New Britain Herald Newspaper, June 24, 1915, Page 6

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£ OfMce at New Britain Mail Matter. o any_part ot the ety " Weok. 85 Conts & Mon paper ‘to be sent by matl vanice. 60 Cents ® e round on sgte at !low Work City; Pity and Hartford depot. f —— “MAY MEAN, _‘Wlllofl ‘has deur\fed his has toiled early morn- night since:the begin- present . international (n to the summer *&Comish N. H, will condition to handle nents which are sure to lays wear on. Today he visiting his old friend use, about whom miuch.| tten, cant ‘to note that the e to take his vacation ‘hen Col. House is within of on the road to Cornish. e there has been much Col. House's visit to for- 8. . Many , persons th')nk he personal emissary, of lson t6 get a foreign _interpational situation. | has always succeeded in o‘t terviewers by mentioning his trip to Europe was| Col. House has been back Ty more than a week, the ar ind he have nat, rence. interviewed these ose of ascertaining, bringing about peace | _warring nations of last nute to Berlin, datea the way for England and mapflng the good offices suntry in peace negotiations. | ews from Germany ad- . will are suitable to Germany. l, too, is growing weary of its problem, that of levying on le a stringent war tax. The ones at home th oing away ties e to the peoples and cus- at 8¢ ixplumtion of such a sys- »ncu at hand, and with the trenches, and with the it home who are bnrmg their as yet, This will ‘be their since Col. House's' res ‘h numerous letters and ive passed between the slose to the administra- jwn that Col. House, e it his duty to get | the highest officials of Germany, and ‘Frarice, men’| the | Eu- 'k the contention of ration people tive Pres-. ed n paragraph which information that the ling to parley for peace It is on the population of r 2 sacrifice that will m and future genera-’ at all desired. fi:ntflu ‘at war the rqmlned at l-mme greatly as those in the 'must of government and le in' the trenches can ves away in reckless with the re- of state. Their only con- chance at the‘ enemy: po has gone to the front s shoulder has bid- tions . he' once held s ances: of ever getting ’dluly in the minority. hmq, realizing all this, e up in their mtgm and loved ones as ends their animals [ge that the novelty of is paling somewhat with burden; it is easy to see ting of President Wilson goes to mnk; . president of the people and for the people. He is the segond Lincoln in the list of presidents. AMERICA FOR ALL TIME. Just at this time the hyphen, that little mark in our;sentence building which is the coupling pin joining two \v'orda‘ into one, has fallen by the way- side ahd tumbled down the gulley of disrepute. The hyphen, when making certain gonnections, is as unpopular as any of our modern diseases. Ana rightly so, for there are no two or threeé or more-words in our language that can be strung into one ayphen- ated mass and made an adjective to describe or characterize a citizen of the United: States of America. German-American, French-American, Italian-American, —these hyphenated terms all must come under the ban. There is no rlace for the hyphen in this connec- tion. Write it American, or Irish, or German, or French, or Italian. Any- thing! But cut out the hyphen. As an example to be emulated by those who do not readily grasp the situation, an incident ‘whica recently happened down in the state of Penn- sylvania may be cited:— A party of German citizens,—that Irish-American, ie, citizens of Germany,—toured the state of Pennsylvania for the purpose of testing the existing feeling there in regard to the present situation be- tween this country and Germany. They asked all they met “How do you stand. on the situation with' Ger- many 2" To the utter surprLse of the strang- ers’ ‘every person they addressed an- swered . verbatim, in this fashion:— *Our names are German, Wwe speak German, but we are not Germans. We have no sympathy for Germany. We are Americans to the backbone and we bear al- legiance to no country save the United States. Our ancestors fought in the war\of the Revolu- tion and we are for America for all time!"” There is an answer worth cutting out and framing. There is American- ism in its true colors. “America for all time.”: It is an answer that must have chilled the hearts of those Gér- man automobilists who were evident- ly misguided in the: belief that the good old state of Pennsylvania is part | of the Kalser's domain. They prob- ably: believed the Keystone state was [ inhabited by citizens and admirers of goevernment. Pennsyl- (l’}g imperial Germana.; when, as ‘a matter..of ‘fact, ‘vania Germans are ‘‘the staunchest Ameéricans who profess’allegiance to the United States of America, : The present mayor of Philadel- phia is a good example of the so- called “Pennsylvania German,” or a8 some call them, Pennsylvania Dutch.” Mlyor Blankenberg -peuks in the em- phatic vernacular or’ dll.leC! charac- teristic. of the German pronounciation of this' language. This particular speech is familiar’ all through east-’ ern Pennsylvania. But Mayor Blank- enberg is not a German,.nor is he a | German-American, He. is