New Britain Herald Newspaper, August 25, 1915, Page 6

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naturally, the other women are all Hence the crowds that watch base- 9 doing the same thing. No wonder hall and football and the crowds that MchLLAN s i We fined them congcenial compan i'lay tennis and golf. ] | We are hearing good lectures, b - In one club in Bridgeport there | NEW BRITAIN'S BUSIEST BIG STORE mear = breathing pure ai arc upward of 400 adult players of | ations as discussed in © - worrying, and feel like new ' golf and at least 200 tennis players. | “ALWAYS RELIABLIE" American lives, and begs the United | before approached in the history of changes that come to Herald || creatures, We fecl sure cach year | When all the other clubs and non- | office, that the uplift will last long after club members are added in, the total States gover: rve defin- | labor in this country. Her sister ci- & government Fo rese el : V. r e we get home—but it doesn't. he | of golf and tennis players in this city | a e judgement tntil°such time as et roughout the state join in o house is dusty, the refrigerator is will be brought {n a figure exc: eding | 8 is able to gather data which he hopes | ing that the era of prosperity throug Panama Canal Traffic: musty, our clothes are all mus the the average atte; Jce at baseball ks o g f nda ne: lul"c:::: :r\;::th. will prove the error of the first re- | which she is now moving will not pass (Providence Journal.) :;2 ;:lms have found the lard. Avm} games rn:hl!rhluvlm.l in the palmiest | 3 r “ v -, N . a a 5 ar i v. And days e basehs DBDSE to bo sent bY mail | ports on the case, Surely no less | too soon from its early dawn to the onsidering the dislocation of all | 10 5]“::‘:,"(”’:; 2 ‘:]”‘):"’ ‘j:"“"i'" s et b‘,"""“ e T that . 60 Cents & : % = 5 S et T S ey ! ! - neig rs T o © We submit is a condi at | {00 » year. could be asked. The American people | blackness of the night. What effects l:‘x:n;‘w‘?ne, and the total ‘f‘xfll“]‘q:‘"‘(‘jo“ff A minute, and we start in tellint scriously damages the \(v‘,“m of base- | are fair minded people. They are | Bridgeport must in some measure re- e r"“zg(‘ ‘1;‘1(.02;1,:-‘t‘l\:::g\:v‘\l‘l :‘I‘fl‘ Panaroa Hlmm how tired we are—and A il to be the nationa] game. It is We offer some very unusual values patient people. They are prone to|act through the entire state Of O} ogyy o o ” S0 N80 up for the | [iyr g e ants. We neednt rescnt a patlonal entertainment—- the Peo- | for this week only. " i s < r neighbors tells us what love watch i : o hear both sides of any question | mecticut and we are for this grand old | the Governments fiscal year ending | o Q08 REIERbote tels 18 WAt o0 b N tomt they dopnas 1!‘;;‘”‘: if the evidence is forthcomong ! state, first last and all the time A [ June thirtieth is propab adl‘S‘:.\v”‘.g‘ where she goes for her outing are national pastimes: they are played Hemmed Bed S reads the wave | to l‘h<' authorities Iml(‘m'l, rorr-|llrmre for we turn right around and tell her not watched, In addition to a p o -j!.! le ('Slln‘l:‘.l(‘sl. le by \"‘rl')'\f»* ',‘ !hr-_ same kind of story. \What a piiy pleasure just imulating as the Extra values at $1.00, $1.25, 81.39, fic experts in anticipation of the OPen- | it is tha¢ peighborhoods can't 1 cxcitment of | ball, they furnish | $1.50, $1.75, $1.98 and $2. cach. ing of the canal suggests that the bUs- | transplanted to pleasant places all | their adhecrents with priceless outdoor | l. down. Bridgeport is a gold field for ness of the past week. the time being. The Kaiser states that so far he has If the goose that is laying the gol- no official information concerning the | den egg, is not Kkilled off too soon sinking of the Arabic and the loss of | Bridgeport will make a record never WHAT OTHIERS sAY Views oa all sides of timely ‘advertising medium 0 feulation books and press ‘oven to advertisers. be found on sale at Hota- . 4, ena Sc. and Broad- | and if not, tmey are slow to | fervent prayer then that 5 ana Hartiors aopot roll high and long. ty ond Hartford depot. act. They will welcome it with | of prosperity may joy. For the German government e = : emphatically states that if American ANCY SHOVELER. ”;i‘ss for the ten and nno-lhn‘lf months | together for their summer outings, exerci Wwhile baseball keeps its ad- | - i ly ifi L of operation is surprisingly large. Just to g how lovely home folk | S i s 8 L ! rin lives have actually \been sacrificed 2 1 kb see how love rerents sitting on a bench, watchin e e <Lt They were Those who made preliminary caleu- f can be when they relax and vet others cxercise, L g preads ————————— | the act which snuffed them out Was | . 1o into the basement of a ChUICh | lationg with a view to the probability | rested up a bit! It would be a gond | Never before in (he histors of this SQUATe or cut corners Extra values at $1.50, $1.75, $1.98 and £2.50 each. EPHONE CALLS. shoveling coal down a TH YOU WOODROW | Contrary to its intentions. The con- | gireet establishment today and S0 | that the waterway might in time re-| time to get acquainted all over nation did golf and {ennis have the WILSON. cluding sentence bears this out. It apt were thelr labors and so rigorous | turn a business profit did not, of | again, and really know the folk who pumber of enthusiasts cnrolled in the j 'se, give serious consideration to' live near Maybe we can't e ranks ; . " says: “T' rman governm ror it ihellR din i o nat|ACoRESE NRlvelisenioUNFCOTSE : us. Maybe we can ranks today—and the number is s ting tribute from the | S2¥S: “The Gel 8 ent would | ¢pejr endeavors that the ths first year's operation. It appea Kind, and courtcons, and altogether | steadily swelling, especially as the _atln e preadas he nation to President . deeply regret the fact and beg to | yacket of the sliding fuel could Dbepowove, “ihay in seven-cighths of this | ;'hm‘min;; all the yvear round. Mav- additien of golf links and tennis courts Extra valu t $2.50, $2.98, $3.51 is paid in the resolution tender sincerest sympathies to the | heard ten city Plocks away. Hot as | year, with conditions singularly un- b€ We put on tiicee things with onr (o the public park systems open the $3.98, $4.50. ,“’;5 and ,.-,.““‘.m.'h g festerday by the Governors American government.” was the day people in nearby apart- favorable, the aggregate cargoes, cast- | Vacation clothes, but my! wouldn't ' jnviting possibilities of the games to % N bound and westbound, mounted to | it be fine if we could hold out the | those not having access to clubs or Boston, cxpressing their L hr T kish T l‘ "to follow his lead in any ge . g Heavy weight, 19¢ each, oy . e - to shut From that it would seem that the | ;yent houses were forced ) 14,969,792 tons. And this is, roundly, | rest of the year? It won't hurt us | private grounds. may take regarding the M i ercerlzed lable rything in good work- | [2ithful home folk. the all-the-year- | Weria round neighborhoods, to whom we | g turn for help and comfort. | tween the two governments. If the | sounded like the patter of myriad | come, with « German government lives up to this | prickbats on a tin roof. We became | ing order. o calculation was that | by 1925 the tratiic would reach seven- i 0 | way is open for a settlement of the | gown their windows and clo.se the one-half the ostimate for a maximum | t0 try it for, after all. w hen sick- | = | crisis which has been impending be- | doors to keep out the moise. It|,verage tonnage for some time to | eSS and sorrow come to us, it's the | The Longest Straight Streets in the ferisis. These men but mtiment of the people they azine) iyernors of the several hs Of this nation * = » * er to vou an expression nce and support in this * deep international con- e resolution, “and to their readiness to fol- note, if it disavows the attack on the Arabic and can prove its contentions, or if it offers a satisfactory explana- tion, there is no fear of a rupture between the two nations, that diplo- matic relations will be severed or that ultimately war will be declared. President Wilson has time and again interested and walked over to where the two handsome shovelers were pitching coal to their hearts delight. “You are some shoveler,” we re- marked to the man in command. “%ome shoveler is right,” he came back in the vernacular, stopping for the moment to rest upon his trusty teen million tons. Though, unlike Suez, the Panama canal was not constructed by the gov- ernment to make money, it is interest- | ing to recall that De ILesseps em- barked on it as a business enterprise, | and his estimate of cost was approxi mately the same as the actual invest- | ment the United States has made. It A Slight on Ironton, O. (Ohio State Journal.) Tt is announced that Julia