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Borwich ulletin and Goufich. —— 116 YEARS OLD. Bubseription price, 130 & weck) G0o manihe $0.00 @ vear. _Eotered at the Postoln Coad, aa second-olasa Telephano Calles B Businees Of! 4 g:“fim Bditcrial Haomar -1, ob Otfice, 35-8. wi Offive, Reow Buflding, Telephone 510. Norwich, Friday, Oct. 18, 1912 REPUBLICAN TICKET. President, / WILLIAM H. TAFT of Ohlo, Viee President, JAMES 8. SHERMAN of New York. Governor, JOHN P, STUDLEY of New Haven. Lieutenant Governor, CHARLES H. PECK of Danbury. of S Secretary te, GUSTAVE B. CARLSON of Middletown. Treasurer, WALTER W, HOLMES of Waterbury. Comptroller, FAYETTE L. WRIGHT of Pomfret. Presidential Electors. N of Hartford. BCOVII of Salisbury. B, MOWRY of Sterling. Representatives In Congress. SECOND DISTRICT. ~ WILLIAM A. KING of Willimautic. For State Semators. WHITO! ?"._l—‘l‘nfi’x' Tt a“'t Norwi SRR D e . 'Y of Stoning- ton. Fond Emwm 5 KEACH of Killingly. AMUEL RUSSHLL Sl of Misdie For Judge of Probate, NELSON J. AYLING of Norwlch. Represen ves, AJSEEN 'éiri'udn. NIGHT HIGH SCHOOL WORK. There is much to commend in the sufficient interest in high school stud- ; ies to warrant the opening of a class for that purpose In the evening school It s an opportunity which everyone ‘who realizes that the pursuit of ad. vanced studles will benefit hfs chances in life should appreclate. There are many who for financial or otler rea- #ons falled to get the chance to take ‘up studles beyond the grammar school and in many cases it has been an ever- | lasting source of regret. There should be & large number directly inf ed 1n this effort, the only object of which is to open an avenue for further edu- cation for just such persons. The plan works with success in oth- ready to do its part in the matter, pro- men who are engaged-in the textile in- chanical drawing and economics, which not a few. find of immenso valus in thelr ‘employment, whilo commer- Jelal studies appeal to others who ara pursulng different lines. So great has been the intérest'dn time past that vantage to pay.for such privileges, but | the obligation rests upon the town to provide such an opportunity where the interest warrants it. When opportunity calls and its appeal is interesting, it Is time for those concerned to act. PROTECTION 18 NEEDED. The importance of glving the proper; {protection to prominent men and par- ticularly the chbief executive of the country, even In his travels through|fer so from predictions. this great land of freedom, has Oft- times been emphasized by the numer- ous attempts of cranks and insane peo deaths of presidents.. It is for that “reason that the president always hu‘] & guard of secret service men in addi. | Thanksgiving time is interesting the tion to his military aide when going| Furopean nations as well as the Amer- about the country, and which cauged Ic2n peovle. a double guard to be given him during | his recent stay in the metropolis. It| is a wise precaution as experience has, demonstrated on many occaslons, ! It is because of thelr prominence in public life, that men with defective' minds get crazed over them and im- | agine all sorts of wrongs arid them- | selves as the avenger. The motives | may differ. It may be a disappointed | office seeker as it was with Garfield; it may be an anarchist as in MeKin- ley's case; or the workings of a dig- Whatever the motive which tempta' cranks to seek the deaths of presidents, | governors or mayors, effort should be made to frustrate it. Fortunately the guard is not called| strong bid for the business men’s vote | at Norwioh, tter, 3 Merray TRELAND TRIED FREE TRADE. Not alone in this country has the experience of free trade, as advocated | by _the democratic. party, been tried and found fo have injurious effects | for others have had like results. At| one time, Ireland was = manufactur- ing country, under a protective tariff, and capital was employed there in the ‘manufacture of linen, silk, woolen and cotton goods. It was argued by Eng- land that she could buy her manuface tured goods cheaper in England and| ralse the raw material on her rich lands. The charm worked and It was tried. Of it, Thomas F. Meagher said in Dublin in 1847: “The cotton manufacture of Dublin which employed 14,000 operatives, has, been destroyed; the 3,000 silk looms of the Liberty have been destroyed; thej stuff and serge manufactures, which employed 1491 operatives, have been Eastern Connecticut Students Make Commendable Ranking— | New Plan for Allotting Football Tickets to Alumni— Good Material Shown at Track Meet—Basketball Suffers For Funds—Annual Meeting of College and Preplnhry: School Association Coming. New Haven, Oct. 17.