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4 THE liAIUiE DAILY TIMES, OCT. 0, 110 i. BARRE DAILY TIHES Sebscrir Ilea : One year. $3 : one mot'X 25 tts. ; single copy. I cert. Monitor of the I'nl.li-hpre' Yretm . The ltft Swintrrnrmo nws f r.m !! part ot the world are rweivd by the ta-ly Times up to the hour of fotiig to jirwfi. Funk E, Ltpgky, Publisher. Poblished Eery Weekday AfUriioon. otered at the pfwtoffiew at Barre m second clasa mailer. EARRE, VT., OCTOBER 3, 1904. The average dally circulation of the Barre Daily time for the wwk ending Stturday was 3 PL1L5 oples, the largest paid circulation of any AaiJy paper In this amotion. State FJtsh nnrt Gamp Commissioner Tliomas' warning to rojietive deer hunters, printed in another column, should ! x-ad by all. It may ue trouble for soon;. CTOBSR Ml uJi ! .. r" ti'iinmit editor had tlm Knles ve moved from their eyes when they vinit il the Fairbatiks Works at. St. Johns- bury last week, or at least, they had their even opened to the magnitude of one of Vermont V bif concern. Shy the Rutland News: Vermont population just now in the house of correction, state prison, industrial sehoo! and insane asylums is very eon tiiderahle. We doubt if (he proportion of those incarcerated either in penal or lunacy institutions h any larger in this (date than in others, but the figures are nevertheless staggering. In the house of correction and state's prison there are '"lTfi incarcerated, nnd in tlm reform school 320 more, making a total of 503 In the two insane asylum, at Brattle boro nnd Watcrbury, there are 8 S3 pa uenxs. i nese. lunacy tigures are par ticularly startling. A QUKSTIONT OK YTKWTOIXT I he Kandoliih Herald and Xews thinks it rather remarkable that we should commend the former striker in the Itiitttmd marble shops for their od iierence io strictly lawtnl measui-i s in the conduct of their latest attempt to secure bet ter condil ions and for the ut ter absence of disorders so' far ns they were concerned. The eontemporary knows that in the stress nnd strife in eident, to great conflicts between ta' , "l htlor there is sometimes capi- a lups i into methods of fighting whicli ot oilier times nnd nn other occusionn would I helil in disrepute, a resort to violence regarding property and lives. Such a condition of allays is not the rule but the 'exception to the rule, to be sure. But there is open always the resort to unlawful means for gaining ends which are deserved or not deserv ed as the case may be. And the course is open not alone to the workmen but to those who employ, strange as it may seem. The reason that we do not bear more oi me resort to unlawful means on the part of the hitter is because they are the party on the defensive strongly intrenched in a position whicli they have been years in making as im pregnable as possible. They can sit by and in calm indifference watch the ef forts, oftentimes puny efforts of the workmen who art- striving for better conditions. That is why we do not hear more often of lapses into violence on the part of the employers. We con fess that if the conditions were cipial and Rimilar we should have no greater faith in the self-restraint of the man who employs than the man who is em ployed. Human nature is very' much t lie same. But in giiug credit to the Rutland strikers we bad no desire to '"palliate riot and disorder, even arson and mur der, when the perpetrators are strik crV' -That whs far from the purpose. Itt was rather an honest desire to com- of p.o. ml a body of men, PjO. jnuch disorder who, in the time and violence in iprniU) and outside, by armed author ilj'" lI ''.V strikers showed not the hJisr'-MVeVy-ing from the path of right. ShiXtoiutiK iided them for taking the ;fiOv'1fVv'H'11 ''""r nnother iiise was tiwuug just as widely open J hem. . -j a l iU.il J.. -"f"-ftUllRfttC0MMENT. What, t4ie" Piesl'of the gtate and Coun I !ajy'Itry'is,ta8dni About. rti-3-e l& KllU iJl frliigs wl.ioh by ixilrnvs"t4i'lh'j'j;tlistitog ' agreement '.4!I.,iiikt-,.,ijbtt,.,,dif, .Imt we can't ;ikc Tier 1 rSile--frti" ii.""1'iineL n St at,. fi'Mliietr ( IttttT f v Ym tif rtiw id another man .j i'tj ;fyt a ;tcn- rsi UOT QK38 8U T3-f lot f IowarcV. a vi.' ,w-l tins I ovnscnd. .-j,,;,.) .j.s . Uncle Piidiev. , , , , bet Short btones, Titif Wkvfiflf ,aa3v8; Our Clothes arc ' some pump kins " this fall. We will stump you to find their equal in Barre. The sign of the times says Overcoats. "There are others," but you'll miss it if you fail to see what's doing in our Overcoat line. Boys' Overcoats, $2.50 to $15.00. Men's Overcoats, 5.00 to 30 00. WE CLEAN, PRESS AND REPAIR CLOTHING. ' Barre, Vermont. Quinlen Block, A. A. S RO. ! ABOUT THE STATE. ement house wntaining one hundred and titty persona to imprisonment for eight months. J he dollar in this ease weighs more than a man. New Bed ford Standard. Immunity from arrest does not spell impunity, though. If a resident diplo mat or diplomatic underling commits a crime and his own government fails to act, the law of nations permits the Pres ident to act. He can order the offender out of the country in extreme cases can forcibly expel him. But ordinarily the offender's government attends to his punishment. Hartford Courant. A man who unconventionally appro priated $70,000 from a New Haven hank of which he was cashier was sent enced to slate prison for five years this week, and a fellow who unconven tionally appropriated a horse in Shef field was committed to the same insti tution for eight years. The moral would appear to be that if you must steal don't steal horses. Hartford Times. The Baltic fleet has again started. The Baltic licet starts more often than a fer ryboat, but, unlike that humble craft, does not get in motion when it starts. The Czar has one of the best starting fleets in Europe. Some kind friend should tell the Czar that it is a custom among the civilized powers of the earth to untie a lleet irom the dock when jt starts. Washington Star. GREAT fothing Sale AT Graniteville! Mnnuna wants the part of the paper that tells about the terrific slaughter." "Tell her I'm reading the war news now, but in a minute sho can have" "She said the terrific slaughter Id spring bonnets at Ma kin & Selleui's." Chicago Tribune. BARRE OPERA HOUSE Tuesday Eve, Oct. 4. UJ wMi 11 km lip JULIUS CAHN PRESENTS Sieyici ISaruoi The Play That Won't Wear Out The Epic of the "Hoss" Trade. Quaintly Delightful. An Ex cellent Company. Mr. . Cahn ' utilizes the same produc- tion here as seen at the Garrick Theatre, i New York. I :liPSvld "arurn fays: Do unto the j other feller the way he'd like to do unto I C.. J .... KfeS?:-il(liK'-:lv , ( :t , ut do it FIRST." Do you take the Boston buncay Gxe j ftZZSCt 35c, 50c, 75c and $1.00. On Tuesday, Oct. 4th, we shall present to the people of Graniteville a rare opportunity to se lect their Fall Suit or Overcoat, as we have made ar rangements with the Desbecker Block Tailoring Co., the big Union tailoring house of Buffalo and New York, to have an expert tailor with a complete line of Woolens for Suits, Trousers andOver coats, at Patterson's Pool Room, Graniteville, on the date men tioned above, to take measures for the newest styles '-. in Clothing, for Fall and Winter wear. Fit and satisfac tion guaranteed. Union Label on every garment. Call and be meas ured by an expert. Remember the place and date, Patterson's Pool Room, Tuesday, October 4th. . a. Sivii i n 0. m BR MEN'S OUTFITTERS Miles Granite Block, Barre, - Vermont ! Items of Interest Gleaned From Our Exchanges. William Kiehards.in 0f Cavendish has a curiosity in the shape of an ear of corn composed of forty small ears in one. The corn was planted be-ide a cauliflower, the small ears looking like corn and a!uo re sembling the catili (lower. Owl IJoutwelt of Caysville killed a few days ago a pure white hedgehog. It. is the hist tit the kind seen ther Caysville is prohablv the banner hedge hog town in the state, Ixiunties on J.KUJ being paid at the town clerk' ollice din ing the first year of bounty. At a special meeting in Bethel iSat unlay (iiiy Wilson was elected town clerk by a vote of lti8 to 8.1 for l.ee Cady. This election was held to till the vacancy caused py the resignation of Harry Adams who is to move to Boston. The ofliee of town clerk hail bi en in the Adams family for oer thirty-five years. Jesse Hentley, the noted Sunderland trapper, had on exhibition at the Man chester fair several mpiirrels. lvn.xes foxes, coons, and fox-squirrels. He has exhibited them also at other fairs in this statexs Mr. Bentley has probably trapped more furs than any other man in Vermont of his age. His house in nearly at the top of Equinox mountain. Gov.-elect C. J. Bell of Walden has made arrangements through the citi zens committee to take hut meals at the Lenox hotel during the coming ses siou of the legislature at Montpelier. The governor has rented a portion of the S. C. f-diurtlert house and most of his family will be in Montelier oil and un uunu me session, l ie iiouse is some distance from the state house. Some one in St.Johusbury broke into a room under the granite shed of J. K. Walker and stole about 25 hens out of a Hock of 100 belonging to Hiram Cheslev. Oorge Caldbeck had three there and they were also taken. Circumstances how that the theives came in a boat for they could row to within several feet of thebuilding. There .were foot marks in the mud near the building and feather were strewed around rather promiscuous ly and a new stake driven in the ground w n ere tne ooat was tied. A canvass by the Boston Journal -of the incoming legislature, which alone has the power to commute the sentence of Mary A. I'ogers, under sentence of death at Windsor for murdering her husband by chloroforming Jmn and throwing him into the river, shows a majority in favor of allowing the law to take its course. Of the legislators interrogated by The Journal 5-1 per cent firmly advocated han"'ing the woman, 27 ner cent were undecided, while only 10 per cent favored commuting her sentence to life imprison ment, in otner word those who will de mand capital punishment in Mrs. Ttoner'a case outnumbered those opposed to it about three to one, with the 7 per cent- age ot memixTS remaining an uncertain factor. Oliver J.nmora of Burlington, who fil iated as one of the eitv's truant ollieers for several years, met two young women on the street last week who stated that they wished to thank him. He naturally inquired what for and they replied it w as because ne hart them writ to the indus trial school several years ago for being truants. They stated that their eoinj: there did them good, and when they came out. they attended school regularly. They said thev had decidedly objected to going down at the time, but they now saw that the ollieers judgment was better than their own. This experience of Mr. La mora's is by no means a novel one, a large number of grown up young men mid women having sought him out to say that they bear him no ill will for sending them to Yergennes, but on the. contrary thev are glad he did. Last Sunday night the peace and quiet of that section of Hardwiek known us Marslmllville ami inhabited largely by Italians, was rudely disturb ed by Lue'i Frabrizio. Luiri emptied the contents of two guns at the in mates of the house where he was call ing, without however hitting anybody or anything in particular. Frabrizio was arrested, and Tuesday he was ta ken before Justice of Peace Xoreross. Taylor & Button appeared for the de fendant nnd B. E. Billiard for the state. A number of witnesses were examined, and from the evidence presented, Jus tice Korcross was convinced that no serious criminal offense was or could he proven against Frabrizio, and there fore took jurisdiction in the case and imposed a line of $:i0 on him. The do fondant cheerfully paid this sum and costs. ( ntiue. A pirl In faroff Martinique- Called her uncle a Uti.ihi acted frlque, -At which this r.