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GRAND 0mm minsn‘ JOI‘I’NS‘I‘ OWN PHONE Big WEBMESMY NOV. 8) It's & Great Flaw—4193 a Clean Play, * William A. qufly’s Gmt Bucess U By Mu mart Goodman A: Played IQ]: Slx~Montlu in C No? York v' K Y. A can Said: ‘fiKARMING Amp A GEM\ cl “2me Said: \you mist see IP\ PRICES—450 500, 7580, $1,001 $1.50 MAY; 1mm 10 ~ m Mat Mom ol All Boy Hero «Billy “19 Kid Ammbhterat : Wi#al Life on the Western Plains “mm ' Theatre SATURDAY NOV. I1] ‘ \MINE AND NIGHT | , Mahnee 2.30 Evening; 8515 *Monte Thompson, Presents _ The Best of American Comedies The Mn on - the Box _ > From Harold McGrath's Most . Popular Novel Speclal Cast and Production PRICES, 25¢, 355, 505, \5s 1 Seats on Sale, Thursday at \ “6 p.m. | . . Family Theatre Gloversville, N. Y. + _ Best MOTION PICTURES . in4 the county Two best singers in the business 5-CENTS-A t All NEXENSNE VAG Tid, IN NEW YORK Greatest Resort Cit! In 'the World. Facts About the Granfl Hotel and \ New Annex. l That New York City is the best a fact kno to everyone, but some people do not know as yet that it may be an inexpensive vacation as well. Those who are familiar with the famous Grand Hotel with its lirge, fine, new - Apnex, however, know that if. you make your home at this hotel you will live on the best in the land and nave no com- plaint to make about the cost. Just two short blocks from the - new Pennsylvania R. R. Terminal, with subways, elevated and surface cars, theatres and, shopping districts immediately | at nand..{ A favorite nome for visitin merchants, com mercial travelers, sight-swears, and a perfectly saft stoppingfppce for, la- dies traveling alone. || | Many army and navy officers have for years considered the Grand the one best. pla to stay while in New York. Not Fonly is the Grand with its fine andlnew Annex beautifully and moderhly furnished, but they are absolut ily fire-proof, and have every medic} to make guests com- fortable and{jat ease. The dining fa- cilities are linexcelled Tempting rclub breakfasts as low as 25 cents; a Table de Hote Ainner for $1.25. (with wine $1 59). Splen- aid music qdas to the pleasure of. the eveningsmear Beautifully furnished large single rooms at $1 .50 or more per day- rooms with private bath and hand- some suxtes at equally reasonable rates. When V151ting New York Clty, stop at the Grand: fyotel and enjoy real home smmforts Write now to George F. Hurlbert, President and General Manager. for a practical guide to New York (with maps). Don't forget the address-. on Broadway, at Thirty-First Street. | | 'Phone 20. ibo . n . Of himself as a worker. , then.\ \Walter's {BEEF, IRON AND WINE None s0° pure as ours. Come in and try a bottle. Price 50¢° 'the full pint. \|ero. waLTERS, DRUGGIST. 133 W. Ma«in St. AMUSEMENTS \Mother'\ Kere Tamght. Wlhfa‘t gives promise - of being a de- | mebfql production on the local stage is Jules Eckert Goodman's flour—wot | play, \Mother which comes to thé Grand: tonight. - The heroine Of the play, the mother, is 'the head of a | family of six children, twio grown boys, two grown girls and tuwo snxall boys. < She has been the mother of | . eight, 'but has lost two of them. Site 1 ds a plain little woman, whose whole life is her home and children. On sher husband's Heath she finds {herself with money enough to rear her affspring in comfort, but her boys have been spoiled, and four years be- | fore the opening of the play the eldest son 'has run away and married a chorus girl whose tastes run to | costly dinneis and imported gowns and auto rides. - Hoe has wasted his share of his father's estalbe against | whiten he has borrowed money, and, the extravagant demands of his wife, ateals from 'his employers. He forges his mother's name to a note for $10,000 and when cornered and he threatens to kill fhd'mselt it is we iovmg mother who comes to | his rescue and calmly admits that ithe signature to the forged :. her own. ~ Her second son is caught in the toils: of another designing chorus girl,, the sister of the eldest son's wifie. The mvfiher saves her Brat borg mnd draws him to hor home again by her satrtfices, white the gec- «ond son is also saved from the wa- man who would spend his Mrimony, by the mother's clever work in ap- pgaring as a slattern 'before the eyes of the girl with extravagoht tastes. - Her- daughtor's love affaire are amo | I straightened out (by the mother, as well ag the childish troubles of her yoqmgest. boys. | \Billy the Kid.