—In the honor ! lists of the academic department of Yale university, printed this week, | eastern Connecticut students make a | commendable ranking. Among the | BULLETIN'S SPECIAL YALE LETTER| destroyed briggan have been blanket manufacture of Kilkenny has the camlet trade of | Baridon, which produced £100,000 a been destroyed; the calico looms of Bal- destroyed; the New London, | the worse. vear, has been destroyed; the worsted and stuff manutactures of Waterford have, been destroyed; the ratteen and frieze manufactures of Carrick-on- Suir havé been destroyed; one busi- mess alone survives, thrives, flourishes and dreads no bankruptcy. * % ¢ That| favored and vrivileged anjl patronized business is the Trish coffinmakers’.” No one can wish such a fate for this country. The democratic administra- tion has shown what can be expeeted and what they intend to do. Before, giving any such jolt to the prosperity of the country as free trade would cause, the voter is going to think twice Dbefére casting his ballot for the demo- cratic candidate . or for any ticket which will bring about a change for SAN FRANCISCO'S EXPOSITION. Though , over two years off, San Franclsco 1s, as she has been fo ‘some time, actively engaged in making plans for the Panama-Paclfic exposi I tion, which is to be held there in 1915. Such things improve by experience and San Francisco is taking into ac- count the weak points of the failures and the good points of the successes Norwich a first dispute. delightful little book, written in the authqr's charaeteristic vein, and ded- icated to the public school teachers of Connecticut. calls up many reminiscences of class room work at Yale and gives it a per- sonal tonme. by deceased American writers, is the the University press, which found it necessary to go to press twice befgre of it behind closed gates, the university honor men in the senior class, who at- | tained high stand in junior year, is Hartwell Greene Thompson of Nor- wich. His ramk is that of high ora-| tion. Kenneth Niles Hillhouse of i | limantic and Winifréd Charles Young | of Norwich took oration stands during the past year. For,the work of the first two years of the course Erastus Winslow Will- jams of Yantic has a junior appoint- ment of philosophical oration. Harold Hayden Barber of Danielson takes a dissertation; Philip Adams Johnson of Among recent notable publicatio by prominent Yale men or under their direction are “Teaching in Schools and Colleges,” and a “Yale Book of Amer- ican Verse.” The first 18 the work of Prof. Willlam Lyon Phelps and is a In it Professor Phelps ture, the Yale anthropology of verse; latest of the list of books printed by | publication to meet the demand. After another week of hard scrim- | maging and drill, some open and a lot as they have appeared in expositions held in other cities, etfort which is being made to arouse| from other countries, representatives have been sent across the water, and they have also gotten an idea of about what countries will participate and tc This is in advance of Jaunching out on the construction of buildings so ’Q‘n they gan cut ‘their y. ‘what extent. ¢ the exposition to be held, though the c world #hould unite in the celebration| of this great accomplishment, er citles and the town school board is| which opens a great international wa- terway vided that there is: suficient lulereltl and by shiown. High school studies, such as| The universal ef-operation which algebra, geometry and higher mathe- | promised is the cause for great satis- maties appeal in- particular to young faction and F dustries. Tt is important to them in, right path to a” su their daily work. There is also mie- |as to participation and finances. young men have found it to their ad-| of the bossless married man is far, far away! has no reverses he will be entirely out of danger. t merely players, bt make any changes in his policy be- plo to harm them, to say nothing of ' cause of the horrible Milwaukee epi- ,the attacks which have resulted in tho;’ sode. egg market by -abs for three weeks, they are simply wait- ing for older eges. havel one more rap at ‘em! pray that he may have the Madison Square opportunity | perilous pas eased mind, such as befell Roosevelt.| qer mill, for instance. every pogsihle to b upon for very strenuous action much | of the time, but it is the everlasting vigllance which reduces the opportuni- ties for committing such deeds. Such protection cannot be too highly regard- | ey | | THE COUNTRY PREACHER. When it is declared that there is a (0108 dearth of universtty graduates enter. | Put thero is the Maplewood extension ing the Protestant ministry, we are ex- perfencing the same conditions which stimulated the establishment of the great seats of ‘learning. Why this de- | 1S 800 cregse in the number of new ministers In proportion to the past and in pro- portion to the in does not yet appear but there is a ten- dency to belleve that the university education, while properly fitting them for the ministry, also gives them the foT” requirements for more lucrative em-|-I&: ‘ease in population ! To get points merit, as both are to be particularly affected by the canal trade. It is en- couraging that there is to be such a | seneral_participation by other nations, it being, particularly fitting that all the, maple-syrup weather. » loth accordi San Francisco is a logical point for laims of New Orleans had much | a feat ,in tvhich all are interested, which all will be affected. e in its undertaking San! ‘ranciso apparently is started on the stul ending, both' EDITORIAL NOTES. This is first-class griddle-cake and Happy thought for today: The age! A week from today if Mr. Roosevelt A new parody on Shakespeare: All| he world's,a diamond, and most men | The thinking men are not the noisy men. This is Why political results dif- | No one expects Stubbs of Kansas to Whether there'll be any turkey by When Cleveland” tries to break the ining from them It is so like thé Colonel to want to Let's. all The flying machine men have, the| tisfaction of knowing there are more | imes—smoking in a pow-| The New York suffragettes who ara| no new clothes until 1915, as a ifige to their cause, are making a| s The principals in the campaign are| to maintain a dignified silence during| the remainder of the time, and the! country will not suffer because of it. Mayor Murpny's ultimatum to the, Connecticut company started~ some- | Boswell avenue is important, | also. United States supreme court| ases on the docket, but it wasw't too busy for the justices to| ke a keen Interest in the world's se- ries bulletins. The ‘What are progressive with millions ployment in different directions, out. Wish for larger opportunities? side the church. Reason for this from the frequent leaving of the pulpit by ministers whose charges fail to provide them a living wage, find it necessary to enter business in order to make the necessary provision for the time being for their familjes and for old age. This is particularly true in the country, where $600 is an aver- age salary. At a recent conference in Chicago It was declared that no minis- ter on a country charge should re- eive less than $1,400 a year. Such a wage as that would provide adequately for the meeting of the needs of a mn- | California fx » ster today from what the require-|vote for i ments were a half or even a quarter | »d to prepare students for the ministry deduction comes | and who | B! | | | | a century ago. Colleges were start- | Wilson tn r fiusiness has attracted because of at! ieast a living wage. Better provision therefore for the small-salaried cler- gyman would seem to be the solution Men who cannot be civil to men who | unyt differ from them in opinion create any- thing but an enjoyable atmosphera, If looking after the orientals is any- thing like the trouble which a small part of the Chinese population located in New York causes, he new republic i setting along slow- Mr. Stubbs of Kansas is a rich con- tractor who has taken up politics; and the Kansas City Journal savs he has had a good many partners who have unanimously failed to praise him ever since. The father of Gov nor Johnson of « his prin 'f his son utes of play. Philbjn kicked the goal. stiffened. The final score was 16-0. quarter, carried a succession of passes up the field, the last being intercepted almost on Yale's goal line. the Harvard and Princeton football &3 goes over to West Point Saturday to play the annual game witli the sol- diers. The eleven did mot do partic- ularly well against Lafayette last Sat- urday, for there was a discouraging amount of fumbling, due mostly to mistaken signals, and the gunning of the team was far from smooth. At the outset the play was brilliant, for Lefty Flynn made a 45-yard run and there was a touchdown in three min- Shortly after Filynn was taken out and thereafter Lafayette's defense The forward pass was worked but once successfully by Yale, while La- fayette, playing desperately in the last Yale's in- terference was much stronger. The Lafavette game was marked by the beginning of organized cheering at the minor .games, in response to in- sistent demands that have been made by graduates and students all during the present fall A new plan for all ing tickets