Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, October 30, 1912, Page 5

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r L] ¥ L] - Native Pork Loins Deerfoot Sausage ¢ Fancy Poultry Chameniburt Cheese Endive Chicory Roquefort and Gorgmzola Delicious Apples and Pears C & B Pickles Bartlett Pears SOMERS MR. H. T. MILLER’S School for Dancing 28 Oak Street, Classes—Saturday—2.15 and 4 p. m. Telephone 1082 JOHN MARSA annotunceés a Special Sale of Men’s Fur Lined Overcoats at reductions from one-third to one-half of their values. The sale will last 10 days and our prices will interest you. Come in and look them over. JOHN MARSA, Union Clothier, - 145 Main St. . Norwich, Conn. Carfare returned to out of town customers. Gluten Flour FOR RALLIES and the Grand Celebration after Election use our ' Ever Ready Hlash Lights &y make a spectacular.ef- Boys, be on the job and aid | EATOR CHASE Company J 129 Main Streel, Norwich, Conn. | | i WHEN YOUR EYES trouble you or you are in need of glasses, don't overlook the fact that we have been estab- | lished for years and have a | reputation by giving quality 'and service that are unexcelled. Eyes examined with modern scientific instruments and all defects of vision corrected. Lenses match- ed from broken parts. Repair- ing of all kinds done-neatly and quickly. TIf you have had trou- ble with your glasses, call and see us, all examinations free, Satisfaction guarautéed in every case. Th: Plavt-Cadden Co. Optical Department 144146 Main Street, i i Norwich . HAILE CLUB NOTES. Activities Expected to Increase With Coming of Cold Weather. « The Huile club is planning to hold first dance of the season at Miller's Academy next month, It will be 'n charge of the following committee: Mrs. A. D. Neale, the Misses Elsie Bogue, Hadie Blackstone, Mary De- celles, Helena Bailey, Henrietta James, Harriet Kinney, Anna McNama , Linea Rydholm and Mary Sheridan, Wwho meet tonight. The club rooms continue to remain open Wednesday evenings, and @ num- ber of the girls are taking advantage of the meetings on those evenings. The officers of the club hope to see the number grow during the coming win- ter. While no special programme is vet arranged, the girls take up sew ing, and interesting meetings result. Def- inite plans of work will be laid out lat- er on. At the next meeting of the club the| special contributions which a number of the girls pledzed themselves to raise will be turned into the treasury, i Fire Prevention Day for Schools. | The Connecticut Association of Local Fire Insurance Agents had its four- teenth annual convention at Bridge- | port Tuesday and elected these offi- cers: President, Dale D. Butler, Mid- | vice presidents, E. D. Kee-| urer, W. H. Held, Stafford | the town’s insane w The association went on rec- | there are four ord as having October 9 set apart in|to Norwich or Middl dletown; nan of Shelton, J. J. Fisher of Bridge- port and F. S. Small of Hartford; sec- rotary -tre: Srings the public schools as “fire prevention day,” the same as is observed in other states. Overlooked His Oppcrtunities. If Adam ha4 thought of it he would doubtless have started a hull ichthyo- surus party —Columbus (S. C.) State. | aged | carrying big catches of cod to emed NORWICH BULLETIN, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1912 The Bulletin. Norwich, Wednesday, Oct. 30, 1912. VARIOUS MATTERS. Tuesday was Viola day for Swedish residents. A few:local flower growers will go EBC!.I’OI to New London today for the chrysan- themum show. An auction at Frank Browning’g in attracted several Lebanon Tuesday, from this vicinity. All Yale graduates are to be in- vitéq to contribute to the erection of a stadium at Yale. Willlam R. Proctor and Edward Proctor have returned to Niantic from a hunting trip in Canterbury. €Crabapples, which are unusually late, are just being pickeq and sweeter than ordinary, having taken so long to ripen. The price of beef need not worry Jocal people, now that such fine lamb is being brought in by Preston and Lebanon farmers. ‘We invite you to attend the bargain apron sale at 7.30 p. m., on the 29th and 30th at the German church on Franklin street.