New Britain Herald Newspaper, April 3, 1914, Page 18

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

a8 #NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, APRIL 3, 1014, NCLE JOE” CANNON " PREDICTS VICTORY This Store Will Be Open All Day Good Friday Until 6 P. M. Saturday Until 11 P. M. for the Accommodation to Out of Town Patrons hinks Democrats Will Be Kicked ! Into Atlantic Occan. RUN HIMSELF IN NOVEMBER ; - - For old acquaintance sake—We will give to every New s Also Sure That He Wil Bo Te- : i\ - ‘ Britain cuztomer a beautiful pot of growing Easter turned to Congress—Says Bull ' i lilies with every clothing purchase. Mooge Are, Petering Out—He Lost by 700 Last Time. New York, April 3.—Uncle Joe Panndn arrived at the Waldorf yes- rday with a pocket full of cigars and “heart full of optimism for every- \ jhing and everybody save the demo- b - - ratic party, which Uncle Joe firmly elieves is headed straight for per- ’ ition. TY.eaning back in his chair and pocking his feet on the table, - he Frumbled: “Who wants to hear from an old wiyou feel at 78; what you think is ing to happen to the republican party; vwhet.her you are going back o aarose \ @ “#Well," “Uncle Joe broke in, “I've f d a hélluva time with he grip. It g § 4 . had be tied up in double bow knots, 4 T'm_teeling, pretty chipper now. A Ly 9 [rp going’ to Bermuda in a few days, mr ¥ run ever to Washington to see ome people. I have always wanted to |- - Wi i 3 § s 50 : { J ® Y isit: Bermuda—it ought to be ‘a good it i ¥ \E: 3 : gé' for'an old has been to boil out fro- 3 iy i a ls lve or * “Tiet ime tell you about the republi- i G ; f b : o ! pait party, son., I wouldn't trade even its chances'for victory in 1916. of‘even, by a . darn sight. What's ¥ _ e, I think we’ll win a majority of i \ 1 1 ‘house next November. I don’t be- il P 3 ‘ % y Bwe Beisepithh genate. There are . Y 2 When you come to this live, enlarged, improved es- Don’t Pay $25 or even $20 for your Easter Suit— lot .of little states that will keep on i Y tablish f il find th test s £ Men’ Thi ding 4 ti tors b ] wil eason tim ia aster ,:m (eegitie) demttor bepkine ) ment you nd the greatest showing of Men’s is season times have changed our special E: ik hetting - we'll have the best tand . gl and Young Men’s Clothes in this state, and at prices ; Suits at $10, $12.50 and $15, are good enough for any BT i 2 lower than ever before. .Free tariff has lowered cloth- - King to wear, and you have 4,000 suits to pick from. m‘:_” G:‘t";;etam’:“"x;f figg’“e,, - a { ’ ing prices, we'll give you the benefit. Come this week Every suit guaranteed. All wool, all hand tailored, just as sure as I'm sitting here that i avoid the Easter Rush next week. - : every size to fit every build, stout or regular. - 6. returned . to congress next i . ) iyl i November. They only beat me 700 . ) p . £ [votes last time, but the Bull Moose . . pptering out in-my district and the epublicans are getting a lot more gumption. My judgment is that'the A\ ! i r g [Bull Mdose is losing out-all over the - “How -about Colonel Raosevelt in A i \ / 3 . . | !Ml ‘Mr. Cannon?” , b ' “Well, what about him?” snapped the 'elder statesman. “I don’t believe ‘Theodore Roosevelt is as popular to- J iday as he was twelve months ago by , sight. Where's he going to get his g - - 4 votes fraEn I don’t believe he’ll get » g , - ) lany mont repuhllcanu. but if these i 2 ldemocrats keep a yank yankin’ around u- congress he’ll get some of their i1 votes. There goes-that infernal tele- < Y / \ i% Phone. 4 g \ i d | E P E I P Uncle :Joe informed & woman that / d : HRE S CIA RICES |she wanted Senator Cannon of Utah, B ot Joe Cannon: of Danville, L + “Whom do yow think is the ' most jlikely republican for the 'presidential i jomination?” the:reporter agked when i 3 l?nela Joe surged back to the easy o J . S “ut me answer that” he replied, “by.asking you how many of the 100,- A 3 000,000 people in this country ever . . heard of Woodrow . Wilson three years and a half ago? The woods and corn fields are full of good presi- o R W G I D ' Boys Suits, Sizes 8 to 18 (with two pants) ................. $2.97, $3.97, $4.97 T Soft and Derby Hats (Union Label) ....................$1.00, $1.47, $1.57, $2.39 DON ,f';‘ :";‘.‘.“’ b (el s ; Balmacaans and Silk Lined Top Coats . ........ e.....$10.00, $12.50, $19.00 A S e ) High and Low Shoes (Spring’s Latest) ......................$1.87, $247, $3.37 P AY ich T i . . a G R e e e W Trousers, Furnishings, Easter Neckwear and Gloves atReduced Prices. family journals. He was back in a oy m 'és and had a fresh cigar going $25 or even $20 for your suit with the expertness of a prestidigita- this season, if your merchant tor. X 3 . i doesn’t allow the difference in e ¥ cost of materials, we will. ‘Will Heed the Call. A “No, T'm not through with politics, Anyway see our three spe- Tm not buttin’ in, but if the people # g cials for Easter at of my district want me back in con- | gresé—and I guess they do—I am not ¥ . p 3 & | going to be deaf when the call comes \ ¥ ks | They made me the goat two years ago, & o 4 g \ Y 'but 1 'haven't had a bad time at that. Notice Our Window Displays, Get a - . ) b I have a few farms scattered round in Indiaria afid Illinois and I own Lesson on Economy. Every Article 147-149 Asylum Street’ Harflord $15 reading, and T've been ca.u:hing up, in‘ some bank stock’ in Danville—enough . s . . e b o L oty Marked in Plain Selling Prices Carfares Paid As Usual and Satisfaction Guaranteed or Money Refunded. my reading.” - : | author do you.like best, Mr. R 4 .aannon’" “Walter Scott,” said Uncle Joe de- sisively.’ “In the /past year I have| soaked myself in Scott. I liked ‘The v Heart of Midlothian’ best of all. Then Lopperfleld but it's hard for a man tion provision is repealed it will comg' praising lands for purchase under the | measured and the number of logs | ber suitable for various products; I've pottered around with Dickens |to say what book of Dickens’ is the | pretty near being the ruination of our 0 ESII[RS rINISH Weeks law for the eastern national ; estimated in all merchantable trees|such as saw timber, spruce for paper Joime. “My ‘choice there is -‘David| best.” coastwise trade. It costs twice as forests, however, the forest service | growing on parallel strips four vards | pulp, or birch for spool making. Dur- 4 “What do you think of President|much to operate American ships as has had to disregard latitude and| wide and forty rods apart, From |ing the whole winter, however, it \Wilson and the present administra-|it does to run vessels of other na- season because it was necessary to| these estimates the full amount of | was noted that stormy days caused Ho" FRENCH PEOPLE | ton?" : i e :t;::im ;1::; “s‘g;:";‘nv\::; mngl;tmh:: IH[IR WINT[R WAlK f:pet::‘te the :vor]i( :n th:a north. Dur-t timber Wwas calculated. no mored lol:s ;f :Ime then in surg “Now, I said was a damned ol ze . g e past winter two camps o mer, and the health of the men (M - QURE’ sTOMACH TROUBLE ! reactionary, didn't I That's what|does for its coastwise trade. men have been estimating and valu- The Crew Leader. the party was, as 4 rule, oot D | they've been calling me for years. But “I say there isn’t a thing in the I 7 ) ing the forests which the government One man, the crew leader, used a|in hot weather. mghpld remedy of the French ' you walt a year or two and youw'll find Hay-Pauncefote treaty which forbids contemplates purchasing on the slopes | compass to keep the men in the de- It is said that the men became: elnnmn; of pure vegetable that the American people will want to | us dealing fairly with our own ships. Tcmncumm a[ '"mss was 20 of the White Mountains. sired direction, mapped the country | quite inured to the cold and liked it, ndro possess wodderfu merit kick the d(mm‘ratl(i party intovv‘:he }\I(;wnca‘?)om \t\}":erques:;fi? 311 nauona} Work on Snow Shoes. traversed, kept account of the dis-|one of the principal advantages be<!: middle of the Atlantic ocean. y? | defence? e e repeal E tances covered as determined by ac-|ing the absolute freedom from in-: al troubles, has been introduced Look at business. Since I've been i leave us? I believe the Panama chw‘s Below Zero Because of the softness of the con-| ;5] measurement, and recorded all | sects, such as gnats and mosquitoes. is country by Geor| efl. Mayr, who in New York I have found out the|tolls question will be a good issue > stantly falling snow, the work was!the information regardins timber. | While these same crews might ap=' !l f the truth a.bo‘;t buz:h;‘ess, i’l‘thinlgat are f(firo‘:lts ::::lbll;i:-:l§; But we will see L done mainly on snow shoes. At times | The oth:r members of the crew' m‘:a- pre::lntet an ;!!lnment to the same mighty quiet—mighty quiet, let me|a - = the temperature has been around |sured the timber and gave their fig-|region for the following summer,! &nd. who himself was cured by its (o you.' Same in Chicago. Same| The 'phone jingled. this time carry-| . Feresters who have just returned| .o ... Gegrees below zero for con-| tres to the leader, who tallied them. |those who have the work in charg 8o quick and effectivs is its action i ervwhere if you want to tell the|ing an invitation to dinner. Uncle|from winter work in the WHhile|giderable periods, and the parties | The actual work, however, did not|say it may be the lot of these same: at a single dcse is usually enough'to . ;¢n When you turn over Amer-|Joe started to spruce up. Mountains of New Hampshire report | now in report some occasions when | end with all-day climbs through snow | men to be assigned 1o the pina: e relief “in eodl:fe r:‘;:; jcan markets to the whole world % 3 § hu;‘ei admm’xg\; p:fly"oln Slonigh(,'i‘l that, while Some hardship is entalled, | the thermometers registered nearly | on the mountainsides, with frequent |regions of the south during the hot-! mwthty :ever Sheard what can you ex[‘)e\"t? Look at the me eifi]:a;leth-ese t:: g lnecye l" show | as' much can be accomplished in the | forty degrees below. The crews were | exposure to the sweep of winds on | test weather of August. b such remarkable railroads. They’re cutting'expenses ?‘\:’Hl o ox B0 D! S, +| dead of winter as in Bummeh. housed in winter camps like those of | the higher ridges and divides; dur- ° 1t is known “© the bone and they aren’'t buying b 3’011 807 In most of the goverfment's fleld |'the lumberjacks, and in order to|ing the long winter evenings, or on The name Russell stands for ex- % inything. Weu‘,‘ se,id' Uncle Joe, shak'i'ng services: it is usually thought best to | make full use of the short winter|days when the snow storms were so | ¢eptional quality in food stuffs. ¢ “Now, I've nothing against Wood- | hands, 1 won’t hang back much,’ work in the north during the sum- | days they were out by daylight and | severe that outside work was impos- | Russell's best creamery butter, 32 row Wilson. He's a high class man. R e IR ] *.| mer months and in the south during {did not return unti] dark. The work | sible, the figures gathered were tab- }1b, 33 1bs. for $1.00, and learn thci store, It is now sold here by Riker- | But he’'s dead wrong on ‘the Panama 27 fresh eggs for 50c. Russell Bros. | the winter, the.idea being to do.the|of the crews required continuous|ulated and the information grouped,|Teason. Russell Bros, 301 Main St. . Hegeman Drug Co. | tolls question. If the tolls exemp- | —advt. work Wwith the least difficulty. In ap- walking. Diameters of trees were |0 as to show the quantities of tim-|—advt. i e 0 BRI

Other pages from this issue: