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N [into consideration, this fleet seems 1o | probably every caninet had pledged it- Foh St. 3 New Britain part of the city Cents » Month. Daper to be sent by mall ;advance, 60 Cents 8 ith. §7.00 a year. table advertising medium 1n culation books and press open to advertisers. be found on sale at Hota- nd, 42nd St., and Broad- ‘ork City; Board Walk, N'S LIGHTS. - criticism of the local ice has not infrequently and severe and at times without some basis, there ving the that New 2 well lighted city. A re- Btion by the board of pub- @lled attention to this con- it is borne out by compar- other place! For many city ‘was dependent for mation in the central por- the old fashioned carbon nd in the outlying sections service was given with jgghich required individ- iy attention. mt years, fact the system lutionized. High pow- have superseded ‘and the mantle lamps 6"1 }ca in the surburban glven way to the bril- on of the modern in- . No city in the state can jtakirts better lighted than Britain. With the ad- 8 mazda light the service reatly extended so today and country roads and in’ former times knew no jination than the farmer's he phosphorescent glint of dazzling aglow with the lval the sun. Winter and ers not; the illumination '.other it reflects to guide the wayfarer past fields orn, neath hanging _heavy with summer foli- Alluminate his journey frigid air of virgin drifts od street lighting is a communit It means fhe welfare of its citizens. prially in development and ‘As an advancer of civil- nks with the trolley, the and the telephone. No rtisement could be offered lor traveler than jating service.. At night, aveler has little else to judgement of the import- lace than the illumination fpeople. |k of course, some parts of district which might ted. Near the corner of Main streets there spot that casts a gloom ate vicinity and which Iy obliterated by the in- | a medium sized light. hite Way is not as gay and me would have it; but for t'is about everything that When the board makes up its mind out it might drift casu- e Rialto and mark the | for the purpose of recom- provement. ¢ i t o'er a t an up- | is of to T IT MEANS, German version of the i battle is given out there fascertaining the absolute the superdreadnaught destruction,—if indeed down. No one will whether the giant ship " by a British submarine ‘at the exit to the Gulf whether she had gone arrows of Moon Sound | struck a mine. The dis- the next two days should | ¢ truth. But, in the long | iner of sinking the Molt- the three and | boats dentals. jottom is e reverses at the hands nans the have last accomplished some- | gvorth the while, for the | Il go down in history | ‘greatest naval conflicts | Bt world war, if Petrograd | # e borne out. Silence| war office would seem jent to the Russian claim | i cruiser were destroyed | That they were the main f;]r‘r.; Russians the truth of accounts of pttle they but demonstrate N sea power is over-rated. b fleet is not as formidable ld be led to believe. From tions of the German sub- would naturally suppose of Germany is the equal Follette state succeeded him of Wisconsonians. LaFollett's absolute dominance of the situation that the sin stood up on their high horse and elected Philipp as their governor 1914, that the going that high state’s | of ‘European goods be at -its best when operating against merchantmen, and not battleships or kindred craft. No one can doubt the bravery of the attempt to force an entrance to the Gulf of Riga by the Germans, It was a daring schemc, and it took more nerve than anything done yet. Transports laden Wild troops were sent into the narrow pas- sage at the entrance to the gulf for the purpose of depositing their car- goes on the mainland. Knowing that the Russians must have planted mines there and that at best there were but eight miles spread of water between the capes guarding the entrance, the German commander of that fleet, even if he had superior numbers, must have looked for stubborn attack from shore batter be granted him,—in the face of every difficulty, he forced a passage. It was a daring exploit and one which goes to prove that the Germans when they start out on the offensive will stop at nothing. Yet withal it might costly bit of work for many, the Russian spirits been rev the Allies have gained somewhat of their lost a . This much must prove, a (v for ived, re- confi- dence, and they may now go out and turn the tide of affairs in the eastern The famous English fleet, which someone has accused of having been kept in the British mu- seum, seems at last to have don¢ something in tne line of battle, for, we are told, British submarines aided the Russians in the battle