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V 7ATERBtTRY EVENING DEMOCRAT, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1002. 3 GIEAT TTT M . 0 1 1 11 f VV I ft TT ...OF... u nreaeeme Pledges Jacobs & Go.o 8l EAST MAIN STREET Watch es, 0!o cks, Dlatno n ds, jeiolry, AT OCT We shall sell everything in our immense stock before MOVING INTO OUR NEW STORE at whatever price it will bring. We shall offer at any time whatever is asked for. It is our purpose to make this the Greatest Auction ' Sale ever" held In Waterbury, and with that end in Vie fwq ,hay& en gaged Mitchell & Tillotson of NewS3Tork?the best known Jewelers' Auctioneers in the United States. A part of the store seated with chairs is reserved for the Ladies, who are cordially invited to attend this sale. Sales every day from 2:30 to 5 and 7:30 to 10 p. m. . dJ 81 East IViaiii Street a Ml J r1! - the remedy for the people, recommended by friends to friends, not pushed by doubtful methods, deserving of their popularity, now enjoy ing: a g reater success tnan ever, still worth a guinea a box. SUBURBAN DEPS RTMENT NAUGATUCK NUGGETS Young People's Society of Union City WJll Give Entertainment To-night. iLambba chapter, Theta Signa, will meet this svening. The German Catholic fair was' well attended last' evening at Columbus hall. The fair, will close to-morrow night. The Hammer club football team and a team composed of some of ' Nauga tuck's best players, are playing on Hotchkiss field this afternoon. ' Mr. and Mrs Peter Paul have re turned from a visit with' relatives in Massachusetts. 13d ward Nixon has accepted a posi tion as clerk in Morris Freedrnan's dry goods store. - '; , Reed Ostrander has gone to his home in Southbridge, Mass. -Reed was se. verely injured in the football game with Company A last week. A praise service will be held this evening at the Parish house. It will be in charge of the. Rev Sherrod Soule and H.-L. Cook. "The Life of W. II. Monk" is the subject, i and a number of hig hymns will be sung. A number of local people are arrang ing for a trip to Southford to-morrow evening to attend a dance at that place.! '. The";Young people's society of Union City will hold a sociable 'and enter tainment at - Union City - chapel this evening. Admission Is free and the so ciety hopes t.o see a large number pres ent. -" 8IM0N8V1LLE NOTES. : . The children and grandchildren and other friends gathered at the home of Deacon Potter yesterday to celebrate his seventy-sixth, birthday; The Ladies' Social circle met with MrsvM. Mulvey yesterday afternoon. A five o'clock , tea was served. The Ladies' Aid society of the M. E. church met Wednesday in the church parlor. ' v Elmer Tyler isvery sick with; neu ralgia of the -head. ANECDOTES OF THE SHAH. His Persian Hlftliness Is Not Entirely WltUo.nt a Senie . ot II minor. ' . . The shah supplies a fair crop" of anec dotes daily, says the - London Tele graph's Paris Letter. His sayings and doings lend themselves largely to anecdote treatment," and',, they are therefore carefully , recorded. The latest story is about the shah and the dentist. His ; majesty ' suffered from toothache soon after his arrival in Paris, and a professional extractor of high-class molars was sent for. . The professional looked at his majesty's teeth, and advised the extraction not of one, but of several. The operation was postponed for a day, but when the dentist returned to the Ejysee Palace hotel he found the shah all right and in a playful mood. The toothache had gone, and there was no , longer any need for the dentist's services. As the professional was preparing to leave the shah called him back,. aying: "I do not like to have troubled you for nothing, so, as you have come, vou had better draw'a molar from each of my counselors." The shah spoke with his ejres fixed on the ground and in a medi tative manner. "When, be looked up all the counselors had vanished; with the' exception, of -the -grand vizier, who . manfully stood his ground unmindful as to whether his all-powerful master was in jok.e or in earnest. The other counselors evidently believed in the earnestness 01 the master s utterances.- The anec5ote is sonTethina-like that old one told of the present shall's predecessor;" who, when in Paris, asked,. to see M. Deibler at work with the guil lotine. When-he was informed that there was nobody in La Roquett e at the time waiting f or execution he proposed that, one of his suite should Te handed over to Deibler and decapitated in the Champs-Elysees, "-."' WHERE DO SALMON FEED? A Question That Even the Pish 'Ex perts Are Unable to Sa-flsfac- ' torlly Answer,! ' WATERTOWN JOTTINGS. Many Watertown People Expect to Go to New Haven To-Morrow. . 