New Britain Herald Newspaper, April 15, 1915, Page 8

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R ] BeI\AL D g - sl 1 00 “pro- n WH 1 M l " V e ";m:mnr ‘are alight, the dtm?:':s‘;'";““"“\"]fi"b:‘:";fl::“:‘i",":;, GOOD ARRAY OF NFW BOOKS NAMED AT OTHEIRS 3AY C LL A O War are being re- Don’t forget the new hours for nmvf ) verti b s, anl - il ':g' m. | In blue have again gathered in New —— questions as discussed in ex- at 9:30 P, M., Other Days at 6 f n St Brits 3 | "T urc! ritain under the name of the American women in civic work, by H. j Lurc of the 1dnd; farming after fifty, SRERDRE e X Grand Army of Connccticut, for the | AS “clean-up” week approac C. Rennett. by Dr. Wiley. S 3 purpose of holding their annual cn- ;:”‘L":‘|1“( "')I""‘;:!f"”"m (hat s : “A study of the personalities be- “Sets forth for ‘the average man ¢ of the ity | CAMPment. There are not as many of | geeper than merely making (he SR (S ot Ehosljoc averaxs mesns forh pfiRwt AN The i pep otk ol . Tier vo any P4 Month. 3 . 5 [ momena of our time--women in civic | dulge the natural desire for country g . o c;. .',:‘ oY) matl | the veterans present this time as | more attractive place to ive m. and social work Publisher's note. life, the dapgers and diMculfies, as (New York Sun.) “for paper to b ents & when the last encampment Was held | (0 ifself is reason enough for | P well s The Hon. James . Mann of Chicago n advance s e B oL s the ndvantages and successe . s I th, $7.00 & year: here and tho step of those who have | Sined eort in frocinz humes yards| california (he wondcrful, by Edwin [ of making his home on the farm: |and the hous of reprensetatives, 2 1 stre O me ‘orners, Markham a v i e ftable advertising medium | come to spend a day or two in the | hut there are other wter ad- “ T G fERe (hR 0 Sian I::;z‘:;l]e Ml\lcv'mlla “4!‘:""3; ‘( nter- { himself one of the honorary i 8 y presentec y one who tion books and press 5 S e 3 b hish by is S 7 o ben to advertisers. city 18 not as quick, but the hearts | vantages. Discasc lurks in rubbish covers about the same | qualifus o smesk irewm @#clonting | OF “also mentiontd” candidates are all right and their memories still [ Ne&PS, as well as in the unsanitary s James 5 S B & for the republican nomination £or e L it garbage containcrs. Accumulations of ey James with equal enthusi- | training and practicatsexpgrience.”— E 16 st Hota- e b k - | president in 1916, is a very able cit- 3 :'d"‘;‘;:: 20 % Bresd-| | carry them back toithe time wheni[ i othes or useless. furniture fin S x_“‘:“‘ -'I-”"\“P‘f"l‘“e- tol A. L. A. Booklist. .. ¥ E§ izen and member of congress, but York City; Board Walk, the G. A. R. was a stern reality and | attics or. cellars are conaucive {0 | hoom the exposition. — & L, A °,’;“ 2 e | perhaps he is letting his propheticals City and Harttord depo! the setting of the sun each day marked | §erm culture. The fiv. the mosquito | jet, 2 1."—A. L. A. Book-'| Memories of eighty years, by Fanny |ryn away with his intellectuals when and the caterpillar are taking ad- ols J. Crosby. | he asserts cocksuredly: vantage of the warm days for plan- | (nildren “1 dom't know who is gelng to be vs f of earth, by A : 2 5 €N tby v : *! ning fttieln Wanmmenilicampaleniiandll ST e e e MRV aS SRRSR IR litical shame of Mexico, by E. I | the next president, but 1 know he is dier. Tt is only a remnant of the once ' efforts must he vigorous ro outwit N | Foing to he a blican.” - ] ) i s mus gorous { the main characters, u middle-uged | <rh D ft i e F mighty host that we have with us | them.—Bridgeport Standard, S i 8, & e author, formerly editor o WO 1 Nothing but uncertainty is certain JANTS TO GIVE PLOPLE ti)dg&y)but e e ;\ omand\\x.m 1]:;\: been thwarted and | newspapers in Mexico City, writes | in the politics of these United satl:'" : New Br! - | hemmed in all her life, and an ideal- | concerning the Madero and Huerta ' Granting 1 t A CHANCE. Jriadital b AL Aor iy FASHIONED HOSE y llclj uP!-mMc CALLS. the passing of many who were serving their country in the ranks of the s0l- Y them as they pass. wishes them more | fstic farmer who lacks the supreme | regimes till the time of the A, E betwee: 3 : ; St whg iach ime . B. C. n the regulars and the pro- on courcil nas passed | years of peace and quiet In the com- The Jitney adds a new but not in- | Virtue of “thrift,” live the crowning | offer of mediation, with a peculiarly | gressives exists or will soon exmp no of transportation. How important a ' fion and renunciation of their love for | Readabl sersational comewhat | to e s il | 2 e i 4 ant a ! able, ensaijonal, some! Ty to both wings can be picked, yet fot that it x,\‘\m,, \rmmi‘t o (f‘d friends. place it ‘T’” finally ke depends upon cach other The setting and minor | prejudiced account, strongly denounc- | the prospect may be 1e=:llpn‘gved with ¥ to the project, but so as New Britain sent many of its people :xh: r"‘\‘l” and the evolution of its characters show the same understand- | ing Ambassador Wilson and urges | Toses and raptures than the immortal voters an opportunity fo| ¢, the Union army, some being little h - AL Present there is little more ; ing found in the author's New Ing- | that the duty of the United States to- | father of the blackmail act sees it or 3 than a hit or miss scramble for busi- | land storics. Received the $10,000 | warda Mexico is to extend. so far as it | 8ees it for publication fer they ness, a reckless and seemingly very prize offored hy Winthrop Ames for | may be pract 1.1 i A A o e (e S )} withll ae NS B 1 v o S a practical, ‘the gains of scien- - If good times are on the way, if i mcutaforiths SoRRer (ot Youns manbiRg Ras mm; 1«\1' dangerous rushing about of vehicles | the best play Iy an American author.” | tifio research nnd the use of the scien- | MI. Wilson's administration is no hist what to do at its meet- | wives and children to mourn t G ek n; cx;n‘ ponsible hands, and a specles A. L. . Booklist. tific methods info all relations of hu- | |oNger associated with lean kine and vy | parture, some for the last time. The | of cheap Joy-riding hy a lot of worthy .. man life, governmental, industrial, ! Ynemployment, if the paths of the it had | PeOPle to whom an’ automobile is a | C 'y on the science of organ- | and personal.’ "—A. I.. A. Booklist nation are dropping fatness in 1916, Bepo novelty from the inside. Apparently | i nd husiness development, © | if prosperity has come without wait- to the member: they do not care much how promuscu- L J. Fre e | Ing to be conducted personally by the 2 e e O ; leep where | onsly they are thrown togotl - how ; e 3 Thrs| A would be better for the | absentees, some of whom sl Y are thrown together or how « . Reading book in modern philos- | '¢Publican party, the need of it as in | they fell and for more than half a | much room they have so that they are | Diplomatic history of the war, by M. ophy, by G. E. Partridge. a special providence against demo- permitted to ride in the open and arce . Price. .. cratic incompetency may look consid- he demands on landed at their destination quicker “Far the most searching a W © grow. erabl; 2 2 . 5 g 2 ¢ ost sen z analysis here the money grows, by G. Gar- | © y less evident to the voters. was considered inadvisable I\nn\\l:l.' So we owe a great deal to tha‘n by any other conveyance With | of the preliminarics of the war. . . rett. 2. Right here in this state, with its = fthe proposition, but the | the Union soldier and New Britain | which tlrey are familiar.—Waterbury | It includes, hesides the relevant “A humorous exposition of the Wall | PI€ sheaf of electoral votets to be d}s ‘m want it or not. It | more than bovs. others in the bloom Pening and it was nece jon counsel to give [ homccoming was joyful, but He | one sad feature; there were many e in favor of municipal | forts of home and the companionship | S9luble complication to the question | day of their lives through tie realiza- | intimate knowledzo of ‘inside aftairs.’ | more, and that a candidate satisface — 1 | | | i Fpass a vote sayving that % (he city at | century their graves have been un- t the ne‘:l city election, a1y ; con- | it places the national colors for which correspondence, cxcept the French, | to the popular conceptions based on | NOPody until the independents have ":I‘wm‘ ot irn tfic wash R 5 > S Various 2 . = % e . o the superior fitne: f ubl paront that (New ¥ork Sun.) tion of the various nations, and an | work is extremely effective.”—Nation. ness of republican citizens must prepare themselves to ! ¢ Ror " i to the seats of power in Washington? | : 2 2 v . o tiations. . . For its lucidity, order- | Armenian princess; a tale of Ana- st in the Knitting without a ™’ 19 and (he nest vote | they may do or where they will [ Jonger boasts the pugilistic suprema-y i and custome!In Turkey: and Armenis tating optimism and the sociological 5 esent, but while there is | Britain extends its glad hand to them | (ho amusement of their friends pass- Ty T T e | 2vation) rect neutrality and at the same tir You will find a representa- AIslt, & successful encampment and a |the car barn nelghborhoods have re- | p St aurCities ; ' i v s problem of our cities, that it is a | Mushroom town, by Oliver Onions.. | gelicacy of international relations, he Hosi D i meant_and of warning policemen to k ray ; ouriosiery epartment, in § €Ep AWAY | cjty department can deal with it sat- | strengthen opinion that in Mr. Onions condemnation, and is threatened with within Itg powers when it As outlined in Hartford despatches | and elevated cars offer opportunities \ here and abroad: studles of other “A @ genre bif, a plece of descrip- | to the Empire of Kulture, may there ¢ill be submitted to the s | s o It . . = . Qi -be & will increase the license fee in towns | son may induce wjnter to return for | __A 1, A. Booklis true sense unique, The characters|dent marked out for punishment by h v > ot it a plan to give the state some SRt as Tapper and Percy Goetschius. 0. L1 3 It is conceivable that even Mr. HOSE to predict what Zeoe enceiahith froml el per ot e : chl attempt to county allowance cut from ¥ ishing condition that nothing CAN| jusic as one distinet manifestation | passing a holiday on a farm, discuss | aliens among us keep on. also, w ¢ add, the brewers' view, . o SRS 10 ¢ : 810, We may & tender hearted watd Je#defS Lo PTO¥ (ijo for giving undue proportion to |to compare experiences. Under this |the Chicago democrats found out last ro into. ot to pass and we hope every ot Y nde . . ST A\ S 3 Y h no condition: to- g0 into. | ought n P of free ice crtam and lemonade.” The | jqmirable chapter characterizes the |the compensations of life lived ac- Black With Split Soles, ‘ .vidence that ghere 1s no cvidenc it comes up for passage.—Bridgeport | provide for the benefit of all’ will PR .. . 2 5 Will business men go into ponties| Out Size Hem Top Lisles, . — . tear it up by the roots to take Wome: {e N T gt YTt would be difficult to name an- [ mirers will find very cnjovable.—N. |dollar"? Two very successful busi- - comprehensive treatment as is pre- olaile have just retired from trade possessed noted in some lines of | 4gide the increase fn the license fee doors, thus, after their unchanging Harvard (American college and uni- PR tact with the masses and won their e a mogt femarkable | tne money from the towns and give it | and burglars in the hot months, _ diner. Ghosal. at line of work simply | framers of this plan have boosted the | i2e that months have passed since | 70 " g V0 ily and friends, insists on conducting | to the service of their country? The: answer /without any e Chietiparliarientare i Law: t Klei . ) been counted, what t o L a s e N e e the chief parliamentary addresses, a | l.awson & Klein such a deligatful bit hat sort of an experi B e ; 34 ST ule is being made? What is Albany % Involved in the question. | panions with the warmest of hearts. | historical introduction. The most O b S ey 3 3 t Involved ir 0 S T P s b 5 et doing- to ‘bring the republicans back | 'The Only Stockings Shapeq, consccutive mu- | ment in this city, their vears will not | admit that spring is here. Local rep- | liness, and objectivity . . ., deserves tollan peasant, by F. J. Banks. 