New Britain Herald Newspaper, September 21, 1915, Page 6

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

medium in 8 and pre! dvertise n_sale at Hota- "St. and_Broad i Board Walk, Hartrord depot. : contemplated against Dr. Dumba. | right. Connecticut knows they are|is a commodity we possess and the et Ul B e - - A The Austro-Hungarian ambassador ) right. Kentucky knows they are ul];os Wish to buy. d loan | needs, as we placed our orders months | A has not helped his case any by mak- | right. Wisconsin knows they are|, .j‘c‘;‘,fi,‘;,‘:j:}“iéfi'&éfififi"iia it is 280 for all our Linens with this Sale 1 ing the letter to Secretary Lansing | right. The democracy of the three|a matter of incidential interest only | iR view, to supply the housewives, | | public. In- this letter the Ambas- |states aforementioned long ago en- | how the money is to be used. It is | hotel and bt‘““‘"ghf’“seL};e;epreii;:f snts of schools the juld follow the ex- s "H. Holmes, of New . which the peoples of the allied gov- % | Beratc with the bu-|Telterated his contentlons, previously | for front seats on the democratic | ernments of Europe need, but when ?brl:un(;l:eallol hl;vr;ens, etc..1 0 SEs New records go on sale 0 2 our | tion of the Depart. | SXPressed, that nationals of his coun- | band wagon. Republicans, progres- | the argument is advanced. as it h‘]f et e ey et all over the country on the P 2 try working in the TUnited States | sives, all, are beginning to see the been in some quarters, that it shou ATancealibavellassai e oW s AT | 20t ofevery Lk ping to Ameri- of the United long before all be obliterated. ear or so have ists in allow- A . N i c eacl 2 ‘;‘mmigmms ©| Therein the ambassador spotls nis | will not make much of a showing| of it President Wilson offered his ser- value. L“}f;;g}ikc‘gg;}fgt each. -DISC R A whole Dplea. That one point has |against Woodrow Wilson, according | Vices in any way that migl;l'. ls\u_ltfl(')};l; Extra Al el s i FOR e tpr “c;lp S | never been the real issue. The en- | to all predictions,—neither will the i’f“l“gere"‘s Endichatioficeiigleshs 50c each. forelen , to them, | 4 case against Dr. Dumba is built | Bull Moose outfit, or what remains of |~ [a the meantime this nation has & 2 TRAXCLOSIS §6y may never prob- | ., on the following statement gleaned | it, have much to say. The only op- | life of its own to live and it is justi- “?’::'cflh values. Linen week price —nan b el “";"’l they MaY | £, the message James Archibald | position Wilson may expect will come | fled in living it. We e O i as| HUCK AND DAMASK TOWELS i :‘esa s°$° his messenger, was carrying to the | from some of America’s leading i‘fa’t‘]f:“;:';‘l;“:;lgagu;‘;tfi,rngeds‘whm’, Extra values. Linen week price H ten to ourb the | poroigy Omoe of Austria-Hungary. | “patriots,” some of the ssme ik as | e e wranted oinerwice That | 25¢ each. _ ; Latest Song and Dance Hits--Here These decade - the | . 4 under the impression that we | the “Friends of Peace,” and others |is what we are in the world for. We | See our Huck Towelsat 1234c each. o will bel .o i Sl e e e e are not proposing to loan a huge sum TURKISH TOWELS A B1708 IT'S TULIP TIME IN HOLLAND. Ethel Costello, so- than the Di- | § e boantioly provent fe igs SAseE eSS oM g o eyi Torl fhe] purpese foflnrolonss Large, heavy, well filled kinds. Ex- o i prano, and Andrea Sarto, baritone Boien. ™ ¢ | duction ‘of war materials in Bethle- | country far across the . briny deep. |, the war. = We are not proposing {8 values. Linen week price 13%c, 10cinch < rHE SWEETEST GIRL IN MONTEREY. James Reed ; be e:::; hem and the Middle- West, at any | Led by one William J. Bryan, the | to loan a huge sum of money in ordec | 19¢ c“(:éAl{FS D A =5 { tenor, and James F. Harrison, baritone. 3 ] ige ts ma 2 iLELs ) FRIS o “p v ow y D ieeiL, | rate strongly disorgantze it 'and hold | Prince of Peace, these cohorts of tne | that either set of belligeronts may | . ;lq W3 SO0 SO0 por, [N A jgoq | HMFLLO FRISCO! From “Follies of 1015.” Fiida Mor § it up for months, which, according to | unsatisfied may make some noise in | 82in an advantage ov AV | valt Linen week price 89¢ cach. To-inch 4 . ris contralto, and Sam Ash, tenor. rings in differ- A i A 3 have goods on our shelves an x r = CASES 2 | COME BACK, DIXIE! (Wenrich.) Billy Burton, tenor, " the statement of the German military | the Big Tent; but it will be nothing e e A S Eioh SHEETS AND PILLOW CASES s Mittmate result| ... . 