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and Goufied. 113 YEARS OLD. savacrt price, 12¢ & week; 30¢ a month; year! —_— Mintered at the Postoffice at Norwich, | Conn., as second-class mntter. “elephone Onlini Bulletin Business OfAce. 480, Bulletin Editorial Pooms, 35-3. Bullotin Job Office, 35- Willimantlc Office, Reom 2. Murray Bufldihg. Telephone. 210. Norwich, Tuesday, Dec. 28, 1909. esnsessansessassasasssneg H sessnesnes § e Circulation of The Bulletin. ; The Bulletin has the largest cir- 2 culation of any paper In Easters 3 Connecticut, and from three to four Umes larger than that of any £ Norwich. It is delivered to over 33,000 of the 4,053 houses tm Nor- % wich, and road by ninety-thres per %cent. of the people. In Windham i it 1y doltvered to over 900 houses. §m Putnam and Danfelson to over £1100, ana In al’ of these places it3| 315 considered the locsl dally. Eastern Connecticut has forty- nine towns, one hundred and sixty- five post office districts and forty- one rural free delivery routes. The Bulletin is scld In every$l town and on all of the R. F. D. routes in Eastern Connecticut. CIRCULATION cesesnses H412 vessuesasens 19801, average ..... 19085, average. 1906, average... 1907, average..... AR | 1133 Feessssssssnsessensesesssassesensessessaassensesen December 25.... i COVERING EVERY AVENUE. Greed is the mother of trusts and the trusts seek to cover every avenue to wealth, even to the cornering of the provender and the candy in which we find dally sustenance and delight. The Independent candy makers say that the trust can never control their business, but the way in which the great candy factories make all sorts of confections by machinery by tons and tons and send 1t to market by the carload, the bucket, the barrel and the box, one cannot help feellng that the large right hand of a trust has a grip upon the business already. They cannot, of course, hold up the Aunt ‘Elizabeths who figure as home candy- makers and none make nicer or purer bonbons, or interfere with the “candy pulls,” which are not so popular now as they were In other days. The man who turns out molasses candy in the shop window and the woman whose kitchen is fragrant with the odor of cooking sweetmeats have no reason to fear that they will not always enjoy the freedom of making candy as they like it when they flike. We Ilove the fine confections of the small man- ufacturers—the pure candies of the home candy-makers. Long may they thrive! R i e o FARMING ON A BIG SCALE. ‘We do not know much about farm- ing upon a big scale in these New England valleys of ours. It is a west- ern method which Is gradually being recognized In the east as among the possibilities even here, and of this Mr. Hale of South Glastonbury Is the most noted exponent. Our large orchards have their hundreds of trees, while not farther away than Jersey trees are counted by the thousands. This is what New Jersey records: An orchard with 30,000 apple trees, 8,000 pear trees, 4,000 peach trees and thirty acres of grapevines. And then think of another with 128 acres of pedr trees, 120 acres of peaches, 170 acres of ap- ples and fifty acres of chestnuts. The Newark News says: “The facts are that New Jersey raises not only the best peaches the world ever ate, but that it can, as President Black of the state horticultural society savs, compete with the west In the produc- tion of apples, both in size and color. Fruit of greater beauty and excel- lence than the specimens shown at the society’s annual meeting can't be found anywhere. The truth is that New Jersey's agricultural and horti- cultural resources haven’t been devel- oped to anything like their-possibili- ties as yet.” This may all be said as a truth of Connecticut, We are getting the in- spiration and some of our leading farmers have profitable orchard: which are object lessons for those who would do big things in this field. DEAR MEAT AND DESIRABLE VEGETABLES. The late condition of the meat mar- ket is making vegetarlans faster than all the vegetarlan agitators possibly could, for it has compelled the people o look for sustaining substitutes and to study the nutritive value of foods. Rice, which forms. the staple food of more than half the human race, is growing in favor in this country, be- ing commended not only by its cheap- ness and the great variety of ways in which it can be cooked, but by its nutritive value, which is equal to that of meat. Beans and peas served in various ways have proved to be rel- ishable and dependable. The humble carrot, once grown onuly for food for cattle, hae now become the favorite vegetable of the aristocratic rich. For, besides containing more nutriment ithan potatoes, and possessing proper- tles of beauty most diversified, it is a #kin beautifier of rare degree. Nuts, which used to be eaten as confections, have more nutriment than an equal quantity of meat; and fruits properly eaten contribute to the health and comfort of the people. These things are not all cheap, but they have been found to be profitable dnmany ways wnd to contribite to one's physical well belng in a way which meats do not, Dear meat is not such a public af- jon as many bonest people imagine %’ it 1 g o e s z i ot onidon Tt js_not s ge that King Alfonso 45 not“Health$" Tor he has nover yet lived in a healthy atmosphere, Out west it is declared that “the ‘has a consumptive autome- A7, hviin: Sl INVITED IGNOMINY, A Chicago policeman, by his own declaration, has become “a live cow- ard instead of a dead lion.” He was in pursuit of a desperado when he fell a vietim to fear and retreated to what he deemed a place of safety, and when taunted of cowardice he openly admitted that he preferred to be “a live coward to a dead lion” and the result was that he was deposed from office 1 disgrace. His badge was taken from him, his buttons cut off and he was drummed out of police service in disgrace. The fact that this is an exceptional case speaks well for the American police officer as a class. A good many ‘rave men are sacrificed in this pub- lic service every year, and the true public guardian does not halt to think of himself when he is in pursuit of a rogue or a desperado. This unfortunate man, who did not realize the value of silence when it might have served him well, may have to change his name and lose himself to his old record and ridiculers in or- der to once more find peace and en- joyment on this earth. MAY HAVE A CHANCE. The department of agriculture at| Washington may give the farmer's sons of New England the same oppor- tunity by and by that was given to the farm boys of the south. The com- petition there was upon the cultiva< tion of one acre of corn and no less than 12,500 boys competed for the prizes, A few days ago Secretary Wilson presented diplomas of merit to four boys, all under eighteen, for special proficiency in agriculture. Sec- retary Wilson said no boys ever had received a similar recognition of their merit, and nothing he had done since | he Became secretary of agriculture gave him more pleasure. These diplomas are not the only re- wards earned. The superintendent of farm demonstration work in the south, Dr. Knapp, offered a trip to Washing- ton to the Mississippi boy who should obtain the best results. The Arkan- | sas bankers offered a similar reward | in that state. Citizens of Virginia and South Carolina duplicated these of- fers. Thousands of dollars’ worth of prizes were awarded, in addition to those re- ferred to, and the results of the boys’ work were almost phenomenal. The average crop was sixty bushels, but the highest prize yields were from 122 to 152 1-2 bushels. This competition was all in the south, and the diplomas went to four ®right, industrious boys in‘ Virginia, Mississippl, Arkansas and South Car- olina. It is noted that the money awards and prizes are not of the most value, but the spirit aroused and the inter- est generally awakened in farming are vastly more important, Our New England youth may be re- lied upon to make a proud record when the opportunity is offered. EDITORIAL NOTES. The small boy and some of the old ones who do mot like to comb their hair still believe In the old John C. Heenan cut. When it comes to collecting fads, it is not wise to see how many trials one can get together. Trials seldom are interesting. Uncle Sam’s fourteen-inch should mot be expected good a record as th has. 1t is slower. gun to make as eight-pounder If time was money, the Sons of Rest of Norwich would*be able to buy New Year’s presents, and send messenger boys out with them, The Missourian who ate forty eges in six minutes should send his report to some medical soclety to see whether he was there or not. It would be well for a waiting world to inquire now of Speaker Cannon whether or not he believes that there is a real Santa Claus. The organized automobilists in this part of the state honored themselves by endorsing the state highway com- missioner. He deserves it The good little boy will be glad when the Christmas season is over and the nervous stress is off, so that he may be a real boy again. Since Bernard Shaw has endorsed Esperanto those who belleve in him are expected to largely increase the classes of this universal language. When it comes to being rigged out In Sunday clothes the average boy would just as soon be tied to the bed- post. He cannot stand their restrair for to Happy thou Have vou noticed tha me men think that they are standing up for when sitting down in a crowded street car? PSEMEAE . 