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NORWICH BULLETIN. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1913 Hanry Afizn & 39 FURNISHING UNDERTAKERS §8 Main St. wUEN REQUERTED YOU KNOW that a solid foundational train- ing is the basis of success. You should determine NOW to make the right start by attend- ing a school with a reputation for excellence of instruction. The Norwich Business. College THE SCHOOL OF EXPERT BUSINESS TRAINING which secures you a position when you are qualified. DAY AND EVENING SES- SIONS. Students may enter at any time. Write, 'Phone, or Call 99 to 105 Main Street, W. E. CANFIELD, Propietor LLMAN | No other| em from the mileage and | ote the . perfect The C. S. Mersick & Co., New Haven, Connecticut, Dealers <<4» -«r'Lfinlebxle and ies. :nalled on request. STUBENTS will find the largest and best; assortment of Fountain Pens CRANSTON'S The Old Reliable BOOK STORE Where all the needs of the students are looked after with special care. AMERICAN HOUSE, Farrei & Sanderson, Praa. {'pecial Rates to Theatre Troopss reveling Miaa, ete. Livery comnocta. Shatuckst Stroes DES. L. F. and A. J. LaPIERRE 287 Main St 1 PRACTISE LIMITED TO EYE, EAR, NOSE aod THROAT| Hours ¥ 2. m. 16 3 p. m, Sundaysj eWMWagmm WHITE ELEPHANT CAFE DAN MURPHY & CO. Ales, Wines, Liquors and Cigers Corner of ‘Nater snd Marke: Sta 1647 Adam’'s Tavern flwmg s 5o 2dv payertisnag R | nue, wne Sliztin, " Nerwich, Thursday, Sept. 25, 1913. Bulletin sheuld be delivered The ever in the ei 8 & Lserlfim whe fai tmnb'lt by re- lhnt time will eenfer a faver porting the faet te The Bulletin Ca THE WEATHER. Forecast for Today: Tor Southern New Bngland: Fair Whureday: warmer in interior; Friday fair, warmer: light to mederate vari- aple winds, becoming south. Pred ons from the New York Her- ald: On Thursday it will be generally clear and gvarmer, becoming unsettled in the eve\ing, with ligsht avriable winds, followed by rain in the western districts. - The outlook for Iriday is overcast, with rain and slight tem- perature changes, followed by clearing and much ceoler conditions, Obervations in Norwich. The following records, reperted from show the the changes baremetrie Sevin's pharmacy, in temperature and changes Wednesday: Ther. Bar. 7 a. m. sasssesasas 42 3032 R S . 70 3032 § ; m. TN 62 30.32 Highest 70, lowest 4 Comparisons. Predictions for Wednesday: Fair. Wednesds weather: As prelicted. Bun. M ter it is low lood tide. Six hours after hizi w tide, which 1s followed b3 GREENEVILLE NEWS Officials Getting Ready to Install Lights at Railroad Station. party road officials Greenev railorad station Mon- to lay out plans for the installing electric lights. Several ligh installed in the waiting room oil lamps. and light on the front tation. The new lights | will be a great improvement at the, station which will be appreciated by people who arrive and depart on Ihc early morning and evening trains. Returning to College. Paul T. Gadic leaves this (Th mfyning for Furlington, Vt, where he ent upon hnis second year in the med{cal depaitment of the University of Vermont. A the d of will be to replace the also be erectec side of t ursday) Lady of Mercy. masses were held Feast of Our Well attended Wednesday morning in St church in observance of the feast U[ our lady of merc: Personals. Matthew Suilivan of Boswell avenue is the guest ol Holyoke friends. J. LeBlanc guest of Jose gtreet Wednes: of Windham was the LeBlanc of Hickory h ay. Alfred St. Germain of North street is spending a few days at former home in Brookiyn, ¢ Miss Mary Murtha of North street leayves today for Boston, where she is to Ive empm)ed Inr the winter. his | Fractured Skull Resuited from Being Thrown from Carriage — Alphonse Fournier Rernains Unconscious. Alphonse Feurni r of Hunter's who was operated on at the Back- us hospital Tuesday afternoon for a fractured skuil, still remains uncon- »us, and little hope of his recovery is held out by the attending physicians, The young m who is 19 years of age and a son of Anthony Feurnier of | Hun\v» s averue, has been employed hy Nelson