TAFT FLAYS THIRD PARTY Republican Party Will Gain New Vitality DESERTERS WILL RETURN But When They Do Let Them Bring Forth "Works Meet for Repen tance" —Republicans Have Made the Grandeur of the Country for Sixty Years. • The address of President Taft to the Beverly Republican Club, Beverly, Mass., Sept. 3, was as follows: N Gentlemen of the Beverly Republi can club and,l am glad to say, my fel low citizens of Beverly, I thank you for this cordial greeting. This club suggests one or two thoughts of a po litical character that 1 did not (ouch upon in the remarks 1 addressed to you on Saturday. It suggests the ne cessity for renewed organization of the Republican party under present condi tions. The Republican party has been successful for many years. I think the last national defeat we suffered was in 1592, aud that is twenty years ago. We have reached a point where it was natural that there should be some gentlemen who were convinced that their position in the party was not all that they thought they were entitled to and therefore they were in favor of sloughing off into a third party. Now, the danger in the continuance in power for a long time to the party itself is the jealousies, the factions, the qwrels within the party that long life and success are apt to generate, and. while, of course, a third party is a misfortune to the Republican party in the loss of some votes, we must be philosophical and look at this result on its good side as well as on its bad side. I conceive in respect of the life of the Republican party that secession of a third party is going to give us new vitality in the vory feeling of fight that the injustice of the claims of the third party will arouse in us as real Republicans. We know that we are a better set of men than we are now called by those who were very glad at one time to be known as leading Re publicans. We know that we stand in the nation as the guardian of those Institutions of civil liberty under our constitution, the preservation of which has made this nation permanent and great, and that nothing could come to this country of greater political in jury than such a split in the Republi can party as would destroy it. The importance of this campaign in its immediate result is great. I could hardly state with (nore emphasis than 1 really believe the crisis that we now face with reference to the continuance of prosperity in tliis country by reason of the vote that we are to have in No vember, but there is something be yond November With respect to the Republican party. It is essential that we should continue and revitalize it as a permanent party and a permanent force in this nation for the continu ance of the progress that has made it rreat. No student of history can deny that the grandeur of this nation and the height that it has reached among nations during the last sixty years has been due to the guidance and the force and the energy and enterprise of the Republican party. We propose to have that continue. We propose that the force represented by the Republican party shall continue useful in the his tory of this nation. With that in mind, 1 would urpe upon you the necessity for closing up the ranks, finding out who is a Republican, and who is not, and when you find a man who is not, do not count him for the party. One who is not loyal never helps. There is no use, gentlemen, tempor izing about this matter. A man is a Republican or he is not. Is he going to support the national ticket, and is he going to support the State ticket? If he is he is a Republican, and if he is not he is not a Republican. Now, such a policy may cost us some votes, but in the not distant future gentle men who have deserted us in the hope of enjoying ofllce, on the one hand, or a millennium, on the other, Will find themselves without office, millennium or party. They will feel a bit lonely, and then when they come back to the Republican party, as they will come back, let them come back as Republi cans, but bringing forth works meet for repentance. IH K. vHuraH wtw.msioM.t c © WILLIAM HOWARD TAFT. REMEMEER 1893-6. How Prosperity Changed to Panic When Democrats Elected a President. In January 1892, this country was prosperous, and all conditions indi cated continuance of prosperity. In November of that year a Demo cratic president was elected. In 1893 the Democratic congress, convened in extraordinary session, be gan its anti-protection activities. After a time it enacted the Wilson low tar iff law. | In the early summer of that year | came the panic. In the period from I May 1 to July 23, 301 banks, with a total capital of $38,000,000, suspended. The total number of banks suspended in that year was 585. In 1892 the total amount of liabili ties on account of business failure was $114,000,000. In 1893 the total was $340,000,000. In the year 1893 railroad properties whose aggregate value was $1,200,000,- 000 wtre in the hands of receivers. Between May 4 and Oct. 3 $378,000,000 was withdrawn from national banks. In this state alone withdrawals of