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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1018 ToMenWho Think For weeks your intelligence has been insulted by false statements contained in page advertisements paid for by the Republican National Committee and by mem- bers of the Republican Old Guard who waxed fat under a Republican tariff that worked all the time for their Republican pocketbooks and against yours. These high priests of special privileges are trying to make you forget. They want you to forget that they themselves were responsible for the Republican panics, the in- evitable results of years under Republican tariffs— the panics of 1873, 1893, 1903, 1907, and 1913. They want you to forget the want, the misery, the despair, caused by these Republican panics! They want you to forget the strikes and lock- outs at Homestead, at Paterson, at Lawrence, at Fall River, at Cripple Creek, at Wilkesbarre under Repub- lican rule. They want you to forget the days when Republi- can tariffs worked with machine-like precision, when men and women who longed to do right were driven to acts of desperationin order to keep body and soul together. E OR—IF YOU WILL REMEMBER They hope by talking of business disaster and unemploy- ment to make you afraid to vote as your conscience and com- mon sense dictate—FOR PRESIDENT WILSON. BUT FACTS KNOCK THEIR MIS-STATEMENTS COLD. If there was the slightest danger of a business let-up follow- ing the return of peace, WOULD HENRY FORD, a Republican and head of an indus- try employing 45,000 men, be supporting President Wilson? WOULD GEORGE F. JOHNSON and ‘H. B. Endicott, of The Endicott-Johnson Company, Republicans and owners of the larg- est shoe manufactory in the world, be supporting President Wil- son? \ WOULD ISADOR JACOBS, Independent and President of the California Canneries Company, the largest concern of its kind in America, be supporting President Wilson? WOULD F. D. UNDERWOOD, Republican and President of the Erie Railroad, be supporting President Wilson? WOULD THOMAS A. EDISON, Republican, the world’s great- est inventor and employer of thousands of men, be supporting President Wilson? WOULD THE IRON AGE, in its November, 1916 isuue, say: “The pig iron market of the past two weeks is practically without a paralle! in the experience of present-day producers. The advances are unprecedented, in being due, not to a clam- orous demand for iron for quick shipment, as in all previous excited markets, but to a simultaneous effort of buyers to cov- er far forward requirements—in many cases through the sec- ond half of 1917.” If You Want War and Panics, Vote for Hughes with Roosevelt. If You Want Peace with Honor and Continued Prosperity VOTE FOR WILSON - i A A A A A A A A A [NV A VO VI A VAU | Nfl flfl AW il WAV A AV AWAW VAR VATV A WAV, 0 N is able to brin and so they make records for the Victor exclusively. absolute fidelity that has established the supremacy of the Victrola; that has attracted into the ranks of Victor exclusive talent the greatest artists of all the world. Go to your nearest Victor dealer today and have him play for you the new Gluck- Zimbalist record or any other Victor music you wish to hear. strate (o you the various styles of the Victor and Victrola—$10eto B | 7 1 — D in an exquisite Iullaby Gluck and Zimbalist S0, W2 s.:- WY R 0 A new Victor Record Among the many charms of Victor music are numerous delightful selections interpreted by world-famed artists in com- bination. Such a record is the new Gluck-Zimbalist presentation of the favorite little lullaby, “Sing Me to Sleep. with a clear and simple beauty that is superb. The throbbin notes of Zimbalist's violin express exquisite emotion. their united artistry this dainty, touching number takes on a new and greater appeal. Sing Me to Sleep ”» Alma Gluck and Efrem Zimbalist Victor Red Seal Record 88573. Gluck and Zimbalist both appreciate that only the Victrola their art into your home with unerring truth, It is this Twelve-inch, $3. Victor Talking Machine Co., Camden, N. J. arning. Victor Records can be safely and satisfactorily played only with Im t wi Victor Needles or Tungs-tone Stylus on Victors or Victrolas. Victor Records cannot be safely played on machines with jeweled or other reproducing points. New Victor Records demmfilu_q}! all dealers on the 28th of each month or . Jt is the identifying 1abel o all genuine Victrolas and Victor Records, Gluck sings it | Throug He will also gladly demon- $400. Victrola Vict AR ATy A AT AUV A AU AT UMYAURAT AU FAUSATAYMTAAPAY I~ I vmmmmm@mvtfx}m‘v’mmwl&msjmmm L N N N NN T Ao EQ) DAY T A o e e T Al T I i pel il L Wi | = S e ] BOMB PLANT DISCOVERED Explosion Reveals Location of Manu- factory of Infernal Machines—Boys Light Fuses and Crash Follows, New York, Nov. 6.