3. Whatever the weaknesses, the : 4 it el atth e e AL , e i . : " taken in 1014, while it is [ gather for future meetings, but New | °f the earth are beginning to drob | pducation through play, by H. S.[are vivid, It is an appareptly truth- | Jparstions of Mr. Wilson, 1i, in iy dow display all this week. room. for debate fhere | today and wishes them a pleasant | ing below; the venturesome vouth of to assert the rights of the Un @ besion that two consecutive gsion tha newed their warm weather recreation o ot go out of busi- from rtain stre 4 v 5 . i i does - n 1 ce! n streets and avenues: | jsfactorily. A very full and excel- | We have a novelist of exceptional |the political vengeance, of masses of reglflar Sizes, our sizes, e’“rlf- te last vening. Just when | the exclse committee of the general to rowdles that are entirely irresistl-| phages are to follow. A sugsestive | tive painting, minute in detall vet|mnot be among Americans a reaction | Fibbed tops and trunk tops. ated hut the L : T $450 [ o brief vis X e % : : : not been state of over 3,000 inhabitants from a brief visit, but though his mani- | v % w ‘have life; their combined lives make | the passionate adherents of a forelgn BURSQN FASHIONED i rcceipts—to the amount | Wi 2 ; 5 frry the licsnss receipts—1o the amo ithin a few wecks the grass in | «y"juctd treatment, which attempts | Orchard pavilion, by A. C. Benson.! Bryan may yet he rehabilitated and & with the question at that | cent. to seven and a ha per ¢ control the popular (lvm\pd that It of the development of human | their different aims and plans, and Tn short, dangerous allies muy every woman. ny doubt but that the | /' "ihe New Haven beer making | that several that 1s, the at several thousand children can be | i garler period, A special chapter | thin story gulse, the writer studles | weel. 50c pair Bl lignting business at | representative from Falrfleld county |shrubbery that an open handed civic | 1li'yooice on music. —A. L, A. Book. | cording to each of these ideals.’— Business Men and Politics : 4 regular and outsizes, 25¢ pair. * & will be rmproved hy | bost. ‘it ively brie e r o \ithin a comparatively bricf spice be | poundations -of sclence, y Henrl | Sheep's clothing, by L. J. Vance. ence d it would not [ '€ . e ences to this matter and it would not | .y, o1yt he Tong bebére rAr*8ignied doubt picking up and the state dizeussed it. It is not a |in, their silv varce i their ps N a i i ~ Ro d in the state £ ther Miverware In thelr respec: | centeq here.’—Boston Transeript Sllver king: rounsalon Henty Athur|lof amuls/means sood eatth nnd'com=] D128 in| finet Black S Cotton . ’ manner, making adequate provisic : ftiw. nighwa business for | the proposition to take a portion of E§adeduntef proyision v scries), by J. H. | Unfinished song, by Mrs. §. S. K. D. | success by their knowledge of human | and 50c pair. ht, terctofors those en-|{ to the state is decidedly unfair. The Does the indifferent population real n admirable addition to Story of a Hindoo girl of nineteen | forty and the other fifty years of age, Balb 1ggans, m Aegula. 3 : i | we had a “wave of crime”? Sueh . is 5 hots, terrorized the train- | fgures so that the state can obtain € ime eh e her matrimonial affairs along western | seem to be well qualified and noth- | tops, 25¢ parr, decided to mive an | puts on its best dress for him today, | A™Merican. treaties. all the published diplomatic | Street point of view. As an antidote | ET2sped by the strongest and sure to B it chironological study of the mobiliza- | & the sketch of a bank president at | €Nt station and proving ground of there is @ de- | tions and welcomes him and his com- Sneiogs ; z % beuives affirmative action by | They may never hold another encamp- valuable feature is the diary of nego- s, The first was taken I | permit of much speculation on what | resentatives of the race which 10| a1l praise’ . Kation. “The author's description of lie | SChtimentalitles of policy, the Irrl-|gegm ~ See beautiful win- Lricks off temement house roofs for atich ful picture of a repellant region. e the school children is the chief play 2l States during a time of excceding | tive line of Burson Hose at | as the pres- | general goed time afterwards. | school problem, and that no other “A remarkable book, which Will| hay been visited with the fanatical & ool uncil AN UNJUST BILL. unday travellers : PR ext week that the co 2 Sunday travellers on subway. surface | jent exposition ed on conditions | power and originality.”