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4 RA]N DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, MARCH 19, 1915, that he had no object in y BF except to do his duty as he MGMILLAN S linted that this suit is the re- Eenemies whom Mr. Osborne jre .trying to injure him. The being given a great deal of in the big papers and profession- : in New York is being much ex- ! L TO FIGHT PROHIBITION. ’ t the annual meeting of the New | L : [ § ‘ ] k .State Wholesale Liquor Dealers’ | 8pciation in New York city yester- ‘ plans were made for a fight | | nst what is known as the Anti- don league, and all who are en- il 8aged in the liquor business are ¢ j| urged to contribute towards the sup- ls ‘N; l l OSS f | port of the movement. The liquor £ dealers admit that the Anti-saloon ¢ | lc@8ue is composed of active, astute FgEe | i Sl Ml ki R ; PR LR and in - ‘°,‘rh:‘: be gMnZ— it strength is that an ef- | g our days She COUld not manage her e iR custom, her husband left his job other words, the movement has taken Y e 3 and tOday he OWnNs hlS Oown store. y it and as women and m heing <hown in mothods | Aemocrats and republicans as well as | the new weaves and colorinzs for early | I IOWP R those who have looked upon prohibi- | SPring wear. ® Rtinucd and A tion as a sort of religion and cannot see P further in- L | WOMEN'S AND MISSES NEW Mawever, | n5 F00d in any other party or porii- | e The wife herself tells how she did it ical movement. But when the aver- rice Bhever. i o nt, n the ave Priced e 3 S ie 4 2 : (19 S will pie- | aE® Person looks upon the prohibition CHARMING NEW BLOUSES h H I H l d M E,:_:e\i‘pm F;“Ld movement in a practical way he can- 98¢ to $1.98 Hacl 3 In the great Serles’ ow c pe y that when |10t find anything which will tend to ""‘"‘7(.“"*; HEOL Husband to Make More Mone 4 ether it will | SUPPOrt the theory that the manufac- TUB SILK BLOUSES i y, i ture and sale of liquors can be suc- Special at $1.98 Fach es are, what e h A l it | cesstully pronibited in this country. 1t | White and colors. 1n the prl nded, and s fengl (e 0l : — » ¢ Tni B CREPE DE CHINE BLOUSES St S 4 . b go it ‘blind ORI UG \erall SRS S $2.98, $3.98, $4.98 Kach wasg the Bl tns |on & sort of independent coloring, has succeeded in obtaining the support of to vote in favor of prohibition they 1d have been o D the {slature has | Would simply deprive the country of | AT OUR INFANTS DEPT. 4 ’ aking appro- | &0 immense revenue without destroy- | All kinds of dainty things to wear 2 ) - for the little tots. ; ing the liquor business. ought as to |8 2 INPAN AND CHILDREN'S § e trom When the prohibition question was BONNITS n's time he |Peing discussed in congress many of to $2.98 lach lls providing | the representatives of southern states INFANTS' SHORT COATS 3 On Sale Tomorrow i stated openly that no one experienced 18 to $3.98 Fach g e o "ANTS' LONG CO\] #na. no one | any dificulty in obtaining drink in so- 5295 0 8550 Farh - Fifteen Cents a Copy of All News Agents mitter a |called dry communities. Now if it is INIANTS HOOD fle measures | impossible to prevent the manufacture SPEC $ Or, $1.50 a Year (12 issues) by Mail, Ordered Through Our Subscription Agents or Direct through and |and sale of liquor, why should the hnancial con- | government be deprived of so much SPECIAL VALUE it not been | revene, The question is & very sim.| NEW SPRING UNDERMUSLINS Boys Wanted to Deliver on Routes. Apply to Our Sales Agent. or Baldwin | ple one when it is viewed as a prac- At 49c, 98¢, $1.49 Each Siles 3 SILK HOSTERY about a mil- | tical businss matter. Prohibition In| New Spring shades anal 50c QI e e then b sotial e i sk HOSH E.H.CHATFIELD, 285 Main St. New Britain, Ct. ent. There e e Always reliable, $1.00, $1.50 and $2.00 paiv the financial | cyTY COURT MATTER HELD UP.