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dlorwich unlletin arnd guafliz?. 77 YEARS OLD. Lo price, 120 a week; 0o a 9 &y « ihe Postoffice at Nerwich, vond-class matter. Telephene Calls: 3 ness Office, 480 [iditorial Rooms, 35-3. “ab Office, 35-6. Office, Room 2, Telephone 210. B Murray Ao wich, Thursday, Jan. 23, 1913, ¢ vireulation oi siie Bll“efin- The Bulletin has the largest eir- culation of amy paper im Eastera Cemnecticut, and from three to four times larger tham that of amy im Norwich, it iu delivered to over 3,000 of the 4053 houses im Ner- wich, asd read by mimety-three per cext. of the peoplc. Im Windham it s delivered to over 000 houscs. iz Putaam amd Danmlelsom to over 1,160, amd in all of these places It is comsidered the lecal daily. Eastern Conmeeticut has forty- nine towrns, omc humdred mixiy- five postoffice districts, amd sixty rural free delivery reutes. The Bulletin s sold im every town amd om all of the R. F. D, routes im Eastern Coamecticut. CIRCULATION 1001, BVEFAE® .evvoeoeconeoes. HEID 5.920 SR 1005, average LEGISLATORS' MILEAGE. The question of mileage is still be- fore the Connecticut legislature. As was to be expected Comptroller Dunn was unable to make any arrangement with the New Haven road whereby the legislators would be carried to Hart- ford and back every day for a rate gar less than the regular mileage rate on the system. There was no surprise that the attempt proved a failure, It swas far from a business proposition in the first place and intended to get around a provision in the law of the state which either should be lived up to ‘or else it should be changed by act of -the legislatyre. The fact that the appropriation for mileage is small should sti the general assembly to Ereater efforts in keeping steadfastly at the business before it, by doing which in the opinion ef Governor Baldwin it can keep within the sum designated for mileage purposes. The idea of appealing to the New Haven road to contribute to the state any portion of the neceseary mileage was one which the legislature should have refused had it been successful Such a procedure would have placed Connecticut under obligations to the railroad in such a manner as would be zgainst the interest of good legisia- tion. There is no cause for such ac- tion in the first place, as it is a sit- uation from which the legislature must provide its own means of escape, ei er by doing business within the ap- propriation allowed or changing the law. THE IMMIGRATION BILL. Though the matter of immigration legiglation has been before congress a long time. and every feature of it should be well known, the Burnett bill on restricting it which has recent- ly passed the house requiring a liter- acy test for those entering this coun- try from foreign lands, is just com- ing to be understood. Before it gets much farther in Washington it is like. Iy to recelve some fixing. re h: been learhed about it since the recent action than was genera]ly known be- fore and the provision which requires certificates as to character from the countries. which the immigrant leaves is receiving severe criticism. In viewing the b now stands the Boston Post w: ¥ “The idea of letting a foreign government have the power to say who shall and who shall not have the privilege of coming to this land of nity is prepos would permit any tyrannic cracy to-hold forever the m ed for labo retain othe litical offenses. hment of The indesirables 1t could get rid of by freely granting cer- tificates. “This vicious provision will prob #bly be knocked out of the bill. But there should also go into the discard the foolish literacy test. There would then be nothing left of the measure which weuld die the death it deserves.” In immigration legislation it is the undesirables from foreign shores which it Is desired to stop, but it is impos- mible to see that they will be checked by the propesed bill. POLICY OF MEASONABLE ADJUST- MENT. It is impossible to leok over the ac- tien of the New Haven road in regard to the disposal of the many demands made against it for increased wages ' from the many divisions of employes and not be impressed by the manner in which they have handled them. Ar-' bitration or conferences have resulted ! 