-laliiiii Showed such liuti;; nation That, the girl was too frightened to uptque. Chicago Journal. Sport I n f Hem. Mrs. Guine.Soi; here. Mr. (J.. 1 thought you said you bad been a licit hunting, but the.-e ducks you brought home itre fuiue ducks. "Y-e-si. m' dear; 1 tamed 'em after I (hie) shot 'em." Cincinnati Commer cial Tribune. His feelinirs be tried io disRiiifce; The girl, tlmiijrVi, Im Ran to aurmixe That something litie wooing Was certainly doliiK -Because, of his locks and deep guise. Cleveland leader. IIi). Step end J u hid. "It seems he nut lu-r at, a bop. promptly proposed tmil now they're to be run fried." "Strange that ho tdiovtld take that step tst a hop." "She took it at a Jump." I'liiladel phiit I'ross. A Natural Impulse. The wee Russian infant now gurglea with glee An the toymakers come to his call; It is rt-ally (something Impressive to Bco How he smashes his .l iiancse doll. Washington Slur. Innuineil. "I'lcase send us Cio cents' worth of your humorous verse," writes the edi tor to J. Jingle Jester. "Fifty cents' worth." muses J. Jingle Jester after reading the note. 'That's a low order of wit." ( 'liicioro Trioune. lew fame! lew Yarn We Have Jast Received From the Talmar Mills One Case of Yarns. Talmar Yarns are unsurpassed for eveness of thread, soft ness of texture, elasticity, and, above all, fineness of quality. Ask for "Talmar" and take no other. Talmar GermanlowD, Talmar Floss, Talmar Sweater Yarn, Talmar Scotch, Talmar Saxony, Talmar Shetland Wool and Columbia Shetland Floss. We carry a full line of the above and highly recommend them to our customers. w VAUGHAN STORE winery and wraps AT THE CORNER STORE. The weather says it't time for a change in COATS and MATS and we are ready to help you to the best there is in medium and fine qualities. Our HATS possess style, made of good material and sold at prices that maie this an interesting place to buy Hats for the saver. AH we want is for you to see the styles and prices. We think they will sell themselves. Our COATS are from the best makers in this country, who are well known for original styles and have unusual access to foreign models and copying. The TOURIST COATS in Scotch material, coverts and kersey take the first place in American fashions, and we have an excellent assortment to show you. Prices from $8.50 to $27.50 each. The Perley L Pope Co., (TAPLLYS OLD STORE) Cor. Main and State Sts., Montpelier. PERLEY E. POPE, Manager. fl p j""""5" """'j f "p1 (-" t "tto( jf 1 " ' Tr wwwMstis., 1 - XT1RUBEROID ROOF ING and mm actn ronV V r IS IMITATED THERC IS A WAV TO Avoid imposition ACCEPT no hoofing which oots not rR tmc tBIQISTtatO TRADt MARK " RUBEROiD " STAMItO ON THE UNO SlOt or TMf KATrAIAl . rvrwy roon rrrr Lasts longer than tin, iron, shingles or any other prepared roofing. Ask for samples and prices now. WILLIAM H. PITKIN, Miles Granite Bnildlae, - - - - Bane. Vermont, Combination Bookcases! We are showing the largest and most complete line to be found in the city. Prices from $1 5.00 to $45.00 each. Bookcases, Ladies' Desks, etc. It is a little early to adver tise them, but you can buy them now lower than later on. BARRY WILLIAMS, New Tomasi Block, ' Cor, Main and Merchant Streets. CNDEKTAKEKS AM. FFNERAI, DIRECTORS, l. ii. SAKiir, - - f) Averill St. I L. M Telephone 209-12. WlLF vMS 28 Jefferson St. Telephone 212-12. Save Time and Money by CI ' X. ondving Yourself. BEST LINE OF Shaving Materials in the an. Our Razors are all warranted. We have the celebrated Shud Strops. SEE THK REAL SAFETY RAZOR D. F. DAVIS, "The Drueeist " 262 North Main Street, Morse Block, Barre, Vermont. i 'A & & : :-