deposits from savings banks were $34,- 000,000 in excess of deposits made. In the period from Jan. 1, 1892, to Jan. 1 1596. there was a shrinkage of $1,400,000,000 in the total value of farm products and live stock in the United States. In that period prices were lower, but hundreds of thousands were wage less and other multitudes worked at low wages and on short time. They had little money or none with which to buy even the most ordinary neces saries of fife in adequate quantity. Now, after twenty years, the Demo cratic party is again asking the elec torate of the United States to put it in control of national affairs in order that the performances of its last pe riod of control and their disastrous consequences may be repeated. The Republican party, under whose administration during sixteen years the country has become newly pros perous and more prosperous than ever •it was before, pledges itself to mainte nance of the policies which restored and promoted prosperity. There is a paramount issue. What intelligent American can hesitate to make his choice? —Albany Journal. Business Confidences. In his speech of acceptance Wood row Wilson asserted that the tariff has made the business men of the country "timid, fretful, full of alarms; has robbed them of self confidence and manly force until they have cried out that they could do nothing without the assistance of the government at Wash ington." Present day conditions challenge the accuracy of this statement. The ex cellent doctor would do well to point out some of the "timid, fretful" busi ness men who are now "full of alarms" and who are lacking in "self confidence and manly force." Where can he find them? The country is at the high tide of prosperity. Business confidence is in evidence everywhere. The course of tlie Republican administration is di rectly responsible for this condition. Danger lies only in a change of admin istration. with the consequent change of policy that is promised. Then, tru ly, the business men of the country would be "full of alarms," and they would have justification. STANISLAUS GROD2IK HAS [}] m ENOUGH SAVED TO LAST pi ft FOUR YEARS IF WIL- ft] ru SONS ELECTED. SO IS Ul H] WILLING TO LOAF. ft > n (Special to Telegram.) [n Webster, Mass., Sept. 29. n; [u Stanislaus Grodzik, who lives u n] in the East village, although [H "1 he isn't a voter, is red hot for fu Ln Wilson and has one of the }{] [Jj strongest arguments ever in U1 nj favor of the Princeton profes- m if) sor for president. HJ fu Ul 1/1 Grodzik has lived in Web- |J [Jj ster fifteen years and is a can- Ln nj didate for naturalization next m year. He won't be able to vote m Lrj for Wilson this year, but has n] [H advised all his friends to vote "1 m for Wilson. (n j{] Grodzik's argument is that jjj J1 he works too hard under the pj j, prosperity administration of jj] pj Taft afd Republicans and Ln n] wants a rest. With Wilson ft If] and Democracy at the helm m [n Grodzik, who has experienced ft the administration of one IT] nj Democratic president, knows ft JJ] that there will be plenty of Oi Ln chance to loaf. W For ten months the East u; nj village mill of the S. Slater & ft U] Sons, Inc., has been working pJ In night and day to fill orders, nj [}j and as a result of the pros m perity at the mill Grodzik has ft been worked over-time. If fu In Taft Is re-elected Grodzik n] ft fears that the over-time jj rj schedule may be extended ton ;{] another term of ten or twenty 1/1 months and wants to call a tJ Di ha,t " nj pJ "Too much work when Re/l n] publican he's President," said }! jj] Grodzik today. "With Demo- TJ [n crat lots time to loaf and (j ft spend all the money we make J] nj when Republican is boss. By n U] Gosh! I'm sick for work so u Ln hard and no chance to spend {] ft my money. If Democrat he's fj elected we have lots of time n then. I guess I got enough J1 save to last four years if we iJ jjj work half time." JJ iti —Worcester (Mass.) Tele- Li t "* m i ; and men of meaner sort out of Hun j gary and Poland, as if the countries l of the south of Europe were dlfi ; ourdening themselves of the more aor- I did and hapless elements of their pop j ulation." From page 213, volume 5: "The j Chinese were more to be desired as workmen, if not as citizens, than most : of the coarse crew that came crowd | iiiL- in every year at the eastern ports. | it was their skill, their Intelligence, 1 their knack of succeeding and driving | duller rivals out rather than their alien habits that made them feared ! and hated and led to their exclusion j at the prayer of the men they would I liluly displace should they multiply. The unlikely fellow who came in at the eastern ports (that is, the immi grants from Europe) were tolerated because they usurped 110 place but the : very lowest in the scaleVpf labor." Foreign born workingmen and work- I ing women of New England, what do j you think of this statement by Wood row Wilson, Democratic candidate for president of the United States? Ho says, that you are "a coarse crew," that the Chinese are