1in the men receiving concessions which are not all that has been demanded, but which have been of a satisfactory nature with regard to proper action' and bettering the conditions of the employes within the bounds of reason and the earning capacity of the road. This action marks a new feature in the settlement of labor troubles be- | tween big corporations and the em- ployes, and the good spirit in which it has been accomplished serves as an example of the much to be preferred method of dealing with such important matters. The big railrcad system has had some appeal for increased wages before it for over a year and there are others pending and their handling of them is far preferable to that which has characterizeq the Bangor & Aroostook road where transpertation has been badly curtailed and hampered during the strike to the detriment, not only of those concerned therein but to the people of the state. Reason and good judgment is always preferable to the exci and unrestrained acton which causes and aceompanies strikes. The policy of the New Haven system to avold etrikes whenever and wherever possible I8 most heartily welcomed. AGAINST' GOOD LEGISLATION. It is but natural that any idea of rescinding the apprepriatien of a mil- lion dollars for the bullding of piers and improving of New Londen harbor for the purpose of making it a termi- nal for ocean steamships, should meet | with disapproval. Whether it is atart- ed for the purpose of using it as a wedge to force pelitical .support, or not, it should meet with the strongest kind of resistance if any such attempt is made before the present session of the state legislature. To play with such an important project and thereby endeavor to force the withdrawal of honest conviction concerning the im- portant question of the highway com- missionership, is & political dodge which should be strongly resented. Both are important matters to the state of Connecticut and they should be treated separately and upon their merits, for the best interests of the commonwealth. There is nothing in one which should concern the other, and it is selfish interest which moves the opponents of Highway Commis- sioner MacDonald to threaten to take away New London's appropriation, if this end of the state and Congress- man Mahan continue -to support the great Conmmecticut roadbuilder. There is no question that the de- velopment of New London as a great- er port is a matter which concerns not simply ,New London, but/the en- tire state. It is not belleved that the state legislature will reverse the ac- tion of the last session and halt an effort so well conceived. Neither should the unworthy scheme to detract sup- port from Mr. MacDonald be coun- tenanced, and be allowed to sway hon- est convietion. It is a case of threat- ening to rob Peter to pay Paul. GOVERNOR WILSON'S BILLS. Widespread interest has been aroused by the action of Governor intended to overcome the present con- ditions In that state as to trusts, their formation and regulations. This stat trusts, its state laws being very fa- states of Delaware and Maine many concerns of other states are incor- pozated under the favorable provisions of their laws. This step by the gov- ernor is needed, but it Is too bad that he did not advocate the changes some time ago when he would have the op- portunity of persopally directing thi legislation, instead of leaving the im portant task for others to carry out. They are drastic measures which he proposes, aimed at some of the larg- est corporations in the country, to- wards which the state has been e tremely lenient and in regard to which there is the utmost need of legislative reform. : It is purely state legislation which Mr. Wilson seeks and in which he ad vocates the principle of “guilt is per- sonal” and would provide for im- provement for violations. How suc- cesstully they will stand the buffeting of the Jersey legislature remains to be seen but the usual changes and mod- ifications can be antieipated. Partic ularly at this time does the anti-mon- opolistic proposals receive special at- tention because of the nearness of the opening of Mr. Wilson's term as pres- ident, which gives a spectacular finish to a state administration which has not dealt with them previous: EDITORIAL NOTES. As long as Dame Fashion says so the hats will be small in the future. kans Oiling th reets keeps the dust down in the summer, but it needs a little dryer to overcome the mud this winter. In New York 5000 lives last y results of heal education state the saving of is one of the happy h hygiene and sanitary woman member of the Utah leg- ure has died from the excitement the campaign. Here is another ar- gument for the anti suffragists. A i of | As long lived to be 8 gallon of molasses 't the Mz husetts man cause of it. | Brandt, who is now in the west, says ' he ready to do anyt He has undergone a wonder since he left the care of the Empire state. honest. Governor low ease has refused to al- the South Carolina militia to. take the inauguration, but no order s been gziven to call off. the big ent. A wild bl ricago. 