15 of great importance, and | more nor less than the muffled beat ok I s o e te for the eox. | Seemless sheets, size 2 1-4x2 1-2 yds. | | and Herbert Stuart, baritone. A i“"’:‘“‘ Which amply outweighs the relatively | of a bass drum in a funeral dirge. | Press purpose of selling }gherrln“t:dtlglgfe Extra valu;mli:?)ev?v Véf‘e&%flce 69c ea. A 1808’ | sc&g]})fl[fir Dtt,m::loocn. (Mack & Smith.) George H. TS ” ce. e al v- SEE 2 « , tenor. d other educators | o..;) expenditure of money. The country has already tired of these :2;2‘32’: = Eorope are here first to | Size 45x36. Extra values. Linen 10-inch 4 GAGOLINE GUS AND HIS JITNEY 'BUS, George H. ming chaos and | | pny of the contentions offered by | mumblings, and that, in the main, is | puy momey of us and thon to spend | Week price 123c each. et { O'Connor, tenor. D the tide of de- | 41y Ampassador in his own defense | the reason why Tepublicans and |it on American-made goods. It's a S ( DOWN IN BOM-BOMBAY. Arthur Collins, baritone federal com-| .o peen thrown out of court by |democrats—true Americans—are for | curious and partisan ming that “";";‘:‘ S eci l w d esd ;‘0 lxfi?:; { and Byron G. Harlan, tenor, Philander P.| o grorementioned statement. While | the most part going to unite on the | OffT Oblections 1o that provedure. p a edan ay 63c TELL ME SOME MORE, | "¢ " Von' Tilery:: /AtH e S sRenaation | 0 2N many who! willl iy | man iwho has madh wood. 1n e 2ur Samtfi”es o,;‘hacvsfil;,‘;mo S - g Fields, baritone. g are great enou 3 - uly be made Am- | poipjze with him and lament the fact | White House,—Woodrow Wilson {uring more out of pure emotion. Momln A 1804, | VITTLE GREY MOTHER. James Reed, tenor, and It was fitting that | ;. .o given no hearing before judg- ¢ P Yoo { _ James F. Harrison, baritone. Orchestra accompaniment. should have Ten Million Minutemen. H | PAINTING THAT MOTHER OF MINE. Henry Burr, ment was passed upon him, there are So an o { tenor. ted with Indepen- uthern Prosperity Rising. (Meriden Record.) \ b those who know that a hearing was (Waterbury Democrat-) 7% 3 a SO e In m l'oi in n ‘whose heredita- | 5 merica needs e - E b d ed L D R d B e ands :otn::‘:"m";’"’h::“hhe ;""?tte;‘mt‘;d T:e south is finding that it isn’t | 1776 the country was saved by T;:s er. € Newe§l ance ecoras . e admitte © | so badly off after all. Putting cotton | minutemen—its citizen soldiery. © H dk h f C ; de to understand the| outhorship of the letter that was [On the contraband list, the thing | rugged farmers, pioneers, of the New andkerciie ases e 0;"::3:,‘,‘7“?'::‘5 (Romberg.) . Fox trot. ..Guido Deing it of Liberty. By such | s0unq an the person of Archibald the tllmt. }:'as feare(_i more than anything E;ggl_aLnd mnsv, all were trained ngc \:;flue& Ltinen week special -“anh 1 HOP A JITNEY WITH ME and MY LITTLE GIRL, e W ¥ acidor) Gonvicteal Rimssir WAyl es Bas BRG (lttlefelece &0 fan, and |imintamon. None dedscdifors iwecs [ Wesnescar iaces 28 R9) O (Donovan and Von Tilzer.) One Step. Guido Deiro, 2 in fact has been followed by slight | excused—not even the pious parson. C Eacu 65¢c zer. d er around the same | that moment he pleaded gullty to the | rise in price instead of ruinous 'de- | Today these United States hold a | These make desirable Xmas gifts Boocraien M can be but one | charges upon which his recall were |cline. Many factors tend to en- | hundred milllons population. That e A 5705 HOLD ME IN YOUR dLovm(; ARMS. (Hirsch.) Fox iiting of all peoples s1i. | courage ‘the south. The eople enroll ten million a 12-inc rot. rince’s Band. ‘of intelligent democ- e e s (L realize now how far their fegrs pot ::I;e?x:‘isl'nxemgagefense. Severe train- ¢ $1.00 SILVER FOX TROT. {(Lodge.) Prince's Band. i matp means by which the Austro- |jast year fell short of realization. | ing is nof necessary, nor hard service. G i i FEIST MEDLEY. - (Introducing “Firefly” and “Coma Hungarian ambassador could “strong- | The