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BOYS' SU Values ary gave him every opportunity to exercise the great legal learnUng for which he was PARKER, BRIDET & CO. | 9th & t ie Ave. J PARKER, BRIDUE A CG. famed. No poible position in the Senate could have beea more to his taste or have allowed hiM greater opportunity to be of service t t he tilled at the bead of the committee an the judiciary. His chair- Senator manship of that committee dates from De- HharPasees Away at eember. 18ft and he filled it continuously except during two years when the demo- crats had control of the Senate. Wrcester. He was also chairman of privileges and elections for ten years. having first become BRIDGfT &C, a member of that committee in I177. case in which a Every tKER seat of a senator was con- DEATH tested received Mr. Hoar's careful cons:d- fj OME8 QUIETLY eration. He regarded the questions affecting membership in the Senate as the most tim- portant ones that could come before that PLAED IrKYATWART IN body to decide. The most recent case to come to the attention of that committee HmTOzr OF COUlTY. In relation of the right of Senator Smont to retain his seat called forth Mr. Hoar's intense interest. He not only attended the bearings of the committee regularly and Members of Immediate Tamy Present weighed all the testimony with care, bLt he sought other means of information to en- at the Redsid&-ToIing of lighten him on the subject of Mormonism and the influences it exercises over its A Town Bes. members. He had practically exhausted the Sterling literature on the subject. Int=rest in Xormonm.- S.-Sea- On the WORCESTER, Mass., September subject of Mormonism, as on every ator George Friable Hoar died at his home other question that has in this city this morning. come before the at 1:35 o?clock Senate. Mr. Hoar ranEacked the of Values The end followed a of unconscious- Library period Ccrngress for books to him ness that had give informa- continued since early Tues- tion. There was no one in the Senate who day, and came so gently that only the has more systematically used the faciliti-s attending physicians were aware of the of the Corgressional Library than Mr. exact moment of dissolution. Hoar. He devoted little time Men's The despaired of to social in events, attending physicians declaring that the demands made the Senator's life six weeks ago, but such on him by his senatorial was the duty gave him no vitality exhibited by their dislin- orportunity to cultivate social circles. guished patient that even were sur- they Whenever Mr. Hoar accepted an invitation prised and the was at public times led to for any event of a social 'cherish a faith In an ultimate recovery. nature it was almost sure to be because in some way he Clothing. On Sunday last, however, all hope was felt it his duty to 'do either of su- so. to fultill for the time being the points abandoned after a last unsuccessful at- his official or personal obligations. He Forget seldom did so to suit his in cut, finish, fit and workmanship that lempt to administer medicine and nourish- Senator merely own taste. periority ment. Brief lucid intervals were followed Hoar was the author of a bill con- giving the President more characterize Parker-Bridget Clothing-and by longer durations of unconsciousness un- of complete powers the of removal of officials of the government sider the suits only from standpoint qual- til Tuesday morning, when the venerable from office, repealing restrictive legislation the actual of statesman sank into a state of coma, from that had been passed in the ity for the price. Compare quality drew time of An- Suits with other which all efforts to rouse him proved futile. Jackson. He advocated that measure fabric in the Parker-Bridget in spite of republican opposition and be- suits that sell for the same money. We've got The Last Hours. cause he believed it to he right. During the last hours there was not a His position on the committee on the ju- the balance of well in our favor. diciary gave him quality in movement of the body, and only a scarcely great prmilnence in the arg,ament that can be forwarded consideration of the so-called force bill re- Every of Par- perceptible pulse evidenced the final strug- lating to the southern states. He led that iavor of clothing is an argument in favor gle. fight with dignity and with great ability. There were present at the bedside when SENATOR GEORGE F. HO &B OF 1ASACHUSETTS. His contact then with southern leaders in ker-Bridget Clothing. a came Gen. Rock- (Copyright. 1904, by Cllne4i ist. D. struggle which probably created as much death the senator's son, Washington, C.) on both wood his and feeling sides of the Senate cham- Hoar; daughter, Mary Hoar, ber as any that has come before that body Dr. Warren R. Gilman, who for weeks has since the civil war Suits of Clothes at $20. been in almost constant attendance upon of his life caused him to have a There's in his autobiography, Senator tr, he became known as an advocate of the high regard for them in many ways. He As a specific case-take the $20 suits. the senator. Hoar says: prInciples of the free soil party. took occasion later to express his admira- Intelligence of Senator Hoar's demise was tion for no line on the market today so well fortified from the "I -have had few idle moments since. I First Political Office. them. In his fight over the ques- first communicated by telephone have tign of retaining the PhilIppine Islands he Exclusive Scotch tweeds residence to the, press by Dr. Gilman. Im- probably put as much hard work into In 1851. when of was in touch against competition. was life as most men on this continent." twenty-five years age, closely with the southern -mediately after a prearranged signal ie was elected to the Massachusetts leaders, in much of the debate that lead up and cheviots---new and eminently tasty brown ef- transmitted on the fire alarm system and After being graduated in law Senator legis- to Hoar settled in ature, and in 1857 he was to the vote on the question. Whenever it effects-mixed effects of number- the long-dreaded tidings were conveyed to Worcester, when that town elected the came to the fects-striped had but 15,(XX) He at once time to vote, however, he was the people of the city by the tolling of the be- state senate. He declined a re-election, as fcund with his party. less -sorts. Everything in color, fabric and style church bells. came identifiedinhabitants.with its interests. The ie did an election as mayor of the of tne anti-slavery movement was at its city your can call for will be found in this line. Arrangements were made to notify height in Worcester. For many years he declined to fancy public in this manner when the physicians Worcester at that time, and Hoar plunged Fireman Boasted Under Train Wreck. that the venerable into it with zeal. His ambition did not onsider his nomination for Congress. attending him decided when it was within his A dispatch from Charleston. S. C., list legislator was on his deathbed. reach out to anything beyond a career as easily grasp, and a lawyer with a to when his election would have followed as night gives further particulars of the !ol- Youths' at $12 to $-20. practice pay him $1,.-0 tmatter of Clothing Passiig of an Eminent Statesman. a year. course and without trouble to lision in which one life was lost and eleven AFineI She We've a to be enthusiastic about the marks the Although iim. In later years he occasionally refer- got right . The death of, Ser.ator Hoar strongly anti-slavery and bit- ,ed people were more or less injured, on tht. terly opposed to that institution of with pride to the fact that he never lines of Youths' here-and a of another eminent statesman of the ifted his hand nor Atlantic Coast line, five miles from that Clothing good part passing south, in later years. after the scars of the took the slightest ac- of that enthusiasm is traceable to the enthusias- the old school. It removes from the United civil war were ion to secure preferment for office. city. as printed in yesterday's Star. Local obliterated, he showeo the When the war States Senate one of the men who havO greatest friendliness toward broke out Mr. Hoar was passenger train No. 41 came tic acceptance of these lines 5v the young fel- southern peo- from trouble with h!s and upon through ataLwPie contributed much fo the greatness of that ple. His own recollections carried him back suffering eyes, train No. 35. which had been stopped uzin- lows. There's a and finish to the clothes to who !onsequently took no part in that struggle. style body. one who was most jealous of his people had taken part in the revo- qis tentionally on the main line the icci- lutionary war and he was a impaired eyesight caused him to be by $3.50 they like-and there's plenty in this line to see. reputation as a'stltesman and who made thorough stu- ;ent to Europe. dental pulling of the bell cord. A dent of revolutionary times. He lived was heavy the duties ofi'statecraft the absorbing ob- much in the events He elected to Corgress in 1864, hav- fog prevailed, and the crew of train No.
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