New Britain Herald Newspaper, August 11, 1915, Page 6

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——— - = - — Q_ ‘our hv;ng as trug,;., cleam, Christian | necessary for those who keep chickens f He chose the law as a profession and | through all this mass of subterfuge 9 " | #entlemen, " bowing the knee to' no| to maintain the yards and coops In a| VHAT OTHZRS sSAY was admitted to the bar at 21. Two | to the vital fact that it was Germany | MchI N M en Al T | cenitary conanti Trid e A AlmEnit | GRS sA years later saw him district attorney which invaded Belgium on the plea of | 8 £king favors of mofe, We: will | sanitary condition. s 18 of Tioga county. He was in the New military necessity. That was the NEW BRITAIN'S BUSIEST ledge Bur arms to;but one nagion ou ! work and the board will reguire rigid Views on all siges of dwmely York legislature when the war broke great sin, the cardinal fault. It vio- BIG STORE earth, America, and, may .shé never | backing by the police and courts to Questions as dMcussed n €x- out, after having assisted in the birth lated the treaty to which Germany “ALWAYS RELIABLE” AND FANCIES, i i i | | Boed ; thot. make it a sucoess.' People are prone changes that come to Herald Olf :he Tepublican party in New York had pledged her honor. It shocked {5 GO n (100 P s o5 O S (et office, 8 flde-_ He organized two regiments the world by its ruthless lack of Mall 3 ) 5 o ol il and went to the front as a colonel of scruple. And on top of that Ger- . . B R — o e o personl st 1 s e ekt salnait sty ncpern many Serr infhad lomaess i | Y gcation - Noeils 10 8 vart of ne oty . resent any sort of regulation. The Mayflower Mystery. the war. At the Wilderness he led his added horror to her original crime by * 0 be sent by mail As long as Carranza holds to *he| question whether it pays to keep (New York Sun.) ;.‘f]‘,"‘e"‘ four times to the charge, | trying to repress with ruthless hand | Hy 1 ta | i e Sun. alling P 2 2 ¢ . 4 .uegremr - 'policy of “fule or ruin,” there can be | poultry has nothing to do with lhe. Among the most curious problems | tary wudespieraltel} H\\our}ded asd fingand sy acefeitygthe fpatfiotiam et Under nced = yoer. 5 R 53 E e Lt () £ GRSt (omia o Sovsy e G0 IEEE o0 it R Rl et | (8T B DL e S REE D thelpeobls: Nadiithat o orusing medium I8 quence, the government of the United | question as they do on the weather ?‘;ulh\;ude sprung from the xnms”?f R 0 e, W (R G Tt drl]gtfig'l:l :: ..::un::v cou‘l’d‘i Ba(hln Suits .. to. .advertisers. States must suffer embarassment. Be- | Many who have tried it are con namee“-‘i?”n‘,‘”- There “““’*h'gl‘r“‘e\,m, ;“191;5. he returned to private life, to against the invading Germans. They | g Hfommd on sale at Hots- | CBuse he believes President Wilson is | vinced that it's a losing Proposition. o Ry oo CORamy Serves to Mo nerim | people, -" Sreater service to his had the right to do so and. if they | Marked Down 2nd st ang Brosd- | set on getting him out of office ihe| but quite as many others VOe fOr Ark. A stern and rockbound climate ' = | S LS i WOMEN’S BATHING SUITS ¥ and Hartford depot. usurper has given sanction to Wwild | chickens, maintaining that they mas- }]‘_s“mcie"t food, privations of many o [ cent men, \52,‘.?;,. flg:t;}?ur{;‘raone g:f‘:s:‘ $3.98 and $4.98 Buits requced to ONE CALLS. rioting on the streets-of Vera Cruz.i terially reduce household exp%nacs: kinds, cut down swml_vl ::‘:;‘;::ii: s Ill;n _It D?n'n. [ natranitator tTlaraVan thal oMcial $2.98 and $3.98. ; and has sent out!street corner ora-| The point the health board makes '8 . qBo O CGUEIETR N Pone his- | “Bou g R ) | German documents prove was done, CHILDREN'S BATHING SUITS tors to preach the gospel of hate | not whether chickens are worth M;xve GHIERD oo ot o S Giern Rt | mode::nx{ew‘:p;::, zl;‘%:: bzn i “}'las to add another blot to the one | Nwszmrl:;‘c‘:’:wh. i = against America and American citi-| from a financial standpoint. but that any ten yg that the bride is “de- | cause there is so much more mews at | omctenens e ained el 8¢, 49c, 780, 98¢ each. 'OR NOT TO FIGHT. | zens ! sanitation must be considered if people scended from an old CottHinlfammilyg| bvie wa Pimnv st [DRs ROl 2 gl jeectehes ‘-'_"m(;rld Fectm il P s b T8a, ¢ 5 3 P ¥ ey g . that came over i Mayflower.” wi ype, Germany a j = i igtor thers is a man| As a result of this anarchy aided | intend to try their hand at the game. | TASL came over in the May e el to the high cost or paper and | all of the White Books in the world 75c STRAW HAND BAGS Ptrec. He is a reservist | and abetted by Carranza, the United | the board should be encouraged to (am:fl::n(;h the hr.ldeg‘roirf\ B oLt mmer f&;lors in newspaper produc- | will not avail to shift it At 49¢ Each. tires. e 3 s g 3 s ardy ancient stock; : Evidently the foilowing dis- | ‘ Z r 4 v t nas undertaken : 5 5 " ¢ y e foilowing dis: e 98¢ STRA E armies on the battle- | States is on the verge of armed in-| continue the oIk arhas rf?lk-s made illustrious by ‘-t‘:? _‘”“:‘;s" lld":l}' Was written by a man trained ' British War Song Wanted. | At 79c¢ each. B"‘l‘-"l-;:l?-::‘c;iwhu ope and has been called | tervention. American battleshios | in this respect. 1 ge‘!nx‘r}ne an:'l the vanity of their p: "}M 3;“1 it down!” office: | (Richmond Times-Dispatch.) s STRAW SUIT CASES 3 ¢ — | perous posterity. edina, N. Y. —_Angelo = . for his native land.|are now steaming toward the harbor Thus a large part of the native pop- | Garlica ate so'm?e ‘l”fl‘f\l‘sllg(;nlsa.vps’::\ij:\- Jane Addams is right. It is not only | At $1.49 each. Straps all around. fie father of a family born | of Vera Cruz, and, in a day-or so, wo ulation bears in its hand the sym- | afternoon for mushroois. The un. 20 0ld man’s war, but a war of old | —_— B iAmerica. If he goes|may read of the sniping of American bolic mayflower and gazes in all pride | dertaker was called at 8 o'clock. | SONES, of old music. First the Britons sale M f ’ 2 : X ; . If the suffrage could be taken from | on Plymouth Rock and Puddle Dock; | Burfal Wednesday.” sang “Tipperary.” It had its day, as anufacturers e will probably never | Pluejackets and marlhes. The ques-| Ifth8 STDIEL Toiven to the At | ana the Mavh el esday. e e = z H ayflawer ys y = . | his little ones again. If | tions naturally arise, What will come | © " ., it might be ‘\\'ell. B.“" that 15 | acle is made even more incomprehen- Anterion o P, | trenches it lost whatever punch it had | Samples here the government of | of it all? Will the United States =0 | an impossible solution—New Yori | sible by the inchision within that ves- % S D LS | at home. It was succeeded by a plan- | . impose upon him a | intor Mexico and endeavor to set up a | Times. 5 | sel of illimitable capacity of the nu- oronto Mail and Empire.) - | tation melody, “Suwanee River. | Summer Knlt teen vears in prison. | government that will have the respect | s i cleus of the “German element” in this Unlgtifz lSnS"ranoe companies in the ! aothmg ‘;n%re fm-hing for a medita- | RS A 3 o o "l Over 200 vagrants have been ar- | country. Ever since the beginning of ited States and Canada are con- | tive mood, but it hasn't a war note in U d Ir'wi i dilemma, this man of all law abiding citizens? Will many| .4 jn New York, but the police | the war the newspapers have been | °®'Med over a rapid increase in the the whole score. It is not a surprise | nderwear ¥ what to do. ‘American lives be sacrificed 'in U’W,‘ havn't caught the man who left that | getting, they are still getting, and death rate of men and women past ' t0 learn that Tommy Atkins has put | For Men, Women and Children. | | A headquarters.—Boston Ad- | some of them are still unsophisticated | SIXty years, especially from degener: ‘ it g n:e discard. | Separate Garments and Union Suits. ir rerii e o cons | tive diseases of the heart, blood ves ut it is rather strange that ‘“Mr. | Now on sale 10c, 12 1-2¢ 17c 25¢ and i - i se W ay that if a | vertiser. enough to print letters from persons | ! s o eart, b e: o n < an ‘reunqmsmng any of our | tion t.h.ere are those \wflhO say Sl 2 | who assert that they are of ‘‘pure | Sels and kidneys. Since 1880 there has :!Vefll.v has been adopted in its stead. | 49c. Values up to $1.00. ,l“nd that gave us birth, | repetition of the half-nearted i S it i 6 Al (o e e ! ancestry” and utter in phrases where- been a notable drop in mortality up e refer to the ditty written by Pat GUIMPES AND VESTEES, n he situation in this | ©f Vera Cruz which took place inj S g e to 30 years, indicating a healthier | ROOTeY In 1888: Special Values at 49c and 98¢ each, up the situation in this | when he recalls that he never heard |in a revealing hit of German idiom ter 13 this Mr. Rellly they spssk | Values to §1,80. = ¢ = o i i i aged, it p; the P , cur ssi te devo- | Youth, but the wear and tear of life | ‘according We wouid | APril 1913 is to be:again staged, his father or mother denounce mar- | usually occurs their passionate " . 