1If they were only able to detain it there after the ing about similar the east could stop werry- the repeated threats of a attack. _The feast given for the poor of New York on her wedding day by Miss gifts a bride of her charitable nature could have made. 4 Brogkton man who denied him- self a comfortable living has died leaving $400,000 and relatives who evi- dently didn't like him, but they prom- ise to fight for his mone: Rhode Island has done honor, to a former Connecticut man, Judge Le Baron Bradford Colt by making him 2 United States senator. They selected a man of merit and worth. Fourteen assistant clerks are to be named by the legislature. der another name is just as bad, but the deplorable thing is that some of the newspapers asked for it. ‘When Police Commissioner Waldo of New York gives the police the credit | for running down the gunmen, in his | annual report, he causes the rest of the activity recorded to be taken with a grain of salt. Col. Giorgas reports there 1s no rea- son why Guavaquil cannot be made a sanitary ci It was such a report as was expected -after the colonel's wonderful success in making the canal zone a healthy That the fast inereasing parcel post business is calling for increased factl- {ties and more room is no surprise. It 1s going to be ane of Uncle Sam's great business ventures and it tekes a suc cemstul ene to demand expansion istence. —_— Turkey hasn't lost all her cunning Wilson in introducing bills before the | New Jersey leghslature which dre has lopg been known as the mother of | vorable to their formation and like the | . it remains to be proved | he drank | : i hange | Gould was one of the most thoughtful | Graft un- | i equipment after only three weeks’ cx- | The occurrence of a crime, shorn or not of its revolting accessories, is in- variably accompanied by & wave of popular prejudice which, if we ana- Iyze it, can be defined as society’s re- venge on the individual, known or un- known, who aitempts to destroy its laws. But time smooths the surface of the waters and the wave disappears. Then the moment arrives for the calm, passionless review of the crime—the Oiroumstances which led up to it, its actual happening, its details, the police investigation which followed, the dis- covery of a clew l to the im- prisonment of the guilty or supposedly guilty party, the latter's trial and sen- tence. Generally the criminal (or victim of the Jaw, s the case may be) has suf- fered the supreme penally imposed by our statutes before that moment ar- rives,sbut in the cese of Oscar Siater, sentenced in Edinburgh in 1908 for the murder of Miss Gilchrist, an excep- tion must be made. It will be remem- bered that his death sentence was commuted into one of penal servitude for lifc, the alleged cause of the re- prieve being “that the amount of prej- udice which has been imparted into the case rendered the evidence of identifi- cation (which at the best was some- when slender) mot suffictently trust- worthy to justify the crown in letting the verdict of the jury carry its com- plete conseguences. Since 1808 Oscar Slater, the German peddling jeweler, and a man of an ig- noble past, has been serving his time | in Peterhead prison, and today Sir Ar- thur Coman _Doyle, the creator of “Sherlock Holmes,” publishes small volume the whole history of the Slater case, analyzes it, and, doctor probing a wound, lays bare the vital points which were at issue, tear- ing the net of evidence which the po- lice had spun around the foreign-look- ing individual. ith & masterly hand Sir Arthur sketches the history of the case. Miss Marlon Gilchrist, an elderly woman of retired habits, but with a passion for collecting jeweiry, lives with a servant at 15 Queen's terrace, Glasgow. Fear- ful for her hoarded gems, she causes | two patent locks to be fixed to the door of the fiat and comes to an ar- rangement with the inmates of the floor beneath her “that in case of an alarm she would signal to them by knocking upon the floor.” On December 21 at 7 o'clock in the evening, and shortly after the servant; having closed the door of Miss Gil- | christ’s flat, goes out to buy the even- ing paper, her downstairs neighbors hear the thud of a falling body end three distinet knocks on the ceiling. Arthur Adame rushes upstairs and rings, There is no answer, only the sound of breaking sticks. . Thinking it is the maid, he goes downstairs. But his sisters are not satisfied, and he re- turns to ring a second time. Just then the servant comes up the stairs,opens the door, and together they enter the apartment, the man waiting at the threshold, the woman %oln into the kitchen first, then into the dining room. In the meantime a wel] dressed man advances to the door, passes Adams and disappears down the stairs. The servant has now entered the din- ing reom—perceives the tragedy—the old woman lying on the floor, her head battered and smashed, one eye driven into her brain by the brutality of her murderer. . ‘When the inventory came to be made up one diamond brooch was found missing, The criminal had left no traces behind, not even the hammer with which it was believed ha had smashed his victim's head. Two people had so far seen the man who left the premises, the servant and in a like a | They did not agree on of him. A third person, girl of 15, said the man rushed oum the house, and-her description of did not tally with that of the other twe witnesses. The next clrcumstance to be drawn into the crime was the knowledge ac- auiufl by the police that a man ar Slater, was attempting to sell a pawn tioket for a diamond brooch. Be- fore he could be ‘arrested he had left for Liverpoo! and New York and was detained there upon landing. The three witnesses alluded to above journeyed to the United States for the urpose of identification, and Slater, of own free will, returned to Glasgow to face his trial. It lasted four days, Mr. Ure prosecuting, and the verdict of the jury was in favor of the man’s gullt. But this verdict was by no means unanimous, nine jurymen being for “Guilty,” five for “Not proven” and one for “Not guilty.” Under English law he would have & new trial. 8ir A. Conan Doyle examines: the case for the prosecution, The “bottom feil ont” of the diamond brooch the- ory because it was conclusively proved that the piece of gawegy in question belonged to Slater’s misiress and had been pawned for some time. Further, the accused’s journey to Amerjea bad not been in ‘the nature of a flight from justice, but in connec- tion with some business transaction, as was proved in New York. ' Again, the Tman ould account for his actions on the night of the murder, if exception be made of haif an hour, during which time he was supposed to be walking home. The process of identification, as set forth at length in “The Case of Oscar Slater,” fully justifies the official state- ment that it was “at best somewhat slender,” The three witnesses' Who went to America were not sure of their man. One, the servant, was “suspi- clo Adams stated that Slater was not unlike” the individual who had him, and the girl admitted that was "somewhat like him.” which she afterward amended to “very like him.” In their original declaration all had agreed that he was clean shaven; Slater was wearing a moustache at the time of the crime. Beyond these three witnesses no one had scen the man who left the scene of the tragedy on December 21. There were 12 witnesses who had seen “a man loitering in the street during the week before the crime had been com- mitted.” Their depositions varied. Be- sides, “two of the most precise wit- nesses saw the stranger in guestion upon the Sunday night before the mur- der” and upon that night Slater had an unshaken alibi. “Evidence of this kind might be of some value if supplementary to some strong aseertained fact, but to attempt to build upon such an identification alone is'to comstruct the whole case upon shifting sand. B Nevertheless it was on such evidence, not even circumstantial, that Slater was sentenced. What if there has been a miscarriage of justice? It is with this possibility staring him in the face that Sin Arthur Conan Doyle penned the graphic history of the Gilchrist murder, and that, by way of conclu- sion, he “hopes that some sudden flash may be sent which will throw a light upon as brutal and callous a crime as has ever been recorded. Meanwhile it is on the conseience of the authorities, and in the last resort on that of the community, that this verdict, obtained under the clrcumstances which I have indicated, shall now be reconsidered.” In other words, Sir Conan Dovle's contention s that Oscar Slater should ‘be pardoned and set at liberty.—Chica- go Record-Herald. holy ¢ The movement is spreading in be- half of outdoor work for comvicts. It is in the interest of health uand body and no better way exists for making the prisoners turn their time to the aid of the state. By his reply the Michigan publisher A does not appear frightened by the A French scientist in discovering a | Sult which Col. Roosevelt has brought new electric light promises a revo.|282inst him. The case promises some lution in that fleld and likewise a cut | IBteresting testimony and fallure to in the electric light bill take any notice of it would have , i 23 caused it to have been forgotten months ago. IDEAS OF A PLAIN MAN The Narrowness of Revelling. One morning about 6 o'clock on one y early rambles in Paris I passed m’s, the restaurant where the real nders are supposed to “go the lim. By means of bribery 1 stepped de. There was a company of men and women, gaily dressed, who were just finishine dancing out the night. A red-coated orchestra was still see-saw- ing madly. Innumerable champagne bottles were upon the wine-stained ta- bles. The sunlight was streaming in. The revellers were clipping out. certainly was as ghastly a scene as one could find. What struck me as I meditated upon the vision was the extreme narrow- ness of the gamut of pleasures among this kind of people. For there were only two motifs, sexual excitement of greater oy less refinement, and alcohol- ic excitement. Aside from the question whether these two modes of enjovment are right or wrong, the ‘appalling thing is the narrownesg of the life that knows nathing else. When one reflects upon | the wide range of interests of which a human being {s capable, and the in- finitely varied forms of joy which have sound values in contentment, one must regard the Maxim sort of person as about on the level of a hog, which also enjoys but one or two forms of animal excitation, and as beneath a dog, which at least adds thereto what hogs, hu- man and porcine, do not understand— loyalty. | CAMP FOR VETERANS ON Government to Provide 54,000 Tents { for Wearers of Blue and Gray. ‘Washington, Jan. 22.—Secretary of | War Stimsou has approved plans | formulated by Major James E. Nor- | moyle and Captain H. F. Daiten, for the mammoth camp, to shelter surviv- |ing Union and Confederate veterans who will meet at the Gettysburg bat- tlefleld next July to commemorate the fiftieth anniversary of the battle. The camp will consist of about B4,- H00 tents, affording accommodations for between 60,000 and 70,000 veterans. There also wiil be 200 Kitchen tent a complete divisional fleld hospial and three fully equipped infirmaries, Tt GETTYSBURG BATTLEFIELD | For once she is entitled to thanks. . 2 S — when she helps along the impression appy thought for today: It is mot| that Adrianople is suffering for food. S15be paace; Bat the. Hiee W | e mars ) OFHER VIEW: BOINTS the cause of great concern in the Bal- | from the thoughts of the loss of the L 1f the government loses the seryices of Colonel Goethais, builder of the Panama canal ,through political ma- chinatiens it will L} a heavy blow. No politics ought to enter into his cat Meriden Journal. Now is the time to begin to save money for your summer vacation. Act on the impulse and you may not have to borrow from your friends to get out of town during the hot wave. | —Bridgeport Telegram. It may be all right for congressmen to print their speeches in the Con- gressional Record, but if the editor of that publication was on his job the long articles from the encyclopedia would be declined with thanks.—New i Haven Union. Why is not ex-President Eliot nam- ed among the 50 American immortals with Wilson, Hadley, Butler, Lowell and the rest? The omission is slgnifi- cant, whether intentional or accident- al. Perhaps Dr. Eliot wouldn't be one | Waterbury is not going to have a board of trade after all but when its Chamber of Commerce is evolved out of thé present nucleus those busy at the “evolving” predict an organiza- tion that will keep the Brass Ci the map everyone of the 365 days in a vear and on circus day, also when leap vears bob up.—Waterbury Republi- can. 4 Munsey is patted on the head by the Outlook and told that he is a good boy but don't know much. His “hold- ing committee” for the two parties is a good theary, and he can now go and play marbles have theories but who are not “it”’ in the praotical management of big af- fairs. What does Munsey know about a political circus?—Bridgeport Stand- ard. We commend the Prohibitionists for persistency ,tenacity, and _unshaken faith in a cause. Despite defeat and discouragement they valiantly face the firing line and refuse to retire. Having just been through what too many regard as a hopeless battle they immediately plan for the next one, and begin the raising of a million dol lar fund for the campaign of 1916.— Bristol Press. To young men, the ipspiration to be derived from a st#dy of the life of Chief Justice Hall, who died sud- denly in Hartford recently, should prove a real help. Of humble begin- nings, his was a career which had its inception in the ambition and deter- mination to make of himself some- thing worth while. He studied, strug- gled and climbed, living a clean, up- right life, earning the advancement he achleved and meriting the honors bestowed upon him.—Ansonia Sen- tinel. E The scheme to regulate lobbying in Connecticut by having those engaged in it registered was, considered good one until a bill was introduced in the Missouri legislature which has the Connecticut plan tied to a post. Mis- sourians propose to compel lobbyists to | i Protect Yourself Up to Elbows. Blotches on Face: ' Very Disfiguring, ltched and Burned. Could Not Sleep. One Cake Cuticura Soap and One Box Cuticura Ointment Cured. Montgomery Center, Vt. — “The trouble began with my hands. It looked lke chaps; but it kept getting worse until my hands and : arms were all covered up o my elbows with a thick crust, and it would split open liko & cut wherg the skin of my hands creased. 1 had a few blotches on my face which were very disfiguring, for when I went out in the cold air they would be dark red and would burn. I suf- fered with itching and burning mostly at night, and I eould not sleep. Lcould not do my work for the pain my hands would be in when they were in water, and ebuld not stand next to the heat. “I had tried all 50Tts of ofntmens and god 1o help until I tried Cuticura Soap and Cuti- cura Otntment. I used one cake of Cuticura Soap and one box of Cuticura Ointment which cured me 8o I have had mo troubls since.” (Signed) Mrs. Joseph Touchette; Jr., Dee. 27, 1911 Cuticura Soap and Ointment do so much for pimples, blackheads, red, rough skins; itching, scaly scalps, dandruff, dry, thin and falling hair, chapped bands and shapeless nails that it is almost criminal Dot to use them. Sold throughout the world. Lib- eral sample of each mailed free, with 32-p. Skin Book. Address post-card *Cuticura, Dept. T, Boston.” i 83 Tender-faced men should use Outicura Soap Shaving Stick, 25c. Sample free. | | S‘\LOUBLE MALF QUARTET) A o P =G 25 DIR-20VOICES Civiiocn .57 RICES SAME FOR 26 YEARS$1, 35¢, 50¢, 25¢ SEATS NOwW Today-- AUDITORIUM --Today NOODILLES FAGAN THE MILLIONAIRE NEWSBOY R Held Over For the Rest of the Week KAILMA & CO. [ MANLEY & CARSON Spectacular Iilusionists Songs and Dogology 101 BISON—The Heroine of the Plains 13 --GO0D ACTS--3 5—GREAT REELS—5 THUR.-FRL-SAT. P IS LA KELLIORS, in tircus Eve in Mexico wear uniforms, consisting of a brown suit, red hat and green cravat. The attorney general says it is constitu- tional, so that there is no legal ob- stacle in the way of its adoption. The Missouri scheme is respectfully refer- red to Lieutenant Governor Tingler and Comptroller Dunn.—New Herald. While not presuming to pass on the relative importance of football and law—such matters are better under- stood by the trustees and the athletic boards of our great universities than by the mere layman- t does seem that in view of the fact that $10,000 a year is regarded as 2 reasonably fair salary for the new football coach at Yale, the $5000 Mr. Taft is to receive as Kent professor of law will not be exorbitant, especially when it is re- membered that Mr. Taft has occupied the more or less important and in some respects honorable office of president of the United States—Springfleld Union. Well might the Pujo committeemen have been staggered by the showing of J. P. Morgan's financial power as presented last week at the demand of the jnvestigator: The money king had on deposit November 1, in his New York and Philadelphia banking houses more than $162,000,000 of oth- er people’s ready money to invest as he saw fit. In addition he had at his comniand the reserve sources of more than three-score of the strongest rail- road and Industrial interests in Amer- ica. And in the past ten yemrs Mr. Morgan has marketed in this country two billions of dollars’ worth of securi- tles of American interests corpora- tions, besides hundreds of miilions abroad. The history of the world pre- sents no parallel to this stupendous stewardship of wealth built upen pub- lic confidence.