\ This is the sixth season for the popular success, \Billy the Kid,\ 'the coming attraction at the Gmn Friday. The play and the entire scenic effects have been refewed and elaborated at enormous expense. The star is ably supported by @ well selected, high class and attnactive company. - The play is well told and appeals alike to young and old. A beautiful pve story, pictures from real life of heart rending pathos, feats of daring and unsurpassed lines of comedy promise moments of such varied diversion as can rarely be found. AT THE DARLING \The Man on the Box.\ Few comelies produced in recent | s have aroused so much hearty gaugh’oer as the play, \The Man 'on : the Box,\ taken from Harold Mc- 'Grath's popular novel of the samme name, and theatre-goers of thig city will be undoubtediy well pleased to leatn that this good play will be the attraction at the Darling theatre on Saturday, matinee and evening, Nov. ] 11th. place to spend a boliday with more : : place: to go 'and more places to see | .* - than any other city in the world, is From start to finish, its plot, Its characters and its incidents are pro- vocative of laughter. - Comedy \is al- ways in high favor with theatre- | goers, and the full capacity of the theatre will surely be required for this performafioe.‘ The play will %e presented here by a special company, headed 'by David Perkins in the role of \Bob Vorbur- ton,\ supported by Miss Marion John- avuest and a good cast. The piay will be staged with special settings, and the production will be complete to the smallest detail. Seats on sale at the box office Thursday evening at 6 p. m. Prices for this engagement 250, 35¢, be, T5¢ and $1.00. 300 seats at 35¢. Matinees, 25¢ to all. donne gaz ia - Young Fellows Do the Work,. Although constantly under the stim- ulus of activity, Mr. Theodore N. Vail, president of the American Telephone & Telegraph company, does not think In the great library at \Sneedwell where he was constantly \dipping\ into this and that book, and noting very closely every word and inflection, I suggested that be must have much to do. \Oh no, I don't,\ he replied. \The young fellows do the work. I only suggest now and The usefulness of this man. incessantly planning how to increase the efficiency of myriads of operators, each surrounded by a web of wires and dispersed all over the country, can never be estimated. The word work has a broader and more compre- hensive meaning after cne has met Theodore N. Vafl.-\The - Law - of Work,\ Joe Mitchell Chapple, in Na: tional Magazine. that law as follows: f \I think you make a very clear, | New | man law, practically THE JOHNSTOWN DAILY REPUBLICAN, WEDNESDAY, NOV. 8, torr | WiCKERSHAM WRITES ON THE SHERMAN LAW New - York, Nov. - 8.--Attorney General Wickersham has written a letter to the Jewish Morning Jour- nal of New York, hcknowledging the receipt of an editorial on the Sher- | man law, and giving his views on | & temperate presentation of the case. What is perhaps not quite $0 clear is that, after all, the ‘Fndarlymg issue respecting the Sherman law is simply the question of groups - of shall control the industrial of the country. The Sherman law was en- acted for the purpose of checking the growth of great monopolies and combinations. But for if; the rail- roads of this country would be con- trolled by a small group of men in York. The decisloxi 'if the Northern Securities put an effective | check upon the most ambiiltlous plans for railroad control by irresponsible | . individual power that e’xf'er found lodgment in the mind of man, and i bat for that decision, E. H. Harri- man would have been the uncrown- ed king of American railways. \In like manner, but for the Sher- every - small producer 'of modest busihess man in the country would be entirely | at the merey of a group of individ- uals controlling great organizations, in the earning of his dally bread. 