'The annual dance given, by the Taft school football team will be held iii the assembly hall of the school this evening. Charles Buckingham returned yes terday after a most delightful hunting trip in Maine. A woman was found unconscious in the road near the residence of William Jones yesterday morning. Mr ''Jones quickly sijmmoned Dr W. S. Munger, who administered restoratives which quickly brought the woman to con sciousness. , She gave her name as Nellie Reardon and said that she, left Waterbury about 9 o'clock Wednesday evening, and that they started for a drive through W.atertown. Further than ! this - she ' could tell nothing of what' happened after they left Water bury. . She is now resting comfort ably at the residence of Mr Jones. The town football team will play the Waterville team at the Fair grounds to-morrow. ' :, A large number from here expect to witness -the .. Yale-Harvard football game at New Haven to-morrow. ;A football team is being organized "to. play the .Woodbury team at Wood bury Thanksgiving day. . 0AKY1LLE - HAPPENING Johii Lynch of Waterville, foreman at -Blake & Johnson's machine shop, Waterbury, Jias purchased the house known ag the Taylor place, recently vacated by A. J, Lippke. Mr Lynch will move his family here. -' ' Ernest Plumb's many friends arc delighted to see him around again. Mrs - Charles : Bavier of : Newton Heights is on the sick list. Dr Lopez is attending her. . Mr Leious, father of Mrs Walter Capewell. is reported to be in verv fee ble1 health. Mr Leious is 8(5 years of age. - Mrs Edward Acher of Simonsville was in this place yesterday - visiting triends. ' CREDIT CLOTHING CO, n Of z "W"OU FAY only vhat you can V afford, . 1 L A WEEK. Arid our reputation of over ten years of continued business sue bess is behind our statement to clothe yourself arid family cheap er and better than any other Credit House in the City- 73 01 CREDIT CLOTHING CO, I(U.MIA(IH1)IW Till cold upon WAT - PRESIDENT RETURNS J! h 1 Jfonrney Homeward' Made Safely And - Without Incident. ' fs 1 ' WASHINGTON,' Nov! 21.rThe presi' dent reached Washington this morning at 8 o'clock. . The homeward journey was without special incident. The ride across the mountains over the Southern railway was made -in fast time. The train stopped only to change crews and en gines:: Its coming was generally un heralded, but there was a small crowd at almost every station. Several times the train was cheered as it swept by. At Chattanooga the president, re-' ceived a telegram from Newport, Tenn., paying that the school children would turn 'out to see him,"! .By hig" di rection" the ; train , wasj slowed down when that place was reached. - About 2XX. little ones, with flags in their hands, were .lined up along the track. ! The president stood on the rear plat form and waved his hand and hat to them. At Stevenson, Ala., early yes terday , morning about fifty children gathered around his car anfl begged , the porter to let them see the president. The president had just. got up, heard their cries and, rather than disappoint the little ones, stepped to the door in .his sacking feet and said; "Good morning." .- w ,y;. r i - i ' -. Just as the train drew, out -of . Oolte-. ' wah Junction, where the train stopped for water, a tall, rawboned mountairi- ' eer engaged .the president " in con .versation. - The Tennesseean remarked that ' the - bears , in Mississippi had proved too wild for " the president. 'Perhaps they were Democratic bears and took to the woods upon my ar rival," replied the president, smiling. At Knoxville the president shook hands with a sister of a lieutenant colonel of his regiment. GREAT OCEAN RACE T A-RTP MOTICTP? Beecham's Pills do not it perform, and they perform all they promise. Beecham's Ps are the safest and most perfectly, reliable medicine ever offered to the Public for Biliousness and Sluggisii or Disordered Liver. They have no equal in cases of Indigestion and Loss of Appetite. They are simply splendid as a Tonic and Restorative of the Ner;ous SysteiW. They ere excellent in removing the causes of Sleeplessness. ; They arr remarkable in their purifying action on the Blood. Their use brings the body to a high condition of health and fitness, and fortifies it against' disease, k No other preparation in ' the world has so many valuable qualities, and as a general or family medicine there- is - nothing equal .to W 13 i'.vF ?fr n"Frar?r5 in rAifi-ft- I $ f IM - i. i W J k i.i a There is no familv of fish mnr-o Tn. teresting than the salmon, and in no ! other fishery have the benefits of arti- j ficial propagation been more clearly ! demonstrated, The homing instinct of tne salmon enabled the propagators of" fry to learn, at the beginning of their work,, that "it was worth doing, writes John E. Spears, in Success. Salmon hatched in any str-eam. usually return to that stream when they are of spawn ing age. The propagators reared sal mon to the size of fingerlings, marked them, and turned them loose. In due time the marked fish returned and were eaus-ht in the home strpam Tf 4 a curious fact, however, that, in spite ui nie xioming lasiinct, sajmon are found at the fi'mawnins" season in iho brackish water at th foot of Alaskan glaciers, where, it is believed, no fish was ever hatched. -Another. curious ' fact'- 7pnn,ofi through marking the artificially propa gated nsn, is that a hngerhng weigh ing from one to two ounces mav ?rnw to weigh from two to ten pounds in feix or eight months, and in two years a weight of 40 pounds has been reached. The growth depends, of course, on the food sunnlv. But where salmon feert end what they feed on have not yet been learned, it is supposed" that they find small marine animals so numerous in their deep-sea haunts that they swim about "as if in a soup." Perhaps the deep-sea hauntswill sometime be discovered. ' So Gambling in Austria. . Por playing "heads and tails" for stakes of a farthing an apprentice named Paul Eiedel has been sentneed to banishment from Austria. Accord ing to the Austrian criminal law the uniform punishment for all games of ehance, including the; game "heads end tails," is banishment. N. Y. Post. r Starving; in Galieia,. ,J?In "Galicia. the wage of the farm la borer has been so reduced tha't he is1 starving t o tie:! ih on a pittance of from .v lv. Ct iij.w u -tiAXt Cmimev Cincinnati Led Warships In Long Dlatance Trial. '.'," ' SAN UAN, Porto Rico, Nov. 21. Carrying a great white bone in,, her : teeth and, with phosphorescent spray dashing high up on her sharp bows, the cruiser. Cincinnati forged abreast of Culebra light at midnight, a winner in the s greatest ocean race of 'warships ever run on the north Atlantic sea board r . : i , , . Barely two miles astern of the cruis er flashed the white searchlight of the great battleship Alabama. She had dis tanced all her rivals of. the heavy weight class and had shown her qual ity by putting up a hammer and tongs struggle all the way from Hampton Jtoads, Va., wiUi the fleet footed cruiser. - -";.',;-::"'-' '. A-.' .' '; One by one she had left behind the little gunboat Machias, the stanch bat tleship Indiana of Santiago fame, the formidable new battleship Kearsarge, her own particular rival, and last of all the plucky Massachusetts, sister ship of the immortal Oregon, r : That the comparatively old Massa chusetts was a stronger competitor than the, Kearsarge is one of the sur prises of the race. . , That the Alabama came in so close a second to the fast commerce destroyer Cincinnati, even though the cruiser had been handicapped thirty-five miles at the start, is a superb performance for a first class battleship heavily armed and heavily armored. v., This is the first time in its history that the ships of the north Atlantic'' squadron have engaged in such a long distance speed contest in the ooen sea. Tie Broadway Stables Rear of Poll's Theater- weather us to have your ss The fine weather we have ; , been having is apt to : : : MAKE YOU CARELESS, If you have a Garment or Furs of any description that you think fiave ' survived their usefulness, Bring them here and we will show you what we can. do to make them ; , ; LOOK LIKE NEW iWhile'wc make a specialty of repairing we. have a large line of Furs to select from Come and see us before the rush- New England Fur Co 167 South ftzr Street. Chauncey 3eeley & Co., Are Drenared to furnish estimates and take contracts on all kinds of building. Jobbing promptly attended, to. Lot at Oakwood, No 41; will build house on easy terms. Shop and Office, 83 Bishop street. 13IAN0S TUNED JT Bv ALEX. HART Pianos, no matter how old, can be repaired. Orders may be left at George N. Ells' book store, 64 Bank street, Waterbury. Conn. . 1 The Popular Place for Dyeing, 'Cleaning and Repairing of All i-mas or uarmems ai ine FRENCH DYE WORKS nVmKit.fi the Poll. Ladies' Skirts rebouud with the toest Brush Braid and scourea and. pressed for . i.00. Best velvet collar put on youu ovarcoat for from 50c to $3. You will need your overcoat soon. 172 East Main St.. Waterbury. Store and 5-Room Tenement on North Main street for sale cheap on easy terms or will trade. VV. P, JARHETT. Raai Estate, 63 Bank Street. Room IS. BOARDING HORSES A SPECIALTY E. W. BRADLEY, Manager. N. W. REED, Proprietor. TLone connection. If You Want a Man For any kind of CARPENTER WORK, telephone or call at 48 South Willow Street. G. A. UPHAM, Successor to Seeley & Upham Co. HOW IS YOUR CHAIIGE Why be troubled with a leaking roof when you can get a new one rea sonably by seeing Charles F. Miller, carpenter and builder; shop, 46 Bene dict street: house and 'phone, 179 Wal-i.-t fctrectj tall, 143, A GOOD HORSE . attached to an up-to-date carriage, and your wife, who needs an outing, beside you, will l ake you feel good and may. save'doctor's bills. If not married take somebody's daughter whom you know you would like for a wife. Go to LOUCK5' STABLES, 6 SPRING STREET 'PHONE an-1 OAKYILLE CO, MAKERS OP 0 Wire and Metal Goods. P. O. Freight and Express. Address Oaktiile. Cona. Telegraph Addrcs Waterbury. Ci:a. New 1'orle OUiCA 48 Howard Street DO YOU. WANT Any teaming done ? We have all kinds of teams and careful drivers, You will soon want grading ' done;. If you do, see us about it. H. L. WELTON. Elir. Street, W&terville. The Yaterbury Ice Corporation TEAMING. Owing to the unusual demand for heavy teaming we have decided to of fer for the use of, the public our heavy double teams, suitable for hauling all kinds of heavy merchandise. 'Prices: reasonable. Horses for sale. Second-hand harnesses for sale. . Wagons for sale. The Waterbury Ice Corporation Natural Q Hypia Qffto :nj Ycri, 37 Crc:kStr:2i