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medlum and press rtisers Ton sale nt Hota- St. and Broad- : Board Walk, artford depot. ITY. bkilled on | aceident such b1 times DLefore. '\ has the given by times about | footpath or a parning is not but once ity, then hd after a 'here does not for it." The ad have been uliar feature this is not illed in about , a little boy the cars and at about the B ago, while little girl was he third rail ic power for i and in so thé few Bristol fne south enad ‘e yesterday's d a great deal ere, the open- access to the guarded. chil- ere with per- no thought of ere from the was the con- d train ap- vesterday and 0ss the track, fin an instant. atality was, it t if it proves bping children , especially at hught with so " should warn p away from F and off the ral, iest there [ the one yes- ly be avoided he danger al- TED. from, New histic plot to cathedral, to en, to wreck reign of ter- he that might var zone than in the United The details other column jgest what an here is in New the criticism subjected. to want to perhaps can tried before jle it was not | more so than The police chists, they escorted them , and so com- | the reception L the bomb was inguished and to the people hs no damage e plain some of il in several jtry, ipply some in-~ putrages Britain '8 been imade 08t on and who com- about some New important in with hemselves are ialking, they ase detectives ith them, they “have been, ‘to do, and the that it seems of the men Ir its effects. | much bomb Ty, the be prompt in he captured and ets drunk and } be no ground Iplan would be tout club, and ram, I'showdown, such | SIDENTIAL CANDIDATES. While %8s certain s anything can be before it happens 15 dent Wilson will be renominated for the presidency next ) by the dem- ocrats, there is no certainty as to who Wwill be the choice of the republicans. The Washingt correspondent of the ag it if Supreme Court Justice Hughes will PRE that sar Brooklyn vs that looks as the convention although it to the when be forced into as a wdidate, is known that he Stitl is opposed proposition. to nomination thinks To country no man, it will refuse the presidenc if has a fighting chance to win. president of the greatest the world is an honor that has come and can come only to a few men. Even at this carly day there men who are supposed to be pluming na- comes a a for he he in are themselves for the republican tional convention and among them are York, Justice the was not the present of New Mr. Whitman, Hughes, has also same capacity. The a popular governor, conscientious one and was also what politicians do some thinking about, a winning one. Secnator Borah has his cye on the place R. Mann, the republican sional leader. Governor Hadley may have some support because of a de- sire to draw back to the fold the progressives who may still have grievance and feel that they should be recognized. Then there are Sen- ator Cummins and Senator La Follette who have been looking at the White House with longing eyes for several years. Ex-President Taft has been winning much praise since his retire- ment from office, and while it does not seem as if he would undertake an- other presidential campaign, there are republicans who would like to see hgm head the national ticket again. Then there is Colonel Roosevelt who would probably like one more try at the of- fice. The collection is large and va- ried and good enough to suit any- one. governor as well as who served in latter but he was a and so has James congres- a TO TRY STARVATION NOW. The European war is now taking 6n a feature which will tend at least to bring hostilities to an end quicker than they otherwise would, according to the plans formulated up to a day or two ago, When Germany ar- ranged a submarine blockade around the British Isles the question as to what the answer of the would be, It came yesterday it announced that if can prevent it there will be no com- modities of any kind allowed to leave or reach the shores of Germany. This means that a starving process has been added to the ordinary man- ner of warfare which has been in progress ever since the war started. This plan is likely to cause the war on water to be more flercely contest- ed in future than in the past. The fact that an embargo on foods is to be maintained as much as possible will add more suffering to the flict than anything else could have done and will affect women and chil- dren, That does not strike the aver- age person as being just right, The war is proving ver for the Allies, the figures given out by the English government alone being $7,500,000 daily and likely to increase another million day. This England and France alone, no state- of cost coming from Germany any of the other countries gaged in the war. It has been point- ed out in this paper before that the countries engaged in the prin- cipally the larger countrics, will find themselves in the end confronted witin arose Allies when was they con- expensive a is for ment or en- war, an immense debt, not to speak of the be paid for making amount to damages to the all sum that will take many years to pay, which the countries will a- tax that defeated side, in a during be obliged to levy casion much hardship on the people. There is no escape from and the longer the war continues the bigger will be the bills. will oc- this course FACTS If the citizens want water meters, let them give their approval. But iz not up to citizens. Of course if the officials now in power see fit they can order meters. That is a charter where the legal phase of the question is scttled first which is really so un- common in this age as to stand out as a joker.—Middletown Penny Fress, weeks Hartford work of Dbeneficial than $10,000 5,200 the Winter Carni the Visiting Nurse association and $5,000 raised in the last three daj for the support and extension Roy £cout work. If Hartford can do this, what reason is there for assis tance of a single case of suffering due tc proverty or unemployment? Why not a fund for relief of the poor. Hartford Post. Within three raised for ture more proceeds of has na- the al of s The funeral of onc faimer was, according riarked by something beyond the con- New Jersey to accounts. be | it provision, and it is one of those cases | of | | rubbish heap, urther search was re- I » arded by such success that only great self-restraint enabled them to call off thce hunt long cnough to decently dis- pose of the funeral services.—New Haven Register. Once prove to a woman that a par- ticular brand of goods is the best for her needs and she wil ever after be a champion of her brand, declared a | department store manager in a new [Krgland city., not long ago. This, then, is the (op: get the women ezch community in New lingland in- terested this movement to clear the j right of way for New Ilngland-made goods, and the manufacturers in this corner of the country will feel the im- petus of big, new husiness, and feel it rieht away.-—Norwich Record. in New York state is facing a direct state tax of $18,000,000, while necticut is threatened with a propor- tionate tax ot this enormous deficit nistaken roadbuilding policy of the Each state has expended mil- in the building of state trunk- highways. Now it is impossible a state {0 make a better invest- ment than good roads, at the time it is possible to build ishly as well Telegram. is due to a as wisely.—Bridgeport Colonel that when But and most Osborn is obviously sorry he said Major Isbell was a liar he knows Major Isbell wasn't full perusal of the elaborate apology equally certain Osborn is beset because parliamentary and Major Isbell's now well- known tendency to invoke the laws of his commonwealth make it impos- sible to record just what Colonel O ;- born thinks about Major Isbell’s po- sition on the subject of civil service.— Hartford Times. makes that by grief courtesy Disputing Over Frank James, (New York Time No man of from thirty-five to fifty vears of age can read without pain the discussion that has been going on about the character of Frank James since that excellent bandit died. With ruthless hands some of these writers are stripping away the illusions with which the schoolboys of from 1875 to 1890 invested him and his greater brother, Jesse. Some of them even go so far as to portray these heroes as ruffians without a redeeming trait, even that of courage, and to give chapter and verse for it. One of them reaches the limit by de- priving us of our cherished belief that, whatever I‘rank and Jesse may have been in later life, they were at least brave Confederate soldiers, and giving facts to prove that their mili- tary career conmsistéd in robbing banks and murdering occasional belated federals who had lost their way. In the name, not of romance, but of the childhood of a quarter of @ century ago, protest. Tt i one were to strip the mask from Robin Hood or to prove that Dick Turpin was an ordinary gunman like Gyp the Blood or Lefty Loufe. nothing sacred from the iconoclast? We can stand—reluctantly—for the proofs that Pocahont did not really rescue John Smith, or that Revere's ride was an incident dupli- cated more effectively by Wiliiam Dawes. But are we to give up our dime novels? These dime novels have long subsided into limbo: they have been palely replaced . by so-called “libraries’”’—the Nick Carter, the Boy Terrors, or whatever may Dbe their corrupt names. Lithographed color pletures surmount their columned dullness; it is a sign progress of the age, doubtless, what a substitute is that for and The Wide Awake Library and The Boys of New York Took at the lagging messenger boy of today, com- fortably ensconced in a trolley car and reading one of these ineffective imitations, and compare him with the boy ‘in school a quarter of a century ago, surreptitiously reading “The James Boys' Great Haul,” and then passing it across the aisle to a school mate, To them the James oBys were not | real characters. any more than Robin Hood was to them five or six years before. They were fairyland her The story of their crimes was part of the strange fantastic hazc around the imagination and transmutes all things into good. Surely the James Boys rohbed banks why not? Tt was not the robbery but the adventure that captivated tae childish imagination. None of us really imagine the James Boys as human beings, any more than we did Jonathan Wild. And now that we are older and know better, something of that happy, innocent, and irres ponsible love for the bandit of our imagination, the bandit who never existed except in that imagination clings to us still; and it is as hard to hear Frank and Je James cooly dissected as common criminals a it would be to hear Claude Duval treated as if he were a gunman. Stop, anal and historians: leave us some of our illusions. Maybe {hey were common desperadoes. are you going to.deprive us also of 0la Sleuth, Old Cap Collier, C‘thips and "nin CHin, Shofty in Search of His Dad, and all the things that made recess pleasant and school hours en- durable to us? Stop at Frank and Jesse Jame and don't deprive us of Frank Wright, the Young In- gineer; or Durango Tom or the works of Col. Prentiss Ingraham and Ned Buntline. The line must be drawn somewhere. Were these iconoclasts ever children? Frank James was not a real per- we refuse to believe it, deSpite newspaper obituari e imaginary ¢ acter, whose deeds little now merged and illusioned man, the hours when he should studying geogranhy and Athily to his in we douhle- of the es. son the an many @ a serious to con in have heen than the next es, was boy, into nass s at see chum ventional interest, The sorrowing relatives, browsing casually around the premises before the funeral, discov- ered $200 in gold in a can in the l would not him, and feeling a greater sense of guilt over it than ever did the real Frank James after he had held up a train, in | Con- | In each case not a little | roads fool- | Paul | bhut | used | same | ditions, and when T came up against | Beadle's | [ that hangs | of childhood | | | | and | But | 1o | | hoping the teacher | duced hecause cons v | sobered | Iness going. | Brape WHAT OTHZIERS Views on all sides timely questions as discussed in ex- changes that come to Herald office. SAY of apshot of Paris. Letter to the nquirer.) (New York Cincinnati ce there The guestion was put to a buyer back from Paris, His smiling suddenly. human misery I could possible,” Tie said, and other it didn’t seem explain that the qu m had been prompted by interest in Irench fashions, After a while, how- cevr, he did show a casual interest in the mission on which he had gone to France. I went over to see what was doing in clothes, he admitted, it how is any one to keep his mind on clothes over there? I'd been reading bapers, but T hadn't even a suspicion of con- “What did you over ust face Mor have imagined some way decent to or enough actually it got me and the war-—came near to realize the horrors got me hard. “I couldn’'t think of anything else, and I take off my hat to the Irench dressmakers who have kept their bus How on earth they've had the pluck to go ahead wita their handsome | \wvori and turn out even as much as it al-! they have turned out I can’t under- Colonel | stang It's rather splendid, you know, for it hasn’'t been done carelessly or callously. Not by a long shot. “C‘orrespondents can write about the way Paris is chirking up, the opening of theaters and restau- rants and all that; but T know Pa and you can take it from me, Paris a mighty pathetic proposition right now. You can’t turn around without running up against something that hurts. Every one I knew had things to tell—well, I was glad to get out and leave some one else to finisa up for me. “Lovely things?, of lovely things. Why, ves: plenty Materials are beat tiful in spite of the war, though I'll tell you right here there's a bigger variety of attractive materials in New York tnan in Parls, We've a blg share of the best foreign stuff——orders filled before the crash came-—and then we've the domestic stuff to fill out with, and its mighty fine stuff at that. “But Paris had enough attractive materials to go on with, and she has a way of chucking them together and handing out color and using things in unheard-of ways So all of the houses that are doing anything at all have good models to show; but hody has created anything, not even Cheruit or Premet or the younger fry that have their names to make. Pianissimo. TFoot on the soft pedal. | That sort of thing. wonder. The guns are mak- noise over there. You'll of mice wearable things, vou know. when the imports are shown here, but nothing that will msa sit up. The milliners have put things across than the dressmake “No ing the plenty see <e more yvou Discase and Despalr in Turkey. (Exchange.) of State Poverty, Bryan, cable ican Peet, the Through Secrctary in Washington, the following message has reached the Ame Board, in Boston, from W. W. of Constantinople, treasurer of board’s Turkish missions. It is ad- dressed to Rev. James 1. Barton, D. D., foreign etary of the Dboard, and reads as follows “Widespread, heen produced ness and by mands from help for has bus De- by war mi swing need gnation of conditions. onaries both for needy people and for medi- cal work for soldiers have increased. addition typhus and typhoid are spreading rapidly. The Turkish Red Cross cannot give relief. Can you not secure means to meet requests and to combat disease, Morgenthau ap- proves."” This message, coming with the authoritative endorsement of the American ambassador, emphasizes reports which reached the American board widely separated parts of the Turk empire. Dr. F. D. Shepard, (he wise and famous phy a1l in char of the board's hospital in Aintab, large clty in Central that the mass of misery breaking. as he and hi; it day by day with no which to relieve All city is at.a standstill; mals, as it does have a is stafl funds work in all draflt heart- face with the ani goats, all food wheat, rice, corn, sugar, olive oil, for the army. supplies barley, cheese, ete., have bheen People with of taken | money in the banks cannot get it be- cause of the moratorium. The whole community is reduced almost to heg- gary. In Harpoot, some one hundred and fifty miles teo the north of Ain- tab, the hospital is fuli of sick sol- dlers, the number or patients in the building never having been =0 large. Important drugs from among medical supplies have been re. quisitioned by the government, At Van, necar the Russlan and Per- an frontiers. the board’s hospital is'filled with wounded and at the re- quest of the government Miss Me- Taren, of the mission, has bheen given permission to as nurse in the military hospital, looking after four ward Trz serve the Rlack bulldings Sea coast, the of the and Girl Bosrding schools for wounded soldiers in «. dition to the hospital, and Dr. (ase has made to summon Dr. Clark of Siv with nurses. a phart and an orderly from the Sivas hospital to help out in £ n Sive writes, people lives hefore had zed the has Boys room. Rev. . C. Partridge who never in thejr to hee arn now relativa have ana % United who Y the hablt of sending monev can fiagq no way of getting it to them. mhig aifficulty 1s now by way of belng rem. S in fhe Sintes £ about | no- | only | from ! Turkeq, writes | all food animals such as sheep | constant relteration of “Ivan’s in the | sending | Garden Picking Cabbages.” What Joard | the Japs chose we do not know, b 'M' may 11 imagine that when they since many of these relativ are part, ame and g ! money through the American and it is being distributed by means wel of Treasur Pet and the massion- | went into battle it was to the llt of | | aries on the ground. More than $80,- | some saucy tune rather than a dig- 000 has been sent in that way al- | nificd national “anthem.” The “Tip- | ready. Mr. Partridge declares that | pera of the present war of the situation financially will be wor cour«e, familiar to every one, than at the time the massacres in | - 1 96, because then the financial | First Robin a gencies of the country were not | eorint entirely abolished. He also ¥s “Wheat is now so cheap that for relief will go farther in supplying | food to the hungry than almost ever | in history."” ecdied in sons is, ol Fellow. Chronicle.) have got the a reporter last night in scmeone sald Fat (Rochester and The hello wires crossed picked up the the telephone Ameri t1 ted 1] L eniidine A ricans a :res rusted and ’ cans are greatly trusted and | Pve seen even honored by all parties in Tur- “You win,” began the reportcr key, apparent and the misslonaries | wf gon't care If you & Captain know what actual conditions bet- | gy began somebody; 1 want to ter even than government officials or {5, 'ad’ in that paper an’ I'm go- investigating committees That they (1 40 g0 it. I've been tryin' to get | belleve the worst is yet to come, eVen | v, o~ Whate that? First robin? | with distress so appalling now, is pret- Iirst nothin : il i ty gooa that funds “I beg your shonld the non- | the first robin combatants Turkey and wanted AW, come ‘don't you robin? winter, swamps. ‘ad." | He shuffled protestingly off the wire | @about then, and the pleasant voice de- | sald: “Hello, that? 1 wanted to tell saw the first robin Three of us were in a saw him near the road. It will be a full year, 1 think, for he was comfort- | ably t. | “Did you ever hear before what | that preposterous fellow said about | Tobins? Someone is always taking the joy out of life. When to know everything there won't be any amusement in life, will there? 1 did see the first robin.” girl must When receiver money | Hlectric Cleaner Price $25.00 The Vacuum Cleane on the market, at anywhere near the price. booth the first robin.' i best Blectric n Free demonst upon request, Annual Mark-Down on Blankets and Comfortables COTTON PLANKL'Tb. Now priced 69c, 97c and $1.40 pair WOCL-ENAP BLANKF Now priced $2.68 pair. fon at your hom« evidence nt in relief helpless but 1 near pardon, today, did see | Medina, he s to The Mot Stove e (RRoy K. Moulton in Syiacuse Around the stove Fifteen or twenty Get together each winter To set all the country’s And'all the grave affair. Are thrashed out neatly bate They talk in a learned for Of our relations with powers They talk religion and outdoor sp And slam the the court, nancial system, of And each one has But each one ha o straighten it out jefore they seftle it Groceryman Jinkly lights. ile furnishes all the oil Though he can't should. So he hurries them of ten, hat they might have solved if they't Warden Garmer Certam Saw Was Smuggled Into- Creaton. id the Intrud- know there ain't no | Rohing live around here in rEIe and Anyway, 1 this on e, er Journal) | first in the grocery store | all L n want tree I get night ills aright. of state in joint or ma more 0 is that you? Who you that near Medina. cutter and we was | hours rs we WOOL BLANKE Now priced $3.97 $4.98 $5.88 pair acls of supreme course, is wrong, sald all along bt different w and save the day. dead to rights turns out CRIB BLANKETS, Now priced 26c and 78c pair. SOFT FILLED COMFORTABL Now priced $1.10 $1.39 $1.68 $1.97 and $2.97 each we get = the and exactly wood, see why 1 SPRING SHOWING NEW DRAPERY MATERIALS! Priced 10c to 45c yard Largest selection to choose from In the city. he | home at the hour | is the its sad affairs meet fate, | of state | once SUNFAST DRAPERILES Must slumber until they Pringd 48o b6 880 yurd WE MAKLE AND HANG WINDOW SHADES Stock shades priced 26c to 79c each any special size or color shades made old Farmers As Speculators. (New York World.) It will take something more than Joseph Leiter's testimony to convince the American people that the only | throughout the state are on the look- speculators in wheat at this time are | out for Charles Creaton, convict No farmers. All that he s about the | 2710, who escaped from the state isks of the market is undeniably | Prison at Wethersfield between 1 and true, and it is those risks which caused | 1:30 o’clock Sunday morning by saw- | the wheat-growers to dispose of their | INg his way through the bars a“ | stocks long ago at prices which they | Skyligat on the boiler room, where | have always regarded as satisfactory. | he worked as a fireman, and climbing There are bonanza farmers | to and over the prison wall at the rear who cultivate whole townships, and | of the building. The Hartford po here and there farmers of smaller de- | lice are hard at work on the case and gree doubt Detective Sergeant Lewis G Mel- { as others profit | berger. who is in charge of the search the nunibe admits that the police and the small Mo of have found two im- 111, by selling their portant clues, and working on at good prices, and they them at the present time, [ the means nor the dispc Warden Ward A, Garner said yes- old crop into w year | terday that he atisfied that the According to {he census of 1910, of | SW with which Creaton cut his way the 6,361,502 farm operators the | to freedom was not stolen from the United Stat only 3,948, were | prison tool chest, but smuggled owners. Tenant farming throughout | into him from the outside, possibly the wheat belt has incre: nazing- | by being thrown over the wall near |1y during the last thirty The | the boiler room or shoved under the size of farms steadily wagon gate nearby. As Creaton, s e of who was a trusted prisoner, was un- farmers was in der the slightest surveillance, it would £640 a vear. 1890 and 1910 | have been possible for him to have the percentage farm property | secured the implement during the ab- mortgaged increased from o8 | sence of the guard on his rounds. ,in We shall not find a cat | view of the fact that up to erday plungers or slow sellers in a the prison officials were uncertain | tion such as this to whether the saw came from the | Even a better answer fo outside or the inside of the prison, is to be scen in the appa the estebliShment of the source may of big New York bakers to establish | mean that the identity of the person migh prices for bread. The who furnished it is suspected. not in touch with farmers when they decreed the six cent loaf. They had | heard from the wheat-pits of Chicag0 | ypyught that an important clue had and Liverpool, and they believed con- | yaa; - giscovered which connected the | ditions were ripe for a colossal profit. | osoape of Creaton wita the robbery | They afe weikening now. not bec of the tailor shop. of Patilelc McCohirt the sitimtic ghanked it at No. 703 Main street. A black silk- their own judgment to the lined overcoat which Mr. McCourt had the people has changed, recently finished making and a blue Fin JossphSletiangh serge Norfolk two-piece suit belofig- been regarded as a wheat e ing to Dr. William T, Owens, who has Chjicago. Hc is the oniy oS offices on the same floor of the build- there who eevr undertook to COrner: ;.- ore stolen and a suit of pough, a new crop just it was coming 1o | .0ap clothes was left in their place market. | A pair of black oxford shoes were algo stolen the shoes which were | teft behind were thought the po lice to be prison brogans, This burs oversight, lary was committed between 12 bands scems | o’clock and 4 Sunday morn- {o have been made for the new army | ing, it was ascertalned, which would Kitchener is recraiting for England. | conform to the time that it would Himself the embodiment ence | have taken Creaton to make the trip and lack of emotion, what Brit- | to Hartford. Detective Sergeant An- ish troops might suffer through the | drew J. Williams took the shoes and | absence of musi accessor does | clothes to the prison, where Warden | not scem to have oceurred to him al- | Garner declared that could not | though it appears his long military | have belonged to € he shoes, experience would have M him the | though of the gene of prizon value of mu in war, | workmansaip, we made with the | The oversight is be it nailed the uppers, whereas | is reported, largely by sub- made at Wethersfield are sewed scription. Full bands { vided in some ir frequent arrangements for a fife and drum who has listencd to ody thrown out by does not need any to know the it may the fighting. | It is curious how the tiste of the average soldier runs, when it comes to the music which is supply him linspiration by which fight and perhaps, die. In the Spanish-Ameri | can war none of the more o 1 stately “national hymn vogue. Instead, that of “rag,” ‘There'll in the Old Town Tonight,” the “pepper” for most ¢ of conscquence. In the war they used to hum. while rammiing down cannon ball, “llere’s Another Lump of Sugar IFoi Rird ) Little Bit off (1 eaid that in the far Russians did some ing to the tune of a lad, the substance of And all of grave | 10re Around the stove in the grocery store. | | | Hartford, March 2.