cotton growers lost money bDe- é“i every male should be drilled—a . L A 5706 : Back, Dixie”) . One Step. Prince's Band. 4k ritain, with our great | 1y disorganize” and “hold up far | CRuse Of the low prices but they sold | minuteman-ready for instant service N e 12-inch | WITMARK MEDLEY, ~(Introducing “Sweet Kentuicky pulation, Yealize What | months” the industries In Bethlehem | 2UU0% 25 much cotton abroad in | as in 1776. — b A «Aumie’ Bkinner's Chicken Dinner) . Ohe. Mo ‘twelve months as in eit] ) v " { e many people Of Va- |'and the Middle West. That this Was | two yea, i Ttoamer of the | Peace for America will be sure : Prince’s Band. ttled in one com- years previous. It seems likely | with that defense, and a powerful |and Burton is one of them. When e Jion sottle: e even contemplated shows conspiracy | that still more of the cotton will be | navy. It is far cheaper to expend |i: is recalled that he must have op- A 5707 OMAR KHAYYAM. (Romberg. Fo: D! Br proper conditions tney | against the industrial welfare of the |needed both at home and abroad this | money to prevent war than to meet | erated, according to his own confes- 12-inch < mg:yns‘;bs WALHW © (Soval}: Prisce’s Opohestra sether in real harmony. | United States, a. conspiracy that on | {onc fgzleexp‘:sgil::sdl o slcta B | tusToonfiotJE Nanslwiliieyeriatiacil| Bion belopalnn e TRn e Eog wairee i SHAPTRO MEDLEY. (Introducing “Played by a Mili- 4 s constantly/ - | Amerion it we o prepave. ir. the New Britain and other savings i [ gy 4 - « ) n 0 - -} ‘:th::r;nieom::t:o:t:;a ::e fa:e :t l;!mag,dexthe preiencedor g::zg;gt.o sdorever, t!il;lgland lsb ex- P b e e P rer :\2,;;(;?1 <: ;?r‘;"ncl::n%mdnmm in Bom-Bombay.”) One Step. A » e ustro-Hungarian ambassador 0 everything possible to 'I'he Gushing Habit, lesser defalcations, it is evident that o 2 . L . \ ) My ) . (Gilbert and Friedland. ge a state of discontent- | and his accomplices intolerable In | Strengthen the cotton market, in or- | o e ESVEE RO there was a moral deficiency in this SRV G s e POE . ST 4 ation of the various | this country. - Their crime was the g::m;oemcs)duxfle;;cetd ?hethanfl-Bti;tigh The sushing habit 1s another form | W27 Which no cne thought possible | ne Step. . by ky e. n e sou v —_— —_— H lasses, a smoldering civ- | greater because of the fact that they | the embargo. Not the least hel})lu}l of the hysterical frenzy. The subject Job R e Tons | the idea of Mr. Holmes | were accredited representatives of | factor has been the action of the |iS to the point now because in too e e, secretary of the treasury in announc- | Many quarters there is a tendency, (San Francisco Star.) bureau of naturaliza- all those of foreign to itake out citizen- Not withstaniding the Insult he has : out of the sixteenth aistrict of | WHAT OTHERS SAY dded to lgj\’iry by the letter written | Illinois, from whence ‘have come —_—— NEW BRITAIN’S BUSIEST to Secretary Lansing, the case of Dr. | some of the staunchest war horses Views o.. all sides of timely BIG STORE Dumba, the Austro-Hungarian am- | politics ever produced, the leaders questions as discussed in ex- “ALWAYS RELIABLE” bassador 18 a closed incident. He Wwill | have agreed that Woodrow Wilson is changes that come to the S T i | not be handed his passports any soon- | the first and only choice Of the Herald Office, e er an account of the extravagant |democracy in 1916. We quote:— “To lnen ee charges he has made, without any |set aside Woodrow Wilson—even to The Proposed Loan. foundation nor will he be called to ac- count for the implied and apparent disrespect he heaped upon the United States Government and its officials in an attempt to becloud the issue of his recall. High officials have timated that no further charges are in- sador did not state the case with any | great degree of accuracy. He merely making arms and munitions of war far the Allies were under pale of death should they return to their na- tive land and that it was his sworn duty to so warn them. governments that are on friendly terms with the United States. X o ILLINOIS TO THE FRONT. permit him to step aside—would be a confession of political bankruptcy end mental senility. For the demo- cracy, with the situation as it is and as it is likely to remain, it is Wilson or nobody.” And, we hasten to ada, these prophets of dear old Illinois are dorsed Woodrow Wilson and, before the first snow, there will be a rush light. For Woodrow Wilson stands head and shoulders over any one else in the political arena. Reason is gradually dawning in all corners of the country. The Grand Old Party ing the placing of $30,000,000 gold at the disposal of the in cotton (New Haven Journal-Courier.) There is not the slightest reason for any normal person getting excited over the proposed loan to the allied governments of Europe of a billion dollars. We admit that we have no comprehension of what a billion col- lars look like, but we hope we know enough to appreciate the fact that it of interest, of course, that it will be expended in this country for products not be loaned hecause it will tend to continue the war, emotion gets the better of judgment. The Duropean war is not a horrid creation of our brains and there is not the remotest reason to believe that we have any power to stop it. In the early stages not to reform or discipline, but tu gush; to swell with emotion over the McMILLAN’S A Six Day Offering of Unusual Values | We dare this our greatest | special price reductions. ing conditions abroad, which means that prices have advanced consider- Linens. | TABLE DAMASK BY THE YARD Extra values. Linen week prices 50c, 75c, $1.00 yard. TABLE CLOTHS READY FOR USE Hemstitched or scalloped. Extra “I will not put pins into my dear | teacher’s chair.” (Tacks will hurt R T belt banks, without interest, to be |f2llen angels who are sent to prisons. | the old duffer just as much anyway.) this part of the PAYING UNCLE SAM, used in making cotton loans at o | The kind of gush we are thinking of “I will not uarrel and fight with It is now the intention of the United | F2te DOt to exceed 6 per cent. That |8 the windiness that is fond of de-|my big brothers in 1915 (What educational ful psychological effect, and will a: it is the £ ese peoble, teach- | aided by national funds to get back | doubtless be followed by other de- |Should not be punished; it is the form | js, in the winter time.) ! Bnd write, to know | from Burope last Summer when. the | POSits for the same purpose if thoy | °f Pabble which we assoclate with| I will be kind to dumb animals, land, and the meth- nment. Because the | not reimbursed Uncle Sam for his |improvement that has already begun : better keep out of this neighborhood) | of the United States is 0 | trouble. There were $2,750,000 ap- IR the south, aided by the grawn |07 the mirror and admire tsell proc| I will not throw stones at the o L ¢ L ey ! .. | digiously. It is not only an absurd an beggars.” (Bricks will make them b, &nything most of these | propriated by Congress for this relief | 7oPS end thriving ’g:g:;;?‘;:: Farperovs Babit hitia fimorbial onel| poneRitou e Sl acqualnted with, | work. Figures at the State depart- | perous, the whole country will be, | H¥sterical gush and windiness serve “I will not—" (Oh, that’s enough. #hance 0f doing £00d | ment show that a trifle more than no good ends, except to butt ChCK |They say the sood die young, and I #ield. The percentage | $2,000,000 was used.. Because letters EORD el T I 'l‘hgy Bed| mantitonliyshuntil Lioa toh At Rired e n b f 2ov s The Woolen Sacrifice. to deccive the pecwle for a time, 10 |peadeqd boy in the next street who ong ose of foreign | of credit and other means of getting 5 deceive them as to their brains and | ,cx his tonZte out at me yestor- to these .shores is | financial ald were of no use, and (Waterbury Democrat.) nerves, to prevent them from regard- | g,y ) 1ing, and these are the | gold was unobtainable, many of the Wool, iwool, wool! Everybody |Ing increasing idiocy and: hysterla it | hom the schemers and | Americans caught abroad had - to | Ner® is talking wool. Everybody is|¢lear enough in e e A Pledg> s of nationa . ® always centering thelr | make application at the varlous con- | SOlleCtnE il the old woolen §00ds | g gesuredly to fight the malady is (New York Sun.) I8 this submerged por- | sular offices for some of this money, | (0¢Y ¢8R find In their houses and |not to go “up in the air” on political | «r gop. Smith, citizen by birth | )pulation that is being f by the oratorical ef- Hists and the dis- present war ‘in Bu- K ned the sentiment of the question of immi- kreat number to be heard from, and | mufflers.” So reads a dispatch from i i i ; , E Bridgeport Post.) ropagandist; ihe organized strength | : i i 2 4 i f how it should be dealt | these are the ones who will suffer the | Northern Italy. These supplies are oDt m(m; i=f:e State is statied gf ‘ppagcxfi st’ we:knesgs; to flpposcga‘n { Hearing is believing. Do not “buy unili ey next sesslon of Congress | .law at the hands of the United States | 071V fOT one army, and these con- |, “oi® FATE € PECRE L i Tsav- | far as in my power lies the civic her- | have heard the FAVORITE. ple there may be a revi- what is going on pren : : e . P of our Immigration laws. | many people in this day and genera- | all over Europe. And the Italian | by the Pusiness world, active in cliy | B0, L s in o E 3 irs, once holding the s - Sam, . ingent method of allow- | tion, exerclsing all the good provi- [ People are making the sacrifice for | g, G"(7 ROMINE T0e S BN BT o deq jacknife, into iInternational id 1 to enter the country | sions of the United States government | the first time. The people of France, | opyron work, ways where nighwaymen lurk; o | iy f in vogue. - It is a well that many of those who vernment inspectors are ‘yflcally pofit to enter | gre indeed strange. The more some believe it,” and again: “If such men | burify it of factionalism and error, g decent: people. This | pegple have donme for them, the less | oo, s etk Rfleokn sone hyiaToaniwel st anogingeveryinay.gby (reatrainy e T he L m clothing ever scarcer. The|" It appears that the defalcation is | selfish impulse and cultivation of san- 4 | they appreciate the assistance. ‘nat | ablebodied men of Europe will be | apout $36,000. Not large, it is true. | ity with courage, to contribute so d in the work of| the government should be forced into | warmly dressed and well shod this | ynless there are still undiscovered | far as I may to the spread of true ! 7 . s RS ople fit citizens of the | the position of prosecutor of those it :;":'ce:m Sinevgmust hefito stand in | icotings. Some of this will be rc-|Americanism in this time of test. 1| i fr"“l'd':“‘m"ef\ '232{’]:‘5;‘;" ‘;"]’U':’? D eeata s ol ,',',f;f,"":, ’;‘ yrog: A . u’ or e WOo- , i 2 | sl 'S y si v - | order ha! 4 $ b 2 e < / - the method suggest- | had gone out of its way to benefit is [ o > TERIRCR | BUE (OF the woo ;‘:‘O’;ee‘it;"’t;:: Pond andibvitheniios ,iiv,,,f‘i;"féi,’p sm“f SRRl Ll e e covered that someone stitution to cut Framk's throat, atendent Holmes. Every | the last step. It is to be hoped that | will be few woolen stockings and | But it is not the amount that is of | my shoulders and not twist the other | had carele Isfe o door, linlockedy Bdoh Aincidenss’ Me FERNCEEEEN édd of an educational in- | 5] those recalcitrants will be held up | Woolen shawls and caps and woolen |such serious consideration. That mere- | fellow's neck because he is not look- | and they unceremonious "eFClr“‘;“ at ':“_' 'i"‘l’”‘f ":;"9 TG‘Moddle pri- puld ponder well over | 5 public scorn by the publication of v"v’j‘;lfflgs»mosfl‘;“;h‘ggg; as 'g;,?;ew:ilfi xyf means that there was some desres ing in the direction I do.” 1:g*‘g‘eb“s’“‘l"“m::‘j‘f\,r"“d L crorien S Sha O '.‘(:&“",'n,t.’l?,’t?;;i 3 done in New Britail. | their names and the amounts they | pe few warm garments of any sort | e cifulness upon the par = T Assassin Holt was obviously anxious | than the public suspected, States Government to enter against those individuals who were suit war broke out and who, as yet, have and the United States' was generous in helping the forlorn. By far the great majority of the refugees paid off their indebtedness when they ar- rived home; but there are sull' a Government. It is surprising that so should be so ungrateful and irre- sponsive as to ignore their moral and legal obligations. The ways of man sum isn't so big, as crop values zou; but it is big enough to have a powe are needed. The result is likely <o be a steady growth of the- business shipping them to the committees, who send them to the mills to be re- made into woolen yarn. No old wool is going to waste. Eighteen millipn pairs of woolen stockings /for the soldiers are called for; three million head covers and one million woolen tributions are from only one nation. It is a mere hint of Belgium, Germany, Austria and Servia, and even of the neutral nations adjoining them, did it last winter, and are doing it again —and may have to do it next year, England, Russia, claiming against the terrific bogie of punishment; that tells us in platform efforts that children and criminals pompous sermonizing and hands laid on hearts—the emptiness and windi- ness that incite the public to pose be- or piratical airships, armed by crazy mobs, ‘for on such a craft it is im- possible to steer clear of vertigo or provide rules of law and common sense. Another &ind of Traitor. ings Bank officiul, a man prominent Franklin Burton, former Mayor of Ansonia is the man, and we fancy hundreds of persons who know him are saying this morning: “I cannot the officials and the bank examiner. have I got a little brother for?) “I will not play truant from school tc go fishing or swimming.” (That such as tigers, licns and elephants” | (Stray cats and dogs, however had or by solemn oith of allegiance, of the United States of America, do re- solve from henceforth to avoid the pessimistic negligence, unmanly sur- | render of prerozative and unjust de- | fault of civic duty that give opportun- | ity to the demagogue, the disloyal esies of hypocritical or blind ideal- support my party so far as it promisas to uphold unspotted the AmericAn fla to defend American rights and pro- | tect American citizens; to endeavor to | Courtesi I8 Records Columbia COLUMBIA FAVORITE Easy Terms $50 138 Main St. Double Hallinen Bldg, Records | Guaranteed § was turned over to a conviet farm and another convict, known to be of the | the improvement can be | have failled to “make g00d.” This|left among tens of millions of the | Yet it appears that the pilferings have . in Prisons. to die and relieve the courts of the that those of the present | may be a lesson to those of the future :)001‘, There will be little fuel, too, | been in progress over a period of (Waterbury Republican.} ‘;wc}?se and “;’ ““’l‘(’;"I“flff-";;‘fr;‘;;‘“ | barvel at th et change. . J4n most of the homes, to make the | fifteen years. Worthless notes rep- Down in Montclair, * N. J., two | for his attempt to slap < et | Rk & ' e T op the g00d nature |15k of winter clothing tolerable. Only | resent tho loss, and this is the way | crooks were locked up Monday for | Someone cithar slipt him a revolver | i of ‘Uncle Sam. here, in peaceful America, will there |the thieving was made possible. 1In [safe keeping until they could be |Or let him climb to a wndow with-| B idea. May it spread be warmth and comfort. And how | other words, implicit trust was placed | taken before court to answer serious , Out bars in order that he might end | like wild fire, envel- | With Edison working from -8 |long before we, too, shall be giving |in Burton and ne betrayed it. jcharges. The weather v uncom- ; @11 _his troubles at once and he did. | merican teacher until | o’'clock in the morning until midnight, | up our woolen garments? The wo- In these war times we are apt ' fortably hot and some kind-hearted | Convict Leo M Frank, v\h‘ | ¢ realize what it means | B¢ Will probably attend to his duties {and children—they pay the price. They | to think of traiters who betray their | official thought it must be tough :o | death sentence EECpIIT e AWARDED GOLD MEDAL o as a member of the Naval Advisory | always do. The sacrifice of wool for | country. But there are traitors be locked up in cells on such a day |face of a mob crying for his “‘““-l i SAN FRANCISCO EXPOSITION ‘one,—one country, one the paths of peace who betray their country when they shatter confidence, The suggestion led to the release of the prisoners, Board from midnight to 8 a. m.— ' Clearwater, Fla., Sun. the soldiers simply tells the old story. of wars since the beginning. who were permitted

Other pages from this issue: