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Waterbury evening Democrat. [volume] (Waterbury [Connecticut]) 1903-1917, November 20, 1908, Image 2

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KVATERBUTIY EVENING DEMOCRAT, FRIDAY, -NOVEMBER 20, 1908.
Fulton Fish and Meat Market
58-202 CHERRY ST.
HIGH GRADE SEA FOOD-
riallbut, salmon, bullheads, lake
White flub, spotted trout, pike, blue
flih, perch, frogs legs, soft crabs,
crab meat, green turtle, scallops and
lobsters.
Mn Moore, Prop, one 841
CASH LOANS
15 and upwards on furniture, pi
uos. etc. Business strictly private.
43 East Main St' Room 37.
Over 6 and 10-cent Store.
Money Loaned
1 1 ssen tnd women en furniture, P.snoa
etc.
"VuSanT' Room 36
Call sad Get Our Low Rates.
-' The young . woman, who when
asked: "Whether she would rather
be an old man's darling or a young
man's slave?" replied "that she
would prefer to be a young man's
darling," showed wisdom. Warmth
of soul Is very good. We need, as
especially at this season, some ina-
terlal heat. Brown's Qulckflre Char
coal and Otto Coke makes a fire in a
short time, filing the home with a
Bice mellow and comfortable warmth.
TELEPHONE.
j. H. MULVILLE,
i The Undertaker.
Residence, 439 East Main
t . Street.
Store, St. Patrick's Block,
110 East Main Street
Tdephooe 1080. Readme 603 North
Main Street.
MORIARTYS,
UNDERTAKERS.
OFFICE OVER POLTS KNTRANCB
. Open Day and Night
Telephones 397. 354, 2080.
Arthur J. Lunny
Undertaker and
Funeral Director.
The price of the casket is the price
ef the complete funeral with me.
Funeral Parlors snd Show Room,
231-233 Grand St
TELEPHONE 499.
OPEN DAY AND NIGHT.
40 Stamps Free
with 50c worth of Teas, Coffees,
' Extracts, or Baking Powder.
Best Teas, Imported, 35c, 40c, 50c,
60c lb.
Best Coffees, Imported, 18c, 20c, 25c,
SO, 32 and 35c lb.
FOR THANKSGIVING,
All Kinds of Good Things.
Raisins, Nuts, Figs, Dates, Oranges,
EVAPORATED FRflTS, Canned
Fruits, Etc.
Look Out for Our
CUT PRICE GROCERY SALE
Price at these sales will be HIT
HARD, so keep your EYE on this
Bpace. It will he big pay for doing so.
Golden Tipped India-Ceylon Tea,
U. S.. Ceylon, India, China.
Japan, lb pkg 25c
EXTRA STAMPS.
SO stamps with 3 pUgs A. & P.
Mince Meat 25c
10 stamps with 1 can Sultana
Spice 10c
10 stamps with 1 pkg all prepared
Plum Pudding 10c
10 stamps with 5 lb crock John
son's Mince Meat 50c
10 stamps with 1 lb French Ore
gon Prunes 10c
10 stamps with 1 can Bell's Poul
try Seasoning 10c
10 stamps with 1 jar A. & P.
Jam 15c
10 stamps with 1 lb can A. & P.
Plum Pudding. . . . ' Oc
10 stamps with 1 can Sultana
Corn 10c
10 stamps with 2 cans Iona Toma
toes, each sc
MAIN )
CALL, 2037.
Fresh Eggs at Cost.
It ro are loon ror ooaraen,
try the Democrat want adrs for re
Vita; SO word S oars for 25 eeata,
WATERBUBV. CONN.
IsMKiky
THE 0EM0OAT PUBLISHING COMPANY.
'l-TS Grand St.. WiTiasosr, Ooaa
C. Malonej, Edit mi Prstrltter.
MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS.
Subscription Rates:
ONE YEAR. .M I SIX MONTHS, UK
Tunas Montis, 1 a I Oms Month Con,
Deltwed by Cantor to tor pari ot Clly.
Bj Mall to uj plus 1b Cnltaa State.
Entorod at On Pott Off in at Wattrburt, Conn
' u Mcond clam Matter.
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1008.
A St Louis woman wants a dl
vorce because her husband has given
her only one hat and one dress in
twenty-five years. There is no Jus
tice in the courts if she does not win
a suit this time.
It is all officially arranged that Mr
Roosevelt will become an editor. How
long he will remain satisfied to be
heard from but once a month re
mains to he seen. A correspondence
school would seem better suited to
his tastes.
Chairman Kenealy's election state
nient shows that E. J. Hill contribut
ed $500 to the republican state com
mlttee fund and that Frank B. Bran
degee gave $5,000. New Britain
Herald.
