New Britain Herald Newspaper, January 20, 1916, 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)

NEW BRITAIN 4ERALD HERALD PUBLISHING CUMPANY. Proprietors. Essued daily (Sundav excepted) at 4:15 p. m. &t Herald Building. ¢7 Church St Entered at the Post Ofce at New Britain as Second Class Mail Matter. Delivered by carriors to any part of tne city for 15 Cents 2 Week, 65 Cents a Month. Bubscriptions for paper to be sent by mall payable in advance, 60 Cents & Month, $7.00 a year. [TPe only profitable dvertising medium in the city. Cirentation books and press room always onen to advertisers. 14 will be found on sale at Hota- News Stand, 42nd St and Broad- New York City; Board Walk. Atlaotic City and Hartford depot. TELEPHONE CALLS. usiness Office . ditcrial Rooms 925 NSTITUENCY INCY,—THER FER AND CONSIST- IS A DIF- CE. There should armony between men and medSures bt the same type and pattern. That consistency. There should be no ross-firlng or contradiction. Sure- v this doctrine must belong in every bell organized movement, for we are reditably informed that house ivided against itself shall fall. How en shall Representative Sherwood ender an accounting to the pacifists Ind advocates of disarmament; of hom he is one, and to his lord high nce of peace, Willlam Jennings ryan? How shall the Representa- | ve square himself after his recent | bnduct on the floor of the national buse of Representatives when he in- | loduced a bill appropriating $5,000 b0 for a government munition plant | “his home city of Toledo? i be compatibility and a It seems | be not so much a question of con- ktency as it is constituency in this se. Politics doth make paltry pitroons and back sliders of us all. | The worthy representative from the bledo district is not at all unlike jher men who wear the toga of pub- office. First, and above all, he st keep on the good side of those ho tendered him honor. His per- | al interests are closely aligned h this part of his program. AftA]‘ these things are attended to, the ngressman must cast about and | hd his other hobbies ad. 1ib. And bt 1s where he is efther made or | pken. It is mostly a matter of k. The politician must get some- ng favorable to the masses, to the ority of those to whom he caters. this instance, Mr. Sherwood put political ear to the ground and up | ough the tympanum there was | nsmitted to the auditory nerve a | hnd which sung in dulcet tones, px Vobiscum, Pax Vobiscum!” And | ghtway Mr. Sherwood went forth preach the doctrine of peace on | th, good will toward men, and how ghty it is for nations to indulge in } And he getting along | ously with propaganda until | preparedness got ringing in the and men turned their attention pewhat to building a storm cellar. n it was that Mr. Sherwood’s con- uency got in his work. A volce | I out Toledo way said, ‘“Look here brwood, old man, this psalm-sing- of yours is immense, and we like | se pipe organ notes and all that; ‘ forget the Hallelujah chorus just | was his s enough to get us a government | nition factory in this district.” Sherwood did. At least he has | ted things moving in that direc- He has introduced the bill while he throws consistency to four winds still he gathers to his | om the most precious of all,—his | stituency. A mere matter of k, and they all do it. When pork | in the window patriotism goes | the back door. BETTER LAWYERS. y raising the requirements for ission to practice before the bar | he United States, the New York ‘e Bar Association aims to produce | etter brand of lawyer for the | jon. The New York lawyers have ed the movement and intend to e it nation-wide. The particular est against the present order of gs has to do with the too liberal ting of certificates to men who e completed but limited courses in t school st wh; eadily m should be leveled | products of night seen. The institutions of generally men who know | men y critic| the bols is not easily men attend these ming are t they going about, not the to gal education in their earlier da trying They are, for the majority, Their usually t are who opportunity acquire who to pnds. ous tion ee or who now make minded students. to the books is s0 loll 11 channels. intens the Because a man more e an o through atior law night is no reason he The , derives its of those oing to 1 a poor lawyer. H e other professio bt men from the r were ade.” unt of training will make a law- unless the particular individual ergoing treatment has the makings ‘born, not r | public building in every | icans, if we prefer our e | attitude of the Tex regular | of a lawyer. Pushing the sta admission