straight American, and proud of it. He showed that when he welcomed ' President Wilson to his city not many weeks ago,—at the time the president spoke to the newly naturalized eitizens of Philadelphia. It is to be hoped the German tour- | ists of the state of Pennsylvania took away with them a lesson in American loyalty. If they were after, any. en- couragement in this. country -they were in the right place, so it would .seem. For fully one-half the gover- nors of. the state of ‘Pernsylvania have been Pennsylvania Germans. Nearly one million and a hllt of its pupulatlon speak the dialect ot these people, 2all of whom can-also speak the -German language as fluently as people in Berlin or any part of Ger- many., If there was no swerving from ‘the land of their. adoption, by such people, how can the emissaries of the Kaiser’s hope to enlist 'sympa- thizers in the rest of our land? It ie safe to say these tourists, if they visited other places dominated by people descended from the persecut- ed peoples of the Old World came to this country in the' early eighteenth century, or later, would receive the same answer they got all through Pennsylvania. There is no such thing as a Ger, who tse today at Roslyn may ‘with great possibilities; to how it may go down in the one first step in bring- ad Europe l.r thi e o —\mmzn mny ife and turmoil, to its senses. s ‘than this have ol the_‘greatest accom- n polllb]e lights, the be one of both in- tle the nlfion. 1e has litician. . He is & Dem- , but by his work ot| has man American. The Germans in this éountry who have taken out their naturalizations papers are just as loyal Americans as those directly de- scended from: the families of tne men | refuses to be coupled with any other ‘those who knew of his.work in ‘the “to watch how heir menuty The term American | word denoting to our principles. Pennsylvania, something foreign As they say down in “We are Americans to the backbone, and we are for Amer- jea for all time.” OUR NEW SECRETARY OF STATE As was expected, President Wilson did-not go outside his official- family in selecting a su. to the late| William Jennings Instead, appointed tie man who has held the office ad interim, Robert sing, and by so doing prevented possible | chance of disruption in the cabinet. Robert Lansing, who before taking up the reins of ofiice where Mr. Bry- an threw them down, was counsellor of the state department and; as such, in touch with all tae minute details of present day situations. Even whiie Mr, Bryan was secretary of state, Mr. Lansing sat in cabinet meetings. He had done thie on several occasion, especially when his chief was on Chatauqua chatterings. At those times Mr, Lansing sat at the rigiat hand side of President Wison, the place usually occupied by the secre- | tary of state. In this way he came to | be looked upon as as adopted ‘member of the cabinet by the other members. Now that Mr. Lansing has been of- ficially hdnded the portfolio of sec- retary of state, he will have a chance to show cessor Bryan, he any at ay his real powers. He is not lacking in knowledge of diplomatic affairs, for he was brought up on sueh things having for a tutor his able father-in-law, John Watson Fos- ter, who of state in ‘President Harrison’s administration. Although a life-long democratie, Robert Lansing has no political back- ing in the sense of that term. He was practically unknown until the Wilson admtnlstration.\ It was not until John Bassett Moore resigned from the state department and Mr. Lansing took his place that he wedged his way national prominence. was secretary into But there were diplomatfc service. of ifiternational law, contact with both republican anda democratic leaders, and in this way ‘has built up a friendship in both par- ties, For that reason he will be as welcomed by one: political gathering as another. Under Secretarys of State Lansing the administration is expected to shake off the old “grape-juice” poli- cy, and, in ‘it place inaugurate one that carries with it more! decided meagures ‘when -acting im inteérnation- al sttuations. "It will' be interesting Secretary’ Lansing handles the Mexican problem, A close studeny, he has come into Add summer pastimes: Seaside flir- tations, breach of ' suits, elopements,divorces, baby-car- riage pushing. promise and \ New: definitions: * Graduate, n, One who has completed a term in any in- stitution where = athletics and other amusements are held, and whe s gradually getting ready to look fora job. On with the Carnivall And by the way, when you attend, keep smiling. The girls translate B. P. O E, “Be Pleasant, Or Exit" Harry Thaw, on stand, says: “I'm sane now.” He needn’t brag about it. Wait until July 4 and see how safe he is. 7 he us, Professor Taft ‘told Yale men pities Bryan. That reminds Where is Bryan? No.statement from him for two days. Who pities us? German correspondent corresponds ithat Russians were routed from Lem- berg. What of it, if it's so? Far bet- ter to say “There goes a rushin’ Rus- gian” than “There’s a Russian stoppea rushing.” We are first, last and all the time for rushin’,—even ducks. And now Carranza refuses to parley with Villa. They're not a bit club- by down there in dear old Mex. Oh, what is so rare as a day in June? A German toastmaster at an English banquet. Dow’t Talk Religion—Practice It. (Norwich Record,) The supreme court of Arkansas put & truth familiar to us in refreshing clearness when it refused to sanction an appeal for separation between a man-and his wife because they could who affixed their signatures to the Decluratlon of Independence. ' The Germans in Pehnsylvama have set an example that shouldibe fol- lowed by our new citizens in all parts of the country. Naturally they must sympathize with the land of thelr birth. But when it comes'to a ‘“show- down" betweefl the land 6f birth and ‘the lahd ‘of adoption. then comes the jnot agree about religion. Its judg- ment was that they would have no trouble in living happily together if they would practice their religion | more and talk about it less. There is the thing in seven words. It is a lesson far the people who make re- ligious divisions uncomfortable, or who talk as if the ivay to have unity in religion 'is to make it out of the same words in the same order. Prac- tice religion-more talk about it less— parting of the ways. There is no mlddla mund. Eitaer they are Ger-’ man, or they are French, or they are . Irish, or they are American. There Is o hyphen behind' which to hide this is the sovereign ‘precept. The | more people talk about their religion' the less religion the have, and the less they talk about it and use-it the more will dlfleraneel be lifted into | accord. | Mexica. | ties | terbury | weula | an amputated 'ACTS AND FANCIES, Fourteen hundred marines off for Frequent invasions and small profits are the jadministration rule for Mexican Intervention.— | Erooklyn Standard-Union, Soon be time to celebpated the sane | fourth, but the insane Fourth will| result in the usual number of fatali- without dout Press. | Penny With the launching of the super- dreadnaught Arizona. let us hope the Leginning of a suitable armament for | this country has been started—Wa- Democrat. The protectors of “the interests of humanity” “are so busy protesting ngainst poison gas «nd submarines | that the girl with the long hat pin is permitted to go unchallenged.—Meri- den Record. To be charged with a more lack of originality for his former secretary is the distressing position of Rev. Billy Sunday. If he had been called an un- blushing plagiarist- no harm, perhaps, have been done.—Springfield Republican, | A physiciah says . fresdom - from | warry is essential to the treatment of | locomotor ataxia, But a man who | could Keep free from worry with | locomotor ataxia could recover from | head writhout treat- ment.—Lcuisviile Courier-Journal. The longer this year lasts the surer seems the statement that Napoleon made a century ago when he said that the Lord was on the side of the heaviest artillery. Big guns and shells will decide this war.—Meriden Journal. The news that erough on candy class' navy is not going where. Does anybody the people will give up indigestible dreadnoughts?— Democrat and Chronicle. the natton spends to purchase a first- to get us any- expect that candy for Roches- A life prisener in Connecticut has lived longer than ths life insurance tubles say that he should have lived. His attorneys therefore say that he lias served as long a term as the state cught to ask’ him to serve, and on that ground asks that he is pardoned. ——Westerly Sun, Gabrielle d'Annunizo, who has been spitting fire for several months, has heen ordered to join his reginment. Hir ardor should convert Alpine glaciers into running streams that will sweep the gallant bersaglieri ! limitless field, and will, | enough to advertise. | many outsiders. onward to Vienna.—Boston Journal. Mr. Bryan, gays Mr. Viereck's pub- lication, spoke not only for himself hut for the average American when he resigned from the Cabmnet. Righto! The average American approved Mr, PBryan’'s resignation absorutely.—Fin- ancial, America. We would think that there could be a graft same made out of enlist- mentg in these days? TYet one of the promoters of the so-called Empire Rattalion is accused In London of being a crook.—Buffalo Express. No country would be likely to waste a first-class man’s time spying in the United States; when it could read cverything it wanted to know in the newspapers.—S8t. ‘Louis Globe-Dem- ocrat. At least the Kaiser has the courage of his convictions. In decorating the commander of the submarine that senk the Lusitania he.shows the world that he is not-afrald to acknowledge his own responsibility for the foul murdér of innocent non-combatants. ~~New York Herald. Bill Bryan's idea of keeping the werld at peace is to let the other fel- low hit the first and last blows and all those in between. On the princi- rle, presumably, that he will tire himself out and .quit. In the mean- time the object of his attentions is likely to be too dead to welcome the arrival of peace.—New London Tele- graph. The citizen soldier is no longer lightly regarded as an ornamental personage who parades on festal days end dances in the armory. The idea ¢f the need of national defense now poesesses all minds, and the value of the National Guardsman’s prac- tical-training to that end is apprec- iated.