What base ingratitude it would be
to turn Brandegee down after coming
up bo nicely.
Those republicans in Waterbury
who have been finding fault because
democratic office holders are asked
to pay toward the campaign expenses
might take a glance over the list of
contributors to the fund which the
g. o. p. used to run the last state
election. Office holders will he found
on the list in plenty, and It looks as
though they were made to pony up
handsomely for being allowed to
feed at the crib.
Just now politicians of whom
there are many in Washington, some
of them distinguished, are engaged
In speculations with reference to the
outcome of tariff tinkering, electing
United States senators from New
York, Ohio, Iowa and other states.
They are also trying their hands at
cabinet making for the president
elect. It is predicted that Myron P.
Herrick, former governor of Ohio,
will be nominated for the secretary
ship of the treasury. It is believed
that Mr Garfield will remain in his
present position as secretary of the
interior. In such case there would
be two cabinet ministers front Ohio
but there is recent precedent for
such an arrangement for has not
President Roosevelt three cabinet of
ficers all from the state of New
York in Root, Cortelyou and Straus.
The old idea that cabinet ministers
must be picked out with delicate con
sideration for geography might as
well be abandoned. When the right
man is willing to serve for $10,000
a year and such fame mingled with
reprobation as the place may afford
him and his wife he ought to be
nominated by the president and con
firmed by the senate whether he halls
from Nevada or Rhode Island or any
intermediate state.
The corrosion of tubular poles at
the base has long been a matter of
concern to trolley companies, and it
was to remedy the situation that the
use of concrete has been resorted to,
says Cement Age, New York. The
method of treating the poles is as fol
lows: The workmen are furnished
either with a wagon or ladder and a
vehicle whicth carries a grouting tank
and a motor-driven compressed air
outfit operated by current tapped
from the trolley wire. In repairing
a pole the first step is to remove the
cap from the pole and then drop into
the latter a reinforcing cage built of
high carbon steel twisted bars. At
the factory the lower ends of these
rods are set in a concrete iron base,
but at the top a hooked cap tem
porarily confines the upper ends of
the rods to allow the rage to pass
through the narrower upper section
of the pole. Upon the withdrawal of
this cap from above the rods flare
out against the side of the pole, but
are prevented from touching it
through the interposition of shims.
The next step Is to force the concrete
into the pole from the grout tank by
way of a line of armored hose. When
enough concrete to cover the rods has
been injected, the pole cap is re
placed, and the setting of the con
crete does the rest. The size of the
rods and quality of concrete varies,
of course, with the degree of the re
inforcement desired, but in all cases
this method brings the advantage of
a reinforcement which extends above
and below the ordinary limit of cor-
rosion. It has been found that the
entire process can be carried out in
. a few minutes, so that even in the
i narrowest streets there is no appre-
l iable interference with traffic. There
is no excavating to be done in Its re-,
construction, and no dismantling cf
poles. The reinforcement is invisi
ble, grows stronger with age, and Is
inexpensive.
When Secretary Root Instead of
Piatt shall represent the wealthiest
and most populous state In the Union
it may be predtcted that there will
be something doing, says a Wash
ington correspondent. He Is not a
military man, but during his service
as secretary ot war he succeeded in
having legislation enacted In the
teeth of the old fogy generals that
was not short of revolutionary. 81nce
he has been secretary of state the
consular service has felt his vitaliz
ing and purifying touch and the de
partment of state which was cob
webbed with red tape and clogged
with humdrum fogylsm, has been
placed on an effective rational work
ing basis. It is impossible that such
a man in the senate can be quiescent
or useless, much less venal and ob
structive like the man he is expected
to succeed. There has been a won
derful change In politics and poli
ticians during the seven years which
will be known perhaps In the future
as the beginning of the Rooseveltan
reform era. There are others to
carry on the work and it will not be
arrested by the departure of the
president for Africa. What a change
for example has come over the spirit
of politics in New York as demon
strated In the election, for the sec
ond time, of such a man as Governor
Hughes, elected as he was in the
teeth of the fiercest opposition of the
machine politicians. Eight years ago
Secretary Root would have stood no
chance of coming to the senate from
New York. Now he will take his
place as the most conspicuous repre'
sentative in the American house of
peers and If he does not begin at
once like Senator LaFollette to make
himself heard and understood New
York and the country will fail to get
all they are entitled to.
HEARD IS 2ASSIKG.
General Hancock wasn't so far
wrong when he said the tariff was a
local issue. This is being demon
strated every day at the hearings in
Washington. Each section of the
country Is after something without
reference to how the country as a
whole feels about it. Bridgeport
Fost.
Now Bill's brother, C. P. Taft, of
Cincinnati, is being prominently
mentioned as the next senator from
the state of Ohio. Good suggestion!