to the will not ndard for | bar higher | plane necessarily do away with all the shyster lawyers, nor will it weed out all the unfits. But will do this, cut off the chance many a might fall | subject. to a of deserving candidate who because of one particular In the long run the law of i competency decides the whole ques | THE COMPLETE ULTIMATT Men are but boys grown large, and { nations nothing more augmented familie: J is at the bottom of and the same passions that sway the manly breasts rage hearts nations. Tt would not then, if internal strife is continvally fomented in the United State: greatl nature than Human the whole works, in the ot be surnrisi by fo r- i eign agencles, to see our Uncle Samuel | some day go over to Charter Oak and tack up a notice similar to the follow- | ing which was posted on a farm in Collinsville, Alabama: “Notice—Tresspassers will be per- sekuted to the full extent of the law and I might caushun further & sa Bewar of 1 mean mungrel which haint never been overly soshible with strangers, and a double barl shot-gun which ain’t loaded with sufy pillars. Dam if I ain't tired of all this hel- n on my prorp 2 | The man who wrote that had some- | thing to say and said it. It is time our | own Uncle Sam dashed off his ulti- | matum,—once and for all. Hail ye the King of Pork, Clark of Florida. Rather would he have ‘ town from a dential post office,” than see the “Stars and Stripes” float serenely over the high seas or Uncle Sam strong enough to look any man straight in the eye and delve out a quaint old saying. ‘What care we about the security of the nation as long as we can spend its ‘“‘dough” ? The manner in which Carranza's soldiers take delight in parading through the towns of Mexico with the corpse of Miguel Baca Valles, Villa’s whilom “Butchen” merely goes to show that the First Chief means busi- ness and intends to ‘“make good” for the United States. First, in Congress; next, in Pork; and then in Right with his Country- men. FACTS AND FANCIES. Whatever Mr. Bryan has up his sleeve will soon pop out through his hat, as usual.—Boston Journal. On the conscription issue there are stil] Britishers who believe it's better | to sacrifice their liberties to Ger- | many than to their own government. —Binghamton Pres; Sweden has had no American mail since January 3 and more than sus- pects the British censor knows Yet neither Sweden nor the United States is at war with anybody.— Pittsburgh Dispatch. If this country does not enact a tariff barrier to protect us from econ- omic invasion by the world when the war of Europe is over, we shall have | only a short time to live in our fools’ | paradise.—New York Press. 5 { to the Mex- | and com- | fort more than doing those things by which we shall demand respect in Mexico, there is not the slightest rea- son for ‘“preparedness! The time to act has come.—Philadelphia Star. If we are afraid fig The greatest menace to tional peace between the ited States and Mexico is embodied in the ns along the bor- der. They have suffered greatly. The Texans know how to fight and they fear nothing. Most of the men along the border are gun men—not in the sense New York uses the term, as meaning criminals, but men who are crack shots and carry the weapons that can do execution in a region where the value of human life is held lightly but where ‘“‘personal honor” and “national honor” are warmly cherished. The Texans have never forgotten the Alamo.—Syracuse Jour- nal. This Is An Enlightened Act. (Collier’s Weekly.) Missouri finally woke up to discov- er that a majority of the railroads en- tering St. Louis are in the hands of receivers, so the Public Service Com- mission raised fares from 2 to 2% and 3 cents per mile and freight rates by some 5 to 7 per cent. The idea is to get the roads going again. With good regulation this sort of action is safe and it is absolutely necessary. But it is not enough for a railroad | to be merely solvent. It must be | strong enough to be looking and planning ahead, building for the lar- ger industrial conditions that are to come. Th country is going to have some 150,000,000 people within our lifetime. It could hold twice as many. The grouping of this popu- | lation is going to depend very largziy | upon transportation—people will | farm, manufacture, trade, and live where they best served in ease of | coming and going both for themselvos { ana for their goods. for a | few cliff dwellers, it has always heen | so. The regions that have rub | railroads will remain themselves ba ward and undeveloped significant that while stati ns predicting 14,000,000 population for New York City by 1950 or so, the Lackawanna Railroad has spent $21 000,000 on colossal cut-offs which save cept ver: \re Maine to California which has a Pres!- | | | party interna- | ingly set forth, and we s | that Mr. Wilson will do it. NEW, BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, JANUARY 20, 1916. grades to hea the d ¥ W the and more and fourteen miles on the anthracite coal fields *at Lakes. Bigger rities hauling must go togethe: If St. Louis is to be what its ps triots dream, the railroads of the Missouri region must do more than keep out of bankruptey. Justice Hughes’ Distinction. ( York World.) Justice Hughes Gov. st choice for I'resident, as long as the Justice firmly to be a candidate he will not con- | tinue to be the Governor's first choice. | On these terms the Justice will re- main Col. Roosevelt’s first choice too, and the first choice of every other Re- publican aspirant for the Presidenc It rare distinction that Justice | Hughes has won, and he cannot help being impressed by the great popular- ity he has achieved. Of course, if there should signs that the Justice was weakenin | in his refusal to accept a nomi | tion, th might be different Then | the Governor, the Colonel and all the rest of the lightning-rod holders would be compelled to give patriotic consideration to the question of ver- mitting the United States Supreme Court to prostituted to partisan politics. The Governor, the Colonel, and the rest of them are very sensitive about the honor of the United States Su- | preme’ Court But while Justice Hughes remains equally sensitive he Is their candidate for President. New ! | | | is a conia be A Southern Appeal for Mr. Taft. (Bridgeport Standard.) The Augusta (Ga.) olde: Chronicle, the newspaper in the South, has an article addressed to President Wilson in which it advises and conjures him to appoint Mr. Taft to the vacant place on the Supreme court bench. It is for Mr. Taft first, last and all the time, ana it put Mr. Taft’s quali- fications and the character of the act Which his appointment would carry, s follows: “You have the opportunity, Mr. President, to do one of the most sraceful things that ever fell to the lot of a Chief Executive of this na- tion; at the same time, one that will redound to the Denefit of the nation; an act comparable only with that act, itself, which placed Justice Lamar, a Georgia Democrat and a citizen of Augusta, on the United States Su- preme bench. “When [ the Hon. William H. Taft, then the Republican President of tht United States, rose above party poli- tics and broke all precedents by ap- pointing to the Supreme bench this splendid Southerner and Democrat— even therby distinguished himsel for broad-mindedness and pure patrio- tism by, also, appointing Judge Lur~ ton of Tennessee, to a similar position, and then clevating Justice White, an ex-Confederate soldier and Democrat to the chief justiceship—he not only endeared himself to all the people of the South whose opinions are worth anything, but also, gave to the country convincing proof of his pure Americanism. Certainly the more complimer of Mr. Taft tr with peculiar he, could be nothing ary and appreciative | an this and it comes force to the President “from a newspaper publ in the city where lived as a and | where you still have so many friends | and admirers.” The appeal also says: | “May the oldest Democratic new: pape the South, or in all the coun- try-—voicir the sentiments of your | fellow Scutherners and Democrats, not hope to sec vou, at least, equal this magnificent act by the appoint- ment to the Supreme bench, as the late Justice Lamar's successor, of that superb American who rose above party politics and all sectionalism when conferred a similar honor | upon t ana who to res day?” you he that was Augustan | to- | good in this city laid woud think that a man at all to the impressions which a situation makes on the aver- man who has no official dignity or fealty to safeguard, would be to emulate the action so feel- ncerely hope One susceptible such - moved Tmre of the Oyster. | (Washington Post.) | Among the things that puzzle stay- home folks is why other folks want | | at- ! to be moving around all the time. | | The latter themselves are not always l'able to explain. Part the sec | is found in the desire to find in new surroundings a surcease from their own dissatisfactions. But with such it is too often as with the worthy | ascetic, who, after seeking shelter in | | his lonely cell, found he had incarce: | ated with him his one worst enem A brighter touch, however, I | been given to the habit of intermin- able globe trotting by the account of a hurry visit of Capt. William F. Paclk. U. 8. A, i tive shore Capt. Pack w governor of the Igorrote hunters in the Philip- nes. his would seem a calling equal to the banishing of ennui. Was the captain content? Not much. The oysters of his native land called. £o he traveled the brief distance of 8,800 miles to his destination in New York for a half dozen of what are called “Juscious bivalves’—hated words to the purists, but understood and re- vered by the captain. Upon finishing his plate, or plates, the captain will return. Not to the land of the head-hunters, but to the Isle of Pines. Not that the goal mat- ters much. Either is as good as the other without oysters. By the same token, either i bad as the other under the same conditions. The irip here is own defense, considering the object in view. Perhaps when the captain has entirely shaken off his sloth, conquered for all time dolce far niente of nds, he’ll come to the Ches- ke and eat oysters. In that event it'll be no hail and farewell He'll v his hat in our midst, and sunlit reefs and airy atolls will know him no more forever. of et as its tropical the encrvatin ape | i WHAT OTHERS SAY Views on all sides of timely questions as dlscussed in ex- changes that coms to the Herald Office. Americans in the War. (New York Sun.) In the French Foreign Legion par- ticularly and in other regiments on both sides less conspicuously, a not inconsiderable number of American citizens have been engaged in fighting the battles of Burope. Some of these men are soldiers of fortune, seekers of adventure, cager to fight in any cause. Many have higher motives, but all are voluntarily in surround- ings ghat most men would prefer to avoid. To some persons their partici- pation in the science of slaughter seems altogether unjustifiable. 3ut leaving aside those who one reason or another are digsing trenches, aiming rifles or machine guns and participating in the deadly work of war, there can be no two opinions about the brave Americans who are risking life and Hmb in the ambulance service. They are doing all they can be done to alleviate the suffering in the fleld. Their task is not light. They enlist for at Jeast three months of field duty, and their courage and zeal are sternly tested. In the American Ambulance of Paris every State in this Union is represented. Of more than 400 vol- unteers this city has supplied more than seventy. This winter they are doing their duty of mercy on the fir- ing line and have borne their share of the casualties. Some have given their lives in the work of humanity. Who shall say that these young men take away with them al] the courag | and skill of our American young man- hood? They are heroes, and there an army of heroes going quietly about their work at home. The Press and Officials. Once again the Supreme Court of Connecticut sets its seal of approval on the newspaper duty, we will not say right, to sharply criticise officials of all kinds who fail to do their duty to the State. or who are so lost to a sense of fitness that they besmirch their officials robes with transactions of a discreditable nature. At the same time the Court makes it clear that there must be no malice or per- secution in the criticism. If this is in evidence the party responsible for it cannot escape consequences as the law allows. This reaffirmation of the Court's position as defined in the Burns case is made on the complaint agains Willlam J. Pape, editor of the Water- bury Republican for alleged criminal libel, made by State Senator Jame A. Peaseley. In the trial Court the case was ecliminated by technical plead- ing on demurrer. The supreme Court held that this was error and the case goes back to be proceeded with ac- cording to 1aw. There were nice little points at- tending the procedure in this case. The action was brought under the breach of peace and abusive language statute. The obj of this was to take from the accused a chance to produce and show the facts upon which he based his criticism. When the case reached the upper Court the defendant came forward with a de- murrer which was sustained, claiming special privilege. Thus one act of manoeuvers at law was met by an- other without touching the real is- sue. With these procedures the State is little concermed. What it does want 1o know is the standing of an official with scant respect for the dignity of i his office and the extent to which the | public watch dog, the press, can go in criticism of such lack of respect. In our judgment the Supreme Court In