'These things should be made clear to the people. Much of the agita- tion which is going on now, and much of the alleged uncertainty in the law, is simply a method to dis- credit the law adopted by those against whom the law was peculiar- Iy intended to operate, because they | find that they are at last compelled | to square themselves with that law. There is, of course, an area of un- | certainty in the application of the It is not nearly so great as law. represented, and it applies far more to the organization of new consoli- 1 dations and combinations than it | does to the disintegration of exist- ' ing conditions. \'But while the law is not perfect, and while like most human institu- tons, it is attended with some un- certainty, yet it has at last, after twenty years of judicial interpreta- | titfi been found adequate to check the growth of vast combinations and to put & limit upon the exercise of power by a small number of exceed- ingly rich men. This result, if noth- ing more were accomplished, would vindicate the wisdom of the fram- ers of the act, and, in my judgment, this fact will prevent the American people from tolerating any impair- A TALENTED Youre Agtist Persons who appreciate fine draw- 'ings will be very much pleased with the exhibit of the work of Harold Quackenbush that is being made in the window of WiMard Brothers' sta- tionary store. The drawings aro all lin black and white and embrace a very wide range of subjedts. Some of thom are comic and Indicate a part of the artist, as well as skill in expression. Others cover more geri« ous things, yet all are equally good. The lettering that accompanies many in the form of mottoes is very attrac- tive, and the entire display is one of which Mr. Quacken‘bufih has reason to be proud. The art department of the High school, where he largely ob- : tained 'his training, is to be congratu- lated on producing so apt a pupil. _,,__—__———ta——-——- MILLIONS OF FOLKS USE CNLY GASGARETS THEY NEVER HAVE HEADACHE, BIL10USNESS, SLCGGISH LIV. ER OR BOWELS OR A SICK, soUl STOMACH. No odds how bad your liver, stom- ach or bowels; how much your head aches, how miserable and uncomfort- able you are from constipation, in- digestion, biliousness and sluggish ' intestines-you always get the de- 1 sired results with Casearets and quickly too. Don't let your stomach, liver and bowels make you miserable another moment; put an end to the headache, biliousness, dizziness, nervousness, sick, sour, gassy stomach, backache and ail other distress; cleanse your inside organs of all the poison and effete mailter which is producing the misery. Take a Cascaret now; don't wait until bedtime. In all the world there is no remedy like this. A 10-cent box means health, happiness and a clear head for months. No - more days of gloom and distress if you will take a Cascaret now and then. All druggists sell Cascarets. Don't . forget the children-their little in- sides need a good, gentle cleansing, too. power- | whether or not the government or | interested individuals: i feree, w 3X; Who has seen the adjustable Collar Ulsterette, as Made for us by Hart Schaffner & Marx wants one; aha Best winter Overcoat ever made. dressy wear; stylish, lively models. we've got one for him. : many good stifles ; tn ote BEFORE C0. CLERK Ella McKinlay of Gloversville to Mre. F. A. Pickett of the same place, l lot on North Main stresat, GHovers- . ville; consideration nominal. , Ray S. Sackheim of (Hoversvikle to | Mathilda Kennedy of the same place, lot on East Fulton street, GHlovers- ville; consideration nominal. || Beckwith Brothers df to the Johnstown Improvement com-. Johnstown; consideriation nominal. Homer Baird of the town of | Johnstown to ' George Keller of Bleecker, land in Bleecker; consid- eration $3560. James D. Rogers of thnsbown, to Milton A.. Haughton of Ephratabh, land in the town of Op- penheinm; consideration $243. James 'W. Rice of Gloversville to Josephine Hardy of the same place, land on North Perry street, lot on Eighth avenue, Gloversville; ' consideration $2,250. Maude Heath Wilcox of Fulton to Willliam Harrts of Northville, land in - Northville; consideration nominal. Holden Lumber Co. of Glovers- ville to Ingvart A,. Hanson of Tie same place, bot