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| D] forarD PUBL;‘S‘HKNQ WI!AH!. b dany (sunaay hxund\ at 4:18 meum Building, 67" Church £y ?e;. Oue ‘ed by carriors to a to any part of the city 1§ Cénts Week, 65 Conts a Month. riptions for paper to be sent by mall payadle in advance, 60 Cents a Month, $700 a year. At the p 1t !’coq t New Britaln ll Mattes "’y profitable advertising medium in city. Circulation books and press room always open tp advertisers. erald will ve found on sale at Hota- Nows, Stand. 42nd St. and Broad- » New York City; Board Walk, tiaatic City and Hartford depot. TELEPHONE CALLS. Meo . Teooms THE | PLAN, ' om a stauhch antagonistic posi- Mr. James Hay, of Virginia, ‘man of the House Military Com- e, has been won over by Presi- ‘Wilson and now promises his support to the Garrison plan for enlargement. and betterment of nited States Army. This is the pleasant news of a fortnight to P who havé been apprehensive of Welfare of the Garrison plan. It been known all along that Sen- ‘Chamberlain,. head of the Mili- ommittee .in the senate, would his unqualificd assistance to any nable plan for the betterment 4r ‘land ‘forces:’ but Mr. Hay's pects of so doing were always in it. In fact, it was reasonably sure he would join the Bryan men in fress and ‘wage war on any plah might be advanced by the genial btary of War with a view of en- ng the value of the standing Secretary Garrison's plans not, as yet, been made fully pub- Some of the salient features been set forth but even from no one can devine just what [be asked of Congress when that convenes in December. Tt is n among the elect, however, that . stress. will be laid upon the or- ation of a continental army of n soldiers and that the students imerican colleges and universities be prevailed upon to undertake ry training in the summer bs which have been set up hghout the nation. Ample provi- it is said, will be made for the blishment and maintainance of prous other camps. These men, trained and ‘drilled to the proper Hard, will form part of the na- 1 reserve of ,which the National d will be-the first line. It is ed that ‘Mr, ‘Hay and Secretary son have agreed on the advis- y of federal pay for the mem- of the National Guard and the nized militia. It is to be hoped a safe and sane program of de- is put through at the coming lon of Congress. Now that the ison plan has the support of Mr. the prospects for its adoption looming larger on the horizon. DEMONIC DRIVERS. Hroad men throughout the try have set up a complaint nst the issuing of automobile li- es to drivers of automobiles when known that these driversare ad- bd to the constant use of alcoholic rs. They demand that the states rohibited from issuing these licen- to persons who habitually use or. It is but natural that the foads should want something of kind done, because railroads ever been annoyed by the ken driver who persists in pi- hg his car pell mell across rail- jl crossings, sometimes in the very h of approaching trains. ‘When ash-up takes place, it is difficult jprove the driver was under the ence of alcohol and, if the psing at which the accident oc- ed happened to be in a remote on, who is to say the driver of automobile had timely warning pre the onrushing train did its k? As a consequence the rail- ds have often suffered suits and lost in court because there was other way out. Of late it is be- hing the practice of police court es and others dealing out the ‘to heavlly fine the drivers of au- fes whe, gt has been proven ! v tHéld vehtcies while' under ;In!luance of liquor. - The licenses such drivers ate generally held by the secretary of state, only to returned’ at some future date. b ohe way out of this would be imake the penalty more severe, to to the fine a goodly term of prisonment and to have it under- Pd that on the third time a driver @n automobile is hauled before the rt for ha\}ing,\dmln his car while Was under the influence of liquor | driver's license would .be taken &y from him;and Qevcr given back. the sa.ietw of tll" concerned that ht be a4 good thing. Then it driver wishea td do any joy rid- i he could take his place in the Seat while a more steady hand k hold of the steering wheel. ‘ot getting these fellows who, for the WAR oonnEsPom)m‘-rs. Ever -lnce the expoas of James F.D, Atchlbn.ld. the . war gorrespon- dent who was. caught.« carrying. secret papers from representatives ‘of foreign governments here to_ their authorities at home the people of the United States have had an inkling that the news from the war zone is not always as reliable as they would wish., There have been so many re- ports received from the front during this war, so many that have been de- nied, so many that have been shaded to suit some particular belligerent that the reading public has reached the stage where it refuses to place but little credulence whatever in the dispatches. Having in mind then this state of “affairs, knowing that the various governments at war have paid press agents at the front, men who will write up the battles in the best interest of the ' countries for whom they labor, the United States has decided to put an end to this practice as far as it can by refusing passports to correspondents unless they are accredited to some respon- sible journal or press association and this only after assurances have been received that their purposes-are neu- tral. Under the' new ruling, press agents for belligerents will no longer be recognized as correspondents and the passports issued by partment will permit of passage from one country at war to an enemy country. Well and good. But what about the men who are already at the front writing - biased dispatches? What about the vast hords of correspon- dents that went from the United States to Germany at the beginning of the war, the men who have been sending all the glowing reports anent the wonderful victories accomplished? What about the men who are with the French and English armies, the men who are accredited to no par- ticular press association or newspaper and whose only reason for sending out “stuff”” is to mould public opinion in the direction desired by superior officers of the government for which they work? After the exposes made by the secret service men here there are very few correspondents who wish to go to the front in this war, so while the new ruling of the United States is primarily intended to pre- serve neutrality among the war cor- respondents it will not work its full capacity until it strikes the men who are already with the ' various armies. There should be some way our state de- not to most part, are American newspaper- men seeking adventure. FACTS AND FANCIES. Although Secretary Daniels didn't attend any of those military instruc- tion camps he has learned how to “about face.”—Brookiyn Eagle. if the' Rhode Island have ‘“blackhead,” some other excuse for making the Thanksgiving bird cost more would have been invented. —Rochester Union. turkey didn’t) One of the stipulations in the new German peace terms is said to be a de- mand that England and France pay a large indemnity. Indemnity for what ?—St. Louis Times, The horse is not played out yvet if it is true the Allies have paid $64,- 000,000 for American horses and mules while paying $68,000,000 for Amer- ican automobiles.—RBuffalo Enquirer. Having had about a year's warn- ing of the embargo on arms, it may be presumed that the Villistas and Zapatists are well stocked by this time, if they had any foresight at all. —Boston Journal. The more the decisive effect of the British naval power is thought upon the clearer it must become to American citizens of the rational type that our own navy must be brought up to the standard proposed by President Wil- son and his Secretary, Mr. Daniels.— Brooklyn Citizen. The Chicago Record-Herald wishes us to believe that the Middle West doesn’t take the “Hall of Fame idea” as seriously as New England and the Atlantic coast folk do. What d'you mean, take it seriously—with Carrie Nation’s hatchet in a gla case in Topeka!—Binghamton Press. To all Germans who have not been corrupted by Prussian militarism the hurried, stealthy shooting of hapless Edith Cavell in the dead of night be- hind prison walls will always be a bit- ter memory. More than all the counts Belgium it will weigh in the judgement, for it has struck the world with horror.—New York Sun. It is not the brutality but the blunad- er of the Germans in the execution of Miss Cavell which today excites the astonishment of all non-Teutonic ma kind. Alive, Miss Cavell was but an offender against German military rules; dead, dead after summary con- viction, dead under circumstances that gave the incident the character of a midnight assassination and the color of an atrocity, she becomes to all men of English blood a martyr and an inspiration to new patriotic devotion.—-New York Tribune. Germans are forever complaining that Americans do not understand them. Tt is not worth while for any American to try to understand the mind and purpose that decree in cold blood the shooting of a woman for such an offensc as that which = Miss Cavell committed. Americans can never understand the mental proces- ses of a people who are capable not only of tolerating such a military sys- tem but of exalting it and HONESTY, What has happened to the man who was quick to pay his debts, who looked askance at anyone who failed to meet his financial obligations? What has happened to those who pre- mulgated the doetrine, Hones best Policy? Has modern day ethics been the despoiler of that sound ola principle, pay as you go? Judging from the information sent out from Washington about those who bor- rowed moncy from the federal govern- ment to get back from the war zone of Europe after the first days of battle there is something wrong with the mental fabric of many of our cit- And the worst part of it all is v is the izens. that some two hundred of these per- sons who were given a helping hand by Uncle Sam are from our own New England. These people, coming from a land always 'held up as the acme of honor, were caught abroad when the Kurovean War broke out, were placed in such a position that they could not get home. Their credentials were not recognized, the hotels and public houses refused