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Ipart of the city "Cents a Month. j be sent by mail ‘60 Cents a year. ising medium 1o books and pross advertisers. @ on sale at Hota- @ St. and Broad- y; Board Walk, Hartford depot CALLS. ED WEAPONS a4 man to jail he for carrying hd sent another s for carrying cused ‘in the at at such times counsel. other members of th« thereby furnishing corroborative evidence which some think had much to do in rendering a verdict of has made affidavit to that effect. Marshall is said to have made another affidavit contradicting the first one and still another in which he admits certain admissions concerning the other affidavits. The Becker case, it is understood, will be argued next month and the negro’s statements are causing considerable excitement among the lawyers connected with the It looks as if the revised version of the negro's testimony will flgure in the arguments for a new trial. An effort is being made to Becker and every particle of evidence case. save that would help In that direction is being eagerly seized upon by his This is quite natural and the feeling that has been engendered by the action of the negro has added to the interest in the case both by the prosecution and the defense. Becker has never taken the stand in his own behalf and this has always been re- NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1915, FACTS AND FANCIES. unnecessary now to of car steps to It seems a hit order the lowering cemply with the hobble skirt limits, when rashion has settled it by re- moving the hobble.—Norwich Bulle- tin, been A bill ha introduced in the y sales of liquor in hotels, even with meals, Such bills are frequently troduced in most all legislatures. But what are the people who propose them thinking of? If such folks could have | their way what would laws be like? ! Would a man be allowed to wear slippers after R o’clock @ m.? could he feed his dog at the table? What is human liberty? Just being permitted to do what some other folks think you ought to do.—New London Telegraph, da Incidental mention has been made of a measure which this Connecticut legislature will be asked to consider, requiring that all buildings used as rooming or boarding houses, hotels or saloons shall bear their owners’ names on small plates on the front of them. Every town and ecity in the state of Connecticut maintains a town clerk’s office, in which, along with’ other things, is kept the record of the ownership of every piece of prop- New York legislature prohibiting Sun- or ; WHAT OTHZIRS 3AY Views on all sides of timely questions as discussed in ex- changes that come to Herald office. A Disease of Many Forms. American Medical A ciation.) | People commonly think of cancer as a single definite disease, as distinct and uniform in its nature and symp- toms This the truth Cancer- (Journal of misconception. It is nearer to regard ‘‘cancer” as the name of a group of quite different diseases which have one feature in common. It has been said that tho layman’'s conception of cancer is of something very indefinite, very por- tentous, quite hopeless, a disease which always cffects someone elsa than himself, an about which he car ries no immediate interest or responsi- bility. If this is a fair statement, the layman is wrong on practically every count, and his error and confusion is probably due, in no small part, to the failure to take account of the many forms of cancer. 1f this were done, perhaps the patient would not so fre- quently yield to despair and throw appendicitis or typhoid fever. | | i ciever and interesting a play may be, unless it affords the actors ample op- portunity for the exposition of their art, it is worthless for stage purposes. Our dramatists write for the story and the punch, but as vet, with a very few exceptions, they do not write with the object of giving the actor full sccpe for his talents, The whole secret of successful playwriting is the possession of a sense of effect This f{ may be inherent or it may be wcquired, but the playwright who | iopes to make name and have it. He must 1ow acting values in character, line and situation He must know exactly how every scene | is ing to work out when acted. The | young dramatist as a rule has a vast amount to learn in this respect. It not necessary that he should have technical knowledge of acting, or able to act himself, but either he must Lave the natural dramatic instinct strong in him or he must acquire the be tion. Tt is just as important ducing manager should sense of effect as it that the matist have it. The power Is ver strong in some of managers, but others do not possess it and never will. In Judging of the merits of a the great question of course is is it going to act?” manager s hims that the have pro- this dr is our “how fame must | is | knowledge by experience and observa- play | This is what every | covering villages and old churches The city dates back to the time of Sennacherib and contains records in- scribed by Xerxes the Great The American board Van s s o section as large as state of Missouri and its nearest college neighbor is distant ten or fif eeen days caravan journey over hard and dangerous trails. In addition to college and hospitals, to girls' and boys' high with kindergar- tens and primary departments, and to evangelistic in city