Anybody with the name Taft goes
now, especially if he is in the fam
ily. W. H. T's recommendation is
enough. New Haven Journal and
Courier.
There is some opposition to the
hunting license law among the farm
ers of Connecticut, whom it was real
ly designed to benefit most. The ola
ject of this law is the preservation of
the game and song birds, and the
number of licenses which have been
taken out show that it was not en
acted any too soon. Norwich Bulle
tin. Few cities in the state are as well
situated for convention purposes as
is Meriden. Its location is central.
Its day and night train service is ex
cellent. The people of Meriden are
hospitable, its natural scenery is un
surpassed and we have the facilities
in the way of hotel and hall accom
modations for taking care of all but
a very few of the largest state con
ventions that are held in Connecti
cut. Meriden Record.
President Roosevelt made a char
acteristic speech at the labor dinner
at the white house on Tuesday.
This is the way he explained the
situation: "Now, you labor people
get together, find out what you want
and let us know, and by George we
will try to help you out both by leg
islation and in the courts." That
doesn't sound as though the presi
dent has given up all his thoughts
to that trip to Africa. New Britain
Herald. , :
Three fatal auto accidents in New
Haven within 48 hours are three too
many. Hartford has lately gone
through an almost similar experience
and almost every city in the country,
big and little, has had nerve racking
incidents if not fatal accidents. Ac
cording to report New Haven has
adopted strenuous measures to pre
vent future tragedies. A flying
squadron of police has been formed
and it is said the automobile speed
regulations will be rigidly enforced.
Norwich Record.
Only those who have been working
short hours, or have been idle a part
of the time in the past few months,
have any conception of what it
means to have business revived and
to be put back on 'full time and un
derstand that there will be a chance
of plenty to do all winter. The aver
age man who works in a shop and
has a family dependent upon him
has to he busy about all the time if
he hopes to meet his obligations and
a curtailment of 25 per cent of his
earning ability makes a serious loss
to his revenues. New London Day.
There are some mighty well tried
and veteran voters in Connecticut,
and at the late election two of them,
"C. J. Camp of Winsted, and Avery
V. Barnes of Norwich, cast their
eighteenth and twentieth presidential
votes, respectively. Mr Camp first
voted for William Henry Harrison In
1840,' and Mr Barnes for Andrew
Jackson in 1832.'' We take it that
Mr Barnes is not one of those who
having voted once for Andrew Jack
son found the habit so confirmed
that it could not be broken. We tin
heard that there were such. Bridge
port Standard.
Mentl Arithmetic.
"Two years c;ro I asked Aunt Jane to
visit us for a fortnight, and she has
Bt gone home yet."
"It's a blessing."
"What's a blessing V
"That you didn't Invite, her for a
month." Harper's Weekly.
Only One "BItOMO QUININE"
That Is LAXATIVE BROMO QUIN
INE. Look for the signature of E.
W. GROVE. Used the World over to
Cure a Cold in One Day. 25c
144-148
S. MAIN.
UVttGIXT
s your dining table large
j
Thanksgiving day? Here
pillar base round top
"fTl
$20
Twenty-five patterns from
best value.
EH)
$24 to $75.
LANGLJEY
Yellow
Front
Cut Tiiis Coupon Oul
It is Valuable and will Save Half
Your Money. Redeemable at
Dexter's.
George L. Dexter & Co. the popu
lar druggists, will save yon money.
Present the following coupon at
their store, corner East and North
Main streets, and they will let you
have a regular fifty cent package
of Dr Ames' Pleasant Specific for
the cure of constipation and dyspep
sia, containing a full month's treat
ment at half price.
Cut This Coupon Out and use it
at Once.
This coupon entitles the hold
er to one 50c package of Dr
Ames' Pleasant Specific for the
cure of dyspepsia, constipation
and biliousness, at half price,
25c. We agree to return money
in all cases where it does not
cure.
GEO L. DEXTER & CO.
Dexter & Co will .go further, and
will give with every package they
sell their personal guarantee to re
fund the money If Dr Ames' Pleas
ant Specific does not cure a re
liable medicine at half price; with a
guarantee that your money will be
cheerfully returned If the remedy
does not cure.
Anyone who Is suffering from
liver trouble, constipation, sick head
ache. Indigestion, bad taste In the
mouth, biliousness, specks before
the eyes, melancholy, or tired feel
ings should take advantage of this
offer. Messrs Dexter & Co don't
know how long they will be able to
Bell Ames' Pleasant Specific at half
price, for the sale has been some
thing phenomenal.
As the dose is diminished after
the first few days a bottle that you
can obtain now for 25 cents, will
last a month. And It costs nothing
if it does not cure,
"j. lu DEXTER & CO. Druggists,
Corner East and , West Main
Streets, Waterbury.