—N. Y. Times. | the hybird whose first allegiance i3 |OUt sizes, hemmed tops, assembly has reported the bill which e. The opening of the baschull sea hook for all teachers and taxpayerz.” | broad ‘in sweep, the book Is in the | of sympathy and support for a presi- ‘s that according to law [ (o §600. The proposition carrfes with | festation may be violent, it will he | ¥ssentials in music history, by Thom- | the town alive.”—Outloolk. power? BEs in April, 1910, It I8 S ty-five per cent, with the |the city’s parks will be in such flour- | i 3 : ! OUT- | to present ‘the growth of the art of | “Three Oxford undergraduates | cease to bo comic if the hopeless Deserve the attention ' of > is bi ents the majority view, it {1 | does not seem as if there This bill represen e 3 ) be stamped out of existence’td nermif thought,’ and which some will criti- | return after thirty years of success | await the republicans, how dangerous Black Sl”( L'sle 2 35 ’ 1 S, &40C ,J9C, b ejected because | o udgment the bill a § romise will' be rel ciement. In our juds gathered “In one spot by the promisc | | govoted to music in America. An |thelr varving characters and weighs will register his vote against it when | corporation and generous individuals : i list 1 o Ea (New York Commereial.) ; . _ | in bloom, and a thoughtful public will ; : " : e = . . The Herald has made several refer on pUaAc Y { Ppincare. | " “A lively yarn which his many ad-| and glve up chasing the “almighty | black and white, 25¢ pair, D-DATEy ROBBERY. o any harm {f every otner newsPaPer | aicizens will clove theif houtes Jeae.'| Cthew work on science that is of such | Y. Times. ness men, well known in New York, Trunk Tops and Extra Out dvances jnove -prog- ; sislati 1 ving | tive sideboards, neglect to lock their g advances more Drog- | good plece of legislation and leaving glect to loc eit . w Jones' play, by A, W. Ba 3 parative vouth. Both came in con- | and Merccr"cd Lisles at 25¢ for the maintenance of sn thiey 2 Solofg=ncATRt ey nature. Will these two men, one only of popula mosraphs. " —A. | w Y jon ¢ = ‘ote t their active 1 : : : popu mon 1phs who, to the consternation of her fam- | devote the rest of their active llves sizes, also out size "lbb&.‘d the lamentable fact. One is overdue. | i rohbed the =xpress ear, | 4 portion to help defray the eX- | But the season of the “organizeqd band | Lure of the cimeri, by (., & Olcott. | lines, The author is a sister of Rab- | ing stands in their way. \m\r.lm: their cfforts to | ravagance of past legislative bodies | of kidnappers” is almost upon us, and Reminiscences of various rambles | indranath Tagore.”-—Publisher’s note. | One of the members of the British 2 2 At % . hor, o a .- fe corps at Washington whoso hd e e S : . 1ok 1o the | Bmisble ladics and gentlamen who | taken by the author, camera in hand, . diplomati: ] whos( g Sdeat BunGasioften ioniithefinratense fthalqtha loms o Ble i e b tine of ohiting strange | through the ciuntry of George Eliof, | Winning of Lucia, by A. E. Barr. duties bring him in contact with busi- ’ .{h. hi= howeveriitowns willinot be Heavy BIE thaipro: | i it gna ) offering danay to| thti | Garlyle, Scott andliBurns, thel, Luke * e ness men and who belongs to an pf- Liz husiness and the | posed increase was for the purpose of | g petter re: n their impuls district, literary New lngland, and|Wooden horse, by Hugh Walpole, English family prominent in manu- yosterday are inadequate | strengthening the town treasuries the | The sprin the most danserous | the country of Mrs. Humphrey Ward: | “The story of the return of the|facturing and merchandizing gave a OF CU'I' GLASS | with chapters on the Italian lakes, the | heir of a proud Tnglish house after | somewhat cynical explanation of the ; T e e e T e . Yellowstone, the Grand Canyon, and | twenty years in New Zealand. Fven | difference between the attitude of A ked mon held up a frelght | but to increase liquor s fees un ; - a day spent with Burroughs. Forty- | his son considers him an outsider. | the English business men toward pub- | Values up to $2.50. Special arning about fiftcen miles | then give a portion to the state hasn't | : attractive illustrations.”