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THE BARRE DAILY TIMES, BARRE, VT., FRIDAY, AUGUST 14, 1914. it. The best foundation for a hard day's work Sturdy workers with eight to ten hours toil before them need hearty, real food for breakfast. A big bowl of Purity Oats is just the thing. It banishes the gnawing ten o'clock hunger and makes one "feel like work" all day long. There's both enjoyment and staying nourishment in PURITY OATS . , "The Bountiful Breakfast" totally different More nourishing than other oats, because absolutely pure and wholly digestible. No dust, hulls and shorts only the good part of the grain used as rich in nutriment as nature can make it. Pirarrv Oats cook quickly, are never mushy or soggy, are com-- pletely and easily digested. Jacn flake is steruizea. Purity Oats are fmnranteed to stay fresh, clean and pure in the round Purity Package original with us. Try a package of Purity Oats Begvilar Size Package 10 tents Family Size Poem age, containing four pounds, is the largest package of real good oats ever sold for 5 cents. Order a package of your grocer today Davenport. I.. Purity OatS CO. Keokuk. la. CONFESSES TO MURDER Mrs. Jenm6 Mills Admits Killing Charles Manley at Henniker, N. H. WHEN CONFRONTED WITH AFFIDAVIT Declares It Was a Question Whether She Killed Him, or He Took Her Life e-t i ivr it i hi i TOJHP THE VERMONT STATE FAIR. seeds C. 0.' Ormsbee; fruit, Prof. M. B. Cummings; domestic manufacture, Mrs. Bertha R. Howe. A prominent feature of the State Fair this season will be the track events. With the largest number of horses ever entered and with liberal purses the con tests promise speed and spirit. PREMIUM LISTS OUT. Superintendents and Judges Have Been Selected for the Many Departments. With the customary big premiums of , fered in every department and the usual liberal prizes that have annually' been nwarded, the Vermont state fair ' this season promises to interest exhibitors in great numbers. The opening day is Juesday, September lo, and the place is White River Junction. The fame of the state fair has trav eled far and exhibitors from far away states will come with stock, either equine or bovine, to show to the farmers of Vermont what the farmers of other states are doing. A Virginian farmer will show several Guernseys and Ohio, Xcw .York, Tew Jersey, Pennsylvania and Canada will show several breeds of .cattle. Superintendent and judges have been 'selected. E. A. Smalley of Morrisville will be superintendent of the horse de partment; George E. Terrill of Morris ville. cattle: W. H. Hrrineton of Pom- tret, sheep; A. C. Harrington of Tafts ville, cattle; W. H. Harrington of Pom 'products and maple sugar; R. S. Currier. Barre, poultry; Dana M. Stafford of White River Junction, horticulture and fruit; Chester Sargent of White River Junction, machinery; S. F. Leonard of White River Junction, domestic manu facture. The judges are: Regular Morgan class es. J. J. Lynes; standard bred horses, F. V, Thrasher; draft horses and ponies, L. D. Herrick; registered Jerseys, J. E. Dodge; registered Holsteins, E. J. Flet cher; registered Shorthorns, William El liott; registered milking Shorthorns, E. J. Fletcher; oxen and steers, E. J. Ben son; milking contest, E. S. Brigham; the northerly end of the grounds, a sep fcheep, coarse won breeds. J. A. McLean; ,4rate entrance for automobiles has been tine wool breeds, C. Whitnev Lewis: . made. In the cattle, horse, sheep, swine and poultry departments, the premiums have been increased. Purses to the amount of $1,200 are offered for the track events. Dog River Valley Fair Issues Attractive Booklets. The premium look of the Dog River Valley fair, to be held at Northfield September 8, 0, and 10, has been issued. It is presented in an attractive cover, showing a" birds-eye view of the fair grounds. A huge bull dog is seen upon a high projecting cliff, peering down upon animated scenes. A biplane is high in the air over the grounds. The subject matter of the booklet is interesting and filled with valuable information for both exhibitor and intending visitor. A copy can be had by addressing W. H, Douglas, secretary, Northfield, v t The directors of this organization have made many improvements at the grounds that are sure to be appreciated by the visiting public. A siding 400 feet long is being constructed at the grounds by the Central Vermont Railwav company This will fill a long-felt want ,and be greatly appreciated by shippers of stock A new entrance has been made for pe destrians. Getting off the train at the southerly end of the grounds, one ap proaches by a new, commodious pair of stairs that leads to the grounds at the southerly end of the new midway, which has been laid out this year. The visitor passes through the midwav and enters floral hall or the grandstand. At dairy products nnd maple