New Britain Herald Newspaper, December 16, 1915, Page 6

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NE% BRITAIN DAILY HERALD. o e e S BRITAIN HERALD! LD PUBLISHING CUMPANY. Proprietors. iy (Sunday excepted) at 4:15 p. m. brald Building. 67 Church St Post Office at Mew Britaln Matter. t the Second Class Mall by carriors to any part of the city ‘ents 2. Week, 65 Cents a Month. ons for paper to be sent by mall able in advance, 60 Cents & Month, $7.00 a year. profitable advertlsing medium 1n ty. Circulation books and press m always open to advertisers. 14 will be found on sale at Hota- ews Stand, 42nd St. and Broad- New York City; Board Walk, atic City and Rartford depoi. TELEPHONE CALLS. Office .. Rocms to the number portion of 127,448. of dollar are given Quite a goodly over the five thousand And yet who can say it is complotc a man who ha earne mark, I'here must be many over that sum and who has failed to give. in just proportion to Uncle It is human nature to dodge. his “amuel. a bo doubled. Taking into tion the present wave of prosperity that is sweeping over the country Uncle Sam should have less trouble in stacking his exchequer with good yellow gold. TRIA’S REPLY; WIIAT? e government authorities at uphold the Austro-Hungarian | ity in its position regarding { jsing of the Italian liner An- nothing but relations hbe- the ere can be a | ce of diplomatic he dual monarchy ates. The admiralty is ab- foppesed . to disavowal of se of the By sinking the Ancona the boat did per- and any submarine coni- of the under: ight, according to this version. his conduct is fully approv- he is held up as a hero. Lccording to instructio done otherwise he would havs onsidered as having failed fo | his duty. That position taken there seems to be continuance of v relations with Austria-Hun- It is not going too far to fore- at the government officials will he men who run the navy. For, been pointed out by one on Austro-Hungarian naval Austria’s fleet is her favorire “Its honor and prestige are red to the highest degree. Tho | ment might possibly yield in a matter affecting the army, vowal of an act of an Aus- aval officer is hardly thinkable but abnormal circumstances. 1d have to be a very extreme ndeed which could justify es of all Austrians any humil- of a naval officer ‘at the behest oreign power.” As if this is not treme case. il the Austrian minister of for- ffairs hands to the Ameri ssador the note that must decide here is really no use speculatinz e outcome. It must come onc br the other. There can be no Secretary Lansing has ted his demands and they must be accepted in the spirit in they were intended or reject- tirely. On the face of things this would naturally seem to be the e. The government will in all hoility back the admiralty brotection of the naval officer. n event it wiil simply mean that assador Penfield will hook early ge to the United States. Austriti- gary has no official diplomas psentation in this country since esteemed Dr. Dumba departed these shores. it is believed too the Austrians somewhat | ed over the removal of their rite son, -and that the forth- ing #ote Will show manifestations his attiddh. " He | and admiral ope for a an- mn ing. o are CHECKING INCOMES, hen the income tax law was first into cflect ome of the greatest culties the internal revenue offi- s had to face was gathering in so-called tax dodger,—the man o came within the law, who was bposed to give a certain portion of income to defray the cost of gov- ment, and who for one reason or bther failed to do Even fes where the “came 0ss” without much ado it Iy hinted that cheating was going , that the full amounts not ing subscribed. And when the rt of the internal revenue bureau is S0. in taxables was were re- en into consideration it is readily bn that there must necessarily have en some very successful tax dodging. om this report we are given to hderstand there were 357,515 persons xed in the United States last year,— 7,515 out of a total population of most 100,000,000. The least possible timates had been placed at one time the experts at 500,000 taxable rsons. That too, would dered a small figure made up of be con- in a population ch as ours, men and fomen who are ever striving for suc- ss in the financial field and who, for he most part, have attained such suc- less. There are more ten thousand ollar men this than ny other land beneath the 'here more opportunity here The figures in the in country in sun., is for cquiring fortunes. hbureau of internal revenue show that herc are 34,151 persons who kums between $10,000 and $15,000 a ear. lower than that, earn The class | that these deadly i The dum dum DUM DUM BULLETS. Charges have been made that manufacturing concern in Bridgeport has been turning out dum dum bul- lets for use in one of the belligerent Photographs of wounded s have been produced to show Just how these off land will prove that the dum dum bullets