New Britain Herald Newspaper, January 7, 1915, Page 6

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- = o,y OO y = y 1910, s | pealed to the authorities to cause it | FACTS AND PAN I?wo‘man is when she’s going to Inflict | M".lAN, wi to be adapted. ey AT QN '“;‘,r smus gifts and advic (-'u af = c T e ows i | e o omms sor ot e | GO0 ARRAY OF NEW BOOKS NAMED |lsoemsree v bl les in the sewer lne and is|country are sclling their horses and ]N INSTITUTE’S L[ST THIS \\7hEl< ton in my ears the way she demanded mules for war purposes. An auto- - “Well, after 1'd put them socks on, still having them, and vet, | 1 was afraid to change to a lighter i mobile is much better to go to town - ch St it has spent hundreds of thousands | | oo A = L i s | | { of dollars in an attempt to solve the | :\"\f:l(‘bl‘l‘i')ve r;xc‘om\UTK tmuur% i Of Present Interest. ‘| Flower-finder, by G. L. Walton. | weight, lest I catch cold .m: lm‘:: | 4 . - ‘ni : 2 L | We S ocrat. Anglo-German problem, by Charles . s o | rr;‘nrr‘ pains and ,»:nu(ihe,\ .X “gll]‘dl | ¥ Matter. problem and pay damage suits. = Saroles. Growth of Europe, by G, A. J. Cole. | change morning—we have - ] state which is vitally interested in the ; When the war is over what will the | Written three years ago by a Bel- “Rather more technical than most | days for . changing 1 Ih..]u” :\:ru‘vl ! 1::: :ffi:;:tw solution of this problem has made no | Younsg royal love do with mm_r re- | gian, volumes of this series. Studies the | is my other woo :““ i d-' . ° by matl . do | SPective fathers and prime ministers | * % o surface features of Furope in the swers, ‘I put ‘em on your dr B 5L by mell| effort to help and yet it ought to do | ) gigpen 2 : | ser.’ An’ I come bacl They ain't | 0. Cents a . s o £ ey all glowering at one another? Roval{ German army from within, by a Brit- | light of their geological origin.—A. e ': et At with - ear. so because e adoption o SYS={romance will have to zo a-glimmer- sh officer who has served in it. | L. A. Boolklist rere!’ And she called me a liar with- tem that promises to take care of |ing for some time to come.—Norwich R Sy out sayir 1« women do Then edium 1n ; s ame hd hunted, just to prove ke ana miess | | sewage better than any other system | Record. T he came in an | A German empire’'s hour of destiny, by | M 3 F 5 mdvertisers. can be adopted by another city with | ’ v H. Frobenius. Wi EEbe s both falimanio e et L ol tha palntil earanGB a B s time goes on municipal elections | “« .o ters and man of science, writing with N tha fighit that near distupted br sal> ac Hota- | NONC of the preliminary cost and as | 5¢tract less and less attention. In the | a charming grace and observing his|Si0rY Of the Bt tARL T b o st | oura Walk, a general proposition that does not|majority of cases efficlent offictals are insect world with the accuracy of a | g% TEFRPPY GRS B T e day Ext <. T rcduction( seem to be fair on the face of it. New | always retained in office, except of mathematician. And did he but know L = CXtensive price Brord ;g vt e e R e bt KROW | them socks was discovered in the i s n peanut politics are in- it, “abre also writes in the style | ¢ #9° e At o d Bman; its t\;‘vofl:in: al}(‘)ng bthat ::‘ni e e R e vmerios foe ot e Sl o B | e B ETsl sschwcit s i REne SLiall pia ool tnablwekanouldiiava at Isast | O clear our shelves an now, bu e feeling has been that|p,,ck down and dqrag out pure and Anne Topham. : PR T, o T e et “Ihey had been on the dresser ail racks of all kinds of winter the governmenat should contribute { simple.