for games to the alumni has been an- nounceq by Everard Thompson, mana- ger of the Yale ticket office. The rules contain the following provisions: No_more than two applications for a single ticket may be pinned togeth- er. The tickets on these applications will then be allotted together. The order of choice will be as follows: First, applications for one ticket o a mame, two blanks pinned together; third, application for two tickets on a name. There will be no borrowed ap- plications granted this year by the football management and it announces that if all the applications for seats for two people cannot be filled, the decision as to who shall get the tick- ets shall be made by drawings. For the Princeton game three tickets are to be allowed on graduate appli- catfons, two for the Harvard game. Blanks for the two big contests have been put in circulation and applica- tlons close on November 4 for the Princeton game and November 6 for the Harvard game. The games are at Princoton and New Haven, on Novem- ber 1§ and November 23, respectively. Graduates and undergraduates as well will soon be able to look back with rellef at the days when tickets for the blg games, to spite all carefully arranged plans, have failed, at the last moment, to be forthcoming, The solu- l tion of this past and present difficulty | will be offered by the erection of the new stadium. At a recent meeting of the committee of twenty-one In New York, it was decided to get out the plans for the big structure at once and to make contracts for its erection. | These plans will be ready In a fort- | night and therefore it may be possible 1o start the construction as early as hext month. | Up to the present time, the develop- | ment of the new Yale fleld has com- | prised leveling the land, mearly 100 acres of which the committee had pur- | chased opposite the present fleld at an expense of about $150,000. During fate spring anq the summer this work has been going steadily on. The funds have been coming in rath- | er slowly, 8o much so that the com- | mittee is shortly to send out another appeal for subscriptions to all the graduates, for while many pledges have been made and redeemed the great body of alumnl have not respond- ed to the call as generally as is de- | sired. An active campaign is also to y be taken among the undergraduates. | The plans for the stadium call for an expenditure of about $300,000 and after that the scheme of developing the new Yale field provides for a new clubhouse, mew tennis courts, baseball fields and other athletic facilities. The committee has incorporated, with Da-, vid Daggett of New Haven as secre- tary and Everard Thompson as assist- ant secretary. The annual fall track meet at Yale' field Wednesday afternoon showed good material in the entering classes for the freshmen won the meet with a score of 49 points. From the upper classes of course all numeral men were excluded. The junlors were second with 38 1-2 points, the seniors third with 11 and the sophomores last with § 1-2 points. The freshmen won by taking all three places in the last event, the polo vault at a height of 10_feet 8 inches. While Yale has this season with- drawn from the intercollegiate bas- ketball league, and there has been | much talk as to whether the.game might not be dropped from the athletic sports of the university, for there has been decreasing Interest in it for a number of years past, Dr. W, G. An- derson, head of the gymnasium, on Thursday gave out the statement that lack of fnancial support is the factor hindering the game at Yale. The bas- ketbal]l association has been unable to meet the heavy expenses of travel, coaching and equipment. Dr, Ander- son called attention to the fact that many of the minor sports are far from self-supporting, that the major sports alone seem to hold the interest of un- dergraduates and alumni and basket- ball seems to be the game that has received the greatest amount of criti- cism whether merited or not. Harvard has dropped the tirely for reasons similar to those here and Princeton seriously considered withdrawing from the league because of its annual deficit. At Pennsylvania and Columbfa the sport prospers. . Yale this winter will play independently, but plans to meet most of the teams still in the league. The Wilson-Marshall club of the university held its first rally in Osborn hall Wednesday night. Congressman Thomas L. Rellly of Meriden and At- torney Kenneth Wynne of New. Haven of the democratic state central com- mittee were the speakers, dealing mostly with tariff revision. The at- tendance was very small, but enthusi- asm was shown. me en- At Yale university on November 1 and 2 will be held the twenty-seventh annual meeting of the New England Assoclation of Colleges and Prepara- tory schools, On the afternoon of the first day there will be a conference on the subject, “For what ought the col- lege degree be given—for work done in college alone or for that plus work done in preparatory schools?” In the evening in Memorial hall there will be a dinner and reception in honor of the presidents of the colleges in the Con- necticut valley, The probiem of Stu- | dent Honesty will be discussed Sat- urday morning. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR How to Vots Nov. 5. Mr. Editor: In my last letter, touch- ing tariff matters, I quoted statistics from census and other reports showing great achievements of the republican party for 1900 to 1910, when they were in full control of the government in all its branches,and would be much pleas- od If some one could show up the great £ood of the democrats during sixteen unbroken years in control of the lower house. I have hunted carefully and find that they were continually engag- ed in breaking down the government policies that produced prosperity, fault-finding, promoting senseless in- vestigations, or fighting for the pay- ment of rebel war claims, and just as soon as they were placed in power again commenced right where they left off to destroy the protective tariff sys- tem that makes New England espe- clally and all the nation generally prosperous beyond the most dreamy expectations. They have passed bill after bill to encourgage Importations of products raised by the labor of cheaply paid great tide turning towards President Taft, proves beyond a shadow of doubt that the sober intelligence of our American workingmen has commenced to assert itself once more, the chasing of rainbows and lurid promises are be- coming less and less; the determina- tion to patriotically stand by a presi- dent who has manfully performed his ‘whole duty as he saw it, the ever to be depended on labor vote will not go | astray in 1912, but will be found in its might laden with full dinner paills and heavy pay eneviopes, ching in millions as one man and ng a bal- lot to throw a bomb of demoralization into the ranks of the enemies of prog- ress and prosperity, and to do it in a { way that will be felt for many years to come, and will discourage all future attempts to break down our protective tariff system; that mighty army of union labor Wil see but one place to | make & cross on its ballot, and that | place will be In the Circle at the Head of the Republican Colmn. Vote for the straight republican tick- et and there will be no danger of a tariff tinkerer or soldier hater slipping in, C. B. MONTGOMERY. Packer, Ct, Oct. 17, 1913. ‘women and children, and manufactur- ed goods made by pauper labor in castern mills and shops. They have done all in their power to encourage foreign manufacturers and 1d up foreign enterprise. One bill alone, the sugar bill, would driy out our own cane sugar and he interests” backing the would kill completely the great beet | | s T indusiry that has been worked Is it because they wish to be, UP under the protective tariff system | ardeq as idealists, or because they|!® employ at high wages thousands| upon thousands of hands, | . Not a bill of the entire lost of tariff bills passed by the Underwood con- gress would build up one single mill here in any line of manufacture, but would start a general boom abroad. would follow complete democatic tri- umph, but of what use Is low prices |and no money with which to par- chase. _ I have the Congressional Record be- fore me and will quote a few words from Congressman James R. Mann of | Tinols, who says: | “The reduction in prices would mean cutting off the profits and cutting down {the wages; would mean strikes | rlots and starvation o 2 wage curncs hin = vie would Tt 1s the workingman's ballot which' ind without 18 to declde whether he will prosper| higher or lower or mot. If Wiikon 18 elected all busi. | Jhe fact that e ne: iow to be prepared for| 1 democratic congress may | fujjer othe [ 10In the was of chunging the econoumle] to 1 opintons on the cam- poifees of the government denly discovered @' | '} OTHER VIEW POINTS | | that hawe been killing scores of people think they will hav one of these days with a good_dinner New Haven Union. { and talk it ove | The country is well off today. Why | should agitators with imaginary cures | for evils that do not exist, and tanft it's no wonder | The reduction of prices I do not deny | theorists and protection smashers be permitted to lead it into disaster, un- | certainty and confusion?