| MIIN'S ONYX SILK SOX THE CURTIS PUBLISHING COMPANY nown before | g i S en: i S : ! : ‘ B . (e veidlag jofithojaction of; - (the SR tp‘,,, Independence Square, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania e common council on the matter of the | gppyNG WE IGHTS KNIT UNDER- ot be with. | City court by Mayor Quigley may kill WEAR bt they | that matter for another two years. It | For Men, Women and Children. g " |.does not follow, however, that the WASHABIE SPRING GLOVE quite an ad- ey N p Chamoisettes, 25¢ and 50c¢ pair. ditions, veto will kill it but it deprives that | pj1, ‘Beaeh Washable Capes : particular charter amendment of the | g1.50 pair, : = e 3 —— = = - A » i icials, v ave ac ire . B z o 50, | endorsement of the common council KAYSER'S SILK GLOVES ple 4‘I ufi'm‘llb. “l_“f h“f oqitie ‘u‘on(‘jcmen: you cannot ha\f«l ,0(\01 . S e e e e ol e TR tie bad habit of exceeding their ap-| disenfranchised women workers in Lspatches the e e Sy 7 | White, black and colors, in short, | propriations, then caliing on _the| Uonnecticut.” Well, there have been s, toEetheriIn mpecial sesslon and Pass | 00 ahq full lengths. state to make up the deficiency from|more than that in this state for at | i HERE’S A NEW SPRE eparmE %1 4he amendment * over the mayor the next year's revenue. There | least 25 vears, and most of them do- | § ace. men N |, .3, which, by the way, is mot TURDAY SPECIAL should be, if there is not, a law that|ing very well at last report. It is not [ 007 WomeT 1)y ety - Plaus Gleiey 8 will make it punishable to thus waste| Wise to be too dogmatic about what l IN ring the past 7 . White and black wits | the money entrusted to the charge| can or can't be in this world. It l': > IR This is another instance of the dif- i e e = | of public officials. The deficiency | ISn't so very long ago that the world | g R 6t lainea, | flculties that reform always encoun- | faree Tews it bill that has just heen passed gives "\hfluhl have been quite horrified by | 3 M ot expla ed, H . 5 , " . 5 ng v i e fact that in 191 Miss Kmily Pier- | 2 ters in New Britain. The justice REPL s CHINE ND a convincing indication of how this ! y i R et i e e e o o e RS R :ul:‘v'zl 2 Syilitaslzrownl simplyloyatoioration | SRS Tol el SBoRicReRERs sl ; d . i sl e niaene L e | B RIEBEE T | s is & good time to call a halt in | polf of = i cande o i e | It's a new line, men in every sense of the phrase; b1y arrived or SiE : S ¥ . v | the interest of economy. s in il effito r drit- ST s : Hot 3 ; N “(“‘“} | be abolished and have made a report | WOM!I . e e e poaram. of the legis.| in. before a big labor mass meeting, : l 1EW in assortment, new in models, and new in value; t atte o oo =, ] r g : "ha sn't see: e an as! ish- i ' OIS gLavemr in favor of its elimination. Now the | - SERCHIEEC b, reg- | latars—Ansonia Sentinel. That doesn't seem (o be oL ) | st know what you've been accustomed to getting at question of expense has come up and | yiae S — Rt i i st 46 0 oenze o B twelve-fifty and fifteen dollars—and you know what that appears to have overbalanced | EXTRA WIDE FATLLE RIBBONS Votes For Women. that good old ahoriginal moralist .l you want for your money. Well, it won't cost you the good that might be accomplished 39¢ Yard (Providence Journal.) would have gone up like Blijah in a anything to see these Sprir ind d by the establishment of the proposed | Al the new shade There was a big labor mass meet- | chariot of fire. g 10 8 pring wonders—and we guar- antee you'll have more thanyou usually get for the | 5 o = | SALIC OF SAMPUE LEATHER ) jng iy New Britain Tuesday night at N 200 Sample Iandbags from one of | (icid’ think, would be @ good place Psychology. ' ‘ money if you buy one. | | ergency and i the list of lge that it has by as to how s would last Y | I new court. This reform will come | nue fighting. Filling in Eng- rer | for a labor mass meeting. Miss 1im- | (From Life.; they were | <. | ! , c for a la g g they without the endorsement of the com- | ers on Sale Saturday, 0 $4.95 Hy Plessen of Crosaucll, one ufte]| Paychologs is & word often ised tol B l D H d R ty | mon council. 