3 A s Mad X . . o , 11 | ti etween ty and sixty is lea ghly? ade long sleeves and sleeveless, of fe time ago we shook | Were better that mo action be u\l\ed-i riage as a failure.—Toledo Blaae. | “D\?\';n Knlturi 5 i T R B ii‘l:;)rca?; <|,;h\ HR ::;:\f:": Is this Mr. Reilly who keeps Llack, white and ecru 1aces and nets. i he o cas absolutely fruit-| = | ’hat carpet of magic, W 5 : sixty thethotel? | = J Qe oc our netive | ThA eRpRdon e 1bs‘ome stirring |/ Tobacco prohibitionists have been | corper hax wherefrom issues a djinn | depreciated vitality, and often 2 How :;nnr:n be made to fit any of | S LI flia Wwc do it? Becawsc | less. Its’only result was ; - i-,n convention in San Francisco laying | Who hits his head against the clouds ?lseased condition of vital organs too | ype eonditions on the western front of Statlonery up of more strife, the embittering of |/ ). 5o e e When tobacco is | And darkens earth with his prodigious | far gone for remedy. Old age and | (ne European war is not quite clear. | Lin lite anq we felt there | the Mexican people against the | conquered chewing zum may be | bulk, is a billionth part as marvelous decay of the body, especialy weaken- What is the matter with the British | CRANE'S LINEN LAWN, o ' as Americans are calied. | tackled—Tacoma Ledger. as the inside of the little Mayvflower | IN& of the heart and thickening of | gong writers that they haven't com- | ote size Sheets 15¢ quire, | — which bore to “these shores” the an- [ the arteries . come prematurely | posed something of their own? If it { Note size Envelopes 15¢ quire, b Just about now there is a race on | cestors of most Americans and all | through unnecessary strains upon and | is because the soldiers love the songs | Letter size sheets 20c quire, erican property have thus between those who are onut striking | ‘German-Americans” ?—New York | neglect 9{ the body when business | of other days, why haven't they l»etterv size Envelopes 20c quire, Ransom has. been paid by American [.for jobs and those who are striking | Sun. and social cares monopolize atten-| played up ‘““Cheer, Boys, Cheer, No Crane’s Linen Lawn Corresponding fdual chance. ! & tion i "y Cards and Letter P; Hisappointed In this new | business men i Mexico to'the leaders [ because they have them.—Berkshire 2 [iMorefot 1disiBorrow: (N TN Wio er Paper at 45c Box. & < nev ; - P laieien | masis. e _ That the acceleration of break-up | never a war that produced as many | CRANE'S HIGHDAND LINEN of ‘our choice? Well, | of various factions. n &7, S PR JOWO! z 1 > in men and women over 60 is, purely | songs as did the war between the ! All the newest shades In Letter Pa; today is united in but ore thing,—hate Great dimonlty 15 being experienten (Norwich Bulletin.) and simply, the consequence of the: States. They were not only songs of | Finvelopes and Corresponding C-rq:"i i verytHing American. " Grand Tr M 1 e Occasionally some excited adopted | “American fashion” of living during | the camp, but battle songs. They were ' against everytHing 3 by the Grand Trunk Railway in find Jorlied: St S 5 o & o o | 28¢ box. i the situation, Carranza is| ing names far 135 new stations be- | Citizen will assure his American dis- years of prime appears from the sung for a generation after con- Crane's Highland Linen Grasm:f ot Dlay ' for. | Mexican | tween Toronto and ~Winnipeg. It | putant that the Union was saved by | fact that there has been no corre-|flict. They are still heard at reunions. | Letter Paper, all shades, ol buveiod makingiiuss 1808 D 8Ye ; {.should apply to the genits who names | men of alien birth. It would be great- | Spondig increase in the British death | But the British have always been a bit | at 45¢ box. . sympathy. Heknows ‘that-many of "4 o L0 O elphia Leq. | I to their credit if this were so, and | Fate of persons over sixty. The Brit- | tardy in working out ballads. | Greeting Cards of all xinds fe to the. followers of Villa and Zapata will | ger. they did furnish about one-fourth of | ish rate since.1880 shows lower mor- But, to return to our midsummer ' 5. each, flock to his side it he can prove to | the entire fighting force in that five | tality in all ages. The statistics, as|lamb, there!:r;‘“*’};‘o‘t:‘! ‘lfl i‘flnde}:’!’ Birth Announcement Cards 80c Bt e O Russia’s wheat crap is reported to | vears' conflict jand acquitted them- | quoted by Dr. Fisk of the life exten- Jjust now. r. Rellly is thers, he | nogen, the et ihirty ! perlaent i lats ot thon Tast | selvesnobly: ; sion institute, New York, in an ad- |18 in the trenches. Why sing of him Party Cards for Children 30c dozen. from the hands of Uncle Sam. There=| ' A" N "G ornia s ubmarines | The Germans led all other aliens | dress to the Toronto, insurance insti- | Unles it is tribute to the culsine he | o\ o, o0 o o in lies the reason for his present at- ; busy'in the North Sea and no outlet | With 175,000 fighting men, the patri- tute, are worth study. In 1880 the usiiru;:e(;;;ullé “ ?’: Eo:sr;:i‘e or such ! . 7S Aut “C. ‘SJ-!;TATI()MY titude. - Also, he feels that ‘President i as yet through the Dardanelles the | Otic Irish being a close second with < y L . | " i family, and are just on to prosperity, a pros- death rate in Britain from diseases ; Wilson, in any negotiations he may ) American wheat grower has no occa- | 150,000 men. The English and Brit- | 8rowing out of ordinary wear and _ Rt i K | sion to worry .on this score.—Spring- known to the proletariat ; ish-American by birth furnished 100,- | tear upon tne system-—excluding, of An All-American Conféderation. fative land. For threc | make with. Mexican. leaders will ig- 514 Union. 000; and the representatives of all | course, all communicable diseases— (Bridgeport Standard) be been enjoying this | nore the name of Carranza. ¥ [ES— ‘other countries 75,000. Takinz the | Was 2.6.6 pernzo,ooo of populat(qn. In | In calling once more upon the | D MBMILLAN Now comes word that Even If the United States, acting in | ek B Brn_mh empire as a whole it :urnish- é?allfleslt ;Zns '.1.3”.1 1In 1880 the United | South American republics to lend a . conjunction ‘with its Latin-American | by 2 poor Haitians, too, are|ed in KEnglish, Scotch, Irish and |¢£ rate was 21.1, considerably l1ow- | hand in the matter of Mexico, the il | ced in the same posi- | venture? In answer to these ques- bomb at ! not conducive to an ¢ Qe oprortunitics in the Gringoes, Many American lives and much Am- fica, where men grow big, 7l suffered. | & rulcs, and where every as only temporary dis- and the gate was al- ¥ we did not like lhe la have gone right back soil: But we did ack. Conditions weie “better here and we re- fther, we saved a few odd [ a nice little home for hds gone to war with SRR el s Starving like the - Mexicans, because | Canadians a farce of 250,000, or 25| er “1;" the British, but in 1910 it | president takes what may be easily | 199-201-202 MAIN STREET reservists of the army d £ g up A of the gonditions created by their | per cent. of the alien forces to Ger- | Was 38.7, or .much ‘higher. Why | the first step toward the “All-Ameri- | lled, home. We are sup- | ico a provisional government, who ‘bigandish leaders. If these rogues | many’s 17% per cent. should there be this remarkable dif- | can” federation which, once formed, ! SerVIstE 'SHAT We go ¥ [Téan say “How' stablet that goveriment [-could be forced into the starvation The straight American enlistments ference?_ Every North American get- | would be the most powerful influence !l the remnants of the charred bedy ¥ 2 " |fwill be? ~ ‘Such: a: govermmrent estan. | Z0ne, and compelled to feel them-|amounted to over 2,000,000 of a to- | ting up in vears is vitally interested in . for peace that could exist, and not only | Were hung to a telegraph pole. “That is the question.'