Marlowe | a0 compare with Fifth avenue, and | g4-inch. Special value 50c yard. The loss | these are both on Manhattan Island. | of a star will darken the drama very | FTOm its souce in the asphalt bol- an actress who hon- | t0ms of Washington to where it loses never made always to Will retire from the st w1 the stage, Ay to the pit. In the world as known to Baede- | ker there are only two streets that it | itself in the coalmiddens of the Har- the | 1em river at 143rd street, the evenue ‘ | (Simeon Strunsky in Harper Mug~[ Damask Matting Suit Cases 24-inch. Special 85c each. Value 98c. . i i s el i intelligence and culture of the peo- | TUNS @ course of almost exactly seven E i told jerman govern- | weapon. would he gratifying if, in time, the | in [ ! f al E o in s Smatters fSh SIDSEEl LS v S business should be sufficient to liquid- | Ple. There are many editorials and | Miles. It runs true to the North j 7 Tni States “ ci a shoveler is y H _ ; Sies ; A i I oo ihestl ol Dot ment Uureiphoreehe tiniian Sises What kind of a shoveler is vour | % %ouy nundred millions put into | dispatches announcing the retirment | SUar without a turn, with only = « | Bpgumy Fib Suit Case: or and maintain the | St2nds onl the much discussed German [ partner?” we continued, to get a line | (h, waterway, but, meanwhile, there | F Julia Marlowe, all of which refer | SNEI€ Dause, rimly bent on its bus- re Sui S Bfare of the nation ana | SuPmarine policy and the German gov- | on the situation. will be no concern anout that. As a | [0 hler residence in Ohio: but they | [Dess, fn o wav colemiated to make | ‘ople" ernment knows the feeling of the “Oh,” replied the boss, “he is not [ public improvement, with possibilities | .'flll‘sorm to omit rr‘ff‘v‘:‘.fll‘(‘ to h"rl el e A“H’:\(\' ‘ ¢ of inestimable service, the canal i [ retidence at Ironton. Hven hermore | ,\\ \ican i 1t rivals are Eighth ave. | words, the Governors say: B RS i 5 & Bl pretentious bhiographers omit that. | . . e Hig] ave- A s say worth what it cost, and it is sufficient | pretent e st Ralr il o h eatianion You Woodrow Wilson.” | ground for satisfaction that It has | 1% refer to her residence as Ports | 100 o gome nine hundred feet lone - & S been built out of the national incom Incinhaul Bun i caresrong B . 2 ; the popular sentiment of bae © | ton out. This is not treating Ironton | &T: and, still farther west, Tenth, c: R iain in this hour | Amsterdam, avenue, the titan of 4!l js with the portents of 24-inch, made with short straps. Special $1.835 each. Value $1.69 American people. That Germany is | \hat you would call a fancy shoveler; willing to even go out of her way | put he is a d—m good shoveler.” to avoid a break is made manifest And we second the motion. by this timely communication. The honor and dignity of the United States must be upheld whatever the outcome and it is to be hoped that ol the Bditor othinal Herala s the two governments can get to- 7 : Sir: Will you kindly publish the gether once and for all time and avoid answers to the following questions: a serious break. What is the meaning of the syllable “teen” on the numbers from thirteen to nineteen? Straw Bags At 49c, 79c, 98c each. Trunks 83.98 to $22.50 each. ‘h“;:‘ ’fi‘n’;"u"alfim‘;;: :e(‘;f"fiaf?“‘”"?l‘l‘i right, for that city is entitled to | 70 £ B e e e el e slightimonlononli nolseron Rark| RuibS TNk wayaipnine Brallses u py L1l “fould r?n.) ably c'o\erlo\or)thmn.. m_)'st this great woman’'s fame. | m_]d down as determined in the prim- of operation, maintenance, deprecia- | ~The writer remembers her well, | ¢V2l Plue-print shaped by the cit tion account, interest on capital and | Her home was on the same stroet | [A(€rs some time about the year amortlzatlox:l, For these-ten and one- | with his office, and only a block away 43.?0- All three streets have char- half months the tolls amounted to $4,- | and he saw her nearly every day, | 2C{°T 88 well as length, but Fifth 313,383, The canal earned $230,833, | playing in front of her father's cob. | 2Venue alone has significance over and above current expenses of | Ling shop—a happy-hearted girl at- e operation and maintenance. With the | tractive in face, form and motion in | Dr. Cook Exploring Again. Standard Patterm conclusion of the war it would not be | those early d She went with her (Torrington Begiater.) ensive visit through all Had the United States Commission | “to oo sach numbers as twenty and | SUPIIsing to see a rapid rise in trafiic | father and mother from Ironton to o WAl September Number Designer ' now West of the Mississippi he s e R E." | to ten million cargo tons, with annual | Portsmouth, and soon after to Cin- | Dr: Frederick A. Ccok is reported | ready. Price 10c copy. st o & on Industrial Relations lived long | thirty, ete? : revenue of about the same number of | cinnati; and the next time we saw | (0 have passed through Manila lately | Large Illustrated Standard Furhion fith the predominant 1dea | onough,—it died a natural deatn last | New Britain, Aug.’23, 1915. dollars, | her was when she came to Ironton | °0 his way to India, with the intention | Books (Fall Number). Price 20e, nes had been completely | Mongay,—and had the members of ey —_— with a Pinafors company and played :;'f“:':?:c(‘dl{;f ‘1?\ T”.”'Tha'a":’ :m: (RS e 5 g Mt Everest, the highes uring the present acute | y.¢ Ccommission j e 1. Teen is a suffix denoting AND “Busts” More Proce “Little Buttercup.” The perfor nce journeved to usts” More Precedents. ! e performa ; ) 5 2 cw e s e i ia=lcivenMin ol {on e 1 ikw Richi [BLCa il theRVORICTRDE RGOS Kimayibe e that ever: man who f f 2 TEN: added to the numerals from y Bridgeport, in this state, and made a filled to greet the delightful girl, | Temembered as the man who climbed . Jigclt & real American | giuqy of conditions there, they would | LPTee to nine to form those from Under the ahove forceful if inele- | Julin Marlowe is her s (or didn’t climb) Mount McKinley, behind Woodrow Wilson. { pave found a cause for social unrest thirteen to nineteen inclusive. Thus, | gant headline «n esteemed conteui- | her family name was Brough, as near | (€ apex of North America; also as 5 ¥ G 2 ’ sorary recounts the ‘“antics” of the | as we c = T the explor 2 2 [Bemocrats, Progressives | ¢ . girerent from any they men. | LCUrteen means four and ten ¥ Wwe can remember after 50 yea he xplorer who discovered (or | s y < s i S . | bresident during a litte trip to Phil- | have by ; | idn’t discover) the North Pol 5 b 2. When used as a termination of | Preside X A Eoneiby il Butiwcidotninichcnnglilc idnitidiscoser)isthe NortheEole: e onists. The only devia- | tjon in the numerous reports being s s S R G ton, | delphia_which he evidently did not | few women in the world are ontill‘(-tl | vwrote books about both exploits which lis sentiment was found in | mode public this week. And the main | FUMe . 1: 2 ; . s hC" put down in the secret service news | to more praise than Fanny Brough, | AT¢ classified as exploration or ro- d Milwaukee, Where a| .ouce of the social unrest, if strikes The numeral itse: esignates ow | notebook. mance, according to the way you look | = > sany ti i . in sixty, Before six o'clock in the morning | I at | - y,and ultra-pro-German | ..., o jabeled thus, paradoxical as | T2V times ten is computed: in sixty, e S [ ]'(h}"_m- i e : | says: “During the last seven months » g . | is only fair to say that in recent | Fajr Play has in its editorials | TEN, TWEN., THIRT. ondent of the Washington ently sent by that paper nvass of western states, rpose of sounding the e political situation pre- — he campaign of 1916.| BRIPGEPORT AND THE FUTURE.| What is the meaning of the syllable Agents for 199-201 -2 MAIN STHEET The Failure Which is Success. ‘were on the other side | ; 2 times. ias e : o may seem, is Prosperity. Not po to Philadelphia for a it to his olliers.) years Dr. Cook ha ree 5 3 _Editor. : ; . vea : s succeeded In con- | S oAl . o by | "against the President. golory oculist. He returned in the evening | _The Universal Tragedy of Mankind | vincing a large number of Americans | bug thercir remterey Eorents Justly not so many of these by rail in the regular train and was | lles in the discrepancy between one's | that he really did reach the Pols, and | -no g Crepy rendered sreat service last they are not as great driven to the White House in a hir- | 1deals and deeds. What we wish to | a still YflrRPrAnumhor e s:n(:erel\' to the nullmnn of forcign-born citi- some are willing to be ed automobile. As a little diversion | 40, What we mean to do, and then— | helieved he reached 1t, whether he | Gers of SIRIslcountey, Sspecially. o me are W 5 An actress out west was married | while he was away he managed to | What we actually do! Or, ¢ OEMAN JANCH AUSLIDE MEgRIAN Lot o s as ans ally ! Or, more often, | did or The Mount Everes ost | 1o i g ating, these then it thirty minutes after receiving a pro- | get lost on the road, had luncheon | 8las! what is left undone. Here is ‘\‘fl]';"rwi‘l::l:\ nl~.r~“..mn)v»'.