—A, L. The story tels the growth of Robin's | lic life and that of the American ). uncoupled the - engine, | u single thing to recommend it. There Dog’s Devotion to Man, i et ; respect for his father.” similarly placed. -He was mot talk- at $1.00 and $1.49. arter of a mile away and | are, of course,.a number of small (Rochester Post-Express.) ¢ — . S ing !:r wuhdllcnt‘l‘on. .:;I hl!lnn::v ;::n- ThC grcltest values in renl %he cars. Ten of the most | tuwns, and one city, where there is | The dog of a I'rench soldier fol No Reform in Criminals. will cxperience the greatest business | NOt be use o 5 to e ; ° 1% Llowed him to the war, lived with him i ey Al iov the English business man in enter- ats futomobile trucks drew up | ne license and> the representative$My'(ho trenches and shared his blanket (Washington Post.) revival over known. i ing politics has a chance to Smprove Cut Glass ever offered at suck o train ana when they | from these places’ are expected (o] at night. A shell killed a dozen men | “Criminals nearly always are defec- SR his social position and win a kntght- | extremely low prices. . . A Joke Wrecks Village. 1 I to the top they wore | support the medsure on the ground |amd buried this one, badly Wounded. | tive and for the most part incurable.” | g ory (1ad) IDienatentto (Clavelana hood or perhaps :.l seat in !h;'hous: E with the b ‘ ymen sit- | that it will pot affect them locally hut | ¥ & trench which the explosion halt of lords. His wife and daughter in- ands of today. objection might not be sg'emphatic. | season in New York. ANSA WithiearthnlTholdag dugttrans | Qcciared A ddison Sohnson | tormer Plain Dealer.) variably urge him to serve his coun- load. “The tr crew was | will help the state. The measure Will | ¢fealy for. his Master and managed | Warden of Sing Sing. at the r:memh! One man is filled with bullets, the | . "4 “harliament because the social hnnoyed, but it is said that | be an injury to the cities and towns | te expose- his face before he 0- | “It is my conviction from nine years' {town jail has been torn down, a Pob-| i including presentation at court, 8 werc vory much relieved | where liguors are sold and the repre- |-cated. Then he scized other soldiers | observation of criminals of all classes | Ular prisoner has been released and| ., ,cq15 to them. When a man has by their elothing and finally suéceeded | that they can rareiy ever be reformed. | Sheriff Harmon, of Daviess county.| o ireq aj| the money he needs he in drawing them to the me. They | They may be model prisoners while in | has received a mightily urgent appeal R ¢ vorlds t 12 th 201 -2 N 3 : i B fiaas ai| ) : | % still has fresh worlds to conquer i the 199-201-203 MAIN STREET ing their hide punctured | to the interest of their own comuni- | ynearthed their comrade and put him | prison and leave the institution with Lo “come over and help us'—all be-| 17 0 Kingdom, where interost in | from the chauffeurs, ties if they vote for it, v : on a hospital train, into which the | ; intention, hut they are led jcause of an April fool joke that| e ang generous subscriptions to | == piposed to have been the _— :‘:K“:"-“l“ "‘.7I""=;‘~"‘" "'P“""'t'”"'s way. | easily i ”I'“"""""“" 1;‘]“-‘ There {i‘““":;"x';"‘l R and hasn’t yet|(,o campaign fund often win a peer- | men must serve without other re- 1t 9 g AN N « al, near Paris, the man’'s | are, of course, cxceptions that prove |stopped kicking. vho canrot be clected s gt 2 b % 57 business B FACLS AND F4 - e hospita s th P E : age for ome who can e clected | ward than the coasciousness of what kel e anjtnisiiine ok ekt Jeg was amputated, and the devotion | the rule. I had a man in Sing .