—New York Times. Italy shows some consideration .in the matter of military service. The government announces that profes- sirnal singers are exempt from duty and need not enter the army. This lets out the operatic stars. . Anparent- ly Ttaly, the home of art, has the idea +hat some kinds of genius are too valuable to be used as ‘“‘cannon fod- | der.”—Troy Times, { Germany is not too busy, it is heped, to give the consideration to ihe American note it deserves. We| don't mind a little delay but an in-| definite postponement of demands in- ! tended to be peremptory would not be taken kindly here, where the sinking of the Lusitania is not a forgotten issue by any means.—Ansonia Senti- nel. Former Secretary Bryan is simply furnishing a new example of fatuity | when he argues against the strength- ening of our national defense. For cnce he is consistent in combining | fajlure to stand up for our rights | with failure to provide means of de.! fense in the program he espouses, ‘ hut such consistency potnts directly | toward national suicide.—~Spring- | field Union. President Richard M. Bissell of the | Hartford Fire Insurance company is| to be congratulated on the compre- | hensive policy his organization has! pgsumed in opening up a new branch | of the insurance busine that of 1ssuing policies on Hve stock. Ameri- can companies which have heretofore ; tnsured horses have been limited as to risk. The Harts ord Fire Insurance company has therefore opened up a no doubt, de- velop a new branch of the insurance business which will mean much for Hartford.—Hartford Post. Jests about the iceman would lose their point if ice companies general- ly gave directions such as one com- pany in a Western town is candid “Be courteous. Remember, every iceman is supposed 10 be a thief until he has proved his honesty.” Anpother human touch is no less promising. This consists in the advice of the iccman that, when he has happened to cut the piece a iittl short, he should rell the customer, “and then bring a larger piece the next time and draw her attention to that, also.” Here we have at Jast that Tecognition of human relations in business with the social reformers have long been: preaching to us.— New York Evening Post. Civic Advertising. (Manchester Herald.) Willimantic is entertaining thou- sands of visitors in observance of ©0Old School’ Week” this week. Next month Rockville will have a “Chau- tauqua Week” which will attract Manchester will have nothing. Last year our Hame- land Day brought about 10,000 peo- ple to town and gave Manchester a fine advertisement There can be little question of the ecivic value of such Jarge gatherings as these. It planned rightly they bring a large sum of money to tawn. Further- more they serve to introduce to the place many strangers who, but for these occasions, would never see it. Lastly they serve a useful purpose in stimulating civic pride and in uniting our home people in the de- sire to advance local interests. In our opinion Manchester is far too modest. While we would not encaurage the habit- of boasting, we do believe that this place should so bring its advantages before outsiders as to get the credit it deserves. There is no sense in hiding our light un- der a bushel. For example, it strikes us that to permit a thrifty, progres- sive place of close to 18,000 inhab- jtants to be classed on maps and in directories with small places like Bolton and Marlborough on account of sentimental objections to the name of city is false modesty. It is stand- ing in our own light Undoubtedly - some people will in time learn that Manchester is a good place in which to live and do bus- iness; but if they ‘do it will be in epite of our poliecy of submersion. What would be think of a merchant WHAT OTHZRS 3AY Views on all sides of timely questions as discussed in ex- changes that come to Herald office. . 0 The Nation’s Voice. (Brooklyn Standard-Union.) Nothing has so forcibly indicated the wdespread determination that this country shall no longer be un- prepared in a military way than the meeting at Carnegie hall, held under the auspices of the National Security league. Men of national, reputation spoke and in the audience were al- most as many women as members of the other sex. The presence of so many women means nothing less than that there is a deep-rooted and steadily grow- ing bellef that the United States is pursuing extremely foolish policy in trusting too much to the Atlantic and Pacific oceans as formidable bar- riers agalnst invasion. When men of the type of Dr. Ly- man Abbott, Alton B. Parker, ex- Secretaries of War Stimson and Dickinson, and ex-Attorney-General Boneparte unite in urging increases in the army and navy no one can longer doubt that the country Is deeply stirred and proposes to force the issue at the next session of con- gress. It would be absurd t6 assume that the Carnegie hall gathering was com- posed largely of jingolsts or eitizens with belligerent ideals. *The au- dience and speakers are for peace, but also for measures which will save this country from humiliation in case trouble comes. Switzerland and Armaments, (Waterbury Republican.,) One need only look at the map of Europe to understand the reason why Switzerland has always seen fit to keep in a state of preparedness in the event of war. Now the raging powers all around her respect the efficient Swiss militia who are on ‘the job and! this respect seems to be keeping the rights of the nation safe from en- croachment by the belligerents, It is well known to students of his- tory that the Bwiss are no slouches about maintaining the laws of neu- rality even at great cost to themselves for to police their little country re- quires the services of no small army. They have won a great reputation for punishing “offside pldy" on the part of belligerent forces and have captur- ed and disarmed good-sized armies who boarded up his show windows and refused to advertise, ‘saying that his goods and prices alone would at- tract trade? But such is the policy of this town. We. keep our curtains drawn and offer no temptations to outsiders to come to us. Manches- ter is growing rapidly, but it might grow even faster if the citizens toak more interest in making known its advantages. Two Billion Dollar Balance. (Waterbury Democrat.) Sir George Paish, financial expert of the London Statist and adviser of the British government, prophesied when they have fled, inadvertently, across the boundary line and trespast on Swiss soil. Perhaps if all the rest of Europe should agree to disarmament and should actually fulfill such an agres- ment, the Swiss also would throw away their arms and forget all about war and military training; but it seems like a hopeless proposition to undertake and convert the Swise of today to any political creed that ‘makes no place for armed forcescap- able of enforcing neutrality and of defending the national honor. There are certain places where even a ‘peace-loving man will not go Without being armed or accompanied; the . PR New Britain’s Busicst Big Store. “Always Reliable.” Sweaters For the shore, the the cool evenings at tical garment serves mountains or for home this prac: you best. NEW FIBRE SILK SWEATERS at $5.00 and $6.00 each, Two tone and plain colors for Wo- men. Vefy nobby styles with belted backs. WOMEN’S WORSTED SWEATERS $1.98 to $5.98 each, Shown in all the latest colors, gorn Nile green, old rose, Copenhagen, ma- 100n, Du Barry red, Havana brown and white. CHILDREN’S SWEATERS 98¢ to $2.98 each. Colors maroon, Havana brown, Co- perk:gen. NFANTS’' SWEATERS 98¢ to $1.98 each. MEN’S SWEATERS $2.98 to $5.00 Oxfords, maroons .and brown. Havana BATHING SUITS . - Women's and Misses' Suits. Priced 51, BOYS' BATHING SUITS o & UITS g BATHING SHOES : at 25¢ and 49¢ pair. im : BATHING CAPS' 25¢, 49¢, T5¢, 98¢ u&. D. McMIL 199-201-203 MAIN STREET many of it& fo ead oy M rmer leaders, has all The llunnhum and Muck: last summer that the United States| Swiss know that Burope has never |CAmpaigns will have more general”in- would, as the war proceeded, become the financial center of the world. We have already attained that distinc- tion. He prophesied then that our favorable trade balance for the year would reach a billion dolars, and that forecast has been closely ap- proximated. We are prepared, now, to listen respectfully when he an. nounces that our éxcess of exports over imports for the next twelve maonths may reach $2,000,000,000. The greatest favorable balance we ever had, before the present billion dollar year, was $666,000,000 in 1908, A two-billlon balance in our favor would be precisely three times that. Such a situation would mean that we could use wo thousand milllon dollars a vear in buying up American securities now held abroad, and In lending money to foreign nations, without in the slightest degree im- pairing our own' demestic credit or money supply. With a billion-dollar wheat crop in prospect and other crops doing well, with the steel in- dustry reviving and the prospect of getting ahead to the extent of two billion dollars a vear in our foreien business, the few business pessimists left might just as well ltup croak- ing. The Upper Berth. (New York World.) The decision of the United States Supreme Court that the Pullman company has the right te¢ have an upper berth made up, whether or not it has been sold, settles a controversy going back almost to the first sleep- ing-car. The passenger's side of th2 afgument having found exppression in a Wisconsin statute 'forbidding this exercise of the company's custom, the court now pronounces the law un- constitutional. As in mosat cases in- volving human rights, theé court dai- vides in its decision. Justices Me- Kenna and Holmes dissenting. It is well to have the long-standing dispute finally adjudicated. But It should interest the travelling public which has “lost out” to learn from the text of the court's opinion: that the controversy in which they so lightly engaged involved a grave con- stitutonal question. Their resistance of the Pullman rule, or at least the statute legalizing it, ‘“violated 'the company’s constitutional rights in that it took property without due process of law.” Like the Moliere character who was surprised