Theroux of Franklin street 48 a barber. Monday evening in com- pany with Mr. Theroux and twe other friends he went to Baltic with a horse and carriage On the return trip the horse stumbled goir down the hill in 1m near the boardi house and occupants of the carriage were throwa out, the earriage turning over on its side. Mr. Fournier struck the top of his 4d on a pole by the read- side and was rendered unconscicus by the blow. Mr. Theroux alse suffered several minor bruises, As soon as possible the urconscious man was taken to his Twme in the carriage and early Tuesday forenoon was removed to the Backus hospital, where an ex- ation snowed that he d a badly | uli the top having been inward when he struck the Annual Outmg to Hartferd. The choir of the Taftville Congrega- tional churcn left early Wednesday morning for Hartford on their annual outing. and a very pleasant day was sighiseeing. A delicious din- ner was enjoved at noon and the party returned on the evening train. Miss Heo >, the cirector of the choir, ac- companied theic on the trip. Personals. Joseph Trugell is_ suffering from a bad attack of ivy poisoning. dasis Bed- > visiting Mrs. J. C. Mar- . Dion ind Mrs Mrs. Joseph Y)P la:ndos of New ford, Ms Deslandes. Franklin square. place while he is p in New Yors Norman's simte barber for T. J. Sullivan of Mer- chanix avenue in the absence of Adolphus larose of Merchants® avenue, who is confined to the house because of lness Returning After Visit Here. Mrs. Fred Held, who has beem fthe gvest of Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Christ- mann for a week. lefi Wednesday to reimrn to her home in Brookiyn, N. Y. My, Held was the firsi moving pieture operaior when J. B, Shannon opened the Aunditorium here under the name of the Dime theater He is now a camerz. man on the field staff of the Imp company. it AR Going to Ireland, Bernagd Canfield, whoe for the past number of years been employed as head fireman ai Thamesville power station, resigned his position a few Cays ago 1o sail for Ireland, Main | Main | ave~ | SANE, LEVEL HEADED CITIZEN Magazine Writeup so Describes Frank B. Brandegee, a Charter Oak Senator—Has Broad View on Public Questions— Has Confidence of Colleagues of Both Parties. B . In the September issue of the Na- tional Magazine, Joe Mitchell Chapple writing en A Charter Oak Seuator, has the follewing to say of Senator Frank B. Brandegee, whom he terms a sane, level-headed citizen: In a recent trip through Connecticut, meeting people in all parts of the state it seemed that everyone joeined in an expression of appreciation for Senator Brandegee. In view of the hista of Connecticut one would not expect s state to send a wild-eyed radical to the United States senate. By birth, instinet, education and envircnment, Senator Brandegee is just the kind of a senator one weuld expect 2 sane, level-headed, orderly and prosperous people to send to the United States senate. He believes in progr but he does not think that mere motion 13 necessarily progress. He thinks that motion in the right direction is pregress. He does mnot advocate changes simply for the sake of change. 1In his opinion one ought ta@ look before leaping. He does not be- lieve in keeping on the move for ine sake of mere motion. He has always gone straight ahead himself, and has always moved upward. He graduated from Yale at the age of twenty-ones at twenty-four he was chairman of the committee on cities and boroughs in the Connecticut house of representa- tives; at twenty-five he was corpor- ation counsel of his home town: at thirty-five he was speaker of the Connecticut house: at thirty-e: he was a representative in congr and at forty he was a United States sen- ator. He served out the unexpired term of four years of the lats Nen- ator Orville H. Platt, and in January, 1909 reelected for a fuli t | of six His term of visited | i ber of the house of represen during the 58th and [ he served on the following commit Naval affalrs and expenditure | te will | and south | | | which | there when Brandegee | | | republican | committee Joseph Peronx is working as substi- | Y oaT will expire March 3, 1915, As o department of been in the senate ha h Since he has served on the committees on educa- tion and labor, the Philippines, as chairman of the committee on inter- | oceanic can on Pacific islonds and | Porto Rico. and is now chairman of the committee on Pacific railros ranking republican member committee on interoceanic canals, a member of the important « on the judiciary, on inter merce, nking repub ber of sommittee on cut n of irge manufa which subject Conne Iy interested by and rea its and the committea on ty of the United Ag chairman of the committee est reservations and game he. put thro protectic 1 the Ate White Mountain and Appa est reserve bill. He was chairman of the select commitiee of the senate which investigated the so-called Third Degree ab He is a member of the special senate committee to inves- tigate the alleged foreign combin tion against our tobacco. In th nd congress he was a member of ‘he r publican steering committee, which de- cides the order of business, and this congress he is a member committee on comm which makes up the republics bership of the committees of the sen- ate. He is one of the Inner Circle and is consulted by the leaders as sme of the senators whose jndgment is sound and whose vision is clear. Broad View of Public Questions. Senator Brandegee nationa! view of public of the responsibilities of his po&n P'& He is weil read and well has traveied extensively in and has crossed to the Pacific o trans-continental railroad line and v ited every state and territory in the west, including Alaska and the Ha- waiian islands, As chairman of the on interoeean canais ne the Isthmu of and is thoroughly visited times, has several fliar with the comstruetion, ope and government of the stupends canal enterprise, He took = ground aszainst the exemption cf American coastwise shipping frem the payment of ecanal tolls, first, bBecause he thought that preovision vioizted the Hay-Pauncefote treaty second, be-s ecause Ameviean coastwise shipping did not need the exemption: tnird, because he thought that every skip that passed threugh the eanal Rowvld help pay the government for the work and expenditure made by the govern- ment: fourth, because evea if we had a right te make the exemptien under the treaty. the game was net wWorth the eandle—it simply inecurred the ill- !Will and suspicion of our foreign friends, with no ben te amyhody which already had a monopol foreign vessel under our lowed to emgage In our trade. The position he took upon this great question was supported by many of the abiest statesmen, internaiion: lawyers and publicists in the count and Senator Boot now has a bill pen in= to repeal this exemption. which will probably be taken up at the next ssion of congress. His Length of Sarvice. There are ninety-six United States senators, fifty-one democrats and for- republicans. Of the fort republicans there are only thirteen who have been in the senate longer than Mr. Brandegee. Of the fifty-one democrats there are only nine who have been in the senate longer than Brandegee. That is to say, of the entire membership of the senate, is ninety-six, only twenty-two senators out of the ninety-six were entered the semate in December, 1905. In the brief period of seven years. only one longer than a single senatorial term, he has seen seventy-four sen- ators go out of the senate and seven- | t¥-four new ‘senaiors take their places. To put it in another way, more than three-fourths of the senators Wwho weTe there seven vears ago have left the senate. Brandegee, therefore, stands among the first quarter of the senate in point of senioriiy. or con- tinmous service. FEe has the confi- dence of his colleagues on both sides of the chamber. One of the most prom- inent senators of longest service told one of Senator Brandegee's constit- uents within a few weeks that many a senator could be here for thirty years and not take so promineni a posiiion as Brandegee has attained. This demonsirates why it is of advan. tage to a state to keep its senators fn office as long as they represent their stale with credit. Mr. Brandegee is now foriy-eight years of age, 1f he should stay in the senate for the next thirty years he would then be no older than was his predecesser, O. H. Platt, ai the date of his untimely death, What He Did for Mew Hayen, in New Haven they give an iastance of the quiet, systematie, but nene the less effestive metheds of Senater Brandegee. The sutherities of New Haven, the jargesi eity of Ceonmect- ieut, theught thei the time had come the erestion of & Lederal mfl@m for .tma-w oflles and other governments) PuIPoses commensuraie with { portance of the inleresis Javely I8 keeping with the arelitestusal roungings of the proposed log a.u{iwn{ws appointed a committee to (9 (o Washinglon and advoeate appropriation. With the aid of €on- i they were the pasesiy | tinence; post system was established, and for the accommodation thereof more space was necessary. It also appeared that when the plans were perfected, the materials propesed would not harmo- nize with the magnificent county court house which the city had recently erected faclng on the historic New Haven Green. This Green was for- merly the site of the old state house when New Haved was one of the twin capitals of the state. It immediately adjoins the campus of Yale univer- sity and is surrounded by some of the most beautiful structures of the city The changes proposed involved an ad- ditional appropriation of about a half million dollars. The committee there- upon again appealed to the senator, and he went te work upon the matter and carried it to success in such a way as to call forth the following statement from ex-President Taft, who has now become a resident of New Haven and is Kent professor in the Yale law school. Ex-President Taft said, in a recent interview in a New Haven pape: Ex-President Taft's View. “In all its proceedings the comr tee's efforts were most ably seconded by Senator Frank B. Brandegee. In season and out of season, he has kept the local committee informed of what was the hitch here and what s the hitch there, so that action could be taken at the right time and in the right way to bring about the proper expedition and to avoid those obstruc- tions which are almost inseparable from the procedure in the erection of | plied. Writing of the se: or in the Saturday Evening Post within a vear, Samuel G. Blythe, the celedrated Washington correspondent, oke of him, under the title of “Who's Who— and Why” as follows: “Now, then, to point a moral and | adorn a nutmeg, let me say that Frank Bosworth Brandegee wa to form. senator stituting another the quiet courage to do jus in these days of hocuspocus an sistent pifle is a trait worthy of ebration and s herewith cel with all the pomp and circumstance the traffic will bear, “Young Brandegee—he is only for- eight and has heen a senator since cftizen. He looks at many statesmen off on ghost dances, with a clear and prop- er perspective. He has a luecid of proprieties, precedents and per- He distinguishes soberly be- and promise. He whirlwinder, spell running trt ties of that of the ty 199, things that tween performance is no grandstander, binder or ha Wt he is is a modest, i lligent, effiefent and levei-headed perzon, with more disi lusions illusions and compr derstanding principies on ch this government ig founded. “Back of it ail 1s a real sense of | humer that forbids his putting crepe bands on his hat and sieeve, and h view is bread enough (o make him certain - everything will ceme out all right in the end. Neo Spotlight Senator. ‘““There is no opportunity for an ar- gument over the statement that the TUnited States senate has changed in personnel and in power in the past dozen yvea but when you are looking for concrete examples, you will be in grave error if vou pick Brandegee. There iz a person who is a re: 3 ator, not a spotlight senator—a. ator who attends to his job, does his work, underiakes all his responsib ties, meets all his obligations, is e cient and pable, and doesn’t parade around beating breast and telling about it. There is a senator of wide