better workmen anil might mane etter citizens thau j oi. are, and that you are toi' rated be cause you usurp "no place but the very lowest in the scale of labor." We have given you page number and volume number where these state ments are to be found in Woodrow Wilson's "History of the American Peo ple." You can goto any library tnd read them for yourself. Woodrow Wilson is the first candi date for president of the United States who has declared himself in favor of Chinese immigration Of tbe estimated population of 3j0,1'00,000 in China many millions would like to come to America. If admitted they v. ould soon drive American labor out 01 the mills and workshops and also out of retail and much of the whole sale business. At present Wilson is keeping very mum on the subject, but there can be no doubt whatever that lie would, if elected president, attempt to carry out his published views, and open the door to the Chinese In this he would have the backing of the southern Democrats, who would be glad to have the Chinese come over and work fir them in place of the negroes. In this connection we suggest par ticular attention to Woodrow Wilson's expression about "the unlutely fellows" from southern and eastern Europe be ing "tolerated because they usurped 110 place but Lhe very lowest in the scale of labor.'' The Republican party, whose first president was Lincoln the rail splitter, whose second president was Johnson the tailor, whose third president was Grant the tanner, whose fifth presi dent was Garfield the towpath mule driver, whose eighth pre4ident was McKiuley, in his youth an iron found ■_r. regards and treats all honest labor as honorable and as not merely to be "tolerated," but honored. Wilson's slur upon the labor of the foreign born finds no echo in the ut terances of President Tall, who, re turning from a visit to the w »et, In the course of which he addressed large ratherings of our adopted countrymen, declared that nothing had gratified him so much as the intelligent inter est shown by his hearers in American institutions and their earnest desire to understand the spirit and meaning ol the constitution of the United States. "Nicaragua Pacified; Marines to Be Withdrawn," says a newspaper head line, -narking the conclusion of anoth er delicate and menacing international situation, ably handled by the admin istration. Woodrow Wilson remarks that "the American people aren't going to be fed any longer with words," but he has of fered 110 variation of diet himself. Prosperity is politics proof when a Republican administration is in power, but it wouldn't be in tile face of Dem ocratic or third party tinkering. It is apparent that the third t.rm party did not get value or the $2 a vote it paid in the Ne'v York primaries. WILSON'S CHIEF SPELLBINDER* The Self Degradation of a Former publican President. If at the time of the defeat of Bur poyne any one had foretold that diet Arnold four years later would lead a force of British and Tories to the massacre of h's countrymen at Fort Criswold, the prediction would have met with Ae greatest resentment mid indignation. If four years ago any one had pre dicted that a man twice honored by the lit-pub'.lean party with the highest oillce on earth —the preside nt./ of tbe United States —would turn on that party and seek to rend It because not given a third term, and would flo n;s berit Indirectly to elect the choice and the representative of the southern bourbon democracy, that prediction would have seemed fully as incredible as the former. The third term ea r .didate is the prin cipal spellbinder for Woodrow Wilson He knows in his heart and so.il that the onl> success possible for him should he succeed would be to defeat Taft and elact Wilson. Every vote foi Koosevelt is indirectly a vote for the Democratic nominee, whose support ers at Baltimore made an open appeal for His nomination on the g'-ound that he was a native of Virginia, an ex-Con fedtri'K statu, and not, like his rival, Clump Clark, a native of Lincoln's state < 112 Kentucky. Filled with anger against President Taft, who has merited by able, faith ful and distinguished service the usu al m«;d of Republican presidents, an other term in the White limine, tfoose* velt parades up and down, here and the?.} and everywhere, professing any principle or lack of prtr.clple, from aa artl.y to oligarchy, that he tfiiijks may win votes and throwing to Uie win-is alike consistency. decency f.nd that reverence which every American should feel and express for the lnsti, tutions of our country. That the aspirant for u third term will sink into richly merited oblivion there can be no doubt whatever. Ho might have maintained in private life the honor, the dignity and the influ ence belonging to his position as an ex-presdent. He has sacrificed th"m •all to a Catilinian ambition, and the caln and deliberate judgment of fie American people will put the stamp oi condemnation alike on his insatiable appetite for power andtiis unscrupu lous demagogy, the bourbons who are egging him