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" FOOTBALL MAY BE ENDED AT CARLISLE sy Official Status of School One Reason Why Officials May Cut Out Game. Carlisle, Pa., Dec. 1.—Rumors have gafined circulation here in the last few days that Supt. Lipps of the Car- lisle Indian school will discontinue football because of the bearing on the Carlisle school of departmental restrictions which place a non-reser- vation Indian school located at Car- Isle at a distinct disadvantage in re- ceiving Indian youths of football size as compared with reservation schools. Differences between Coaches Kelly and Welch are said to have contrib- uted to a bad showing this year. Supt. Lipps, when asked about his policy, said he was giving considera- tion to the proposal to eliminate foot- ball, but had not made up his mind apd probably would not make an an- uncement before the end of the week. Lipps and Coach Kelly both Jeft for Washington today, presumu- bly to consult with the Indian office officials. It has become known here that Kelly practically relinquished the position of head coach ten days ago, being succeeded 'y Welch. The students are strongly against sacrificing football and neither they nor the Indians’ friends here under- stand why the game should be abol- ished. 1t is known that it is im- possible under departmental regula- tions to use football money to pay transportation of poor boys who want to enter Carlisle and that it is also necessary for Indians to complste reservation courses now before en- tering Carlisle. .4t is thought here that, if teaching difficulties can be settled, Carlisle should be able to meet a fairly strong schedule. Demands for games are great, Princeton just having asked for a contest for the first time in many vears. MAHAN NOT APPROACHED. Jsconsin Has Not Offered Iim FPo- sition as Football Coach. Madison, Wis.,, Dec. 1—.The posi- tion of coach for the University of ‘Wisconsin football team has been of- fered to no one, according to Pres- ident Charles R. Van Hise yesterday. A report was current that Captain Eddie Mahan of the Harvard eleven had been offered the position. The Regents will meet next Wednesday o dfermine whether the present coach shall be retained. Gilmore Dobie, coach of the Uni- versity of - Washington eleven, un- beaten for eight years, is a candidato for the job. Dobie is a Wisconsin graduate and former star. fambridge, Mass., Dec. 1.—Eddie Mznan, captain of the Harvard foot- ball team, said last night that he | would not consider any offer to coach a football team until he finished his course of study here next June. Friends of the Crimson leader said he had received several proposals from colleges, but was treating all alike at the present time. MIGE] LOW FAVORS SANFORD. Former Yale Captain Recommends Selection of Rutgers Coach. New Haven, Conn., Dec. 1:—Lucius H. Bigelow, Jr., captain of the Yale team, in 1907 and one of Tom Shev- lin’s assistants on the Yale board of coaches this fall, in a letter to “The Yale News” yesterday recommends Geofge Foster Sanford for Yale's new head coach, with Al Sharpe, as second choice. He also recommends that Fred Daly be the freshman coach, and Mike Sweeney, of the Hill school, be athletic adviser. Bigelow’s advocacy of Sanford for head coach is a tremendous surprise to ¥gle men, for Bigelow and San- ford were not in harmony when in college. Bigelow declared that any new football system at Yale must be devised only with the advice and con- sent of the representative Yale foot- ball men. MITCHELL HARVARD COACH. - S A Vetdran of Boston Nationals to Han- dle Crimson Bascball Squad. Cambridge, Mass., Dec. 1.—The election of Fred Mitchell, coach and scout of the Boston Nationals, as head coach for the Harvard basebzll team, w announced by the Harvard Athletic association last night. He is to be engaged for one year, and will suegeed P. D. Haughton, the Crim- son’s football director, who stepped into the hreach caused by the resig- mation of Dr. Frank J. Sexton as baseball coach in the middle of the last season. ) Mitchell has played with the Bos- ton Americans and the Philadelphia Amggicans as pitcher, and with the New York Americans and Boston Na- tionals as catcher. HERRI LEHIGH COACH. South Bethlehem, Pa., Dec. 1—Har- ry Herring, in professional basketball for teen years, was elected coach ¢ Lehigh University basketball squad yesterda. He will arrive to- morrew. For several years Herring as'Wiosen as guard on the All-Amer- ican professional team. IWALE. BEGINS HOCKEY PRACTICE New Haven, Conn., Dec. 1.—Thirty candidates reported for the Yale hoc- key team yesterday Capt. Burgess hnnounced that practice will begin Baturday and that arrangements have been gnade for a series of three games ith ittsburg teams to be played in Pittsburg during the Christmas vaca- ion. DILLON BEATS FLYNN. New York, Dec. 1.—Jack Dillon of lindianapolis, outfought the veteran Tim Flynn in every one of the ten ou! of the windup at the Broad- vay oporting club last night. Flynn s outpointed and outfought, but ever outgamed, and sent every one ome satisfled that he had had his poney’s worth. THE VALUE OF TRUTH GERMANY PLANS T0 ‘Truthin businessis just asimportan as truth in every-day life; truth creates confidence, establishes good-will and builds a reliability that will not be wrecked by the storms of competition. Through three generations people have learned to place reliance on the advertised words of Scott’s Emulsion, | because they are untarnished, unex- | aggerated truisms about a household remedy of real and actual worth. ‘The popularity of Scott’s Emulsion is increasing as intelligence advances, because in these days of adulterations it continues to guarantee pure cod liver oil medicinally perfected with glycerine and hypophosphites to build strength, im- prove the blood and strengthen the lungs. Itis free from alcohol or opiates—a whole- | some food-tonic, truthfully advertised. i Scott & Bowne, Bloomfield, N, J. 15-20 TRIEST, RELEASED. THANKS ROOSEVELT Kenneth G. Triest, the former Princeton student who was arrested in Liverpool early in January and held by the British government on a charge of espionage, is indebted for his release, in some degree at least, to Colonel Theodore Roosevelt, whose appeal to Sir Cecil Spring-Rice, the British ambassador, on the boy’s be- half was largely instrumental in bringing about his release. Triest's father, Wolfgang G. Tiest of New York, brought his son back from England and then took him to Oys- ter Bay to thank Colonel Roosevelt. NOT CONNECTED WITH GOVERNMENT Chamber of Commerce Issues State- ment Concerning Company Selling Oklahoma Lands. Information received and given out by the Bureau of Investigation of the Chamber of Commerce is to the effect that the company temporarily located in New Britain offering to purchase government Indian lands in Oklahoma for New Britain people has no con- nection whatever with the govern- ment, and has no standing with the government which enables it to pur- chase land to better advantage than any individual. The land which will be sold by the government at auction only, is stated by the Department of the Interior to total.about 184,800 acres, or less than 290 sections, and will be sold subject to certain restrictions and reserva- tions by the government. Our information is that the com- pany temporarily located in New Britain desires to act as agents for New Britain people and agrees to purchase if possible, certain plots of land to be selected by the party de- siring to purchase, and to lease or to sell the land for the purchaser within a short time after purchased, pro- viding it is able to do so. Members of the Chamber of Com- merce are entitled to receive further irformation by applying at the office. ARREST JUNK DEALER. ‘Will Be Tried for Buying From Minors ~—Other Court Cases. Marlin Nemroski, a junk dealer, was arraigned before Judge James T. Meskill in police court this morning and charged with a violation of the law which forbids a junk dealer from buying scrap from minor children. The case was continued until tomor- row morning on the request of Law- ver M. D. Saxe, counsel for the de- fense. Henry Churchill, who was sent to jail for ten days for drunken- ness, might have got off more easily had he told the truth. In court he told Prosecutor Klett a number of conflicting stories as to where he came from and where he was going and previously he told the probation offi- cer that he came from another place. The judge detected the lies and sent- enced him accordingly. I STROM ON PROBATION, Frederick Strom of Edson street, who has just finished serving a term cf thirty days in jail for beating his wife, was in court this morning and placed on probation for three months to insure his good behavior. Postmaster Collins and bride, who was Miss Mary J. Corliss, have re- turned from their wedding trip and TAX WAR PROFIT Bill ntroduced at the Opening of the Reichstag 30, Via London, 1, 2:07 a. m.—The opening of the Reichstag today was marked by an address of welcome by the president, Dr. Kaempf, in which he compli- mented Germany on the highly satis- | i i Berlin, Nov. Dec. factory military situation in the west | and east and the successful conclusion of the Serbian campaign and a speech by the secretary of the imperial treasury, Dr. Karl Helfferich, in intro- | ducing a bill arranging the prelimi- naries for the taxation of war profits Dr. Helfferich urgeqd the speedy | cussion of the bill so that no profits could escape taxation, promised an actual measure on the {axation of war profits for the next sitting of the Reichstag, in March. He intimated that it would impose a graduated scale of taxation based on the amount of the war profits and would also include a tax on incomes which had incrcased during the war, | but he gave no indication of the ex- tent of the prospective taxation. Dr. Kaempf’s Address. In opening the Reichstag, the presi- i dent, Dr. Kacmpf, d: | ‘““While in the west the cnemy’ temp® to break throt undertaken | with strong forces, failcd when con- fronted with the contempt of death | of our troops and their commanders: while in the east the German and Austro-Hungarian arn hold with an iron grip what they have won in hattles, which were boldly planned | | and heroically carried out: while on | i the Isonozo the Italians, by force of | arms, are attempting to conquer the | []east part ‘of what before the war they could have gotten from Austria without striking a blow, in the Bal- kans feats of arms have been accom- plished and events have occurred which, from both a military and diplomatic point of view, have been | carried through with splendid and un- | surpassed certainty and which have | i cnabled us in combination with our | i allies and with the Bulgarian army to avenge the murder of Sarejevo and i{c bring to an end, as we hope, for zll time, Serbian intrigues, which have proved to be so mischievous to Europe. Have Crowned Victol “In close union of arms with the brave armies of the King of Bulgaria {and the Bulgarian people we have {crownea our victory. We welcome this from the bottom of our hearts. | The Serbian army has been trium- | phantly defeated. The Turkish armv | has lived up to its old reputation and has brought about the failure of the Dardanelles enterprise. “Proud England is troubled about the key to her supremacy. All our enemies have recognized that we are invincible on the battlefield; so, the more eagerly do they cling to their hope to destroy us economically, to conquer by hunger. they allow themselves to be deceived regarding our financial strength, which has been proved by the astonishing results of our war loans, so they have also been deceived in their estimate of our economic strength. Potatoes Are Abundant. “We have corn for bread. Pota- toes, the most important food of the people, are abundant. If in other things there may be a scarcity, as cannot be disputed, yet the hardships thus caused to a majority of the poorer people will be surmounted by the organization of the provision mar- ket. We, therefore, financially and economically, have every reason to contemplate the future with firm de- termination and unshaken confi- dence.” Peace Must Bring Security. Earnest Bassermann, a leading na- tional liberal member of the Reich- stag, discussing the war in the “Na- tional Zeitung,” under the title: “The Will of the People,” says: “A sluggard peace which does not bring us security east and west is equivalent to a lost war. The repeti- tion of a war of destruction by Eu- ropean powers against Germany must be made impossible and will be made impossible if we make ourselves so pcwerful that none will dare attack us. Decades will pass before the hate of peoples will abate, and only fear of the strong will guarantee peace. “It is not lust of conquest, not van- ity nor desire to rule the world that drives us forward, but the spirit of sclf-preservation of a healthy people, firmly resolved to achieve security east and west which will prevent a repetition of this horrible war which has spared no single family.” Herr Bassermann says that nothing could tend to lengthen the war more than the appearance that Germany was seeking peace. He insists? that | the efforts to starve Germany, as he expresses it, not only have failed, but that the country can hold out for years, if necessary. COLD GONE! HEAD AND NOSE CLEAR at- First Dose of “Pape’s Cold Com- pound” Relleves All Grippe Misery. Don't stay stuffed-up! Quit blowing and snuffing! A dose of “Pape’s Cold Compound” taken every two hours until three doses are | taken will end grippe misery and Lreak up a severe cold either in the . head, chest, body or limbs. It promptly opens clogged-up nos- trils and air passages; stops nasty discharge or nose running; relieves sick headache, dullness, feverishness, sore throat, sneezing, soreness and | stiffness. Pape’s Cold Compound” is quickest, surest relief known and costs only 25 cents at drug stores. It acts without assitance, tastes nice, and the have taken up their residence in Far- 1 mington, WILL TRY TO SETTLE | a call to the members oi the board to | | clogged Kkidneys; | bladder disorders. causes no inconvenience. Don’t accept a substitute. | ney flushing any time. STRIKES IN STATE ! | Board of Arbitration and Mediation | Ordered to Organize by Gov- Holcomb Hartford, Dec. l.—Governor Hol- comb sent yesterday a letter to Sen- | ator Lucius E. Whiton, of New Lon- ! don chairman of board of mediation and arbitration, directing him to cail a meeting of the members of the board for the purbose of organizing | and work under the statutes for the | purposc of settling strikes in the state. The letter of the governor was in | reply to one received by him from | Senator Whiton in which the senator | stated that it Was not customary for | the board to mect for the purpose of | until cailed together I.,\" The senator said Gov. | GoVv. Weeks had issued | cin and c. Holcomb directed Mr. Whit- attention to a letter from Mr. O'Mcara of New Haven and the senator replied that at one time he | did not think the statute gave the poard power to interfere, but that he found he was mistaken in that opinion. Gov. Holcomb said he did not dare to say what duti of the board were in the premises, but he wanted it to do whatever it has power to do under the statute. | MISS JANE i org: on’ sterday that ADDAMS { CHICAGO HOSPITAL Settlement Worker and Peace Advo- cale Suffering From Fever—Her Condition Not Critical. Chicago, Dec settlement wor aavo- cate, was taken to the byter v, suffering from atd, Addams a soverc but not critieal. e exact nature of her illness has not been determined. Dr c Herrick said that her ill- ness is not serious Miss Addams had well for several da Whether her condition will prevent her from ac- companying the Ford peace party | abroad depends on developments. | Last Sunday night Mi ddams ad- | dressed a meeting on the subject of peace and the Ford peace ship in particular. & s frequently ap- plauded and r one outburst she remarked smilingly:— “I thank you for your applause, for after 1 sail on the ¥ord ship, I prob- ably never shall be applauded again.” After the meeting she explained to friends that her rem knowledge that the Ford unpopular n DEFENSE SAYS CASE | | J. not been feeling mi; « r quarters.” War Relief Work in France Wins Medals forU.S. Women It was announced in Paris that the French foreign office gold medal had been bestowed wupon Mrs. Harry Payne Whitney, founder of the hos- pital for the wounded at Juilly, and that it had been dispatched to this United States and would be present- ed to her by Ambassador Jusserand. The similar medal, which President, PROF. GEER TELLS OF RUSSIA’S RIS 5 Interesting Lecture Before Woman's Club on Rise of Muscovite Em- IS POLICE FRAME-UP ntain Miss Flynn Did Not Violate Law In Silk Mill Strike in | Chicago. Paterson, N. J., Dec. state witnesses testified yesterday ut | the second trial of Elizabeth Curley | Flynn, a labor leader, charged with | inciting silk mill strikers to riot, that although they saw between 250 and | 400 strikers outside of the Miesch Mill | on the night of Feb. 25, 1913, there | was no rioting, nor did the strikers | attempt to enter the mill. | The prosecution contends that after several hundred striking operatives listened to a spedch by Miss Flynn the strikers went to the mill in an at- | tempt to force operatives at work there to strike. The state closed its case at the morning session and immediately after that Alexander Simpson, as chief | counsel, opened the defense for Mis Flynn. *“Our defense,” he said, that Miss Flynn did not violate the law, and that this is a police frame- up.” — BIG EATERS GET KIDNEY TROUBLE SAYS AUTHORITY 1.—Three | Take a tablespoonful of Salts flush Kidneys if Back hurts. S u— | Omit all meat from diet if you feel Rbeumatic or Bladder bothers. to The American men. and. women must guard constantly against kidney trouble, because we eat too much and all our food is rich. Our blood is filled with uric acid which the kidneys | strive to filter out, they weaken from overwork, become sluggish! th~ elim- inative tissues clog and the result is kidney trouble, bladder weakness and a gencral decline in health. ‘When your kidneys feel like lumps of lead; your back hurts or the urine is cloudy, fu'l of sediment or you are obliged to seek relief two or three times during the night; if you suffer with sick headache or dizzy, nervous spell, acid stomach, or you have rheumatism when the weather is bad, get from your pharmacist about four ounces of Jad Salts; take a table- spoonful in a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys will then act fine. This fa- mous salts is made from the acid of | grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia and has been used for gen- erations to flush and stimulate | to neutralize the acids in the urine so it no longer is! a source of {rritation, thus ending Jad Salts is inexpensive; cannot in- Jure, makes a delightful effervescent lithia-water beverage, and belongs in every home, because nobody can; make a mistake by having a good kid- | centuries it w | Carlyle half tiger and half | force of char: | is possible to take a railroad journey pire and the Cause- MRS, 1\( V;?HDEéB/LT. SR. MRS. HE WHITNEY & Poincare directed should be present- dor. R b e e e i e o L S T s e B KEFPYOUL FACEYQ Soap assisted by Cutid Ointment will help you. Samples Free by Cutieura Soap and Ointment sold Liberal sample of each mailed free, with 32-p. ‘Addrees post-card **Cutiours,” Dept. 15¥, ~ SUCCESSFU WORK MAKE MANY CONVER NATUREOPATHIC DOCTORS MAKING HUNDREDS O FRIEN IN THIS CITY. The remarkable success tha Natureopathic doctors are ha the healing of obstinate cases of} standing has attracted to them a following, many people having astounded a‘ their work. At Ha their work during the past t ars has been so successful as ct attention from all over New ed to Mrs. W. K. Vanderbilt, Sr., for | her work in the American ambulance, | is now on the way to the United | States for presentation by M. Jusser- | and. A like medal for Mrs. Robert Woods Bliss, wife of the secretary of | juna “ The same remarkable sd the American embassy in Paris, for | (oo, oo FEre N of the N her organization for the care of or- | g o vhic” treatment throughout phans also is on the way to Amet- . state. The records of testimd ica for presentation by the ambassa- | from cured cases are at the state) ital, Hartford. Their methods in fact revolutionized the h methods. - Since they appeared several months ago the papers con' ned columns after colum regard to their work, while many dred people have availed the of the opportunity of receiving ment at their hands, securing in practically every instance b | satisfying themselves of the sound of the theories advanced by this school of healing. So many people have sought BASE FOR ADVANCE UPON PETROGRAD | | | Germans Have Remarkably Effective System of Railways and Telegraphs Along Riga-Dvinsk Front. | “The Rise of Russia” was the sub- | ject of an interesting lecture delivered | fe before the Woman’s club in the Bap- tist church chapel yesterday afternoon | M, Geer of Hartford. | The club was well represented at the | gathering. Prof. Geer traced the wonderful development of the Musco | | { by Professor C. vite Empire, which, contrary to popu- lar belief, is of recent origin. For s a backward coun due to the fact that it faced the east | and was therefore Asiatic instead orl‘ European. Peter the Great. called by | human, | gave Russia it first real impetus as a | world power. Coming to the throne in 1700, he | had three ambitions: First, to estab- | lish an absolute monarchy; second, to | adopt western civilization, and third, | to find a way to the Black Sea and to possess Constantinople. Through his wonderful power and | cter he was able to real- | ize the first two, but the third, the con- | quest of Constantinople, proved fu- | tile. All the Romanoffs, including the Catherines, were strong rulers. Peter | the Great advanced Russia eastward | with the result that today it touches | the Pacific and on south China and | almost India. Russia’s enormous ter- ritory destines her to become a world power. The general idea is that Rus- sia is a cold, snowy country with lit- tle to recommend it, but as a matter of fact the territory is so great that every shade of climate is experienced: | It possesses the finest cotton and | wheat fields in the world and fine vineyards. Along the rivers of south- ern Siberia tropical plants grow. It on Russian soil of 6,400 miles. It is ‘the most prolific country in the world, having doubled its popula- tion in seventy-five years. It now numbers 160,000,000 and all Russian emigration is to Russian territory. Beyond developing its own resources, Russia possesses three distinct am- bitions: First, to become head of all the Slavic people; second, to gain con- trol of Constantinople, which has been the aim of every ruler for 200 years, and third, to gain increased power in the east. Both Russia and Germany seek a warm water port at the head of the Persian gulf. The capture of Constantinopie would mean for Russia a great tri- umph as it would offer a wonderful | electric services and are still seeking at offices at Hartford. However, The Blumer College of Natureo Paris, 1.—The remarkably ef- tive system of railways and tele- {graphs which the Germans have con- | o g o b O v structed to connect with Fleld Mar- | or their school, to locate perman shal Von Hindenburg's forces along | jn New Britain, local people are the Riga-Dvinsk front is described by | pleased. His offices at 162 Main s Charles Rivet in a despatch to the | are daily crowded with patients. Temps from Petrograd. He says the | reports are that he is meeting Germans have given full scope here | remarkable success to their genius for organization and Natureopathy has taken a st that their railways have excited the | hold on the afflicted public; ‘the admiration of all who have seen | ple are ready to recognize the m them. of Natureopathy and crowd all off These lines are brought from the } of Natureopathic physicians throi rear to the front in pieces like chil- [ out the state. Yet so great is dren’s toys and immediately linked | crowd of new patients constantly together. Thus a network of rails | ing to them that they have been o extends behind the entire front. At | pelled to keep late hours. The Hi the same time they have constructed | ford office is obliged to positively three main lines from east Prussia [ nounce that it is utterly impos: to the Riga-Dvinsk sector. Theso | to make any more engagements lines have regular schedules and are | local cases at Hartford, all wit open to the public. There also arc | exceptions, who wish ot receive t tramways connecting the | treatment must go to their local small villages, notably around Ponic- | fice. wesch. In making this announcement t Similar efficiency has been showa | wish to extend thelr thanks for in constructing telegraph lines in | very liberal patronage they have all directions. M. Rivet draws tho | ceived which has been . far beyd conclusion that the completeness of | their expectations and to cordially this railway and telegraph construc- | vite all wishing to see them to cal tion indicates that the Germans in- | the Sovereign Building, Rooms 6, tend to make the Riga-Dvinsk line | 10, 11, No. 162 Main strect, New Bi the base for their projected advance | ain, instead of going to Hartford. upon Petrograd. | Dr. Blumer of the Natureopal SR College of Hartford stated that thy BIG CANADIAN LOAN, w:'m receivad |h(~l[r 41(1];:1."";. ;;al(l‘uu stitution are perfectly qualifie OntFDec AN L o The - | people are convinced that the h: anadian domestic war 10an | greqs of cases that have been cuf has been subscribed twice over. by them stay cured, which in itesl finance department announced enough to satify evell the although the loan closed yesterday, | gyeptical there were still to be recelved sub- m, receive the best benefit frd seriptions placed with banks In dis- | their natural treatment is to try tant parts of the country. More than | fairly, honestly and you will then 000 separate subscriptions were re- | justified to your own satisfaction t ceived. | method as f Dec. | the Natureopathic — | lowed by these doctors is the only sd way in which suffering can be curi SYMPTUMS UF DEBI“W without the use of poisonous dru; | Their record of cures ever since th People who are tired all of the timc| Started this course of healing is and never feel rested even after a long| Positive guarantee of the correctne night in bed, who cannot _regain weight | ©f this theory and strength, whose step lacks elasticit; The Natureopathic and who feel no joy in living, are deb: come here to antagonize the regull tated. | physicians, but to advance the natu A medical examination might easily| methods which have as the basis ti show that every organ of the body isact-| supply of the body with the elemen ing normally but the pallor of Jxe face | necessary for perfect phys heal will usually show that the blood is thin. | and growth. The method does This is the root of the trouble. depend upon drugs, whigh are knos Debility is a loss of vitality, not affect-| by physicians as well fis others to Y ing any one part of the body but the| injurious to the system by ite after ef eystem generally. The blood goes to| fects. The prir objects of i doctors did n every part of the body and the use of ¢ i lessons, 50 cents. outlet for grain, oil and other nat- ural resources. The Russians regard this prize as supreme. It has been the dream of the nation. The Czar hjmself as the rightful successor of Constantine, whose capital city was Byzantium, now Constantinople. blood tonic like Dr. Williams® Pink Pills quickl{ tones up the system. The first sign of returning health is a better appe- tite, improved digestion, a_quicker step, | brighter eyes, better color in the cheeks The rich, red blood, reaching every organ and muscle, carriesrenewed health and vigor. The nerves are quicted, sleep be- comes more refreshing and with persis- tent treatment and proper living the de- bilitated patient is once more enabled to enjoy life. Two useful books, “Building Up the Blood’” and ‘“What to Eat’’ will be sent free on request by the Dr. William: Medicine Co., Schenectady, N. Y. Youw NOTICE. Beginning Friday, Dec. 3, Mr. M. Kennedy will open a dancing school in Holmes and Hoffman’s hall for beginners only on the waltz, one step and Fox trot. Be- ginners class at 7:30 p. m. Class lessons, 25c cents a person; private Tel, 9185. s own druggist sells Dr. Williams’ Pin l Pills. demonstrations w isfy the pul lic that Natureopathy has va remarkable results, and the sooner ti methods incorporated that can pre remarkable results and the sooner ¢ public adopts these hiodes of.greaf ment the quicker will relief follo the afflicted ) raci 8ee . the ‘lo Natureopath, Tet him explafh what thi science is. Consultation will be givel free for a limited time. The Blumer College of Natu opathy of Hartford is now enrollin new students in their day and eveni classes. Those interested in an ad! vanced course may communicate the Secretary of the Blumer Coll of Natureopathy, 97 Ann street, Hart: ford.