information: one who is not seif-con- scious, is quiet, and only assertive when he has a point to make. In- stead of cultivating pablicity, he keeps away from it. He has things to do, and he does them without fuss or fume, and when the other repub- lican leaders want a little clear vision projected on a case in hand, they go to him. “This quiet. unobtrusive, seif-con- tained, capable izen is ome of the big men of the senate, one of the powers in that body. His associates recognize him as a man of consider- able ability - -and sound legai attain- ments, and he has a direct and cnm- manding influence on affairs. * * He is a clear and logical speaker, mak- KEEfs YOU IMMUNE FROM DIiSEASE. May Sound Extravagant, But Investi- gation Wiil Convince You. Negligence and indifférence to the drainage organs (kidneys, liver, bowels, etc.) are the causes of disease, The poisonous, worn-out tissues are permitted to accumulate ,thereby pre- venting the ergans from resisting dis- ease, The best remedy is to keep the sys- tem under the influence of BIOPLASM (Bower)—a sirietly ethical, non-stim- uwlating, nom-poisenous Dfemmlum, which drives out all disturbing ele- suents and ensbles the starving nerve cells 19 receive normal nutritien, ‘While under the influence of BiO- PLASM, (Bower) infection can get_, ne hold, because the persistent guardians (the white eells, of the bloed) desirey the bedy poisons and ecompel their slimination threugh the boweis. One physician wrote: “Bioplasm (Bower) is betier than qflarsfltm»_fxt the best kind of hesith insurenc prq you suffer from Mal-Nutritieon, 1 Aewnia, eurasthenia, oo "Wéwk kufL: yeou should treatmend, Y e ™M fia;m has besn soid M«swd—y on doetor’s prescription for mmany years. Heowever, ssvangements have been made with the iee & Os- good Co, of this eity and other rep table druggisis 1o supply the public d reet. BIOPLASM (Bewery is sold in tablet form, at $1.400 i boitle, o8 g yarantes of mufiwtwa oF maeney idea | ing no pretense to oratory: and there is o senator more popular with his asanclate& Did I say he {# a sane, level-headed cltizen? Well. I desire to say it again. . There is so little opportunity in these days to make that remark about our Statesmen | tr.st the editor will let it go. Having dug one up, why not give three ringing cheers?" In addition to the qualities and characteristice above mentioned, Sen- ator Brandegee is recognized by his associates as ene of the best presiding officers the asemate has known. He knows the rules of the senate and administers them with precision and impartiality., Possibly his experience as speaker of the Connecticut house of representatives helped to qualify him for this important duty. During the last congress he was in the chair as presiding officer of the senate more frequently than any other senator, ex- cept the president pro tempore. Aversion to Publicity. | Now we feel that we have respond- ed to the requests from subscribers of the National in Conmnecticut to tell more about Senator Brandegee. His | aversion to publicity is well known, and many an ardent reporter has been baffled in an earnest and sincere at- | tempt to obtain material from the i+ Connecticut senator that would ade- quately tell the story of his busy career at Washington. For all that, he is a favorite with newspaper mel because when he gives out a ‘“‘story” it is accurate information worth wh but given with the modest reques that his name be withheld in connec- tion with matters of credit to him- self, Knows His Home State. While Senator Brandegee is a res- ident of New London, every nook and corner of the commonwealth of Con- necticut is familiar to him. The con- | scieutious way in which he performs | his duty without blare of trumpets is recognized by the people of his state, for he reflects in a typical way the | Charter Oak sturdiness and indepen- | dence that draws men to him. often been said that it is more in public life to know how im- | portant to qu:‘xln“n 2‘:‘1““'11@‘);%:\ el {i?’r_’l‘“;;tsv: | converse than to orate, and many con- With pls enersi work for