New Britain Herald Newspaper, May 18, 1915, Page 6

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Office at NO' filnl.l Class Matl Matter. ‘Q any part of the eity 8 %‘“:uu‘gv ma’ o 7" nce, 60, Cents's 87.00 & year. advertising medtum ation bogks and press dvertisers. on sate at flow ble hand of Death v'.n\q'rnmg with more suddenness e sphere which he had lomed to habituate a , By virtue of his own | nis i life, | of the cominunity of ,h': had his being. That 4 a' guccessiul and con- nt of the public, a will- VO r;; promoter of pub- His | and re- 4 man | position pes without saying. rarent wherever his hand uporter ar:d editor on K n HJi‘tld for as many | can well romenber, and years ags he has lived a e after the attainment of this mormm,, passed reward of the fut\n‘e. ) upcm the shoulders of y nnggr than himself, one versed in the way of the , one little capable, to fully s teelings at the loss' of the | has been his guiding star _existence as a newspaper- a shock indeed to the Herald,” as it must have w‘lgoh community, when me! t of Mr O'Neill's ume to the members. . O'Neill pérformed his tasks in the office with the pusness which characterized articles in his hand- | appear the i . desk covered to govern the work of as, his spirit lves in the 1as in the past, but his itioss in the ome which y he enter- on copy with ! is 5. Yesterday ve staff in his usual ,:a short e 4380, laughing and:jok- hints oni the game which laying and talking of his come. Today his mingd is and his 2kt has gone out. e way of ihe human which may gainsay. | Fe uséless for us to detail | iople of {his city the good | 197 fih- dece*scd. His recordl ;(“‘;1!1131' to “his constituency Jovial time after the last $ 214 peitsetly willing to leave i s friends, who are legion in the e;zn‘ll ‘his virtues, . vmm not suffor; John O'Nefll, | =vant, worker for the com- | We know ‘, ehampion for his ideals, | worthy ones, is dead. His | his geod works shine 11 may see and his name i 'or no othier reasons.than | ssuredly his soul and body | fn peacc and his spirit pro- . work is dome. Ta it not J AND PATRIOTISM , when practicafly every coun. the oxception of our own is i“Internel serite or Bloodfiy n Qeadly grip with a neighbor, the nobility end the pes- ions are falling before the the enemy or the attacks from their own country, ‘18 the mest appropriate for plass in Mew York vester- js taking plaeq teday, - The . ing maehines of our ?::nwn up to be passed n by our president, Fhey wili im in veview today when they en (o eea o play at war, Lot thiey will eantiniie - e, esilad uson te use the . hfi Hiey leara at play te ed und te pretect Wh“ we should accomplish. ymmu ism is an invaluable asset as long as fanaticism, is not ‘looming in the offing, Our fighters, 'drawn beaceful array draw the attention of ‘the eves of the mation and fan the flame of justifiable pride In our breasts. . We should not hope that they might be drawn into the mad ‘Wwhirlpool of bloodlust tnat exists not far from our shores, the waters of which are stained with the lives cf our people, but rather that they are to be safeguards of our homes, spots where American blood may be shed if absolutely necessary in protection of the welfare of the national machine in which ‘we are coss. Let the “Jackies’” play at their war, let them fire blank cartridges at the invadors from their own fleet, let them live and love and let us hope that ‘they | may not be called upon to be mangled by zhnnnél and to:be drowned like trapped rats in.the w;teu of a hos- tile jland. Meanwhile, however, we are Ameri- cans. We should stand to a man for the protection. of = our * honor. Calmness and patritism in equal pro- portion are the attribates which ‘the true American should possess today. Our naval parade should help to {ur~ ther both. The president’s words as he dressed a gathering of naval were calm and patriotic. He pressed great confidence in our navy. He insinuated what.would undoubted- 1y be true in the final analysls, that, cur people, in case of strict need would stand united in an effort to do; all that is possible for our good. Peace and power to our fighting men.! May there numbers remain undimin- ished ‘by bloodlust and may they be always ready to lose their lives in a cause tha: is worthy. ad- men ex- . ASSASSINATION. The spirit, of assassination seems to be stalking at random abroad just ut present. Leaders of parties in sev- eral countries have had their lives endangered or taken by the hand of the fiend. Italy is a caldron of seeth- g humanity although none of the Italians have. as yet resorted to ex- treme violence, Most of the difficul- ties may be traced back to the in- fluence of the war and the demand of certain parts of a neutral government to be involved 'therein. This is par- tcularly true of Italy. Joao Chagas, new premier of Por- | tugal, yesterday was shot and probab- 1y fatally wounded while on a rail- road train. His assailant was shot. The foregoing premier, Pimento Castro is a prisoner in the hands of the rvevolutionists on.a wnoat which wag formerly part of nis defense. Several others of the army are pris- oners of the navy. ? A plot to assassinate the Sultan of furkey, Enver Pasha, together with two of his advisors, Field Marshall von der Goltz and General Limon von Sanders has been discovered and thwarted. Four hundred Armenians lLave been arrested as an outcome of the discovery and thelr rate is un- Lknown and the Kurds will’ burn two Van. villages near The Armenians, it can easily. be seen are taking this method of protesting wgainst the actions of the Kurds and Turks in slauhtering so many of their number during tne last te“’ months. They are evidently distmbed by the action.of the government and anxious at the same time to strike a2t Germany whom they probably blame for the whole matter. e _FACTS AND FANCIES, The report that the Kurds have gold 850 Armenian women as slaves does not shock us as it would have | done a year ago.—Norwich Record. Herman Ridder declares, that . the | only flag under which a German-Amer- ican would ever fight is the Stars and Stripes, Let us hope that he will never be called upon for any such test, -—Norwich Bulletin, H Jitney bus business seems to have brought ' new problems to traffie squads in small as well as {arge cities, 1t's the up-to-date police department { that wily keep the traffic department conetanty studying the new problems and how best to handle them, but ef- ficleney can't be expected where It is not souzht.—Waterbury Republican. The unequal division of the moral responsibility of pafent in rearing children is one of the conditions that feminists say ought to be changed, Many of them hold that when cqual euffrage prevalls 'and when husbands and wives share in the maintenance of the family the fathers willifind more | jeisure for probiems pertaining to child development, — Bridgeport Htandard. ut bids '‘mseod riddance’” rakas quite as willingly ag daes Delaware, He was neither of thie eountrry ne fit for 1t, TIn his short stay here his career was a menaee, and & blot, and the spaes he has left is worth mere vaeant ' ihen it ever was with him in it, Of his “taking off,”” little newd 'he said exeept thal jt was saiisfaetory he- eause effeetive, 'The Lknowledge of its apprrach hreught. evasvicuousiy te the purface the @pwapdly traits | that were within him, His bravade left him, hig religion was adepled for the and his end was imlmnl as he deserved.—Hart- | Cennect to Peter upin | WHAT OTHIERS SAY Views on all sides of timely questions as discussed in ex- changes that come to Herald cfec, “Colonel Roosevelt's Violence. (Chicago Tribune.) Colonel Theodore Rooseveit is rec- ognized as a case of violent righteous- ness. He constantly indulges him- self in the rare enjoyment of unmod- ified opinion. That is fopce. Force never compromises, never adjusts it- self to judgment, never is considerate of circumstance or of consequence, but always is force. The colonel has had and has his very valuable place in our scherae of things as a force. It is a luxury that all citizen cannot indulge because modifications and reservations also have their place in the scheme of ‘things, and the right to be down- right and uncompromising must be restricted. We have given the colonel full sway in this highly particularized right, and have allowed him to damn with unction and condemn without mercy because it was valuable to have some one so highlyvitalized on that particular work. But the colonel is pursuing his an- cient habit now with less felicity than usually atmospheres his efforts. We have not needed the torch-bearer in thig crisis which has confronted us. We have needed the sane counsels of the elder tribesmen the nen who know life through experience, and who have seen cause and consequence. We have not needed the war dance or the run- ner with tidings. We have needed composure and restraint. Therefore when -the colonel as an unmitigated and uncompromising force gives his opinicns freedom and lets them loose to run the world he is doing the American nation harm. It is at once a