—The police | to order or your shades made over. SHIRTWAL 50 to $7.50. on CEDAR CHE $4.98 to $12.50 D. McMILLAN 199-201-203 Main Street. some gamble in wheat, just by horse-trading, but these is comparatively s of | here, frmors Drosper. If at | prison cials products promptly have neither tion to carry | are in that, if captured, he is liable to re- turn to Wethersfield for ten or more years. One of these is that he con- sidered himself abused in that he had not been paroled after two years The other solution, and the which the prison offici and police think the correct Creaton believed himself some crime, possibly a which he had committed previous his incarceration at Wethersfield may have belleved that when the day of his release he might find officers from waiting in the warden's office with extradition papers for him, and might find him- self doomed to a num of more years in prison. With this danger before him, graduullf assuming the propontions of a certainty to his mina he may have been driven the courze he took. It i= not known whether there was any such crime committed, but there has been no application made te the prison for the surrender of Cres on his re lease an a ne wa in 9o was one the that for one to He one, is wanted serious sed vears diminishing. | American | 1913 at 1y income reported Jetween of came to 33. another state man; popula- as Mr. Leiter ent failure wer to Important Clue Discovered. Early yesterday morning it was ton hec temper | Creaton’s Crime. Creaton’s crime, it has been learncd was of far more serioug nat than the stealing of a binnacle from acht, 1lo was arrested in New Haven in 1011 by Detective Scergean Owen Daly and Detective Bennett Dorman, together with two othar criminals, ¥Fred Willitt and Russell The three h yacht at Marblehead, Mas: and had made thelr way to New Haven In it, stealing several boats on the way, The police hecame suspicious of the strange vacht, which was anchored off the City Point Yacht and through a ruse got the men po- lice he guarters, There they were arrested. Willitt and Ruesell recelved prison sentences and were discharged time who was the Instigator got a more severe of a ® | never | pert in | o big tor | s B and Sort. M ¥ Some Cemstitution.) Tave (Atlanta Through a strange provision for regimental Must by no a o'clock ciul of to the they sOMm¢ ago. Creaton of the crime penalty on al type re ” RECEIVE AMERICANS, March 2, Via Lon- The king and queen audi- di- en Foundation eling In rthering rellef hr from Nish at | those throy May The should publi are to But the to Bulgaria P. M aria tod: 0 Ernest of the American and Henry James | Sofia | don 1 of B ence rhout Have 1 he pro 1ces, more ared Another Term. ul granted an Bickne v Ited « Jr simply | Anyone ring mel combination is to b Creaton from the ; rector been a | clety, wh jonal have made his escape prison when he would he | freeman by release within ten months | tative of the Rockefoller is one that not yet been solved. | These Americans He was sentenced for an indetermi- | Southeastern Burope nate centence of two to five years, | They At the expiration of his minimum sen- two was before parole un- F g hy the was corp: ) the this claboration in st ve repre as av ben tra part play meagure srrivd n tence vears, his casc the directors for | der the permission given them tutes fused. in | were bit to BOOK ON STOMACH JLK 1. Mayr, of 154 Whiting St., Chicago, 111, a prominent druggist, has { published a guide to health, in which he shows how he cured himself and broug! relief to u sufferer from constipation indiges= | tion _and_intestinal troubles by the use of French healing oils, One dose usu- ally convinees. The most chronic cases rarely need over three doses, This book will be mailed free on request. Mayr's Wonderful Reme is sold vy leading druggists every with the positive understanding that your will be refunded without guestion or quibble if ONE bottle fails to give you absolute satisfaction, prison to Creaton's parole Members of the hoard sked night why this replied they could not [ member the particulars the case, but that it might for fights | numher of cascs is rtic jail record, a home a the in danger re- who was re oss were last rollickin that ot furnished the done other Be a me biliousne have heen The in hoard al- a Creaton itions may beard to of returning relcased reasons which Creaton to his foolhardy one British-Boer | ways more p Har in the case of man who has a had, or whos h a that old ha ar the be s to 1 e [ lieve to hi Therc two might have impelled action, apparently a \stern {1 their fight- | nonde bal- which a wa s i money best ript was MGMILLANS Frantz Premier g