—Middletown Penny Press. “An intimate and engaging picture | ¢(yvie intimate. personal, graceful, 108- | tpe time, and 1 had \,' ed 'em But | towards the expense or take upon it- = of the German emperor at home. | jcn), with an instinclive apprecia- | s «ita had washed that sceond pair | Merchandise and wearing among ‘nis children as boon cOM- | tjon of the dramatic quality of his as- “Liberty a statement of the British case, by Arnold Bennett, « x w suspected R ICE. | self the responsibility of making the Somebody has a keen sense of | 1 g and they had shrunk. And I thought | 1 ; ISterlboRky o SO so; panion and play-fellow among his ' tounding rev s e | apparel. the water | i ectigation itself. Rumor in Westport, where they filled | PATION 214 play-fellow amobe W4 tounding revelations.” — Publisher' | {hey were the cotton pluggets—and | PP ! o R | 5, ¢ sports, as head of | note, ¢ . time we were htinting for ‘em | . est the ice at the tank of a piece of motor propelled | {no roval household, whose dally life | ... e | DRESS GOODS and SILKS i AY NROSE S A MILLION. | fire apparatus with ter, instead of | . _ b 11 either sell | SAY PENRO: PENT A MIL] e ‘g?a.so;n; Tlnt“?(ind St i is described in a pleasant, g0ssipY | ggefal direction of human evolution, ST — AT A i N mmer or will It appears that Jeremiah Donovan : £ % way by an Englishwoman who served an outline of the science of eu- REDl L/TIO $ i 4 would be greeted with a jest in kind, : s s el =l . B oend i B Sh memben L me Sme of the joker should burn | (0T 8 TAMbCr of vears as ’\mf‘mpht‘ gealcaiRby vy, i i ellicott. | (Boston Herald.) SILK CREPE DE CHINE | if the home of the joker should burn | (o ™ 03T T2 0 B W | . Where rolls the Oregon,gby D, L.| To us here in New England it is he lake built _who is to make a fuss over the elec- | without insurance, for lack of fire L. A. Booklist P a perpetual source of wonder that| 40 inches wide, extra heavys repairs, the | tion expenses of his opponent. Con- protection.—Bridgeport Farmer. S her with the | gressman Palmer of Pennsylvania has e hirty years, Anglo-French reminis- “Elev e | Great Britain and Ireland, which are 5 S % 8 ® . Sle chapters of personal ex- rmleven chapters of personal ex- | BreSt FOUS T, 00 abrador, nave | quality. Sale Price $1.19 ydj will amount [ made a statement to the senate Common as it is, the real danger of cence, by Thomas Barclay. | ] Oregon. Well written and ‘possessing | Winters so much milder than our own. Value $1.50. ‘. ot | has appro- | committee on privileges and elections 7 these parts, has not been generally i presumably | that Senator Boise Penrose spent | realized. Only the discomfort of it|fiment of the Entente cordiale be- | (uality that distingdish the auther's | never quitc clear up the mystery for erienced now | a million dollars in the last campaign | appeals to most of those who suffer | yyceen Great Britain and France, | 1 5 R A Emm i us. Consul General Frost sends from | shades. the crowded car, as we know it In "OAltimely booklion aceount of its central theme, the genesis and ful-| the freshness, humor, and individnal | The explanations of the men of ¢ Showm > .all the newest ,- hoo Eiontly o . i i y mour hardship of | i | Sor i . ar and Trade ficiently cold |to secure his election. He alleges |it. They mourn the which, perhaps, the writer did more | Seehe Cork tn the Daily Consular and Trade A that bribery was common in many | N8N8 susnended by o brap, of be-| than anyone clse to bring about. For | Flchon: Reports some interesting items of evi-| SILK TAFFETA and MES B b ot or the siaico and thotmien who bj P 3 i‘l a d" Bl 1 tireq | the rest it is made up of scattered | mrothers, by H. A. Vachell lence that make the climatic differ SAL i 3 Ngfeasu sosanceme. and Urec | reminiscences and anecdotes of emi-! <z hook to love and to live in |€NCe all the more impressive, in SA one because | were never knowon to have money | When they have a right to room and | |\ ¢ Frenchmen and ohs i touching on the influence of the wa: i [ | 1 ; ot i s e tions on | awhile, and a hook which will not | 3 i o i S i ew feature of | before exhibited large rolls of bills |& seat. But that is far from being | " ity of public matters.’