Newspaper Page Text
A in a WATERBURY EVENING DEMOCRAT, v WEDNESDAY, NOTERIBER 25, 1008. Fulton Fish and Meal Market 838.202 CHERRY. ST. HIGH GRADE SEA FOOD- Halibut, Balmon, bullheads, lake white flah, spotted trout, pike, blue flab, perch, frogs legs, soft craba, crab meat, green turtle, scallops and lobsters, : Jotin Moore, Prop, ThoneMi CASH LOANS $5 and upwards on furniture, pi- vooa. etc Business sincuy private. 43 East Main St Room 37. Over 5 and 10-cent Store. Monev Loaned It Bien and women on furniture, Piano etc. SJS!Sr Room 36 Call and Get Our Low Ratei Brown's Quick- fire Charcoal is the best regulator of fires. If the fire runs down Brown's Charcoal will bring it up quick ly. If the oven gets cool a little Brown's Charcoal will stim ulate it. TELEPHONE. J. H. MULVILLE, The Undertaker. Residence, 439 East Main Street. Store, St. Patrick's Block, 110 East Main Street. Jot. C. lnhn Mnrinia . Wm. C Moriarty ohjuouj. Moriarty Telephone 1080. Residence 603 North Main Street. MORIARTYS, UNDERTAKERS. OFFICE OVER POLrS ENTRANCE Open Day and Night. Telephones 397, 354, 2080. Arthur J. Lunny Undertaker and Funeral Director. The price of the casket is the price of the complete funeral with me. Funeral Parlors and Show Room, 231-233 Grand St. TELEPHONE 499. OPEN DAY AND NIGHT. I EYTRA STAMPS AND SPECIAL LEADERS. Do You Ever Give It a Thought? The money you could save by pur chasing your Teas, Coffees and Gro ceries at the A. & P. store. Special Sale of Royal Cheese with Extra Stamps. "25 stamps with a large jar Royal ' Chese 2,"c IS stamps with a medium jar Royal Cheese 15c 10 stamps with a small jar Royal Cheese 10c 35 stamps with a 11) 38c Coffee. 30 stamps with a lb 35c Coffee. 25 stamps with a lb 30c Coffee. 20 stamps with a lb 25c Coffee. 10 stamps with a lb 20c Coffee. Mixed Nuts, 2 lbs 25c A. & P. Seeded Raisins, 3 pki;s. regular 30c 25? A . & P. Cleaned Currant, 3 pkgs. regular 30c 2."e Marshall's Kippered Herring, 2 cans, regular 30c 2.c Iona Peas, 3 cans, regular 30c. .2oe Sultana Tomatoes, 3 cans, regular 30c 2.,c Cluster Raisins, lb 12c London Layer Raisins, lb luc 10 stamps' with 1 can Red Alaska ' Salmon 15c 10 stamps with 1 box Shaker Salt 10c 10 stamps with 1 bottle A. & P. Queen Olives 15c 10 stamps with 1 bottle A. & P. Olive Oil 22c 10 stamps with 1 tumbler Jelly, 10c 10 stamps with 1 can Ammo 'Dry Ammonia) 10c 10 stamps with a 1 lb can A. & P. .. Plum Pudding ' 10 stamps with 1 bottle A. & P. Cider Vinegar ioc 10 stamps with 1 bottle A. & P. Catsup 18c 20 stamps with lb packet A. &. P. Blend Golden Tipped India Ceylon Tea 25c Give it a trial. 15 stamps with 14 lb can absolute pure A. & P. Baking Powder. .10c 60 stamps with a lb 70c Tea. 60 stamps with a lb fiOc Tea. MARC ml CALL, 2037. ou-ro losing money Trj oay (bat yrar tenement 1 racant 11 Cm Democrat Had a tenant daa rot P9 BABT "V WATERUUBY. CONN. Inntd by THE DEMOCRAT PUBLISHING COMPANf. 71-73 Grand St., Watbrbuht, Cost C. Maloney, Editor and Proprietor. MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS. Subscription Rates: ON'E YEAR. IS.no I SIX MONTH9, U.M Tunis Months, l.U I On Moktu tots, Delivered by Carrier to ur part of City. By Mill to ay pluoe in United States. Entered at the Pot Offic at iFaterburu, Conn at lewntt cla .Matter. WEDNESDAY, NOV. 25, 1008. Nov. 25 In History. 1764 Hogarth, English painter and caricaturist, died: born 1097. 17S3 Evacuation of New York by the British, the last position held by them In the United States. 1885 Thomas Andrews Hendricks, vice president of the United States, died; born 1819. 1905 Norway's new king, Haakon VII., given royal welcome into Chrls- tlanla. ASTRONOMICAL EVENTS. Sun sets 4:32, rises C:56; moon sets 6:05 p. m.; moon at descending node. crossing suu's path downward; 3:30 a. m.; eastern time, all Jupiter's moons closely grouped about the planet Nov. 26 In History. 1504 Isabelle I., queen of Spain, con sort of Ferdinand and the friend of Columbus, died; born 1451. 1778 The Sandwich Islands discovered bv Captain Cook. 1S99 Great Britain formally notified the powers of the state of war in South Africa. 0905 The 250th anniversary of the set tlement of the Jews in America observed throughout the country, ASTRONOMICAL EVENTS. Sun sets 4:81, rises 6:5"; moon sets 7:02 p. in.; moon's age, 3 days; moon lowest on farthest south; 8:58 p. m., moon in conjunction with Uranus, passing the planet from west to east. Just before last Christmas a writer in the Independent, who spent a week in the thick of the holiday rush said: "I saw girls of 17 and 18 weeping with pain and weariness at 11 o'clock at night as with shaking fingers they made their counters at tractive against the next day's brutal rush. I saw one young girl drop in a dead faint after selling dolls to a fond mother of children. I saw little boys fall asleep in" rubbish corners at the noon hour, their untasted luncheons in their tired hands. That night when I went to my supper saw a boy, small for his 16 years, sit ting on a box before the employes' elevator, for which we waited. He looked up at me and with the craving for sympathy innate in children, he sighed softly, 'Oh, my God, I wish 1 o'clock would come.' People were buying groceries, wines, flannels, dress goods, toys, books, jewelry, hats, gloves, handkerchiefs, automo biles think of it at half past eleven o'clock at night, December 24! Is the world indeed heartless and inhu man or is it only heedless?" Do your Christmas shopping early is the cry now. Keep it in mind. It is no exaggeration to say that the two musical events held in the Buckingham yesterday, under the auspices of the Waterbury Oratorio society, surpassed anything ever be fore attempted in Waterbury. The affair was a success from every point of view. It was made the social as well as the musical event of the sea son. The afternoon concert was a rare treat and that great composer and leader, Victor Herbert, was at his best, and that is saying much. He furnished a programme of rare ex cellence and was generous in respond ing to repeated encores. The suc cess of the whole affair is a splendid tribute to musical Waterbury, and tho?e who handled the musical event must feel that their efforts have been appreciated. Conductor George E. Boyd who labored long and ear nestly, is to be congratulated, for the greater part of the responsibility rested on his shoulders. The suc cess of the rendition of "Faust" is a great victory for him, for while he was backed up by an orchestra that has few equals, splendid soloists, and a chorus that far surpassed any ever heard before in Waterbury, hif work was arduous and painstaking to the last, and the successful ending of the affair reflects great credit on him. It was an event that music lov ers of Waterbury should be proud of and no doubt they are. The root of our present trust prob lem is with the public, which con demns without a hearing any corpor ation under legislative fire. The pub lic follows unthinkingly men who have little to lose and much to gain. Comparatively few of these men are sincere and disinterested. writes Henry Leavitt, Jr, in Appleton's for December. Of those who are honest in their efforts to purify business and political conditions, many are aca demic theorists who, with the best intentions in the world, do as much harm as their dishonest fellows. They approach purely economic questions in unconscious Ignorance of the basic facts involved. Most of the politi cians deal with purely economic questions on grounds of time serving, political expediency. So long as the people continue to be led by time servers of all kinds and methods the false prophets of our day thing will go from bad to worse. - However they may distrust the politicions and the muck rakers, the mors progres- slve industrial leaders are anxious to have faith In the people. They want to Deueve that when both sides of their problems are fairly presented to the people, the final Judgment will be just. Few great Industrial lead either seek to deny or condone the great evils which have come to