o Rear Admiral Sampson and was in all the most serious engagements in which the North Atlantic squadron tools part. He w y President MceKinley, = others of { the oflicers of that squadron, to he i promoted five n for his gal- ber 1 lJant conduct in battle. { For seven vears, from 1882 to 1889, { Rear Ac 1 Chadwick was naval attache of the American embassy in | { London and, was commended by Sec- retary of the N ‘whose exiraor v and { judgment during six years of difficult { service in England on the con- | tinent have had a last influence up- | on naval developments in this coun- | Born Mebruay | town, W. Va., ong 24, 1844, in Morgan- | tear Admiral French | tered the United States Naval Acad- emy in 1861, at swport, R. L., | whither it had been removed on the | | beginning of the Civil war. In Sep- | tember, 1872, he was appointed in- | structor of mathematics in the naval { academy, which post he held until 1875. Chadwick married in Novem- ber, 1878, Cornelia Miller, daughter | of John Bleeker Miller, Utica, N. Y. In 1878 Chadwick was given a | vear's leave of absence to report on | the naval training systems in Eng- | 1and, France and Germany, preparing a work which is still recognized as standard. He was appointed in 1882 maval attache to the American embassy in London, where he remained until 1899. In 1861 he was named a mem- ber of the first board to establish la- | bor organizations of navy vards on the present civil service basis and he was Inspector of ship building at the New York navy vard, where the bat- | tleship Maine was-then building. | President Cleveland appointed him chief of the bureau of equipment July 1, 1893, as successor to Commo- | dore George Dewey. In 1897 he was | ordered to the command of the bat- tleship New York, flagship of the North Atlantic squadron, under Ad- miral Sicard. | The Maine was destroyed in Hava- na harbor while the squadron was at Dry Tortugas and Chadwick was ap- pointed a member of the board of in- quiry into the disaster. After his service in the Spanish- American war, Read Admiral Chad- wick was appointed President of the { Naval War College at Newport, occu pying that position in 1903-4. Rear Admiral Chadw tired February 28, 1906, since which time he has written much that is au- thoritative and of permanent value in d to naval conditions In this other countries. One of his most portant works is entitled “The Rel tions of the United States and Spain: Diplomacy”, which gives an intimato account of the events that led to the Spanish-American war. DECLINES 0 PAY FINE | George Sparmer Likewise Refuses to | i Let His Wife Pay § and Appeals to Superior Court. Joseph Sparmer refused to pay a fine of $7 imposed this mor | him for wife heating, and likew! fused to allow his wife to pay it, in spite of her request that she be al- | lowed to do so, and an appeal was en- tered. Sparmer was arrested Satur- day night at his home upon complaint of his wife. N Sparmer came to | Officers Pac and Sirolls and, clad only in a night dress and overcoat, asked that the officers assist her in getting into her home. FHer husband, she said, had put her out of. the housa shortly before. Sparmer claimed to- day that his wife had locked him in the house and he was powerless to efther let her in or get out himself. Officers Strolls and Pac arrested him by pulling him through an open win- dow. “I came from the window out myself, the court. The case of Salvatore Magnifico has been continued until Saturday morn- ing at the request of his lawyer, At- torney Yeomans of Hartford. Mangi fico s charged with burglary. Tle w shot while robbing Franklin's shoe store on East Main street by Officer John Stadler and has since been con- fined to a bed in the New Britain Gen eral hospital. Mangifico lives on ' Front street, Hartford. Bonds were fixed at $1,000 Leo Okula was in chambers for ths theft of a watch from his father. Ho sold the watch to the waiter in a Main ¢ street restaurant for $7.26. When told that he could not recover the $7.25, the waiter announced his intention to take legal action. COLLINS IS WOUNDED. Willlam Walsh of Elm street has recelved a letter from Frank J | Collins, stating that the latter was { wounded in action in the Argonns | Collins, who was one of the | local draftees has been overseas for | several months, during which time he { participated in the St, Mihtel and Verdun smashes, He was formerly employed as a walter and h,m.»mlm‘ Sparmer said several times to | J&8 ALDS Specials Tonight Tonight 7.30 to 9 P. M., $1.00 Negligee Shirts, 2 for $1.00 at Besse-Leland’s .4 Tonight 7.30 to 9. P. M., All Wool 2-piece Un- derwear $2.45 each, Tonight 2 for $2.45 at Besse-Leland’s Tonight 7.30 to 9 P. M., Any Hat or Cap in Our Store 1-2 Price at Besse-Leland’s Tonight 7.30 to 9 P. M. Children’s $3.00 Sweat- ers, $1.50 Last Chance at Besse-Leland’s Not a Monday Special. Any Overcoat in Our Store $12.00 off Regular Price, the Biggest Bargain in Our Store at Besse-Leland’s Besse-Leland Co. 38 Stores 38 (Cities Largest Clothing Organization in New England