1t any one speaks in | ;""( Wevate mate 11 receiv- | jeuding suffragists of Comnectictt, | explain. the meaning of something | & welve ollars an fliod way tO 1 o cor of it before the committee it | 05 RLe 5 €r. | poke in behalf of women's rights. | which we don't understand after it has | | ; Ed . A : 2 She said women were ont to blame | heen explained and which, if we could | § F ft ‘ t l th P 8 Jishfbaidons iotoyidedigoliicautne for wanting to vote. They had g00d |ynderstand it, would not do 1 y engs isthnerrice us any | g i00DS il i " e sl sometime. Possibly the legislative | C Carpenters’ hall. Carpenters’ hall, we committce may see fit to approve it the leading leather goods manufactur that no one opposes it. In the cvent reason for it. The whole industrial|good. The psychology of advertising | ) celecte ia o 3 . of opposition there is no telling what life of the country has changed. Ma- | means that some one who hasn't the | B ,\Y/e ve selected this line as our opening spring B Iy hioron chinery has revolutionized the home. | ability to sucreed at it tries (o reduce | § special because we believe these garments at 2 B 9 Tegislation now deals with home life, | o 4 mental formula the method of | &2 & £ > o R » ¢ features, it E % AN | to regulate milk supply, sanitary con- | those who do succeed at it. Psychol- $12.50 will appeal to every man who wants ago that such FACTS AND FANCIES, . § % | ditions and various matters of the|ogy. in short, like the, policeman after good style, good quality, a perfect fit—and good attracted the e D | home the fight comes around after the thing | value country, and Some writer is declaring that worms 199-201-203 Main Street. Simply because it is necessary in|is done, swings its club and looks wisc, | ¥ ourt the jury | Wil vet bé used for food. ‘And there modern government to regulate the i fhe psychology of Shakespeare is the | Men who pay up to.$20 for their suits wiil reco Y777 lis many a weary business man who | - S 5 milk supply doesn’t constitute an ar-| guess of some one with a college de- ize i seo t] e o - - > . . br has' been | would like to begin feeding them to|ing of that_creature. While it is| gument for woman suffrage. To be|gree, as to what Shakespears ‘.,s‘ nize in these the same models and grade of tailoring the defendant | the fishes right now.-—Norwich Rec- | true that deer do some damage to | ghort, the bare fact that men, com- | thinking about when he wrote his and we guarantee to eveery purchaser all-wool fab- d who claims | ord. crops at present, the amount is small | mon, ordinary, masculine men, are|plays, always completely jgnoring nm! rics MISE. ——— n - can afford to compen- ' enacting so many useful laws in be-|fact that tr ; ShaiakbehTa that he has and the state can a : ena 3 fact that the only things Shakespearc g s R At the present time Conngeticut no | sate the sufferers. But the damage | half of the home, ought to encourage | was thinking about were the box re- And men accustomed to paying less than $12.50 Intiff, a Youns | (oo gets through with one murder | done would not be in it with the | women in the faith that even if wom- ceipts and how to keep his audience |l will see t P i i i ce the of week as head | trial than one or more is ready to|amount of havoc wreaked by hunters|en do not get the vote, good govern- | interested. The principal differenc.: | k| hat for a slight difference in price, they will {llinery store. | go on. This commonwealth must|of Venison trampling about the state | ment will nevertheless proceed. ot by CRoTons R AT e be able to get twice as much as their money usually Ls W. Osborne, | improve greatly before thinking ser-|and if the deer law is taken off, we| 1t has been the concrete experience | that astrology tells vou what is not | bUVS. jously of removing the capital pun.| may look to see them by the hun-| of states where woman suffrage has|co beforehand and psychology does it | E ishment law.—Norwich Bulletin. | dred thousand, armed with every-|heen adopted that granting of suf-|afterward. ) He says that | thing from a pea.rifice to a Gatling, | frage o women has ont altered in any| A peychologist by any other "‘”””i ‘No, We Haven't Discontinved We Say Agaln, Men; | [ | criminal law- letter ta the Is there not noticeable a greater | bent upon exterminating the prettiest | substantial degree either the spirit|would know as little Thase All-Wool Suils at §7.50 g y counsel says | Vigor, more self-confidence, frankness, | and most interesting wild creature | or lefter of the laws. The special ad-| Psychology is, we are fold by the s ) tedl| Here S Somethlng Ne\v 3 hat's what Wwe told a even aggressiveness, in what Mayor | that Connecticut posse —Bridge- | vantage to women from possession of | experts, the science of the mind. % Scully says and does of late? We have | port Telegram. | the franchise is in the added respect But the great beauty about the| man yesterday who was f S : ¥ noticed something like that and othe e they may have for themselves, and | mind is that no matter how much’| impressed with one his or prln}., and took her | have spoken of it. Tt is a good thing, There W as all of us can easily | men may have for them as citizens, | machinery there is, no matter how | brother bought sometime ~ & ow. He re- [too He has been engaged in pub-| remember, some opposition on the|and in the broadening of . interest | many new theories there are. no nm-{ 480. On the CONtrAryw= 'lwcnty dollars worth of to o picture |lic business, in one way and another, | part of orgamized labor to the es-|which participation in public matters| ter how many new systems of thought | 11 NEW PATTERNS looks, guaranteed all-wool for many vears, and ought to know |{ablishment of a trade school in New | must accomplish. arise and have their brief day, it stili| HAVE JUST B : . nce and then | [T Cabout it as anyone, and more | Haven. It mhay be that the man-| Women ought to vote. There is no|remains unscientific and breaks into | [ ADDED fabrics—and a_full assort- h him. He ad- | than most.—Waterbury American. ner of management of soine . such | reason . why they should mot know |new fields without rhyme or reason. | ment of handsome atterns urant referred R | schools elsewhere gave reason for it. | enough to vote. We think they have| Psychology, however, need not ba | | :; the line—and svme of : p g as not in thed Now that short, wide skirts are be- | But the opposition was diplomatically | the natural right to just as full a clt- | utterly discredited. Tt has one great | f§ | [ 170 @18 GOW «n Slanind and models. ing worn, it iy natural to assume that | dealt With, and (he citv proceeded | jzenship in the way m] responsibility | useful function. It occupies the ex- (g | M ] 5 4 ‘_Iv"'\nmn t';‘\:.” 1(‘; 3 freedom of movement has been re-|tc the establishment of a trade school | or privilege that men-have, but it is | clusive attention of lot of med e X " 3 the queerest sred to women. But this freedom | which has proved distinetly different. | a ztfl:d mistake for women to think .w,-ol intellects who, if they were do-|f | YOu want to see something All Sizes for Men and Yomll lever instituted, | is purely psychological. There is| It has proved the heiper of the prac- | that they can bring to the polls some | ing anvthing else, would not do it well | § unusual for the money. | Men ing is that any | still the high-heeled shoe ta be reck-|tical trade rather than the hinderer | great reformatory impulse which is|enough to constitute a gain over e i vowssa~: e 7 i, b Fad Bt aiainet o oned with. How is a mincing gait | of it. fhe trade =chool is turning | heyond the a(-‘hlv\f?‘non’l of their h_u others who do it better. Tt s, 33-35 ASYLUM STREET’ HARTFORD el o e L aT o N out bovs with an intelligent funda- | hands and brothers. Labor organiza- | therefore, much better for them to | B jis such a fight- ( plocked up nearly three inches|mental knowledze of the work they | (i because they take a liberal | be engaged in an occupation the ex- | gt STORE L absolutely no | higher than the toe?—Bridgeport | intend to do.—New Haven Regi'- | gtandpoint toward everything except | ercise of which keeps them doing | [ 66; . OPEN withess and |Standard. ter. | their own especial interests, very nat- [ something which might be worse 3 SATURDAY e murder trial ; o e urally favor woman suffrage hut the| Psychology, in conclusion, is the | g U 1t is to be hoped that Connecticut| The present legislature can do one | cause of labor, so called, has onthing all that is not EVENINGS tici from | o 3 b A sum total of known o s will never take off the law on deer | thing that Will have great futire| whatever to gain from it. about s given subject, redmced to w at the time, | to the extent of permitting the hunt-l ralue. It can make a drastic exam- Miss Pierson said Very vigorously: ers from him. ined with her formula.