Complete line of fine Enam
eled Ware
Smooth, bright fluisli. Heavy doubU
coated, making them wear tnncb
longer than the ordinary goods. Prices
very reasonable to Introduce the line
In the new stora cf
P. H. GARRITY,
342 South Main St,
Scientific Plumbing and Sanitai
Work.
TELEPHONE 10G9-4.
THE LEY 01 ST RUCTIOI CO. Ins.
(Branch of Fred T. Ley Co, Inc. of
Npringfleld, Mass.)
GENERAL CONTRACTORS.
Controllers of the Bone System of
Reinforced Concrete Retaining Walls
and the Reinforced Luten Arch In
New England.
ROOM 0. Ml LUXGS BriLDING,
03 Bank St. 'Phone 2 1 H3-4.
G. B. Hall. Oen Mgr and Engineer.
DEPENDABLE GOODS
FURNISH
Comfortable Homos
YOUR CREDli IS GOOD.
LANGLEY
giving
enough for your family on
,-.
is one of exceptional value
elegant finish seats eight
without putting in the ex
tra leaves' The price is
very low.
$6 to $35. All of the very
i
Don't Get Roped In
to buy a TRUNK of Inferior quality
at high price when we can offer you
the very best make, constructed of
hard wood and patent locks for much
lower price. We are leaders in the
TRUNK LINE and our great sales
speak volumes as to the excellence
of our goods.
We have a splendid new stock of
UMBRELLAS for the wise and thrif
ty to choose from, made with para
gon frames and waterproof cover
ings. Wat. Trunk o: Umbrella Mfrs.
153 BANK ST.
Telephone Connections.
We are specialists in the repair lino
of Trunks, Bags and Umbrellas, also
key fitters.
The Best
- That is the Magee Range.
Full line Heating Stoves.
Tin and Wooden Ware.
Stransky Enameled Ware.
Plumbing, Heating and
Roofing.
The Barlow
Bros. Co.,
61, 63, 65 Grand Street.
PAINTING and PAPERHANGING
it ear aid trade we satisfy evaryeoa is work
and price. We fsraih paper, border sad
labor complete for il 50 per roam sad wp.
Make as aibuke bet ceaie to toy place: taii
or hi asm baiiaew next deer. We are sot
tailors, bet paperhangers.
DAVID OOLDBERO,
a Abbott Aybc. 'Pbona lft a. Open Erf i
THE OAKYILLE COMPANY
Maaafsetarers of Wire sad Metal Goods
P. O , Freight aid Express Address, Oak
ille. Gone. Te errtph Address. Water-
fc V' V flr. . m
bory. Coia
New, York Office. 48
Howard Street
RANGES.
Try a Democrat Want.
The Shapiro Furniture Co.,
Incorporated. ,
266 South Main Street Just Below Grand
"Out of the High Price District. "
Credit and
Be sure to see our remarkable display of fashionable
Fall Clothing for
MEN, WOMEN AND ' CHILDREN.
Ladies' Tailored Sulta $18.80, worth $25.00.
Ladles' Broadcloth Coats $17.08, worth $26.00.
Ladles' Caracul Coats 814.98, worth $20.00.
Men's Tailored Suits, 918.00, worth $25.00.
Latest style Overcoats 818.00, worth $25.00.
Ladies' and Children's Fir Sets $3.98 to $40.00.
LZF PAYMENTS $ month6'
will clothe the whole Family.
Union Credit Clothing Co.
194 BANK STREET
Buckingham Building,
BUSINESS MEN WEAR
W ILDOUGILAS
THI BEST $35Q SHQES ro
W. L. Douglas shoes are worn by
business men In every walk of life,
because they meet the demand for a
practical business man's shoe. At
tractive lasts, thorough workman-
ship, no cramping or chafing these
features help make them popular.
They are the best shoe investment
on the market to-day. I want
to try a pair at once, for I know you
will then agree with thousands of
other practical men who place the
W. L. Douglas shoe first in the
world at the price, $330.
W. L. DOUGLAS $4.00 SHOES 0f,EyErEil
IK f. OMffu Aon . . $1.7 M mm $JIO.
Watt rotor MptloU mood am rfurtma. Cautoaw muled tn. W. U Dot'ttLAS, BreetKm, Sut '
W. L DOUGLAS SHOE STORE
I i 0 a f 1 W I
Get a "MODEL"
RANGE
and enjoy life. No better baleen In
-the country. Prices suit everybody'!
pocket. ;
We have just received an elegant
line of Chamber Suits. Come la
and look at them. 1 ,
Satisfaction
- Waterbury, Conn.
0
2
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IN WATERDURY : 83 Bank SttttU
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