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44 JIIING COMPANT, tors. By excepted) @liging, 67 Church t Omce at ss Mail Matter tne city or v art Of L th. Waow, 65 crnta & 30 ian for paver (o DNl o b advance. 60 u. $7.00 a ¥ —_— n ing mealum fitable ..a\";:fok! and press yonr P ) be round on maie at Hota- tand. 42nd St. and Broad- Fork City; Board Walk f ity and Hartford depot 1 um CALLS. gcided to give a heur- esday on the matter of ‘certain offices accord- ommendations of a con:- pinted by the governor. 1t that Governor Holconb favor of condolidating the labor and factory :ome éthers in the These sugges- en made before, but they Jrs, also peonomy. before the legislature this @ way that they may . The governor is in fa- ovement, both branches \ll‘(‘ are of the and the be same polit- he financiu the state are such ‘as enchment all along the ing thatwould be made in ‘over, would be small but move in the interest of b that is very much de- are severakapplications in those departments hut the gavernor has stated hot do anything as to fil- Intil the “egislature dis- faiiestion of consolidation. difficult to obtain any to who will appear for ftion of the offices in Who will appear against | It is possible that the e governor may find its b committee room, but pectation of any oppo- although there is some £ opposition to the mat- neys through the house | Wiping out public offi- been accomplishe: on and if it is done 1l be something new ecticut. D PROHIBITION, U Bryan is secretary of ng three times the presidency natur- olitical utterances con- nportance than that i leaders in the demo- e appears to favor mak- been bn & democratic issue in lonal election, the state- prompted by the condi« where he says he favors jal committeeman to ming of course that he | who meore clearly rep- ohibition issue than ona d to favor the liquor ‘n- letter to a friend state- a on he makes this h is not.an issye in all herever it is an issue T he democratic party tak n side. It cannot ally ! p liquor interests with- fnoral standing, and the & of a party is the thing [permanent strength. A vice or immorality sel- en a temporary advan- , but even if temporary d be secured by such n d be at the expense welfa.re of the party. lms made a statement inds well and will find bhy people. For a great lender itself to vice or uld indeed be a great it does’ not seem as if ble position on the li- would be surrendering jose conditions. It does t supporting a well re- law would be allying of interests, not at all be simply the act of meet an issue pf money, a Breat deal d a matter in which a of people has a per- nt interest. As a poli- the suggestion of Mr. be disastrous to the y for the reason that of involving such an fssue wouid | brge number of men who i themselves with that them to support op- \tes, and while it might from those inclined to- ition, the number would than it would lose apd e the result. As matters position of Mr. Bryan 'gm»d argument and were been being by suffra \.3 12 Connecticut, in the house small but sufcient cizhteen'votes. There are some are well pledased and there are others who see in it the near the time when the women They came close to it this time and it must be admitted that the women have made some progress. The de- [feat of the measure was foreshadowed in an unfavorable committee report. This defeat is only temporary and does not dispose of the question woman suffrage in this state for good, because the women propose to keep There again the bill yesterday Woman { beaten in defeated the majority of who approach of will win. of campaigning until thoy win, is no doubt but that they present it not for the fact they are women it might be said a convincing argument. The opposition is made of a natural an- tipathy to having women mixing into not because of a lack of in- telligence but many do not want to see women engaged in the settlement which so often relationship a politics, of public disturbs questions the pleasant hitherto existing among people which must result in the trou- bles and, bickerings which appear to be the natural outcome of active par- ticipation in’ the game of .politics. When the matter is reduced argument the women always have the of it, so far as words are con- cerned, but back of it all that natural opposition which man does not seem able to explain satisfactorily and as result the woman, if she understands the case, and she usually does, has the better of the dispute. The supporters of fvoman suffrage ate often held up to ridicule and there is hardly any doubt but some of them do say some funny things. There will be a lull in the campaign now for a while, but the women will soon resume their work ‘of conversion and there are some indications that and also to an best is a they may have better luck next time. BILLY SUNDAY DISPLEASED. It appears that the Rev. Billy day is not having as easy a time driv- ing the devil out of Paterson as he expected. It may be that the old boy is too thoroughly intrenched in the city and that Billy isn't big enough for the job. Instead of de- voting all his time to fighting Auld