| To begin at the beginning: Gray | {5 {he lower house. et ve Tttt T o A A ded, not only was it re- " B DR, of the dog was such that the attend- | the leader of the prison band, | Far n ambitious young man, In the United States the wealthy | sclves. They are necded in public ir the amount of goods oh- N Sy ot 2 ;‘n: fnu{n("l :l I\‘r‘lxinnnl“l.yx- him near the there r.‘vr I :'|I'|n::;. ‘l((‘l\} -“ ® | played ,\.;‘n-\l lv:-nl joke ‘nv.| one | business man has nothinz to strive for | lire Weaith i3 no bar to popularity An Ormond Beach physician who | kitchens and allowed him to visit | best m: d, and when hi me ] who happens ta he town | . .ont more money, says this cynical | ana position, but its possessor must d RS e ., | mede a bet to drive a horse and buggy his master twice a day. His love for | was up I got him a job in a depart- marshal. The joke must have been g 7 a8 i <it |y mrenton, N. J., if an election went | the wounded man so great-and | ment store in New York and gave la stinger, for Matt Cox, acting in his | &8 5y it on to enter politics. On the ipossible to surpass this | ygainst him, undertook to meet his|his sympathy with his suffering so [ him § I heard nothing of him for [‘ap,(l“\ of town marshal, didn't do a | oo C e generally try to keep the freight train was | self-imposed obligation and died in |evident as to touch the hearts of all | months, and then hs sent me back the l””"g but place yYoung Mr. Farris in hi ml‘l'(‘f pr.aIHh‘R hrt‘nube' they fear The Deadly Routine. the chautreurs been o | Jersey City as a result of over-exer- | who saw it. [ money T had toaed him. Some time | jai). he kind of publicity the opposition (Auburn Advertiser) . ) s “ 1 tion, after losing his way. Mlection What does it mean? Here is devo- | Jater a woman called on me, and told 1™ Naw it so happens that yvoung Mr. | o XM4 i sival e el Ta v AR oughtful they might have | 1, pave killed many men one way |tion which exceeds that of many | me she has heen sent by my former [F,n invaaditionitolhaving datkeen |invn Be Vs S s nane el (ofaerve!| (Drse e it s Fulbasi B s e track, run the train into | o, another, it seems.—Waterburk Re- | mothers, fo many men. Here is affec- | prisoner. She related that the man | e of humor of the April 1 variety Hum_ ':r”\\» bl e e ""f\ it in the rubber plant? ; : 1 i Sniicate it = el 9 ; 2 . % | his country as. @ ssador o . “Yep. md aofter they had dis- [ publican. tion manifested in a lower order of | had proposcd marria nd told her {Is the posscssor of an uncle. ok i 5 5 e < & g il A — + 1life which equals our own. 1t is pro- | at the time that he was o former con- | @pigord 1r APanese e et ol COUEE OIRBLE JAmEARORIIN FANYEOLYeE Coversd lup/the goidfish? bably true that the dog is of all ani- | vict. He said (hat i she wanted mi iord M e anwers Lo the title | Guropean capital that in another mgi- | “Yep.” g n it wi 5 f o 5 S ' s ‘ of trustec of nora townsho Mr. Hies e d daug’ . oY i - eturned and taken it with This sort of weather:is a standing | males te most capable of sincere, self- | know about him | could tell her. | N‘mrmrl Parta “‘m'| 'h‘ ‘_'”‘_P' i TRt ter. His wife and |lln..1\|l&=n. uever .mvk(‘d all the doors nd win. ould be very handy to | invitation to get busy and do the | denying attachment. these higher |advised her to marry him. That fel- | Rt FRTIS RER Berole JUISUCE | stand in his way then, They see the | dows p in a pinch. The au. | SPring cleaning of the cellar and the | qualities having been developed by flow i still emploved at the depart- | L8 8 G0 CRE D e vl { path of duty more clearly than he “Aye-aye."” Jooking for the chauf. | Yerd that makes for good mealth for |long and close companionship —with | ment store. has (wo heautiful chil- ‘l 5 o Muidial Cox ,m' o (; _| ever does—but he generally follows “Put the cat down cellar?" ) :qmz.. (i 1 WU | 4o city during the next year. Con- | men. He can subordinate himself more | dren and ‘owns several hot m““l "‘l 2 h' L 0 bl . is |1, if it is open to )‘nm‘ whenever it “Assuredly.” POrt has it that the charge | ccrted effort can producersurprising | completely and enter into man's feel- [ e has hought from his « e “ y'_‘\_l" e | 1eads to the foot of a throme or to “Covered the canary coeding the speed limit.” | rcsults and this is the opportunity to | ing more sympathetically than any | is a model hushand ; (e \" 3 ;) ”‘ "" ALIS AL "‘f_‘ that dear Paris. “Sure." practice that get-together idea that is | other form of life; yet how friendly | only man in my whole experience as Chant Mr. Dillon tried to bring Our English observer of American “Fixed the furnace?” so often preached hereabouts.