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| MARSAY HAZELOIN | CREAM ‘ It relieves chaps caused by wind or hard water | 25¢ Bottle | .The Dickinson Drug Co. EXCELLENT VALUES IN INVENTORY SHOWS SOME SMART COATS FOR MISSES AND WOMEN They are of imported mixtures and Normandy Bolivia with col- lars of Raccoon, Wolf, Mole and A an Opossum. Formerly to § AT $39.75 Women's Suits of Duvet de laine and Velour—plainly tail- ored or fur trimmed—at three prices $14.95 $19.95 “It Pays to buy Our Kind.” ‘Women's Shop, 140 Trumbull St. ~ City Items Balloon and novelty dance, Friday night, Ieb. 2nd. T. A. B. hall. Adm. 40c.—advt. P Worthy Temple, Pythian Sisters, will meet tomorrow night at 8 o'clock in Judd's hall. | Good skating, Pilz-Rhodes rink.— advt. The regualr meeting of the W. C.| T. U. will be held at the Center | church on Tuesday, February 6. | Radio sets and supplies at Morans’ —advt. | Mr. and- Mrs. Frank Wortcheck of 236 Maple street are receiving eon- | gratulations on the birth of a son. French Hat Shoppe Professional Bldg. —advt. . Meet me at Schmarr's for dinner.— advt. ILL 17 HOURS, NOW FIND BULLET NEAR HER HEART Blood Stains On Underclothing First Intimation Woman Had She Shot Herself New York, Feb. 1,—After she dis- covered she had shot herself seven- teen hours before, Mrs, Elimore Mar- Kker, 47, a widow of 80 Montague street, Brooklyn, was taken to St. Peter’s hospital gesterday in a serious condition with buller above her heart. Mrs. Marker was cleaning a pistol in her home Tuesday afternoon and accidentally discharged it. She went on cleaning the weapon, but nervous from the shock of the re- port and developed a severe ace. She says there was no pain in the region of the wound. The headache became worse and felt | | head- | HENRY CLEWS DIES | INHIS B3RD YEAR| Financial Genins in Two Gmt!' Wars ' New York, Peb, 1—~Henry Clews is dead | The citisen and financier whese range of active cansequence in the af fairs of his country and the world| extended beyond the Civil War—in| the winning of whieh, he was ered. ited with a distinguished part by ne less than Mr, Linceln's secretary of the treasury-—passed away his home, 27 West 51st street, at &) v'clock yesterday afternoon, He was elghty-two last August, He had been bed-ridden since early in November when he bheeame 1l of pneumonia, Death was directly due to chronie bronchitis. Until Tuesday last it had been ex- pected he would recover, Then there was a sudden chan He died sur- rounded by his wife, his daughter, Hisie, and the latter's husband, Her- bert Parsons, and Miss Loulse Clews, the daughter of his son, Henry Clews, Jr. It was anneunced tentatively the funeral services will be: held Satur. day mornin, Interment will be in Woodlawn cemetery, Bare in England and early headed for the ministry, Henry Clews be-| came an intensive American and one of the world's ablest and most suc- cessful financiers by devotion to a §imple code described in his famous| book, “Fifty Years in Wall Street,” in| Jjust four words—truthfulness, hon- esty, courage, hard work, His youth and young manhood, crowded with activities and suc- cesses that are history not only in Wall street and America but among men of finance everywhere, were spent before many, If indeed not most, of today's big men of Wall street were born. There could be, perhaps, no more striking perspective of the astonish- ing span of Mr. Clews' effectiveness as an American than that embraced in these two facts: Salmon P. Chase, Lincoln's secre- tary of the treasury, congratulated on the unexpected success of the great 5-20 loan flotation to finance the Union cause, said the credit belonged to Henry Clews in New York and Jay Cooke in Philadelphia. In the great war, more than half a century later, Mr. Clews was treas- urer of the Belgian Relief fund, of the British War Relief club andqthe Roumanian Relief fund, being decor- ated by the Belgian and Roumanian governments