light In our business conditions. What they do seek and demand Is a fair heang at the bar of public opinion. In the settlement of great problems In a free and enlightened country, public opinion must ever be the final arbiter. Until the people have had opportunity to hear and weigh Im partially both sides of a problem, It cannot fairly be Bettled. Until a question Is justly settled, it is not settled at all. HEARD IN PASSING. "We are living too rapidly," says John D. Rockefeller. Justice, how ever, hasn't got the hurry-up habit. New York American. ' The serene Senator Piatt Is possi bly noting with satisfaction the gen eral Impression that It .will take a mighty good man to Succeed him. Washington Star. ; - Three thousand men fought for 500 jobs in South Chicago yesterday. If prosperity is not careful it will be crippled by the fervor of the greeting it receives. Chicago -Daily News. Frederick the Great once remarked, "My people may say what they please and I do what I please." The kaiser has found it advisable to add some postscripts to Frederick's declaration Meriden Record. "Where can wo find religion and athletics combined?" asks the Rev Dr Gordon bemoaning the ungodll ness of football. Well there was Tad Jones, who was always accustomed to get down on his knees and pray for victory. And there are numerous others. Boston Herald. The socialist vote in , Manhattan borough declined about 500 in 1908 compared with 1904. In Chicago it suffered a heavy shrinkage. But throughout the country, it appears that Debs gained about 130,000 over his vote four years ago. The shifting of the socialist strength from city to country, as now appears from unoffi cial returns, was a singular develop ment. Springfield Republican. A French inventor has produced a horseshoe of leather which is secured to the hoof by a mixture of cement and asphalt. Successful trials of the device has been made in Paris. The new shoe does away with the crude and probably painless process of nail ing. It may interest New York driv ers as a posible remedy for the sllp ping and straining of horses on smooth pavements, since gripping points should be easy to place in the leather. New York World. Some very large stories are told as to the amount of money won and lost on the Harvard-Yale game. No doubt there was a good deal of betting on the result, and that the wagers ag gregated very large figures, but the big winners and losers are probably not the students. 'Their bettipg re sources are not generally ' large though quite likely the young men of Harvard are gratified to find their sundry expense account fatter than it wouIj have been if the result at New Haven had been different. Boston Herald. DYNAMITE IN THE MAKING. Workmen Who Are Encircled by Death In Gallons and Tons. So thoroughly deceptive is dynamite in the making that you are apt to be disappointed on viewing the surface of things. You could more readily fancy thunderbolts leaping and crash ing from tender blue skies than that the most fearful forces in creation are hidden under such a peaceful exterior. Nitroglycerin, a cupful of which would distribute you over square miles of landscape, Is diligently mixing around you in hundreds and thousands of gal lons. It is making itself in big Iron retorts, cascading down leaden gutters and merrily tumbling in minute Niagaras into immense vats, where the deli quescent yellow peril pursues Its jour ney powderward. Out of one recep tacle It fares furiously through special lend coils, driven only by cooling blasts of air, and is drawn off like draft ale and piped on to the next perfecting stage. Gaze with the nitroglycerin ex pert into one of those big caldrons. The Interior is brilliantly illuminated by electricity, the only Illuminating agency permitted in or about the dan ger bouses. Around you are other houses at uni form distances apart and connected by a series of narrow gauge tracks wherein workmen are railroading ni troglycerin from here and pulp cotton from there to be compounded into dy