—The explosion of a black powder bomb in an apart- ment on the first floor of the five- KEEP LOOKING YOUNG It’s Easy—If You Know Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets The secret of keeping young is to feel young—to do this you must watch your liver and howels—there’s no need of having a sallow complexion—dark rings under your eyes—pimples—a bil- ious look in your face—dull eyes with no sparkle. Your doctor will tell you ninety per cent of all sickness comes from inactive howels and liver. Dr. Edwards, a well-known physician in Ohio, perfected a vegetable com- pound mixed with olive oil to act on s Tablets by their olive color. i 25c per box. All druggists. the liver and bowels, which he gave to his patients for years. Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets, the sube stitute for calomel, are gentle in their action, yet always effective. They bring about that exuberance of spirit, that natural buoyancy which should be en= joyed by everyone, by toning up the liver, and clearing the system of impurities. You will know™ Dr. Edwards’ Olive 10c and story tenement housc at 338 Bast 106th street, in the Italian section of Harlem, last night, led to the discov- ery of an outfit for the manufacture of bombs. The police are looking for Marin Paternoster, a barber, who occupied the apartment up to Thursday. The twenty familles who live in the house were frightened when there was a loud report, accompanied by the crash of falling glass and broken win- dows, and followed by a fire. Fire- men and police reserves reached the scene in a few moments and the flames were extinguished. The dam- age was small, Detectives Somers, Mancini, and Caffetti of the Third Branch found that the explosion, which had taken place in the middle room of the three-room apartment, had resulted from the play of some boys who placed fuses in a pile of powder and lighted them, setting off the bomb. In the front room of the apartment the detectives found a long, narrow box containing different kinds of powder; five boxes of big-calibre rifle cart- ridges and a number of elbows of iron pipe, which Inspector Owen Egan of the bureau of combustibles said were used in the making of bombs similar to the one sent to Judge Rosalsky two years ago. They also found a large number of fuses and a quantity of slugs. The police learned that Paternoster twenty-four days ago, W into the apartment. They found also {hat he had moved to 329 East 106th street. The detectives went there and were told that he had again last . moved. They searched the apart- ment and found four unloaded shot- euns. These were confiscated. The police sald they belleved there was no connection between the bomb “factory” and explosions incident to the street car strike. If you want War vote for Hughes. —advt. If you want War vote for Hughes. —advt. ‘Wall street and Crooked Politicians want Hughes. Who do you want? —advt. Wall street and Crooked Politicians want Hughes. Who do you want? —advt. Hughes stands for war and misery, Wilson for. peace and happiness, do your duty—pull the second lever. —advt. If you want War vote for Hughes. —advt. ‘Wall street and Crooked Politicians want Hughes. Who do you want? —advt. Hughes stands for war and misery, Wilson for peace and happiness, do your duty—pull the second lever. | —advt. if you want War vote for Hughes. { —advt. | Pull the second straight Democratic t rrosperity and Wilson.—advt. HOW GOCD THAT MUSTERCLE FEE It Gets to That Sore Spot Like Magic ‘A-a-h! That's delicious relie those sore muscles, those stiff j that lame back. s Musterole is a clean, white oint: made with the oil of mustard other home simples. . It does the work of fashioned mustard plaster, minu plaster and minus the blister! the You simply rub Musterole o spot where the pain is—rub i briskly—and usually the pain is No muss, no bother. Just com| ing, soothing relief —first a g glow, then a delightful sense of ness. And best of all, no blisters| the old-fashioned mustard plaster to make. Use Musterole for sore throat, k chitis, i ro 3 tion, pleuris pains and aches of the b sprains, sore muscles, blains, frosted feet and cc chest (it often prevents p 25¢ and 50c jars; hospital size