| 2 Chuanttl e selves the pinch of hunger, they might | 2,800,000. finding why his life tends to e | for peace but for safety. The great We miss in the account any details Bikon. at 15 d patrictjc | Mshed under present conditions would | bo willing to earnestly collogue to- | e the true figures and they ) shortened beyond that of his brother | South American republics have the as to the moving picture artists, but der a gun and fight for | Pe nothing, if not a misfit. If Car- ! gether sooner in the interest of peace. | show that our adopted citizens were Englishman or Scotchman. Obvio possibilities of wonderful power in the = We are sure that they were present, | gave us birth. On sec- | ranza is not placed at the head of 2 A week for Carranza, Villa and Za_pv true to the government and deserve Iy one reason is that the Briton takes | future and even today a federation and that we shall all have the oppor- 9 i visi 1 e ontbackedrthi 1ata, with nothing to eat and but lit- | a large share of the praise for help- | his business more leisurely, more | formed with them would be able to ' tunity to‘have the same treat in the however, what \about the | Provisional governme acked by this| (" G ter to drink, would reveal to |ing to save the Union. regularly. He is never so absorbed | stand off any foreign interference that | movies ere long. And every specta- qaised? Surely those | country and the A. B. C. powers hel their minds visions of the hlessings | This record is worth preserving. in business that he forgets his out- | the future could develop. The Mon- | tor, we are sure, went back to nis | would not want to be | Will be riled. So”will Villa. ‘So wiii| of peace that would never dissolve. ST 5 door recreations. His personal par- | roe doctrine in such a situation W“"l'; home rejoicing at the triumph of G e e 5o == i ticipation in spi ing. | take on a new form and, instead of | ri ’ < B ticat world, merely | Zapata. So will évery little leader | —Pittsburgh Dispatch. The Plattsbur idea. G,;;;,f“"e i mzp(:,r(ita;‘: cl‘:af:?":;:" | being the wards of this country, the 2:..}327?:?1" ?:j ::Jr::‘r‘!':sri:"n r“m = f feac e = 3 es s sl P y of our goltish .king decrerd | Who thinks he is big enough to “"'“‘l Whether the Bull Moosers who re- (New London Day.) in Tawarden 1s & tynteal Ingiaree wne | Latin-Amerlean repubiics would be- | bwn civilisation o that of Marts Had. fher should go to war | the affairs of a country that has| main faithful to their past professions Tt is not to be anticipated that the | Briton gives his body exercise and | come its confederates and partners in | San Domingo known nothing but strife for the past | are to be termed Gittites of Hittites | Irier period of military instruction | rest, and does mot recklessly sacri- | & compact by which the safety and il would seem to be a matter of choice | that is to be given at Plattsburg to | fice it on the altar of business: Hiy | dependence of each would be assured. | o T lm Biblical interpretation. It appears | 1,200 unattached volunteer citizens |is a more rational, a better-rounded | FXtending the assistance given us | NO MORE BLOCKING we over here on a va- | leaders would su ¥ BOVern-| g, the context that Vietor Murdock | will result in any very important ac- | life, for, after all, the main purpose | 17 th1S 4 Mexioan juuadiesito fether OF MA Med back, things would | ment in which they had no voice. Al' ! {n referring to those who would pre- | cession to the military strength of the | of life is to live, and what avails bus- | tPin&s. broadening the application and | IN ST. TRACKS " But we have forsaken | the ships in the United States navy ' serve the Progressive platform as the | ration. If the novel summer school | iness conquests at the sacrifice of > d ; B s ken liraclites aid the Atk of the Coven- | in the art of soldiering were really | years and health? In the great out: ZEZ’ZJ’.‘."'??Z’Z :;s””:““:“’ f orost “"}‘1" ! u & ant used the term Gittites, as he | planned as a scheme for fitting its| of-doors of this continent may he | (BRI 0 10 DS S wph"a ;::dfl 4 ® | New Haven Rohd Crders Enginecrs [in-a new land. We are, s g e | should, and not Hittites, as careless | students for military service it would | found every facility and oppOrtunity | e (a pe vastly benefted ;m o E = government might draft. So, in the iti E freading A e s S h &5 inher 3 4 =l 3 and one | lIonger ;eser\ls‘m;l VfVe editing or proofreading in some in more remarkable for its erent | for evading hardening of the arteries great movement would be made | and made a niche or ‘a country which he h kne? No, that would be | One hundred years. Not one of thesc | use of the consultation and conference | and the men.of our army’ would be required to enforce the laws such o and Trainmen To Keep