‘y:'r’u‘v:'rm-( aqy:;::}mm FRir s iay hasslousht for, Ehe Baid, that the vast| = . o . o A _ BTl posal. One time when the matrimony | tnannounced in the public dining | the tragedy of aspiration which | the climhing of Mount McKinley, | rights of the latter and for truth, the American people | LUTR Of affairs there is no peace in| wagon ran faster than the divorce | rcom of a hotel and strolled through | Whithers and dwindles into inactivity | though it will probably never be set- | always maintaining an American at- i oodi‘ow Wilson. And Bridgeport today; there is war, but | mill.—Buffalo Times. the streets of the business section of | OF more expendicney. It was Hamlet's | tled definitely. Dr. Cook scems de- the nation are will- eir case in - his hands; erty; prosperity. And a prosperity never before dreamed of by laboring men in this section of the country, nor by the men who hire and fire labor. And because of this great FACTS AND FANOCIES. | titude and showing true American it Is a joyous war, a laughing, hilar-| e Pl:n(i]lade}l‘phla_ ; tragedy; it has heen the trageds of | termined thiat no suspicion shall at- | ’:”"“‘(; Reils e ;h" N e 2 e mob is never able to conceal its n the surface the story sounds | €V person who has ever walked | {nch to latest enterprise. A o DL SR SR UOCH NGRS Ok I W lous; promising war for the working- | acntity completely. 1f the governor | like a little adventure for the presi. | this carth, from the half-naked sav- | witlined hix plans Tong before Jenving | constitutes _“true American spirit.” il deal honestls | Men engaged in it. And it is lable | or Georgin wants to find Leo Frank’s | dent who recently has heen the sub- | A%e up. If this were all it would | America, he intends t have with him | And~perhaps he fsn't. It will oocur 9 / Y| to go an until the day when the for- | murderers, he can do so without much | ject for greater sclicitude on the part | MAn that there is nothing fo o | witnesses whose word will be unques. | [0 MO8t citizens, and certainly to tion ithafy may come| . " . o top coming in, when Bu- | trouble, we guess.—Rochester Herald. | of police and sccret service men than | £3ined by high ambitions and noble | tionable. Tle looks to the climbing of | 705t ©ditors, that there isn't much | He is a great man, a : — ever before. It is quite within the | PUTPOSes. But it is not all. There | Mount Everest to ifustify hi | “American spirit” about any publi- iros up With any who | [OPe.has recovered from its madness. | congitions in Haltl offer some solace | realm of possivilitios that the presi- | I @ Vast difference between one who | tge world as a brave O om, before | cation that will accept money from moc - AA Dest of il | =4 When there are no more muni-| to the politician and office seeker who | dent was not quite as alone and in- | 2IMS at a lofty mark and one who | honest man. He deliberately chose | 1%, fOT¢/EN government on the faco i tions,of war demanded. is confronted with troubles in our own | dependent as would appear from the | NeVer airms at all. Here are tho | what he considers tna heramet feri oo | of the earth lfi]t‘icl&n,tfi: “t‘e sense Xe Ang at the end of the source of all | ccuntry. The man who was offered | despatch, Secret service men do not | tW0 aiternatives; to take life in glum | cxploration yet unaccomplished, now e term. e 2 every move he makes “Harry Castlemon” or become the greatest city in the state True American Spirit, The men, women, boys and girls who (Bridgeport iegram.) A contemporary recently drew com- are parading tarough the streets of | o chould a sraduate of the Na- | Selves wishing we could locate in | ot fORtemb : Bidgeport thcse jovous days and | val Academy write to Secretary Dan- & {OWR where we could have such |3 2EAR BT ern ]V“x.\bfl“ o = 5 o s i v ror 5 L) B B nd = thrilling nights with exuberant spir- | iels recommending that the authori- ‘j{f‘:};}‘_"‘»‘ f‘“_ the :l”"“ ,TI“;-‘ SR e e 1 or'nnm:ler(:p”; | was all he had got fram Dr. Albert in vain to kindle a its singing and shouting for better | ties cn(;)ouxaglo‘ pur:‘)hsf;]o meetings be- | 50 € CrCT 10\\'nfth(o “;‘l’]_‘“’m’z_m‘r“_ tional pastime, While there C:‘.n be | Although his own letter to the Herr | Sticks. Any Boy Scout can do that i e e lv\c(‘? :Pe CERL G el must be | DU O hhors, whe have pecalias. | B¢ dissent from that conclusion in the | DOKtor had cd for $1,300 rjore | trick nowadivs, b the method b - satisfied ? o they neey any encour- | .. 1€ “CS St vense that baseball is the nati and seemed to imply that he wasn’t defined with ¢ titude in the pay, may be building up a great city | agement oF uny eiles e BolliTER SRR D R some Btoostecab e e oo o badin 0 ationalipros i vibuslyt | beon' | recelying 'similar | books of (hos such as “The i » 3 = bor ihe B ; al pastime, there can be a very | ypous & C - L i s HRE A > he future; they may be tearing lated by the s ir e | oWy For the 10 years we had 5 i : very | = & A < crican Boys' ndy Book,’ et for the most part | °f thef 3 2 ing | formulated s Nu{):\rblt‘(i‘nde.n.t onaered why we could't have suen | decided difference of opinion regard.|monthly amounts. In any case | Amcrican Boys' Handy Book," for in- 2 | down the very foundations of a | necessary? e cadets at both Wes el e T = . | ing the claims of thc mor | Viereck insisted, the payment v stance, but that didn't deter any boy Misbn can be trust. rith > s x fine, interesting necighbors at home diamond in 5 4 f1s e ed: wit | Point and Annapolis always resort to | 1o, W ETERRAR B0 E 00T ¢ hhit | tther respects. £ | legitimate. Dr. Albert declared: “It | from tryi he nation and if left to isticuffs settle those dis : S > 2 RouElNDS i o . & 5 oy Sty ; stlemon” gained the ma ikl . e i o e stioutts ‘k‘: s ‘l“" psefldisbutesftnac s il et R R Ve e The attendance of 47,000 at the | I8 NOU true that an effort has at any | Harry Castlemon” gained the ma- be well. That is why : L el o are not arbitrable. As to the authori- we weren't good all-the-year-round | *PENing of a new ball park in Boston | time been made secretly to ‘nfluence terial for his ories whiic traveling q 7 r er] a £l irs today 4 ies T vay.—New A = b . o o = % Are With You Woodrow ‘I; _t;“" 2 :‘rer ni‘g'{‘l m:l.\‘ g0 22?,{‘2:?. look the other way.—New | , ionpors ourselves, We had known | Was cited as cvidence of the ity i windling away ov nt and leave 'k Sun. : . the presidency of Haiti the other day | always advertise their presence passivity just because it is difficuit The Duke of | v = - : b ; D the Abr v ad- | this prosperity, what is going to hap-| o “hii) he almost died from ex- The president would undoubtedly | 2nd bitter, or to hurl onesclf into the | miral of the Ttalian n:.‘" : -"qm; v';fl1 f enjoy the sensation of going his way | Struggle with such ardor and courage | Mount v 5 ool (New Haven Register) ght of how it will act| ; v : ago ount Everest to the dizzy height of . ’ 4 ing, flourishing Bridgeport, going to — ! | e In Buffalo last Sun there died & I chances for re-election. | , .’ '\ © W " e rut of old, the toil-| Villa rattles along about the “na- | ot one of the privileges of the chief | Sidered. It is the attitude of the | mile above that mark. Tt is doubtful . S 0 iy G and is still familiar to millions of fihan any other president ing, plodding, str!:ggl)m: grljflepm‘z | casy strain as Carranza in discussing | Mecessary and wise for every precau- | lorn h:po”: to do his best while there | jis precipices ‘and glacial wall readers, “Harry Castlemon,” author of a few years ago? Or is Bridgepor! “soverei » i ti o, = T a oft i e s St Ll et R . and atter few 3 & gep the “sovereign people There will | tion to be taken since the ‘“atmo reath lefb in him. The wise | live in the rarefied air of its summit, Wundieatotheriea hich dofiatited ndred other tales which delighted the people assert {heir sovereignty | Mial and poorly balanced minds find | MUst have his philosophy of life | pever returns. h v, - the leisure hours of hoyhood for lon that have been his, it and chase out Villa, Carranza and all | that which is conductive to tragedy. | Whether he consciously formulates it | . prnsghe vl gshaye imade or not—aims higher than he c e isn’ : e »mt surprising if he should = 5 . . can ever | jja caetised | 7 sn't a der who can’'t remember ; of metallic goods in New England, | {ey Post-Expross, tion to the president to assume the | RODe to attain. “The desire of the | favc niactsed lln the past “Houseboat Poys” and as for "Rod- the most active manufacturing center e irn_to the quiet and If Switzerland should min' in the | the people of thc United States whom | the little creature to reach it, but at it Christmas gift in the cighties te life. But then the war Europe might as well make it | e has sworn to serve, he cannot af- least it will 1ift him into pure ai (Waterbury Democrat.) And then “The Sportsmans’ Club” B x it thiey demana matically answer themselves in the | gaiq to feel strong resentment over al- 1:“?.,;"""\" him. For here is hope ' World showed, by documentary evi- | adventures boys of hcalthy mind had Woodrow \;Vllson i | Dot far distant future, questions | leged interference with Swiss trade hy can mitigate the tragedy of | dence, = that the Fatherland—the | ever dreamed of and which weretho = 5 ie is News.) in attai 3 sincer: and broad enough to ing sides with the Germans. But (Indiimapdiis Hew: ainment, but in the sincere and | zine published by George Sylvester O©f today. The heroes of those Yooks riously. And the entire State of Con-| L0 " niral country 1o these which We were with them four weeks of | UNTemitting struggle to attain, Viereck—had accepted mones from | could be anything from making firs nd good of the nation. : 5 e g ot : lt’: 8 % ty of its hustling sister city o on.| one side or the other?—Springfield | dear. delightful, kind. courteous folk, Golf and Tennis vs. Baseball, | counsellor and financial directar of | tracking o panther from the broken e reasons the name Fepublican, and how we did enjoy neighboring | { the German propaganda in the Unit- | tW on tie bushe After reading | among the people of that the sum recceipted for in the , boy has started out to hunt Indians hy. His personal desires published autograph letter, $250, and buffalo in the woodlot, and a the welfare of the nation They never will. Some pen? Is Bridgeport, seething, boil- | yaustion.—Buffalo News. like any private citizens, but this is | that eventual defeat is never con- | 25,000 feet, but the man whose pen name was familiar—- Wilson 'has been tional decorum’ of Mexico in the same | €Xecutive. Now, espccially, is it | 800d soldler ordered ouf on a “foi- | wwhether any human being can scale k of “Frank on the Mississippl,” and a B t-ouble ana t ul going to reach out still further and | be national decorum in Mexico when | Phere” is .productive of the abno Philosopher—and everyone of wus | If Dr. Cook makes the attempt, and ch tro and turmoil | : a , and | rears. We venture to scy that there 3 t | amends for any decepti e Ry | Year g of Connecticut, the largest producer | (g (tper “military chiefs.”"—Roches- It is undoubtedly a great temr 3 cption he may aside the toga of public role of plain ecitizen but in justice to | MOth for the star” may never hely ney the Partiscan’—that wasa favor- in the United States of America? | e may not want him to | T10%¢ are auestions that will auto- | ynanimous. The Alpine republic is | ford to do it. above the paltry and sinister flicker- | A few days ago the New York | Series—in which were contained all : Summer Neighbors More Likable iving for all: tr : y which Bridgeport must consider se-{ the Allies and so to contemplate tak- living for all; true success lies not , pro-German, Anti-American maga. ' forcrunncrs of the “Boy Scout” books | personal desires for the ; i . ; necticut is anxious that the prosperi- | hasn't some just grievance cainst | €¥ery summer for 10 years, those —_— Dr. Heinrich Alhert, German privy | by ribbing two sticks together to on has become such an with such people! We found our- | (ed States. Editor Viereck protested | Of the cxpioits of the heroes many a i with the twe s have never vet en- fnehwith staeiiws as made, to be sure. He thriving town. For they can easily | American public opinion,” and that on the prairi fter the ar so his our summer neighbors for four weeks ; of the game. Would golf draw such | Whatever had been done to win information was first hand, and he S s m out of cach year, and, coming fo | % €TOWd, We are asked, or tennis | AMerican sympathy had heen done | knew whereof he wrote. Eince tho the choice of working on lower wages e German propaganda in the| .oung it up, it wasn't very long, com- , but football would draw a hig. | IN the open.” It happens that there | time the “Frank” books were pub- 2 United States has become a political i NY’S REQUEST o G G ) OO me 6..- s has ome political | pared with the stay-at-home wee ger crowd, and if crowds are the |1S Another magazine published in | lished the styles in herocs and hero- i 5 . E Eett s s . conspiracy against the government| nf 15 years with home neighbors, | ¢Vidence, then football, not baschall | NeW York called Fair Play, which |ines of bovieh romance: has changed JPS, but to the point, Or, if there should be a great rush | and people of the United States, Doc- | §mall wonder that we had found out | i5 the national game; all the mope | F4s been actively pro-German dur- | No more do we have the moral tacked gragraph message from | of labor to the scene of prosperity in | UMments in possession of the World| 411 the faults and fallings of tha | 50 Decause it is amatour and not pro- | N8 the war. Its editor a Hun- | on so conspicuously, or the sage: ad- ovémment 49 #ho' gov- | Bridgevort there would be a. custail- S‘}:‘::gl.‘tlfll‘ri?\‘p‘{xlfl(“fl mef!;:clxsgnm,;o?(h” home town folk: We had known | fessional. z ‘,'.mridn (‘1‘/,1\nd named Marcus I;(ra\:n, :;14 ]lmHml ;wul by the paragraph but o T a for rern- F intimately. - But we do not gc reas who is abroad now on a “secret mis- | the boys of thirty years ago could 't States. And vorkers " y 2 them so long and so intimately. Our e not go upon this reason- ty | the United ; ment of tl’}e workers’ joy, for their | ment conducts on American soil 4 | gummer neighbors like ourselves, al- | ing—that attendance must decide the | $ion. The New York World of | skip all that and hustle through to iled with much satisfac- | hour of triumph was made possible | propaganda against the president of [ ways relax from the trying, work-a- | naticnal game. e must bar out | August 21 prints a reproduction of a | the real meat of the story. An old ple over whom the clouds | because of the law of supply and de- | the United States, against the admin- | day part of life, and arc on their | both baschball and football so far as | check for $5.000 made out to the fricnd of bovhood has gone. with been hovering since the | mand. There are not enough skilled ‘:‘n‘;"‘";)" aéfimdnst‘ the C?i“ir::s-,asalq& best behavior. Almost anybody can | the evidence of mere crowds is con- | Fair Play Printing and Publishing | cn:ar11o> Austin Fosdick, ‘“Harry | ; ; B crican industry an erican 1a- | be good for four weeks. While we are | cerned. We submit that ational | company on May 28, 1915, bearing | Castiemon.” on American lives. For, round. in Bridgeport X z Za i & e we are | e it that the national : g i laborers to go around.ir d8CPOTL | hor, against the national intesrity it- | away from home we wear a freshly | same more truly is mot the game | the signature of “J. Bernstorff, B . > pree. the German com- | today. Those who are in possession | self—a propaganda that jeopardizes| combed head of hair, a smile, and ° that the nation watches, but {ho | German ambassador to the United means that Kaiser Wil- | of such skill are welcomed in any| Amecrican relations with other co pretty clothes, €ven of morning: At ime that the nation plays. Base- | States. It wil be interesting to see want an open breach | shop in Bridgeport. As a conse- | tries and mignt in certain eventual home we wear a doubtful looking | kall and football are soctacular | What explanation will be offered for | sions at 4 game in Boston: Detroit fitry and that he will | quence the laborers are-playing.the ties imperil the safety of the country | breakfast cap, a frown. and a cov- | games, meant to be watched. (‘,n]fitha! The World also prints a re- | pays $15,008 for the release of Pitcher Bl avoia | 4 u —the federal authorities can hardiy | erall apron. Away from home we | and tennis are games that do not | Production of a letter from Ambas- | James. What more is needed to show g RO 3 void | employers against each other, and | remain indifferent.—New York | are bright, vivacious witty, always | afford much of a spectacle, but to |sador Bernstarff to Mr. Braum, dat- | that baséball is losing its grip?— | the first ray | the laborers are ~winning, hands | World. ,putting our best foot forward, and, | furnish real enjoyment must be played | ed March 15, 1915, i which he | Philadeiphia Ledger. those who remain behind them with Thirty-two thousand paid admin-

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