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fick’s Igg len’s Egg? pu know which is best? know why you answer fanswer is very simple— . HEN ADVERTISES y time she lays an egg yone in the neighborhood s it. That helps the de- . If you were in the and heard a hen cack- ou wouldn’t get sore about ould you? You would 2 your face for the egg h has been announced with pardonable pride, wouldn’t DUCK won’t advertise. | got something to work it is quiet about it. And pint is Pays o Advertise W, [ b there is a woman in this country who con- without giving Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege- d a trial after all the evidence that is con- ipublished, which proves beyond contradic- rand old medicine has relieved more suffer- en than any other one medicine in the world? blished in the newspapers of the United States estimonial letters than have ever been pub- hterest of any other medicine for women— we publish, many new testimonials, all gen- .Here are three never before published : S. T. Richmond, Providence, R. L. I.—“For the benefit of women who suffer as I have ate what Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound I did some heavy lifting and the doctor said it ment. I have always been weak and I overworked Bs born and inflammation set in, then nervous pros- h I did not recover until I had taken Lydia E. Pink- ‘Compound. The Compound is my best friend and woman with troubles like mine I try to induce her ine.”—Mrs. S\ T. RicEmoNnD, 84 Progress Avenue, | Mrs. Maria Irwin, Peru, N.Y. Before I took Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- by irregular and had much pain. I had lost three It worn out all the time. This splendid medicine bthing else had done, and I am thankful every day IMrs. MariA Irwin, R.F.D. 1, Peru, N.Y. . Jane D. Duncan, W. Quihcy, Mass. , Mass.—* The doctor said that I had organic trouble me for a long time and T did not get any relief. I iInkham’s Vegetable Compound ad- ied it and found relief before I had bottle. I continued taking it all life and am now a strong, healthy n my own living.”— Mrs. JANE D. Avenue, West Quincy, Mass. o LYDIA E. PINKHAM MEDICINE CO. DENTIAL) LYNN, MASS.,foradvice. be opened, read and answered ad held in strict confidence, MANSFIELD RENAME BY GOV, HOLCOMB Preseat Insuranci Commissioner " Receives Renomination. Hartford, March 5.—Burton Mans- field, the present insurance commis- sioner was renominated for this office by Gavernor Holcomb today, and the senate upon receiving the communi- cation sent it to the committee on executive nominations. Mr. Mans- field was named by Governor Bald- win as a successor to Theodore H. MacDonald of New Haven, and the nomination was confirmed by the re- publican senate of 1911. Mr. Mans- field took office July 1, 1911, and his term will expire next July. The term of the office is four years. The governor also sent to the sen- ate the biennial report of State High- way Commissioner Charles J. Ben- nett. by Bill Reported Favorably. The judiciary committee reported favorably the bill empowering cities and towns to report to the public utilities commission damage caused by electralysis, to water mains and pipes and current of street railway { companies and entitling them to a { hearing. ¥ | Another favorable report empowers | the adjutant general to secure assist- ance without regard to limit of the cost, the present law limiting him to $5,000 a year in this regard. Un- favorable reports were made on bills { which would have required hotels and rooming houses to have name plates on their doors to show ownership of the building; on an amendment to the package law which would have af- fected net weight requirements on | food products; on the resolution to | appoint John M. Walsh of New Brit- ain, a state referee, Senator Isbell explaining that Mr. Walsh is not a lawyer and the state at present has enough referees; and on the bill rais- ing the age of consent of girls from 16 to 18 years. Other Favorable Reports. Favorable reports came on a bill to incorporate the Young Men’s Chris- tian association of Greenwich; on that to raise a commission to provide a suitable memorial to men of Connec- ticut who fought in the Spanish-Amer- jcan and the Philippine wars and the Boxer relief expedition in China, and on the bill to empower the adjutant general to design a medal to be given to all Connecticut men who served in these same campaigns. Senate Tables Bill. From the senate calendar was called up the bill to found the Palm- er Memorial association of Montville. Senator Whiton objected to the broad | powers given-in the act of incorpor- }nz!nn in respect to exemption from { taxation without a limit made to | amount of property to be held. The bill was tabled. In the matter of the bill regulating | the manufacture of mattresses and pillows from second hand material and prohibiting the making of these by persons who are suffering from disease, Senator Bishop inquired how the bill affected stocks in hands of manufacturers. Senator Klett said the bill was not effective until August | 1. Senator Isbell said time enough | should be given makers to handle | their stocks, and his amendment to | make the law effective Jan. 1 next | was adopted anq the bill passed. May Increase Capital, The St. John's Slovac Society of Bridgeport was empowered to increase its capital from $20,000 to $50,000. i Other bills passed ‘were those amending the Masonic Charity Foun- | dation charter, the charter of the | trustees of the funds for ministers of | the Congregational Church of Connec- ticut, and concerning notices to cred- itors who have claims against insol- | vent estates. | A favorable report was made on the | bill to throw the Connecticut river open to shad fishing. To do this the bill would repeal chapter 57 of the acts of 1911 which closes tributaries of the river below Portland bridge. Quorum in House. In the house there was again a quorum for a ¥riday session, the roll | call showing 142 present. The senate started with a quorum also, nineteen members being present. The hall of the house was granted to the committee on March 15 which will hear all bills relating to the em- ployment of school physicians. Bills Favorably Reported. IFavorable reports were made on | bills to allow the Milford Water com- pany to issue $50,000 in bonds; on the use of lock-ups by a town of those in neighboring town: ncreasing the fees of grand jurors to $2 a day and six | cents a mile; providing for one long term a year for courts of common pleas instead of the present five terms; amending the charter of Orange concerning rules and ordin- dnces; permitting Meriden to issue reet bonds; and Stamford to change ts seal. Among unfavorable reports were those on bills to compel the New York New Haven and Hartford Railroad company to issue 1,000 miles in cou- pons for $20, to give a uniform rate | of two cents a mile for passenger tick- | cts, concerning Pullman car service and tickets and on the petition of the Waterbury and Milldale Tramway company for an extension of time. I'rom the calendar was adopted bills incorporating the Young Wom- en’s Christian asociation of New Hav- en (concurrent); requiring manufac- turing establishments to keep cmer- gency Kkits for injured employes, amended to exclude agriculturalists; and concerning employment agencies =0 that fees are not collected unless a situation is furnished. Native egss advt. MRS, HELEN ANGLE ON TRIAL FOR HER ADMIRER’S DEATH Bridgeport, Conn, March §.—Ap- parently quite unmoved, Mrs. Helen M. Angle, singer and church worker, faced the twelve men who will decide whether, on the night of June 23 last, she caused the death of Waldo R. Ballou, a well known politician, who was her admirer. It is the conten- tion of the state that the woman pushed Ballou downstairs as' he was leaving her apartment in Stamford and that in the fall he received in- juries which caused his death. His body was found in the street near by, and bloodstains on the sidewalk' and up the stairs linked Mrs. Angle with his death. Mrs. Angle showed the strain she had been under, for she appeared only the shadow of her former self. Her hair was streaked with gray and her face was wrinkled. She has aged twenty years in the last eight months. FINANCE BOARD N THE HARNESS AGAIN Wil Give Hearings fo Thres De- partments This Evening. Discussion of the estimates of the school department, the Institute and the public amusement commission the program for tonight’s meeting of the board of finance and taxation. The school board asks for 272,27 are on imates The public amusement commission wants $4,250. Included in the incidenta] account estimates this year are items that total $13,625.00. They are advertis- ing and printing, $3,500; office sup- plies, $2,000; election, $1,000; tele- phones, $400; indemnity