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. NORWICH BULLéTIN, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1912 The Porteous & Mitchell Co. THE VALUE ©F PROPHECY. This is the season when straw votes and prophets are holding forth in the shaping of the course of coming pres- identlal election. They must be taken for what they are and nothing more. Straw votes have often proved the THE BULLETIN'S SHORT STORY. ] o ‘un;zich Builetin !.d Coufied. HEATRE BROADWAY Matinee and Ni WEDNESDAY, " Oct. § ; ABORN ENGLISH : DAVIS T MONDAY AND TUESDAY LEBOUEF BROTHERS, " THE SUTTON'S HOUSE e—— e e e < —— e et e } " all heated up again Upside Down Dancers — | dvposite and by no mreans reflect the| “I still insist,” said the woman Who after a game got n g §pre P lating against the half timber- IREN GRAND OPERA COMPANY i dttitude of the average vote In any|Was doing the talking, “that I was| expostul | E JRVING, 3 A £ 338 YEARS OLD.__|3itint i i ymss voe o 2oy | s, %, S5, Sy bt | Smies e o o FALL STYLES AND COLORINGS IN NolENE IRVING, P S however; is firm in his conviction that Baign prophecy much the same holds ptttion. 1o not a building; 1t was an institution true, but it is rarely that such proph- g 0 g Without which the golf club would AUBREY & FLOWER good breeding. I secretly think that Eccenuriz Comedians IL TROVATORE fos dea thing but the near i 1| have fallen flat. It made it all the gt £ 0 gt:'eth s e 11:1‘. rl::l"nu-fi;en;:lnlt’e:vmlxielrl“:sgfi:- mo‘r‘:s c“ax:lcmxmle that nu:l Suttons o RAILRO&&:&?;"NVAR' And Pucei Charming ¢ There is a prophecy, however, which | ters whenever I allude to the subject! | were in Europe and the house was as made by T. J. Sheidon, editor of| “Of course I would not go around| helpless, without defenders. i THE TRADE GUN BULLET 0 : et i AR LT AT HE.TRADE GUN BuLLE Madam Butterfly hristian. before tho United States | looking inito people’s windows i town.| “When the Fiel the standard plaineaves. A big rangs of noveities and fancy Gourt, ‘May. 7, 1901, the outéome. of | When o person bullds a house in town spend the day ot e R ihan thai F | mixturss. Fabrics suitable for skirts, waists, suits or coats. New THE ROYALTY OF SILVER AT NIGHT you know it's his castle, and you have- 't any right on the premises without an invitation, but when he builds a house in_the country it is a posiive bld for inspection! “Why, a new red barn is a subject for dinner table conversation for miles which will be watched with great interest. That prophecy was for a DPeriod of twenty years, and Mr, Shel- don sald: “Theodore Roosevelt will be the president of the United States in succession to Willlam MecKinley. He will serve two terms and be fol- lowed by a republican. The democrats have elected their last president. At the end of twenty years a party known — A 4s the union labor party will have ab-| “The Suttons began building their sorbed the remnants of the democracy | house c:;n nenrdlhe 505 l:r‘)r: un:lesl'_ J;fl and its allles and 1 il elect athe spring and as prgy[dcnl_" s and labor Wil elect & L aethe road from tho sighth hole t The interestinig part of this prophecy [ It Was dulte tho thing £0m (e OT fs that it has been fulfilled to date.| 10 € 3PS O G Tect the hole Half of the period over which it ex- und which was going to be fended has passed, and the result has| the Sations cenar eventually. All of Deen as prophesled. When straw votes | us declared every time we looked at it are belng taken into conslderation and | that the hiole was either (oo big, to¢ rellance piaced thereon. here is some- | small, too Snallow or too deep. and thing which has a better claim to rec- | Dothing could Induce ue 70 P00 & 7 | LN iy turnished room in.a house ognition. What its value is can only | X% Ukett R U8 RIS "Shen | that @id not belons to you and found be judsed from the past. Straw votes| Fiore sxciting, because there are so| the owner refarding you meditatively are as uncertain as the wind. This| many kinds of foundations. Nobody | you canfot understand my sensations prophecy has a perfect record. Who looked at the Suttons’ foundations |~ “My face remained glued to RYANT of Bridgeport. THE STATE POLICE. o A e oasy- What may or may not be the need vi take 2 h pane, because I was t0o limp to t: ap'?\‘;va:e:uo:u:xfa with joy when the| it away. The strange man arose and n. 0 B of Balisbury. of the state police, it is shown by the B, MOWRY of Sterling, uld take them over to see the Sut-| :g:s' house? I thought they would en- | joy gloating over its deficlencies. It Was nearly finished and I‘hadn’t seen #t myself for a week. We tried the front door, but it was !fld gndfl.l: around in the country and a house is| was that at the back. Evidently a positive godsend, because ova‘I;YM‘y‘ ;::tl;.pemen had finished their work and lcl?cl; ::Dllin it o A e “*Anyhow,’ I told the Fielding girls, ! 1 want you to get a glimpse of the inside, You mever saw the likel’ | “8o we strolled around to the side and I got a box and stood on_tiptoe and flattened my face against the Nv- ing room’ window. LOVE'S MESSAGE and STERN PAPA A Roaring Comedy BASEBALL RETURNS GET THE HABIT shades — exclusive patterns. We invite examination. of styles and prices: WHIPCORDS ARE A STRONG FAVORITE WHIPCORDS are amongst the most| WHIPCORD, a heavier grade, 54 and] Ppopular fabrics of the season. We| 56 inches wide, in solid colors and show an excellent quality All Wool | changeable effects. The assortment Whipcord, 54 inches wide, in brown, | includes all the newest combination navy, tan, new taupe and black—| in mixtures and solid black—price) price $1.25 a yard. $1.50 a yard. CORDUROQY, ALL WOOL AND 56 INCHES WIDE, IN BLACK AND NAVY —AT $1.50 A YARD. POPLINS AND BROADCLOTHS SILK and Wool Poplins, a very desir- able fabric for street and evening dresses, in black, white, navy, gray, old rose, violet, peach and Alice— price $1.00 a yard. These few hints In the Double Cast, 100 Gors ot SPLENDID AND ARTISTIC #CEN- ERY, COSTUMES and EFFECTS Night Prices. ... o o General Admission o Gallery. ... 286 BREED THEATER SPECIAL WESTERN FEATURE BRONCHO BILLY OUTWITTED--Essanay Featuring G. M. Anderson and Miss Vedah Bertram Baseball Returns by Innings, Announced from Stage This :-ma-. Tuesday, Oct. 8, 1912 REPUBLICAN TICKET. Por Vico President. JAMES 8. SHERMAN of New York. For Governor, HN_P. STUDLEY 0o e Hhvers For Lieutenant Governor, CHARLES 8, PECK of Danbury. | . Wor Becretary of State, GUSTAF B. CARLSON of Middlstown. B For Treasurer, e wu.'rn% W. HOLMES ¥ of Waterbury. For Comptroller, FAYETTE L. WRIGHT of Pomtret. Prestdential Electors. ALLBEN of Hartford. 'OODRUFF of New Haven “T found myself looking straight in-| to the interested eves of a perfectly | strange man who seemed very much at home in a wicker chair Teside a Dig table heaped with magazines and books and flowers and surrounded by furniture! If you have never peaked CHIFFON Broadcloth, 54 inches wide, desirable for Suits or Dresses, black, navy, gray and moss green—a $1.50 a yard. Mon., Tues,, Wed. SPECIAL FEATURE BILL £ at at the front door and around uprights ArIng . Fherc. the | to whera we trembled and shrani and ve could see where the f 3’5.;‘3.“:’."’(0“5. ‘According to vari-{regarded us politely In a voice BLACK Broadcloth, 54 inches wide—al $1.00, $1.25 and $1.50 a yard. ALL Wool Imported Poplins, a good medium weight, 42 inches wide, in AUDITORIUM annual report of the department that ver | strangely mot my own I stammered | black ,brown, garnet, wisteria, Nile, P ‘Répresentatives in Congress. nlal:yu Save. had pleentymrot ;::mw ‘,’,‘,’:,u'fl,t &:y,::mfi u.dewn‘} room mhfiy) that I was showing my friends | . myrtle, pearl, old rose and dark gray |SPOT-PROOF Black Broadcloth at “L. ET'TE nE E” throughout the state in the past|was a faree, the dining room.a crime, | the Sutfon house. The strange man | _ ¢ 4309 g yard, $2.25, $2.50 and $3.00 a yard. For State Semators. B GILMOUR of Norwich. \ N of N 'BENEFITS OF A TARIFF, A protective tariff is for the pur- Dose of making the competing foreign - ;T-i-l- carry the, burden, pay for the ¢ ege of doing business in this , supply the revenus, and at same time encourages our own in- ~dustries, saves our markets, and, by | Dprotecting the workingmen in_their * chosen employment, results in higher © wages. It is very evident that it is » ble to pass a tariff measure will do for all timé, and as con- revisions