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THE FARMER: ..OCTOBER 22, 1913 F1 Store Honrs 8:30 "to. 6 Dally Except Saturday f I Good News From Our Busy Glove Shop. Y til JJUH,C3 Hi Ml ,.1IIV 1 ''MiAMiM St it: The war has not held up the steady out put "of the great Trefousse Glove establish ment in France. , Our regular supply has reached us, the skins are' as fine as ever, and the styles are as Parisienne as a "woman can . wish. '"''V"." 51 Valance, , is one of ihe best-known Trefousse W gloves. The "new styles come in tans of course, in white with black and black with white as well as many. new. shades to match Fall suits and' gowns. Some have two-toned embroidered back, others dark stitching. $2.00. ... ! Dorothy isanother : 'favorite Trefousse clove "Soft finfe quality in gray, tan, white, black, white with blacky black with white, with new wide or nar row embroidery on backs. ' $1.50. , New mocha" gloves with spear backs, and PK. seams, in orie-clasp style, $1.15. . , New "capskin' walking gloves at $1.00 and $1.50, the kind that wash perfectly. " - s . ' . ' j- Dainty new neckwear invites - admiration. ' Lotus collar is oae style. organdie petals with-pL-cot edgex-and chiffon taffeta bow, $1.00. V. .; " New Jabots of carming cascade net wrth Frech black-and-white bow, $1 and more. . Back again side frills of fluted eyelet em-i broidery, very' effective, 50c and more. a Neckwear Shop, .main floor. , r t INCORPORATED ' 6) OUTFITTERS TO MEM WOMEN 3L CHILDREN BRIDGEPORT, CONN. i , FIRE HEADQUARTERS SOON WILL EE IN JOHN ST. HOUSE Assistant Chief Beardslee to Take Temporary Place in Middle Street. For -nearly 20 years, No. 5 engine house in,' Middle., streets has been the headquarters of the chief of the fire department but according to a votd of the fire commissioners last night, the chief's headquarter will be trans ferred to No. 1 house in John street until repairs and changes can be made in the No. 5 house. In the meantime the Middle street quarters will be oc cuoied by Assistant Chief George F. Beardslee. ' . , ' During the time Assistant Chief Beardslee is- at the Middle street sta tion the quarters he formerly occu pied at No. 3 house in Norman street will be renovated and later he will De transferred there in'order that he may take personal charge of all fires in the West End until the arrival of Chief Johnson, It was decided last night to pur chase sectional steam colls to replace the old radiators in. use in No. 4 en gine house. . " It was also decided to purchase" grease guns for each en gine house. The method of shooting greast, through these gans is consid ered a more economical method of ap plying lubricants than, the custom now I followed.- ' . " Joseph Shadwald will have to bring suit against the city to secure the $48.50 damages which he claims for the collision of his jitney bus with the auto service truck of the depart ment at Fairfield and West avenues oh October 16. .. -Members of the fire department claim ' that Shadwald's jitney came from behind a stationary trolley car and ran into the service truck. - " ' OPPOSES BRITISH OF ISLE OF GRETE TO 6REEGE IS -'M'.f ' f. : - :;- ' i' London." Oct. 22. Great Britain's ' i reported' " offer to cede the island of 5 Cyprus to Greece to induce the latter, f country to Join the 'entente alliesis s upposed by the Morning Post, which ' dittoria.lly characterizes the offer as ? bad diplomacy. ' .' " N 'i i "Cypiras is a. very nice island with fertile soil, a peaceful population, a i satisfactory revenue and a flourishing trade," says the Post. "Now we pro ; pose to give it away in order to bribe Greece to fulfill her plan in the obli j Rations- We do ,not like the tran 5 saction.! It is a bad precedent and might well encourage other countries to ask a prize for their neutrality or support. When the British empire is reduced to selling part-of . itself for V military, support of . Greeoe, ' things t might be considered as in. a ' bad way. i "Our strength in the Balkans seems f to have been in nerveless, incsmpe jtent hands. Meanwhile, Serbia strug . S gles desperately against great odds and the chances of saving' her grow more remote. . The desperate position Hn the Balkans is not the- result of mere mistakes but of inability to itand by our conditions or to stand Hup to our . enemies. There is a field there for courageous strategy and able diplomacy, but if strategy takes the jf orm ' of driblets and diplomacy the ,hape of gifts, our natural advantages land superior resources will ' not suf -Mce." ,.v - , PROPOSED GIFT TO GREECE PLEASES PARIS J ?: Paris,. Oct. '22. The Paris newsna- Its welcome Great Britain's reported j-oJTer to cede Cyprus to Greece, as a ign that the -entente diplomacy has Centered the domain of reality. Some 4of the papers express the opinion that the proposal to make gifts of Epirus, Smyrna, sjid other territory is like iUrpoing of the bear's skin before the lanlmal is killed, but adds that Cyprus '.1elongs to England and is a gift worth having, , being- the - finest island in the archipelago. ? The Athens correspondent of the "Matin sends the following; under date of Wednesday: ' ' Z "The only way of inducing Greece fto take military action is to send jtreops to Saloniki in sufficient num Jbere. '" Ministers Elliot and Demidoff (respectively British and R-usaian mlntsters to- Greeee) have called on jPremler Zalmis, but no .collective ac tion by the allied ministers is prob able at present for it would have lit tle chance of success. The Bumanlu- military attache here is daily in" close relation with his German; colleague and the German minister." , VOTERS WHO THOUGHT THEY WERE OFF ARE ON DISTRICT LISTS Several . Democratic voters., who complained to The Farmer thaK their names had been left off the voting lists have subsequently, found, that they were in error. Their names ap pear, as they always have. " The mis take was made by the voters them selves who looked ! Over the list of those' "to be made" voters which al ways appears On the initial lists. Their names ;had ibeen properly registered in the lists 5 of 'the old voters which precedes the lists of ' those to be made. The voters who complained did not look for their names in the f proper column, henee their error and com plaint. , . "' THREE-FOLD PURPOSE IN SERBIAN INVASION Paris, Oct." 22 rThe Petit Jourhal today pftblishes an interview with Dr. M. Ji. t Vesnitch, Serbian minister to France, in which the minister is quot ed as saying that Emperor William desires to effect three things byl an attack on Serbia. These things are: First, a junction with Turkey in or der to recruit . soldiers ' from Asia Minor; next, to impress strongly the imagination of the Mussulman and lastly, to restore the German army's prestige, lowered by the failure on the. eastern and western war fronts. ONE DEAD, SEVERAL HURT IN AUTOMOBILE CRASH New London, Oct. 22 J. Thomas Hudson, who was injured in the auto mobile accident in Waterford, Thurs day night, in. which George P. Fen- ner was killed, died at 11 o'clock-this morning at the Memorial Hospital. Mrs. Samuel Parks is in a very critical condition, suffering from a fractured skull. George Merritt, the only occu pant ' of the Fenner car to escape without serious injury, says that Mr. Fenner was . trying to pass a car in front of him whenVthe machine ahead pulled into the road ahead of him. The Fenner car struck the rear wheels of the automobile in front and was hurled around, striking the dagon driven by Stacy Edwards of Water ford and overturning, -throwing the occupants out. SIR ANDREW NOBLE DEAD. London, Oct. 22 The death is an nounced of Sir Andrew Noble.- He was an authority on artillery and ex plosives. For many years Sir An drew, who was born in Scotland in 1881. served on experimental and ad- f mlnistrative committees in connection with the vnvT& of Woolwich Arsenal. He was authgr of several works on these- subjects. . China Will Ship Beef For Soldiers : in the Philippines Peking, Oct. 22 China will prob ably supply the American troops in the Philippines with fresh beef after this year. Major Hugh Gallegher" of the United States army and several veterinarians recently made visits to different- parts of China for the pur pose of inspecting beef animals and determining whether Chinese - beef is suitable for - the American army, which is very particular about the quality of meat supplied to its men. Contractors , in China, have .signi fied their willingness ; to compete for the armiy contract in' the Philippines. As the7 Australians, who hav.e been supplying fresh, beef to the United States troops, will not be able to com pete next year for the contract be cause of the embargo Great Britain has placed bn the exportation of beef. It is likely China will land the beef contract in Manila-- ' ' ( Chinese beef cattle are not as large as the cattle which have been sup plied from Australia. The Chinese animals' dress only about 450 pounds each, but are said to be a fair grade Of grass-fed ; beef; ; .- -Manchuria and Shantung Province are the chief cat tle raising sections of China. Russia is now drawing large quantities of beef for its army from both of these sections.' Beef cattle are shipped on hoof from Tslng-tao in Shantung Province to Vladivostok. Before the war there was a ' small packing con cern in Tsing-tao, but it is not oper ating now. . v Facilities for slaughtering- are also limited in the Manchurlan cities near :the grazing lands. The American army prefers to have its beef killed before it reaches the islands'," because of the' difficulties of shipping live ani mals into the tropics and the quaran-? tine troublesc liable to arise 3nt of such shipments. However, it may be necessary for the Americans to change their specifications in prder to obtain the required meat. , Within recent years , there have been several agitations in China for an embargo upon, the exportation of beef animals. The complaint ! has fre quently been made in various prov inces that meat " expprtations., raised the price of cattle so high, that it was impossible for poor farmers to buy the cattle required by them' to plow and cultivate their fields. It has been urged that it is quite necessary to put an embargo upon the exportation of cattle as it was upon the exportation of rice, but the Central government has not taken any definite step in the matter. '.. .. ; . AUTOMOBILE COMPETITION. , Railroads that do a heavy tourist business have been complaining about their losses through automobile com petition. With a good . sized family, the saving by using a motor can tre very considerable. '. It is one of the economies which people plan in ad vance to offset the cost of the car. But as a matter Of fact there may not be much saving here. The average motor party probably spends as much in hotel bills and garage fees as it saves., But they think they are sav ing the price pf the railroad passage, which amounts to the same thing. The effect is seen in the passenger earn ings of any line doing a tourist busi ness. In the commuter towns around the large cities, the motor partly takes the place of the train.. In the plainer communities, the working people still scramble for,, the train"for the city , as they did of yore. But in wealthier neighborhoods the sociable sight of the whole masculine element rushing ten masse for trains is no more. The swift moving motor gives the business man five miutes longer over his egg and coffee. The railroads for the time being will be hadd. put -to it to make econo mies to counterbalance this loss. Per- haps they could cut off some nearly empty sleeping and parlor cars. Many of .thesd are hauled over long dis tances with three or four people in solitary grandeur. These cars are heavy and it-:osts good . money to haul them. .. 7 The railroads will always continue to be the great democratic highway for thv mass of the people. Long tours in a motor car have zest for a time. ' But in time it ceases to be a novelty. The train covers the dis tance in the least time and the great est certainty. It costs more and more money to build a railroad, so that an existing right of way gets more and more valuable. The country is grow ing, and there will be many freight shipments additional for every motor party that is lost- Tim Easiest "We-y' Is The W4A What We Have FOR THE LADIES SUITS A magnificent display of far- trim 4 models in fall range of prices, 12.98, 17.98, 22.98, 27.88 COATS . All the new models in plmsh and cor" daroy mnd Ktixtmres, also far-trimmed, 7.98, 9.98, 14.98, Ik DRESSES Plaid and plain silk dresses also silk and serge combinations. Every 1 dollar you spend ,nrm brings yon added satis faction. Your good will is more to as than momentary profit We desire your Friend ship. A continuance of your latronage at a smaller profit is more to us than larger profits and con stantly changing customers. e have thousands of cus tomers that have stack to us for nearly the 22 years of our business career and we are proud of such m record. if I 4.98 to 19.50 JwJ ? YAn T W TRW &sS X 6.98 wrr What We Have FOR THE MEN SUITS range of emits are mnbeat- style, cat and price. .50, 17.50, 22.50 OVERCOATS Doa't Neglect TEE CHILDREN Suits all wool winter suits in neat patterns. 2.98,4.98, Ken the Uis want sni weii pntcetca 4.08 and 7.98 ' Girls' Coats Danif stfits tor tks b b stxts I to 14 4.98, 6.98, 9.98 and BALM ACAANS Heatty all wool.Jalr.es in Ae season's latest styles, ' 50, 19.5), 24.50 HATS I, and older men in all the s-ason's latest shapes and shades. 2.00 and 3.00 HERE DWELLS ECONOMY AND LIBERAL CREDIT 1 J f THE CREDIT EOUSL v oYujjam ,Wkcc C R EDIT EsuALt S kCMH 1 TBMSUtS 1 of SatB J Rei Cos- iincR w . Every-wkere. III) 7 3IAJN STREETT OJfE FX,1GHT I T every steps you money C:i jO. II. FTJEPrCH, Mgi. Edward Lonergan Our Suits Stand right out from the crowd! The f values are extraordinary. These su.its are made for the man who in sists upon having a good looking, perfect fitting, stylish suit at a moderate price made for men who appreciate a good, me dium priced suit. x Come in and let us surprise you with the amount of suit goodness $18 brings. Other suits more moderate in price at $10, $12 and' $15. , - . Fall "fixings" of every good kind. r Gloves, Neckwear, Sweaters, Under wear, Sirts. . SNAl'PY TOGS AND TOGGERY 1127-29 MAIN ST. Stratfield Hotel Bldg. OTaTo ot. ATTRACTIVE INING ROOM FURNITURE , D i Summary OF THE WarNews Greece is likely to reply to the recent representations of the en- tente alliesihat she will abide by , her policy of armed neutrality, according to information that has reached Rome. Suggestions in the London Press that, the British fleet in the Mediterranean can be used to enforce the representa tions made are again heard. Despite the odds' against' them Serbians are not discouraged, according to British and French officers who have been at the Serbian front in the north, a Sa loniki despatch states. ' Serbians, on the same authority, held the Austro-German forces to an ad vance of but eight miles in nine days, in the Ralia sector, v Sinking by the Germans of three British steamers, the City of Berlin, the Auk and the Iris, is announced in London. The cir cumstances of the sinking are not explained. DEMONSTRATION TO URGE OUR NATIONAL, DEFENSE Boston, Oct. 22 An all day demon stration in furtherance of its demands for . increased national defenses was arranged for today by the Massachu setts branoh of the "National Security League. A demonstration camp on Boston Common was the daytime fea ture. Detachments from several companies, of the state- militia came here to participate in the Maneuvers, including the preparing of a camp, serving mess, company drill, signall ing, machine practice and ambulance work. Governor Walsh has promised to preside at an evening mass meeting a which the announced speakers in clude TJ. S. Senator John W. Weeks, President A. Lawrence Lowell, of Harvard "University and President Richard C, MaeLaunn, of the Massa chusetts Institute of Technology. BOTHA'S FOLLOWERS TO HAVE MAJORITY Cape Town. Union of South Africa, Oct. 22 The followers of the premier, General . Botha, are assured of a safe majority in the House of Assembly of the Union of South Africa. The Nationalists, who opposed the military operations against German Southwest Africa and are attempting to defeat the plan to dispatch a con tingent of the Union forces 'to Europe, thus far have obtained only 21 seats. mostly iq the Free State. -' THE YOUNG MEN AND THEIR CLOTHES GREEKS CONCENTRATE 50,000 AT SALONIKL Naples, Oct. 22. Passengers arriv ing on -the steamer Montenegro from Saloniki state that , the departure of troops of the entente allies for Strum- nitsa has been suspended. The land ing of Anglo-French forces is said to continue. f According to the passengers the concentration of Greek troops is be ing carried out acUyely at Saloniki, whorA fin nftO rirek nnldiem fljreadv Fanner Wan. Ada. One Cent st WotnS. have been landed. In looking'' over a trade report the other day, the statement as noticed that the "young men's clpthing ouses were selling certain styles. This prompted the question, Is there a distinctively young man's style of dress? Across the' line of sex no such line appears. Elderly women fre quently dress as if they were "trying to call attention to fresh beauty. And young women who could afford to at tract scrutiny rrequently dress very simply. In other orders of existence, it is quite common for the male to be decked out in fine , plumage. The male bird is apt to wear brilliant feathers, while the female may be dull grey or brown. The human male seems to have some longings for this display, and to part from it, at least during youth, with some regret. Up to. the. past century, men's dress clothes we're of the most gorgeous rainbow hues. In some branches of sport like, hunting and golf, red and green are still more or less popular. The dominant feeling among ma ture men favors inconspicuousness ox, clothes. This holds down formal dress to plain and severe black. In business He srthng onedks and plaids are condemned as "loud" and effusive. There are many young men, however, who apparently dislike to be held down by these rulings. Seeming ly they would like to array them selves in purple and fine linen, to be physically resplendent to the other sex. - . And so it comes about that men's styles originate many novelties every year. They are not very pronounced as compared with women's fashions. But men's dress is no nearly alike that any variation is noticeable. The clothing maker who would sell to youth must stock up on these changes. Young men dislike to fol low too much the beaten path. They cherish their own individuality, and seem to prefer something that em phasizes it, and gives them some; mark of distinction from their fellows. It seems to be the first item of the day's newspaper work ait Washington every morning to call up Margaret Wilson and ask her if she is engaged yet. . ! ji m, ' EXACTLY LIKE CUT 4 Piece Colonial Suit in fine genuine Mahogany Buffet 46 in., Extension Table 46 in., China Closef and Side Table. This is an exceptionally fine suit and wonderful value at our price , ..... S132.00 5 Chairs and Arm Chair to "match above . . V : ' 9 Piece Fumed Oak Set; Buffet, China Closet, Extension Table and, 6 Chairs, per fectly matched at . .. . l -: . . . - S52.00 Good value at S65.00 Our Dining Room furniture, floor shows an unusually fine variety of suits and separate pieces in all the approved period styles and woods, in b6th medium and high grade We specialize in furnishing homes which show marked character in each room blending all carefully so your liome will show individuality- , 7 floors for furniture. . t . . . 1 floor for Rugs, Linoleum, Lace Cur tains and Upholstery. v AN AID TO HEALTH PURE WATER HIGHLAND SPRING WATER A bealtbJui. invigorating drink which Is absolutely im contaminated My Impurities of any irlud and has passed the most rigid tests Bottled Daily Delivered Daily Highland Spring Water Co. 645 'Phone 987 WARREN STREET WANT ADVERTISEMENTS ONE CENT A W02B 54 JI II