—An- |and how loving to the extent of their | warden of the New . tate [ahouts peace: However, he chasea | manners and methods confesses that “You know it.” , that is the ma- | ¢onia Scntinel. capacity would all the furred and | itentiary whom I know truly reformed, | POOT place to stand while voicing his | ne was tainted with radicalism before “Wound the clocks?" m, have a hard time — feathered folk of the woods and field “1 know there are men who helieve | A8Uments. . He got in the way of | he came to Washington. A few years' “Uh-huh." " With the reyxusation that be if only man would-meet them half | they can reform prisoners. If they can | the bullets directed at Clifford Far- [ regidence in this land of the free has “Let the water out of the automo- machines to come to a This is to be “Made in New Britain | way. How the birds would delight | accomplish this, they can do more VIS ¢ cased him to see a certain usefulness | bile radiator?” ck of a standing trolley j \Week It should be a me mnr«hh' to sing for him if their confidence had | than the oedinary warden, and per- v\ citizens' committee double- | i, titles as stimulants to patriotism “Yep-ce." pms an unncessary waste | week and an le opener to many not heen destroyed by ages of perse- | haps it is worth the trial. | auicked over to the town 1 and | and service of the ‘country that never “Turned off the light in the cel nany of the operations to | New Britain's citizens. The Hard- | cdtion. There are Hindus who as- Warden Johnson. whe is a cloze | When they finished what they started | giruck him while at home. He has | jar?" achines, and they are | ware City is a hustler and has a lsert as fact. within our experienc fricnd of Gov. Whitinan, declared that | there wasn’t any more town jail than married an American woman, which “Undoubtedly." hoot past the car without | 1ecord of proud achievements in the | that there + kindly men who re- [ the New York executive will be New |a rabbit may explain his loss of all distaste “Rring in the baby cab?" dewn perceptibly, The ; industrial world. Tt makes nearly |spect all animal life whom neither | Yor republican candidate for pr What's more, voung Mr. Farris, find. . His views may be super- “Certainly.” ._h”\\'i‘\vr, and ghould be | everything worth while, including | tigers nor sn»ukux will harm. An im- | dent next year. and that it nominated [ing there wasn't any i“!{ in which they are honest and they “Put out the milk bottles?"” its strictest letter. One | public spirited citizens, and it has | munity of this sort was assured of old | he will cairy the Kmpire state v [to stay. automatically quit being a| pave not been pressed upon the at- “Yeos-w-s-8." ietions will probably hreak | been quietly “making good” all these | to believers, but it would seem that | 300.000. 1e is confident the republi- | prisoner tention of the American public. And then he starts in and does as drivers-of tneir violation ars. The show at New Britain this [ nobody has sufficient faith to make | cans will win. and predicted that |n' Now all Winora is wondering what We cannot offer knighthoods and | many of these things as he can re- :fra Post. e week ousht to attract !.tt‘e?ggrgo-i t‘r‘iulnoi _1} np}\'&{da{s' the next fifteen months this country the sheriff is golag to do about it, peerages in that way, Our business | member, g — succeeded m escaping | sentatives from these places are blind of the wonderful cpter- observer, His female relatives do not | net vulgarly obtrude it on others. loot from the cars they

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