and country round about, the board main- tains an industrial department for the help of the widows and orphans of the Armenlan massacres of 1905, colleze in the schoo work Labor Commissionership. (Hartford If the general fails to consolidate the labor bureau with the factory inspectorship there is a possi- bility that the labor commis sionership may go to New Britain The euandidate from that city for the is Orson I°, Curtis, a republican who is prominent in | affa Mr. Curtis has made ccessful effort to clected to the voralty of the city. It under- stood that his most formidable oppo- is Willlam D. Parker of Meri- who for year was the chief of the bureau There is at Times.) assembly position and an un- be is | nent den, clerk municipal | McMILLAN'S SALE the special you can buy at lc wp Come aund see needful things to 10c Sale of Hair Nets, 5 fine imported hair nets for 10e. many Out Size Hosiery for Women Burson outsize Hoslery in Rib top, plain top, trunk top, Black, Whites, Balbriggans and Black with White split soles. Price 25c pair, sizes up to 10 1-2. NOTION’ garded as guspicious but on the other self when he heads | hund some think that he acted under the advise of counsel. That it is un- doubtedly correct and the reason for it is that if he went on the stand he weould be forced to make admissions aside from the killing of Rosenthal hstified in carry- | Of course there | ng any aw: the excellent chance of cure that exists when the disease is first dis- covered. As a matter of fact “cancer”, in the light of modern knowledge of human ailments, is almost as general and vague as a term ‘fever.” The word covers a number of entirely distinct erty in its limits. That is the best. the only valuable evidence of such ownership. Any other method of iCentificaton is superfluous.—New Ha- ven Register. a manuscript and it is what he asks his play readers and his stage direc- tor. The principal cause of the failure of some otherwise very meritorious plays is that they did not act well. | Parker was first appointed to a posi- One thing is certain, no play can act| tion in the bureau by the late on. too well, and there never was a play | Robert J. Vance when the latter was least the suggestion of a coincidence in the fact that he is a native of New Britain, the city of which his rival is distinguished resident Mr. Boot Silk Hose. n carr = ‘m " 8 like a weapon a c pair. White ge in a fight efense. It will it Outsizes Black and a New Spring Embroidery o Governor Holcomb’s message re- | and as opponent’s face irks there. It ed in a brawl was not in dan- h provocation. is a different carries such a tends to use it bilities are the A man who quarrelsome with a business possession. No hat matter be- a number of a moment of r did not have is possession he in {the melee, a bloody nose And those who y if they escape ce of the fight. be commended cases because e of public dis- necessary, not | blic policy, but eople from the temper and bad has that would not help his case with the Jury. SMOKE NUISANCE SUITS. The smoke nuisance at Fair Haven resulted in suits aggregating $75,000 being brought against the New York, New Haven and Hartford railroad. The company in considera- tion of the number of complaints re- ceived on account of the damage caused property by reason of the heavy clouds of dense black smoke removed its round house close to the Quinnipiac river but this location dees not appear to have eliminated the trouble. There is no question but that heavy smoke does much damage, it per- meates houses within range of the smoke, it damages the contents and renders such places practically unfit to live in. On wash day clothes hung on a line to dry are soiled and taken as a whole the smoke has been rightly termed a nuisance. Factories do some damage in this line but it infini- tesimal compared to the damage caused by locomotives. The legisla- ture has been asked to remedy this is rainds the citizens of the state of many things, leaving other things to be inferred. Tt reminds us that a mistake was made when the former careg and burdens of the county were loaded on to the state because the mistaken notion prevailed that there was some maglic way for the state to rajse money which did not reside in the country. Today the state is con- fronted with the full iniquity of that practice and it finds itself unable to lcnger stand the increasing hurden and pay its bills. The governor sug- gests that the error of the judgement be corrected and that we render unto the Ceasar of the county the respon- sitilities that are his.