them admittance. And, as a last resort, they called upon the American consuls and ‘borrowed money from the American “govern- ment. Because of this aid they were cnabled to get back to their native hearth stones without mishap. More than a year has elapsed since they borrowed this money and still they Lave not paid it back. The federal government announces that it will prosecute all delinquents in order to reimburse the national treasury. This is perfectly proper; but it is deplor- able that such action is necessary. It is to be hoped that when legal action is brought it may be found that the persons who have failed to make good their credit have been ferced by nec- essity to forego payment,—that s, that they are honest, but have no money with which to pay. Otherwise we may believe that the character of some of our native born Americans is not what it should be. It is a fact that per- sons of forelgn birth who received aid at the game time have already met their oblizations. The tremendous mafjority against woman suffrage given in'New Jersey’s special election Tuésday indicates that this political heresy has spread about as far as it is going to. During the last year woman suffrage hag met defeat in twenty-one states, six by direct vote of the people and fifteen through the representatives in the various State Legislatures,—XKingston Freeman, o S W ing it. German psychology Cavell matter is ac inexplicable to us as Germar psychology in the T tania matter ew York World The Freedom of the Seas. (Wall Street Journal.) Albert Ballin is quoted as sa) that freedom of the seas is an dispensable condition of any peace. Herr Ballin is the head of what ws one of the greatest steamship or- ganizations in the world, and ignor- ance cannot be pleaded in his case. He does not mean freedom of the seas, and he knows it. ‘When were the seas so free as they have been up to the outbreak | of the war? All nations enjoyed equal rights with Great Britain; so far as the British Empire was con- cerned. Our own navigation laws represent a restriction of the free- dom of the seas, such as Great Brit- | ain never imposed. British or other vessel could have loaded ut Hamburg a cargo for a German colony, except under prohibitory re- strictions. Without adequate Ameri- can shipping available, no foreizn vessel could load at New York a car- go for San Francsico. But the freedom of the seas en- forced by the British was positively Quixotic. German vessels traded on a regular schedule from one Brit- ish port to another on exactly {he same terms as were accorded to B ish bottoms. Tt is extremely improb- able that when the war is over Britain will again permit such dom of the seas as this. Is it un- fair to suggest that Herr Ballin sees this coming, and he secks the aid of | neutral powers to preserve enor- mously valuable factor in German trade which Germany herself would be the last to concede to others.? A Course in College Life. Brown univer: is requiring all her freshmen th ear to take a course in “The Aims and Meaning of College Life.”” She has been in the university business for 151 years; so, if experience counts for much, the course ought to embody some prac- tical hints. But is a century and a half long enough to uncover the truth? We wonder, Probably no two pedagogues would teach that course the same way. Any good professor can preach little daily sermons on college life, but to make a science of that life's aims and meanings is another matter. We should like to see Henry Seidel Canby of Yale or Robert Wen- ley of Michigan or Dean Briggs of Harvard take a whack at the job, hut | something tells us that even they would never agree upon what are, sav | ten most tival principles. When Wood- | row Wilson was president of Prince- | tcn he was once quoted as declaring | that the most important part of col- lege life was the time from the last class on one day to the first on the | next. Is this a fact or merely an epi- gram? Abe Martin observes that most of the studying’ is done after a feller } immunity WHAT OTHERS SAY Views on all sides of timely questions as discussed in ex- changes that come to the Herald Office. For Women Only. (Waterbury Republican.) War in Europe taught the American people to learn how to walk | alone and some of the early resulls of this new independence are appear- ing to be fraught with pleasure for | the Yankees. One instance, which clinches the old argument that Amer- | ican women have always been foolish | to insist on foreign goods when seek- ing the best obtainable in clothes, is | causing considerable comment in the a goods trade and among the fashion critics and experts through- out the country just now. It is the creation of a number of woolen pro- ducts that have not only caught the eve of the most fastidious but have | climbed rapidly to favor in the cir- cles where the best only is sought or tolerated, and almost as promptly | found their way into the fashion cen- ters of Paris. “The pride of Amer- ica™ is the way these woolen goods | one writer and | goods buyers and dealers seem unanimous in their tes- timony as to their attractiveness, style