were the United States of America remains to be seen. If the pictures can be proven authentie, and i fact established armies. sold that such is the case. pictures a far taken in real made in be also projectiles were, or the can are, actually made in Bridgeport, the charge is most serious one. It was at the International Peace Con- ference of 1899 that the majority of nations decided against the of the dum dum bullet. This deadly missile is considered one of the moust obnoxious of all death dealing muni- tions for the simple reason that it is equipped with a soft point which flattens or mushrooms upon contact, a wound. It is a half-covered steel-cased bullet known soldier: a use making horrible among as a “man stopper.” Its name is derived from Dumdum, | near Calcutta, the seat of the ammu- nition factory for the Indian army. No one will readily believe that these bullets are being made in Bridgeport | until absolute proof of such work has been establiched. War horrible enough as it is without injecting dnm dum bullets into the conflict. Amer- ican concerns while they are out after business are not going to violate all the laws the world to get such business. It is therefore reasonabie to suppose there has been a mistake _\mtil the contrary has heen proven. bullets might been made elsewhere. is in have Smoothed over litlle phrase “at his own instance. the mcws that Field Marshall Sir John French has “relinquished” com- mand of the British armies in France and Flanders will evince no surprise to those who have been following military activities on the other side. That he will be supplanted by an of- ficer who did gallant duty under his command will but make more plain the fact that England is looking fox carefully tucked away his emoluments | The report shows that there are al-| This time next year that number ma [ considera- | The trouble secms to be that Queen | Sophia sees King Constantine last.— Buffalo Enquirer. i | Ior once Allied and German opinion coincides. Both agree that the Al- lies are not aware that they are beat- ew York Evening Post. | vy | Germany may not be ready for peace but some of her prominent men are showing the symptoms which to actual negotiations.—Water- town Times. | 1eaa most ten thousand millionaires in the | Unitea States. Quite gathering. That American 1 be summoned to | compylsory service, with active field servick and seven lines of reserves, as in the military nations of Europe, is inconceivable. It is not yet time for Americans to become concerned about Secretary Garrison’s statement, which reads like a threat.—Buffalo News, For some reason or other it has been impossible to down this man Vil- la. Those who thought that he had been squelched were surprised to find in the day’s news that he is preparing for an attack on the United States. Well, if he hasn’t been subdued as yet, 'he's taking the initiative hinf- self, in a plan that will insure his early elimination.—St. Louis Times-: At an auction sale of autographs a (George Washington apology was sold for $110, and an Abraham Lincoln pardon fetched $102.50. Assuming that the prices were not affected by superheated competition among the ! bidders, but represent normal valua- tion by the collectors of curios, it would be interesting to know jus what factors determine these prices. This is the only apology wrintten by Washington we have ever heard of (it was cpening a letter by mistake), but Lincoln wrote many pardons.— New York Sun. President Wilson’s hitter denuncia- tion of hyphenated Americans, whose activities have, as he says, been the gravest threats against our national peace and safety, is worthy of the man, worthy of his position and wor- thy of the nation. It is time that the people of this country who are not craven in heart, who are not uphold- ers of the cold-blooded murder of wo- men and children and of the awful, unspeakable horrors which have been brought upon Europe, should give voice, as President Wilson has done in his just but bitter arraignment of these unworthy citizens. Rightly does he suggest that every self-possessed and thoughtful patriotic American must feel deep humiliation and scorn when he thinks of such people and of their efforts to injure this country.— Baltimore Manufacturers’ Record. The Walker Case. (Meriden Journal.) The parole of Walker has furnished a topic that has interested som~ of the editors of the state considerably in the last week or two on the ques- tion as to whether or not it w good public policy to release a pr oner so soon when the maximum sen- tence was so severe. While Walker was sentenced to one to cwventy vears he oniy served about seven, when released. State Attorney Alcorn somewhat harshly commented upon the action of the board of pardons because the amount involved in the embezzlement was so large and because so many bank depositors suffered from nis ac- tions. The attorney thought that it was unseemly to free the man so early even if his health was so had The Journal-Courier, of New Ha- ven, whose editor is spokesman for some leader in the French campaigns who will take hold with All along there has seemed wrong with the The fighting has i littie and vim. to be something command in France. been gallant, but comps has been accomp! Gen. Sir Douglas Ha right man remains to he scen. probably be removed, another officer given command. By process of elimination England strike on the right man. Whether the 1t not, and shed. will 2 be he will a may finally Log of the Oscar 2. 1915. shore started Dec. 14, As the old bark nears the I fee! like the little boy who out from home to see the dentist. Turning automobiies out of a fac is one thing and turning Kir their tory away from Gaily pastime wother. While the in Europe said to have gone on the fritz the dye indusiry it dic | ful. industry continues to be succe de Or why Isn't it about time Mars, Inc., clared a big stock dividend? not prosecute him under the Sherman anti-trust law? “Balked in the Balkans” might be a good title for a book on which Eng- ( ) collaborate. Understand the 1. N. landed at Kirkwall. that's Killing popes ahead of tinie, the us But nothing. | docking ships while they ax 1o iiike ave merely ca can and such HY play for them. It doesn’t matter whether you call s de mer, it's El or mal on the appetite. why it sicknes pretty rough I un- com- table and now steamship charge so little Nobody eats. just like der: panies for a d-hote nner. Sometimes Electric Coni., and then it 1 feel Ci m Cooley of New secms nobody loves me. There is water enough around here ade of whose average hearly incomes are somewhere ween $5,000 and $10,000, jereatly augmented condition mpared with the .aforementioned ners. These Jatter men and women up those be- a when shows to suit even Although they say that the only him is his tailor. And Fords keep Which helps some. Bryan. man who can suit little along. in the meanwhile, the rambling right more snay | ; | had held occupied by another. land, ¥rance, Russia and Serbia could ! ady has | Britain, ! the pardon. board, takes Mr. Alcorn {to task and presents the novel that the state attorney is in of the situation until the mi sentence of a prisoner has been s ed and that afterward the pardon board in full authority In other words after Walker has served o year Alcorn had no longer anything to say about the matter, While that sounds pretty good from a technical standpoint still both Mr. | Alcorn and the pardon board should understand their responsibility to the people. The board no doubt con- siders this phase of the matter thor- oughly but it has not made its posi- tion very clear to the public. Twenty Years Ago. (New Haven Register.) i Twenty years ago the Hon. William | J. Bryan had just seen the Iifty- | fourth congress convene with the Ne- braska seat which for four years he e | had, however, the editorship of the | Omaha World-Herald to console him, | ana serve as an outlet for his views | on free silver. But the country at large hadn’t worried much abon: Rryan. Congressmen ka didn’t loom up large in those da and free silver was, cast of the Miss- | issippi, little more than a name. But | there was Bryan in all his poten- | tiality. Then came the campaign of 1896, and to those who participated in it twenty years seems a short time. It ng campaign. There was an going up and down the coun- flashing his cross of gold and drawing tears with his crowns of | thorns. There was Mark Fauna | commanding the cohorts against him. | There was the calm, patient, admir- | able and soon to be lamented Mc- | Kinley. The others have passed on; | Bryan has remained. Soundly heat- en, he smiled imperturbably—and gan his Chaulaugua foundation. | made hay, not only in the sun of that | campaign, but in the four years fol- | lowing, and the next four. expect to win in 19042 Probably; { anyway, he added capital of the sort | he seeking. He increased it in 1 1908. He did not fall back in 1612, | for the result of that yecar brought him to his zenith. And now the end | | | a of the twenty { much in evidence, even if his sun is ! moving toward the western horiz | Politically it has been a rring twen- ty years Historically, it has been as notable. It has brought to Bryan many things that men desire, but it { has not brought the confidence of the | American people. He, howeve seems as hopeful as she was in De- cember of 1895, from Nebras- He | Did he | years is approaching with Bryan still | THURSDAY, Goe‘ttingen, Germany, Loved by Americans DECEMBER 16, 1915, Washington, D. C., Dec. 16.