he is giving some of it whom he char- other d this the un- Horney to newspaper reporters an has made acterizes as liars some things. . Just what outbreak is columns ep- ithets would that in Billy’s opinion they have not been telling the truth about him or per- haps are ridiculing the character of the s The result is that the meetings arc not as well attended as expected and that up to the present time Billy not got Paterson, There has heen enough said by way of comment the big New York dailies to suggest that there is some opposition to Bitly’'s manner of cam- paigning, both to what he says and how he s He has, however, been drawing until he struck Paterson and the money has been com- ing in in large sums. The collections which it is said are taken up in dish pans in Paterson, are however, paratively small. The not filled at afternoon there is a larger number the evening. There has been some talk of havi the evangelist open mectings in Bes- ton and New York, but while a willingness to have him come to the former city has been manifested there has been no enthusiasm to have him tackle the job of chasing the devil out of New York. It may be that Billy is losing some of his magnetism and that he not able to enthuse the people in some localities as he is in some others. He was a power in Philadelphia, but he is not in Paterson, where, by cau plain in but the indicate not the press, seem to of vices. it is apparent has in a it well com- tabernacle is meetings but present in in is as well so successful the way, the folks are a bit more live- ]y than in the other city. The news from the tabernacle there is not to his liking either. TACTS AND FANCIES., Only two days were needed to wipe cut practically all evidence of the late Liizzard. This speaks well for the power of the sprifg sun.—Ansonia Sentinel, The appeal of the Sing Sing convicts for Billy Sunday to come and con- vert them looks as if they preferred a quick and easy change to the pro- cess of rebuilding which Henry Fora recommends.—Norwich Eulletin, If the jitney will eliminate the chain gang, that familiar spectacle every term of the criminal superior court in 1his country, well and good. In 1915 to witness prisoners chained together, followed by small boys, is not inspiring to the rising generation, let alone the liy-gone methods employed.—Middle- town Penny Press. The poor have a great many burdens to bear, a great many more than should fall to them, but perhaps the burden of being uplifted is the hardest of them all to bear. When a like a very sound on:. man has been working hard on his and & §lass of beer a great deal more than most that the uplifters are very likely to do for him.—Norwich Re- cord, The mayor has soundea the call for the clean up campaign and he has named a committee that should be re- sponsible for the proper impetus that will bring about a real cleaning for the city this spring. However. no matter what the committee does or can do there can be no reut campaign unless the people, the men, the wom- en, the children, take a veal inter- est in the effort everything they can to success.—Meriden Journal There probably will be no effort on the part of the promoters of the Willard-Johnson fight in the way of lobbying or otherwise to have United States laws changed or reinterpreted in such a way that the moving pie- tures of the bout can be axhibited in this country. As the American federal law now reads, moving pic- tares of boxing bout may be shown iu the state where they were taken, but they cannot be moved from one state to another or shipped into or out of the country.——Hartford Times. One good thing about these mov- ing pictures is that they enable the actor to spread himself out over any number of theaters. Through the ald of the film spectators in theaters from one coast to anotier may see the same actor in the same play at tire same time. And tne big actors are overcoming their aversion to playing for the movies.' Every day new names prominent in the = dra- matic world are being attached to the screen prdductions. Some time phonographic records will be so per- fected that spectators can hear as well as see their favorite actors in the film drama.—Manchester Herald. make it a COMMUNICATED. _ Address Grosvenor Dawe Explains H of Last Night. Editor Herald:—In one of the im- portant Hartford papers this morn- ing appears an account of the speech which I had the pleasure of deliver- ing before the New Britain Chamber of Commerce last night. The head-line used is misleading. It says "Grosvenor Dawe Flays Gov._ ernment.” Those who were present at the meeting, of course, know that there was no denunciation of our na- tional government. With all seriousness, 1 attempted to show that we have, in a measure, lost our sense of national balance, in that we have a tendency to legislate for agriculture and for labor in a more liberal way than we have leg- islated for business. This is not at all a party tendency. Misappre- hension of the relation of the three great forces of natianal life, agricul- ture, labor and commerce—has been in evidence in our political life with- out regard to party affiliation. The .main point of the brief state- ment of last night was that business men in a very marked degree, have neglected their duties by drawing aside and permitting a'denunciation af bus- iness,” without taking the very right and safe position that business, or the interchanges of goods and nec. essities of-every kind, is just as re- spectable and just as essential and, in its totality, just as honest as the growing and selling of food stuffs or the bargaining for the sale of labor capacity at a. price. So firmly am T convinced of the value of a democratic government, that instead af any man attempting. to “flay”’ political conditions that do not meet with his approval, he should at- tempt by interchange of thought and of opinion to bring the majcrity into agreement relative to correcting con- ions that seem to him unsatisfac- tory. Our political institutions are so pre- cicus and the right of the majority so essential to the maintenance of those institutions, that denunciation is al- ways a mistake. The great lesson which set the business forges in the last twenty wears is that bus- iness men must come into a more intelligent tivity in public affairs. This was the burden of that which I had to say last night. Your read- ers will immediately perceive that such a line of thought is quite dis. tinct from the tendency indicated by the head-line referred to. GROSVENOR DAWE, has been of the nation What You Ought to Know, (Brooklyn Standard-Union.) The rate for electricity in Manhat- tan has just heen reduced from ten cents to cight cents per kilowatt hour. If one not versed in technical terms asks what a kilowatt hour is he will be told that it is a unit equal to that done by one kilowatt acting for one hour, or, in other words, it is the equivalent of 1.3 horse-power working an hour. Tt is also generally known that a kilowatt is a thousand watts. But what may a watt be? This takes its mname from James Watt, the Scotch inventor, sents work done at the rate joule a second or in a electric by one Ampere under the of one volt. One horse- power ix 746 watts, The latter two terms known than the former. he volt is the unit of electromotive force, or that force which applied to a con- ductor with a re tance of one ohm will produce a current of one ampere; An ampe which term preserves the name of a French electrician, is the practical unit of electrical current. An ohm, from a German scientist of that name, is the practical unit of electrical resistance. To revert now to the joule. which should be pronounced as “ou’ in our, but in this country is usual called “jool.” is derived from the surname of an Inglish physicist. This is a unit of energy equal to 10.7 ergs. An erg in its turn represents tue amount of a work performed by n dyne working through a distance of one centimeter, or two-fifths of an inch. A dyne is a unit of force, which current pressure is ar better and promise to .ln‘ GOOD ARRAY OF NEW BOOKS NAMED IN INSTITUTE’S LIST THIS WEEK ind Lorraine, , 68 B. C. Alsace Kai from Caesar to 1871 A. L. w Annual and biennial their value and mstructions for by A. 1. Speer. . garden plants; us; with full their cultivation, Austria-Hungary and Ernest Ludwig. A semi-ofliclal defense tria. the war, by of Aus. .. Califarnia, an intimate Gertrude Atherton. “A keen sense of the dramatic and the picturesque, a vigorous portrayal of outstanding personalities from the mission padres to Heney and John- son, and an attractive style are dis- tinguishing features.” A. L. A. Book- list. history, by v w Concrete vey stone manufacture, Whipple. . by . Iitching, a practical H. Reed. “A book of detailed though densed directions for the student or practical worker. In contradistine- tion to Plowman it deals only with tools, materials, and methads to be used in the acid and drypoint pro- cesses.” A. L. A. Booklist. = .. Eternal peace and other interna- tional essays, by Immanuel Kant. . e How to produce children's plays, by Constance D'Arcy Mackay. “'Gives a history of the childrens’ play movement, a chapter on its so- clological aspects and suggestions fer new fields, with practical chapters on play producing, scenery, costumes and properties. Graded list of plays for public school use, a list for special holidays, for out-of-doors, for settle- ments, for boys, for girls, and for group reading; also a list of helpful books for directors.” A. L. A. Book- list. treatise, by E. con- e Joseph Conrad, by Richard Curle. "his pioneer study of Conrad, com- prising an outline sketch of his life and an enthusiastic appreciation of his work, will serve as a valuable in- troduction to his writings, The en- thusiasm is generous and sincere with- out effusiveness and the judgments on his work are often penetrating.” A. L. A. Booklist. . e v Law and usage of war, by Sir Thomas Barclay. “A handbook arranged alphabeti- cally with brief articles on terms and seneral war topics, which are con- stantly being used and discussed. Many references are made in the ar- ticles to the appendixes, which con- tain the original text and regulations of The Hague and other conventian treaties and recent acts”” A, L. 2 Booklist. H P 555 Present military United States, Greene: situation in by Francis Vinton « o rchology of management, the func- tion of the mind in determining, teaching and installing methods of least waste, by L. M. Gilbreth. e world in any number days, by Maurice Baring. “Humorous and clever comment on people and places and bits of genuine, serious description, all of which con. tain a surprising amount of atmo- sphere and experience, are to be found in this short diary of a trip around the world. An entertaining book for a dull or blue hour.” A. L. A. Book- list. Round the of Har- t i the Scientific mu Bertrand nagement, 'hompson. “A collection of articles reprinted from technical magazines (some of which have been out of print) elu.hor- ating certain phases of the Taylor tem of management, and describing the system in actual use.” A. L. .A Booklist. Published by Harvard University. . x bird-study, . w Through the Grand C: nyon from Wyo- ming to Mexico, by Ellsworth L. Kolb. “Story of a perilous rowboat trip very modestly and interestingly told. It was the first attempt to take mov- | ing pictures on the trip.” A L. A Booklist. by Clarence Sport af by H. K. Job. e With sabre and scalpel, Wyeth. “An autobiography richer in varied interest, more diversified with pictures of life amid all sorts of surroundings, |and in the rehearsing of it re-lived with keener zest and, if one may add it without offence, greater compla. cency, than the life-story of Di. Wyeth, is not offered to the reader every month in the year or every year in the century. In addition to his dashing exploits as a Confederate trooper in the Fourth Alabama Cav- alry, and his subsequent notable achievements in mediciné and surgery, he has been a farmer, woodsman, cot- ton planter, cattle-buyer, river-pilot, telegraph-operator, land-speculator, building contractor, lecturer in his profession, twice president of the New York Academy of Medicine, founder of the New York Polyclinic School and Haospital, which is the first institution of its kind in this country to offer post-graduate courses, and author of numerous works both of technical and more general interest.” Dail. “ e on Fictions. Brunel's tower, by Eden Phillpotts. “Mr. Phillpotts has written more cngrossing stories, but none of finer fiber.’ Outlook. s o0 Robert by J. A. Loneliness, son. < “Monsignor Robert Hugh Benson's last novel before his death is a story of modern times and conditions in England. The heroine is a beautiful young opera singer who leaped to |fame and happiness in a day.” Pub- lisher's note. by Hugh Ben- Y Martha of the Mennonite Country, Helen*R. Martin. “Martha has had mare than the usual “Mennonite maid” trainihg. Ro- mance enters in the person of th teacher of the village high-school.” A. L. A. Booklist. e Pepper, by Holworthy Hall. “‘A story of Harvard undergraduate life by the author of “Henry of Navarre, Ohig,” Publisher's Note. .. Pollyanna grows up, by Porter. by Eleanor H. . x s Stories without tears, by Harry Pain. “Staries without tears will increase the number of those who, like Alfred Noyes, regard the author as a great and sane artist, with a real knowl- edge of life.” N. Y. Times. .. “Refined minute farces.” Nation. .. Taken from the enemy, Newbolt. “A well-told story, of which are skilfully drawn. center of interest is the exiled Na- poleon I, whose friends make an at- tempt to deliver him from his island prison.” Publishers’ Note. by Henry the characters The acting on a gram for a second, gives it a velocity of a centimecter a second, the equivalent of the force exerted by a milligram weight under the in- fluence of gravity. In the electrical vocabulary the quantity of electricity conveyed in one second by the current produced by an electromotive force of one volt acting in a circuit, with a resistance of one ohm is termed a coulomb, from a French electrician of that name. It was formerly called a weber from a German professor, and is also termed a maxwell from an English physicist: unlike the examinations in the school system here called Maxwells from the supcrintendent of education, a former resident of Brooklyn, now living in Flushing. Sawdust Rlng (New York Sun.) Is another established form of American amusement destined to dis- appear? ls the circus, which in the form it has possessed for half a cen- tury is genuinely native, to follow negro minitrsley out of the taste of its public? There are already pes: wists who say that the essential char acteristic passed away altogether when the ring was surrounded by four walls instead of its canvas dra- peries and its roof because a fixed dimension. Did half its charm really side in the temporary nature of the walls which housed it? The excellent circus which is just now amusing its spectators in the home of all our circuses tarries with- in the walls of the Madison Square iarden but a short part of the period it used to spend there. Yet it has lost none of the quality which for- merly made it welcome during longer time. The circus which was visible at the Hippodrome could not well have been better so far as its entertainment was concerned, but it was powerless to hold at bay the ad- vancing movies which have now taken its place. Tt happens that the circus performances are just now capable of being as excellent in quality as their promoters want to make them, since conditions in Europe have sent here the members of that profession usu- ally emploved abroad. Still. the old time enthusiasm about the acrobats a and the clowns, the equestrians and the tight rope walkers, is not to be discovered. Did the transient uncertainty them of the circus show help to make it at- tractive? Would it rain or would the sun shine? Would the mysterious palace of canvas be heavy with the untimely waters or would its walls stand white in the sunlight? The horses tethered outside, the flaming alcohol torches, the clephants sway- ing at their pegs in the scattered hay, the pink lemonade and the pea- /nuts—were all these really such_im- portant characteristics of the circus as to take part of ite charm and mys- tery along with them when they dis- appeared from the programmes? Only a comparative statement of the success of the circus is its tents and between its brick walls would tell the story accurately. But who does not confess to a sense of loss that these characteristics of old circus days have passed? Ra time oad Bought for $1. (Kansas City Star.) Here's haw the Kansas Southwest- ern railroad, 60 miles long, between | Arkansas City and Caldwell, Kan., was sold a few months ago for $1, The road was owned jointly Atchison. Topeka and Santa the St. Lauis and San Franci road It was badly involved and in |a poor physical condition. The Kan. !sas state public utilities commission | had just issued an order that $150,000 | should be spent to put it in better | condition. K. P. Ripley. Fe and W. B receivers for over What commis “How road %' president af the Santa Biddle, onc of the three the Frisco, met to talk was to be done about the mer’s new order. wauld you like to Mr. Biddle asked. “T'll name a price, give Mr. Ripley “Go ahcad,’ said “One dollar,” “T'Il take it,” And that's the acquired full tifle of the branch road out when a Santa Fe (at the John W. Weeks buy the take,” or Friseo receiver Mr. Mr. way to Ripley responded. Biddle snapped. the Santa Fe the ownership The story came afficial told it luficheon. WHAT OTHZRS 3AY Views on all sides of timely questions as discussed In o3- | | changes thut come to Herald | ' oftice. k It's “Hay, Hogs, and Hominy. (Atlanta Dispatch to Philudelphia Public Ledger.) assurance that the the “hay, hogs, abandoned the set about | cror yuth- With at and hominy” cne-crop system. ernestly to diversify ner ern boards of trade and commercial and industrial organizations of all | kinds are busy advising the farmers how to adj to theso new conditions, Kditors, ecducators and lecturers have dinned into the ears of the farmers the idea thet the south can grow as fine a quality of hay as the west, Wita this idea in view, an in- vestigation recently was made. The farmers asserted there wus no market for the peavine hay. The commission grain merchants were then moved on. They acknowl- edged that they did not care to buy peavine hay, and gave their reasons. It was not cured properly, they was not baled properly, and, in dition, possessed a fattening quality, which made it unsuitable for work animals, As a result the south has now ‘a propaganda of ecducation on how to cure and bale hay. the last soutiy has heeded slogan, and improv- | A rather unique plan for | ing the grade of southern cattle is| being urged, and to this idea the farmers have taken readily, | The county commissioners of every | county in every southern state are urged to purchase a thoroughbread sire of one of the best breeds of cat- tle for the free use of the farmers of the county, Along this same line of dlversifica- tion it 1s also proposed that every southern town have a market day. While a complete revolution can- not be expected in one year, the de- crease of nearly fifty per cent. in the sale of fertilizer tags this year and the unquestionably large cut in cot- ton acreage show that King Cotton is tottering on his throne. The great- est fear is that a high price of cot- ton next year, due to the crop short- age, will plunge the southern farmer back to where he came from to the unending field of white. Shirts and Social Welfarc. (New York World.) It might once have puzzled the or- citizen to ‘discover what the relation is between the government of a great city and the price & utreu- cleaner pays for his undershirt his wife for her corset-cover. But that, of course, was before the days of social welfare. Now anybody who knows anything at all is well aware that it is the duty of government to4 inquire into such matters with “ view to increasing the effidienc of employees by correcting any errors of individual judgment on their part in the purchase of their undergarments. Th the shirt makes the man, it is essential that he should wear the right Kind of shirt and pay the right price for it, and so also of his wife's gorset-cover and garters. 