sugar, George Cushman;. horticulture and grains and WhenTired and Heated AUT0IST RECEIVED DAMAGES. Received to Machine When Collided With It. Horseman Sanfords Ginger Will strengthen and re fresh you. For stomach and bowel ills, fatigue, nervousness, and sleep lessness caused by heat it has no rival worthy of mention- od f Trtr brandy lor J r f wmjrrv 1DVMBH Lon4 te Om Irmtir Mr Um wtsqt. ymi r-4 bp, wnnfti or jGffvi e.htittc. Fori rx tn 9A-&dM4 e -j-itv. evnr 4 uQgtte. botd by 4 Usually when a human being and an automobils. come into violent contact, if there are any damages to pay it is the man in the car who settles. The pro cedure, however, was reversed Wednes day 'afternoon by Edward Harvey of Bennigton, who gave up $25 after a horse he was riding had been in collision with an automobile on the Woodford road. The accident happened between 4 and 5 o'clock, a short distance ea.-f of the point of rooks. When the car and horse came ogcther Harvey was thrown into the machine and the impact of the bodies of the man and the animal created con-1 siderable damage. One of the mud guards was bent nearly double, a lamp was smashed and the crank was torn a wa r. When Harvey picked himself up blood was running a stream from a deep puncture in the biceps of his right arm nnd he was also considerably bruised. The horse was cut on one front shoulder and on one hind leg. The ear which was being driven by Charles M. I Leonard of Schenectady was occupied by four women passengers and immcdistely after the collision all five of them began to put the blame for the accident upon the horseman. Leonard told Harvey, according to the young man's statement that he would nettle for 25. but that if the matter was not ad justed on the apot that he would bring uit and make the affair more costly. Harvey paid the s2. and Leonard pave him receipt. Harvey appeared at the office of Dr. E. .?. Hurlev in the evening with blood- ! soaked handape shout his arm. When the bandage wa removed a deep punct ure from which a larpe amount of blood had flowed w revealed. Harvey said that be had rid.!en to Woodlord city dur ing the afternoon for the purpose of buyirg a wapon, hut that when he ar rived the vehicle had been sold to an other party. He via cm his n,T Wk to Bennington whea the acri.lent happened. Harvey Mid that he a loptn nVer the road at a good gait and that he neither heard nor saw the rar until it ' almost upon him. He admitted that e pulled his horse to t V rone md of he road in his ef ort to avoid heir? hit I hy the car hut inits that the aulo nvhile am upon brn so m4ier,W that there was nothing else for h.m to da. Concord, X. H., Aug. 14. Without any trace of remorse, Mrs. Jennie Mills of Henniker, who has confessed to the mur der of Charles Manley, for whom she acted as housukceper, on March 8, is in a cell in the county jail here, awaiting arraignment in Branford to-day on a charge of murder in the first degree. Mrs. Mills' confession came after she was confronted with the evidence of au affidavit, made by her little daughter, by Detective Hildreth of Manchester and County Solicitor Robert Murchie. She had been living with Manley for more than a year before she blew the top of his head oil with a shotgun after he had returned to lus home late at night. "Yes, I did it and I in glad of it, she has said. "He deserved to die, and it was only a question of whether he died then or whether I died, for I was never sure at any time that he wouldn't kill me. Neighbors of Mrs. Mills in the little town of Henniker in spite of the brutal details of the murder which she admits having committed, having a genuine feeling of sympathy for her. They say it has been a matter of common knowl edge that Mauley, especially when he bad been drinking, had treated her cru elly for a long time. They tell many stories of how he continually beat and otherwise ill-treated er. Unfailing efforts by the county solici tor are responsible for clearing up the mystery surrrounding the crime. He was unable to obtain an indictment against Mrs. Mills in the April session of the grand jury, which he endeavored to do on account of the public clamor that the mystery be cleared, and has been working tirelessly in an attempt to unravel the affair since. "There was nothing left for me to do," Mrs. Mills explains. "I could have left him, of course, but where would I have gone? I am no longer young or good looking. There was no one to whom I could go. I had no money. It was stay with him or die. I had to live, for I had to think of my daughter, Frances. "On the night when it happened, I don't know exactly what I did do. I know I was blind with pain, and with anger, and then somehow I felt the shotgun iu my hand and it was all over. I thought something of giving myself up, and then I thought maybe I could get away with it and live to forget it. It