—Hartford Post. WOMAN ESCAPES OPERATION By Timely Use of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. Here is her own statement. Cary, Maine.—*“I feel it a duty I owe to all suffering women to tell what Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- of the number.—Waterbury American. | on | with the other boys who | pound did for me. One year ago I found myself a terrible suf- ferer. I hed pains Britain | in both sides and | 3—WHELANS—3 I n a novel singing and piano act { FITZSIMMONS & CAMERON “ Who do a-little of everything BIG FEATURE 3 REELS THE PERIL OF THE PLAINS One of the Greatest Westerns Ever Taken BARGAIN MATINEE EVERY DAY—5c and 10c. EED THEATRE FEATURE PICTURES FOR TODAY “The Marvelous Pathe Weekly,” Latest Events. “A Woman,” Vitagraph All-Star Society Drama. “The Signal of Distress,” with Florence Turner. “The Cat’s Paw,” Featuring Francis Bushmann. “The Cowboy and the Baby,” Pathe Western Dram: Matinee 5c Every Day Bass=Clef Concert Slater Hall, Friday, January 31st CHORUS OF FORTY MEN % |LOUISE BARNOLT, Contralto Assisted By (yER A BARSTOW, Violinist Those who subscribe for the season: s become associate members of the club and are allowed to reserve seats before the public sale begins. Associate members cards may be goiten from the ac- tive members or at Davis’ Book Store. Sale of seats for single concert begins Wednesday, January 28th. PROVIDENGE AUTOMOBILE SHOW State Armory, January 25th to February 1st, inclusive Opens Saturday, January 25th, at 7.30 p. m., and daily (except Sun- day) thereafter, from 10 a. m. to 10.30 p. m. A complete display of pleasure cars, commercial ocars, motor cycles, accessories and automobile wearing aprarel. Beautiful decorations. First-class restaurant. Wednesday, Society Day, $1.00 Concerts daily. Admission 50c. such a soreness I could scarcely straighten up at times. ached, I had no ap- petite and was so nervous I could not sleep, then I would be so tired mornings that I could searcely | get around. ble to move or do a bit of work and I thought I never would be any better un- ! til I submitted to an operation. I com- menced taking Lydia . Pinkham’s Veg- etable Compound and soon felt like a | new woman. I had no pains, slept well, | had good appetite and was fat and | could do almost all my own work for a | family of four. I shall always feel | that I owe my good health to your med- icine.””—Mrs. HAYWARD SOWERS, Cary, Maine. If you are ill do not drag along until an operation is necessary, but at once take Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetabls Compound. If you have the slightest doubt that Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegeta~ ‘ble Compound will help you,write to Lydia E.Pinkham MedicineCo. (confidential) Lynn,Mass., for ad= vice. Your letter will be opened, read and answered by a woman, and held in strict confidence. 1f your head swims, or the objects in the rogm seem to move around, you are troubled with disordered stomach, imperfect digestion, ir- reguiarity of liver action, intestinal tor- por—and are subject to fever. go down to the root of this trouble, giving early relief and cventual freedom from the cause. They are tonio and therefore build you-up. Wholly vegetablet absolutely harmless, Sold everywhere, plain or sugar coated, ¢ a box. Send for our free medical book. Dr. J. H. Schenck & Son, Philadelphia My back | It seemed almost impossi- | AN / 1 FULL QUART OLD DARLING, regular. ... $1.00 1 FULL QUART XXXX PORT WINE. .. ..vo.r .50 Total St e e e 9150 RNOW ORLY $1.00 Geo. Greenberger & Co. 4753 Franidin Street Telephone 812 P . o e i a : This Delightful Trip, $75 Six days down the coast, across the Gulf Stream and through the suuny waters of the Gulf of Mexico in big, express steamers. New York to Texas without Change i Your choice of mail lines returning, with liberal stop-over privi- leges at principal cities. Meals and Berth on Ship included -over in Galveston, stin trips, Or if time permits enjoy the four-day with its famous fishing, hunting returning by same steamer to Ney y Saturday direct to Gu! ‘ampa and Mobile. Wedne MAILLORY STEAMSHIP Difice, or write (o A. V. River, New side and int o on Saturdays for West and Galveston. COMPANY uy Authorized r Trariic Wicket Agent Py Tour- Manager, | WHEN t 1 WHEN you want to put your busi- you want to ness heforc the public, there is no me- | Dess before the public atum better than through the advertis- | ing columns of The Bulletim. dium better than through the advertis ing columns of The Bulletin