of the Gulf of Rig This may mean that Eng- land has decided to really get in the war and take some of the burden off the shoulders of her allies who have suffered the brunt of nearly all the fighting. theater of war. SOMETHING NEW. Not with having crippled the American merchant marine and driven it to seek the registry of other nations, Senator “Fighting Bob™ La- is now out after his own the scalp of the man who the gubernatorial *hair of Wisconsin. Governor Philipp on reducing the high taxes content and in s bent hat Mr. LaFollette hung on the neck It was because of voters of Wiscon- in all of his Wisconsin With radical reforms he people found out | was over strong and | too the ilor. expenditures weresreaching LaFolictte like grasping the his retrenchment a point. spent money Philipp, tunity, platform Lakollette policy and made his main lower drunken g campaign from a s and oppor- on a the launched of plank one advancing taxes. Ever since he took the oath of office this Governor, who has already cut down expenses to the tune of $8,000,- and saving, has been hampered by the fanaticism of La Follette, his henchmen claim. Next year an clection will be held | for the senatorial Mr. La- Follette, and the is just about getting it 000, promises a greater toga rof campaign start now. Govern- or Philipp is going out after the wily old fox of Wisconsin and the battle promises to be one of the strangest ever fought inasmuch as man is advocating economy in running the ! machinery of government and the other demands its exact opposite. This is probably the first time the United States that a campaign was ever waged on such contentions. In the ordinary run of things the man advocating the cutting down of ex- penses should win. We must watch and wait for Wisconsin's election re- turns to get a line on the American temperament of 1916, one in FACTS AND FANCIES., The motto on Georgia’s seal is “Wisdom, justice moderation.’” What's in a motto?—Springfield Re- publican, More trouble: Uncle Sam has been called upon to settle the ownership of an egg laid by a hen while in transit by parcel post.—Buffalo Cour- ier. With the end of the war the flood into the Ameri- begin again unless protective tariff.— can market will prevented by a Glens Falls Times. The peach crop is going to be a rceord-breaker, but no one has noticed the price dropping from the mark set in years when said crop was a failure. New Haven Register. Although decrying war, George Ber- nard Shaw confesses his inability to stop it. Now let us hear from that other staunch Tnglishman, Henry James!—Buffalo Commercial. Prudent citizens will keep their own counsel these days and let the allies and the Germans do the arguing. There may be a call for volunteers soon.—Waterbury Republican. German newspapers are offering Spain Gibraltar, Tangier and Portu- gal if Spain will enter the war on the world. But on second | s - side of Germany. The German gov- ernment itself is said ta have offered ing all Lhins:lltaly, Nice, Corsica and Alglers, butlutlons‘——Brooklyn Eagle. . self to both Belgium and Luxemburg that it would respect their neutrali- ty.—Buffalo Express, If anyone sees a bunch at San Francisco showing effec verwork and melancholia it 2bly the press humorists their convention.—Meriden Journitl of fellows s of prob- attending The fact that so many candidates have declared themsclves for repubii- can nominations this fall is evidence that the party is strong and full of canfidence of success.—oughkeed= sie Eagle-New There seems to he a possibility that the Germans will reach Moscow. And evidently they are convin¢ that |r they get there they will have better luck than did Napolcon Bonaparte.— Troy Times. ed are said to be em- pp works at present. uns is such a rest- women and so and all that.— Many women ployed in the Kru Well, making big & ful occupation for pleasant and so refined, Rochester Union. The fact that your female relativ can carry picnic luncheon ba twa or three miles over a rough road does not mean that they could lug one and one-half pounds of beefsteak wrapped in a brown paper parcel.— Meriden Journal. profound- in Mexico. The president of China moved by conditions Thus China has at last entered the family of civilized nations by find- ing some other nation ta look down upon.—New York Evening Post. 1y is taking her poets {a the inspire them to write song: which in turn will inspire the Turk- ish trops. Possibly putling the poets on the front line to recite their paems to the foe would cause a hasty retire- ment on the part of the allies.— Water-town Times. A Gotham policeman was appointed cn Friday, the thirteenth, and his second day on the force made a star arrest of two burglars. It was hard luck for the burglars, it is true, but it was very good fortunc for the police- man, so even luck depends much on the point of view.