are necessary. A great deal of the goods imported in- this country come In duty free be- they do not compete with arti- ‘which can be manufactured or Wa here. President Taft has stood ! today for'a sclentific re- of the tariff, which would have accomplished now had the dem- ‘worats favored a saterevision, and not ~ one for Politics , When a revigion is | mads, it should be done according to ~ facts and not rely upon theory. the cotton {ndustries of this coun- average wage of the er than in free-trade In “this particular industry average wage is $0.68, while In in_the eotton centers it is | §552. The and conditions here ) ‘&I: far better under pro- . _The tale of sewing 'machines 1n at a price cheaper than they @Fe #old in this country, in thé opinion s 18 one cause for free 'This might be so if the con- were as represented. The larg- Sewing machine company, however, m,{nmh«un all its machines this country; it has factories in d and Russla, where 18 cheaper. It is the sume ma- orwich, fiscal year, having been called upon to make, or taken the initlative in making 1,191 investigations, which re- would haVe escaped Investigation and prosecution, but it is likely that the towns oliside the cities have received better and quicker attention from the fact that the state police force ex- ists. Towns without a police force understand the value of the state po- licemen when it comes to the Inves- tigation of erime within their borders: The state police force Is not a pay- ing proposition in the matter of dol- lars and cents, but no city police force brings in’a report which shows a bal- ance on the right side of the ledger. They are for the purpose of protection and the running down of crime, in which they serve their purpose. The @dded duty which is imposed upon 'the state police of inspecting bulldings and booths for moving picture heuses, and the Issuance of licenses gives add- ed work, which fills in the quiet times, In many Instances they have also done effective work in enforcing the obserye ance of the law, which otherwise it seemed Impossible to secure. They. &ct as a reserve force in the pursult of. evil. EDITORIAL NOTES. A vote against President Taft is a vote aguinst majority rule. Dr. Wiley says we die too youns; but we would all' do different if we ¢could. Happy thought for today: men never get to the front because they talk too much., B Down in Jersey good citlzens show their respect for the police by tip- ping their hats to them, Though politics are lively, baseball will come in for its share of attention for the next several days. Some | & hall a joke and the bedrooms & g‘l’gh‘:, Mo’l‘t people sald the house should have faced east instead of west, a thit revived flagging interest. 1f Some one wasn't telling about & cob- blestone house he knew of that fell down at the first puff of wind, some one else was explaining how banal and inartistic cobblestones were now that they had grown so common. That the second story was half timbered only fanned the flame, Everybody who sat acround on the terrace to cool off then .announced that he was Mr. Sut- ton’s brother and living there till the® arrival of the family and he would be Jess man, who took us from attic to| cellar and had the cruelty to serve tea into the bargain and act as though we, had called politely instead of peeking | in_at windows! X “He hadn’t any right to revenge him- ! self so! The inside of the house?| My dear, the house is a perfect dream, | a beauty! That's the most exasperat- ing part of it!"—Chicago News. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR A November Bailed Dinner. Mr, Editor: The crops are looking fine, The biggest growing cabbage- head of the season is yet on the stump, ‘but, judging from appearances now, it will stop growing in time to be ready for the grest “biled” dinner, Novem- ber b, it is expected that Teddy will fur- nish the moose meat and Hiram the mutton, for the seasoning. If the spare and intellectual Wilson should be elected the honorary guest, he may enjoy the dinner so hugely as to swell out the length of his waist line enough ‘Ito make it the equivalent of Billy Tatt’s, without becoming strictly a taris ey C, H. TALCOTT. Norwich, October 6, 1912. The Tariff Problem. Mr. ‘Bditor: Your editorials and C. B, Montgomery's letters prompt me to make a few remarks, Tf the tarlft is for the protection of the workingman, why did President Taft say thére was no excuse for cer- tain portions of it? Why did the Te- publican platforms of 1908 and 1912 advocate a revision, and why do re- publican papers, including The Bulle- tin, advocate a revision? The findings of the tariff commis- sion point to reductions in every case investigated. If the tariff protects they can do to elect Woodrow Wilson and a democratic congress. 3 The events of the past few days have proven this more and more clear- Iy “In the west, should Roosevelt hold | out until November 4th, he will prob- ably sweep several states. Wilson will get his free trade south, and in order to insure the election of him, Taft will have to be killed by hitm in New England. Fair New England, Who has most to loose and nothing to gain by free trade heresies that were born in the south, where an idle rich class owned slave labor and had nothing to fear from foreign competition, were the originators and ardent supporters of every free trade or near free trade bill ever advocated or passed. The managers of the Roosevelt cam- paign are shrewd, keen politicians. They figure—and figure truly—that there may be a possible chance for them to win. However, if lose, as they probably will, and Wilson is selected, with a free trade congress at his back, the business demoralization will be So great a check to progress and prosperity, so fatal that at the fu- ture battle in 1916 the American peo- ple will be willing to turn over to them for reli Are you willing to risk four years of '93-'97 misery for -the sake of shouting hurrah! because your favor- ite has been elected? Is the game worth the risk? Do you care to be an aid to a par- ty that has in view the turning over of the government in all its branches, leaving the supreme court helpless as 42-inch, all -eolors, French Serge—at 75¢ u yard. colors, 36-inch in all colors—at 50c a yard. 50-inch, in black, navy and brown— at §1.00 a yard. 64-inch, In black and navy only—at $1.25, $1.50 and $2.25 a yard. A STRONG LINE OF BLACK DRESS G0ODS IN our Black Goods Section we show a large assortment of all the' most desirable weaves, including Lansdown, Priestley’s Silk and Wool Sublime, Poplins, Indla Twills, San Toy, Suede Satin, Henriettas, Pruncllas, Pana- mas, Batiste, Voiles, Crepes and Brilliantines. We specialize in Black Dress Goods, and If you are considering black goods, be sure and see our line. Copenhagen and Alice—at $1.00 vard. both storm and all good weight—at $1.30 a yard. dresses, in black, navy, brown, tan, FOR Mackinaw Coats we show a 54- inch heavy gray and green mixture} —also lustrous finish Ziberlines inf black, brown, navy, tan and old blue, The Porteous & Mitchell Co, BULBS Geduldig's Greenhouses, Dutch, French and Japanese have arrived in good shape. Let us know your wants. 77 CEDAR ST. Phone 868 which must be ready at a moment's notice is _great Lunc 3 The Hasty y improved by Vaudfl;h" Classiest é’b’“‘i Ihx“ Novelty £ Special Scenery and Electrical Effects. / few in favor of | charmed— oy | P Highest Priet H. KBACH of Killingls. | sulted tn the prosccution of 592 cases,| Tiough there were & few f JUor the | © "Were you ever hspotiaed? Did you SERGES AND OTHER GOOD FABRICS % ROO e S | or about fifty per cent. of the cases| rajlway line and let one keep track of s 3remug‘£ld;§;¥h ‘Em’“‘n - ) WE oy S WAL e : \ J « ; hat wauit: past tedyour 2 ] carry a strong line of Serges, Suede, 40 inches wide, 4 ',"m["‘?g" Strysa, ot ed Jot0, oiis dosa|the traine et e obblestanes, | curdlad s wo trailed atter that relent || Mgt oh ar wosh Snd = 1ot Soeon Expert Highly Refined Novelty Dancers Musical r Monday and Tuesday A TWO-REEL 101-BISON FIA"URI FILM — "f;'l PENALTY" - Indians, Horses, Soldiers, Cowboys in hundreds i CTOBER10,11,12 THURSDAY, FRIDAY and SATURDAY , THE GREAT STAFFORD FAIR | Auto Parade. Motorcycle Races. THE PLACE TO SPEND COLUMBUS DAY Read what Thos. F. Galvin, Bos- ton’s leading florist, has to say concern- s ing REUTER'S new manager: Boston, Sept. 21, 1913, [ ha { L Mr. 8. J. Reuter & Son, Norwich, Conm. Gentlemen:— 1 wish to say a few words in n‘vrd to Mr, James D. Rough, who is to enter your employ in Nerwich. Not only you but all the people of Norwich are to be congratulates upon securing the services of a man who has had such a wide experienss in the florist business as has Mr. Rough. Ty the workingman, why is it that the California, to & party pledg- N rd tes, His experience and also the high quality of flowers and plants pre. Sugar trust, Tin ' Plate trust, Steel | '3 \n aavanee o strike o blow ai proa- Aarving o ety sl elieons B T e O s duced by Reuter & Son, should give to Norwich and the surrownding but it comes from outside this| Something for nothing has faded trus tc, make numerous million- 9 but something that smells good, uuzu e B s ¢ hatdly be axdbeded in ork. #ountey, and being made by men Who out. The bread and butter in New|Sirer wiiie many of thelt workmen | Tor it hardly think so. occasions it is & wise housewifs who has on’ hand a j towns 5 combination -that can hardly be exe Boston or New ¥ { less wages it is 80ld for a less|York hotels is now made a direéct|are confined to mean Streets and C. B MONTGOMERY. During the many years that Mr. Rough has been connected with my ‘ and yet the cost of that ma-|charge. wretched homes, possessing no suffi- ehine to the poorly pald Mexican is more exorbitant than the price of the #ame machine i to the better. paid American workmen. Isn't the Amer- dean workingman fortunate in being :;- to demand the better wages and the better prices? ' STRIKES ARE COSTLY. 1t is astonishing how costly are the Btikes which interrupt the business activity of the world. We read of the troublo here and there, and, even 4n the recognition of the fact that it 18 costly to all concerned, little thought 8 actually glven to the great cost. ‘With the growth of arbitration and «concillation and the general tendency a that direction a decided reduction 1n strikes, and therefore in the strike cost, was due. Yet the information that $1,000,000,000 has been lost to the world through strikes in the year end- fng September first is surprising, it not & bt discouraging, to the vast multitude who would Ifke to see such 4 loss eliminated, or materially re. duced. A large part of the large ex- Dense has resulted from strikes in for- eign ‘countries, a quarter of ' the amount being charged to the British <oal strike, thirty million for the Brit- 18h, cotton strike, with fifteén million 2o the British dock strike, and ten mil- Yon to the Canadian rafiroad strike. In this country: the eoal strike is fig- wred at fifty million, Harriman rail- road lines' strike twenty-six millon, at five million ,New Bedford trouble at six millign, the Lowell strike at two and the Boston elevated strike at ‘ome ‘millton. Many strikes, in this country, have ‘W. W, the labor unions taking a much different: stand in regard to strikes than formerly, but it is evident that arditration and conciliation have much to accomplish yet to straighten out the tangles throughout the world. Great Britain, Canada and other coun- tries are working on different solu- considerately will accomplish the best results. Mr. Baer says there s no shortage of coal, and that never “since doesn't have to be a bull moose to be whils the Lawrence strike is placed | been dve to the influence of . the I.| the | It is very evident that Admiral Southerland does not intend to allow. starvation in Nicaragua by his per- mission. Wages that put heart and hope into a man are the best of investments. A vote for their retention is a vote well cast. Whiskers are coming back into style and the college boys are growing moustaches. What will the safety razor do now? Queen Wilhelmina is the most ex- pensively dressed queen of Furope. She settles for her own wardrobe and knows no dictator. The bull moosette is found to be the touchiest thing in politics this year. She permits no reflections upon the Colonel in her presence. Every time there is an election due in Cuba, there arise Tumors of a new revolution. The island empire is still in the rough-house stage. A Chicago teacher says “girls should be taught cooking instead of classies.” useful than good poems. The defeat of Tai working man to better times. as Lorimer. grotesque. Greed has made a corner in wheat, and butter, He thinks good doughnuts are more and the breaking down of the policies of the governmient will not help any business man or ‘When it comes to accounting for or | explaining campaien funds, the Col- | onel can' make as good an appearance | ‘What they don't know is The world is being notified that which shows we've got to hleed more than ever this winter for our bread A Chicago resident, seeking the suf- The Newark News says most New Yorkers think the sun rises in Brook- | Iyn and sets in Hoboken and that! there is nothing worth speaking of | publican for office, and boldly proclaim riman money being for the state cam- clency of baths and clean clothing, are 11l fed, and work long hours? The cotton industry is highly pro- tected, and yet Labor Commissioner | Neil shows that in the cotton mills of New England nine dollars is the aver- age wage for a full week's work. If we import goods to the amount of seven hundred million dollars annually, goods that can be produced in this country, why not raise th® tariff so as to exelude such godds? And if we are 80 almighty anxious to protect our working people against the poorly paid labor of other countrles, why not ex- clude this labor as well as what it produces? We export beef to England and Scotland and it is sold there for ten cents the pounq less than in New York city. 1Is this to protect the American consumer? We send sewing machines to Mexico and sell them 40 per cent. cheaper there than we do in Kentucky. Why? JAMES BARRETT. Browsters Neck, October §, 1912, Striking a Blow at Prosperity. Mr. Editor: In speaking of the de- cision of the supreme court of Califor- nie in disfranchising the entire Taft vote of the state, one of our great editors says: “The supreme court of California has unanimously decided that under the law no remedy exists for the theft of the republican column on the official ballot by the suporters of Roosevelt and Johnson. But the court, through #ts chief justice, who delivered the opinion, felt obliged to condemn the law as unfair and oppressive. Said | Chief ~ Justice Beatty: “It distran- chises absolutely the voters of this state and deprives them of the _free exercise of their functions as inde- pendent voters.” \Yet the court could not find a way out. The disfranchise- ment, it held, was “not justifiable” { morally, but # was “the law,” and the court was obliged to respect the plain mandate of the legislature.” In Kansas the Taft republicans were compelled to go from court to court, being defeated at every turn, and un- tl for pure shame the Rooseveit peo- ple nominated as electors withdrew from the republican ticket, the great sented most by its owner. Here in Connecticut goody, goody managers of the progressive party hold up their hands in holy hor- Tor at the mention of indorsing a re- the Flinn himeelf, and still the baitle of Packer. B e L !mmsourummhl L S SN S TR Intellectual Trains. There is no way to' get the values of the countryside so good as walking. If you have a horse he gets in between you and the glory of ‘the landscape, and if you whiz along the road in an automobile you had as well, save for the fresh air, be at a moving picture show. Only when you walk do you get that personal, minute and intimate ac- quaintance with nature. It is even so in our intellectual life. When we think along with a political party, a religious sect, a literary cult or an artistic school, we may be sald to be traveling by train through the land of ideas. When we leave all groups and creeds and plunge alone into life's problems, see and determine things for ourselves, and form our own tastes and persuasions, we may be said to walk. There are times, perhaps most of the time, when we Juust perforce go by train; the affaifS of society and the state being too complex for individual capacity. | We must possibly vote the party ticket, go to church, join the literary crusade and co-operate in this or that group; but we should reserve the right to go often upon an inde- pendent ramble. “There are men,” writes Hamerton, “whose whole art of living consists in passing from one conventionalism to another, as a traveler changes his train. ‘To them intellectual indepen- dence is unintelligible. Why go afoot When you may sit comfortably in a train, a rug around your lazy legs and your head resting softly in a corner?” Col. Webb C. Hayes, son of a for- mer president, Rutherford B, Hayes, and Mrs. Mary O. Brinkerhofi, widow of Judge Samuel Brinkerhoff, were marrisd in Fremont, O., Tecentiy. When ou Cough "There is nothing better than Hale’s injurious. BORDEN'S Malted Milk IN THE SQUARE PACKAGE g of rich, creamy milk, with extracts of d barley malt (in powder form), It pos- ity Mawor that 1o most temphing. 'Can in_or with gg, o served hot or cold, nt y and “tang” |s entirely removed, Trla] Package and Unusual Recipe Book B '.lnm“V:zr Drugglst, or Malted Milk Department BORDEN'’S CONDENSED MILK CO. Manufacturers of B Eagle Ges, Wm, Bentiey €0, N, H, Seliing Agents, State St. Boston, Mass, Tel. Richmond 836, users will be astonished at the com- pleteness of our assortment within a month after our DISASTROUS FIRE and we have also unloaded a cargo, tions, but the necessity of getting to | {fage desired to declare his loyalty to|republican party of that state was dis- common understanding, the dispens. | “King Taft” He has not yet learned | franchised also. Other similar moves eaCh, of Chestnut, StOVe and Egg ng with the trouble agitators and deal. | the difference between an American| ! the west could be mentioned, that ing with the matters patiently ana|Sovereign snd the other kind. &0 to show an ox belng gored is re- GOAL GENTRAL WHARF 's Evaperated Milk and len Milk, 192 business he has taken a very active part in some of the most lmportant » decorations in this part of the country. 1 shall feel his loss very much indeed and Le carries with him my best wishes for his every success in his new field. Very truly vours, % S5 THOS. F. GALVIN. FULL SET TEET FIT GUARANTEED paln during all opera Boe Stk of & ke najare. deme ALl work_guuraa teed. ENTAL PARLORS, 203 Main Pamtodp m TOMATO SOUP ' It takes carefully selected, red, ripe New York State tomatoes and fifteen other tempting ingredients to give the color, . | beyond the East and North rivers, | that the votes should be cast for snap and smoothness you get in our T‘DTL';‘G;::”;:“’: ;“f*;‘;:_“h::"m'_": ST e o he | Roosevelt or Wilson. Out west the Sach Tofnxo Soup. Unthinned it makes 2 o T ¢! One of the most effective demon-|S&me progressives force the names of of None Soups om: Tty k todar— Deen such prosperity.” ~He quotes |, otiiiie in protest against the Law.|thelr candidates on the republican “ A P P E l l c o in 10-cent cans delicious tomato sauce. Try Epictetus to prove his statement. | pone " ov B e the wide. | {icket, and the courts are compelied by | a o Chicken. 10 cents a can at your grocer's. MRS pcntiiup ey loosely enacted laws to let them do it. “Tomato Okra e} spread display of Old Glory. It can-| 1 o8 Te to Bowillon ChickenGambe Who would bother to make mince When Governor Hadley of Missour! | ot taie too prominent a part in evew(‘,lf‘,f"’,‘,“”fll‘m;“ {hf lom.of the = Of Horehound and Tar > Vegotable Thick Mock Turtie meat when s packsae of NONE SLCIY qeolared for Taft, it was a great dis- | porage | Bifos Bl han s ot o g 1o on what 1s left of Cioar Vepstable Pen MINCE MEAT costs but 10 ce & parade. sevelt, v appolntment to the Colonel, who tried - and Roosevelt men for Taft, as the| [ontains no opium nor anything Soattion Beet Bard to cajole him over. A man| Iv's the same old claim of the Har- | case may prove best for Mr. Boss grogresst paign. Isn't the state campaign, in,theé Lord goes on for honesty, purity Sold by Druggists. l — every instance, a vital point to the|&nd downing of the bosse | L £ — Maryland has 465 miles of good | paign ? Ise why @ e " s | o n 1 2 P00 In th ooy eoid | people who are hon TRY PIKE'S 3 Telephones A b Sk 7 roads, and funds enough in hand t 4. in the Pennsyl- | thefr support of ex-President Roose- | | there nearty doyble them. A tax of ono per mpaign for nnnsmrill\nu are being maniod snd cajorea oa| Toothache . e jent. 18 lald o keep them in repalr, the case may require intg doing what Drops | The Builtin )