namite and blasting gelatin. Greatest care is taken In rolling the prodnct from house to house. As soon as a loaded cart Is ready to pass out of the nitroglycerin house, for instance, a semaphore signals from an adjoining station, to which the consignment is carefully hurried. Around you are long storehouses packed with pulp In tons of innocent whiteness. Presently this pulp will as sume a tan color under the nitrating process, and then, suddenly becoming earbonlte, red cross, hercules. judson and giant powder, forclte or what you order, it develops the quasi virtues of dynamite dynamite or blasting gela tin In which more natural forces are condensed to the cubic Inch than exist anywhere else in creation. Death, curbed and sleeping, encircles you in gallons and tons. Annihilation threat ens at every turn In the form of poten tial pulverizing forces. But the man and the mercury are there also, alert, responsive, reliable. IsIIe's Weekli Head.-M-hcn and WuralKia from Colds LAXATIVE RROMO Quinine, th world wide Cold and Grip remedy, removes cause. Call for full name. Look for signature E. W. GROVE see. Are 1ANGLET DO YOU NEED A DINING TABLE Here is an exact copy of one I tell for $20. Bound top pillar base highly finished seats eight without extra leaves. Plenty others, $6 to $35. SIDE BOARD This board is forty-six inches lone has beveled mirror eighteen by forty inches three drawers cupboard cast brass pulls excellent finish. Priced at $28 others $15 to $75. " China Cabinet Has bent crystal glass front and built polished finish excellent of others. Yellow Front LANGLEY A TRIPLE SURPRISE. It Came With a Pleasant Outing In a , Now Auto Car. I A well known author, who for some years has been an enthusiastic ad mirer of the automobile, bad an amus ing experience, which she describes In the Bohemian. A new model al ways attracted her attention, she de clares, and when she came out of the New York hotel where she was stay ing aud saw a fine new car standing unoccupied by the curb she stopped to admire It: While I examined it and gazed with envy a friend, also interested in autos, came down the steps and approached the machine. "Isn't it stunning!" he said. I agreed enthusiastically and added that the machine was tantalizing me, as I did so long to take a spin, that my chauffeur was 111 and that I was afraid to run my car through the city. "Why, I will take you," he said. "I haven't anything to do this afternoon. Where shall we go?" We got In, and I suggested Coney. To make a long story short, the de lightful ride gave us au appetite. We stopped for dinner and then went out to Sea Gate to call upon friends. As we were crossing the bridge on our way home at about 11 o'clock my friend inquired, "At what garage do you keep your machine?" At the question a terrible possibility dawned upon me, and with the re membrance of a certain unfamillarity that he had displayed at the first in regard to the running of the car the situation became Instantly clear. He had thought that the machine was mine, and I had been eqnally secure in the belief that it wai his. In other words, we had calmly gone off with some one else's property. You may imagine our feelings. We felt confident that we would be ar rested on our way uptown. We rolled np to the hotel inwardly quaking. After much inquiry and explaining we found the Indignant owner. For tunately he knew me slightly and bad a well developed sense of humor, in spite of a rather forbidding expres sion as we first faced him with oar unfortunate story. I think he believed us. His parting remark, however, was rather puiziing, although he said It with evident cordiality: "Whenever you'd like to use the ma chine again Just let me know." Sh Got a New Pair. . Sarcasticus and his wife were going to the theater. "Will yon please go In and get my coats off the dressing table?" said Mrs. 8. "Tour goats?" queried the puzzled Sarcasticus. "What fangle hare you women got now?" "I'll show your snapped the wife, and she sailed away and soon retain ed, patting