Cross- end the United States would be the | stances made him do. There is a | futility than for anything else. But| heart weakening, Bright's disease and e # Y i % ers who have tendereq | A1l about Noah, the Flood and the | Of the kind. What the military au-| the wonderful organism of the body. |t sl % ewh 1 B0 pur.ychildren,: And | American powers who ha endercd | Ark, but he could not swallow the | thorities are trying to do at Platts- o 2l uturt’,i efpar A ent lothmert the | i this a King says iwe their good offices in the solution of | gtory that the Ark was dragged about | bUrg is to show a considerable num- e hE AalC e ocher! | federation of the worl 2 | installing two large signs at the Main ek from the land of onr | What seems to be our own problem. | in the wilderness forty years.—Brook- | her of intelligent and more or less in- o L e | street crossing today instructing their 't ‘. 1 1If this is the day of the showdown | 1yn Standard-Unien. fiuentia] civilians the utter impos- 5 b r fast, | employes not to block traffic there, fight for a tountry we | » g — oibility of making a scldier out of the A 15-years-old Springfield girl who | (Consul Geperal George E. Anderson, | i§ meeting with much favarable com- and this problem must be tackled, it | 1 popver the other day there died | crdinary citizen in a few days: to im- | Was taken into custody 30 miles out Hongkong, China, June 1.) | ment. The twp signs, ope.on. essh should be done immediately, once and | a wise man. His name was Bernard | I'Téssed with the necessity of being up in the country as a runaway, told the American toy manufacturers seem | Sife of the tracks, read as follows: for all. There should be no more de- | Beer and he left a considerable estate | and doing, And every one of these | Police an extraordinary story. —An|(q have an increasing trade in Far _ “To engineers and trainmen: No en- ! lay. A proper embargo ‘on arms go. | as a monument to many years of | Will become a missionary in the cause | orphan, uncomfortable in the home | Eastern ports. German and Austrian | 8ine or cars must be stopped on this 2 3 | strict attention to business. This es- | of national preparedness. Wwhich charity had provided for her, | toys which have long aominated the | CTOS€ing except to avoid accidents ing over the border would alleviate | tate will eventually revert to two | IN this way the Plattsburg camp is ild says she set out to see her | castern markets are being shut out at | After each movement of cars or engine his brother, where | SOme of the difficulties. and after a | sons, providing they display the bus- | VerY liable to be worth many times its present, with the result that Japan Across the strect ample time must be ce for all. And no | Strong man has been selected for the | iness zh!hhes_hoved for by the ""-"_t_m the government and to the f\r caurse, and | and the United States have the field Biven persons waiting to cross -nfe';&: ; i el \sional presidency our troops can | father. The will left hy the father clvilians who are in attendance. > s . Girls in this en- | very largely to themselves. Japanese before the next movement is made § consul in this country, | PToVisiol X ? z '™ | provides that the lads were to he | lightened day think little and not very | imitations of the cheap German and | For vears this crossing has been 4¥. There is no law un- | uphold his hand. While no one in| given $500 of the estate at once. And e deeply of their grandmothers, if at | Austrian tove are sold in considerable | the cause of much trouble between {“this country is really anxious for in-| every vear thereafter they are tn Our Fighting Navy’s her. all. Girls who would walk 30 miles | quantities, though they are usually too | the railroad and the populace and it ! tervention, if that is the only way out, | Teceive as much money as they have ing Olear. Action of the New Haven road in SRall we go? iswer is. No! We shail Will remain where we here-is no"strife or dis- ‘every man is living in King in any foreign 5 4 4 e ba): a iy (Bridgeport 1-0st.) to see a decripit grandparent are | chcap and too flimsy to hold the mar- | has been the habit in the past for i 8 us _C “"_ maie e i tha bit intns made and saved. If at the end of | The death of General Benjamin F. | probably very rare—so rare that if | ket long even in such cheaper goods. | trains to switch across Main street n years in prison be- ncles i S| the first year they have over $1,000 to | Tracy, secretary of the navy in Presi- | this little girl's story proves true, | American toys are expensive and their | at this point and hold up trafig for d'to tight for a lond in | teeth. Now or later. the good they got another thousand, { dent Harrison’s cabinet, mark the | charity may lose a friend by shipping | sale is comparatively limited for that | long periods of time and on several R eateiial 1 e but if they have squandered the ori. | Fassing of a splendid American citi- | its young protege back into the |, reason, but they reach the fine trade, | accasions it has been necessary for A > z ginal $500 and have no assets they | Zzen. At the ripe age of eighty-five he | somewhat forlorn atmosphere of the i &nd for the present at least are in- the police to order a freight train S ' A NUISANCE. have nothing. Tt is one of the mos goes to the undiscovered country, [ big world that works and fights and | creasing in popularity and in volume. | broken in order to permit passershy answeted in that way, o J. " sensible documents ever penned and | @fter a life as full as it was long. working and fighting, forgets. | — | to cross. but and swear allegianc | . NoUld the people of New Britaln| ;.13 pe an incentive to the boys | It has rightly been said of General | Any young man or girl who will | An American Drama. SR B aeptan. Ew | be allowed to keep hens in thickly | to prove themselves worthy of the | TTacy that he was ‘the rather” of our | walk 30 rods to see a grandmother (New York Evening Post.) COLONEL WANTS AN ISLE. of our adoption. SWear| .ijeq parts of the city? = This ques- | man who reared them.—Buffalo En- | modern fighting navy. He saw the de- | without first gaining positive assur-| petails of th City Clerk Thompson in a talk to- Plghest rank of citizenry, | o5 b rought to the fromt | aulrer. | tenseless condition of the country and | ance or reward must have some good. | etatls of the purely Amerionn drs e : e byt o = rad tto Imaeethit s Sian o §00% | ma recently produced in the public 48y with a friend, intimated that he everything, life itself. if| . )0 tnrough the efforts of the health S DPrepa A B ASTND. old-fashioned sense of filial piety, | gouare at Temple, Texas, show tery | Was strongly in favor of the establizh- B ot e over | 22 : The Eastland disaster points with Strengthening included the prototypes | and some basic capacity for good oiti.. | =0 B T TR MO S Y e O aa Iah of et -~ B, department to regulate ‘the “poultry | greadful certainty to a grave defect | cf the modern battleship, the battle- | zenship. unusual consideration for the drama- | g of an isle of safety at the south Bithe cloak of protection. | puginess from the standpoint of sani- | in the system by which we attempt to | €hip cruiser and the scout cruiser. A | tic unities. It was given under the | c:m (vf!hvrp r)l:]rkv ; ]\\ r.nh:nrlvrularl) wered in that fashion | tatjon, The board recently completed | secure safety at sea and on the Great But hisbmw“““fl’";“:;" innovationsyas The New White Book. ! ::,’::r:m L T.',chi::.m n‘?e ¢ pudb'l'" l!hl;;r;‘m ¥ oo sty Hix l‘hnt‘ t}::c(hnl. v ol | ; b 2 2 the substitution of the present war bt : : audience, on foot and in y, is - aside all worrles and | ; cpicken census and brought to light | I@Kes. 1In the past we have learned | » (Angonia "Séntinel.) automobiles, packed every square 1€y company is usurping the park for | e s | vessels. This one tning revolu- of the just for, at| g,me startling facts. ft was dis- §;‘,’,§Z’,‘f’n :E‘asp:ihr:‘;‘i’:::fli:?::::e:ho\:f | tionized the defense for war vessels, | A White Book just issued officially | inch, but called for no interference commercial purposes which ehould Bld go to our downy | covered that hundreds of birds ‘are| ed the need of adequate lifeboat , Great Britain saw the impor- [ PY the German government goes to (On the part of the police, who appar- Mot be allowed. —The company have f that no King on earth: xept in confinement within a stone’s | equipment. It was the wreck of {he . tance of it immediately and then grent dengrh (o Jusilfy tne atrocities | ently were greatly gratified by the en-| @ telephone stationed at the south us, that we were s tpy Main street and Volturno which proved that fn a | and there prepared to build over [ committed in Belgium by Germany. It | tertainment. Boys of all ages climbzd | end of the park and at that par- erveetieh | throw of Main street and an investiga- | ° (Wm0 WREL | PTOTEC IEL IR K er navy. He also saw the advantage | Will probably convince the Pro-Ger- | the trees of the square and cheered | ticular point various employes of the ‘potenta roas- tion of their. sanitary condition was| ygeless without a competent crew. | of high speed and was quick to apply [ mans but to no great extent will it |and applauded, and, =o the Houston | COMpany congregate at all hours of v change the sentiment that has solidi- | Post assures us, ‘many girls of ten-| the day, and on many an occasion how powerful he is, the | yound to prevail in and about! the | home with all the tragic appeal of One would think that such a record | fied throughout the world against | der age” were “scattered through the it is almost impossible to get by ? : = = . | e e t cas | Germany because of her treatment of | throng.” | them 1V fern ‘oft g . fts hundreds dead. is no less plain. | was enough for one man, but it was C ! . live who can e | coops. Many people feed table refuse It is a warning that every ship 1a | & very small part of the activities of the small neighbor, who trusted to her | The title of the play was “Spurning | e_ad of a true American | to chickens and make no provision to | which imperative principles of marin. , General Tracy. Citizen, soldier law- | pledged werd, and was wiped off the | the Law,” and the chief actor was ! OFF TO CLAMBAKE. a stands for all that| xeep the yards 'clean, Unless the| comstruction are viclated threatens ver, statesman, he was effective in | map practically because of that trust. | young Negro, twenty-six years old, A party consisting of members of e and true in the world. | birds clean up such food it is left to | Suffering and loss of life which ade- everything he undertook, and in every | Germany brings forward many sworn | who played the unusual role of being | New Britain lodge of Elks No. 957, great place to :live at | mold and decay on the ground. This | quate life boat equipment and -com: ' walk of life in vwhich he entered‘ he | statements mten_deG to prove that the ; burned alive. The large supporting | journeyed to Holyoke, Mass., today, B e oine, . oo petent crew can at best.only mitigate. | left a mark which any one might| Belgian population took part in the | company “velled and cheered,” just to attend the annual clambake of : °T M- | goon creates an unhealthy aimosphere | I+ is rad that we should need so ap- €nvi. fighting against the invaders and | as if they had rehearsed their parts+ the lodge in that city, The trip me crazy with the lust ' .nq makes a breeding place for flies. | palling a horror to teach this simple The child of the small country towr, | claims that, because of this, Germany m times, “as they shoved the Ne-; was made by autos, and those going b back to one of tho::! pies, as we.KNOW now, carry disease | 1esson. long understood and often like =0 m: v of our men of atta ent, [ was justified in wrecki vengeance | gro into the flames.” 8o realistically | on the trip were: M. T. White, T. " While the Unltml‘ ot Al deadly charactos pointed out by marine experts. It General Tracy started life with some | on the civilian popula_t..,n and des- was this all done that the “onlook W. O'Connor, Tom Dunn, Ottis O. fi'? §8% v e penaois d ¥ .29 i would be a lasting disgrace if we advantages. It is interesting to note | troying the property in those cities | were fascinated,” particular lButlor. Henry Donnelley, Timothy W. 2 e The health department plans to| paid the price- without learning the | that he was a boy friend and school- | where resistance was. offered when the chief actor was again and | O’Brien, R. W. Egan, Fred Pritchard draft ordinances which will make it | lesson.—The New Republic. 5 thate of the late Senator Thomas _PlatL‘ The civilized world looks back | again thrust back upon the prye, un- | and William Dannelley. i ne Right of Kings| ot reassuring. Filthy conditions were | The lesson of the Eastland, pressed ' it | i

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