on and rejoicing in the hope of profit from his treachery have only contempt for his motives and hia course. They are deiiglited to see him attempt tq destroy the party which abolished slavery, overthrew secession, built up American industry and main tained the financial integrity of the nation. But they have no stomach for the malice and the treachery that are behind his desperate ad Ventura, When Aaron Burr was self exiled to Europo after the killing of Hamilton and tho semitreason of his Mexican expedi tion an Englishman desiring to visit tha United States asked him for let ters of introduction. "I have no friends in America," answered the former idol and once popular vice pres ident, with an expression of abject loneliness that his visitor could nevep forget. \nd so it will be with the per petual candidate when Ills followers recover from the brief madness that now possesses them and realize alike his monstrous egotism and their own aberration. A PERTINENT QUESTION Which the Third Termer Did Not Care to Answer. A man attending a third term meet in:; at Denver asked the third termer the very pertinent question, "Would not the Republican party have been all right if it had nominoated you?" Tho third termer did not reply. He simply looked angry and went on dol ing out political, ecouomic and social istic chop suey garnished with the usual sauce of epithets. It was, we re peat, a very pertinent question. Tho Republican party and Republican prin ciples were good enough for the third termer until he found that the party was not willing to give him a third term. Then he broke loose, and be gan gathering in eveiry Issue and al leged issue he could grab to make up his cray quilt platform. He lias sought, with the savage rage of a Malay running amuck, to destroy everybody and everything obstructing ills mad onrush toward a goal he will never reach. His ingratitude to the party which honored him Immeasurably beyond his deserts will have fitting re ward in the historic fate of those who have sought to "rule or ruin." J: A high grade gasoline that never goes back on you. Most motorists know that inferior more auto trouble Power without carbon. Quick ignition—never I Wmverly gasolines insure instantaneous, powerful, clean * I explosion. Your dealer has them. If not, write us. | I WAVERLY OIL WORKS CO.. IndtßMdmt Refin.r, fittsburg, PA. Alio'makers of Waverly Special Auto Oil. FREE—2OO P«|e Book—tells til about oils. /%S WANTED-A RIDER AGENT /FMi SKI bicycle. We shiptoa^neany^ref^tfes l ®K7,.°f/ 0,, £ Mi \ I \fl| Mr / vM nco, prepay freight, iiu.l allow TEN DAYS' prep ' mm Sipppssssss, FACTORY PRICES tll « highest grade bicycles It la Mrlfe Order* fHlod tho da v received. u-cjclea uudt,ryuurown nawu plate at double our prices. ° nd !mnfl b,c y c, ©«. but usually have B°A /c°rt D WIIVSS'W'I o '*"«■'» 0wouU * r out *<"*>» COASTER-BR A K E S , 111— Hedgethorn Puncture-Proof« MBO I || Self-healingTtres? < ,sfSf 4 wlUitn,oum tampte fat'for U.SuUa ™ NOMORETROUBLEFROMPUNCTURES [ >7 / NAILS, Tacka, or Class will not let tho r?r out. I 3 ; , ,/ / 112 J / ' / A hundred thousand pairs sole) last year 112 -Mr!/ DCSOBIPTUU,, rldlnsr, very durable and lined iusltlo with ( ffinK^WH'Mm ► special quality of rubber. which nevn Ih-.\Hit, • 7 eomes porous nll d which closes iu> in'ill^^' ■"' *" .1 punctures without allowing tho air to oscane I 111 '" •*' '', 0(1 . s , 0 112 letters from satis Hid customers ffi Notice the thick rubbertrvad gtatini;that their tires have only Ixseniiuiripecl up once <«ji' *A"and puncturestrip*"B" or twice in a whole Bi'ns«#i, They wfljjli no more than jJT and "D" also rim strip "M" an ordinary tire, the o.scs we are " EAST RIDING. (nakinfr a apecial factory price to lim rider of onlySt SOnernnlr »,• day letter la received. VeahlpC. o 1). o 1 nuprovall J,?^ rssh . lppe S, sama have examined and found tliein strlctlv p s itpiv sentoii y u you WITH OllDEß a a*urem'lD^ l thi^ativartTwOTeiu er^''ouI nm I |fo t rh;k r iii e * 4 ", Bß • M>r pulr) "y° u W FULL CASH rrturoed»t 008 expcu-u if forany rra>..u tl.. y are n. t ratu-factori oa SiwmlMtri or \v r *" •>• and money aent to ua IK»« enfoas In a hunk. If *ouorl, ra l air o?them n s™?s-,,w. E Y?. P ? R ? CTL » rell * b,B ciu-ler, run faster, wear lwtter,iastloni!eran,l i..nk tir, r trn, mvi l™n '/ ? tl,at tb ey will rldo We know that you will Im ho well pleaS ,1 tut \> \ ' a hlnvHn I 1 " V' r t,r ■* ">? Prl«- yon tosend una trial orderut onoc. hence this reiiinrkiii.ie tire oTer * lve u " r ol »r order. We want IF YOU NEED »T*U» " nt ' l y°" a pal rof TTedfethorn price quoted shove; or write for our htgTlre uud Mtu Cataloicuu \vhlph t ! le H, ": < ' lal Introductory kjudaof tlreaatabout lialf the usual prk-on. KU e wblcU descrlbeeand quutea all makea and DO MOT , N ° TTM,NK O p Buyinor blcyole or a pair o ( It -;uly eoatH a pontal to learn everything. Write It NCW wonderful otTera wo "'re making. l.n£ad cvole oa MM ohicago, ill. «§=. UNDEf? THE UST DEMOCRATIC I PRESIDENT Aom Gov. Wilson's Opinion. THE BOOMERANGS