—*Goet- tingen, where situated the much de-' scribed and widely heralded camp for war prisoners, is a small German city intimate in the memories of many Americans who have spent among the most pleasant years of their life as students in its famed university,” be- gins a war primer just issued today by the National Geographic society. ‘For more than a hundred years, there has been a colony of American residents here, and Benjamin Franklin js hon- ored as the founder of American tra- ditions in Goettingen, Thus, Am- ericans have taken their part in the university’'s history throughout all of its strongest years. “The old university town nestles be- side a low broken range of hills, call- ed the Hainberg, the newer part of the town climbing up the evergreen for- ested slopes, the older part spreading out into the sunny narrow valley Of the Leine. A more intimate, peaceful and enchanting setting could not be well imagined. The town itself like our American Washington is em- l»mvcr_ed in groves of trees, while be- hind it, its forested hills rise in a solid mass of green, broken only by a slender grey tower, a memorial to Prince Bismarck. The valley land around the town is fresh sreen mead- ow and grain fields through the sum- mer, and a wide expanse thinly cov- ered with snow in winter. “Across the valley, to the south, the framing of the picture is completed by a series of heavier hills, which climb higher and higher toward the moun- tainous country around Muenden. Be- tween these hills, flows the meek and muddy Leine a river by German court- esy, but one of such proportions that all visiting Americans jump across it wh_en i_t wanders over their paths. The Leine is one of many examples of European rivers inches deep and feet across. “In the old days, Goettingen was a strongly defended city, and the great earthen walls more than thirty feet thick, still enclose the older parts of the town, now ringed around upon eir sides by massive trees, which complete a shady walk around the town. The old wall is Goettingen’s most popular promenade and one up- on which many an American, now closely following the war news, has idled away pleasant afternoons and evenings. These surroundings, prob- ably, could not be better suited for the establishment of a healthful camp for prisoners, for on all sides is the freshness of the country and quieting perspectives of the idyllic scenery. “Somewhat above 38,000 make up the town of Geottingen and most of these are interested directly or in- directly In its world-renowned univer- sity. The buildings of the university are found scattered in all parts of the town, big and new along more recent streets, old and delapidated in -the twisted streets of the ancient city. In its parks, cafes and byways, in nor- mal times, almost every language un- ‘der the sun could be heard; for Goet- tingen was a city to which all coun- tries sent their students. It was known throughout Germany as a ‘work university’, in contrast to the more fashionable universities at Heid- elberg and Bonn, and, among its graduates, highly trained American, Englishman, Frenchman and German are now playing prominent parts in the theater of world events. “Besides that of its great university Goettingen had a secondary fame—an excellent brand of sausage, manufac- tured primarily for the students but respected throughout Germany. Also, there were made within its confines various scientific instruments noted for their delicate accuracy. The saus- age and the instrument manufacture, however, were too intimat linked with the being of the university to de- tract from its fame. The American colony at Goettingen was another fea- ture of the litle city’'s life. Due to the generosity of a German who felt the desirability of student friendships be- tween Americans, Germans and Eng- lishmen, there was completed for the colony a beautiful club-house beside the railway station. In the club- house were locatel rooms of the Am- erican colony, including a large col- ony library in English, and a number of class rooms in which subjects were taught and discussed best adapted to bring about a deeper understanding of the German speech, customs, ideals and aspirations. The membership of the colony which moved into these rooms in 1903 numbered more than one hundred, whereas the colony, from year to year, fluctuated in mem- bership approximately between fifty to 150. Some members of the colony came to Goettingen many years ago, and, captivated by the charm of the little city have never found heart to i leave it.” i COOD ARRAY OF NEW BOOKS NAMED Finc Arts. Art of the old English potter, by L. M. Solon. .. and crafts of India and by A. K. Coomaraswamy. PR Corean and Japanese pot- teries: descriptive catalogue of loan exhibition of selected ex- amples. Gift of the Japan society. v s Decorative design, a text-book of practical methods, by J. C. Chase. oo Bducational metalcraft, a practical treatise on repousse, fine chasing, ete., by P. W. Davidson. P Giovanni Antonio Bazzi, hitherto us- ually styled ‘“‘Sodoma,” the man and the painter 1477-1549, by R. H. Cust. » Constable’s country, Tompkins. “It is a book to lovers of Constable and his art, all lovers of English landscape.” s Notes on pictures in the Royal col- lections: collected and edited for the Burlington magazine by L. Cust. . In by H. W. delight not only but o Peasant art in Italy, by Charles Holme w w % William Hogarth, by Austin Dobson. P Home Economics. a hook for mothers and nur- ses, by D. R. Brown. P Baby’s physical culture guide, by Mrs. E. V. Hart. . elgian cook book, by Mrs. Brian Luck. PR Canning, mak- ing, by Mrs. Consumption, what it is and what to do about it, by John B. Hames. “A short treatise by an eminent specialist in tuberculosis in simple non-technical language. Its tone cheerful and hopeful.”