for his distinguished services. | Wealth of Great Deeds. ! Out of the great wealth of his use- fulness as a citizen and financier, some of the better known contributions were his assistance to the Japanese | government in establishipg that em-| pire’'s modern system of finance; or- ganization of the committee of seven- ty, which overthrew the Tweed ‘Ring in New York; invention of the stock quotation board used in brokerage of- fices the world over; initiation of the custom of giving clients the names of brokers from whom stocks were pur-| Chased for them, thus driving much dishonesty from .the business; initia- | tion of daily *“sermons” to customers | d the public; and, not less than| y of these, his quiet, but abounding charity. In Wall Street no man went to bim in vain %or help. Born in Staffordshire, Aug. 14, 1540, the son of a widely known pottery | manufacturer, Mr, Clews was study- ing for Cambridge to give his life to | the church whan his father brought him to America on a business trip. Struck by the romance of American {the advantages of a youthful appear- office, Ineluding the mayeralty nom- ination in 1870 and appeintment %o the Port Collectorship Wrate Two Notable Books He was known many thousands in and out of b ess life as the author of "Pweniy-clght Years I\\'nll & " YPifty Years in Wall | Btreet,” The latier perhaps the dhly | authority on many of the stirring (| &vents of that period. His services to the Japanese financial mission of . T 'fil . | half & century ago indelibly hmpressed Cut This Out and Save ife :| s nume in the history o the erent Subject to Sore Throat Aspirin Gargle (| Mikado decorated him Commander of (| the Most Distinguished Order of the Rising Sun, Mp, Clews was a member of more |than a score of internagional, na- tional, State and civie organizations and social and country clubs, As ene ter, gnd gargle throat thoroughly. Re- | o the Nation's most successful men peatdn two hours if nepessary. of finance he was regarded as a rich Tlo sure you use only the genuine | mapn, But no authoritative estimate of Bayer Tablets of Aspirin, marked | his wealth is as yet available, with the Bayer Cross, which can be | His wite was Miss Luey Madison had in tin boxes of twelve tablets for | Worthington of Kentucky, a grand few cents, {nicce of President Madison, His T —— | (4ughter, Elsle, 18 the wife of Herbert colvell Bila tathiar's Sbeebnt to rematn | Parsons; his son, llr|‘|ry '(‘ln-w-, J,r‘. 18 ' A R Ok | an artist and sculptor, living in Paris, A younger son, Hobert, died in his .H' obtain & oclerkship 1n “""{yuulll. The business of Henry Clews woolen goods house of Wilson G.| & o' has for a considerable time Hunt & Co,, and there created An X-| hoon getively directed by James B ample of industry, Integrity and fair-| oyows o nephow, and member of the ness, But he finange Was | qom since 1890, where he belo , and foundéd the firm of Stout, Clews & Mason, after- | ward Livermare, Clews & Mason, #ul tides of opinion A harmpless and effective’ gargle is to dissol twe Wayer Tablets of Aspirin in four tablespoonfuls of wa- CHILD DI PIDEMIC Connecticut "owns Are Swept By and feeling over the questiol of Measles, Mumps and Other Tils, slavery disunion, the young financler| New London, Feb, },~—Eastern Cons became an outspoken Unionist, and | necticut, uccording to reports, has an with the call of arms he volunteered a8 a private In Company G, 224 N, Y, infantry, but was discharged to be- come & government agent for the sale of treasury notes and bonds, then re- | garded by investors as risky securi-| ties, | The success with which he dispesed of then unheard of quantities of se- | curities to finance the struggle, to-| gether with the public recognition of | the debt the Union owed him, made | the young New Yorker a national fig- | ure at once. A republican in politics he was one | of the organizers of the Union league club of New York. His great hns|-‘ ness ability prompted PresMent | Grant to ask him to accept the treas- | ury secretaryship, which he declined, as he did every other offer of public SAGE TEA KEEPS YOUR HAR DARK ‘When Mixed With phyr 1t Bflngs‘ Back Its Beautiful ®Lustre i At Once. Gray hair, however handsome, de- notes advancing age. We all know| finally Henry Clews & Co, With the surging =X = = = &2 = = 2K = ance. Your hair is your charm. It| makes or mars the face. Wher it fades, turns gray and looks streaked, | just a few applications of Sage Tea POPULAR CONCERT and Sulphur enhances its appearance | Mefistofele—Ave Si | Martha—Porter Chi se nne séord; | Cradle Song (Wiegenlied) (Brahms) Jn German Little Man. (George Graff, Jr.~Ernest R. Ball) a hundred-fold. | Don't stay gray! Look young!| Either prepare the recipe at home or | get from any drug store a bottle of “Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur (.‘om-’ pound,” which is merely the old-time | recipe improved by the addition of other ingredients, Thousands of folks recommend this ready-to-use prepa- | ration, because it darkens the hair| beautifully, besides, no one can pos- sibly tell, as it darkens so naturally| and evenly. You moisten a sponge | or soft brush with it, drawing this| through the hair, taking ene small strand at a time. By morning the | gray Jhair disappears; after another| application or two, its natural color is restored and it becomes thick, glossy and lustrous and you appear | SACRED RECORD {Th. Son of God O Paradise business pioneering he sought, and re- | Deposited in Our Savings Department Up to and Including Draws Interest From the she walked the floor of her room al | fiil night. Later the pain became less.and | she undressed to go to bed and found | blood stains on her undergarments. | She then summoned a physician, who sent her to the hospital. Mrs. Marker came here from Cal- | fornia two years ago after the death of her husband. She said that pistol belonged to her husband and that she read of so many hold-up and robberies that she was getting it ready for use. STINNES RETURNS German Industrial Baron Is Back Again in Occupied Area Muelhefm, Ieb. 1. (By Associated Press)—Hugo Stinnes who has been resting at Oberhof, came to the oceu- pied Ruhr area yesterday for his first visit since the arrival of the Irench. His colleagues and others have been urging him to remain outside | the occupied zone for the present but Herr Stinnes has chafed under the the | [l enforced absence. His appearanced here was entirely unexpected. February 3rd Sooee W years_younger. | Young and old are unusual number of children's diseases, and the sehool attendance s & result I8 seant, Oid Saybrook 1s in the grip of an epidemic of mumps and measies, vietims of ene disease or the other, and in some cases both, On Monday (hree teachers and 119 puplls were absent from scheel, In Mystic and other towns east of this eity small echildren have been subject to several epidemics this win- ter, commenging with whooping cough, which kept soores of the younger pupils out of school for a period of six weeks, Then followed chicken pox and how measles, which seems to be more prevalent than the other two, Many houses are placard- ed ang the epidemie is still spreading, ‘ULSTERMAN CAPTURED Senator John Dagwell, Prominent Irish Unionist, Weld Prisoner By Ir. rigular Forces, Londen, Feb, 1, (By Assoclated Press)—Dublin dispatches assert that the kidnapping of Henator John well, general manager of the Gr Northern rallway is causing as much excitement as any incident of the Irish struggle and that great anxiety is be- ing felt over his fate, g Up to carly this morning nothing had been heard from the senator since he was forclbly taken from his wife's.side in Sutton, County Dublin, Tuesday night, It is not supposed that his captors Intended to do him personal harm, but rather wanted a prominent hostage to be held against hermometers Don't have to ask cold it your neighbor how . 0“— SEE OUR SOUTH WINDOW HERBERT L. MILLS HARDWARE one or more of thelr own men, whose execution they fear, The government's threat of punitive action In case Senator Dagwell is not released arouses anxlety among his friends, The senator Is an Ulsterman and a unionlst, Dublin, Feb, 1. Press)—Senator John (By Associated Bagwell, gen- HIS MASTERS VOICE" AND OPERATIC Some Day You Will Miss Me (Clifford Grey-Max Darewski) gnor! (Hail, Sovereign Lord!) (Boito) /n Jtalian (Flotow) Jn ltalian 2 a cchili] (Oh, How Can I Forget!) (Marvasi-Barthélemy) Songi (Canzone del Porter) Goes Forth to War MELODIOUS INSTRUMENTAL uartet in D Major—Presto (Becthoven) String Quartet ungarian Dance No. 1 (in G Minor) (Brahms) Fiolin Solo La Campanella (The Chimes)' (Paganini-Liszt) Piamo Solo Symphony in C Minor, No. 5—Finale (Part1) (Beethoven) in C Minor, No. 5—Finale (Part 2) (Beethoven) thout Words (Chant sans paroles) Viotin Solo Spring Song (Song Without Words) (Mendelssohn) Hasp Solo Ballad of the North—Finale (Poenitz) Harp Solo Toy Symphony—Part 1—Andante Moderato (Haydn) Toy Symphony—Part 2—Menuetto and Finale ome Again, Kathleen Violin Soio I’ll Take You Mollie Darling Mah Lindy Lou' Honey Chile Jimbo Jambo RECITATION {A Heap o’ Livin’ DANCE RECORDS Who Cares—Fox Until My Luck Comes Just Like a Doll—Fox Viotin Solo My Old Hawaiian Home~Waltz Octo-Chorda and Harp-Guitar Isle of Sweethearts—Waltz Octo-Chorda and Harp-Guitar LIGHT VOCAL SELECTIONS . Lady of the Evening (from ‘‘The Music Box Revue’’) Will She Come from the East? (irom ‘‘The Music Box Revue’) I Was Married Up in the Air The Boy and the Flag and At the Door t (““Springtime of Youth'’) Trot Teddy Bear Blues—Fox Trot I'm fl: Alone—Fox Trot I'm Through—Fox Trot Open Youg Arms My Alabamy—Fox Trot = Faust—Bal When Hea Journey’s E3 Where the £ 3 Red Moon— Victor Taling aHiCop SPECIAL ISSUES DURING JANUARY Faust—Ballet Music, Cleopatra and the Golden Cup Music, Dance of Cleopatra and Her Slaves Victor Symphony Orchestra Paul Whiteman and His Orchestra Paul Whiteman and His Orchestra The Great White Way Orchestra The Virginians International Novelty Orchestra The Great White Way Orchestra The Serenaders The Serenaders any, Ca EsnE are Young—Fox Trot d—Fox Trot Lost (A Wonderful Girl)—Fox Trot_ Bamboo m Buddy—Fox Trot en Winter Comes—Fox Trot Thru’ the N :;Wnltz al Babies Grow—Fox Trot CONSTANCE TALMADGE - N - “EAST IS WEST” WARNER OLAND in cast ling Along—Fox Trot (‘Little Nellie Kelly"") Trinity Male Choir Trinity Male Choir Olive Kline Elsie Baker John Steel John Steel Billy Murray Billy Murray Edgar Guest ar Guest and His Orchestra ite Way Orchestra Time Will Tell—Medley Fox Trot (‘Sally, Irene and Mary”’) The Great White Way Orchestra The Great The Virgini: The Great White W-.y (;:c‘:::t?: s+ The Benson Orchestra of Chicago Zez Confrey and His Orchestra Sophie Braslau Feodor Chaliapin Titta Ruffo Neagolitan Tito Schipa Ernestine Schumann-Heink Reinald Werrenrath J:’nul Whiteman Victor Symphony Orchestra 336 MAIN ST. manuger of the Great Northern rallway who was kidnapped Tuesday night, Is agair a free man, it was scmi-officially announced this afters noon, Whetifer he was released or oscaped Is not known, the senate of« ficlals being simply told he avas free, Thoumnds of people are telling us nice things constantly about Herald Classified ads. Number Size Price 66115 10 $1.25 87355 10 1.25 87352 125 66117 1.25 87353 . 1.25 66118 1.25 }18984 KL Flonzaley Quartet 74792 Jascha Heifetz Olga Samaroff Toscanini and La Scala Orchestra Toscanini and La Scala Orchestra Efrem Zimbalist Alberto Salvi Alberto Salvi Victor Concert Orchestra Victor Concert Orchestra Mchel Gusikoff ichel Gusikoff Sam Moore-Horace Davis Sam Moore-Horace Davis 66123 74794 -74769 74770 66119 5330 18974 8987 18989 = TarE e Jasaat £ € X FrE: S E P ZF 12 10 10 10 10 mden,N.J. s Return Engagement CHARLES KEATING CO, in “Huckleberry Finn” He'll Make You Cry !