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W"TM- fat w-f, "T v-u.r"'r " - ' AQE TOUR THE MARION DAILY MIRROR. MONDAY SEPTEMBER 16, 1907. r I: THE DAILY MIRROR -, ,; r.KBURGESS ...Business Manner ki.C. HOLLAND Editor IP.tM. AItMSTRONa..City Editor ADVERTISING RATES PUB LISHED ON APPLICATION. TUli paprrrncMvostlie United lre. Tele graphic NewsSerVle nbdilftrkct lUporti. BATES OF SUBSCRIPTION. Binplo Copy nam. 2o OFo'p Week by Carrier ac-r. .10o BySMnil, per Year $4.00 Bomi-Weckly Mirror, per yoar $1.00 9 Both Phones ...:.: WEATHKlt Partly cloudy cr,fi possibly local showers No.. wcath tonight orVfucsday. -n 1 1 . ti ., DBMOORATIO COUNTY TICKET. 2 ,u Tor Representative I WILLIAM T. SMITH. s y. DEMOORATIO CITY TICKET. i .1 Tor Mayor LOUIS SOHERrF. fc For Solicitor" L .5WILLIAM P. MOLONEY. U For Auditor U,.' HARRY S. ELLIOTT. Z For Treasurer & CLAUDE D. WALTERS. , For President of Council MSAMUEL B. LIPPINOOTT. For Council at Largo ARTHUR W. BRYANT . r BENJAMIN F. WAPLES HENRY A. SOHULER. or Board of Public Service J. O. ANTHONY. MICHAEL CLARY THOMAS J. MEAD. iij. For Board of Education FRED E. QUTHERY J. WILBUR JACOBY. ,- For Ward Councilman First Ward-G. W. NEELY. Second Ward-tf. J. RUDOLPH, fhird Ward-B. B. CARTER. Fourth Ward-J. W. HURR. n ( "M&RION TOWNSHIP TICKET. For Trcasuror DR. C. P. GAILEY. For Clerk THOMAS DAY. For Trastco JAMES REYNOLDS. THOMAS GRAHAM. For Justice of Peace CHARLES H. CONLEY. CHARLES E. GOMPF. NOW IS THE TIME TO GET INTO ACTION The delegates to Saturday's con vention, the democrats and all of the- people of Marion county aro to be ! congratulated upon tho dono by convention which placed ,(ij in nomination, William T. Smith, of jthis city, for the oillce of rep resentative in the next General As eenjbly. TJie contest in the convention was lively but not heated, it was not a bitjor fight such us too frequently occurs in meetings of its kind. There was a rivalry between the aspirants for the place, but it was friendlv and the hearty good willi' with which the delegates joined in making the nomination of Mr. Smith unanimous showed that tho rivalry was: forgotten when tho se lection was made. Mr. .Smith, tho nominee, is one of iho best known young democrats in 'the county. lie has by persistent efforts succeeded in establishing a . . ,. . ,, ....! ,. :.. ip ..i DiuineM in luanon wu.cu is m , mean importance. 'Wherever ho w known ho is respected for his up rightness in business affairs. He is a thinker, tx man who has ideas nnd is not afraid to back them with his best efforts, is a forcible debater, being capable of present ing his views in a clealj cut man ner, and above all 1S a man so thor oughly honest thathe cannot be in fluenced to do twit wj(ich he does not believe to bo right and just. With a man like William Smith in JLET US SHOW YOU er Hae of 50 cent fiction A choice lino of the popular Cefiyrights that Kited original ly at $1.5o. Now 50 cent. C. G. Wiant BOOKSELLER AND flTATIONE. Tlw goHJ of Post Pr, the legislature, Mnrion county will bo well lepicsonted. Would that n n,:,M '" "3 stripo couiu uo bom 1,rniH a dtetrlct !n 01lio . The delegates to the convention . performed their duties well. It now leiitiiins for tbo democrats of the county to bo ns faithful to their j party a the delegates wcro to the voters who elected them. No voter who believes in tbo principles ot democracy can afford to stay nt homo on election day. I,t may bo a littlo early in tho campaign to be gin talking, but it is never too early lo begin thinkiug, and now, beforo tho boat of tho campaign is tho 4imo to dotormiuo to givo tho party your best efforts. Vic tory this fall in the election of n stato legislator, epclU victory next fall when tho samo office must bo filled and when tho man electe'd will Lavo a voice in tho election of tho noxt United States senator. If sleepers remain in camp this fall they need not expect to awaken in u year from now and accomplish what tiiould have been accomplished a year previous. Democrats, Re publicans, Prohibitionists, Social ists, and members of all other parties mo hiuitily tired of eoqior- iition bona tors. Tbo demnnd that they bo retired to privato lifo is almost universal. If you have an interest in National affairs, if you desiro to see Ohio represented in tho country 'is 'highest legislative body, if you desire to seo Marion County represented in the General Assembly by a man who will rep resent the iKtoplc, then get awake, shako tho dust fiom your, clothes and get into line and never drop out until the polls have closed on election day and William T. Smith sent tov faithfully, honestly, fear lessly and capably represent tho people of Marion county in tho 'Jeneral Assembly. The battle ships uro to sail for I he Pacific Coast on December 15th. The trip will cost hundreds of thousands of dollars for extra; coal and colliers to carry it. What good it will do to send all tho battlo ships on this long cruise is a conundrum that, only the Adminis tration can solve. Tho demonstra tion was first arranged as an ans wer to the warlike talk of the .Japanese, hut as peace and good will prevail with that country thcio now must bo some other rea son that President Roosevelt docs ot wish to divulge. The federal ollke holders and their friends of Fort tScott gave Secretary Tnffc a royal reception iiid presented him with '"a mas- hive tin dinner pail which held six gallons and was made to typify the full dinner pail campaign only'' work1 w'?s notieablo that tho striking telegraphers and other workingmen lid not join in tho demonstration Of course, the ollico holders din ner pails are til ways full as long .is they do service to the party bosses, . Those Pennsylvania state house grafters aio certainly strenuous fel lows. Having stolen everything they could lay their hands on they ire now trying to steal tho evid ence ot their btculings, which has been collected and filed at Har t'isbiirg. Thoso people of Pennsyl vania allOng themselves Republi cans, however, consider all this ex cusable, or they would not continuo to vote to keep tho rascals in pow er. flovnrnor Hii"lip-i wli hns mlnritptl " 1 ho or(linary lwUical d0(1e of vis ltIff tho c0untry fairs gay3 th( tho public conscience is awake". Ho will also find that the Oyster Hay boss is very much awake to tho Hughes scheme to control tho Newjir Federal courts by numerous rul- York delegation to tho Republican National Convention. Tim Taft swim' around tlm .!i-Mn had all tho assistance tho Federal 'flJMU9jr Sl'"!" ,J0 Pt to thlnH ollico holders and the Associated SST'SSS.ZZ Kng Press could givo and made tho poor irrled.'paMoilger(j nf'rf rate of l 07 littlo Fairbanks boom, that ho was V"t8 ,',''," h "offr" position to claim trying to cultivate on (he same i1' a tw-"nt rate is confiscation. k " 'x t;" ,":","?. -Lwi; z,:r, assas liko a tield of buckwheat hit by n rvor theso points hecause It has nov hail storm. ," regarded tho Hat and universal . ' jlvo-cent enactment as Ideal or even If them is any one event that htelllgent legislation. It waH corn shows tho incapacity of tho Renuli. I'0'lcd tD recognize It as tlfo ddflulte li..nn ,i.v it U n.nt M,n ,n,n.,f 1 ie Panama Canal is taken out of 1110 nanus or. politicians and given to the onginors of tho army to nulinl tt Ali l.! i ii 1 tho talk of omft ,nnsna. 1 - 53- - v-- v f What Others Say. Tho first Informatory noto that lomes to hand in relation to the ro- :cnt observation ot tho planet Mara s from Professor Pcrclval Lowell, lid it 'Is "ifo tho effect that Mars is ho nbode'bf; Inlblllgcht, constiuctlvo lfc, and that the so-called "canals" Jscqvcrcd by Schlaparclll, and whiwh lave ben a subject for dispute of ong years, are undoubtedly the worlt f this lntelllKeuco Tho observation of Mars, tho planet having been In pposltlon for some time, lias been if special Interest becauso of tho act that tho little world Is almost nt ho minimum dlstanco from the earth, nil so far south in Its apparent rein ion to tho earth ns to make It pos I ble for astronomers who established tatlons lii South America to sco tho alanct almost In the zenith; and mis, with the stalons high In tho viro atmosphere of tho mountains, ffoflr" l""!."? U1U1U U(UUR'U lUi uiijumtu UUSVl VU" Ion. It need not bo doubted that Mars Is nhabltcd, and that by some mll lona of intelligent beings; but tho ttrnctlon of gravitation Upon tho llt lo globe, about ono-hnlf tho bulk of ho earth, is so slight compared with hat which obtains with us that all Ivlng nnd moving creatures would ccossarlly be so different to earth lfc as to tio Inconceivable to us. It ;i of scientific demonstration that i lite unquestionably of all tho satel Itcn of the millions or suns which re nightly seen In tho heavens are o nv, or have been, or may be, inlinb ted by Intelligent creations. Kvcn Ii tho caso of planets which, like Uranus and Neptune, receive little Ight and heat from tbo sun, on ae on nt of their vast distance from tUM cntral luminary, thero may bo a lino In their exlstcnco when for myr nds of years they arc fitted for such nbltatlon by reason of Intrinsic con itlous. It Is one thing to assert this by a 1 roccss of deduction, science having cmonstratcd thntccrtalu conditions nust Inevitably produco certain kinds f life, and to assert that Mars is nhabltcd becauso tho telescope rc cals artificial operations In tho form 'f "canals" .which could liavo been onstructed only by beings of wondcr il intelligence, Invention nnd Indust y, possessing marvelous mechanical Sowers for dltch-dlgglng which Vould bo an Invaluable acquisition n tho construction of tho Panama (inal. It Is qulto likely that some- hing will bo added by recent ex ertional, observation to tho sum ot lartlaivi knowledge In regard to tho ihyslcat constitution of the littlo lanot; but tho clearest, most lndls- utablo 'demonstration will bo do- uanded before scientists generally v- ill accept Professor IxiwcU's dcclar- tlon of CTmuIatlvo evidence that tho reaturcs of Mars hold tho record t canal builders. Is It ically not tghly Important whether Mars Is or not Inhabited. What wo shall do vitli our own teeming billions is a inch more vital consideration. Pltts urg Dispatch. .CJAINST T.HK TWO-CENT LAW.. Tho decision of a Piilladclphla court oldlng tho two-cent-a-mllo act un- i institutional Is not fully coniiuslc, luco decisions holding lcglslatvc nactments Invalid can hardly bo re- arded as final until they uro nf b mod by tho Stato Supremo Court. .idecd, after United States courts I ivo Intervened In Stato legislation in this very Issue, thero Is n a sug- I 'stiou that In natural justlco thero nould bo an appeal to those courts n dofenso of tho law. Nor is tho ullng entirely unexpected, sinco tho esort to a Philadelphia court of a airporation that has accepted a slm- lar enactment without contest in i 'her States Indicates a Judicious b rceptlon of tho quarter where tho- t 'les of law favdrablo to it wcro lost likely to prevail. Though tho t nil decision must conio from hlgh- ' courts tho Philadelphia decision -eates a presumption as to what f. o ultimato ruling will bo in Penn- I'lvanla; and it may bo added that ci legal praotlco an appeal on tho mrt of tho stato from, Its own H urts to tho United States tribunal Could bo difficult. Pending tho question whether this 1 iclsion will bo reviewed on appeal it s hardly necessary to discuss exhaust ve y tho reasoning on which the act s held Invalid. It is enough to pay mat the principal point of law nf llrmed, viz, that tho charter of tho I onnsylvanla Railroad gives jt im- Jg as ueen uiimy irom- legislative reuulatlnn. coiurauicteu In tho lilch ugs yet unreversed. On Mm m,.. J'on of fact, whether tho two-cont ato Is confiscatory, there is a inn? ''mount to bo said on lmth ni.in.. ''"easuro permitted by political and' fnrnnmfn Inflnhnnna Tint Atiflrnltr part rrom tho legal questlon.Jt was! --.,...., ...,..w..wu. u.i,) b..v.wj ,!!., It ,.. J (to be recdgnlzed that the nrbltrafy two-cent rate' might easily ljamper nnrl n1istinrf Mia flAVnlnnmnnf nt nnfifl 'Wr ?"'" " I'nch or now lines Whore the cost of service -was great- r FALL Our Hen's suits are shops of the very best, for your choosing. THE TAILORING IS PERFECT. THE FABRIC3 UNUSUALLY HANDSOME We sell you the best suits produced in America at thtse prices $7.50 to $20 Our whole store is now aglow with the spirit of autumn. A cordial welcome awaits you. I. MARX X SONS MEN'S OUTFITTERS. 113 South cr. Por this reason, and with recog nition of tho possibility of an ad vcrso Judicial result, "Tho Dispatch constantly urged that1 the full duty ot regulation would ;rio be discharged unless the Pennsylvania Legislature did what was dono In -Now York, I c, create a commission with power to investlcato tbo . " conditions sur rounding each ratO(tconiplnlncd of, and to direct changes In such as wcro found to bo unreasonable or to involve Improper "discrimination. In default ot this having been dono it Is not flattering to our Stato leg islation to contemplate tho state in which matters aro "left on tho as sumption that tho "Philadelphia de cision is sustained.' The one meas ure which the politicians ot both parties specifically -promised in tho Stato campaign Is' left In the Invalid i lass and becomes a mero delusion, lint tho general promise of effective, regulation has not even that pre teiiBo of performance. Tho nets to enforce tho constitutional provisions wcro emasculated by trivial penal ties, and n commission was created without power to enforce tho correc tion of a single unjust rate. It Is plain that. if. the Republican party of Pennsylvania acquiesces In this result of Its roform legislation It will simply go on. record as adding another oxnmplqtpthc list of enscs In which tbo pcoplofhavo been fooled. To make good tho true meaning of tho pledges, tho -necessity must bo rpcognlzcd of legislation that will itroMldo Idffcdtlvo rcjsiilatlon. Tho illspatch has no ideHlresor. liking for nrbltrary legislative prescription pt any rales. But there,' should be ef fective nnd exemplary' penalties for violation of the constitutional pro visions. Thero should; bo an impar tial commission with power to cor rect unjust rates Hack of nil as a remedy for pcrslHtontOj.and flagrant vlolntlon of public rlghtsT thero should be n general provision. -for tho excr ciso of that powrr doc1nrcd by tho Stnto Supremo Courti'iearly sixty years ago to bo Inherent,' namely, tho forfeiture of rharteravor mlsuso or abuso of their powers. Pittsburg Dis patch . THU PLKVELAND CONSCRIPT. It Is with tho blcssfug of President Roosevelt that Representative Theo dore B. Burton renounces his sen atorial ambitions, sacrifices, a brilliant Congressional career and undertakes to displace Tom L Johnson as May or of Cleveland. '.c'. , After n period of reluctance, with mingled modesty and i, prldo , Mr. Burton nnuounccs his candidacy with tho statement: '."I liavo re ceived letters from President Roose velt nnd Secretary Taft,' 'and liavo talked with Secretary Garfield, whoso opinions liavo aided mo In reaching a decision. At an early1 date tho vlows of each of them may bo , made pub lic" -VV On his personal credentials, oven without President Roosevelt's O. K. Mr. Burton holds good tltlo to tho esteem of tho people' of 'Cleveland. First of all, ho applies business Ideas to public affairs. HQhas been eight times elected to Congress, twice with out Democratic opposition. Ho lins Fcrved with great ' distinction ns aiialrmnn of the Rivers "and Harbors Coniinltteo nnd innlntiiTncd a com manding position lit tlio'Houso by his' nhlllty nnd independence Ho has nlso combatted tho Administration's policy of oxtrnvnganKnaval expendi tures nnd set a dangprdus example to the majority by Insisting on strict economy. i,V"' - Cloveland 13 a Democratic rltv. Tom Johnson Is se'rvlng his third term and will b0 renominated. HJs fight for threp-cont