on Pearl street, Gov- ersville; consideration nominal. John H. Lasher of Browdalbin to George W. Hillman of the town of Johnstown, land in the town of Broadalbin; consideration nominal.. Violet E. Weich of Gloversville to Lyman Hofman of the same place, lot on Newman street, Gloversville; consideration nominal. Harry Williams of Gloversville to Violet E. Welch of the same place, lot on Newman street, Gioversville;: consideration nominal, ~ Kirk Dutcher of Gloversville to John A. Willand of Northville, lot on Franklin street, Glmersvmlle; con- sideration nominal. William Harris of Northville to . John A. Willard of the same place, fand in - Northville: - conglideration $2,000, Daniel A. Valentine of deoversvfil‘le to Minuile A. Withenhead iof the same VARYING RESULTS IN TUESDAYS ELECTION (Continued from Page 1.) Down in Kentucky. Louisville, Ky., Nov. 8.-James Bennett McCreary, governor of Ken- tucky thirty-two yedrs ago, has been re-elected at the age of 473 years by a majority ranging over 30,000. His;1 opponent was Judge Edward C. O'Rear. The vote on the remainder of the state ticket gives that every Democratic nominee has been elected. The state has been Re- publican the past four years. The state legislature in joint as- sembly will have a Democratic ma- | jority, probably of 85, sufficient to | dispel any doubt of the election of Congressman Ollie James, Democrat, to the United States senate as suc- cessor of Senator Thomas H. Payn- | James is the nominee of the. ter. state Democratic primary. The city of Lexington voted to adopt the commission form of gov- ernment two years hence. 'The Rural Uplift. \Has your family been of assistance to you in place?\ \I should say so,\ replied Farme: Corntossel. \Food has been so high that the summer board season would have been a failure if it hadn't beer fur mother and our son Josh.\ \They saved the expenses of help? \No sir. But Josh is a right good hand in a poker game an' the wap mother picked up bridge was some thin' amazin'.\ much { place, land in the town of Johns- ~ keen appreciation of humor on the town; consideration nominal. > assurance | running - the Tart] Come T0 PAAMA FORMER SPEAKER or OF REPRESENTATIVES LEAVES WASHINGTON FOR NEW YORK oN WAY TO ISTHMUS. ° Washington,, Nov. Speaker Joseph Cannon arrived 'here last night from Danville, HJ. Mr. Cannon, who is showing the weight. of his advancing years, was feeling none too well but said he would leave today for New York whence he will sail for Panama as a member of the house appropriations commit- tee on an inspection trip preparatory to voting on canal appropriations during the coming session of con- gress.. See that crown or cork is branded \ Schiitz.\ Ari. fauna HOUSE . §:-Former / Speaking of President Taft's | never wear any other make,, shoes. Call and see them. Others here for- Suits also in # U ' 83.088°)3300880’03t’f830223Qutoaéfiéaéwfiiaéu‘watfl'aflm s Make one experiment with really “5m” p + If you knew all the additional foot comm mum service and pride df possession that Regal shqes xiv! m mull! Just now we are showing a very complete lino M these W E. trip through %he west the Torther ; speaker said: . \ \t met a man from San Francisco: the other day who told me that Cali- | tornia was extremely strong for |- President Taft. 1 asked him wheth- | , EACKER mones enones tor awmmwawomummwm er it was m“ or m flaw-d- dent's visit that the mum“ ; to adopt the initiative, m fecal! and waggi’n min-uh \P lg Schlitz is brewed in the daft“ > stored for months ml glass line steel enameled tanks—bottled m i darkened rooms where even the Wlfi~ dow shades are. drawn ‘tO CXCiflde‘ $65 11ght -then sent to you in brown J ( Without all of A ¢ these precautions, no - beer can be healthful, and who knomngli would drink beer that was not. Light starts decay even in pure beer Dark glass gives protection against hght. We have adopted every idea, slavery immu— . tion that could aid to this e 'more than half the cost of o Today, ' brewmg 1s spent to make and keep Schixtz beer pure. If you about beer, \Schlitz- Bottles.\ h I knew Wheit we know 11 you ivoifld ask for Schh’cz in Brown l] | Telephone 2693 Sanford Eaton Lincoln .-; ~ Cloversville,