waste of time and a necessary use of it to say that he is the best-known American. It is as- sured that whenever he says his full opinion upon an absorbing subject that expression will go wherever wires or wireless can carry it to interested peoples. A million Americans might rave, yet register none of the effect that this one American will imprint on universal sensitiveness. And we think that when the govern- ment of the United States is endeav- ing to decide to th e bestfo etaoin shr ing to decide to the best of its abili a question which holds the dignity of the nation and the happiness and use- fulness of hundreds or thousands of this generation of Americans which concerns the future of the United States, Mr, Roosevelt might for once qualify his righteousness, abate his opinions and control his utterances. We realize that he has said what is in the minds of a great many of his countrymen, but we ask them to ac- cept this satement of the' differencs between hi mand them. He is willing t0 back his word with all the force he has and to accept any consequence, however filled with torture for him- self and suffering for his family, and we doubt that the majority of our other vociferents are. We ask every ranter to regard him- self, in consequence of his ranting, in the trenches , with a respirator over his nostrils, a Springfield in his hands walting for the suffocating .cloud of poisonous gases. to roll by and reveal a surge of charging Germans, We do not ask him to be afraid of that. [If Americans be afraid of that, then God help the American nation; but ‘we do ask’ the persons of uncom- promising opinion and vehement de- mand for final action to put them- selves, and not some other fellow, in the way of carrying out the policy they advocate. It is no mitigation of’ the mischief Col. Roosevelt is capable of doing to say that he would ao- cept personally the chances, but it reveals consistency urd nobility in his character. War Would Not Check This Country’s Big Boom. (New York Press.) Our chances of wair with Germany, in the very best judgment of the At- lantic, are virtually negligible, Neither in the latest note ne has sent to Berlin nor in any other ‘action he has taken hag President Wilson in- vited a clash of arms. He has very nearly supplicated peace by vointing out to Berlin with all the earnestness he commands the clear and the sure road to the pegce with us which no one can doubt Germany wants. He has given the imperial government every opportunity that it could ask justly and honorably to satisfy the ‘American people for the very terrjble us, whether deiiberately or accidently. There is no question that not only the millicns of men of German blood in this country, but many more mil- ons in Germany fitself whose ‘in- fluence contro's the course of Berlin, will .havs no war with the United States if it {s humanly possible to pre- vent it. And, as a coldly calculated fact, war Dbetween Germany and America under the circumstances is not to be considered as humanly possible. Yet, If contrary to all signs and all reazon, if in spite of all that makes for peace, such war should come, this sountry, facing fit, position never in all the history of the world known by any other nation about to draw the sword. Our government would raise vast war loaps, but they would be raised here in‘our own ecountry to the last dellar, of Buropes are spending on war sup- plies hundreds of millions a month abread, Our government would be | spending hundreds. of millions a ionth at home, Those funds would farmg, mills and factories, weuld ‘and in the pockets of our own produeers and wage-earners, Agr iong as the Allies remainsd in aontroi of she seas—and with seur war fleets added to their navai ferees that eontroi weuld centinue indefi- nitely—we ehould go on seiling and delivering to the grealep part of the | area n..nq pepuiatien of the worlg Just +hinge which have been done against | would stand in a, The heliigerent governments | v poured into eur own industries — | They | WM 48 we 'are doing at present. No oreign port ‘that is open to us now would be closed to us then. Every foreign market-that is ours now would be more than ever ours then. Today, while at peace with every- ! body, we are sending abroad supplies which net us in trade balances all the hnndred and seventy millions a month. There would be no reason for us, at war with Germany, to do less with our foreign trade than we are doing al- ready. In all likelihopd we should be dolng more. The outside world would go on talking all that