bonds, $400; reporting births and deaths, $650; darinking fountain, $200; municipal record, $700; charter and ordinance, $600; personal tax, $3,000; examin- ing land records, $125; typewriting for comptroller, $100; printed land index, $450; sundry accounts, $500. The special appropriations have not been compiled, but they will probably be the same as for the present fiscal year when'#$90,220 was appropriated. An emergency fund of $6,000 also ap- pears in the estimates, Interest and discount totals $88,- 416.25. The items follow: Sewer bonds, $43,800; street bonds, $2,000; park bonds, $5,115; refunding bonds, $5,293.75; school bonds, $30,837.50; town deposit fund, $370; temporary loans, $1,000. = Payment on prin- cipal due this year follow: - School bonds, $34,000; refunding bonds, $5,- 000; park bonds, $2,000. The follow- ing are the proposed sinking funds: Sewer bonds, $20,000; street bonds, $2,000; school bonds, $5,000; mu- nicipal building bonds, $2,000. The salary list of the city for next year will total $49,323. ——— e e AT ONCE! STOPS STOMACH MISERY AND INDIGESTION have not been presented as yet, “Pape’s Diapepsin” makes sick, sour, gassy Stomachs feel ' fine. Do some foods you eat hit back— taste good, but work badly ferment into stubborn lumps and cause a sick, sour, gassy stomach? Now, Mr. or Mrs. Dyspeptic, jot this down: Pape’'s Diapepsin digests everytning, leaving nothing to sour or upset you. There never was anything so safely quick, so certainly effective. No difference how badly your stomach is disordered you will get happy relief in flve minutes, but what pleases you most is that it strengthens and regulates your stom- ach so you can eat your favorite foods without fear. Most remedies give you relief some- times—they are slow, but not sure, “Pape’s Diapepsin” is quick, positive and puts your stomach in a healthy condition so the misery won't come back. You feel different as soon as “Pape’s Diapepsin” comes in contact with the stomach—distress just vanishes—your stomach gets sweet, no gases, no belching, no eructations of undigested food, your head clears and you ree: fine. | Go now, make the best investment you ever made, by getting a large fifty-cent case of Pape’s diapepsin from any drug store. You realize in five minutes how neediess it is to suf- fer from indigestion, dyspepsia or any 1 tomach disorder. RELATES TESTS HE MADE WITH DUMMY Corner Phelan Called to Stasd at Mrs. Aagie’s Trial. Bridgeport, March 5.—In its efforts to prove that Waldo R. Ballou did not come to his death by falling down stairs from the landing adjoining the room of Mrs. Helen M. Angle in the Rippowam building at Stamford, the state today in the trial of Mrs. Angle for manslaughter called Coroner John J. Phelan to the stand to tell of tests he had made with a dummy which convinced him that if Ballou had fallen down the stairs the sound of the fall would have been heard by other occupants of the building. The coroner said he had taken a dummy representing the figure of a man about the weight of Ballou and had it thrown from the top of the stairway leading to Mrs. Angle’s apart- ments to the floor below, while he stood in the room of Patrick Rabbit, on the secohd floor separated from the landing by an eight inch brick wall. He had two others in the room with him and distinctly heard the sound of the dummy as it fell. Speaking Tests Tried. The first time the dummy was thrown from the top of the stairs, it landed a few stéeps from the bottom. He then had it thrown from the third or fourth step down and it struck the landing on the second. floor. A num. ber of speaking tests were also tried and these showed that sounds made in an ordinary tone of voice could be heard in that room. ° Preceding the testimony of the cor- oner, a detailed description accom- panied by maps of the Rippowam building and the location of the Angle apartments and the Rabbit room was given by Nelson E. Emmeons, an ar- chitect of Stamford who designed the building. With the exception of the few moments that the coroger was on the stand the testimony of Em- mons occupied the whole morning. Shortly before adjournment yester- day, Harold A. Parsons, a civil en- gineer of Stamford, was put on the stand to describe plans he had made of the Angle apartments and the stair- way leading to it, together with the location of the various objects in the rooms and stains, spots and barefoot prints which the