—adv. A woodland fire at Lords Pdint has destroyed trees of thirty years' growth or more. The peat near the railroad tracks is still burning. The Connecticut Valley Kindergar- ten association is to hold its meeting Saturday, November 2, at the Center church house, Hartford. The opening of the Peck library at Slater shall, on Sunday afternoon, from 2 to 4, wasg appreciated by about 600 visitors during the past year. The republican candidate for repre- senmative fromt Grotom, C. Tyler Land- phere, was a former resident of Mont- ville, where he served as a selectman. Bastern Connecticut women’s clubs will be represented at the meeting of the fall meeting of the state federa- tion of women's clubs at Mt. Carmel today. Harvey F. Wilmarth, whose funeral took place Tuesday afternoon at West Medway, Mass, was a member of Fairview lodge of Odd Fellows, of Groton, At Waterford, John Bitters, a breed- er of white Wyandottes, lost several valuable birds by foxes last week and on Saturday saw a fox getting away with one. To make confldential the communi- cations between physicians and their patients, a state committee has been appointed to bring the matter before the legislature. Members of the A. O. H. in towns about the state are making plans for the observance of the annmiversary of Allen,, Larkin, and O’Brien, the Man- chester martyrg. John A. Smith of Mbohegan favors The Bulletin with a bunch o clover blossoms picked from the fleld on Monday evening. This is pretty good for the nearness of November. Mrs. Bertha M. Lounsbury, president of the W, R. C. in Connecticut, who has been in California as a delegate to the national convention, has return- ed to her home in Branford. The Danbury News devotes con- siderable space to a sermon on Tuber- culesis, delivered Sunday by the pas- tor of the Universalist church, Rev. Elliott D, Barber, a native of Norwich. Mrs. Minnie E. (Albee) Blanchard, 42 years, died Monday at her home in Worcester, Mass. She was born in_ Voluntown, the daughter of glenry C. and Jeanette C. (Baker) Al- ee. The state agricultural society hopes to begin the institute season early this year and is furnishing speakers on dairying, fruit raising, pouitry, agri- culture in general and miscellaneous subjects. In the Connecticut Churchman Bish- op Chauncey B. Brewster announces that no attempt will be made to elect a bishop suffragan for. the Connecti- cut diocese until the annual conven- tion next June. In the loan exhibition of paintings om the collection of Mr. and Mrs. Burton Mansfield at New Haven this week for the visiting nurses' fund, a favorite is Childe Hassan’s “Church at | Old Lyme: Spring.” i Guests at a party given by Miss Helen Goodman of Groton included Miss Esther Levinson, Miss Fannie Levinson, Miss Julia Feinstein, Miss Fannie Abrams, Harry Levine and Harry Rudosky of Nerwich. Hallowe'en used to be regarded as the sabbath of the Evil one and from | this old superstition ariges the custom of jack-o’-lanterns, orfginally repre- sentations of Satan with horns, which are left off the lanterns now. The new missionary in charge of the four Episcopal stations of Black Hall, Niantic, South Lyme and Millstone is Rev. Ezra F. Ferris, Jr. He comes from Haledon, N. J., where he has been rector of St. Mary’s church. Of local interest is the announce- ment that Mrs. Katherine B. Knight, | for men and measures, PERSONAL Miss Sarah Quinn is seriously ill at her home, No. 48 Roath street. Mrs. Timothy Lynch and children of Stonington are visiting in Norwich. Mrs. George Comstock of Quaker lane is visiting relatives in Montville Center. John Rigas of the West Side left Tuesday evening to join the Greek army in Europe. John R. Gray and family of New London are in Preston, spending a vacation with Mr. Gray’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. John M. Gray. G. Roland Burdick, employed as in- spector on the dredging work at Nor- wich, has returned, after spending Sunday at his home on Tilley street, New London. Miss Lily Gallup of Hartford, who has been the guest for two weeks of Miss Mary H. Deane in Old Mystic, went from there to visit her sister, Mrs. Russel Gallup of Ledyard. Mrs. J. F. Cobb goes to Hartford today to attend a meeting of the na- tional executive board of the Univer- sailst Women’s Missionary association in the Church of the Redeemer. Miss Ella G. Rogers, former post- mistress at Quaker Hill, who was forced a year ago to give up work on account of ill health, will leave tI first of November for the south. Mr. and Mrs. E. B. Fisher of At- lanta, Ga., formerly of Norwich, an- nounce the engagement of their daugh- ter Alice to George C. SmitR of At- lanta; The wedding is to take place in December. Miss Fisher is niece of Mrs. Frank H. Lester and grand- daughter of Mrs. Sarah E. Rogers of this city. CHARGED WITH SELLING DISEASED MEAT New London Butcher Wus ' Before Common Pleas Court. The trial of Ike Merran, the New London butcher, charged with keeping diseased meat with intent to sell, was before the criminal court of common pleas here Tuesday. The trial began about 11 a. m. The jury to try Merran was selected and the rémaining jurors were then excused subject to the call of the civil court. Judge Charles B. Waller is presiding at the trial. Prosecuting Attorney Charles B. Whittlesey is assisted in prosecuting by Prosecuting Attorney Daniel M. Cronin of the police court, where Merran was tried originally and sentenced to six months in jail, from which decision he appealed to the court of common pleas. Arguments in the case were concluded when court adjourned. FALSE REPORT OF SHOOTING OF JOHNSON. Meriden People Set Off Torpedoes and Fired Cannens. The zealousness of some of the new party followers in Meriden causec them to explode torpedoes and fire cannons in honor of the governor's arrival, with the result that a report spread around the state that an at- fempt had been made to assassinate him. A squad of policemen was dele- galed to guard aim in New London last night, but Governor Johnson did not hear the rumors unmtil after his meetings were closed. FAVOR WILSON. Two Ministers Address Gathering of Colored Voters—Soloist Declares Her Allegiance to Republican Party. The audience of about 100, mostly colored people, and including a num- ber of women, gathered in the town hall Tuesday evening, was disappoint- ed in®its expectations somewhat, as the principal speaker engaged for the evening, R. B. Ransom of New York, failed to arrive. Charles Hall presided at the meeting, and in the absence of Mr. Ransom, addresses “wére given by Rev. A. W. Adams and Rev. Wal- ter Gay of Providence, a former pas- tor of Grace Memorial Baptist church of this city. The meeting was a po- litical gathering and the speakers were distinctly democratic, dealing with' the leaders of the republican and progres- sive parties in no uncertain, if per- haps, somewhat exaggerated terms. ! Rev. Mr. Adams stated that under the present unsettled conditions, there was but one man of the hour, one man | { who embodied his ideals for president, Gov. Wondrow Wilson. Rev. Mr. Gay stated that the colored i people were awakening and would no | longer vote in a solid phalanx with a single party, but would hereafter vote They will no longer, he said, speak of the solid south, they will no longer consider the negro vote of the south a quantity to be delivered on election day. When the honest colored -delegates at the Chicago convention refused to be bought and Colonel Roosevelt found himself defeated he tried to split the | party and laid the blame for his fail- ure to receive the nomination to the dishonesty of the colored vote. Could | 'I vote for Roosevelt after he threw the colored delegates out of the hall of the progressive convention? No negro with race pride can vote for him. Roosevelt is the Napoleon of ! today and a materialist who cares not widow of Dr. George H. Knight, has ! been selected to succeed her husband ' as superintendent of the Connecticut school for imMbeciles at Lakeville. In the shore towns of the county, the weather has favored the fishermen, there having been few days this fall unfit to fish. Just now the boats are York markets and getting good pr'i Several members of Faith Trumbull chapter will attend the state D. A: R. meeting at Waterbury November 8, when there will be an historical address by Rev. Samuel Hart, D.D., dean of Berkeley divinity school, Mid- dletown. It is noted by Waterbury papers that the marriage of Michael Dorcey | Mary Dodd Monday morning | and Mis; at the first ed Heart church was the { marriage ceremony performed by %r . Hugh Treanor since returning to Vaterbury. The United States cable boat Cyrus W. Field, which has been engaged in > W of relaying the cable be- Fishers island Groton shore, completed t task, and left has for Portland, where she has other work to attend to. A Wallingford correspondent notes that the representative from Connec- Thayer of the ticut, Rev. William Baptist church nd the tw pringfield, Mas iptist church finances for the New ngland states. at There is complaint from the depart- ment $-f publi rities in Waterbury of the' increasing cost and number of to be tr etc | more awaiting exami | number of patigats in institutions be- ing 125, Two Policemen Whase sole occupa- tlon was killing files on the Bell in Philadelpt 0os reform \ At present | erred either | n and three | tion, the total for God or man as long as his own is- sues are at stake. If I vote for Taft I vote for a Unitarian who does not believe that the blood of Christ will cleanse man's sins. Can a minister of the gospel vote for such a man? I shall vote for Mr. Wilson because he is a Christian preacher and secondly is a Presbyter- ian preacher. The negro will find his political redemption with the démo- cratic party. Solos were rendered by Mrs, Mary Hutchingon, who declared that she wished it understood that she was re- publican®in her ideals and always would be. Suit Over Water Rights. The controversy between the Un- casville Manufacturing company and the C. M. Robertson company over the_ ts at Wheeler's "pond in le was the basis of a suit heard in the superior court at New London by Judge William S. Case. ille company was plain- g that the Robertson com- pany b permanently enjoined from shutting off the water supply and ask- ing for damages. To Join Greek Army. Theodore Evergetes, Alexander Rie- gos and cohn Antonopolos left Tues- day evening by the boat train for New York, intending to join the Greeks whe ar oing back to their native country rmy. These three men ve been residents here for about five Arc Lights Were Out. Because of engine trouble at the elec- tric light plant, the arc lights were cut off for about 15 minutes around 7 | o’clock Tuesday evening. This light- ened the load so that the commercial lights were not affected. No Noise Ones, However, Though Mr. Edison has declared for the Bull Moose, we have no doubt that he c invent better horns than th displaved by that animal.—At- ion litional local ond Page Two.) | WILSON'S EVASIVE ATTITUDE Governor Johnsv.. Devoted Much of His Time in Speech at Big Rally Here to Attack On Democratic Candidate’s Position on the Trusts and the Tariff—Davis Theater Filled to Hear Progressive From California—Edward M. Rozelle of Hartford Also Spoke. The progressives brought their vice | presidential candidate, Governor Hi- ram Johnson of California, here Tues- | day night for their rally at the Davis theater, and filled the house to the roof | with the crowd that was on hand to hear the running mate of Theodore Roosevelt on the national ticket. | Governor Johnson made Norwich his | last stopping place in a tour of New England, and his voice showed the ef- fects of his continuous speaking tour, | but, even though husky, was distinctly heard in his remarkable ‘and eloquent | presentation of the claims of his par- | ty. Sentence after sentence, with nev- er a pause or moment's hesitation to choose a word, flowed from his lips, and his speech was generally looked upon as one of the greatest political addresses ever heard in the city. Westerly Delegation Arrived. The meeting at the theater began at a little after 8.45 o'clock, having been | delayed a little from the anmounced hour of 8.30 by waiting for a delega- tlon of forty that came here from Westerly on a special trolley car. They filed into the theater with a Roogevelt flag at their head. Chairman Edson F. Gallaudet then opened the meeing, the theater at that time being full, with the exception of gsome of the boxes. Admission was by ticket, with spe- cial tickets for the stage, and later the doors were thrown open for all who wished o come in and stand up. Tubbs’ band played at the Wauregan House corner before the rally, and the theater orchestra filled in the time there while the crowd was waiting for the meeting to begin. Edward M. Rozelle Speaks. At the laboringsman's candidate, Ed- ward M. Rozelle of Hartford, the pro- gressive candidate for secretary of state was introduced by Chalrman Gallaudet as the first speaker. Mr. Rozelle said he was in the strug- gle for better conditions and referred to his apprenticeship in three differ- ent towns and seven different chops. He is a cigarmaker, and proved an earnest speaker. He raised a burst of applause when he declared that the mantlé of Abraham Lincoln is to fall upon Theodore Roosevelt, who is to catry with him into the White House that great fighter from the Pacific coast, Hiram Johnson. Mr. Rozelle went on to speak of thousands of small girls working in Detroit in cigar fac- tories and hidden away when the in- spectors came around. He asked if society, under these conditions, had not a duty to do to protect the future motherhood of the nation. His party, he said, proposed to take every child ott of the factories and preserve the greatest asset society has, the children of America. A Minimum Wage. The speaker took up the minimum wage question and said that the pro- gressives proposed to establish a liv- 1 wage as a minimum, and if it takes $8 or $9 a week for a girl or woman left to support herself that was to be the minimum wage. He spoke against night work for women in.factories or industries and discuss- ed other planks in the platform, in- cluding one day’'s rest in seven, a pro- tective tariff whose operation ‘should be shown in the pay envelopes of the workers. On the tariff, he instanced the Am- erican Woolen company and conditions in Lawrence, as a kind of industry that is not entitled to protection until it will put intp the envelope of