and quality of texture. It is explained in the Brooklyn Eagle; “Owing to the war in Furope and the destruction of a large num- ber of the woolen mills of France and Belgium, the designers and cos- tume makers have been obliged to turn to the American manufacturers for the, finer weaves that heretofore | were bought abroad and the Amer- icans have responded wonderfully. In fineness of texture, beauty of color and sheen, the illuminated chuddah cloths, peau de souris, zibelines, silky mohairs and silk and wool poplins that have been produced right here in this country during the past year rival any previous importations from Europe. In fact, so beatuiful are they that several of the famous French designers have imported American woolen materials for the fashioning of many of their most dis- tinctive creations. New England once was filled with woolen mills and its people reveled in their products. There was hardly a town in Connecticut or Massachusetts that did not have its woolen and the industry continued to thrive until about the middle of the last century. Now in this Naugatuck valley great metal producing plants, machine shops, and munitions factories stand where once great woolen mills were operated and the present generation may be forgeiful or ignorant of the glory of the past that was America’s, and especially New England's, in the manufacture of woolen cloth. With such a heritage it is but fitting that when the first great opportunity in the nation's commercial history to prove to the old world its ability to produce the-quality and the style de- manded by Dame Fashion knocked, the response was immediate and the evidence of worth convincing. Let the Amerlcan = woman heed! She can find the best and the most fiashionahle in American goods and in justice to her husband and herself she should patronize them, that American industry may not lag while foreign products enjoy such demand that/they can compete suc- cessfully with domestic goods in spite of tariffs. This is a good time for her to get the habit of preferring the domestic product. has pay Mr. Melien, an All-Around Witness. (Springfield Republican.) Mellen, bored but still rather seems willing to testify for side. The government already is disappointed in him and warns the court and jury that the former presi- dent of the New Haven is a “hostile witness."” The defense will probably call Mr. Mellen as a witness of its own. He locks good to the defense. Did you read about Willlam Rockefeller shak- ing hands cordially with Mr. Mellen and conversing amiably with him, when the trial began? If the gov- ernment does not get the ‘‘double cr in this business, it will be be- cause its attorney is an exceptionally { smart man. Mr. Mellen was the original villain in the New Haven melodrama, but very cleverly he secured personal im- munity from criminal prosecution by testifying freely before the interstate commerce commission. The United States attorney-general of that day, Mr. McReynolds, protested against the bath for the New Haven's president, but Mr. McReynolds was howled down by un indignant press. The sequel will he worthy of the movies if Mr. Mellen, saved from prosecution himself by making a clean breast of everything before the com- mission, rescues the brother directors by convinecing the jury that the gov- ernment’s case is punk. Mr ccoky, either Eating at Home (Omaha World-Herald.) When a real man has been marriedl to a real woman long enough to for- get the honeymioon, he suddenly comes aware of the fact that a taurant is about as pleasing an « es- tablishment as a jail or a dentis's studio. He wonders how he managed to exist before the clergyman con gratulated him with one hand and accepted a ecrip new bill with the other. Too full for words, he gazes across the wreckage on the dining room table, and in the glowing eyes of his wife he finds a tonic that would enable him to digest a ton of coal had she seen fit to set such a dish before him Dinner at home becomes an event in his daily life that increases most steadily in importance. As he bart- tles desperately in some chophouse at noontide, he loathes the lackeys who heave the smelly stuff in his general direction, and he gobbles his tasteless he- gets out of college. Is this, too, only a half truth? I R lmore than anything else. luncheon through a sense of duty From then McMILLAN’S EW BRITAIN’S BUSIEST BIG STORE “ALWAYS RELIABLE" Large Selection of Maruulsenes i i | | Scrims, Madras,e Fic., for Window Draperies FANCY Priced 10c¢, 39¢ yard. COLORED BORDER SCRIMS Special this week 15¢ BORDERED | SCRIMS | 15¢, 17c, | 22¢, 25¢ to 19¢ values. yard. 2,000 YARDS DRAPERY MATERIALS On Sale this week 25¢ yard. Values | to 3bc. { Marquisettes, Novelty Scrims and Madras. Your chance to fit out your home from top to bottom with new | draperies. FIGURED CURTAIN MADRAS Quite the fad for dainty Draperies in new designs. Priced 19¢, 22¢, 29¢ yard. OUR DRAPERY DEPARTMENT is overflowing with Drapery Materia)s of all kinds. New Silkolines, Cre- tonnes, Denims, Burlaps, Monks' Cloth and over Draperies of all kinds. We feature especially the new Sun- fast