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TO DEBT DODGERS. Daily News Says They Are a Smm of Highwaymen, Pickpockets, Etc. For the benefit of those Yale stu- dents who have n _dodging New Haven tradesmen the college year draws to a close, the Yale Daily News ;n its leading editorial writes as fol- ows: “This is the season when the busy “Fits - You - Like - Paper-On-The-Wall" T0GET ITS BENEFICIAL EFFECTS ALWAYS BUY THE GENUINE MISS DREXEL MARRIED IN LONDON .. Margaretta, Daugh.!er of Fhiladelphia Financier’ Eecomes Lady Maidstone. WASHBURN-CROSBYS bridegroom; Miss Hilda Chichester and London, June 3.—The marriage of s - | Miss Essex’ Vere Gunning, cousins of Syrop-fies AND ELIXIR-SENNA MANUFACTURED BY THE (autrorwia ie trup @ SoLp B‘G QULGLG“;;.TESADING One S(ze ONLY. SO‘ABOITLE Girl and the Man. There seems to be a growing and widely sprezd diseatisfaction among women with the men. Very few wom- en appear to be thoroughly satisfied with the men of their households. One and all they fail far short of what they ought to be.—Exchange. The Grind That Dulls. ¥ & scissors grinder kept his blade on the whetstone unceasingly the scissors would scom be useless. The grind that dulls women is not daily bousehold duties. The housewife who is knowing keeps herself sharpened with frequent change and recreation. by washing the affected parts with Glenn’s Sulphur Soap It’s an excellent remedy also for pfmples, blackheads, dan- druff, itch and other skin diseases. Sold by druggists. HF + ek wnd Wiksker Dye, black or brows, 80c. Copeh 2 e it aften tonves the Httle ufi': mm:-l.ifl‘ - Don’t fes course. It can bacured i Ly..,a.mxyxu Dr. Doud’s Remedy for Whooping Cough The most violent attack will be re- Jieved in three or four days, and a permanent, perfect cure in from ten to fiftean days. Y is authorized torefund g ourdrugwistis suthorized torefu Prepared by The Safety Remedy Company - CANTON, OHIO IF SICK--WHY PA Unless Health First Returns. Here js what should end can be done! XNow you would not willingly pay for fool fhat was worthless—would you? oSien wh: Pay for medicine unti] that medi- o yo s uctual worth? i Enowi 4 De. Shoop's Re- | Qnfi" can y to il “don's YnaRt oot retuna ARG I back my fimn s with & me wud sesled 30 day “No belp, npu eont 1posiiyely pledge to the sick everywhere that «. hoop’s Restorative is absoluts- Iz/frn £ i€ fQils”. Let others do the same— or alse pass théir prescriptions by. 1f ou need more strength, more vitality, more vigor or more vim, use n Restorative a egvgment. re. oF Kidn itive. I oy, For that nmnfdvmm Tcastaway Talstaken ides 0 medicine. The books below will Best. 1.,70\: how I am succeeding. 'books al¥o tell of & finy hiddsn “in- nerve.” no Jarger than a silken thread. They = hoLnl nerve, until it fails, actually gives 113 power. it tone, Jia’ naver: 'Ihun flw—v new and helpful | 13ens o those w! not well. They tell how | the Stomach, and yseach have their"inside” | ©of power nefves. tell how the ative was. Iy 2o Teach and revitalize these .'#nmh rerves. All of thess facts tell why m-bl--%k"nk 318 falls”. This is why 1 say ncson a medicine whose maker dare not back it Just as I do by this remarkable offer”. 80 write me todey for the order. ted honsil and rw day test. d thus save o also which surely ln Bow while | R m-‘"l‘k‘l!ui ¥o. 4 For Women R 'v‘-‘t. ere 13 no me- B Viscount Maidstone, elder son of the | Earl of €l, daughter of Anthony Drexel, first of three Anglo-American wed dings to take place in London this month, wag celebrated this afternoon | at St."Margaret’s, Westminster. There‘ was a large attendance, both at the | church and at the reception held aft- | in | | wag fully choral, the | erwards at Mr. Grosvenor squart The service bishop of London and Canon Henson, canon of Westminster Abbey and rec- tor of St. Margaret's, officiating. The bride was accompanied by father, who gave her away. There were ten bridesmaids, as follows: Lady Gladys Finch-Hatton, sister of the Drexel's residence her | in | the bridegroom; Miss Rhoda Asley, Winchilza and Nottingham, | gaugnter of Dowager Lady Hastings; anq Miss Margaretta Armstrong Drex- | Lady Viclet Manners, Miss Sybil Fel- the | lowes, daughter of Lord Dramsey; | Miss Constance Combe, daughter Lady Combe; Philadelphia, and two American brides-elect, Miss Mildred Carter, who is to be married to Lord Acheson on June 21, and Miss Helen Post, to be married three days later to Montague Eliot. Charles Mills, son of Lord Hil- lingdon, was the best man. The two received man: The bride's father gave her a d mond tiara, as well as an automobile which Lord and Lady Maidstone are to tour the continent on their honeymoon. M Drexel's gift to her daughter was & rope of pearls. DISTRIBUTED FiINE LINGERIE ON SUBWAY TRAIN. Salesman from Providence Made Some Blush lnd Othan Titter. New York, June 8—Scores of shop ang factory girls and pretty stenos- raphers boarded a Bronx express at the Fourteenth street statlon of the subway last night at 6 o'clock. So did a number of clerks and other mere men. In the crowd was a man about 32 years old, finely dressed, who carried a sample’ case, on the side of which was stamped “A. C. P., Providence R. 1" He carried also a load of strong waters.” After the usual eats and when the itself to withstand the rush at the and Central station, the happy salesman began to address the passen- | gers. _adies,” he said. “I am carrying in this sample case the finest line that there is on the road. You are all good looking and I am going to give each one of you a sample of my line to re- nember me by.” Then he opened the sample case and began to unpack an especially fine lot of lingerie. It was the finest lot of goods of its kind that any of the girls had ever seen, and it was the first of that kind of wear that some | of the men had ever seen. Then the drummer, smiling his best | smile and steadying himself as well | as bis condition would allow, began | scramble to find crowd had braced |to hand to the girls embroidered, be- laced and beribboned chemisettes, cor- | set covers and other things. | Some of the maids began to titter, | others blushed and others got mad. | One girl slapped the drummer in the | face he handed her an especially fine sample of his lingerie. Others highly insulted, declined to take the | presents, but many of them apped | up what was offered, blushing lhel | while. Every man wore a broad grin. Over in_the corner was a messen- | ger boy. The beneficent drummer saw | him. “Here, I mustn’t forget you” he re- | marked. “Take these home with you, and he handed the messenger boy sev- eral articles that the said messenger | boy never will be persuaded to wear The boy took the goods and pro- | ceeded to examine them. He held up one affair embroidered and trimmed with blue baby ribbon and looked ap- pealingly to the salesman. “Wottells these?” he asked. Then he | wrapped them up. | At the Grand Central station the man got off, having been warned by | the guard that if he didn't he would be arrested. The Ready-made Me The aversion that restaurant-fed persons show for “side dish aet- rimental to their digestions and try- ing to their tempers. In seeking the | difference between ready-made dinners | and real home cooking this matter of | the side dishes at once is found to be | the most vital point. The ready- | made dinner consists chiefly of soup, | a large order of meat and a dessert, | with efther a dish of stewed tomatoes (from the can) or a baked potato. to | represent the vegetables. Psychology is a factor in the situation. The res- taurant diner may realize keenly enough that he is given too much meat without other provender, yet he will shrink from paying extra dimes | and quarters for salads and beets and string beans. To make the matter worse, the chances are that if the| diner ‘is a city man, he hasn't taken! enough exercise to make him require even half the amount of meat that is set before him—but to get his money's worth he devours as much of the order as_he can. In contrast to this picture, consider the man who lives on real home cook- ing. His steak is not thick and perhaps nor garnished with mushrooms and sprigs of unknowr plants; but see what he has in com- pensation, what an overflowing meas- ure—home-made bread, sravy., green peas or string beans, pickled beets, potatoes with a potato flavor, all the butter he likes, jam and jellies and usually a salad.—Kansas City Times Or the Appendix Ever Heard Of.u The London Lancet assails the morning cup of tea as a very danger- ous thing. Ab, the good old times we used to have in this world before the 1 germ theory of disease was invented! | Drink Chocolate In Church, Mexican ladies are fond of choco- late. Even in church they bhave it brought to them, and drink it during the service. What's the Use? The man who says nothing may be a deep thinker, but of what use is a | vein of gold if it can't be brought to | the surface?—Chicago Daily News. The Question. Why hide your light under a bushel | when a pint measure will answer the purpose ?—Judge. Uncle Ezra Says: “It may be worry thet kills an’ not | work, but how kin you help worryin’ when you don’t hev the work?” | Learning Her Weight. “How did you learn Maud's weight “I asked her what she considered the most attractive weight for a woman.” Learn Nature’s Charms. All that are lovers of virtue quiet and go angling.—Walton. be Prevent Melancholy. Employment and hardships prevent melancholy.—Joh P one goes very far.— ¥rench Proverb. INDIAN GIRL, THOUGHT TO 3 BE WlTCH FLEES FOR LIFE. Members of Tribe Had Prepared to Torture Her. San Bernardino, Cal, June 8.— Driven by fear of death at the hands of her tribe, whose members believe her to be a- witch, Mamie Holmes, Indian | for more than 100 miles, the distance from the Coachilla reservation to Santa Manuel reservation, near High- land. The girl was taken in charge by Indian Agent Royce, who says that he learned several arations to torture and kill her. will be st at Ph Suffic nt proof to the Indians that th il ill, Hadow dog ent pumpkin withered after the had fallen on it and a big ained up in front of her par- shack howled all night. e shunned, and one evening when ghe saw d braves gather on a hill at s and indulge in ange rite: 1 ed away and was four reaching the Santa anuel reservation. She was found by officials of the reservation as she was about to redeem herself from witchhood” in accordance with one of the superstitions of the Indians by bathing in the waters of the Arrow- head. CONNECTICUT PENSIONS. Norwich, Stonington, Mystic and New London Men Benefited. (Special to The Bulletin. ) yashington. June S.—The senate )e<u=r ¢ afternoon cleaned up a large number of pension bills which have already passed the house. Among them were the following Connecticut bills: In behalf of Henry J. Mongovan of New Haven, Company M, First Mas- achusetts Heavy artillery, at $24 per { month: in behalf of James Harvey of Norwich, Company A, Second New York Heavy artiiler at_ $24 per month: in behalf of James F. Malin o Norwalk, Company K, Third Connecti cut infantry, war with Spain, at $12 er month; in behalf of Paul H. rd of Stonington, Company /-first Connecticut voluntee per mon behalf of Granniss of New Haven, ifteenth Connecticut per month; in behalf of Haas of Mystic, Company H, teenth Connecticut volunteers, at $30 per mon in behalf of Sarah Beers 1y W Haven. widow of Calvin Company B, Twenty-seventn ticut inteers, at $20 ‘per month; in behalf of Jane D. Peyton of Derby, widow of William H. Peyton, of the Marine corps, at per month; nd in of Daniel J. Simons of D, volunteers, at Company John Seven- Conne West Company B, Twenty- seventh chusetts volunteers, at $24 per ed the bill 1sion of $24 per month rthington of New Lon- B, Twenty-sixth Con- introduced by The granti to Horace don, Comps cticut introduced a bill pension of $30 per month th of Norwalk, Com- Connecticut volun- granting to Calyin H, a It Stuck. The cat was being pursued by Pat- rick around and around ‘the kitchen. A sudden tyrn in the chase landed it “kerplunk” into the crock containing the pancake batter. It scrambled out barely in time to escape a blow from the poker wielded by shot into the yard. “Lave the poor baste go,” begged Biddy, make peace. “The batter ain't hurt in the laste. Every place he touched it has stuck to him.”—Everybody's Magazine. = Can You Do This? Get the wishbone of a fowl, and bore 2 hole through the top part; then | place it on the bridge of your nose and try to put a piece of thread through the hole. Luck. “Pa, is there such a thing as luck?” “Of course there is, my boy. It is al- ways luck when a batsman on the op- posing team makes a home run.” Musically Decribed. “There is never any discord in your | family.” “No,” answered Mr. Meek- ton, “not exactly discord. is some mighty ‘close harmony Fare for the Brave. “Fortune favors the brave,” raked in the pot with four a Girls and Sanity. The way a man can keep being | erazy over a girl is for her to keep om | being crazy over some other fellow. Why They Fall. Some men never succeed because they expend all their emergy curslng | their luck.—Philadelphia Record. Life’s -Blessedness. The blessedness of life depemds more upon its interésts than upon its comforts.—George Macdonald. Above Fortune's Buffets. Be not arrogant when fortune smiles =or dejected when she frowns.—An- tonius. How indeod! Without big words how could many people say small tEius’—B-xLI. Patrick, and | seeking to ! But there | re- | marked the tourist, as the red man | of Miss Edith Wayne of | creetly distributed debts presents, | thought on the part of the discreet one \n' 26 vears old, has walkea Chi days ago of prep-. men are lowering all speed records in the pursuit of collegians who have al- lowed_ their accounts to run up until the end of the college year. “The art of highway robbery is los- ing prestige. Even pickpockets are 100ked at nce. Nor Is the practice of appropriating one’s neighbor's valu- ables py night held in high repute among the more prominent and re- spectable members of the community. But, somewhat curiously the custom of living on credit—running up dis- without a | of ever paying ‘his_creditors—is con- demned only in whispers, ingenuously and gracefully managed this philosophy h many devotees and admirers at college and elsewhere. “The man who lives on credit with the intention of paying debts in five or ten years is stealing the intér- est from his creditors. The man who lives on credit without ever seriously intending payment steals the entire sum. Both of these types—not entire- Iy unknown at Yale—are equal in here ism to the above mentioned practition- ers who are the highwaymen, the pick- pocket and the nocturnal craft whose code of merals th IN GOOD CONDITION. f Mooney So Shows Bridgeport Fire Department in Annual Report. and when The annual report of Edw | Mooney, chief of the rt | Gepartment, has been city auditor and shows in good condition. T hief ma many recomme duU”hH he depart- She | to the government school | plarme with & net 10 girl is a witch were the facts that| 1 on the reservation were made | | i | ment made a record i Women in Federal An interesting study of the increasing number of women succeeded in making their federal offices under the merit s | does not say how ma the: Offices. steadi ho have stem ! before that ystem red. General Spinner, it be rememtk ed, em ved women cl in the treasury department at Washington during and soon after the ( War the d | novation; but that did not worry Gen- period, and was criticized fo in- eral Spinner. Since the passage of the vice law in 1883, it appears from tb statistics referred to women emplovers of federal offices have increased in numbers at the rate of nearly one half per cent. per vear. In 1900 the proportion was 9.4 per cent., or 8119 women as compared with S8 men, and the census of 1910 may advance it to 19 per cent. In some dep: ments women are scarce. But agriculture, governm the interior their perc in t spectively 19, 29 and hold clerkships. A few sional technical and scientific e and still fewer executives. These the same abitities tha are desired in a translator forewoman, statistician, or inspector.—Miiwaukee ppose il life librarian, stenographer Wisconsin. Does the World Think? Man is evidently 'made for thought; this is his whele dignity and his whole merit; his whole duty is to think as he ought. Now the order of thought is to begin with self, and with its au- thor and its end. Now of what thinks the world? Never of these things, but of dancing, playing the lute, singing, making verses, tilting at the ring, et of fighting, aking ourselves kings, without thinking what it is to be a king or what to be a man—Pascal. What Kind of an “Office.” Once upon a time a child who was asked on an examination paper to de- fine a mountain range, replied: “A large-sized cook stove.” The same method of reasoning seems to go with A recent examination older growth. paper at the Sh is the office of the gastric juxce’” And the answer on one paper read: “The stomach erybody’s Magazine. Werk Ahead for Josh. “T'll be kind o’ glad when Josh gits home from school,” said Farmer Corn- tossel. “I have an idea he can be right useful” “Are you going to put him to work?” “Maybe. I've ex- bausted all the language I know on that team of mules But I haven't given up hope. 1 want to see wheth- er Josh can startle 'em some with his college yell."—Washington Star. A Census of Physicians. Tkroughout the United States there is ome licemsed physician to every 709 persons; in New York state, one to 672, and in New York city, one to 653. The income of physicians varigs fully as much as that of other profes sions. Noted city specialists often get in a single fee from a wealthy pa- tient an amount equal to five years’ income of some ceountry doctors. Daily Health Hin. Wounds, of whatever sort, should bg treated by s surgeon, if they be too sérious to be cured by court or ad- hesive plaster. In applying these plas- ters, however. be particular that no t be left in the wound, and also that the edges be brought into perfect contact exactly as the parts lay be- fore the accident, or as near to that position’ as possible. A tickling or dry cough can be quick- v loosenea with Dr. Shoop’s Cough Remedy. No opium, no chloroform, nothing ur or harsh. Sold by Lee & Osgood. | more; | DON'T WORRY; It Makes Wrinkles. Warry over fll-heaith does youws Bealth no good, and merely causes wrinkles, that make you look oldee than you are. If you =re sick. don't , but s; about 1t to make ycurself well. To s we repeat the words of thousands of other forme: sufferers from woman- iy iiis, similar to yours, when we say, lake Viburn-0. It ts a wonderful female remedy, you will admit if you try 15 Direciiens for 'ts use are printed in six languages with every bottle. Price $1.25 at druggists FRANCO-GERMAN CHEMICAL CO, 106 zm 123th Street. Now York. mar3; | acquire kingdoms shave themselv: | size; GOLDMEDAL FIOUR 1| THE VERY HIGHEST QUALITY Snake Milked the Cow. Muhro Cogswell small living just outside the village of Tar- iffville and he has cow which has been turned out to pasture for weeks now. He had noticed lately that the cow when she was milked at night did not give any m. »ym one udder. About a wes s in the past- ure when he big black snake rent to the the run under a f house a ured aid to turn over tone, ang wher was do 1 nakes were One of them measured el two inches in length and trifle over four feet. H bigger ¢ t stone. He v found ar having seen th n no illing Kk f d en in mselve the or snakes of helping habit to fresh wa Work for the Young Man. There is a place for you, young man, and there is 2 work for you to do. Rouse yourself up and go after it Put your hands cheerfully and proud- Iy to honest labor. A Spanish maxim runs: “He who loseth wealth, loseth much; he who loseth a friend, loseth but he who loseth his energies, loseth all.” Feared Assassination. When asked whether Napoleon | shaved himself «Tallyrand replied “Yes. One born to be a king h some one to shave him; but they who Dionysius, the tyrant of Syracuse, not daring to commit himself to & bar- ber's hands, is said to have singed his own beard with glowing walnut shells. Girl Has Remarkable Voice. 16-year-old girl who sings bass was heard in a London hall the other day. Until a year ago she had the usual soprano voice of a girl of her then the voice grew deeper and deeper, and to-day it is as low as a man’s. A specialist who examined her throat found the vocal chords to be singularly large and broad. The Scrubwoman’s Lunch, *“I used to let my scrubwoman get herself a little lunch,” said the city flat dweller. “It's the nice thing to do, I know, and I like to do it, but I bhad to quit in seif-defense. She took an hour to get her lunch and eat it and charged me extra for the time she put in.” Swinburne and the Cabman. In his youthful days Swinburne had & quarrel with a cabman over his far The cabman abused the poet mel lessly. Addressing him Swinburne said: “And may I invite you to de- scend from your perch and hear how & poet can swear?”’ Don’t Persecute your Bowels Small Pill, Small Dose, Small Pr:- GENUINE must bear signature: e T et The Range that Makes Cooising Easy’ farmer | ~ | it to the scalp and hair Negative Virtue Beware of making your moral staple Substitute for Leather. | Seaweed, dust, goats’ bair and Irish | moss, compounded by a secret chemi- | cal process, is claimed to be, by its in- ventor, John Campbell, a porfect sub- stitute for leather, vulcanite, wood consist of the negative virtues. R fs g0od to abstain, and teach others to abstain, from all that is sinful or hurtful. But making a business of it and marble. As leather it makes sery- leads to emaciation of character un ez obos dencatipady ey less one feeds largely also on the bt 2L more nutritious diet of active sympa. ¥ thetic benevolence—Oliver Wendell His Hope. | Holmes. “Papa,” wrote the sweet girl, *I PR have become infatuated with calis- | thenics.” “Waell,\ daughter,” replied “Madstone. the old man, “if your heart's sot on The madstone is a stone popularly him I haven't a word to say; but I | Bupposed to cure hydrophobia. Such \ always did hope youwd marry an | Stones, usually of the size and shapa \ Ameri: of an egg, are superstitiously pre- . e S served in parts of the United States, Happine because they are believed to absorl We should be as happy venom. The madstone is a light, por- and our happiness should ous stone of greenish color. They ara Ay aREtNIe" Tor-Aboie Who quite rare, being only occasionally | issue from self by the po: found in the ' | piness know infinitely wider free, than those who pass through the of sadness.—Maeterlinck Gain and Paln, Not any Milk Trust EPRAIIN The Original and Genuine twin brothers, they o8 resemble oeach ] other so closel their most intimat them apart—the [ 4 \ friends cannot tell | one plants the tree, the other c S for it until thé fruit fs matured, MALTED MILK | ‘;rgu" SR The Food-drink for All Ages. mentative. “Dar is two kinds of arguments | = More healthful than Tea or Coffee. 5 Agrees with the weakest digestion. Delicious, invigorating and nutritious. said Uncle Eben; “dem in whic! is tryin' to enlighten somebody, & dem in which you fs tryin’ to fool | Richmilk, malted grain, powder form. | { somebody.” A quick lunchk prepared in a minute. | Take nosubstitute. Ask for HORLICK’S. Others are imitations. e na Walla India Atior } i Walla reser - No & of th Umatilla Danderine VERYBODY CAN HAVE BEAUTIFUL HAIR NOW, and they don’t have to wait weeks and months for results either. You will notice marked improvement after the very first application. Grows Hair and we can PROVE | IT! y and Danderine is quic thoroughly absorbed by the scalp end the hair soon shows the effocts of its wonderfully ex- hilarating and life-producing qualities. Itis pleasant and | rasy to use—simply npply | once a day until the hair begins to grow, then two or three times a week till desired results are obtained. | A lady from California writes substance as follows: 1have beon using your wonder- ful halr tonlc for scveral mon and atlast lam now blessed w wonders ures over 48 inches in length braid 18 over § inches arcund. Another from New Jerscy: After using sixth boitls 1 am Bappy to sy that I have ot nlee & head of hair as soyone (a New Jersey. This Great Hair-Growe ing Remedy can now be had at all druggists in three s 25¢c, 50c and $1. 00 per boitle. sends this free coupon Lo Kaowlton Danderine Cs., Chicago, with thelrname and address and 10c in siiver or to pay postage. ape . 0. Murphy, Norwich