witness said ap- peared to be blood. Emmons Describes Building. At the opening of the session to- day, Nelson E. Emmons, a Stamford architect, was asked by the state’s attorney to describe plans of the Rippowam building. Emmons de- signed the building. He was asked particularly to poilnt out the location of Mr. Rabbit’s room on the second floor with reference to the stairway leading to Mrs. Angle’s rooms on the third ffoor. He said Mr. Rabbit’'s room was under a part of Mrs. Angle’s front room. Opening of court was delayed for about half an hour because counsel in the case were engaged at a short calendar session of the superior court in another part of the court house. State’s Objection Sustained. The witness was asked if he had made experiments to determine whether the noise of a falling body in the Angle apartments could be heard in Robbit's room. Witness had not done so. The plans were submitted ag exhibit G by the state and Jacob B. Klein of counse] for the defense took the witness in hand. He sought to have him say whether the stairs were as steep or steeper than are usually put in buildings. An objec- tion by the state to these questions was sustained by the court. Asked by Mr. Klein for the percentage of grade of the stairs, the witness said he could not give it, but promised to secure the information and sumbit it at a later date, Detail of Measurements. Mr, Klein went into considerable detail of the measurements: of land- ings, hallways and rooms and of the cntrances and exits of the Angle apartments and of the lodge rooms on the third floor, In the course of his questioning Mr. Klein brought out that the dis- tance between the door leading from Mrs. Angle’s room to the head of the stairs was about ten feet six inches in a diagonal line. Efforts of counsel for the defense were directed yesterday largely to drawing from the state’s medical wit- nesses a statement that the injuries suffered by Ballou, who died of a fractured skull, could have been re- ceived by a fall downstairs. From four of the five physiclans examined this admission was secured. Consid- erable attention was also paid to the lighting of the hall and stairway. OVER 90 MILES OF PIPE. New Britain’s Fire Fighting Facilities Shown by Water Board. A review of the work done during the past flscal vear by the water de- partment, furnished by Commissioner P. J. Egan today, shows that New Britain has over ninety miles of pipe lines and water pipe. The exact length is 461,864 feet. During the past year the following pipe has been laid: Four inch pipe, 200 feet; six inch, 7,560 feet; eight inch, 735 feet; twelve inch, 1,200 feet; sixteen inch, 1,500 feet. s hydrants were added dur~‘ , making 656 in all now the following being installed during ¥our inch, twelve: six inch, twenty-eight; eigit inch, six; inch, three:; sixteen inch, three. These figures were compiled for an agent of the New England Insurance exchange, who is investigating con- ditiong in this city, the vear: « ESTABLISHED 1886 » Globe Clothing House n Umbrella| Bargain 28 Inches, Parragon Frame, Fast Color, Waterproof, a Dol- lar Umbrella For 55c. Look atThem in North Window We AreNow Showingthe New Styles of Hats From —8$2.00 Up——— We Sell Stetson Hats. Our Classified olumns wil/l do it - — s There are 1,253 valves, | twelve | THE GREAT WESTERN MARKET QUALITY STORE OF LOW PRIC Fresh Lean Roast of Pork ....:..... seens . L. 12 1e2¢ Fresh Lean Shoulders (Eastern Cut) . 12 1-2c Fresh Lean Lamb Legs 1-2¢ Fancy Rib Roast of Heavy Steer Beef 19¢ 2 1bs. Shoulder Steak (Heav) 25¢ Pot Roast, Lean and Tender .. 14¢ Fresh Cut Hamburg Steak . 14c Lean Skinned Back Hams P ] Lean Smoked Shoulders . . ceee srnn ceae 11 1-2¢ Heavy Cut of Salt Pork .. seseenans sree T 2 Lbs. Beef Liver 25¢ 2 Lbs. of Pure Lard 250 Compound Lard sesse fc b, EXTRA FOR SATURDAY 1 Peck Potatoes and 2 Quarts of Onions 25¢ Hard Stone Turnips reck SPECIAL ON SUG AR ATURDAY 9 Lbs. Sugar and Can of Tomato Sauce 35 oo 55c Pure Olive Oil, 1-2 Pint Can ‘e 25¢ Pure Olive Oil, Former Price 80c Qua . B0c¢ Quart Sauerkraut .. 9c¢ Quart Guaranteed Native Fresh kEggs 20¢ Dozen Guaranteed Candled Eggs, 4 Doz . 95¢ Fancy Prunes, 3 lbs. for .. .. . .. 28c Fancy Dried Peaches . 10c Lb. Asparagus, Former Price . 18¢ a Can 4 Cans Tomatoes . 25¢ 3 Bottles Catsup ’ L... 2BC KALE, SPINACH, LETTU ONIONS, CABBAGE AND PARSNIPS. 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