Tares 'ti'nd munl rlpal operation of tho", faff eot railways has been popular. ''- But President Roosovolt has hln own precedent for raising nn admin istration candldato Inatlocal contest outside, his own Stftjkjr Ho backed x ' 1. "uhmj jngainsi Mayor Duuno and inunlninikVJc.nwiinpai,in in Chicago so what Is thorb Inconsistent inn uraiung Representative Burton to run ngalriBt MityVr, Johnson nnd municipal ownership hi Clayolahd? If ovrythliig turns out well wltv Tar', E.i"r ,,,l'B "l! Secretary Taft should piofit iioxfFybar. But Tom Johnson was nholoctmf 'by 7,000 ma. 2!?"n! In c"88pr;Mr; Burton's . - y.J i.fi fifr.lln9 T.. . ' """"" "I rveUnn DT 0UW ?WMWt R9 .COST OP PASSIUKflBIl M-flAUOin T P PASSBNpiin, TRAPFIC, foro tho master ppplnted by 1 he tailor re ready I SUITS fresh from the makers and are Main.11, Judge Pritchard to tako testimony In tho Southern Itnlway rnto caso, Mr. Evans of the Loulsvlllo & Nash ville road was called as ail export. Ho testified that tho railroad company Is losing money hauling passengers at tho rato llxcd by tho North Caro- llna law. Ho averred that it costa 25 per cent more per mllo to oiiernto ocal trains than through trains. On cross-cxnniinatlon ho admitted ho was merely giving his opinion, based pon his personal experience nnd ob- ervntlon, and that roads with which ho had boon connected never kopt any system of books that would show ho rclatlvo difference In cost be tween local and through business. It is a bit difficult to understand why Mr. Kvnns wns called as nn expert witness, and It Is ustouudlng to bo Informed by nn "expert" wit ness that railroads do not keep train operation. As n matter of fact, wo know that sonio railroads do keep such accounts and nearly analytical records of tho costs of nil manufacturing concerns have laborato systems for. keeping "shop costs." Wb may add tho public will never concede tho contention of rail roads concerning the cost of any par ticular traffic until they demonstrate it by honest, itemized statements. AVo do not recall over having seen any reports concerning tho cost of operating local or through trains on tho Southern Railway. But wo do recall soveral ablo articles comparing such traffic on, greater railroad sys tems. Theso papers aro Written by competent engineers, after painstak ing research, and tho consensus of opinion represented therein' Is that cost of traffic bears direct relation to tho speed at which trains aro op erated, and tho value of equipment used in operation. Thus, a train traveling CO miles 'an hour costs much moro per mllo than ono trav eling :;o miles nn hour. In these comparisons careful account has been taken of tho cost of stopping nnd starting, which, ot course, Is greater in tho caso of local trains. Moreover, mnlntonanco of wny en hances In cost of proportion to tho speed of tho fastest trains. Highest speed and costliest equipment are employed In long-dlBtnnco traffic, that Is, Inter-Stato business. Laying aside tho question or apportionment of nmlntennnco of wny cost, it will 110 difficult for nny expert to pro- sent actual figures to show the local pnsbongcr trains cost moro per mllo for operation thnn through trains. Pittsburg Dispatch. MOROCCO M1A1Y CHANGE PAST. In sonio respects Morocco has waited until the right timo for wakening. Natural conditions in tho land of the Moors fit in well with the ulectiic ago. It would have been impossible for Hint country to de velop as fast at any former peilod as it may when good government makes business enterprise? securo nnd protects foreigners in their iust rights. Morocco is poor in fuel. Com paratively little of its area is cov ered with timiher o.vcept in purls of the Altlns Mountains, nnd thero aro no coal mines, whatever mnv bo discovered in tho way of minora! wealth when the rnuntrv can he thoroughly examined, But while there nrc few rivers nnd ,iho streams are mostly small and un certain, the torrents which dash, down from the mountains imvo urcnt' Txwer possibilities. They plungo from such heights that n vorv mod onite volumo of wntor. ehn furnish irrmeudoiig pressure. 1 Fir that reason it will,, ho pog. fdhlo to mako trollev Hues fny in Morocco whore toain railroads would bring, henvv' Josses upon their builders and' owners. The motive power can be pbfyined jYm" tho mounlnin slmVn)?"'nio,grmlig will cos(, little in n land s0 drv and noop, nnd Ihqn are possihifllies of jndiiRlrinl dovelopment enough to '"Nure fail' pnhvminfe riovlnP only t'mt llieio shall ho gdnd ..govern irr"'. Mnrnofo lins -OH" of. the- flUPS,t -li-nnln in f'-o ivorldi opiop:ni n inlnr. oc xvhat tvxiRaS Tor ivipln. 'i . T j - vn.rjnn (.)ocn onoi'Mi '' ""- ' ni,P1.',p (,i rrir j :,. ' -0 ,jn i,0 nln(v of nnvoltlpq in Morocco ,to intorest tourists from m . countries' inlmbited, by white men. Tho wintor plensuro-sccUors may yet bo an important source of wealth, , It is tfvido'iit that tbo Moore aro likely (o witness extremely rapid chnnges for so old nnd slow-moving a land as Morocco, They arc about to be forced out into tho world's great currents soolicr than they would have been if they wore not so ignorant, bigoted and turbu lent. Cleveland Loader. FANS DUCKED Bridge Gives Way When They Were Returning from a Ball Game. Piudlay, Sept. 10. At least four ..nnitln .trrtn nnttfiitu1 v l.illlrnfl nllfl 1(10: people were submerged in tho Blanch ard river lato Sunday afternoon while on their way homo from a ball game, as a result of tho breaking down of tho Spindle street suspension foot brjdge in tins city. Tho Injured are: Miss Hlltia Out felt, aged 17, back badly sprained; will recover. George Davis, Internally Injured. Glenn Hardy, aged 12, badly bruised and Internally Injured. MrH. N. llnhro KnrlnunW liiirt about tho face and Internally Injured, more wore a number of narrow escapes from drowning, Tho giving away of tho bridge was caused by the breaking or a cable that supported ono of the sides, sup posedly by tho excessive weight that wns on It at the tlmo. At the" point Where the brldco broke a Tarcn snnf tary sower runs Into tho river and tbo people who went down scrambled around In llvo feet ot tho nithlrsf sort of water. v Included in tho list or tiioso who woro on tbo brldco at tbn Mum mi foil Into tho water were n number or women nnd their cries woro frantic as SOOn ns tllOV calnnd rnnnolniiaiiniiu owing to their heroic efforts to frco uicmsoivcs. Tho structure wns said in bo n fmii affair nnd Is said to have had con siderable moro people on It than al lowed by an ordlnnnco that nnrmitimi Its construction. SPECIAL ENGLISH CLA8S-Bccln- nlng October l.'l'ho School of'Com merco will start a Speclnl Class In English, teaching Penmanship, Arithmetic, Spelling. Reading, Let ter Writing, Composition, etc A good clinnco for all deprived' or early schooling. Teachers, Bauer and Ellckor. Telcphono 1700. Offlco open every evening this month. 0-lC-Ct Lord Mayor Waa a Drummer. When the piosent lord mayor of London, Sir William Treloar. nresl- J dont of tho London branch of the "United Kingdom Cnmmorcial Travel ers' association, attended tho annual dinner of that organization ho told a story of his early traveling life. "Forty years ago," lie said, "I called jn an upholsterer In Southampton, whoso daughter, n very nice looking girl, rang the boll for her fnther. As soon, howovor, as she recognized tho visitor sho gently called up the stairs: "'You need not como down, pa; It's only a commercial I' "When sho returned to tho shop tho girl remnrked, with a pleasant smile,. 'I took yon ror a gentleman.' , "I npologlzed," ndded tho story tell er, "and oxprossed my regret that my appearance, should liavo deceived her. And so wo became excellent friends." PRICES JUMPED Cost of all Meats, Excepting I .PorK Kaisea by tne Beef Trust. , Chicago, Sept. 10. Tho Beef trust bos' fjcrved notico on wholesale mnnl ilnnlmv- llinf Jill lneilts. CXC'Cnt tpork, will bo advance Ho to 4o a pound. ' ' . This' increase comes W top of,, a succession or auvauces iuuuu uui )ng tho year. Tho restaurants nnd lmtcls hnvo anticipated tho raiso by advancing ioukI. Iicnf nuil stmil.-K 10s to 20o all around. The present retail price oe 1 a i.i 11 t.!.i t ...:,!.!.. ..- ikvi is iiufi iiignuai. ivmiiu ii;- ol'y. ThiB, too, in it city wlioro the trust ' pays jio freight on its product., Porterhouse steak is 2?o wild 30o 11 pound. Lamb is the fenmo nnd mutton 22c. Not to be; outdone, tho milkmen have announced a 10 per cent in crease General proviftion donlors cay that canned goods, Jjotli vegetables nnd fruits, will cost thp consumer from 4 to 0 cents moro a can 'tho coming wiutei' than they est today. . Business and Professional LITTLE ADS LIKE THESE BRIKa PEOPLE TOGETHER WHO WANT TO DO BUSINESS. ART, STUDIO If it isnU a Brunskill Photo it isn't tho best. It pays to get tho Best.- They -pro -rondo" fftiUbaiU JJrunskill Studio. , ;. lg riL a.iH-m.'. "ff r LIVERY Iv-rl iDon't forgot that wo mako a specialty of driving rigs Tor plca's uic or business. . , a$ II. P. PEIMlY'U"nloVStf ' Roth Phones. , J1 tt. MODEL MEAT MARKET. ,yi Dealer in nil kinds of FreslTand -Smoked Ments. Sausage etc.. W. O. MERKLE ' I Both Phones. 140 S. Main St. .WAHTP. PAPr.TJ. - I ,,, ... , ; We buy waste paper of all kinds and descriptions. Also dealer in, Scrap iron, Mctnls,, Rubber. ,BpU' ties. Hides. Pells and furs. P. MAL0. '.' Both Phones. 282-292 .Farming, St. STAR BOTTLING WORKS Manufacturer of carbonated bever" idges Ginger Alo and Sodas, Selt zcf and Siphon Mineral Waters. J. R. SMTH. Prop. '' Phono 1744. - ' ' BRUNSKILL- Has all kinds of Kodaks and Caiporas for sale, and every known supply. Bring your kodako trou bles to us, wo will sell supplies iu any quantity at any timo. PHOTO STUDIO ' Jijco our special Photos for $1.00' and $1.50 per dozen. Special rates for the next 30 days. ' 2 O. L FELLISON, 115 East Center St. ' REAL ESTATE 'We linyo tho greatest variety of city property of any firm in Miir ion. Wo bnvo business properties of various kinds to offer for gro cory stores, restaurants, bakery and department stores. y' '' if THE J. W. CLARK, '; REAL ESTATE CO. i 114 Court StrpotJ Prof. Frederic Ttterryiriari i BARITONE Tcachor ol Volco and Piano. Studio 400 E. Church cor. Vine. . Phone 1596. .Tho pie field is to suffer, too. Wholesale prices on pics will bo in creased about '1c per pic On hearing this nows, tho res taurant keepers tohl their custom ers that they will get smaller pieces of pic for 5e, beginning next week. Pies now cut for counter trade' in to four pieces will in tho future" bo,, cut into six pieces. TWENTY SIX DEAD Boston and Maine Officials Give These Figures as Correct. '' Concord, N. II., Sept. 10. -With, fifteen bodies identified, ton unidon" tifiod in tho locnl morguo and-ono still remaining at Hanover, officials of 'tho Boston & Mflino und the au thorities, at West Canaan; the scene of yesterday's disastrous collis'ion between a freight and passenger train, make tho positive statomont that tho fatalities numbor twenty six kind not thirty-two ,11s linl been feared earlier in the day. All of tho injured mro (loins' as well flsi can bo expected and fow'ofj them are likely to die. ' It vas learned at tho Investigation herd today that tho men in tho train despdtchor's offlco UnoW tho wreck wan .Inevitably Hpy.ernlfi minutes be forq It occurred and after making in-i e'ffectual efforts to stop the trains beforo they passed the last telegraph station, notified tho wrecking crew! at White river" junction and! a'ent'W n; call for physicians and medical mippllcs. ONE TRAINMEN KILLED IN "VYREOK. Richmond, Intl., Sept. 10. In a freight wreck Sunday' on the Rich-, moud division of th0 Pennsylvania railroad, north of Richmond, Peter J'7; "Mph of Ilnjienjtown, wnh killed and . .Conductor 0. V.E. Thomas of Richmond mei Injured. I Ho train ran into an open switch tmd spyoral pars were derailed. K X J t5 lk 1 i;- 1 i - tS. f .V... u-4Ji-, a