the/overn- | TDICUGUS GRUIG - 8RCH Hoor, conyepss {oaant and Toc Be 'fgn}g*&};:“‘f-\mhznrfim | Whenever vou sit down to talk wi publicily to the work which he does, A Senator Edemec) youate Hure. to) and with the personal knowledge I learn something, hetm.so e is one Bave''of how much the New Haven |Jf those men who thoroughly absorb community is indebted to him for the | ¢ Salient provisions and ultimate ef- exceptional suceéss that New Haven | (93 01 Snv Ieafiye OF B Ha0or oo representatives had in pushing on this | ir:e:::al-“::‘x:‘ :ml:‘ ’{vh“- 7 Q:L, e wark. I feel that 1 should publicly note | s i ol ool h ; his’ co-laborers to clearly rec- it and invite attention to it. As the 5 . 3 ract s ar ‘es- head Of the Penama.canal committea | OSHIAS the praciicalinecds and neces in the senate, when the republicans | 5 B riip . - Sy Mooy i Lyl B Fh‘fl]md thusiastic majorities from going off T e b 5 SRy € 14 "nts ha are as ) o in republican on that committee, ho | 3L {anents Giat are often as deplor- | has given a great deal of attention |0l a8 the: sagiran = to the government's public work on || situationofen (M) Arel mote the Isthmus. Similarly he has stood | {0TOUghly informed not only on the | for the best things in the work of the | X’?f;'g"f‘“»‘flfl’glii;z‘d"'f,‘:g ;’x‘]‘?‘\‘;‘l",“‘: e judiciary commitiee. of which he is |J*ady €Stablis e SSERMIR as] e T * ¥/ many new avenues and channels of Beople renerally don't understand that | rade which have shown such a re. the really hard work of a senator or | ariae B ta 25 pous, 4 O o tatiea i qonSenator o he has the knowledge of what {8 best D e poone D, come | for the welfare of the people at large . e e T jen of| Senator Brandegee's genial manner | A en e maata C{o | and speech are refreshing to those who the bill a5 introduced are ‘prepared, flifve expericmced 'fhe distant ‘pedos- and where a Teport it agteed npon. on | (21" manner supposed to maintain the faith of which, without very much | 3873 3 b discussion usually, the recommended | [€CO8Nizes the rdgged dignitv and L S | common sense associated with New : aoied | England traditions. When all is said Looks at Things ICearly. | and done in official life, the qualities Such Instances of the senator's quiet, | of the ' man himself are what count conscientions and effective work for | most of a his constitnents could easily be multi- NCRWICH TOWN Requiem Mass for Miss Mary A. Shea | —Settlement Work Engaging Atten- tion of Miss Randall—General News. ves and acred Wednesday morning when friends were Heart church at requiem high mass Rev. Charles Bren- A. Shea. The solos were sung by M o0 also rendered The month's mind was celebrated by «nun for Miss Mary | during the ma 1\mv Pounch, w Is a RBeautiful Land on High at the | oftertory. Guests from Chicago. Mr, and Mrs. George Burns of Chi- cago who are east ending a con- vention, were guests Sunday of their cousins. Mr_ and Mrs. J. Henry But- ler of Otrobando avenue, Studying Settlement Work. Misg Marion Randall of West Town street left by auto Wednesday for ‘Hdldtnd. where she will resume her studies in settlement work for this | coming year. Home from Massachusetts. Rev. and Mrs. J. O. Barrows, of West Town street, returned Tuesday ! evening from visit with their son derick Barrows of Hyde Park, | M Briefs and Perscnals. Mrs, Enoch Worthington Wes | Town street is visiting friends in C | chester, of Mrs. and fer of West Albert Miner Louis M and street Mr. Town BORN. WOOD —In Stonington daughter to Mr. Wood. MAHRIED COTTRELL—BILLINGS—In New Ha- ven. Sept. 24, \‘», by ..ev. Oscar K Maurer, D. D.. Calvert Byron Cottrell of Wester] R I, and Miss Mabel Frances Billings of New Haven HOLLAND — WDOUGAL — In Mystic, Sept. 24, 1912, by Rev. John Flemi kuward Holland, M. D., of Colcheste and Miss 1d McDougal of Noank formerly of Norwich DIED TONER—In Dorchester, Mas 1913, Ellen McArdle, widow of rick Tone: Funeral on {val of 57 train at Main street station Friday forenoon. HUNTER—In Norwich, Sept. 24, Annie Schoonmaker widow of Joseph Hunt- er, aged 70 years. CHURCH & ALLEN 15 Hain Strect, Funeral Directors —AND— Embélmers. Lady Assistane, Telephons call 223-a. Heery B Chaves. Win Smith ANen, PATRICIAN SHOES New Fall Styles, Patent Leather, Gun Metai, and Ruseian Caif, A weman's Shee thats right, flA!KA BII.LlMIhhSL Shea & Burke 41 Main Street Funeral Directors It has ; CUTICURA Soap and Ointment Do so much for pimples, blackheads, red, rough hands, and dry, thin and falling hair, and cost so little that it is almost criminal not touse them. Cutieurs Soap and Ointment sold throughout the world. Liberal sample of each matled ires, with 32-p. book. Addross ““Cuticura,” Dept. 48, Boston. #g-Men who shave and shampoo with Cutiousl Soap will And 1t best for ekin and scalp. o | in Lebanon h N | It | = 1 t a p v a |a t | = F D. Ve Huntington avenue week wich Willi idence Tuesday were bors has | New York New v of Fort Fowler f Huntington avenue visited friends Tuesday. C, H. Wheeler of Fort Point visited his son, F. S. Wheeler, of the Scot- land road t week. Miss Prest of New York er vacation with her sister, ergason of \\l\m. lane. of Hackensack, iting her aunt, Mrs. the Scotland road. Rogers of East Lyme was of William Parkinson of the first of this is passing Mrs. Fred Mrs. George Seibert has been v Lasthaus, o fary Henry he guest and Mrs. Henry C. Gay of Nor- are spending several days with heir daughter, Mrs. Frank S. Wheel- r of the Scotland road. Mr. Arthur to her visit Mr Jenkins has re- Peck's Corner Haven with her George Tufts. G. home on in New and \lrb Mrs. urned fter a arents, le Gembel of Packer and Z2ishop of Jewett City were Sunday at the home of Mr. Albert Green on Huntington Miss Cam am isito nd Mrs. venue. Mr. and Mrs. are in A. R. Keables of Prov- town this week and calling on former neigh- and friends on the New London urnpike. George Randall of West Town street been spending a day or two in this week before going to Haven .to enter upon his senior at Yale univer Mrs. Richard ear Carter of Sturtevant treet recently entertained Mrs. James Pastore of Laurel H Eimer Tubbs Pierce, Florida, and Miss Ruth of the Sachem Plain road, John Thompson of returned after a week Mrs. Thompson's par- Mrs, Charles Bushnell Canterbury turnpike. Stamford.—Three new memorial win. Mr. and Mrs. tford have visit with Mr. and 0Old dows are to be placed In the First Bap- - HOW THIS WOMAN t church. FOUND HEALTH Would not give Lydia E.Pink- ham’s Vegetable Compound for All Rest of Medicine in the World. Utica, Ohio.—*‘I suffered everything } from a female weakness after baby came. I had numb spells and was dizzy, had black spots be= fore my eyes, my back ached and I was so weak I could hardly stand up. My face was yellow, even my fingernails were colorless and I had displacement. took Lydia E. Pinle ham’s Vegetable Compound and now I am stout, well and healthy. I can do all my own work and can walk to town and back and not get tired. I would not give your Vegetable Compound for all the rest of the medi- cines in the world. I tried doctor’s med. icines and they did me no good.’’—Mra. MARY EARLEWINE, R.F.D. No.3, Uticay Ohio. Another Case. Nebo, I1l.—*“1 was bothered for tem years with female troubles and the doc- tors did not help me. 1was so weak and nervous that I could not do my work and every month I had to spend a few days in bed. I read so many letters about Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- pound curing female troubles that I got abottle of it. It did me more good tham anything else I ever took and now it has cured me. I feel better than I have for years and tell everybody what the Compound has done for me. 1 believe I would not be living to-day but for that.”” — Mrs. HETTIE GREENSTREET, Nebo, Illinois, MISS M. C. ADLES Hair, Sealp and FaceSpecialis! BACK FROM NEW YORK. Miss Adles Las returned with the new fall styles in Transformations, the new device which takes the place of + old tims, ugly, artificlal looking wig; fine stoek of Imported Halr, etc. Come {6 her to be made handsome and stylish as New Yorkers are, Ask Miss Adles mhoud Tomique. 868 Main Streel, next te Plhelsea Bank. s9piie Feisphone #54-4,