the worker the difference to which the worker is honestly entitled under the advantage given by the protective tar- iff regulations. Mr. Roszelle said he had been a worker before the legislature fon bet- ter conditions in his trade, but he had been defeatéd, and had been given promises enough, which had not been fulfilled, and he now proposed to join the progressives and lead with him workingmen from both the old par- ties. The speaker rapped Senator Bryan F. Mahan, the democraticycandidate for congress from this district, for his statement that people took no inter- est in party platforms or pledges, and then touched upon the suffrage plank in the progressives’ platform. He ad- vocated this for the reason that wo- men should be given the chance to protect their children from the evils that surround them. ; Governor Johnson Arrives. For a minute Mr. Roszelle was in- terrupted at this point while Governor Johnson of California arrived, and the band played Hail to the Chief as the governor came out on to the platform and the audience rose to greet him. Governor Johnson had come from New Lendon by automobile. Mr. Roszelle closed his remarks in a moment and gave way to Chair- man Gallaudet, who introduced John 'W. Alsop, who in turn made the brief- est sort of introduction for Governor Johnson, , presenting his as the fight- ing governor of a free state. Governor Johnson was given a greet- ing that lasted for a minute, with cheers and applause, and waving of bandanas from the stage. Governor Johnson assured his hear- ers that he came to New England with considerable trepidation, but he had found the people all the same; he had been kindly greeted and he predicted that Connecticut was going to do as a \\ Voting a split ticket. democratie VOTING ON THE TRIUMPH VOTING MACHINE. REPUBLIGAN RALLY IN TOWN HALL, Wednosday Evening, October 30, At 8 o'clock Address by ' SENATOR 1 FIARK 5. BRANDEGEE AND - Hon, GUSTAF CARLSON, Condidle for Soretary oy H. H. GALLUP will give a few minutes’ talk. number of other states in the Union were to do in the coming election. He told of conditions in California, where the state was under the control of a railroad and remarked with a sar- casm that brought laughter from his hearers that he supposed they hardly understood what that meant. In a calm, dispassionate way, Gov- ernor Johnson reasoned with his audi- ence to cast their allegiance with a party untrammeled by tradition, and usked if the people had the nerve to strike the blow. He told how every man and woman in California was ah individual political uriit. He predicted that Oscar Strauss was to be the next governor of New York, and that was to be the opportunity of the progres- sives of New York to strike a blow there to dethrone Barnes of Albany and Murphy of Tammany Hall, who had long saved them the trouble of ex- ercising their duties as citizens. Basic Idea of Progressives. The basic idea, first, of the progres- sives is that the people have a right to govern themselves just as they see fit, and that the first thing to be consid- ered is the men, women and children of the country. The [frem old party, he claimed, had ceased to register the wili of the majority of the party, and those in charge at the Chicago con- vention persisted in their idea untll they nominated a minority candldate 4and they assassinated the basic ided of the party of majority rule. So came into existence the progressive party. Its first idea is to eliminate that invisible government that has s, long heen an influence in the nation and to restore to the people the right of governing themselves just as the choose. Governor Johnson went on to speak of varfous planks and predicted that the only one to be considered as an opponent to the progressives was the democrdtic candidate. The democrats present two economic questions, the trusts and the tariff. One man, said the speaker, once stood as the in- superable barrier between the rapacity which would have exploited the nation. This man created the very sentiment which has made possible the curbing of the trusts, and this man was Theo- dore Roosevelt. The ndme of Roosevelt was the sig- nal for a wave of applause and the waving of bandanas from the stage. On the Trusts. One state in all this union, contin- ued the governor, has spawned all the iniquitous trusts against which our democratic orators inveigh, and that is the state of New Jersey. By the New Jersey state constitution the speaker charged that power had been given to dissolve these trusts and solve the trust situation for the na- tion. Within the past 22 months this power has been in the hands of the governor of New Jersey, but he has failed to make 2 move. By what right then is he to criticise the attitude of Theodore Roosevelt on the trust situation? Governor Johnson next took up the democratic attitude on the tariff,whicl he said was a particularly hard propo- sition to handle because of the hetero- genous character of the elements that made up the democratic party. Campaign of Negation. fve have the remarkable pheénom- enon of a candidate who have never made a definite statement as to. where he stands or what he intends to do. We believe that he can’'t get by next Tuesday with this campaign of nega- tion. . No man knows today just what his particular attitude is and we have no statement from him to show where TUBBS' BAND WILL FURNISH MUSIC | " land as nations which had showell way in these to the laggard Efl& States. Defends the Big Stick. He extolled the unselfish gn, c rst of eloquence. It that belo; to 'the arouse the and hi izenship, a movems than political, .fl fy the splendid new whenever #t dawn of a T it of A m’: hiy umy final words, and many nr:d to .nhlke his hand ’to “c t of the theater an Diie ‘which atiing to. tale poke for L) d the rally was over SALE AT GERMAN CHURCH. Young People’s Seciety Had Pt rona mmy____w A two days apron and novelties sale, Union Square Meetin Attorney General Frank R. Hitch- coek of Nebraska, who spoke at the recent republican rally here, has secured by the hl'epu fean ’wwn ea’lz- ittes to come here again for an o :=r meeting at noon op Saturday «‘: Union squére. Not Worth Thirty Cents New. Uncle Joe Cannon's old aute ?l been sold fn Washington for aoo u: there was a timeé when Joe had machine—Los Angeles Times. he will stand. Governor Johnson con- sidered that there were only two can- didates to be thought of in this fight— Roosevelt and Wilson. In contrast, Governor Johnson said, was the positive and definite state- ments of the progressives on every subject in the platform. He enlarged upon the plarks touching upon the conserving of the interests of the men and the women and the chfl!ldren oflghe nation. It will be the effort to give equal opportunities to every child and | conducted b ,}h’ Young P P""- to every man and woman with justice | Cety, open ~""“‘” X o to all ‘applause) and the effort to al- | Gérman L"‘d whe“ d'l"n" B P 4 leviate and palliate in seme degree the | street, an t' :lmul 2 s m 3 great problem of. poverty, through | ¢kes Ofle“‘; 0;&“ e é’“&e z' government oversight and aid. In that | ronage. The ednl‘ Mhnuun line the party i8 to insist upon mini- | prettily decorated in ?tnn - mum wage schedule, in\"elslligatlon and 5;1‘;‘;;":"“";’“’":;: n "!-“‘c regulation of health conditions among | » J P workers. The speaker gave the figure | Emma Zahn, Antuh;(me M- can. that 59 per cent. of the women of this | dy, Misses Ida Ja&{ owsky an f country were engaged in gainful pur- | Dearing; towels, Misses u:: . suits ind he declared for a living wage | kutt, Ida Rossell, Frieda Kra: for this labor unless the men vished | Thiel; ice tream and cdke. Hagry to be counted a party to the low wage | derbrand, Willlam 1z, John - schedule for women. The progressives sky; mystery boxes, Hans Mk - are absolutely opposed to the demo- {liam Stelzner, Willlam Karkutt, albid crats on this point. Indications point to most succes Do Away With Child Labor. ot The party insists upon the absolute prohibition of child labor, the coun- try is too rich and too powerful to call for the sacrifice of the children. Herc again the progressives are diametrical. ly opposed to the democrats,who hedge themselves about with the Chinese wall of state’s rights and cannot afford an remedial legislation in this regard. There is insistence also by the pro- gressives upon an eight hour day for women and an eight hour day for men, Here again the democrats are hampet - ed by the doctrine of state rights, Gov- ernor Johnson discussed further planks of the platform, including working- men’s compensation and old age pen- sions, and adducing Germany and Eng- Y naming this com- pany as Executor of your estate under your will, you are enabled to feel certain that your estate will be ecarefully and economically ag- ministered in exact ac- cordance with your wishes. You imcur mo obligation by egrmh us on this important subject. This imstitu. tion serves in all capac- + ities of trust. THE THAMES LOAN & TRUS NOPWICH THE BANK OF | R, FRIENDLY HELPFULNESS 0 party lever pulled to vote for a ma- [/ ority of the names on this tigket, with two indicators turned down for < YT iwn spublican candidates and the corresponding indicators in the dem- ON SAVIN crat ne turned up. (Uther diagrams ou Pages I and &)

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