materials, Ball Fringes, Gimps, etec. Curtain Fixtures of all kinds. YOUR WINDOW SHADES Have them looked after now. Your old shades made over or new ones to replace the old ones. Window Shades 25¢ upward. Any size, style or color made to order on short notice. Call, or Ring up 21 on the 'phone, let’s talk it over, make arrangements to have our shade man call on you. BLANKETS, COMFORTABLES, RUGS, OILCLOTHS AND LINOLEUMS 25¢, Curtain Bagings, Shades ANNIVERSARY SA l.E BARGAINS FREE SOUVENIRS FREE SOUVENIRS WISE, SMITH & CO., Hartford Values to $5.00 fo Select From Special Trimmed Hat Value Shapes are made of a fine quality velvet in sailors, pokes, turbans, tricornes, etc. Trimmed very artistically with flowers fan- cfes and fur. gain. VELVETTA SHAPES Twenty different styles to select fram. Good quality velvet- ta. Looks good and wears 35c Hats Trimmed Free vet. ors. bans, Each hat CORDUROY TAMS Black and colors, large size, good quality corduroy 506 BEAUTY R()R!'R Natural looking with follage All colors. A 60c value .. In a Big Selection—Prices the D. McMIL AN 199-201-203 MAIN STREFEN until evening his eye is upon the clock—if he is human Then to the real home—let's say a little cottage with a lot of vines around it and an ice card in the win- dow and the evening paper curder upon the porch steps. There is an odor of something good to eat wreath- ed abut the place, and within he can detect that indescribable sizzling sound of cooking—real cooking, The kitchen door bursts open: he is con- scius f having been most ruthlessly, and vehemently gone and the her! His wife! Presently the sizzling the door is once more pus door snapped behind and open ceases ed by a touch of her dainty foot, and she | appears carrylng a capacity cargo of plates, platters and bowls with every- thing that a hungry man could wish for without being consigned to a sty Her cheeks are rosy and her eyes are happy but anxious as she watches to see if he does justice to her effort. Justice! In a twinkling he is going around an ear of corn as cooper goes around a barrel and a horrible massacre of other daintics progresses ir the meantime. Generally she pauses until he is well under way before com- mencing her own operations—for she iz his wife and the chances are she wouldn't enjoy that dinner unless he | did. This is no anti-suffrage argument, but can any one imgine a big clumsy stevedore of a man come lunging out of a kitehen with anything fit to eat— if he had cooked it himself? Could you, or any one else, sit opposite him and begam at him and revel in home | because it is home and dinner because it was built there especially if it | were built by him? Would you feel tempted to reach across the table once i while and squeeze his hang and to don an apron and help him h the dishes, meantime keeping a steady eye on that plump round arm | and dimpled elbow—which he hasn't. | Not much! How Hyphenates Are Made. (Collier's Weekly.) The United States is getting aware of the problem presented by those of other lands who are among us but rot of us. President Wilson has made some strong speeches on the subjact, patriotic associations are being fo: ed, and pains are taken to make the naturalization formalities more sin- | cere. These things are all good, but the test of daily contact is still cru- cial. What sort of a deal does the newcomer get here? The fake officials on the dock, extortionate cab drivers, cheating money lenders, fradulent eni- ployment igencies, and deadfall boarding hou are the least of the evil. Our two miserable failures in dealing with the immigrant are those of industry and those of law. Law- rence Paterson, Ludlow, Little Falls, among many others, spring to mind as typical of the industrial centers where the newcomer is overworked, underpaid. tyrannously treated, and then blamed for lowering American stanlards of living. The American standard of living is what these Lowest | | | veen | they | of the early | club making the | shoula be given | York, | Hoboken and marked out a diagnona {on the Elysian fields. | been dependable. people get. Our business men hav set it for them. We have commeni- ed repetedly on the mean and stupld discriminations made against allens by the statutes of many states. In law ters, first, a police not understand or sympathize him, and second, t in for political reasons. In New York city recently five garment work ers—Auspitz, Sigman, Singer, Stup- nicker, and Weldinger—were accused of murder, jailed tried, and acquitted. The case against them was little bei- ter than a frame-up. Leading New York papers, such as the “Times, “Tribune,” and “World,” commented officer who does with at length on the kissing in court when | the verdict was announced. They had no word of the fearful injustice which kissed—then she iz, had imperiled the lives of the inno- cent. Is this sort of cruel stupidity at the bottom of the whole hyphenale problem? Is it a high time that we began to see that the immigrant s neither a joke nor a nuisance, but a uhman being. Baseball’s Birthday. (Cleveland Plain-Dealer.) It may interest the to know that their farovite game has passed its seventieth birthday. {3 s on September 23, 1845, that the baseball club was formed art it was called the Base- Lall club, but a little later on took the name of Knickerbocker club. The rules of the game have not preserved, but fundamentally were like the present ones. The the not baseball fans W carliest At the bound catch was sanctioned and pitching was really pitching, | throwing. Because of the heavy batting one rules declared that the irst twenty-one runs the gamo. The Knickerbockers played on u vacant lot in what is now lower New but presently went over (o For a time the nine was the whole thing in the new sport. Tt was the model, the pattern, to which the other nines, as they were called, looked up. Then something happened. The New York nine in the summer of 1846 went over to Hoboken and beat the Knickerbockers at their own game and on their own grounds, 21 to 1 Trolley Mail Cars Going. (Philadelphia Press.) Replacing the trolley mail cars in this city with step in the right direction toward improv- The white United States mall trollies that have been in transferring have never automobiles is a ing the service. operation for years past mails to carrier stations trollies going to and from business they have always been a menace. variably one of these little white cars cars blocks up a stree* car line for five or six minutes while loading or unloading at a station A glaring example of this can be seen every night at the Penn square station, Fifteenth and Market streets. Twenty-second-street station, Twenty- second and Market strects, and West SILK VELVET SHAPES Made of an ele- gant quality silk vel- Black and col- sailors, tricornes, perfect . . .. Hats Trimmed Free matters the immigrant encoun- | a police magistrate | To the patrons of | In- | Every hat is a wonderful bar- HATTERS' PLUSH SHAPES Dressy and exclu- sive. Beautiful high lustre finish. Velvet underbrim. Rll(k and colors. oy $1 45 value. Hats Trimmed Free tur- ete. 95¢ DOMESTIC PARADISE Lboks like the genuine. Large size. Black only. $1.00 value NEW BUCKLES Steel and nickle. All sizes. Regular 30c value 15¢ Philadelphia station, Thirty-secopd and Market streets. Until the mail dar turns into Woodland avenue business people returning home on the Market- street cars are delayed at least 18 minutes. o The advent.of the automobile will be advantageous In more than one way. Fires, parades, accidents gr breakdowns of other cars which fn- | variably delay the trolley mall cats will be eliminated. If an automps bile sees a blockade on one street has the advantage of turning into am- Other street and continue the trip to | its respective stations. There will probably be assigned to each of the larger stations one auto- mobile. This is another point in ad« | vantage, as the present system re- quires the trollies to cover thelr en- tire circuit, collect and deliver to sta- tions while on the way. By the new idea the automobiles can be dis- patched direct to the stations. The transfer of mails from the central of« fice and return thereto from stations will be more frequent and the servics should be greatly improved. ) & An Old-Timer's Reflections. (Turners Fall Reporter,) Before us is a circular offering th# remains of the Newburyport Heraid as junk. The paper had a long and honorable existence, and was printed for 138 years without missing an - sue. Alas, poor Yorick, we knew you well. How many times during the period of the Civil war has the writer fished you out of the discard lin the exchange heap, and admired your neat typography, dignified adver. tising column Ibeit a deyg in the lost advertisement would look longingly over into the next column where wus temptingly displayed the list of wares of the butcher, and took you home o mystify the uninitiated with thos | white streaks next to two columns fa each page, and nicks in the head ruleg, where cords ran to pull the shedt from the type as it was printed on a old Adams press—that evolution in | machinery. that simply made the priy, ciple of the old toggle hand-press pos~ sible of operation by power at a greats er speed. The assignee tried for fvel months to find a purchaser to pay an sum whatever for a good will of ove a century and a quarter's standin only to find that the soul which we foolish mortalsecall good will is doomed to annihilation, not even to live in the memory of man, and its body givhn to the junk dealer to parcel out to | various melting pots! To what base uses may we all yet return, and Im- perial Sun may not go to the junk man to raise the wind to cool the wrath of a loaning “angel! i Good Will Scems to Have Brought Something. - (From the Lowell Courier-Citizen.) | The News of Newburyport has bought the name and good will of the | paper and will carry the former undes its own title. It will have the right to start a morning or afternoon papes with that name, but a morning issue is not looked for for a long timeito’ come, if ever. Newburyport is scarce- 1y ‘big enough to support & matu 1 journal Many in the News ol were braght up on the Herald and the purchase was therefore largely abd pleasantly sentimental. But the K