1t is therefore greatly to be desired that the “White Wings’' and their wives should answer the formal ques- tions asked thein by the Bureau of Standards and fill out the blanks. To refuse to do so will be ‘‘anti-social” and antagonistic to uplift principles. Besides, it will leave various worthy city officials with less to do to earn | their salaries. -Then, when the mass | of data is all in and compiled and | tabulated and analyzed and reviewed somebody can evolve an official theory for the standardization of shirts and corset-covers for purposes of efficlency, and the world will wag on that much the wiser One of the benefits of modern gov- ernment that it has money to spcnd for such things. But surely that is an irrelevant if not impertinent in- quiry of Alderman Dowling, who wants also to know what the wives of city officials pay for their stoc cte. What have such qucstions to do with public officials? They ure the uplifters, not the uplifted dinary \ Lost Boniface, (New York Pre Once upon # time there man who kept a resiaurant York. He kept it because ducted his business with one the profits and the other comfort of his patr T got away from This man was altogether character. He never allowed wait to be backward in serving water in | the hope that something more costly might be ordercd. He never allowed waiters to suggest roast canvasback duck to all comers and look dis- gusted and contemptuous when some mere $2 entry was ordered instead. He never encouraged waiters to drive diners through their meal under whip and spur so that the table might pay as big returns as possible and so thut the waiter could pay himself in ditional fecs, His gzall fell short « a “bread-and-butter” charge, In this remarkable restaurant you | could daily over your coffee and cigar for half an hour without hav- ing your ears constantly bombarded with muttered imprecations from the | waiters’ side lines. There was such a restaurant keeper | once, hut he died long ago and left | no successors. was a in New ! on 1us neitaer a strange ad TANZER INDICTMEN Federal Grand Jury Completes Exam- | ination of Witnesses. New charging York, April conspiracy 8.~ to obstruct jus tice may soon be handed down by the Indictments | choose | priced | Boxes, priced | who is accuscd of us | most impertant of J., ' THE PERILS OF 'McMILLAN’S Don’t forget the new hours for swre ny ut 9 P, M., Saturday (mwr Dll)n at 6 .M, closing-——Mond | at ! ' The New Window Draperies Drapery materials by the yard and ready made Cui- tains you'll need now that spring house cleaning time has come. Our showing is now coms= plete. Scrims and Marquiseites A beautiful selection to from. Priced 10c, 12%e, 15¢ up to 39¢ yard, Colored Border Scrims, Priced 121j¢, 15¢, 17¢ and 22¢ 'yard. Figured Madras Priced 19¢, 22¢, 25¢ and 29¢ yard. ! Sunfast Draperies for over Draperies and Por- tieres, priced 39¢, 45¢, 50¢, 59¢ and 69¢ yard. New Cretonnes, Silkolines, Tapestrics, Monks’ ClotH, Burlaps, Denims and Felts. Large selection of Tapestry Table Covers, Couch Covers and Portieres. Window Shades All kinds and colors from 25¢ upward. Any special size or color made to order. Your old shades made over or new | shades ‘made and hung com- % plete. "Phone No. 21 and we are at your service. Curtain Fixtures . Rods, Brackets and Fix~ tures of all kinds. Vacuum Carpet Sweepers. and Electric Cleaners Combination Sweeper-Vac 3 in one, the best of its kind at the price, special $6.50 Reeves Suction Cleaner Priced $5.00. Frantz Premier Electric Cleaner Priced $25.00, Free demonstration of any above sweepers or cleaners at your home. Cedar Chests and Utility Boxes $4.98, $6.98, $8.50, $9.50 to $11.-70 Matting Covered Utility \1 98, $2.98, $3.50, $4.25 to $7.50. Qplendld selectlom. of Floor Coverings, at our 3rd Floor Drapery and Rug De- partment. Here you will find Rtugs, Linoleums, Oil Cloths, etc. 199-201-205 MAMN STRERT ing the Osborne malis to defraud J in hor $50.600 promire suit. This was stronzly hinted at yesterday after the jury had completed the examina- tion of a number of witnesses, tho whom was Frank- lin D. Safford, the hotel clerk who tdentified Mr. Oshorne the man Who visited a hotel at Plainfield, N, with Miss mes W breach BRONGCHIAL ILLS The bronchial membrane lining the bronchial tubes, the bronchial tubes and the bronchial veins all become highly inflamed from bron= chitis—results of exposure to cola or dampness. Quick /relief deter- mines whether the disorder shall stop at the first stage or progress to the chronic form. SCHENCK’S SYRUP contains no narcotics. By prompt teduction of the bronchial inflamma- tion relieves the keen pain and dull ache that throbs through the air passages and supports the affected parts. Eighty ycars a family medi- cine for the treatment of bronc hitis, coughs, hoarseness. 50c and $1.00 per bottle. If you nnot get it from your druggist, we 11 send direct to you on receipt of federal grand jury which is investi- gating the case of Miss Rae Tanzer, price. DR. J. H. SCHENCK & SON, Philadeipbia. l Cedar Chests in all sizes, & "4 v