—A. L. | 52 = v Wes «or | on Irish agriculture he brings out 36 inches wide. Sale Prices the worst of it. Not only are seventy- | 5 lightly be forgotten.”—Westminster | PP ater commis- | on election day. Mr. Palmer states 2 > ¥- | A, Booklist. Grzetis | that England is Ireland’s hest cus.| 89¢ yard. Value $1.00 to : e L 1 = % | five percons sometimes confined in 4 | PSS figete: i | tomer for foodstufts. Enghna gets| g oS " ispose o e a va s commi = ; : s ol L pess ¢ - Gilebe Sl e b 5]“?“"“’fi‘f‘thv"; Rere: alofenals "]”\“ 1esS | mreitschke, his doctrine of German | cail of the HMast, by Thurlow Fr | from Ireland nearly half of the meat 29, ement at the { ed as having received and disbursed :’“Mn v, but l! Gy B gnade _"'1 destiny and of International re-| «phe Jpanco-Chinese war, 1584 { that It imports, about $112,000,000 HA“II T()\' MILI 9 e clty's idea | $432,000 and the expenditures in six- | Preathe a quantitv of air which hard- | lations together with the study | | worth annually; a third of its egg im- MIL N MILLR 1y suffices for fifty.—New Haven Re- 5 : ’ | supplies the setting of a story which of his life and work, by Adolf | hag its centra] interest in Doctor Mac- ports, a sixth of its butter imports, SERGES ! be observed | ty-seven counties will add $335,000 bal ice to all [ more to it, so that he claims that S = EEOREERL | Kay, ploneer missionary to Formoss, [ elc. But by far the most impressive S d { Shrunk. A4 carri 5 - and his work of rellef there directed |Tresources of the Irish farmer is the ponged ana Shrunk., - i La.mCd m‘; fhoneimas s qundiofloversthin e The Well Dressed Man. What Germany wants, by E. R. O.!hy a4 gallant young doctor from Can- | Mild and equable winter climate that inches \gJVId Sale Price 69ch ve people | ters of a million dollars raised for (Robert Lioyd Thevor in Vanity Fair.) | von Mach. {n!lnfl'—.\_ B at inHmw the production of a variety e. > e ice 3 and quantity of winter crops far be- yard. - f sclling ice | Penrose's election, all of which is in “His book is a calm good-tempered P attempt to place the German position | Nothing but the truth, by F. & |Yond what most Americans would be- in a favorable aspect.”—N. Y. Times. el : | lieva possible. BIG CLEARANCE OF EM- e “On a wager the hero undertakes | For example, Consul General Irost tells us that Irish farmers are in Jan- | BROIDERIES and LACES. % ¥ Some time ago, but not so long ago ging in the | violation of the federal corrupt pPrac- | that the day may not be remembered unless they | tices act. by the oldest inhabitant, the shirt the contrac- It is not uncommon to hear of | makers were, vulgarly speaking, ‘‘up against it.” It was then the manu-| W ¥y we are at war, by members of | to tell the truth and nothing but the people Who |ilarge expenditures of money for polit- facture:r’s ambition to make money, Oxford faculty of modern his- | truth for three weeks.” uary harvesting cabbages from plants Ed : g 2 all-4 i | e 4 ce ] | " September, and setting out gings, insertions, all- g ; ical purposes and whether they |y stead of to improve the appearance | tory. | “Altogether a pleasant little hook.” | Set out in Sep . and sefting out g . pme of them | are true or not they will continue un- | of. a somewhat reckless public, as “Great RBritaln's case: with an ap- | —N. Y. Times. onjons from seed sown in e ls overs, flouncmgs, from thes | LY summer. During the last two months s, and the | ti] the state takes a hand at the man- | they now love to do. There was a | Pendix of the original documents in- thoy have ‘Desn Hacyésting tarnips| DRITOW one-inch to the full G ¥ i igh cluding authorized English transla-! On the staircase. by F. A. Swinner- group of them sitting late one night & ¢ s v ) 1252 lacea sowniarid-thetnotatoloron | dress widifis . Sale Prios 2R in the lobby of one of our biggest | tion of white ‘hook issued by German ! ton. at the busi- | agement of elections and operates bn may be | them in such s manner that it Will Be | potels—or perhaps they were in the | overnment; also containing the Rus-| ‘“An exceedingly clever book, with | was harvested. Some kinds of ves- to 25¢ vard of financial | impossible for a man to expend | bar—and they worried, round by |sian orange book.” [ moments in which we cease to thini | etables and grains are planted '"v”;n DE JRLG. sappointed if | guch a large sum in order to be elect- | round, over the fact that although SRR | of his clevern and find ourselves | late fall and harvested in ‘.hp i GET BUSY NOW ON " 0 engage In | o4 to a public office. 'It is alleged | PeoPle bought shirts, they didn’t buy Science. | wholly engrossed in the fortunes or | SPTing in ample ki 0 "”"“4”"," .”:’. = ! 5 enough shirts. The problem was (0| Antarctic penquins, a study o frjihi= charatters Tt deais horieRflyhwitligtje SRCHER HEl0e s L ORI e S Ren il A g FANCY WORK pr; but then | that one branch of business spent o |jiient some shirt that would sell i e L e (,ivi::m | life and is vet frce from grime or | tumn crop. At the present time, with Is under 10 | jarge amount to help in the election of | self by virtue of its novelty. Tt was| «a delightful book. — Nation. | slime.~—Spectator, Londor. the length of the war and the future Stamped goods marked food supply problematical, the govern- : 1 ment is doing all it can to encouraxe | down. Three big bargain lots Irish farmers to make the best pos-| Sale Prices 9¢, 19¢, 39¢ eachwe . of their remarkable climate, jn with ice to | penroge, but while all the allegations | an ugly situation. And as they ‘The book is quite a rare little | K sible in any | may not be in accordance with the | WOrried, so their spirits went down. | treat and we like the natural way, the | QUinnes e in this re- | racts there probably is enough | ., FLIStoTY does not relate how lomg | jolly way, it is written.’—Saturda; “Quinney owns an antique shop, by H. A. Vachell tions of antique shops are amusing tiny spiash of color. Gone the plumed | Goods, Gloves. All broken’ A. : which for three centuries had any show against him. Money | With soft cuffs. The innovation was a Thrusfield, J. R. Naval warfare. All his competitors followed L L. Booklist. and vivid.”—A bheave STEAD OF | is surely a powerful influence in pol- shion. | lines to be moved quickly. p they sat there. The important fact is | Review. | mas a passion for beauty and a hatred | sible = . | con- ; eview. I S ice by con- | goundation for the claim thatalarge | that the meeting was finally broken SRer> | of ‘rubbish.’ He becomes an expert, | both for their own profit and for the _A lot of 4c Embroidery abors of the | sum was unnecessarily expended in |up by a member of the party JUmping | Cambridge manuals of science and | MOVes to London and would be ab- | benefit of the tables ;‘f e o e Silks. Now 3 skeins for be. would make | the campaign. The amount specified | t¢ his feet, waving his arms and | erature | solutely absorbed in his passion for julous island across it B b : | 5 for th X 3 shouting: “T've got It.” What he had | Sk things if it were not for his daughter | — — = Quick clearance of Neck- pund for the | i g5 great that it is easy to under- | i ; ad | Daken, W. J. Pearls, E8 ; BN o . se for Mei o k 2 got, no one could discover, because | (3ips S L RS who brings him to a realiza- | Plumage for Men. wear, Handkerchiefs, Leath- retail prices stand how ith: M Pinchot Gibson, A, H. Natural