5% The Santa Claus who serves the common peopla in Russia is not the same one who serves the autocrats— they are afraid he might drop a bomb, If the truth were known, it #s more than probable that a cooking school graduate would find the domestic pages of The Bulletin continuously | burned on the hearth and he spread | \ It was the day beforé Christmas. John Choate lifted the handle of the shining brass. knocker with a heart that was full of boyish daring, and the sound of the rapping echoed triumph- antly through the house. The man felt as it he had parted with twenty years of his existence; they had grad- ually faded from his reckoning the aft- ernoon before as the train carried him away from the city toward his ances- tral town among the hills, and when he had stepped onto the station plat- form at the end of his journey, John Choate had forgotten the gray hairs is head and the grip of things pro- onal was very far away. All night he had kept the illusion wigh him, and the morning sunshine had cast a radiance on its reality. Up under the caves of the Choate home- stead he had slept in his old room with the familiar tune of sleety rain-drops pattering on the roof, and with the morning he had looked out at the tiny- paned window and seen the glistening fields of his boyhood streaked with long lines of shadaws as the sun blinked just above -the horizon; the naked elms stood gaunt as ever along| the winding road, and on the distant | helght the Seaver homestead was bright with the dawning day. Tm going up to see Betina this| morning,” he declared. And so it came about that John Choate set the knocker on the Seaver | door to ringing forth the warning of } his presence. “Why, John Choate!” A little woman, with big black eves opened the door and held out welcom- ing hands. The man knew it was Betina, grown very, like her mother. I dared to lift this knocker, Betina he said as he took both hands in his and bent over them with gentle cour- tes “And we didn't used to hardly dare look at it when it had-just been pol- ished!” laughed back Betina. The man shook his head and fol- | lowed the little woman across the wide hall; in the sitting room an open fir out his hands before the blaze, though | he knew quite well the room was | warmed by a radiator over by the| wall—somehow he resented the gilded | thing as an imr ou look n like your father, John!” said Betina, looking up at him as he warmed his hands with the gestures she remembered of his father. “They say that each generation of Choates produces one fac-simile of the original John!” Betina laughed gently. “And we always have a Betina| among the girl Then she spoke of the old romantic | legacy of John and Betina; how it was | that the first generation of Choates and Seavers, who had _taken their| grants of land from an English king, had hoped for the union of a John Choate and Betina Seaver, and when that had failed the wish had been re- THE BULLETIN'S DAILY STORY { . THE LEGACY } oned not of time; and the tears were ciose as they spoke | ill my world!” pedted for the generation of grand- children, only to be again defeated and passed down through the years as a legacy of romance to those who bore the names. T Now Betina spoke .happily of the likelihood of its fulfillment, for a younger John Choate had grown to man's estate and Betina's niece was very charming. John Choate listened with a sudden feeling of age. There was a time when he had been openly faithful to the Betina of his own generation, and as he sat there he realized that he had always been faithful to her, for no other woman's face had ever cast a light across the even living of his life. Could it be that the legacy of John and Betina might have been for him had he come back and persisted in his asking. The loneliness of the years grew suddenly big as he looked over at the little woman’s face and saw the gladness of her life in every feature. His voice broke as he answered the question she had asked. “I'm here at Tom’'s for Christmas. My housekeeper declared that every soul ought to eat Christmas dinner wl’l;l his own kin, and sent me off,” he said. The tales they brought out of the past were full of memories that reck- they laughed togeth- er over the old days of happiness; ot those now Iying quiet in the grave- yard. Finally John Choate found himself telling of his own life; of the struggles during those first years to push in the small end of the wedge and make it stay; of the joy his first success had brought, and ‘of the influence he had gained among his fellow men. ! But as he talked the man found that | in his heart the loneliness of his life was standing out against the big| things of which he had spoke. For | how much more these things might | have counted with Betina to share | them: of how little value they were in | comparison to her own sweet pres-| ence! He wondered 1f he were too old, | if the legacy belonging to his name | has passed beyond his grasp. He got up_and stood before the fire again, a tall, gray-haired man, and the tender | strength was on his face that brought little children to his arms with but one word. . Betina looked up and waited for him to_speak. “It is wound into my life somehow, Betina. The longing that makes ypu | John Choate put his hands on her soft hair and his voice had the ten- derness in it that had never been there but for her near. t's the legacy for John and Betina, sweetheart,” he pleaded. Her lips trembled slightly and the | words came very slowly. “I've wondered sometimes why I al- ways choose to stay here alone, but T guess, John, it must have been that I was walting for you™—The Post. than a balloon of the same capacity filled with coal gas, or alternately the ze of a balloon with the same lift- ing power could be reduced by 30 per cent. This balloon gas contains upwards of S0 per cent. of hydrogen, while the content of methame, the most difficult to decompose, is reduced to 5 or 7 per cent. The gas has only a very slight smell and contains neither benzol nor any other heavy hydrocarbons capable of “attacking the balloon cover. The theoretical fact that coal gas is de- composed by great heat, which under- fies the pr has long been known, and seems to have first been d ered by Bunte about 40 years However,” the difficulties so far expe- rienced in utilizing the reaction for the production of a light gas on an industrial scale have proved far great- er than might have been expected. The most important point was to pro- duce this gas during the ordinary op- eration of the gas works, and in the | same ovens as those in which the or- dinary coal gas is generated. The in- ventor therefore used the vertical ovens of the Dessau gas works. He is now engaged in experiments intend- ed to accertain whether the process is adaptable also to horizontal ovens and other type Curtiss on Future of Aeroplane. Glen H. Curtiss expresses some doubt in guessing the probable out- come of the development of the aero- plane. but “it would not be surprising if within the next 10 or 15 vears the ocean was crossed by an aeroplane. It will not, of course, be like the deli- cately built machine of today, but @ large, strong structure, with a body like a bo: hich will float and stand rough W Tt will rise from the | water by weans of hydro-surfaces or | water-feet, and fiy with but little sus- | taining surface by virtue of its small | head resistance and great speed. desirable speed for such a fiyer i be above 70 or §0 miles an hour. It| would be designed to alight on the sea, and in case of accident in flight could make repairs or continue the journey on the water. But even after this feat is accomplished experimentally it will | take years more to develop that ma- chine to a commercial state. | The New Hope for Ireland, | The Irish leaders have decided to | accept at their face value Mr. As- | quit's promises of some form of home | for Ireland. It is fair to infer, | efore, that they have private as- that satisfactory to regardin nature of ~the measures to be proposed and the time | when they will be carried into effect. | It is idle to attempt to forecast the | result. Whatever jt be the Irish have | nothing to lose. Should the liberals | carry the country by a large majority | they are bound by their promises to do ! something for Ireland. Should their majority be so small that they must | useful. A midshipman has been dismissqd the service because he married with- out the consent of the naval depart- ment. If he has a good wife he will not mind. Those who did not carry bundles on Christmas week were suspectéd of not having the Christmas spirit. This is when the package carrlers have the advantage. Uncle Horace Johnson saw that thore who were hankering for a White Christmas did not get left. If the state had given him an observatory, he might have done better. NEW BALLOON GAS. Gorman Scientist Working Out a Method of Reducing the Weight of Ordinary Coal Gas. Somie experiments carried out by Dr. W. von Oechelhauser, in conjunetion with the German Continental Gas com- pany in Berlin, with the object of pro- ducing a new kind of ~balloon ga show the decomposition of ordin coal gas in vertical retorts to vi in normal operation a balloon g specific weight of about.225, so that to one cubic meter would_correspond a lifting power of about 59 pounds per 1,000 cublc feet. According to the statutes and regulations of the Inter- national Association of Aeronauts, the 1ift of 1,000 cubic feet of lighting gas has up to the present time been cal- culated at 45 pounds and that of hy- drogen gas at 65 pounds. Hence, by the assistance of the new gas a bal- loon of a capacity of 1,000 cubic feet to lift 14 pounds, S count on the Irish members to keep | the party in power, the prospects for effective home rule in the near fture will be excellent. The chances are by | no means bad should a small conserv- ative majority make an alliance with the home rulers the price of forming | = {and PR R e It would not be the first time in ish history that the conservatives have stolen their opponents’ thunder. _ There has been a change in the Brit- ish attitude regarding home rule of late years. Slow as the ple are to re- ceive new ideas, wmp:’one has been kept steadily before them for a terof a century it begins to pe: te. The process has been hastened by Mr. Chamberlain’s Imperialist campaign and the flood of information regard- ing the provinces of the empire that has poured on England since it began. Tt is now possible for the average IBnglishman to draw analogies between Canada, Australfa, New Zealand and South Africa, intensely loyal In spite of self-government, and Ireland, and the stock arguments against home rule have been refuted by the conservative leaders in their advoeacy of closer im- perial union. Even Mr. Balfour might nbw without inconsistency propose some measure for the relief of Ireland which would not be thrown out by a reformed house of lords. A policy of masterly inaction seems to be jmposed on the Irish members while Great Britain is deciding be- tween lords and commons. They are pretty sure to profit whichever way the election turns.—N. Y. Sun. Man After His Own Heart. If Zelaya really wants a substitute for president we suggest that we can spare the Hon. Robert M. LaFollette.— Philadelphia Inquirer. All things by time are set to rights ‘And squared in divers ways; Gay blades by lengthening their nights Are shortening their days. —Catholic Standard. Alone in Sawmill at Midnight, unmindful of dampness, drafts, storms or cold, W. J. Atkins worked as night watchman at Banner Springs, Tenn. Such exposure gave him a severe cold that settled on his lungs. At last he had to give up work. He tried many remedies but all failed till he used Dr. King's New Discovery. “After using one bottle,” he writes ent back to work as well as evel evere colds, stubbo: coug inflamed throats sore lungs, hemorrhages, who6ping co prompt_cure from this gloriou e cine. 50c and $1. Trial bottle free. Guarantced by The Lee & Osgood Co. Rich Men's Gifts Are Poor beside this: “I want to go on record as saying that I regard Electric Bitters as one of the greatest gifts that God has made to woman,” writes Mrs. O. Rhine- vault of Vestal Center, N. Y. “I can never forget what it has done for me.” This glorious medicine gives a woman buoyant spirite, vigor of body and jub- flant health. It quickly cures nervous- ness, sleeplessness, melancholy, head- | ache, ba fainting and dizzy spells ds up the weak, ailing them. &§0c, at The Les & Osgood Co.'s. s Honey and Tar is the best t cough remedy for children. the first symptoms of a cold, give directed and ward off danger of as eroup, bronchitis, sore throat, cold in the brings es. Contains mful drugs. and refuse substitutes. good Co. head and stuffy breathing. It comfort and ease to the little no opiates or other Keep always on hand, The Lee & Os- BUTTE Tuesday, Sweet, W MoHICAN COMPANY | o R DAY Dec. 28th holesome Table Butter © 30¢ PEANUT BUTTER -n.§2¢ 33¢ Mohican Creamery BUTTER Ib. Strictly ¥resh EGGS doz. 27c BEST lb-llc COMPOUND OMPO \\ 1t you have & stck headache, of Schenck’s Mand: you well—70 years' speci % Mandrake Pills. -?7 uND one dose rake Pills will make ific for biliousness, liver complaint, constipation, indigestion, glddiness, Jjaundice, “etc. Wholly vegetable_—absolutely harmless—sold everywhere, 25c. Our free book uggest how to_prescribe Tor yourself. Dr. J. H. SCHENCK & SON, Philadelphis. WM. F. BRILEY | public an invitation to call and inspect LIBRARY TEA STORE Jy24STuT (Successor to A. T. Gerdner) Hack, Livery Boarding Stable 12-14 Bath Street. HORSE CLIPPING A SPECIALTY. Telephone 883. apr25a Holiday Presents Among our large assortment of Leath- er Goods suitable for Holiday gifts a NEW THING is a nice LEATHER JEWEL CASE. You cannot buy it anywhere else in this city. Come in and see it. Prices range from $2.50 to $6.00. The Shetucket Harness Co 283 Main Street. WM. C. BODE. declla Telephone 865-4. “NEVER SAY DIE” seems to be a part of Santa Claus's good-natured character, but he would | surely advise his friends to dye when it came to the renovation of seemingly old clothing. For it is a fact that, when properly dyed, even an old gar- ment looks like new again. Let us show you how to save fifty per cent. of your clothing expenses. Lang’s Dye Works, Telephone. 