—New Haven Journal-Courfer. Statistics prove that Bridgeport builds its school houses more cheaply thanalmost any other city in its class, and vet its new schoolhouses are the equal of those in most other cities, and superior to many. Part of the reason for the lower cost in Bridge- port lies in the fact that this city has built its new school houses with an annual cash appropriation. Freedom from bonded debt has kept the whole cost of the school tem lower than in other cities. To appropriate one-mill tax annually for school build- ings has been found to be an excellent policy, and the freedom from a school debt has been a contributing factor in the low percentage of Bridgeport's general indebtedness. Bridgeport a diseases, differing widely in their orig- in symptoms, treatment and curabil- ity The varous kinds of tumors have little in common except that they are all forms of new and lawless growths of body cells. This false notion of cancer as a sin- gle disease has probably hindered progress toward the understanding and control of the various diseascs which are conveniently grouped under that term. All forms of cancer arec aspects of new and lawless cell growth and it Is in the inner nature or “‘causc’ of such growth that we do not yet un- derstand. The essential point for the man in the street is that each different kind | of cancer is a separate disease. If he is so unlucky as to be attacked by any one of them, it would be well before becoming discouraged to go and find out which form he has. If he is taken with a “fever” and it happens to be Ferman measles, his outlook on life is quite different than it if chances to be virulent small-pox. So, also, a ‘“ro- dent ulcer” on the face is quite differ- ent from cancer of the stomach. And lastly while one is a more serious dis- ease than the other, there is always hope if it is recognized and treated at once. Why not give the surgeon the same chance with cancer as he has with appendicitis? Suppose all symp- toms of that disease were neglectad and hidden until the ‘appendix had burst? Doubtless the sur con would | have been improved for the actor, Invasion. Gazette.) For the first time since 1901 are now being quoted openl than $28 per ton. This price was established for rails at the time of the formation the United States steel corporation and has been maintained by poration and independent mills alik since that date. Very recently the A company, a Canadian corpo entered the market in th quoting open hearth rails ton on board cars at mills, on board cars at Chicago, pared with $30 at the mills b: the manufacturers in States. This creates a very A Canadian (Railway Age steel goma country t $25 per or as at least three roads, the Pere M: quette, the Big Four and the Tolede and Ohio Central, have given company rail orders at these The reasons why the company is able to quote this price or rails are evident. The Buropean war has business depression in Canada mucl more acute than in the United States | With the result that the rail require prices created steel new ! materfally reduced. The is therefore seeking busi produced on the stage that could not at basic Bessemer of the cor- steel ion, has $27.60 com- quoted the United interest- | ing situation in the steel market, and ) this n " | ments of the Canadian railways nrni com- | ilulmr commissioner during the ad- | ministration of Governor Morris. Mr. | Parker was a democrat in politics | then and he remained in the demo- ‘.-mm- faith until the appearance of | Bryanism. He could not swallow the spurious democracy that was substi- tuted for true democracy and he be- came an independent. Later he joined the republican party and since then he has remained a consistent republican. He identified himself quite prominently with the political interests of Senator George FP. Mec- | T.ean, first in the latter's candidacy for governor and later when he for the nomination of United States senator. In the contest between Mr Goodwin and Mr. Lake the practical syvmpathies were with the former, Mr Curtis favored the nomination of Mr Lake. The republican town com- mittee of New Britain is in favor of the appointment of Mr. Curtis. POLICE MAKE RAID I 0N CAMBLUNG DEN d from First Page.) | ! ‘ (Continue (Contirued from First Page.) Voiles. The new colored effects inches wide Mutt and Jeff Statues. 26c 59¢ yard on white, 40 59c value, special for your den; also whist prizes. set make Get a sot suitable Baldwin Double Service House Dresses. $1.00 and $1.49 each Including extra size up to 48 bust New Mercerized (.'hambr_\.' Dresses. $1.40 each Solid colors trimmed collars and cuffs. with Sale of Women’s Umbrellas, each, were $1.00 Real Human Hair Goods Sale and demonstration now going Sale in personal charge of a New expert hair dresser and mateh- 79¢ on York er. i often that the Bvolver or .brass but there is no jid be done with . hght. Judge ideas on that evil but it has failed to do so on the { pany ground that there is no known remedy for it. The smoke is the most dense when a train is steaming into a city or lcaving it and the company’s experts ‘have said that this cannot be avoided although it is admitted that it can be done with stationery engines. The letter case has been proven. The sentiment against the smoke nulsance is increasing every yvear and it will not be long before the legisla- ture will prohibit it by law. It has been claimed in our own city that it can be stopped under the health or- dinances, but such a contention has never been pressed to a cision. The Fair Haven suit will call attention to the case in a general way still save a certain percentage cases, but would the record be any- thing like it is now? It is the intel- ligent cooperation of the patient and the family physician that has con- quered appendicit and the same weapons are even more needed in the fight against cancer. of of doors. She told lice and Sergeant Kelly and Officer ter out the po- D. McMILLAN® 199-201-203 Main Strect. Telegram. Y at a reduced price to prevent the closing down of the mill The fact that there is no tariff on ore moving | McCarthy arrested the young man from the United States into Canada, | In court Feore admitted being im.