—Nation. a preserving and jelly J. M. Hill. P . Dainties for home parties, by F. M. i Williams. 1 ““A small but well varied book of | attractive and somewhat unusual cipes, which will serve twenty-five pe —A. L. A. Booklist. . ox o | ramily expense account, by Brookman | “Writien” (1) to teach the ‘math- | ematics of money’ underlying the impler processes of investment and { expenditure. and (2) to solve a ser- ies of problems such as usually arise b | i | T. - B in the families of those living on small salavies . L. A. Booklis | Habits that Towns. . “Shows the manner in which the drug habits are formed, offers im- portant suggestions for the handling | of the entire question of habit form- | ing drugs and points a way to help in individual cases. Includes in the discussion the alcohol and tobacco habits. Dr. Richard (. Cabot writes . in the Introduction, “I do not hesi- tate to say that he knows more about the alleviation and cure of drug ad- handicap, by €. B. Ceylon, | is | re- | Al IN INSTITUTE’S LIST THIS WEEK i dictions than any doctor that I have !evere seen.”—A. L. A. Booklist. i R | Housekeeper’s handbook of cleaning, by S. J. MacLeod. ! “A practical guide, based on the results of laboratory experiments. An- swers the many questions which con- stantly rise on the care of the house and its contents including the wear- ing apparel.”—A. L. A. Booklist. : ..o How I kept my baby well, Mrs. A. B. | G. Noyes. . month | Mothers’ guide, a month by young mothers, by i manual for i Coolidge. | e ! Nutrition of a household, by and Lillian Brewster. “A book that will hold the atten- i tion of any reader who is really anx- jious to know that a balanced ration is and how nearly his present food habits approach it. They have infus- led a good deal of originality and freshness into their pages.”—Wiscon- | sin Library Bulletin. . Small family cook book. by M. Pretlow. “A few old Virginia and German recipes are included. It is cheap, is for beginners, the recipes are not elabor- ate, they are easily read.——Wiscon- sin Library Bulletin. . ® E. T. D. Working people, their health and how to protect it, by M. G. Overlool:. PR Fiction. Buck Parvin and the movies, by C. E. Van Loan. . Burkses Amy, by J. M. Lippmann. “With the same cheeriness and wholesome humor that pervades Miss Tippmann’s “Martha” books, there is an added strength of plot and char- acterization that should win “Burkses | Amy” an even warmer welcome-— Publisher’s note. . Flower of the Gorse, hy . | Plasher’s mead, by Compton Macken- zie. | “His carlier productions we been obliged, for obvious accept with some qualifications. | “Plasher’s Mead,” however, stands | free of all objectionable features, and | we may speak its praises freely. . . | Surely if there is any sense of pura literature left in the world, if we have not all grown to be mere devotees of | “efficiency” or mere rhetoricians, Mr. ie should win a conscicuous place on our bookshelves among the creators of fiction of our times.” —America. . . Louis Aracy. have reasons to PR | Son of the otter, hy Schaick. By the “Sweetapple Cove.” v e George author Van of Wee MacGreegor en Don’t Walk the Tracks, (Indianapolis News.) It is a familiar plea which (he Pennsylvania railroad makes in a ro. cent bulletin on “tho most needless waste of human life in America.” The | other day a father and son were wal ing along one of the tracks leading into an Indiana City. The father step- ped to one side as a train approach- ed, but the boy did not. The fatality sts, by J. J. Bell. | free-trade 'McMILLAN’S| NEW BRITAIN’E BUSIEST BIG STORE “ALWAYS RELIABLI! No Matter How Little You Buy We Will Cash Your Christmas Check. | FURS FOR CHRISTMAS CHILDREN’S SETS. { $1.98 to $5.98. | SEPARATE MUFFS AND SCARFS. | FOR WOMEN Priced $3.98 upward. FUR SETS EXTRA VALUES. Priced $7.50 upward. DAINTY HOLIDAY APRONS. 25c, 49¢, 76c, 98c each. DAINTY UNDERMUSLINS. In Xmas Boxes, make acceptabie gifts. BOUDOIR CAPS. 25¢, 49¢c, 98c each. SILK HOSIERY. That one delights to receive for Christmas, “Onyx” Silk Sox for Men. All colors, 26¢c 50c pair. CHILDREN'S SILK STOCKINGS 50c pair. BOOT SILK HOSE FOR WOME 25¢, 50c, pair, all colors. “McCULLUM” SILK HOSE. For Women at $1.00, $1.50, $2.00 pair. The kind that women know are reliable and right in every respect. HANDKERCHIEFS. Bigger values, Greater assortments then ever before for Men, Women and Children. GLOVES FOR CHRISTMAS. If in doubt as to size when pur- chasing gloves for Xmas, they can be exchanged after Christmas. Women’s Kid Gloves, $1.00 $1.50 to $3.00 pair. ‘Washable Cap Gloves, $1.00, $1.29, $1.50 pair. Men’s Lined and Unlined Gloves, 50c to $1.50 pair. Golf Gloves, Mittens of all kinds. HOLIDAY STATIONERY. 