sources of E e y 9, AL s Delther sMr.t Binchot fnor | he immedfately fled. But a week later || oy orey tion that people come first. Qun]rw_\" (Boston Herald.) Good ] Sy Shell Mr. Palmer, opponents of Penrose, | he put on the market the first Shirts | pyecell H. The flon. 1 real human being, and the revela- | Now _the masculine hat sports its| €T 1300dS, — jewelry, —ohell , | [ | iti clifl—it T Rubsy G0 G061 deiiion g he book alive in every line. | dominated the world of R to patent his invention—and for years | of animals, by W. P. Py- | full of strength and vet with the most | Tahooed the sweeping sombrero for | R. & G. CORSET talk so much | - o i s the market was inundated with soft craft. delicate half-tones.”—Daily Mail. | street wear in the teeming cities of . x. U g ¥hey prob- |COVERNOR SILENT ON PER- | cuff shirts. Everybody bought them “With the same serious scientific e [Se=s e o av Sale Price 69¢c. Value $1 B ORI LR because everybody else did, and be- | Purpose which marked his ‘Infancy | Things that count, novelized from the | (oriai art note with a smile, and | 9c. Vi $1. I It is being remarked that Gover- | cause the makers said they were com- | of animals’ and in the semi-popular | play hy the author, by Lawrence | S f > | « J PR v 5 > o R author, by L ¢ | sgometimes with trepidation, that the | [ > pne by com-| . polcomb did not have a word to | fortable and handsome. | e of that book, the author de- } Eyre. ‘m.tl;x while lotidly protesting His in- %300 ]\EMO Sl }‘J(IAL J losely allied | g0 s inaugural message in ref.|, [N vogue of the soft cuff has heen | scribes the evolution of the mating | Y L ncdita 0o v iits ofiarass Whibh CORSET B Today & . immense, but at last it is on the wane, | instinct from the insect to the ape.” | Winning the wilderness, by M. H.|are affected by “the female of the | erence to the persanal tax, about|and I for one am glad to report the | —A. L. A, Booklist, McCarter, | apecies,” is availing himself more and | Sale Price $2.00. tory for the| ypich Professor Fisher had so much | fact. The soft cuff was not hand- | [Rotine sup_ {., ..o Guring the last campai some; it was hot in summer: it = more of the little tufts of blue or [ e e s UNDERMUSLINS n. His ; 4 Amecrica and Peace. llorid et s o R in other | . 1 2 crumpled in an hour or two: it ab- = | sever, w ¢ vk : > ) R the starboard side of | ¢ will_ em. | S ence: however, will not necessarily | (rpeq, like a sponge, every atom of | (Edward T. Devine in the Survey.) | had a perfect right to disregard Pres- | faunted upon tne sarfoard 96 ol That have been mussed - prevent the introduction of measures | dust with which it came in contact lident Wilson's wishes und make loans | “ertain headge: 73 B Zirst ofiall thisiaino e tonisuch [y ) o ront atafes.. We are not dls || miod-:lDespotisd fof Nthe ) g5rasoun liduring holiday rush, at Clear- cease. Can anyone deny that the | manufacturers would have a right (o | to wipe it off the statute books if | and was, altogether, far from desir- | military and naval progr: i s E ) < ary : aval programs, in this s 5 t which his ancestors wore, his | ; be employed | sycpy action is desired. It is un-|2lle. Tt has begun to go. The stiff | neutral, peace-loving country, as wiil S “.hl(‘”“\y oo Dations (conld ‘\:'l':‘r‘:‘unn:]r]e:x & usliter garmests] AUCENRTICES! o g i cuff is comi into its ow; again. | > g jcarmamel ; o | properly demand that such exports | °©&° TS : g e lode- Il o0 iar in some places and presum- ing into it Wwn - again. | make general disarmament and a T for which they never were ,,,,,.,]d,,L! denied any degree of polychromatic WOMEN’'S WOOL UNION._~_ splendor, poor man welcomes with SUITS becoming gratitude such small as this plumaged | Sale Prices $1.38 and $1.59, And men who dress according to the | Jcague for peace more difficult afler ably there are a great many who are | dictates of sense and cleanliness and the war ends. President Wilson is | obliged to pay it who do not like to| practicability are wearing it quite ex- | a wiser leader than the generals and rtion to the | 5. tensi abinet officers in tha | league. Can it be be no money ms to be in cease to manufacture and sell to bel- ligerents as the make loan nkers declined to Can anyone deny that | crumbs of comfort vely. editors and ex-c national securit, so, but it does not follow that it will be repealed because of that feel_ ik i Al hat affords. Of all ihe foreigners|y; s bgether new, | ;. The Proposed Naval Parade. that the leaguers kept sober counten- ;f\ DI‘”:;“T 'n.rvlm?n‘l(?fl’nmnn. It elean | o atad| thE TallodistALes i\/a]ues $1.50 and $1.75. on of the : (New York Times.) | ances when one of the generals laid it | ¥ & sation forbid the export of | L 0 " Lortaps only Lafayette The question in its broadest sense o e o down that one of the most Important | 2F'™S and ammunition as congress au- | €XcePtNE = POIUEPS O . e e — - thorized the president to forbid such | Louis Kossuth, the Hungarian patriot, s e e e Tt is doubtful if the navy will be | things that can be provided for at exports to Mexico? Just as we had | received the most cffusive welcome. | en food and £ s 2 + Y greatly disheartened by the possibll- | Washington is to teach our school | : ¥ | i Professor Fisher has claimed that it |ity that, about Washihgton's hirthday. | and college students to shoot? Wsri- |2 Tight to rep the Panama canal | Forthwith the Kossuth hat, of soft j8 for them | ,pn unfair and an unjust tax. The | the condition of the Culebra Cut will | cin i he e and in the navy | tolls act, because it seemed to us bet- | felt with a defiant an aggressive | [ e s ¥ v g features | piaeport Farmer takes practically not be su;-lzhus]‘|fx Izm?lmit the © |15 certainly” ossential; and if the cab- | (¥ €0 SF 3€ at all, on the side of In- | plume, ‘(;‘;:l;"»\:ifl" .-fl’,f"lffifli'\'h'«h'h & y work is be- e e F(Lt'dgg nl “r: “fi..rl s‘\ll_z» ‘0f the At- | inet officers and military chiefs need o ‘?p”\-.‘n", our agreements to our own (l:lnk \: .h»r'; :‘ bl “'j“ PA\ M 4 N large scdle antle fleet through the Panama canal | prodding, or if the appropriation |Jisadvantage rather than to run the |slllc hat whic 2 g its wi I / i who has vet offered a suitable sub-|to take part in the opening of the committees need arguments, no one risk of failing to keep them, so it is ' into favor But then the n.«(' which | stitute for it as a revenue producer|San Krancisco exposition, Naval of- | can ohject to the process. But, ths | 21Ways open to us to do more than the | Was sponsored in 184y by Kossuth and We \\/l” Put a ation as to There has for a city. Municipal expenses have fi"F“iSl hr\\u]_u;\ll’__\' rl(‘lru:1n frullnly\tuhlg Glio ihing nesdfullis bhat we shouid Ix-m;;; n{(} international law requires | was wymm.\-(vfu xlu 1\|v|1\‘ the ]mz.};,mm} on the part|, B b msl| oAl ) DRI RS, bkl TS | selsan) crately anviliucriicl (ieiside offneutralityfiandipeace ilifciaractenmpLHIES SRINEC AR N S e ols ong | ncreased compared towhat they Used | nave been rumors ot discontent over | hioceSh wioderalely IR any SUCh | e simple and appalling considera- | plon of liberty. Do the men of to-| COLUMB]A e elloving | [0 Pei in many places the revenue is|the prospective waste of time and | i (RS O RS BERENS GBS tion which should control our dect- | day fear to act upon their rights? g eVINg | jnsufficient to meet the ordinary needs|money in mere display and maval | g oo ® STEW AEPECL 0SS0 sion ds that if the cannon, armor | Downtrodden for decades, it may be = iy led as a part| os (he community and just why a per- | Junketing which = might - better be | j,i4 o) even plausible cause for of- | Plate. copper, powder, motor carsand | that at last they intend to garnish and RAI( ONO] A Those who | (= . B R expendediinipractice Tt Suaslheenilfaoil BECIIRRRE o8 S Sl s o wsoline with which the war car- | enhance their heauty and that thes ! ] £ = son can reasonably refuse to pay alcuggested that the new dreadnought | ;. = 5 £ ~¢ ried on, are supplied by this country, | side-wheel festoons are the harbin- B aliors e bl o e e SlEEdR s M S s L | |is considerably move important just | S AN : is desirabl ta 2 a year has n r been very e oLy riecred andamanned il e S ey s militacviliestab | RS STeRGsROns Bleforitsicontinuancediiners ot the goplt HHimelSoming W th R 2 g G R, More is being|and accompanied by a few smaller |y oo o St S0 R | We might casily find ourselves liter- — = | l C e admirably to rep- ble features vessels, would ser ‘ an fleet in Pac c‘ done for the individual now than say | /o=20(S oW =0 lly more responsible for it than any The LynchingeRecord. ion engaged on the battlefield. If 5 lege boys to understand and appreci- | in your home. Complete out- k put.)hv ald | twenty-five years ago. The city fur-|waters at the opening of the exposi- 2“ A’]\‘(A\(dn (‘m,wlmn.\.‘ Japanese, it cnitnllconeatts B (Cleveland Plain Dealer | policy and | pishes books and other supplies for|tion, and that, in view of the e menicans and Germans 1%, 1, ze stake in the war, inevitably the | For years Booker T. Washington | fite machine and records : e & e A e e “onsic Iy more importan her ) e - - B >n PRichaonoo chilaren freej thel manner of [[ticrdinary comtplications which have |lic.tning them b enchine | American conscience will be seared, | has kept n record of lynchings in th i °h . developed of late and the urgent need | . ° D g 120 Sl oD merice: Avest blinde s d States. In 1914 he tinds the | Iy into such | equcation has improved; all those| u¢' praetice with the big guns the | (€M to respect the rights, the views i‘] LESRD pinio \”",”“'“ innitec 'r1||1(< ot point sing A - ] b » i . S, > oy e Tt o A | fluence for peace paralyzed, - | number fell to the lowest pc since | £ out to tIY | things cost money and the bills must | San Francisco authorities might well | 2nd even the psychology. of others will | o556 0 PEite, Bave waed, ament- | TETE PEE 0 5 ere fifty-two per- l'Ofn S LOW s practical | 1o et by taxation in which all do not | be satisfied with sume curtailment of | Pear o better harvest than any in- | g © A oo 0 i SIRES CEETeCLin § il B0 ehed In the United States, 1 watch the their nmaval programme. which was | Struction in military tactics i £ gk i yword, . 4 o €| pay an equal share. The personal e ] TSl ey S E : American prayers for peace, o bla ¢ whom forty-nine were colored. Of / 3 2 pas he pe arranged a vear or more ago. | Second, we should empower the e 2 SRS L [4 J i ( interest. It ],y is not levied to meet this ex- Next Sunday or Monday the Atlan- | Honal government to make good its | PO It e of M = } k> 100 pense, however, but rather to meet|tic fleet will proceed to Cuban wa- | international obligatior S Missed Ilis Stocki “and Louistana SRR e i S o |ters for practice. As so many of the | Ments. The supreme court has in- | st toukings) SO el : | as erms‘ i e cos aintaining the military, ships were kept at Vera Cruz all | terpreted the constitution in such a (Cleveland Plain Dealer.) This pr ‘»l"m‘nr‘mr is an old story s g the balance to go Into the local treas- | fpyough the summer and fall. there | way that to do this may now requirc ‘Happy Now Years!™ cricd one well | 0T Mississippi, but a new one for em of sew-|ury. It is this balance that helps|have been few opportunities for gun- | o constitutional amendment. But we | dressed loafer to another, saturday | LOUSIAna - 00 1915 the former stat _— Double Disc Rec- ussion and | 5 community to meet the remainder of | nery, though Admiral I"leteher | have learned that amendment of the | morning. was \m\.w- ] m'\:‘v) {} 4“?”‘ ‘t‘m‘vnuf \ 5 Brown, says | its debts. If the tax is abolis .. | managed to keep some of the war i constitution, when public opinion de- “You're late.”” answercd tha othep, than any other Ll EOLRIE Soariet \ ords 63¢ up >Ed : = S abolished it | 70 O " moving and the men in active | mands it, is comparatively easv. No | “but you're excused. Merry Crismus: SeCond. e & question | will mean that the 10ss in revenue | von fraining a good part of the time, | mob in New Orleans, no legislature | We ain't seen each other since Lahor |1t is further interesting to note ths ¢/ Instruments $10 method to | must he met in some other way, proh. | It was< hoped that six- weeks migh( | in California. no business interest in | day, 8o it's all right. How v enjoying ' ©f the fifty-two lawless executions x>/ ( : bt about the | abhly by an increased tax rate \ | e devoted to practice this winter, | New York, should be able to em-)the holidays, and what did Santy recorded, only seven were of men ac- to $200 4 3 orders ar assemble at | broil the nation in war against the | bring you? crised crimes against woman-l wage out of v N but the rders are to ASsEem 2 1 3 ) 4 Epod many peoble would object to | py. o non Ronds early in Eebruary for || will of the nation; vd that will “I gotta tell you about You On the other hand, the Alabama edu-| Geafonela Dept. 2nd Floor pady deflled | that. tho start of the hig parade through | should be consistently good will, an | know 1 ain't very well coiw fcator calls attention to the fact that ’ scens to be e the canal. According to the present | earnest desire for peace, for the inter- | days. 1 got roomatizum and ear- | the figures show “an increasing fen Van Ost M t the great Mayor Scully is sadly out of date | yrrangements all the larger hattle- | change of genuine services, for mu ;Hrhv something fierce. Well, my wife | dency to lynch fopr any cause, how I g wewage be when he says that the city’s bonded ships well as number of | tual support by each people of the | insists that I'd orter wear wool things, | ever trivial.” | % .| debt is growling out of proportion to | .ryjse and many as | best interests, the higher life, fhe {but 1 hate to do it I've wore the In other word the old pretens best method | pjr jdeas of what it should be. Why | \ell. are to be in thic . But | true civilization of all its neighbors ime weight all the year “round, | upon which lynche formerly trie b within ‘he | should we worry about posterity” [ir (he open p e throuzh the Cu- Third, we should cease to export | since—" to oxcuse thoir 1 en - What has posterity ever done for us? | jehra Cut will he only 100 feet wide | munitions of war. It is not a question | v. cut that out. 1 know about it sl ahav e (the new n | he cost. It i brd has sev- Aren't we leaving posterity a mflh_nn at the time fixed for the fleet’s pas- | of what we have a right to do as neu- § Wihad did yo wile give you?" | eration of lynchers These latter dollar city hall, when all that posterity | sage, it is not likely that an attempt | trals under international law. No “She knitted me some wool socks. | day criminals are franker; their mad- . Heration but expected was a half million dollar | will he made to get more than one [ doubt Jefferson believed that we had | I wanted to give 'em to the starving | ness jgnores logic hey slay be. 1 s ently ap- | bullding.—Waterbury Republican. firm like a |cause they like to slay. 99-201-203 Main Streot. dreadnought through. la perfect legal right to export guns i Beljuns, but she w

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