- and the recent removal of the tariff | plicated in last summer's theft, but on steel products into the United |asked the court to be lenient, saying States now enables that company to|“If you give me a chance I'll never direct its attention affectively to this|be before your honor again.” The country. Situated as it is on Lake |judge sent Feore to jail for thirty Superior, it is in a position to deliver | days on the theft charge and fined rails by water at any of the lake ports, { him $7 and costs for Saturday night's and it may therefore become a serious | drunken offense competitor of the mills in this country. | While as a business matter it may | be expedient to reduce the price on | the rails delivered in this country to | naintain the output, it will be inter- | - o . : esting to note whether the Canadian 1 tion to being fined $12 and costs for roads do not demand a similar re-|drunkenncasand breach of the pasce. | Sotion. | Tt avill also be interesting to | Oficer William Hart arrested Sarra at : 8:40 o'clock last night at the corner cbserve the attitude that the stm-l" t Booth ahd Mystis strests where o ccmpanles in this country will assume | 01 Booth and Jyrtie stree = 8 toward this new competition and the Barnes Passes, (New York Times.) by the hair and when she screamed he hit her in the mouth With his clinched st. A handful of hair that Anthony had pulled from his wife’s head was exhibited in court After the hed room fracas the hus | band broke up some of the furniture Officer Mercure made the arrest Laconis’ only excuse was that when a little drunk his wife scolds He was jail for thirty” Good-bye, William Barnes. Some time when men are casting up the 1 of organization leaders—other- wise termed ‘‘bosses’’—they will re- member you, and not unkindly. It is the fashion to think of every man who finds his pleasure, profit, or other emolument in running a political ma- chine as an imp of darkness. It can be overdone; and if you, William Barnes, are quitting the political game for good, there is a valedictory to be said to you that may be unfashionable and reactionary in these days of social service and applied psychology, but which there may be a tew old-fash- foned Yankees still to hear and, not mislike. One Policeman to 1,571 Persons. (A. F. Howe New York Herald.) The narrative of a revolting crime which has carried a New Britain date line for nearly a week has contained no mention of a significant fact, which should receive consideration in con- nection with the murder of the Rev. Joseph Zebris and his housekeeper. There is little doubt that the lack of adequate police protection in New Britain facilitated the commission of the atrocious act, operated against the taxes is one in munity and discussed it more than a [ Haven collector show back approximately cover a number n going back to pe held for such Revolver—Jatled, Sarra of 128 Carried John Beaver street was sent to jail for three months for carrying a loaded revolver, in addi- | he him | days. is sent tc Judgment Is Suspended At 8:20 Saturday night, Offi Carlson found John \Wright and lying flat on his bac street. In court Wright s cated wr John drunk Park he had drunkennes: before court de- on was making a disturbance. Sarra sald | rticular case is it also has a ery town in the jappens that the %0 long in ar- khe estate is in but it would pst on the bills ger now than and this condi- to those in y. ed as if back pcted after at or six years and L be gotten then at any time. s for further t possibly exist Be in a number ks foreclose on ‘nterest not bceedings occur is 0 be considered n there would counts with the | I 80 fast that it bill proper. It jnce, was able to Jaxes on its col- | ' be able to pro- Iprovements @ left for other | arages large sum. ?’ e he task and of | It collector now before AGAIN. eutenant Becker, ce of death for | rder of Herman | ork on June 16, e convicted, lhfi; dissatisfied with trial ordered a | the public eve. James Marshall, ed to have com- . second trial Becker in con- Rose and uomn‘ | blame it | coming and should the plaintiffs win the effect further line proceedings probably would tend to along the same force the company to abate the nuis- ance. and COMMUNICATED. Socialist’s Action 1s Repudiated Member of That Party. by As a member of the party of New Britain and of the International So- cialist Movement of the World, I re- gret to say that a comrade so far forgot himself as to say something in regard to certain religious societics when he had been instructed to tallk only on the unemployment question There are in the socialist movement men of all religious beliefs, but no man is justified in casting slurs upon any organization, be it religious or political, but occasionally a man wiil slip into any organization which the organization would be better off with- out and 1 think the socialist organi- zation will take action to prevent a recurrence of last Friday night's ac- tion. 1t would not be fair to judge the soclalist party the actions of a man who did what he was not in- structed to do. In every organization since the be- ginning of time there have been those who by their ions were denounced and censured. The comrades of New Britain regret the occurrence was unexpected by them, but it would be fair to the socialist organiza- any other organization ta as a whole for the action of individual. We cannot blame democratic party for the MeNs who were democ s for what one man does or says you cannot condemn all and it does not seem to if a fairminded person SOCTALIST. by ac not tion or a one the maras me Republicans in Massz alarmed over a reported political con- spiracy against them involving thte primary election. Tt demoe intend to have only a ate for governor, with the g that all the ‘democrats will vote for the weakest candidate put forward by the republicans. This 18 made possible because Massachusetts has no party enrollment.—Bridgeport Post. the whicn § would. | said | The New York Republican machine has been run by many b s. Roscoe Conkling was not much of a boss, he was chiefly a man of eloquence -in speech and force in character. He followed Recuben E. Fenton, a dis- tinctly inferior man, though a man of ability nd Thurlow Weed, a still abler man. The modern meaning of the word “boss” was not understood in those days. Conkling was followed by Platt, a manipulator and little He called himself “the v s, meaning by that title that men who did not oppose him too actively, did not cross his path too offensively, could count themselves safe frm rious punisnment by him. He however, a real boss, a dictator, and in a not very brutal way a tyrant. In the last three or four years of Platt’s supremacy, Odell rose and forced the rule from his hands. Odell was a man as inferior to Platt as Platt was to Conkling. He was 2 boss who derived his power chiefly from the failings of the man he was superseding and from certain financial influences that, to do him justice, Platt would have encouraged and used but never wholly surrendered to. 1t was not ‘Odell, but Harriman, who governed the state republican ma- chine, Let us pass over Timothy L. Wood- ruff lightly. He was the most human of all the leaders, and the least of a His career was as short Odell's, and Barnes succeeded him. The heatien like to rage when the word “‘boss" is pronounced, but if we are to have any leaders in political organizations—and the way has not yet been devised to get along without them—it might be as well to have men like Barnes instead of men like Conkling, Fenton, Weed, Platt, Odell, and Woodruff, His name has been linked with Murph but the difference between the men is deep. Barnes i man of culture, and un- derstands government and To him politics is not merely a mat- ter of manipulating ward heelers: perhaps he is not above but it does not represent science of government ire very few politicians, in hizh was boss. as whole There few, in- who have a a abido the him, oy to deed, even oflice defin politics by it. W one of them i politically active it is well not te 1eory of hen judge him too harshly and, if he ge- cideg to give up the pursuit, to part from him with regret. polities. | doing that, | becomes | immediate apprehension of the mur- dere and retarded the finding of a tangible clew. There is, however, no implication in this that the police force in New Britain is not well of- ficered and alert. The crux of the situation is that too great a task is imposed continuously upon the de- partment, and that, through no fault el its own, it is ill prepared to cope with the extraordinary conditions with which it was confronted last week. There is a city of thirty-five men 000 people with constituting the en- tire police force. The number of policemen is too few for any city of New Britain’'s population. But New Britain is entially a manufactur- ing communi with an uncommon- ly large foreign population. It s growing rapidly, and the influx is al- most exclusively alien. In few cities is there a greater babel of tongues, and in none perhaps is there a larger proportion of people who do not speak the vernacular. Obvious- ly, it is a fine breeding ground for crime, and that the propaganda of dark and deadly deeds has not man- ifested itself more frequently is a tri- bute to a police efficiency which is more than commensurate with the demands made upon them. The people of New Britain too much of Chief Willlam J. Rawl- ings and the force when they get the relative security which they do. That | the city wakened to a sense of | its insecur its determination to get the murderer which it has evinced by not counting the cost, would seem to indicate. But if it does nat take preventive measures, not only by in. creasing the number of policemen but also by having non-English speaking peoples represented on the force, it will not derive all the praofit possible from its recent bitter experience expect Writing for the Actor, (New York Review.) crop of pl very cleve aywrights work, but to forget that the dramatist provide “a me- t, that of the One of the 1 ns why “prize inva fail is that they are always judged upon their merit a; products of literary and dramatic have | the The new done some majority of them sc the principal object of always be to for another m should djum' actor. ays” ably | out extent to which the roads in country will avail themselves of thi reduction in price, and the effect, any, on prices in this country. Governors Tendered Reeeption. Turkish (Exchange.) toward the meric: missionaries in The representatives board have the home office i and nd America educators countr; American written to of n Boston difficulty of and supplie: Ithough great hardship for the whom they work. That the mis: vate the friendly attitude of the thorities toward themselves and work is well shown by the message recently received from the capital of ancient Armenia the center of the Turkish whose name it bears. The mes reads, “Our good Vali, Tahsin h been promoted to Krzroom leaves today and Jevdet brother-in-law of Enver guccessor here. The mission: vited them both to an inform ception yesterday and Dr. address Tahsin gave him to our embas appreciative address sher, who read the addec is in charge of the Amer.can board hospital in Van. He of birth and got his medical training Kansas Medical college He secr except money foresee people among they au- their He the his in- re- Bey, is 1l ppreciation mplishments ; and will-send e respond- an of here, a copy ed with Dr. U a an is in has valuable contributions to medical knowledge as to the manner of typhus infection and its treatment the result to his experiences in typhus demies among the Turkish stationed at Van Van, the province, Persin the Russian Trans-Caucasian vinces lLake Van, a beautiful sheet surface is 5.500 fet tide Into the lake flow twenty stream of it not one. A century half ago it had an outlet throu a tunnel. The Kurds, in quarrel, filled up the outlet with bags of wool epi- joins pro- whose level but above a ahility, the judges losirg sight of the l all-important fact that no matter howl . and now the water is heavy and bitter and the surface has risen 150 feet, this if'lnmud to chase him. 8l Press dispatches from Turkey have | consistently affirmeqd the friendly feel- ing of the Turkish government toward | protection.” n! that | the repeatedly that for themselves they fe:r nothing | following | Van, | 1 and | ral province | o | Ing sher read | saturday Hlinois | one been in Van since 1898 and has made | he and i The city is on the shores of | me,’ ! Josephine 1. [ h | wouldn't ause some accus- aining troublesome he carried the revolver be dog on Washington street was In cxy | more in detail about thi | dog. Sarra got badly mised up, Pros- | ecutor Klett remarked thut the more he tried to explain {he we he made matters. Carvied Brass Kauckles, Claiming that the conditions existing in city “a is entitled to carr) under present the man ymething 1 George Marchenskj | mitted carryving b knuckles, Jud: Meskill thought differently and sont him to jail for thirty days in addition | to fining him $7 and vosts for drunk- enness. At 11 ck last the dinkey conductor told the ti | Marchenski was on the car drunk a | having in his some | knuckles. Serge: 30 o night poiice onaries wisely culti- | Axe] Carlson mad | ! No Disturbance, Only Song. wa dtsturbance, John T Main street. was parad- shouting makin inging who was arre morning on man was drunk along West Main and singing when Officer Haves arrested i 1§10 1=n't only w an said ted at West and trect Sunday The him was fined and costs, Curcio’s Case Continued L.ouis Cureio the arrested hreach Officer King for a A4 today i1l e morning of peace Louis aske continueg next Saturda and lj Milk. mdering Stole Priesi's A hoho sent Burgess \ jnil for quart of milk from the Rev. John Winters' parochial rc s- terday morning. The previou vight had heen given lodging at the police Burgess said he n to the house yesterda asked for They him priest's there he to ten days for ition v sister's food house stole ind soldiers | milk. Likes Him When He's Sober, like he said want ober I to chok o when him when drunk he eighteen-years-old Mrs she told the Anthony, ha that lust nigh drunk h with him, going to e with a little girl who lives in the house, inseead. He came into the bed room and ordered her to go to his bed. She refused and he grabbed her‘ wconis as how her husband her hand court abused her hu wid William | stealing | | | | {r Viadesiaw 1 t was | ¢ | | been disturbance, ca Zunzen shut 1o or ten years. He has a wire and seven chi:dren. Judge Meskis suspended judzment and told Wright to go home and hena himeeif, Judgment was also euspended on Joha Poterson, arrested for drunkens ness on Chureh street Satorday at 4:15 P. M. by OMcer King Bullding Inspecio Albin € plaint of Ruild Rutherford, ci No. 4 h " in nine arison wag arrceisd on £ Inspector A ged with building at street t & per- thic uned iliness e 84 ! witho mit to 1 his homc ontinued unti! Threw Clothes Officer | treet at eeponse 1o a Saturida at Marin., t 1 Broad 30 0'c n nicht arrest omentk s and who lives in 1) camne night When he threatened the police to quiet lim Slomenik at me a rooster.” sald Slomenik blamed Zumzen and W Liold him he didn't he'd pet the ns the drunkent n Slomenik hristening last I flow 1k his 3 up ime got 11 police riest At he 50 Mys station Slomenik 0 to 1 her bronght before the be re- his coat, themn again » untfl and came out pouse clerk and ined } p nd captain’s hi und irt « rled free le wa did was i not After Measles Whooping Cough or Scarlet Fever the extreme weakness often results in impaired hearing, weakened eyesight, bronchitis and other troubles, but if Scott’s Emulsion is given promptly, it carries strength to the organs and creates rich blood to build up the depleted forces. Children thrive on Scott's Emulsion. It is Pree from Alcohol.