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.LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Law—What For? Mr. Editor: A note in today’s paper ayd that'many of the chairmen of the ‘caicuses have not filed their nomina- tion papers yet with the secretary of state_and that they should send them in at once. What right has the sec- retary of state to disregard the law and admit the papers or certificates of the delinquents after the legal time for filing has elapsed? It is the third now after the legal limlt and the should be enforced, no matter re it hits. The law is plain and tary of state no dis- cretion in admitting certificates, de- livered after the legal limitation. The best way to make a law a dead lette is to follow the plan of the secretary state, and overlook or stretch it t wonvenience. The secretary of state has not too much time to pre- are the ballots it The law +ys “the nomination certificate shall ered to the secretary of the the chairman or secretary of | the convention or organization not less han eighteen days prior to the time fixed by law for holding the electiton which the ndidates nominated at 1ch convention are to be voted for. al limit October 2 Taw whe zives the sec as is. Absolutely Pure d all nomination certificates accept- Cream of Tartar \fter that date are iilegal and void. h.’nm .ollm Ph h ' 1" he socialist p: strained’ every nerve to comply literally with the law h BT ROSPRALD | o it cartieares. miod oo late would thrown out. he law should be enforced without favoritism discrimination EDWARD PERKINS State § Bullets and Botany. A correspoudent tells the London News that being at Palling, In Nor folk, he asked permission of a local marsh owner to walk over his mead 24, Conn., Oct. Mystic, One of David B. Hill's Last Letters. ows. “What for?” he wanted to know What is believed to be one of the y anizing,” was the | 125t words received in this state from 08, to. 00 5. 1ittle hotamistus, ’ the late” Da B Hill of New York reply. There was a pause while thel s e following letter to former Con- landowner scratched his head. Then | gressman Joseph H. O'Neil of Boston: R ici wN, | S - 1, 1910, slowly and suspiciously, “Not with &} ' ;. 3. O'Neil—T find upon my gun?” | table your letter of August 3 last, wihich “arrived during my absence on s s x cation. In answer to your I can only reit active politics and political situation as I formerly For Coughs Of course, [ want the demo- to succeed. 1 can only say that A simple remedy is safest and best, Yook rather vorable in this Thousands of republicans want The conduct of the repub- ich that we but T win. in power has been s hands down,” Dry cough, spasmodic cough, hack- ing cougi,cough that raises phlegm, are effectively controiled by i o win 9 { ney like to prognosticate in rega Hale s Hone to political events. can simply s | that it looks pretty well at the pres- ent time. With best regarc 1 remain of Horehound and Tar very truly yours. B. HIL ber of con- a superior combination of healing Jill was ingredients, which act directly upon the s time with Mr. the affected parts, remove mucus they ~were such good accumulations and relieve sorene: ol e . Used promptly for coughs and colds, | | been i N e st it checks their advance and affords et A s C Difference. vy ure » difference between an —_— e a democrat?” Champ Sold by Druggists wnd Champ quickly Pike's Tootliache Drops care in replied: “An ins one minute goes part of the way and a democrat goes the whole hog. ° In Sudden Emergencies like illness, it is often necessary quickly to raise the temperature of a room. For instance, in those hours between midnight and dawn, when the day temperature has been allowed to drop, if you are cailed upon to get up, the room is chilly and cold. It takes a long time to start up a furnace or fire and raise the tempera- ture by ordinary means. You can instantly heat a room to any desired temperature with a DE RFECTIQ] SMOKELESS Absolutely smokeless and odorless It quickly gives heat, and with one filling of the font burns steadily for nine hours, without smoke or smell. Has aute- matic-locking flame spreader which preyvents the wick from being turned high enough to smoke, and is easy to remove and drop back, so the wick can be cleaned in an instant. It has a cool handle and a damper top. An indicator always shows the amount of oil in the font. It has a filler-cap which does not need o be screwed down ; it is put in like a corkin a botile, and is attached to the font by a chain. ® The burner body or gallery cannot bécome wedged, because of a new device in construction, and consequently it can aiways be ecasily unscrewed in an instant for rewicking. The Parfoction Oil Heater is finished in japan or nickel. Itis strong, durable aade, built for service, yet light and ornamental. Draiers Everywhere. If not at yours. write. fordescriptive circular fo the nearest agency cf ihe tandard Qil Company i (Incorporated). Buick! Buick! As the authorized agents of the Buick Automobile Co. we have re- esived a limited number of NEW 1910 BUICKS of various models which we are positive can be placed here within ten days. The discounts on these cars will surprise you. A WORD TO THE WISE IS SUFFICIENT. M. B. RING AUTO CO., Telephone 553-5 21 Chestnut Street SPECIAL! [by70ps RAZOR | 5l come to life. You have all heard of the man who paid fifty cents for a razor which beat them all. You have that opportunity right now. You may never get it again. FOR A SHORT TIME ONLY these Razors will be offered for 50 cents Bulletin Building 74 Franklin Street Funeral of David Bennett Hill - Historic Edifice of St. Peter’s Church, Albany, Crowded to the Doors—No Eulogy, Only the Impressive Burial Service of the Episcopal Church. Albany, N. Y., Oct. 24.—The funeral| followed the body to the Delaware and of David Bennett Hill took place at 3| Hudson station, “where it was placed o'clock this sfternoon in'St. Peters|3EOpapine FUEori) can dscluded Dr. church. There was no eulosy—only [ Lawrence D. Hill of Malden, M the impres: burial service of the|nephew; Riton Durfey of Waverly, N. Episcopal church, cosducted by the|Y., a cousin, and Peter J. Manwiller, ev. W. W. Battershall, the rector. The | Mr. Hill's secretary. hoir sang “Li Kindly Light” and| The funer: r was attached to the ow the Laborer's Task i train leaving Albany for Elmira cluding with the erment will be in Mont “Peace, Perfect Poace, Hill's birthplace, tom was borne from the church. ere tears in the eye: : The historic edifice was crowded to | the employes of the dead statesman at the doors. Men were there who had | Wolf: Roost when the body was stood shoulder to shoulder with the|removed this morsing to St. Peters dead statesman throughout many a | church, where it lay in state from i1 hard fought campaign, as well as men | o'clock’ until h; hour before the who had opposed him bitterly through- | funeral services be out the various political activities of { Many floral tributes e received. which he was so large a figure. But|The democratic state ttee sent all were there today to do him rever-[a large design with the “Star,” the ence. emblem of the democracy, wrought in The little group of mournzrs who |l the center in blue viole ged in the liquor bus- STONINGTON formerly a club- County Commissioners Hear Appli- | ace he proposes to oc- e = B T |cup. but he had no conmection with cants for License—Biggest Remon- { it = o remen o strance from Old Mystic—Death of Antonio Castagna, age twenty-one, Thomas W. Garrity, Jr. and who is to ade a voter next Friday. is the applicant for a license lere was quite a gathering at the | &t 88 Lxh«-ri\; lre;»x Pawcatuck, so he Snfon - of . the’ county.. og = . | testified fe had never been in the sessfon of the county commissioners | guo bysiness and proposed to man- held Monday in" the Stonington town rage the e Bohs: court room for the conusideration of {owned by applications for liquor licenses for the | NOt Whthir town, made possible by the vote poll- | house or vicinity is d in the October electior is- | patrolled b Mahon when ther ta ble > present. g was open- s t 10.30. place. The first applicant h John A Carey, who applied fc 15 for No. & Garden street, Pa . He | _James Foley of Mystic, testified t his proposed place of {for license for the co usiness was about three hur and Church streets, t ards distance from _the parochi: esid the house school, and nearly as far distant from | Posed saloon was to Liberty street, and convenient to the { conductc saloon in ti { esterly woolen mill and that he did |five ve: s0 and did not violate law. | der it a strictly residential | N0 remonstrance. i s The place was about seven- | Charl ty-five feet from the resi of Mi- | cense hael Shea, who had for a |fied th license. There was no remon- | liquor nce. law’s r ) remonstrance. | Application Withdrawn. i Mo, B The cation of Michael Ke | He license for No. 1 Liberty s | n the { thdrawn, the applicant being {fore, but he had never en ed that the place | busin He had resided in - | hundred et of the tuck o thirty and tional church, and therefore | obeyed the said the reet | excluad Attorney A o e v was oceas atrol by Officer | of Westerly appeared for Mr. |Casey and Officer McMahon. No ob- | k jections. { B T Apalid for Near Unused School Property. | he had been ent of | Andrew L. St | catuck for forty-one vears 5 Dellclous Doughnuts. If you like crisp, flaky doughnut richly “browned, without a suspicion osf- greasiness, try the following recipe: ,Cream 3 tablespoons of Cottolene wi % cup of sugar, and well beaten 3oics R with white of one. ~To thi 2 cup fresh masl atc cup of milk and 2 . o A 2 cups of flour siftec with 3 teaspoon each of salt and gomoa of ith district, but school purpo: Remonstrant mace “and 215 tenspoons of i Toll. Cut in rounds with doughnut éute ter or otherwise and fry in Cottolene i ally to proper xfm;z;:mfi-e,hea“d s Doughnuts fried in lard lie like lead on the stomach; lard is indigestible. Cottolene, on the contrary, makes food that even a child can digest with ease. 1 | R UL we—_f3e e :}EK—M\\\\\\\'» A WIS Ao e 7 e N et NG et e il W (fl\‘&%:@% Lightens Labor— Saves Fuel F your range is a fuel eater; if it burns or scorches foods; if failures in your baking are frequent—it is time to change your old range for a BARSTOW RICHMOND RANGE It will save fuel and lessen labor. It is equipped with the latest labor saving de- vices,and offers unique improvements which place it away in advance of any other range. s I \ NN i B The Simplicity Damper, Swing Fire Top, Heat Indicator, Aluminum Plated Oven Rack, Oven Food Rake, Patent Sliding Tea Shelves, Simmer- ing Cover and Sectional Ring Covers are just a few of its very desirable features. The even distribution of heat to all parts of the oven makes baking and roasting a process you can accomplish successfuily a// the time. There is no guesswork about it. Come in and see the BARSTOW RICHHOND RANGE. They will satisfy your every desire. J. P. Barstow & Co., 23-25 Water St. Agents for Barstow Richmond Ranges Ba o & g [ ¥ | AT A S PR S e IR | _;W]. | estab and that of the ' in oppositior | | proprie- stic, appli- z Ri London, se long ain was own S ~. Main approved | of a licen for the applicant. TIf | granted nse the bar would be locat- | ed th otel proper d not in the | anr had conducted hot | towns and had neve | he sale of intoxicating | tated that residents present, who would | s character and The Tue Garrity Oid Mystic Saloon Opposed: Cini, of Old stic, ] icense on his own pr ty in His place was in the r section 1 he would ca > Ttal ie had heard he vot or no lic peopie ¢ to obje: r years. est of her mother over Sunday, Death of Thomas W. Garrity, Jr. homas W educated in the borough school, house, the to have the; said he the circur ony he d this coincid of ch tes cessary in nissioners ected Pawcatuck Premises. sm- | the | in | for Keleher. was_re- rooni the noon recess the mises in tie, who ap- | glon street, | proposed to con- | n their own account | 1 a license, con- business r e town of appeared. onin Owners Protest. who tor orn ed str in there. as 1o Oppos vho owned the tenant of wh e propose the Avery a from the | run a sa- with In plied for =r of Northwest and onington, testified in Stonington re. He 'had ne siness -and _had it should be » remonstrance, 1 rn the two remonsirances y v one hundred vd the other w my Mr. Cin. ce a petition in and he knew there Mystic who hty-one d the lice in ther ew Application. sowen withdrew his a lic in Liber West in Pawca- who applied g owned by r of Mechani had been in r and knew be prope: ronstrance. the bu the corr of Mystic, who in Willow street, s born and always He had license for ago and kept There was no Friday. John To Be Heard application of MeGowen nd Liberty New Iondon heard in Borough Interests. T. U. is to meot today at the home of Mrs. Silas P. W . O. Barrows left Saturday for Town. Rev, Mr. Barrows was the Road church here for J. A. Gager of Norwich ‘was Garrity, J1, died on Sat- He was born in Stonington, Uneeda Biscuit are soda crackers made from the finest flour and the best materialsobtainable— That Makes them an ideal FOOD Uneeda Biscuit are baked in surroundings where clean- liness and precision are supreme— That Makes them PURE Uneeda Biscuit NATIONAL BISCUIT:- COMPANY and when he pas He was the Thomes Garri 16, 1889, irable g vounger set he 2 Since lea his fathe s here. M. Howarg iting frienc D. M. package— u son and ies. the borc vin. Saturday 0 p. m d Mt ntil DANIELSON OéiTUARVY. h anielson Mo: a native of resident he irvived by Oates, died v e for many a son, Frederick Oate hom she has made her home Caroline Oates. vears Worse Than Death In sentencing a brute to 1 - | prisonment for murd dge 16 Kavanagh of Chicago deliv raordinary address Lo the plaining why a sentence of death had t been given to him. Said his hor of mankind ath s ) hment 1 i Dot corre You are now o receive a st ishment r vietim died more 1 After I from m ple prison < the culyp possible in ant ence Civilizatio In an article morrow,” the cha vilization s that ing demand. f Thus she can making mor she is th that the mercial conditions crea 1 die a hundred tin thar vinful nth t ommitte ther and o n on indus or _wo take c her thoughts are taken up with than horm thrown out of the rout of societ nd love And then, the in the The socia getting higher (?) eve {no young people nt {a lower grade of accustomed to. They Matrimony. are touched only once by human hands —when the pretty girls pack them— That Makes them CLEAN Uneeda Biscuit are sealed in a moisture proof That Keeps them FRES" ¢ A Package (Never sold in bulk) WILLIMANTIC Connecticut Field Trial Ciub to Begin Activities Today. ut Kield Trial ¢ b i or ii meeting plete record of the p and field tr president, buryport, Mass.: w. 11 meeting Monday evening neld t house, Hampton. The r the president and sec ry ccepted 2s read. It was voted pro- ia Huntington nd treasurer, rtford; board of ce of Farming- artford, Henry I. ‘Waterbury, F. M. Chapin of and Willlam C. Hunger- Britain; chairman of au- Henry 1. Wade; i ¢ fleld trials, F. ( Bradley of Fa Haven it was voted to join the United Field y 1b, with headquarters in Mem- enn! ub &h season has entries as 15 ¥4 membership, 16 in Derby, lay) in how wil hout the day. H. H. Davenport Arrested for Violat- ing Automobile Laws. uty was high de T arr by Officer W te police force for viol tomohile laws. Mr, Daven cautioned while driving down mount on a motorcycle Stiles & Harringt Davenport told Officer Jack e was drunk and that Vs e club this year. W evening at Jackson tion Tt ain vas followed up by Officer and on's kson he could > him. Jackson had called his to the fact that the ngmber was not properly illuminated in the rear. Davenport I out his registration certi license s not signed. 3 S. Arr Peckham went bail Mr. will comne up lock in the In for A We that B. Parket onc some six 0. gOt in h° Theadore Roose- ers of the United polls and buried An Unseen Problem. declared that has the night for a week e how a girl in a hob. would ride & bicycle, alves- TO CURE A COLD IN ONE DAY nins Women of To- | maja T, ROMO ' Qui s, read that | maplet ts nd mone: 2 ninish it fails E. W. Grove's signa 0e TeAR0N S0 | bype s on box sc trial and com- e an an’s are mone, nd ne making 1 sta ry d 0 than they want rather ascend through marriage than to de {=cend. So they t and wait: wait for & windfall or till th 1gh ahead, until the roma: < love has passed, and th €00 alculation have come. an alarming degree, ends in bacy article 1 o H adictior Ok i usion that s¢ through the me of statistics and quoted authoritie: it is thi Tha the time to marry is when the sex is at its height and the romance vet when calculation pushed aside and John marries Mary for Mary and Mary mycries John for John Ohio State Journal Keeping at a Distance. Judge Parker is going to follow Col. Roosevelt wherever he 1ks in New Yo state. He t the habit . f being hehind in 1901. — Washington Post. The objectio Refuse York New graduated from the Westerly college, class of 1906. Mr. had been ill since l.abor day able iniquity 1o side-track nal, n of mu to the commission pi ment is chiefly tha them out of commis News-Leader Be got to s has but cannot settle down 16 a com until it ynor The Story in a Nutshell. Gives that deli- catecomplexion so difficalt to obtain in any other way. is a pure, greaseless toilet cream ; fragrant, pleasant and harmless. 1f you have a red, biotch- ed, pimply, coarse skin, apply a generous coating of it to-night, and notice the effect to-morrow. Get itataoy A.D.6. Drug Btore. Look for the sign. | | | | cipa] politicians an of govern- it tends to put! sion. Richmond | $mith, the Drugman, 05 Main St. Pitcher & Service, 253 Central Ave | Lerau's Phacmacy, 2i¢ West Main 8g idetiacked i rid of | SR AR NRTA e dizcovers Chica | WHEN you went to { nes< before the public, dlum hetter ut your t! than through the advi ing columns of The Bulletis, Busk ere is no me ertim