——Baltimore Ameri- n. Turkey front to Adolphus, count of Cleves, in 1331, founded the Order of Fools, “for hu mane and and charitable purposes. And some one meanly suggests that they are still taking in new members. ~—-Bridgeport Telegram. “How sunrise we know ike to be shot at syndicate writer. of none wno would, but if can judge by appearances there many who don't mind being hdlf hot at sunset, (he Houston Post. New Haven Union would vou " asks a we are is wi repre- rinst shing the future Journal- If the German government it will listen to the counsel of sentative Germans who advise the annexation of Belgium. could be more harmful for of the empire.—New Haven Courier. million by The fa that so far half a iron crosses have been conferred the German government indicates that there is no reity of that metal. When the er es are turned over for the making of shrapnel there will be some evidence of a_decline in re- sources.— Wilkesbarre Record. S0 There is no law, it may be there is no irrefutable reason, against nomin- ating the chief justice or an associate justice of the supreme court for presi- dent. There is, we think, a general it undefined ohjection. Justice Hughes apparently shares, and his example should do much to strengthen, that objection.—New York Times. George Ade has renounced writing slang for good and all. Mr. Ade, who worked himself into a collapse cover- ing the republican and progres ticnal conventions of 1912, has since devoted most of his time to the golf links on his farm near Chicago. He says Billy Sunday may take his place hoi polloi.—Springfield Republican. that the in- hostile force man army in It is all very well to say vasion of England hv is a chimera. The G the field has failed in only one of its accomplishments—the invasion of Paris itself, and to say that the British fleet must be destroved before Eng- lanad can he invided is to overlook the great field guns of the Germans, that can hurl a ton of moctal a distance of miles.—Ansonia Sentinel. a hundred in this automobile—we intention- One person in country now has an tay ‘“has” and not “owns,” ally, and still there's no cessation in the manufacture of the cars. If the ! cost of manufacture decreases.in the rext decade as it has in the past, the old saw about “wishes heing horses™” v have a modern instance.—. Ilaves Register. The profits of ocean carving are greater now than at any time in the | past, even with the risks to both bel- ligerent and neutral ships of seizures the high se! This fact empha- sizes the intolerable folly of the La | Follette seamen’s law virtually deny- | ing to American shipowners any part l'in these profits. But the sentimental effect of lowering the American flag on vessels that have to be sald be- fore November 4, when this ridicu- lous staiute goes Into offect, is cal- culated to hit Amecricans even more on s. as chief coiner of vernacular to the strongly than any cconomic consider- | fast lEngland. with no real friendlines: WHAT OTHERS 3AY Vicews cn all sidles of timely Questions as discusscd in ex- changes that come to Herald office, Landing an Army on Our Coast. (Waterbury Republican.) The beople of the knowledge cvery day of the thew are not sage from the war it this country happens into it and a string power is able to land. Against oup present military cauibment a strong army would make e of marching (rom the coast far enoush inland to make life unpleas- ant for those who think they are safe. Col. Bdwin F. Glenn, chief of the staff of the eastern department of the army, with headquarters on Gov- €rnor's Island, talked to the business nien’s regiment at Plattsburg about this on Tuesday night. He said that a nation powerful cnough to control the sea, with a navy like England’s | verhaps, could take possession of our | coast from Portland to the capes of Virginia and land an army of 450,000 mien on the castern scaboard. Against this our army would offer little Te- sistance and the enemy could estab- lish a line far west as Eric and Pittsburg cxtending down to Balti- more and Washington. Within this limit would bhe included most of the factories and munition plants of ireat importance. Without these fac- tories the 60,000,000 people to the West of the enemy's battle line would | be very poorly provided with the | for arming themselves. Thi iming that they are in their present helple: unarmed, unpre- pared condition when the enemy lands. With these plants the enemy could casily supply himself with all of the cquipment and supplies needed, | He would be self-supporting 2rmy and in fact would he practically indifferent to the conditions of the sca. This only a new form' of teach- ing the lesson of the need of being | ready to defend ourselves, Col. Glenn | laid special stress on the desirability | of having our yvoung men trained for | military service. We have boasted | that we were free from this nccessity. It has been one of the conditions here | which has tempted so many foreign- | crs to come here to escape military service at home. But if the rest of the world is to keep in condition we ve got to. Military service can, after all, be made pleasant and have its advantage as a means of healthful | cxercise and valuable moral and men- | tal discipline, west get fact that evils of to get middle as is The St in our afidst, (Collier’s Weexiy.) It is a bad omen that the German papers published in this country con- finue to view the whole controversy from the standpoint of Berlin. They are anxions about Germany's inte ests in conducting the war; they 1ot anxious ahout the rights of United Stat Their editorials satisfaction conviction cver eman from the Wilheln stra while yney intimate very broadly our government i prejudiced, hypoerital, unneutral, wulservient to Kngland, indifferent te fact, and so on, ad nauseam. Oun ircedom of the press enables them ta malign the administration at Wash. ington, but doe enable them even to exercise f: the Tulers at Berlin, 1t is perfectly plain that in (0] He Kk with German many the so-called American Germans vill *be unable cither Yo curb their zeal for the old country or to shake off their habit of implicit and instinc- tive obedience of its order We have had many examples of this lately in the endless small “acci- dents” to war property of the United States, in the hombs found on vessels loading for England ana France, and the foolish-frantic acuvities of al these alleged peace, truth and neu- trality leagues. These things may be only coincidences, nut there are altogether too many such coinci- | dences. It is high time that our oft- izcns of Germanic origin and German- ic sympathies pull themselves to- zether and show that they care about the United States. The next fow months are going to be a very critical season for those whose hearts own a forcign and an antage ic allegi- ance. ar the find and in what- that st not irly of wi (Springfield rmany is Heading. Republican.) Important ages were evidently | amitted in the condensed reports cab- led to this country of the address last Thursday of Chancellor Von Beth- mann-Hollweg to the reassembled Reichstag. In commenting upon it the Tageblatt of Leipsic says: “The world now knows how we hecame invoived in this war, and we have learned ‘for the first time whither we are heading. If the writer means that the world learned from the chancellor's speech that England and not Gern ponsible for the war, the absurdity hardly calls for comment: this part of the speech was | a tisue of sophistrics and misleadir statements which may pass muster in Germany but which cannot for a mo- ment stand analysis in a country where the facts have been put he- fore the public in the United States. It is otherw ror € as with those passages in | the specch which convey hints as to the designs of the German govern- | ment, and when the full text is avail- able it will merit the most minute serutiny. A sedulcus effort has been made to represent Dr. Von Beth- mann-Hollweg as the opponent of war and of aggression. It must be con- fessed that his character is as vet good deal of an enigma. In Eng- land before the war he managed Paul Rohrbach noted with satisfac- tion. to nd a confidence which had not toward his im- mediate But ovents co: ho pr er whether he trying a ian was not Biemar tactics | ta demonstrate [ neta | monstrous la for the sake of squaring Britain till | other designs were accomplished. G In America feeling has rather | sc leaned toward the chancellor because | he has been credited with opposing the murderous Tirpitz submarine cam- | paign. At the outset of the war he | was likewise credited with working | ir sincerely for peace. Of late he has | been credited with opposing the de- mand of extremists for annexing Bel- | ir gium and other occupied territorie Whatever justice there v be in the Cribtion to him of these good inten- tions, it has become glaringly parent that at every point he failed to acompl anything or the sincerity of intentions, Wherever we can sce hand at work it is promoting a war of ARgression—whether a mere tool or ! as an originating force may be still in doubt, But whatever the true character of t]me chancellor may be, he is unques- tionably the voice of the government When he tells Germany “‘whither it is heading,” and it is plain that the Ger- man press no longer doubts that Ger- | many is heading toward conquest and expansion. “The chancellor words | ‘Courland freed,” says the Leip Tageblatt, “will be grected joyfully “A certain goal,” vs the Berlin Tageblatt, ** is clearly to he seen in the chancellors words; a new Burop W a new order of things, must it invalves “the extension and ening of the German empire; ;in th burpose all Germans Wwill agr The German press (akes it for granted that liberating PPoland from the Rus sian yoke means putting it under German control, and in this the chan- cellor wag supported in the Reichstag by leaders af the conservative and liberal parties and the center ere is no longer room for doubt as to the purpose of the government to take all it can get ar as to the helple ness of the scattered minorities which | are opposed to a war of agresion. Do German-Americans stand for that? All | neutral countries know, says the able | and patriatic German author of that damning hook. “J'Accuse:" | That the plans and the preparations for this war have long been made by Germany and Austria not only from | a military but frém a political point of view. That for long it had been resolved | to represent this cffensive war to the German people as a war of liberation, because it was known that only thus could the necessary popular enthusi- | asm be secured. ! That the object of this war is an at- tempt to establish a hegemony on the | continent, and as a later sequel, the | acquisition of England's position of power in the world. * This has been strenuously denied, | { though every scrap of evidence point- | { cd to Germany's guilt. Now the clov- | cn hoof is shawn unabashed. The people have suffered much they are proportionately tempted by the glit- | ¢ tering hopes of wealth and empire | v out by their rulers. Those who | ¢ wenld have held back from a war of |y feel that the sacr of | i treasure me a reward. | the world has to face, « revelations will consoli- h W h 1 1 te w ap- has even n his N h n fr h o h Kk 1u cesuliGiEna trength- k b fl is k n ir ) ¥ & | w \ i e | i n conquest ifice Dlood an That whit and these new date neutral opinion still more strong- Iy against German agression. It must likewise nerve the allies to hold out to the last ditch against this of conquest. i — - ¢ Better Walks Needed. (Norwich Bulletin.) It doesn't require any extensive investigation, or a walk of many miles ahout the city, to discover the gcneral unsatisfactory condition of | the sidewalks. This is nothing new, | but rather tuation which has | come to be locked unon as the es tablished order of things It is needless te that flects no credit upon the city property owners. It the kind of #n advertisement for terpri rity not to keep its side- | walks up to a decent standard which will not only contribute the comfort of the many people who use them, but insure safety | where it at present does not exist. Norwich has been backward the matter of sidewalk ance. It has pursued a happy-go- lucky policy of giving them atten- tion only when the spirit moves re- zardiess of the needs of the travel- | ing public, and the cohdition in | which they are today, and in whicn | ” some of them are every year, Is the result thercof. There is not the proper co-opcration among the property owners and there is also that injustice which throws the burden of such improvement upon certain owners while others go scot free, Good sidev decided is hizh is insolence [ I 1 i i ir th say its re- or the | Doorest an en- | is b to I in mainten- | a P n k ti si o ks are a benefit and to every ecity ard ' that Norwich should awaken to this relization. It h experienced for years the unsatis- | factory results of its present method | of building and maintaiing them | and it should therefore he all the | hetter prepared to not only endorse | but to adopt a plan which gives promise of furnishing a decided im- | provement it time 5 < a The August Bachelor, | (New Haven Regster.) Everyone has read about the “Man Without a Countr; Fut m these Aug- ust days, with their charming weather at the vacation resorts, there comes into e tence that loneliest of mortals ~—the man whose family ay there he a more discontented and | disappointed individual m the history | T® of the time, he hasn't yer appeared. | ¢ Before the family goes away, the | '™ head of the house plang for himself | a rest from his labors. He will go down town every night, He will in- | ¥ « in mild ‘“busts” without having | 1o think of getting home in time to | 5° let out the cat. Everything will be | ven up to the care-free and jolly life reputed to be led by batchelors. Then the family goes. The lone hu band about town in search of enjoyment. He finds his bachelor | cht are out of town. He cats alone 3 shing to spend too much money he cats cheaply, and only nothing nourishing, bhut nothing to please the palate. Unanic to find anyone at his club, he wanders up gs in th tos goes fa th sn ar. as to * ge into the library, add reede tke lset | ticular e and every sweaters months fing of the of | he sa) facturers will follow Moreove Much Hangs | the | she marine operations ish shipping in on Wilhelmshaven wi What | 1ife t | overthrow | of | tians that have not yet heen tested. sort mand of drank a quart of brandy flery and four months' issues of the Alantic At 10 o'clock, habit, | he starts homeward, to enter a dark | closet | ontemporary Review » strong is the force of ouse, search through every shelf for clothes, stumble chair and bang into every t 1 the place, and finally get to bec In the morning he rushes to ithout breakfast, and without the bed, and during the day of his s 10 K im company at dinne m 0 much smoking ana tistening 't of conversation whicn n't rest him, as it doesn't have tc ith the houschold buaget or He g wake the ind wonder ying out the shore, parties he and s on the veranda ouse talking with peopie he nows, and with whom he itely nothing in common. The careful habits or before are disregs and the enforced that the freedom he ounted on hut ashes. £V first week every bur had ooy me ight to ecadache in morning at his so late but finds all Aoesn't foo! ess in st He t riends reak 1d crow in into of the sear nas a the el rded « letel has u au dra 1 the rown Tic its cont in a search hed in the h it house has the hirt stripped b itchen ishes heaped high oard. Flies appear v dared show its he a desolation. Let bachelors, who now, talk of freedom in whose wife's away ny freedom. He wants to ymebody round who knows the dence everything is ho can find a tie, meal, and bos August is the [; for the marricd on or gy every re of covers, of unwa on the where W dreary waste drai nev think The dosen't v w make a his aro waors( in Fight (Bridgeport ¥ Hour and Corset, wrmer.) The adjustment 3ros corset worke ompletely satisfactcry to vhich is a guarantee that it in a long run, Co. The good with the appears t t wi to wi Varner Bros, { the people who are the working for: establishment a manufacturing asset of value. This k megting, and a satis are so much more verybody. DeVer H. s that n is wh W m Warner the correct, corset his better, The com! hour day, is irr the same is other "he sooner the fon of an eight ible, when it exists In neighborhood. The ten hour day sessfully maintained while the Warner Bros, Co. is cight hours. The ten hour day not be ndustry naintain f the cannot be in New Haven. To it would mean a steady hest workers to Bridge it nization its marke can keep condition want like a llmr\lv‘ club- | actory profitable or able 1. work mak- gots ceep cans to a in- y do knit his to | cely bso- even om- bachelor rd AW ents for ouse NEW BRITAIN'S McMILLAN’S BUSIEST BlG STORE LWAYS RELIABLE"” Big Sale of Summer cs home arter mid- | with a | lish- | Manufact S m Value Up T SALE WEDNE AT 8:30 ONE O the | shed ing or they married vant have here somet bed, « na month man 00k the o he hem, n of y a wvhen anu- example. peti- esis- o In- | dustry, in plants situated in the same | suc- in Bridgeport, on can- long maintained 1n the corset try to flow port. is doubtfu] if a large or- t in competition with corsets made under fair The Farmer predicts an era of in- reased iustry prosperity for the corset in Bridgeport. ton.” Register.) suit Haven “Engl: ' lothes he way in whole cr-button,” Henry M chavacter the trading ieli and for what is I llast Afriea, when he 1 15400 from exploring the terri 1 Africa. Such was e trade was war began bitterly made, but ever s the transaction denounced in cen E to | land. The *“trouser-button’ be the most strongly del in the world, and ny not Heligoland in would lack her base against the North sea station of greatest has 0 had this for Zeppelin ortance, A hundred million dollars en rent in fortifying that only about 70 acres in extent o one but nows the ons or the it. is el extent of the Tt the key tuation, and the Kiel to the North should it fall, Canal, and be to the British fl the Dardanclles are to Heligoland is to Germany nly ould open ey, Gum and Valor. (Washington Past.) only it the little count, but it takes them many preconceived id they would he under cor Not is what Thus it ird the g insti ereto of viands and comestibles in by the fighters. Mighty r ssers of old have heen cited in pr the assertion. as when neat with: moving his lips from the flask wing the battle of Sedan e Great 11 note—went relation 1cts and between the the tastes him one better in times of peace, removing me additions of red Today, however, we liquo; such a ragination of Miss pepper. e it that the Jane shioned American chewing e prime incentive to drives for glory tte itself, des illions noked daily in the trenches ouse the Tust es the chicle a turn and with the ract affected by the parti gum neroic chary Not ite erker of favored het quid su things t in- m “The Trousers’ But- of vas | Stah- of now Brit- returned tory the view when ince has g- come fortified Ga war, sub- the Brit- and im- has rock and sen not eet. Tur- to- 1 to) deas 1di- ited | s signifying the more deadly de- Yot out fol- And Peter | ~to preserve the due impar- | by quaffing the same sized quart regular- | the not . and the house | Warner | be | the | ad- | to | but Bremen, | Hamburg | Trolle sa | eaw the chance PRIC Your opportunity of Women's and at a big saving find Union Suits Vests for to plain women; Uni Knit - Underwear urers’ es o ¢, DAY MORNING "CLOCK lay in a supply Children's Garments In this Sale you will and fancy Lisle on Suits, Vests, Pants and Drawers for boys and girls. These garments every one first and ality. WOME Black ribbed top morning at 9c pair. 'S MEN'S S tan W Value Black and ing at 9¢ pair, WOME Values up to $1 morning at 69c each. Broken lines, others | all Waists of the bette | big bargain lot for W ing's selling. WOME! Value up to $4.98 You cannot afford t of Dresses. Be on morning 199-201-205 MATY lar its. And if the were nat that regiment, tale enough, martial pulse of China’s been aroused simultar increasing demand fo Four hundred million in unison, 800,000,000 as one! Yet there surprise. Lewis words on the subject o and its relation to vielding determination ual paper cigar betwe | teeth of the villian int | frown on. his brow, the fragrant cud ing faculty, long reco acteristic of the pron: And run amuck after their fate will be th yellc thi; hero, of whom it His pigtail till he 4 Plucky fn an int on Norway, written for At the outbreak of s, Norway with a total tonnage while now Norway has with 2,108,000 tons to do a profit because of ot a in | | the frefght routes has been the custom to re- | America fight- Bismarck | the apldness of the beverage by whole- [ who was | freights, | driven off as German the ocean. building was pushed besides Norwegians prices a great many captured by the Englis considerable money b espe and st Germans formerly For this reason, country is English Germany has felt spec Norway s Mr “Norwegian passenge Vesta and Venus Newcastle route, have sveral times by Germ don and in well when going eastward that ward. It happened was on board the Ven England when a torped the propeller. Capts expelled fr hand from sentiments Carroll a why develape less | that which befell Tom Hood's salty is recorded that his Head was turned, and so he chewed It has been a. frequent comment that Norwegian ships have the German War office | Seemed to be special targets of Ger- fortifica- | man submarine strength of the guns | *hips of neutral nations | 1s disclosea attack had 3 Norway in Norway Africa, samples and HOSE 5. Wednesday Value 12 1-2¢ OX. ednesday morne 12 1-2¢. S WAISTS AND BLOUSES, 50. Wednesday slightly mussed, r kinds. In one ednesday morn- S SUMMER DRESSES. Wednesday morning at $1.08 each. o miss this sale Wednesday D. McMILLAN N STREET the trenches fact is cited thrilling the )w hordes have eously with an r chewing gum. hearts that beat \ws that close #hould be no has a few f jaw movement spirit of un- If the habit- en the clenched ensify the black should not the fight- gnized as char- athous species? e if China’s patriots be incited to s new patheic fashion, than fed subject of among the The reason eresting article the Providence Journal by H. Trolle of Copenhagen. the war, Mr, vessels 1,767,084, 80 vessels quickly carrying trade the big rise in shipping was Hence, ship Norway and ought at low German ships, h, thus making took up seially to South which the 1inated because the its sympathi ially provoked Trolle steamers, n the Bergen- been attacked an submarines, as west~ Amundsen us on a trip te o0 nearly struck Ain - Amundsen, Schleswig of T as om when he was lecturing in Danish on hie experiences at the South Pole perfervid | certainly a reason to a Addams | why wonld have us believe, but plain old- | Swedish explorer, the German gove Hedin, has question gives & treats k the rnment fair is | ment, while a Norwegian is denied it.” ges | the anemic are | serves to tle | to red | are D cu The pluck of Norway under these circumstances is indeed worthy of ad- miration She powers has Germany alone when her invaded. She is t the three Scandinavian her manhood is virile. of the smaller not been afraid to protest neutral rights he weakest of countries, but. 121-2¢” each having its favor- *