we could | spare it, getting into deeper debt to us, making our economic and finan- cial position internationally stronger end stronger. With what our government began to buy from our farmers, manufac- turers and merchants, on top of what toreign governments are aiready buy- { g and as long as the war lasts will buy, every plece of industrial ma- chinery in the land would be hum- ming from early dawn to dark, a great dGeal of it all through the night as well, and there would not be an idle wage-earner from one end of this country to the other. CGiermany or with any other power. If the rewards of war would be com- mercial and financial conquest of the carth the American people would not chocse to take up arms until, all other raeans of defending its rights failing, they were driven to that course as the iast resort. Nevertheless, if we did have to go to war with Germany—God forbid that we shall ever be compelled to de so——there would be nothing in that future, as ar as human vision could range it, to check the cconomic prosperity which is now adding im- measurably to the wealth of the; American peeple; there would be everything to multiply inexpressibly their riches and expand their power. While the best sought and the strongest influences in this country, and in Germany, too, exert truest cfforts for peace, let consider that. “Marry!” Then Say Prayers, (New York Sun.) County Judge Dike in Brooklyn yesterday sentenced Nicolo Chiagone, 82, to marry Philomena Donata An- tonio, to whom he was engaged and from whom he stole a quantity of Jjewelry. “When 1 allowed you to plead g ity to petit larcency as a second of- fense,” Judge Dike said, “I under- stood you intended to marry the girl. I have seen the girl since then and 1 have also seen you. I am going to leave your punishment to her. You are going to get all that is coming to you from her—that is, after you mar- ry her. Then you'll’see the force of those lines of Kipling, ‘The female of the species is more deadly than the male.” I'm going to let you marry this woman—and may God have mer- cy on your soull” every- Two Clubmen Eat Crow. (Philadeiphia Recard.) hig, fat variety that haunts cornfields Crow-—a miliar in the Parker House, Burlington, by two popping of firecrackers, explosion hombs and catankerous actions of a “goat submarine.” These two unhappy members of the club were obliged to masticate and swallow every morsel of medt on that acrid, horrible bird, all because failure of the Germans to keep their boast to be in Paris by last Christ. mas. The men—William- Absolom and John F. Spotts, of Burlington, wio backed the boast of the Teutons— were game losers. They were on the spot last night determined to eat the crow or choke. To make the ordeal more trying, twelve other members sat nearby and regaled themselves with wine good ‘‘eats,” while Absolom Spotts, faces ghastly, tackled crow. Bach sawed hird, and, eyes 1y, Absolom was biting viciously breastbone and Spotts was worrying a wing, when a goat was turned looss. It were a placard with the “German submarine U-14." ar off a portion of the go. 1t charged the crow-eateis' table, but Absolom and Spotts seized the animal and hustled it out of the rcom. . They the table, but the two young men had now become used to warlike meu- sures and finished the bird. 3 L Why Congress Should Meet, (Washington Post.) On January 24 a German and a British squadron clashed in the North Sea, and the German battle cruiser Bluecher was sunk. The Bluecher was unable to keep up with the other German vessels, and her lack of speed resulted in her destruction. Yet the Bluecher's speed was a lit- tle more than twenty-six knots an hour—four or flve knots faster than the speed of any battleship in United States navy. If the United States navy had been in the North Sea battle it would have succumbed to the weaker antagonist. The German warships which escaped from the larger British sqadren are ships in speed, while the British wa ships ean make as much as twenty eight and thirty knots, American naval guns and gunnerv {nre supaesed to be gs good as any In the world, No one knows whether ithis 1& true or not, but It ix taken i for granted, Tn speed, however, Ameriean warships are notably in- ferfor, Hers iy one gpreat, vital fact con- cerning the Uniled States navy which demands the. immediate attention of the government—of cengress and tha | | ravy department, I Another vital faet, affecting the safety of the ceuntry i this: The Tiniled Stales doer net possess a sin- gle battle eruiser. The battleships