on her floret. "Are those what yoa mean? Why, I call those kids." "I used to." replied Mrs. 8arcatieus, "bat they are getting so old I am ashamed to any longer." He took the hint-Pearson's Week-If. You Ready FOR Thanksgiving ? ? ends five shelves solidly value priced at $25 plenty NOTICE. The Democrat efflcn is onen every evening until 8 o'clock and on "Wed nesday and Saturday evenings until 9. People who desire to pay sud scription or other bills, or to leave job work or advertisements will be attended to evenings if they can not call during the day. TO SZVlTfp A Good Protection In more ways than one, are our strongly built and highly serviceable UMBRELLAS. They have stout rods and strong frames with your choice of natural wood handles, or trimmed If you prefer. All guaranteed water proof and fast color. Close rollers and neat looking. The prices are reasonable enough to tempt 'you to buy. . , Wat Trunk & Umbrella Irs. 153 BANK ST. "Telephone Connections. Umbrellas recovered and repaired while V wait. Keys fitted at short notice. Telephone 1315-12. FOR GOOD SHAVING A3D HAIR CtmiNO t GaTTER & HODSON'S NwSbo - ' Jl WIST MAIM iTUKKT. Over Park Loach Boona. PAINTING and PAPERHANGING b our old trade we satisfy everyone ia work and price. We furnish paper, border asd labor complete for $2 50 per room aad up. Make so mUtake bat coate to my place: tail or ia same business seat door. We are aot tailors, but paperbaotera. DAVID OOLDBERO, S9 Abbott ATence. 'Pbon 1278 I. Opn Erfi TOT OAKY1LLE COMPANY Maoafaeturert of Wire and Metal Goods P. O Freight aad Express Address. Oak rule. Com. To ocrsph Address, Water bury. Coaa. Ntw York Office. 48 Howard Street. INDIVIDUAL INSTRUCTION ; Arithmetic, Algebra, Bookkeeping, also Languages. H. 8. GULLIVER, M. A. (Tale). II Walnut at Tol 1229. . 11-lS-tX St Snappy Styles Men's Plenty of new creations in the following list that will appeal to careful dressers. NECKWEAR, HEAD WEAR, UNDERWEAR, HANDKERCHIEFS, SUSPENDERS, COAT SWEATERS. ( Prices within reach of everyone ) COLIN r. WILSON, 115 South Main Street, The Shapiro Furniture Co., Incorporated. 266 South Main Street. " Out of the High EVERYDAY MEN WEAR W. lb. DOUGLAS THE BE8T , W.L. Douglas $3.50 shoes are worn . by men in every walk of life. My line is so complete, the styles and shapes so varied, that every man can be fitted for permanent comfort at any one of my numerous stores. For all round satisfaction, for shine or rain, hot weather or V. L. Douglas shoes are best. Made from high grade materials, and made right. .As a result they have the largest sale in the world. Price, $3.50. W. L. DOUGLAS $4.00 SHOES CANN0TA ffiKl" jg Ws L. Dovalmm Boy Shorn - $t7B m 1t.Ofl FmU Coor KtMtti Catalog tw ma0H .,...., njnMl 1 W. L DOUGLAS SHOE STORE IN WATERBURY: 83 Bank Street. There's Just we want this advertisement to reach. She is the woman who last Fall bought the number of yards of goods indicated on the envelope of a well-known pattern as necessary for that garment. When she came to cut it she spent half a day trying to lay it out and then found it required at least another yard of goods at one dollar a yard. We have a message for that woman. With each Pictorial Review Pattern there Is given a Cutting and a Construction Guide which will show her how to lay out her pattern on the goods in three minutes with absolutely no possibility of error or waste. And it will require only the number of yards of material stated on the envelope positively not an Inch more. We want that woman to go to our agency in this city and find out all about these facts. Do you know her? Tell her. Pictorial Review Patterns CUT RIGHT HANG RICHT FIT RIGHT Use them once and l-wys mm liiMini m. w 1 SHIRTS. ' COLLARS, . CUFFS. GLOVES. v MUFFLERS. HOSE, ETC. Get a "MODEL" RANGE and enjoy life. No better bakers h v the country. Prices suit everybody's pocket. We have just received an elegant line of Chamber Suits, Come ia and look at them. Just Below Grand Price District. " SHOES FOR MEN. sun cold, I One Woman