157 Franklin S1. dec21d Evening Schoo! NGV GPEN TUITION and SUPPLIES FREE Also fa Talfville Schoolhouse oct26d NEWMARKET HOTEL, 715 Boswell Ave. First-class_ wines, liquors and clgasa. Meais and Welch sarebit servec to order. John Tuckie. Proo. Tel 13 Best watch for the money YACKLEY AND BUNNELIL Musical Comedlans NOTHING CHEAP BUT THE PRICE—3 SHOWS DAILY—2.30, 7, S45. AUDITORIUM and llustrated Sungs ADMISSION 10c Evenings Reserved 3 Shows Daily WEEK 2.30, 7 and 8.45 DEC. comeoy skit—PARSONS & STEWART—sack & aack neavy weiant—ELVER | EN—JvaaLer PRee*—NIBLO & RILEY—C0iDiNGns one srina—MUSICAL IRViNG—viomist — THE MORRELLE SISTERS IN HIGH CLASS SONGS— * 2Mth Ferflusnn& Charhonneau WILL SELLYOUA | 17 JEWELED Hamilton Waich in 20-year Gold Filled Case —FOR— $15.00 in the world. dec25d THE RUBBER STORE RECOMMEND THEIR Goodyear Quality Boots Rubber [Felts Arelies Men's, Women's and Children’s Rubbers. Money saved on every pair. Gloves and Mittens, 24c to $3.00. Working Coats, $1.38. Hot Water Bottles, 75¢ up. Alling Rubber Co., 74 Main St, Norwich, 158 Main St, New London. Wholesale (s:.,) Retail —OPEN— Del-Hoff Cafe Business Men’s Lunch a specialty. Also Regular Dinner, fifty cents. I¥%a HAYES BROS, Props. 1 tha: say My Aft DR. KING, nator of the King Safe System of Painless Dentistry. not to put them in perfect condition. days 10 to 2. Telephone. What and Where 1869 - CHRISTMAS ---1909 We extend to the great American | our choice line of Holiday Footwear— eful and sensible gifts for old and young. Courteous treatment and satis- faction guaranteed. P. CUMMINGS, PREMIUMS, 52 Central Ave. dec10d u H. COOPER —— UPHOLSTERER Special Sale of Hair Matlresses | $9.50 FOR 10 DAYS, Regular price $15.00. 259 West Main Street. dec10d Custom Grinding TUESDAYS and FRIDAYS at YANTIC ELEVATOR. A. R. MANNING, Yantie, Conn. Telephone dec14d OUR WORK meets the approval of the critical people, Rogers’ Domestic Laundry. DR. KING, Dentist. No High Prices they dreaded the ordeal. wonder why think of having your work you get my estimate, which I give for Jess extraction free when sets are ordered. No Pain have twenty people a day tell me t they had put off coming because Now, let me for the ten thousandth time, that Method is Absolutely Painless. filled or ex- er the first tooth is tracted you laugh at your fears and ou waited so long. Don’t done till hing. Don't put it off any longer. We examine your teeth without charge and tell you what it would cost Our charges are consistently low. Pain- m. to § p. m.; Sun- Hours 9 a. KING DENTAL PARLORS, Franklin Square, over Somers Bros. to Buy In Norwich Josgph F. Smith, FLORIST 200 Main Street, Norwich. Ivia PURE OLIVE OIL There are many brands, but only one best brand. LAPURA leads them all. We fmport it direct from Italy. We sell it at & low price. Let us supply you. 0. FERRY, Tel. 703. 336 Franklin St Free delivery (o all parts of the city. 24d DR. JONES, Dentist, 35 SHETUCKET ST. Room 10 ‘Phone 32-3 maylid Red Cross Stamps and Xmas Cards at Thamesville Store an; all the rest of the good things Tel, 958. Rear 37 Franklin Street sopi2id . R il | IN SEL 'Phone 518-5. “Phone 423-3. novi3d o Weakfish, Shell Fish of FEATURE PICTURE: “The Indian.” Master Harry Noonan, UTED SONG PROGRAMME. Ladies and Children, 8o NELLIE S. HOWIE, - Teacher of Plano, Room 48, Central Bullding. CAROLINE H. THOMPSON Teacher of Music 46 Wasl gton Street. L. H. BALCOM, Teacher of Plano. 29 Thames St, Lessons glven at my realdence or at the home of the pupil. Same method as used at Schawenka Conservatory, Ber- | lin. oct118 F. C. GEER TUNER 122 Prospect St, 511, Norwich, Ct. A. W. JARVIS is the Leading Tuner ia | Eastern Connecticut. 15 Clairmount Awe. sept22a JAMES F. DREW Fiano Tuning and Reparriag Best V'ork Only. 18 Perkine Ave sept2ld Fancy Native Chickens Fancy Native Fowls Fancy Native Ducks Just the thing for Sunday dianer. Apples, Basket Grapes, Malaga Grapes, Oranges, Grape Fruit, Ete 'PEOPLE’S MARKET, 6 Franklin St. JUSTIN HOLDEN, Prep. FALL STYLES including the latest pattorne, ready for inspection. Quality, minus the high priee sting, tells the story cf our sue- cess. Whether you wish to order er not, we want to show you the new line and fashions for FALL. THE JOHNSON CO., Merchant Tailors, Chapman Bldg. 65 roadway. HOLIDAY Wines and Liquors For the Holiday Trade we have a mplete assortment of Purd Wines and Liguors FREE! FREE! A bottle of fine California Wine will be given to each purchaser of 7§oc and over until Jan. 3d 1910. Handsome Calendars to our patrons, JACOB STEIN, « 93 West Main St. lephone decl8d FRESH STOCK THIS WEEK Cod, Pollock, Haddock; Smeits, Salmon, 1l kinds. h Markel, 32 Water Street. Halibut, Mackerel,