of the . American way from one hundred millions to one | This nation does not seek war with | their | bird of ‘the fa-| autumn—was eaten last night at| members of the University club, am.d | of | and | the shut, chewed violeni- | t the | words, | The goat seemed to know where to | were just finishing the | j crow when a bomb exploded under | the | all far superlor to any American war- | navy are presumably umd giv- ing a good account of themselves if they should be fortunate enough to se- cure an advantageous position in bai- tle. If the enemy will approach them, they will stand him off. But they cannot pursue and overtake him. They cannot choose their range, but must fight according to the wishes of their faster enemy. In a .long running fight the enemy could literally ‘‘make circles’ 'araund the American fleet. Another vital fact in conn with naval defense is this: The 1 States has no submarines that will { compare in size and efficiency with {those of Germany. The coasts of the United States are not guarded by submarines, as they should be. The greatest danger from American sub- marines is to their own crews, as was lamentably lilustrated in the loss of the F-4. As to the army, the lack of a mo. | bile force of sufficient size to protect the coast fortifications is apparent. An American army authority has just'dl- rected alention to the efficlency of the Turkish army in defending the Dardanelles. If the Turks had not interposed a mobile land force against the allles, the -British and French landing parties by this time would have captlured the forts which the bat- itle fleet failed to silence. Consten- tinople- has been saved thus far by {the Turkish -army, which has pre- | vented the capture of the forts from | the rearward. American seaport cities are not de- | fended as well as Constantinople, and { there is no land force to protect the Hnnsl forts. A hostile navy coulld land immense numbers of soldiers ai- most anywhere along the coast, adja- i cent to fortifications, and could cap- | ture the forts defending New York, San Franeisco, other can port. { These facts are sufficient cause [ he immediate assembling of congress { for the purpose of providing for the national defense. or any Amerl- Cow Vs. Trouble. (Telephone Bulletin.) Yes, by gosh, it was a cow and we guess this is a new one in the trouble line. It was this way, you see. The night operator in the New Britain of- fice caught a steady light on the board a few nights ago. She tested on the line and then tried the “Row- ler.” Effect of this, nothing. The circuit still showed trouble. About five in the morning the line came clear and a few moments later a call came from the subscriber. He wanted to know if there had been any trouble on his line. He was assured that there had beern; whereupon ‘he explained that he had an_ extension instrument in his barn and that his cow had brushed the receiver from the hook. He then requested two new directories, one for himself and one for his cow. Honor to Mollie Pitcher. (Philadeiphia Press.) | in this year of grace than the pro- pesal, favorably reported to the sens ate at Harrisburg, for a monument at Carlisle to Mollie Pitcher. An ap- propriation for $10,000 to honor the memory of this revolutionary heroine is recommended by the committee. Legend which is accepted as authen- tic has erowned this militant wife of a patriotic soldier _with *~ unfading laurels, Daughters of the revolution and other societies have long favored this | recognition of Mollie Pitcher. Her husband, according to one version of of Monmouth, and she field as a water carrier. That engage- ment, so strenuously contested, was fought under such intense heat that many soldiers on both sides suc- cumbed.under the sun’s rays. An un- | precedented explosion of Washington's wrath, directed against Gen, Lee, was another exciting incident of the day, { which history has recorded. | Mollie Pitcher's husband was was on shot down, whereupon she took his place | at the battery and served his can- non in his stead. .Her bravery and activity in the battle are celebrated in song, story and picture. Just how, when the state of her birth is con- sidering the guestion of granting votes to women, and when the greatest war in history brings military virtue to the forefront, it seems right that a military heroine of the gentler gex should be publicly honored. For Mol- lie Pitcher rendered a “man’s service { to the pariot cause in the revolution- ary war. Jditney and Trolley. (Toronto Star.) The city auditor reports a decline of $100,287 in the receipts of the Tor. onto Street Railway company in the first four months of the year. This is largely due to the operation of jitneys. Perhaps there would have been quite a falling off in receipts in any case, owing to unemployment, and the necessity many people have been under of practicing every small economy possible. The jitneys, however, have had a marked effect on the business of the company in Taronto, and elsewhere. In the city of Providence the autos took during April an average of $2,333 per day out of the receipts of | the street car company. The same thing is occurring in a hundred cities, In and around Toronto the jitneys are having the effect of causing the trolleys to. show some concern for public convenience, For years the service an the line to LambtonsMilis had been quite inadequate.. ~ Small, old. cars’ bumped over a ‘“*neglected track at intervals of half &n hour. | After being unable to getsdn one car | it sometimes happened that people, after a walt of thirty minutes, were | ngain crowded off the next one, Many | have had ta walk .the two miles in | to where the city care start, The | Jitneys ’ eeme along and the trolley service has spruced up, The com- pany had not besn gperating cars on IBunduv This was not owing to re. liglous seruples, beeause they put [them on at once when the jitneys entered the fleld, The jitneys, too, put jn An appearance at the eity end of the Lake Bhore read, and on Sat. urday lest the trolley beman giviig o twenty.minute service to Port Credtlt Nothing could be more appropriate the story, was a gunner at the battle | the 4 has w w) ore that, a huhdn afternoons rep usual hour service, The trolley must attend to business, or the Jitney will take it away. That is the whole size of it. PRIVY COUNCILLOR SPEYER RF<TGNS, His Loyalty and That of Sir Erest Caswell 10 England Attacked By Newspapers. London, May 18.-—Sir er-has sent a letter to Premier As- quith resigning his privy councillor- ship and requesting also the revoca- tion of his baronetcy. The letter de- clares that Sir' Edgar was led to take this step after nine months of charges of disloyalty by the newspapers, which charges have lately culminated in speeches against him by public men. The “Globe” in an editorial pub lished yesterday before the letter of Sir Edgar had been made public com- plained that neither Sir Idgar nor Sir Ernest Cassel, both privy council- lors, had made public “their detesta- tion of y's crimes.” The ' charged that because they were of alien origin Sir Edgar and Sir Ernest ere only permitted legally to hold their seats in the privy council by an amendment in the naturalization act which passed un- noticed during the turmoil of last August. Edgar Spey- Sir Edgar £peyer was born in 1862, the son of Gustav Speyer, the banker, He was educated at Frankfort-on- Main and later become partner in his father's three firms, S8peyer Brothers of London, Speyer and Co., New York and I. Spey Ellison of Frankfirt on- Main. He was resident partner in the ¥Frankfort firm until 1887, he took charge of the direction of the London house. He resigned active participation in the New York firm last year. BSir Edgar married t he daughter of Count Ferdinand von Stosch. Sir Ernest Cassel was born in Cologne in March, 1852, the s=on of Jacob Cassel, a banker. Sir Ernest was the confidential financial adviser to the late King Edward and has long been identified with Britsh royalty, British finance and British philan- thropy. DROPS PROSECUTION OF MINE OFFICIALS Michigan Grand Jury Decides Not to Press Charges Against Moyer and Thirty-seven Others, Calumet, Mich.,, May 18.—A nolle prosequi was entered vesterday in the case against President C. H. Moyer and thirty-seven other officials of the Western Fedcration of Min , indict- ed on charges of conspiracy by the Houghton county grand jury a y ago as a result of alleged acts of vio- lence said to have been committed -at the direction of tie defendants dur- ing the copper strike. The order was made by Judge P. H. O’'Brien in the Paraga county eir- cuit court at L’Anse on motion of Prosecutor W. J. Galbraith of Hough- ton county. The prosecutor said: “The strike established in this community certain fundamental facte and prin- ciple and thig conduct, leaderghip and subsequent events have theroughly discredited the imported -mercenary agitators and the gospel of class hatred.” . The decision to drop the prosecu- tion was said to have been one of the first decisions of the new county ad- ministration elected last autumn, PLEDGE LOYALTY TO PRESIDENT WILSON Illinois German Catholic Convention Also Prays for Success of German Arms in European War, Aurora, Ill, May 18.—Resolutions were prepared yesterday at the Tlli- nois Catholic union in convention here gotting forth the. loyalty of the| ors ganization to President Wiison and the Tnited States while prayers for the ,success of German arms m the Eu- ropean war were entered on the vecords of the meeting. A rgesolution offered 1ater in the day urges that the territoial inde- pendence Of the, papal see, be recog- n.zed when the warring Euopean na- tions =ign a Mreaty: of peace” and “the disposition of neutral nations to take Pope Benedl;‘t into uem,e coun- cils”. was recommended.’ A 18NQ1 from Count von Bernstord, the German ambassador at Washing- ton, was read, thanking the Iilinovig union for more than $4,000 in chsh and other gifts to the the German Red Cros: JAPANESE PRINCESS - I MARRIED IN I\IMON()' Youngest Sister of Emperor Weds Prince Naruhiko of the Second Army Division, : . Tokio, May 18,9 a, m.—A brilliant court wedding took place here today | when Princess Yasu, the youngest sis. | ter of the emperar, was united in ma: riuge to Prince Naruhiko Higas Kuni, attached to the second army di- vislon of the empire, This was the first great court event since the ciose of the mourning pe- rlod for the late Empress Haruko, It | was notable also as inaugurating a ' season of court and natlonal gajety | which will find its ciimax In the great | aceesslon ceremonies at Kyoto in | Novembe, Attired In a magnificent flimono and | I when | ar | i Raincoats and {imbrellas WOMEN'S RAIN COATS $5.00, $7.98 and $9.98 each. | CHILDREN'S RAIN COATS $1.98 and $2.95 each. CHILDREN'S RAIN CAPES - 'u.u Each. WOMEN'S UMBRFELLAS at 98¢ Fach, Strong built frames, cover of good quality iaffeta, big assortment or carved am tiimmed handles. Unusual values At the price. g - £ COLORED SILK UMBRELLAS " $2.50, $3.48 and $3.95 , % Can be used as Umbrellas or to sl the sun in warm weather, ” MEN'S UMBRELLAS 98¢, $1.19 to $5.00 each, ) 59¢, CHILDREN'S UMBRELLAS » 19¢, 75¢c and 98¢ each. po WOOL DRESS GOODS 3 J MARKED DOWN 44 inch Serges, other staple and fancy weaves. 79c values. Reduced to 69c yard. Another lot of Dress Goods, value, $1,00 and §1.25 yard, Reduced to 890 rard, SALE OF DAINTY WAsH 7 TABRICS at 20c yard. Special for this week only. Regular 29¢ valu including Satin Striped Organdies, Silk Striped Volles, Crepe Corde and Lace Voiles in Dainty Flowered effects, in;'MchuAN" 199-201,203 MAIN rmm rourl hakama of deuble falded son silk, and carrying a fan of sacred hinoki wood, the princess driven from the Kasumigaseki tached palace to the imperial where she was joined by Prince Nas ruhiko. There, hefore the ancestral shrine, the wedding rites were sol- emnized by a court ritualist, f |I'l‘4 de. All the imperial princes and cesses were present and the Am: charge d'affaires, George Post Why and Mrs. Wheeler, were Subsequently the g were escorted before the emperor ® empress for felicitations. The em peror later gave a wedding feast, DANVERS, MASS,, WOMAK. REGEIES BLESSING Mrs. W. H, Brown Tells How She Was Relieved After L.n. Gumrlnp \ was a victim ble which tortured her for tried many treatments and and got little reliet, Rpaty ‘shi oot Teoths Mgkt sWRr] and got resu away. lng:-mu of her case she wrote: “For years I have suffered 'y with stomach troubl 1 could™a no relief. Then, like a blessing fro above, 1 heard of your remedy; for it, and after a few treatments being cured. I am going to tell n:’y friends of your miraculous edy.” Mayr's Wondertul Remedy gives manent results for stomach, liver aum intestinal aflments. Eat as much-and whatever you like. No more d after eating, pressure of gas in storsach and around the heart. boltle of your druggist now !rl m an absolute guarantee—if “setory money i1l he returned. i y»‘: That Gough of Yo | Racking your lungs, weakening arteries, nrunmg your throat ln 1 branes and jarring your head mi be the forerunner of more seriou trouble, and should have immeduu attention. | SCHENCK'S SYIIIP fontains no narcotics. It comfo the throat, soothes the inflamed passages, loosens the irritating . tretions that causes the cough takes expectoration free. For: years SCHENCK'S SYRUP been successfully used for the ment_of Coughs. Colds, Hoa and Bronchial Affections, 50c and $1.90 per bottle, canfot get it from your dr: will gend it to you direct, on of price, . DR. J. M. SOMENCE & SON, y

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