to learn that he had been talking prose all his life without knowing it, they were unwittingly engaged in a controversy invotving fundamental principles of Justice. It is satisfactory to know that jus- tice is neither ‘‘denied” nor ‘“de- layed,” in this anniversary of Magna Charta, even to the Pullman company. As for the defeated passengers, th may get around the decision by tak- ing an upper berth, which both costs less than a lower‘snd is quite as comfortable and better ventilated. N "been a safe place in which to be with- out reliable weapons. A Dastardly Act. (Ansonia Sentinel.) While it is unfortunately true that exigencies of war make the use of nearly all weapons - legitimate there is a growing feeling among thinking men that some of the acts that are being perpetrated daily by partisans of one side or the other of the des- perate belligerents transgress the iim- its af both humanity and civilization. The bombardment of undefended towns! by warships, the aerial attacks that result usually in the loss of non-com- batant lives and no military advan- tages of importance and the submar- ine warfare on merchant ships with- out warning, all go beyond the line drawn in the interests of humanity by the men of former times. And now we have another act at- tempted that belongs in the same cat- egory. This is the attempted wreck. ing of an armory in Canada, by dyna- mite when two hundred men were sleeping within, Were the men on the battlefield and were they opposed by other men’ in arms, such an aot might be justifiable under the rules of war. But there is no war be- tween the United States and Canada and it goes against the grain to read that partisans of Germany have taken advantage of their position in the TUnited States to sneak acrass the bor- der and attempt such a crime against civilization as this. Fortunately the plot falled and the other damage done by the bomb users was not material. But it serves to show to what length some of the aliens In this country are willing to go and the discredit they are llable to bring upon us for harboring them and allowing them to organize such plots on our soil. Ger- mans in the United States, who are make no worse use of our hospitality than to organize raide upon a coun- try at peace with us, especially when they involve us in warfare of a sort of which the average Black Hand as- sassin would be ashamed. Three Campaigns. (New Haven Union.) Those who lik¢/ to watch the straws to see which way the breeze seems to be blowing will take notice that three states haveselections during the year and will furnish interesting in. tellectual food for mastication. They may or may fot show how the 1915 national wind will blow. Two of the three states, Maryland and Kentuey, are normally democratic, and the other, Massachusets, is normally re- publican, although for seven years it has been electing a democratic govs ernor. The continued unsettled state of po- litical conditions will help give these campaigns an interest and importance they otherwise might not possess. The progressive party, as admitted by | at least sixteen years terest than the cam Mar; land, In -.......’."a." th? hp-' licans have everything but the gov. ernorship; In Kentucky their co trol is complete. * In this year the leading cam; 1sgue will be the tariff; in Kentucky it be prohibition. Both of these jssses promise to figure largely in 1916. = Kentucky democrats have been idly united in support of the utl’::b al administration, but they are di viding over prohibition. This . tion continued until election 13 might give the state to the republi- cans. In Maryland there are no state {e. sues of importance. The republicgns will place emphasis upon national is- sues, as they will do in Massachu setts. lnb‘“‘l’fllld & full state will be elected, includin, m legislatur: ‘The reput like to carry the I-chhulwfi thy want toy make éertain electian laws prior to 1916. If thtse can ~be made say, it will be possible for them . Slect 'k Usited " St senatep) at | time. 3 - The Money Value of Schooling. (8an Francisco Bulletin.) = The United States bureau of tion has shown that there is & onable money value in education. hundred dollars year is the laborer; $1,00 of the high scho is difference in inoos is prob-bl,v not the result of the school graduate's greater effiolency, but rather of ‘his admission to & field of work. The high graduate could not earn the current wage If he ch as a .common l(":: dren recelved tion no oy value wom it. Education beyond the grades gaing money value by & privilege avaflable to only a If number, Opportunity will not u“ every child is guarante sary by direct state aid—the right remain in school until he or she old. E CHARGED WITH NON-SUPPO Gaetano Apparo, Aged Nineteen, Hog fore Judge Meskill in Police © % But one case came before James T. Meskill in police court ti mo.;nlnc. that of Gaetano . ag nineteen, charged with fali to support his wife and u:"kwam old child. Six months ago “Appaie left his wife and did not til a little over a week The trouble is that ter interferes with the and the wife objecte. The ] S, Byt

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