10c to $1.50 box. Large selection of French Ivory, Jewelry novelties, Coin Holders, Van itles, Mesh bags, Silk bags, Beaded bags, Shell goods, perfumes, toilet preparations Christmas and New Year cards. If its Umbrellas look to this store. \ D. McMILLAN | " 01-203 MAIN STREFT was classed as an “‘accident.” Fatali- tles to trespassers, while classed as “railroad acidents” are accidents “for which the public alone is responsible - When you trespass on a railroad you are breaking a law made for your own protection.” The law of trespass should reasonably cover railroad rights-of-way. But it is rarely enforc- ed. The public a-foot feels less hesi- tation about entering a strip of track property than it does about entering farm grounds. The remoteness of railway authority is perhaps one ex- | planation. “It is true,” the bulletin continues, “that more people are killed every vear trespassing on railroad tracks in the United States than the total num- ber who lost their lives in the John- stown flood, the San Francisco earth- quake and fire, the Salem, Baltimore and Jacksonville fires and the sinking of the Titanic and Lusitania.” Pos- sibly an average of 5,000 people meet death every year while trespassing on railway property. This is a condition which could be corrected. What is | needed is, first of all, education, ana | this the railroads have undertaken. Using newspapers as a medium they are trying to make it clear to all the { people that privacy in railroad prop- erty is not the result of autocracy, but is requisite to public safety. There is a general disregard for the | ‘“no trespassing” signs which ralilroads have eretced. A penalty may be at- tached by the authority of some state legislatures, but this law is dead, else the record of 5,000 victims a year would not be maintained. The pedes- trians in a city crowded with traffie would rarely prefer to walk down the middle of the car tracks as long as sidewalks devoted to foot travel were provided. Yet, in a sense, this is what the railway trespasser does. He ignores the highway and follows the route of the railwa; Sooner or later the tres- passer pays the penalty. “Safety first” among pedestrians imposes a general responsibility. Who Will Write the Platform? (Washington Post.) The Democratic national committee has already President the ticket virtually renominated the So of concerned, next far as the head is the held in St. Louis in June, will be | merely a formality. The principal | work that must be done at that con- vention aside from nominating a Vice President is the drafting of a party platform. Already the single-term the Baltimore platform eliminated. The plank has of heen plank which sug- gested that the high cost of living could be reduced with the reduction of the tariff ix known now to have been based upon a fallacy. Instead of the tariff for revenue only promised by the last platform there is now tariff which admits per cent. of all imports free of duty, and it has not raised sufficient revenue to run the government. It is admitted by the a Democrats enasco Shingles with attractive surface of Red and Green Slate Durable Handsome Fire Resisting We carry a full line of Genasco Roofing products. Call and investigate. NEW BRITAIN LUMBER & COAI, COMPANY. New Britain, Conn If You Give Writing Paper The most popular paper. made. We will die stamp you from 1001 dies w- it for have on hand or engravge a die to suit. ADKINS 66 CHURCH ST. that the tariff is the big sessed by the Republicans no doubt about that Democratic national convention, to he | teresting therefore to sce what Democrats have to say in will party OU can travel any place you wish to go, at any hour of the day or night BY TELEPHONE T requires more effort to cover one hundred miles than it does one mile. no HAVE YOU A TELEPHONE IN YOUR HOME? ® There It will th on the subjec Likewise what th question © their next platform be interesting to has to say on the |PRINTING CO. gest issue pos be in of national preparedness as an insuranc against permitted form, doubtful would as may vention may unlimber all his guns therc make no chance next must war, If Williams Jennings Bryan dictate the next dictated the last, President to run ple it i Vi ilsol to as he whethe find it possible a candidate for re-election. make the next Democratic his greatest battlefield Bryal con «H a last stand. There will bi for compromise n th Demderatic ntion the be a fight to the finish betwe his Wilson and Bryan. wery upon 4

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