hasn't been much living since the thing happened, though, and 1 don't know but that I'm glad they got me and I can at last sleep." ranees Mills has been in the state POISONED BY THE GRIP, Thagrip is no respecter of person No age or station of life ia exempt from it. The grip ia not ft fatal disease but it leaves its victim in such ft debilitated condition that one of our foremost medi cal writers baa been led to lay, "It ii astonishing the number of people who haro been crippled in health for yean after an attack." It is common thing to bear people date various ailment from an attack of influenza. The condition of those who have bad the grip is one that calls for ft tonic for the blood. Dr. Williams' Pink Tills are especially adapted to meet this need as they purify nd enrich the blood, tone tip the nerves and give vigor, strength and health to the debilitated system. "The grip left me without any vitality lief , ' 'and I lost all appetite and ambition. 1 wag reduced in weignt an was Ire quently confined to bed for two days or more. My friends thought I was going, into consumption. I owe my recovery to Dr. Williams' fink i'Uis ana cheerfully recommend them." The details of this case and a chapter, on the proper treat ment of the grip and its after-eiiects will be found in the booklet "Building Up the Blood" which will be sent free on ro quest by the Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Schenectady, N. Y. FOR SERVICE PLUS QUALITY AND LOW PRICES TRADE AT THE RED CROSS PHARMACY ' 1 1 Saturday Soda Specials Chocolate and Vanilla Ice Cream, Lemon Cream Sherbet Buy a Kodak Jr. They fit the pocket. Ladies can carry them in their handbags. $7.50-$ 11.00 Other Kodaks at $6 $65 Let us develop and print your films. Satisfaction guaranteed. industrial school for wayward girls in Manchester since shortly after the mur der, as a result of an escapade in which she was involved with John Boody, an lderlv citizen of Henniker, who com mitted suicide after the couple were found. She has been persistently nues- ioned ever since, and it was only a few dRys ago that she weakened and broke own. She told that her mother killed Manley and signed an affidavit to that eff eet. Remember If it im't an Eaatman, it Isn't a Kodak VISIT OUR STATIONERY DEPARTMENT SHOOTS WIFE BEFORE OPERATION I The Red Cross Pharmacy rao ffiagL stare sseS Wealthy Missouri Farmer Comes to Hos pital Just as Woman Is Going to Table Shoots Himself Also. Kansas City, Mo., Aug. 14.-Mrs. Til lie Rolfe, twenty-nine years old, lav in the room adjoining the operating table at the hwetlish hospital here yesterday while nurses hurried about preparing for the operation for appendicitis that was to be performed on her in a few moments. John Rolfe, forty years old, ner husband, a wealthy farmer of Ran dolph, Kans., drove up to the hospital in a motor car. 'I want to see my wife," he told the head nurse. An attendant led him back to his wife's room. 'Oh. John, why don't you quit drink mg, Mrs. Rolfe said as he entered. Then the door closed. rive minutes later five shots were heard. Physicians and nurses ran into the room and found that three bullets had entered Mrs. Rolfe's bodv. Rolfe lay on the floor, a revolver grasped in his hand. He had shot his wife and himself. It is said both will die. First BEGINS BUSINESS. Federal Board's First Formal Meeting. ug. 14. The. first formal Skin tortures will yield to Resinol IF you have eczema; ringworm or other itching, burning, un sightly skin eruptions, try Resinol Ointment and Rctinol Soap and Ice hovr quickly the itching stops and the trouble dis appears, even in severe, stubborn cases. Resinol Ointment is also an excellent household remedy for pimples, dandruff, sores, burns, wounds, boils, and for a score of other uses where a soothing, heal ing application is needed. ScM by all drnitiritji For trial m, writa to ipu K, Rennet Baltimore, lid. Washington meeting of the new federal reserve board was held yesterday. Late yesterday aft ernoon the members were received by the president. One of the first acts of the board is to be. ratification of selection by the preliminary "organization committee" of the 12 regional reserve bank cities. Pro test of Baltimore against being placed in the Kichmoml district and of northern Jfew Jersey banks against being linked with the Philadelphia bank were on file, but will probablv be turned down. Ap proval of the entire "districting" plan of the committee is deemed certain, for the present at least. Organization of the entire system of banks by tct. I is predicted. : : CURRENT COMMENT a , J , (. Husband's Turn Later, Perhaps. The withdrawal of Walter W. Hus band from the congressional canvass on the east side is no discredit to him; on the contrary, it is a graceful and manly tribute to an older man, one more verged in public problems, but not. per haps, with Mr. Husband's personal ex perience in Washington. The friends of Mr. Dunnett will not forget Mr. Hus band's self-effacing conduct at this time, and his reward mav come later. Rut land Herald. An Over-Worked Word. An exchange says that P. W. Clem- ent'i views, as expressed in his an nouncement as a candidate for the Re publican nomination for governor, "are of a reactionary nature." Which, of course, simply means that his views are not in accord with the editor of that par ticular paper. A man with brains, com mon sense and abilitv to go ahead and do things is juite apt to be called a reactionary bv some street-corner loafer whose exif-tence is completely useless and unnecessary. The word is being over worked in politics. Lyndon Lmon-Jour nsl. TWO BRYAN PEACE PACTS 'ARE RATIFIED Treaties with the Netherlands and Nor way Are Approved by the Senate To-day. Washington, Aug. 14. Secretary Brvan s peace treaties with the .Nether lands and Norway were ratified yester day by the Senate. They are the first of twenty pending. They provide for commissions of inquiry before resorting to arms in international dispute which ordinary resources of diplomacy fail to setue. Be Good To Yourself by keeping in good physical trim and you will be the best friend to yourself and a pleas ure to others. Most sicknesses begirt in the ordinary and minor ailments of the digestive organs, and for these ailments SaciWifts have become the most popular remedy, because they are so pafe, so certain, and prompt in their beneficial action. They tone the stomach, stim ulate the liver, regulate the bowels. By cleansing the pystem and purifying the blood they prove that they Are the Best 01 Good Friends I kaa, 10c, ZSc PRESIDENT BACK AT WORK. Confers with Members of Federal Re serve Board. Washington. Aug. 14. President Wil son found consolation yesterday from his grief in hard work. Back from Rome, (Ja.. where he had buried bis wife, the president turned at once, to big prob lems of state. His chief business to day was to set in motion the wheels of the federal " reserve board. He called members of this organization around him and discussed with them their labors, particularly as affected by the European war situation and by the big crop-moving period of this'country. He also had before him the protest of the German charge here against the rigid censorship placed on wireless com munication between this country and liermanv. A Contest Worth Watching. The announcement of the candidacyj of Hon. Alexander Dunnett of St. Johns- bury, United States district attorney, for the Republican nomination for Con gress in the second district to succeed Hon. Frank Plumley of Xorthfield, who some months since announced that he would not be a candidate for re-election, comes as no surprise. Mr. Dunnett has been frequently mentioned for the posi tion. He makes a distinct bid for Pro gressive support in stating that he is not a "stand-patter. It certainly looks as if a contest worth watching was in prospect in the eastern district. Rut land News. May End "Line Houses." A new and striking thing has taken place in Stanstead county. P. Q., bor dering Orleans couuty on the north. On Thursday the county voted "dry" and the Canadian temperance act will go into effect next spring. This is a not able temperance victory for our Cana dian neighbors and especially is it a vic tory for the Stanstead Journal. Brother ' icans Holland has fought long and hard for the cause and with telling force. The Journal has seemingly bent every ounce of energy for this righteous cause and The Monitor trusts the paper will be given proper credit and be duly reward ed. This measure will apparently do awav with the so-caiien line nouses which have infested the border between Vermont and Stanstead county for mors than a (feneration. These places have been infamous but the law has been unable to touch them. This act of Stan- stead county will be appreciated by the friends of temperance in Orleans county and "Rock Island" will after May 1, 1IH5, be a leas famous place for our boore artists to visit. Three cheers for Ktanntead eountv. the Journal and John Holland. Barton Monitor. the. imminence of the state campaign and the extraordinary brevity enforced upon all candidates by the date of the state, convention, Wednesday, Sept. !). It is perhaps fortunate, however, that the 14 days remaining before the cau cuses make it impossible for one of the ola-rasnioned campaigns to be con ducted, which involved the employment of paid emissaries and solicitors in every town, with the distortion of public sen timent which inevitably followed. Each of the announced candidates for the Republican nomination for governor, at least, has declared that such methods will not be employed, so that, whatever the result of the convention as far as the governorship is concerned, it can hardly be asserted that any, candidate possessed an unfair advantage on ac count of his pre-caucus activities. the Herald take the three candidates at their word and anticipates that the convention of mfi delegates will be most ly uninstructed, and that the candidate who appeals most truly to the present trend of public sentiment will be nom inated. This is as it should be. As far as the nomination for U. S. senator is concerned, it is apparently a foregone conclusion that Senator Wil liam P. Dillingham will be nominated for re-election, although Prouty strength may develop snd there is always the contingency that Governor Fletcher may enter the senatorial race, either us an independent or as a progressive Re publican, with a latent strength as yet undetermined as far as the -Republican party itself is concerned. Nothing like a particular canvass can be undertaken by any of these candi dates in the shortness of time inter vening, and the chances for a free and unhampered choice of the people depends almost wholly on the character of the delegates. Town committees should see to it that caucuses sre warned without delay, well advertised and well attended. Then the peoide of the Republican partv should conscientiously select their best men and send them to the state convention with or without definite instructions as they elect. Also, the time is short, and action should begin at once. "Rutland Herald, and must be got out of the way. To the I nited States he was an enemy who had been baffled. During our Civil war he had been warm sympathizer with the southern Confederacy and his sym pathy was only prevented from becoming belligerent by the refusal of Great Brit ain to join him in recocnizinir it. He secretly licensed the building of Confed erate cruisers in France and in many other ways sought to embarrass the gov ernment of the Union. His "Mexican adventure" was an assault on Monroe ism of such an aggravated nature that when the end of the Civil war left our government's hands free and strong it ordered his armv out of Mexico and that arniv went. Prussia's conduct towards the United, States ddring the Civil war was friendly. When the clash of arms came between united Germany and im- ' penal France the people of the United States were influenced bv their recollec tions of Grman goodwill during their hour of trial and by recollections of Na polecn IIl.'s hostility to the cause of the American Union. Boston Transcript. RUTLAND MEN VISIT BURLINGTON. PINCH0T ENGAGED. Announces That He Is to Marry th Daughter of General Lloyd Bryce. New Tork. Aug. 14. Gilford Pinchot, I the Progressive leader, announced yea terday his engagement to Miss Cornelia J nryee. daughter of Oneral Uoyd Bryce, 'of Fluahing. T.. I., formerly minister to iThe Netherlands. DELAY ON TRADE BILL. May Art TiH Senate Acts en Clayton Measnre. Washing ton. Aug. 14. Final agreement on the trade commission bill n.. in con ference may be delayed until the Senate has acted on the Clayton biJl, which has featorea closely related. A dceiKinn will he reached later. New England Farms. Stories , of abandoned farms in New England states are declared pure fiction bv Prof. Edward Wallace of the Indiana college of agriculture. He recently com pleted a tour of investigation and found some interesting facts. Same farm residences were found va cant snd some farms so worn out that cultivation was hardlv profitable, but he found such land selling from $10 per acre up to $17S. depending on how well land was situated. Men who understand soil reconstruction are buving the land and taking their chances on increasing its productivity. When crops fail, these new farmers do not blame Providence or the weather, hut look for chemical condi tions in the soil. If the soil is lacking in elements necessary to plant life, they correct conditions. Lime, phosphates and vsriou fertilizer compounds are' emplovrd. j The same fight is being waged in Ohio, j The state board of administration basj used many carloads of pnlverired lime , this rear on state farms, putting the j soil in condition for increased produt- I tion. It is using pnlverired limestone j from the penitentiary rock quarries nari Columbus. Analvsis shows it idvsl fir, land baa, 18701914. In 187" the public sentiment of the United States was overwhelmingly fa vorable to Germany. The succession of German victories elicited expressions of satisfaction from the majority of Amer- Only here and there was a voice raised in behalf of France, "our old friend and ancient ally." To-day. at the outbreak of Europe's war, American public sentiment, rightly or wrongly, 4s distinctly anti-German. We shall not pause to discuss the question whether a line of distinction can be logically drawn between the German sovereign and the German people when they act in com mon. Many Americans draw it without reflecting that perhaps thereby they are merely advertising the absence in this country, of an international mind such as a nation which has been a world pow er since the war with Spain might res- sonably be expected to have developed. The American tendency is to personalize every problem and And a scapegoat or hero m every public question, domes tic or foreign, and pay no attention to undeilying causes or fundamental facts. The radical contrast between the American attitude in 1S"I and the American attitude to-day is due to dif ference of causes and environment which Neighborly Visit Was Paid by Means of Automobile Yesterday. Burlington, Aug. 14. Sixty-five Rut land business meu were guests yester day afternoon of , the' Burlington Mer chants' association at luncheon at Hotel Vermont, the speaker for the day being former Governor John A. Mead whose topic was. The Scale Industry. the Rutland men left their city at 9 and arrived here at 12:20 in 15 auto mobiles making the trip without acci dent save some tire troubles. They were met in front of Hotel Vermont by a large contingent of Burlington men who cheered as he cars drove up. Each automobile was decorated with large white banners 36 inches long and 14 inches wide, bearing the, word "Rut land" in black letters. Two of these were placed on each car and in back was a large banner, containing the words Rutland Fair and Carnival, September 7 to 11." Among those present from Rutland, were: Former Gov. John A. Mead, I. M. Frost, II. 0. Carpenter, L. A. Miner, F. H. Remington, E. R. Hopkins, W. S. Smith, Isaac Miller, A. A. Prouse, C. H. Landon, W. B. Mills, W. E. Biirditt, Arthur Bacon, E. C. TutUe, Col. H. Ed ward Over, Judge F. M. Butler and D. H. Martin, G. E. Chalmers, secretary, A. C. Mason. C. H. Murdock. C. P. Cooper, Dr. F. L. Wells. J. J. Murphy, R, L. Rich mond, II. L. Hindlev, E. A. Chalmers, C II. Matthews, Peter" Pouliet, C. H. West and S. II. Walley of Rutland, Herbert Nash, jr., president of the Rutland Pow- . ed company, B. C. Buxton and others. The total number yesterday at luch- eon was 13ri, a record since the luncheons were starred more than a year ago. Max. L. Powell, president of the Bur lington Merchants' Association presided and introduced President Chalmers of , the Rutland body who responded to words of welcome by Mr. Powell. Then Dr. Mead spoke. After telling how much he loved Vermont and her ; people Dr. Mead launched into a history of the scale industry of the state and told of the growth and prosperity of the Howe Scale works at Rutland which era ployed 1.200 hands and whose pay roll1 f 20,o0 a week The governor was frequently inter rupted bv hand clapping and much en thusiasm was displayed. ... The visitors after the luncheon were the Germans of the fatherland and Ger- !sImwn about the city and the environ mnri-.-iiuvi ii n na niiuuiij tifmiKiit i-a in iiif The war of 1870 was waged by Germany to attain German unity. That fact alone would have won fur Germany a great extent of funport from -ople so intense ly sympathetic with the spirit of na tionnlity a Americans. There were oth er reasons for Americans and Germans being in moral alliance which no longer exist. Both Prussia, which was identical with Germany, and the United States had grievances against Napoleon HI. To Pruiia be was the oheUrle to German unity under the hegemony of Prussia j incuts. How to Sharpen Scissors. In the September Woman's Home Companion appears a department en titled "The Exchange." in which con tributors give practical housekeeping suggentions. A New Jersey woman tells as follow how to sharpen -issor: "To sharpen sci-sors take a bottle and cut with the scinwirs as if yon had to cut the n'ck off the bottle. This is ef-. fective." w I urn s . i.i m x r rii mi i in in im '-. ..'?- vt.w.a4 .y Hii? ,JUIWW.IWMMWW - ewe--w. - soil betterment. Worn out been fully restored in Ohio in bundles of instances. Joint action of brain and i brawn brings it about without delay, if j me eon oi any state is given pmjr care it will continue to produce. Worw mit soil is proof of nothing so plainly as poor methods and lark ft rare. Rrsttlehoro Reformer. Bady Identified. Parien. Conn., Aug. 14. The body of a woman found in the woods here last Monday was identified yeterdav by j Thorp a H. Kane of S Water street.! New York Citv. as that of his wife. The a El brnties are investjcating to deter- The rail of the Hcmibliean state eom nine whether Mrs. Kane was killed or mittee for rsucuse to be held simulu- co mm i Med suicide. neously on Thursday, Aug. 27, -iggeeta A Short Campaign. -4--..T I 1 I -.AC '51 DRINK y 7" v , f0 f . ' . .- - i t . - a-- - - -T - - - - ' ' ' l jr-- i. s - - - - ' " p i i- . r-. - ' - - " " ' i . t - V sw0m r - l I fc'flt ilnlllliriil' ilHWIMil i' 'IH :"iat' I ..'J.n tin'Tifr - mi aTm i fT an 'ill' ---ammamammimmmaimmm