—Torringtow Register. The “father of the paper box indus: \ | try” is dead in New York. Since the | first puper box was put on the market { what n_development the business has | had! Every year indeed witnesses 4 more extenslve uge of all sorts of sub- and | stitutes for wood.—Providence Bulle- | dgent Taft oday und while passing through d detectives ot Tt is unfe ole that the pre: United States cannot zo o the Wi Lbout in publle the same as anyone else in a free country like this.—New Britaln Herald, The | tons, orsistent spite of newspaper insinua- Al The Trolleys Eusiness Lead °, Center of T Korwich «« Harvard Mills” Mt Underwear. Harvard Mills Hand Finished Underwear has been making and holding friends for more than thirty years. Try it and you will be counted among the number. For more than thirty years it has led and others have fol- lowed. There’s a style here to suit every woman, miss or child. YOU WILL NEVER SEE A DAMAGED GAR- MENT OFFERED UNDER THIS BRAND. LADIES’ COTTON VESTS IN THREE WEIGHTS—Light, medium and heavy .. LADIES' WOOL-AND-SILK AND ALL-WOOL VESTS—Medium and heavy weight LADIES' COTTON DRAWERS AND TIGHTS in light, heavy and medium weights. ‘All styles LADIES' ‘WOOL-AND-SILK AND ALL-WOOL DRAWERS AND TIGHTS—Medium and heavy weight....85¢c to $1.50 A GARMENT LADIES' UNION SUITS in all styles. All cotton—all wool—ecqt- ton and woolrsilk and cotton—silk and wool. $1.00 to $350 A SUIT CHILDREN'S VESTS AND PANTS in medium weight cotton and fleece lined .... BOYS' AND GIRLS' UNION SUITS in elther cotton or wool and 50c A GARMENT . 85c to $1.50 A GARMENT Svc A GARMENT . 25¢c to 65c A GARMENT either grey or white.................. 50c, 85¢c, $1.00, $1.25 A SUIT HEATRE BROADWAY Thursday — Friday — Saturday BIG FEATURE SHOW MONARCH COMEDY FOUR ' The Funniest Quartette in Vaudeville DON'T MISS SEEING THIS ACT WHAT EVER YOU DO TSUDA JOHNSTONE & Thrill WENTWORTH That Classy Duo ing Jap Equilibrist TWO GREAT WESTERN REELS TWAY AUDITORIUM TebAY THE MENDELSOHN FOUR | OTHER ACTS REFINED musicAL Noverty | OTHER PICTURES UNDINE—Taken from the Nautical Posm 2-reels Breed Theatre GRAND DOUBLEV FEATURE Colonel Theodore Roosey —ALSO— Dutch, French and Japanese have lmvedllpodh Let us know your wants. Some of these magnates of railroads | to get together | went to Worcestor, i he was closely guarded by | denials which are overied by no testimony or evi- Geduldig’s Greenhouses, 77,C2 5= LUMBER 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, each, of Chestnut, Stove and Egg - GOAL CHAPPELL Co. on what is left of CENTRAL WHARF Telephones dence, that Colonel Roosevelt's assail- | ant is a socialist, are pretty mean Dolitics, even when sugar-coated with '| [DEAS OF A PLAIN MAN the suggestion that the assassit's po- litlcal views are “no consequenc Springfield Republican. Congressman Thomas L. Reilly made Freedom. a better impression here Monday night_than did Oscar W. Underwood. Mr. Reilly, who is a native of New Britaih and knows how largely the population is dependent upon the prosperity of the factories, declared that he was in favor of a protective tariff, to the extent of the difference in wages in this and foreign countries. —New Britain Record. Freedom is not only impractical, it is impossitle; it is even inconceivable. It 1s dream of a dreamer who dreams he is dreaming.” ‘If you were to wake up some morn- ing with the comsclousness that you were utterly free to do s you p you would be paralyzed. Human life is possible only under the condition of certain laws; human happiness is found only in obedience to those laws. I said freedom is inconceivable. The- ologians assert that God Himself is not above His laws. We cannot grasp the unconditioned. The primeyal savage in the jungle is bound in a hundred ways, he has less freedom than the poor lady at court. For we are freer now than were our ancestors, merely because we have de- veloped law to a higher degree, The only way, it seems, to get freedom is to take it away. Legislatures and courts are constant- ly limiting the freedom of the individ- ual. They dictate the hours he shall! work, the pay he shall get, the way his children shall be taught, when he shall fight and when keep the peace, and hundred other limitations of his de. sires. There is no such thing as freedom. ‘What we mean when we say the word is justice in laws, - For the only freedom Is justice. How much nearer would our postal service come to paying expenses if the tons of franked rubbish now carried as first class matter were cut out? Sena- tors and representatives dump into the mails not only speeches, some of them delivered and many of them not, but magazine articles, essays and extrac:s from books. Not one page in a hun- dred of this enormous mass of verbi- age is ever read by anybody.—Bristol Press. Becretary Fisher favors admitting automobiles to the National Park in the Yosemite Valley, which, by infer- ence, means_that he favors admitting them to the Yellowstone National Park. The exclusion of automobiles from these parks has been based on the old story that they frighten horses and impregnate the woods with the odor of gasoline. Both of these ob- jections seem pretty antiquated—Wa- terbury American. . WHAT TAFT HAS DONE He has effected arbitration treaties with Great Britain and France, He vetoed the Arizona Statehood Bill because of the recall of Jjudges provision. He has enforced the Sh Anti-trust Law without fear or favor. He vetoed the Democratic wool, cotton and free list bills as unfair, unsclentific and destructive of the Republican principle of protection. He abrogated the discriminating passport treaty with Russia. He established postal savings banks. He prevented railroads from putting rate increases into effect without approval of the Interstate Commerce Commission, He has rushed the Panama Canal to early completion without hint of scandal. He has practically destroyea white slave traffic. He has signed the bill for admission of Arizona and New Mexico to statehood. He has established the Bureau of Mines to safeguard the lives of ONE THING YOU CAN BE SURE OF ~ if you buy Wines and 1 He has extended our foreign markets for the benefit of American capital and labor. He has abolished the shameful system of peonage in this country. He has submitted the income tax amendment to the Constitution to the state legisiatures for ratification. He has effected advanced boiler inspection laws passed by Con- gress. He has established means for complete irrigation projects in the West. He has maintained and extended the open-door policy in China. He has maintained peace in Cuba and South and Central America by friendly warning, without intervention. He has modernized and reformed government business methods by an economy and efficiency commission, saving millions of dollars to the American people annually. He instituted nonpolitical methods for taking the thirteenth census. He has effectually destroyed bucket shops and get-rich-quick concerns. He has persistently labored for and secured a parcels post. He has effected a new treaty with Japan, ending raclal contro- versies on the Pacific Ocean. He has further extended a safety appliance act for the benefit of ‘workingmen. He has made the Postoffice Department self-sustaining and wiped out a glaring deficiency In this department of his predecessors. He has successtully fought for the publication of campalgn funds and expenditures. © has heartily indorsed the labor commission's report and pro- biil concerning employer's liability. He has reorganized the customs service ,eliminated corruption and exposed and punished customs frauds ,thereby saving and recover- ing millions of dollars to the United States Treasury. He has established the Court of Commerce to review findings of the Interstate Commerce Commission and to remedy exasperating de- laye in litigation. He has established a nonpartisan tariff board to report on the difference in the cost of production at home and abroad. He has secured a corporation tax law yielding over $30,000,000 annually to the United States government, He has transformed a deficit of $58,000,000 of the previous ad- ministration Into a $30,000,000 surplus. He has made a new American record for nonmpartisan judiclal appointments. Ho has brought the railroads under further control of the federal government through extension of the powers of the interstate Com merce Commission He brought the workingman's compensation act ue in the Bupreme Court He has effectsd a successful stock and bonds commission. He has extended the civil service rules in all departments of the federal government by executive order. He has secured practical conservation acts. has established & Court of Commons Appeals, by which under- valuations have been stopped | quality of our liquors. Their price depends upon the brand, age and vintage. We especially recommend our Darling, Golden Wedding and Black Beauty Whiskies. Our White Table Wine cannot be surpassed. Geo. Greenberger & Co. Wholesale and Retail 47.53 FRANKLIN STREET | | Telephone 812 ' e and Br o Frompt service LOUIS H. BRUNELLE 10 Carter Ava ‘East Side) { Pies, Cak wa ¢ e exeel Buckwheat Flour for Pancakes Puone your order to a suocesstul at CARDWELL’S Hecker's Old Homestead md} [ | | | WHEN you want to put your ness befors the public, there WHEN s no