this decision clearly defines the law on thi vitall important matter. The opinion, written by Justice George W. Wheeler, all the others concurring, points out the charges made against the Senator and says: ‘“These are charges of corrupt conduct in a speci fic matter, of gross breaches of public duty. They are not expressions of opinion but rather assertions of fact.” The Court goes on to sa “If un- true, they (ihe charges) passed the boundary of fair criticism, and were abusive and offensive, even to the point of being scurriliofous. The right and duly of the press to give to the public information regarding the pub- lic conduct of a public officer is cognize by our law and on another cccasion we said the free and fear- less performance of that duty will be protected by the Court; but the very nature of that duty implies good faith. That means that the occasion for comment must not be used to cir- culate and defamatory matter, nor be made an opportunity for the gratification of personal antagon or malice. Fair criticism by the press is one of the ronzest agencies which free government knows for lkeepir the public service honest and capable, and its o ithful ana honor- able. Tts of criticism must not he hampered.” We believe that this para tects every honest newspape same time it clearly points out that great instrument of the press is not to be employed for purposes of malice. The newspaper which takes this chart for its guide nced fear nothing. On the other hand, the shifty, dodgir official, alw s on the edge of break- ing the law, ever alert to use his of- ficial position for personal gain, is to clearly understand that the Courts cannot be used to save him from the lash of stinging criticism when it evident that he is being false to his oath of office, in spirit. if not in deed. ro- ph pro- Congress will have to get away from its two great stunts, (1) praising the purely imaginary excellence of our defenses, ) eloquently pleading for a substantial appropriation for the purely jmaginary = conversion of Squash Hollow or Onion Creek into a navigable waterway. This matter of preparedness will not down and has to be gone through with.—New York Telegram. | tretted pre | the most sa for ! McMILLAN’S NEW BRITAIN'S BUSIEST BIG STORE “ALWAYS RELIABLE" OUR ANNUAL- MID - WINTER CLEARANCE SALE FROM OUR Peasant Arisiocrats Live in Fine ~0!d Land , they are composed is not as durable | ias that which enters into the composi- | tion of our Rocky Mountains and the b r Alps. Fach year, its thousands of ever de-| funtastic modellings are carved anew. | in chao- | i'he strange Dolomite needles become | tic profusion, into the skies, were, a | more pointed and longer, Wwhile its year ago, a cherished playground of | knife-like ridges run to sharper edges. the world, while, today, among their | Its ‘tusks,, ‘obelisks,’ ‘pyramids,’ ‘ca- crags, peaks and rock splinters, their | thedral spires,’ its serrate ‘teeth’ and weather-torn crests and weather-| etched walls disintergrate noticeably ipices, an inferno of moun- | from year to year. Scattered through- tain cannons, machine guns and rifles | out their area a-e great fields of brok- | hiave transformed the playground into | en stones, and deep streams of eroded vage war-theater to be | matter slope against their higher walls found in all war-ridden Europe.” “Titian, the great master of colors, Thus begins the bulletin i | was born in this mountain region. His the National Geographic socie irthplace was Campo di Sotto or day, which deals with the terrifying | Fieve di Cadore. At least, he spent his Lattleground where Austrians and | boyhood in the latter village, once the Italians are contesting mountain | capital of a sturdy Dolomite republic, pinacles, sheer walls of barren rock, | the Republic of Cadore, which slacier crests, and narrow, twisting | founded 500 years before Americz valleys. The nucleus of the Dolomites | discovered, and which existed for is the southeastern part of Tyrol, a|years, losing its liberty to no lesser | 7 1eglon quite as untamed now as when | conqueror than Napoleon, who, at the Y&rd: Reman leglonaries threaded its dan- | peace of Campio Formio in 1797, re- gerous passes with their shields in |arranged this part of Europe. testudo to guard against rock masses| ‘The Latins and the Germans have from the heights above. fought from times Immemorial on the “The Dolomites are in their nature | Dolomites’ cyclopian battleground. A | _ Large size, heavy sinister, cruel, uncanny. Their desola- | race of warriors grew up in this bor- While this lasts, tion is weird. The paths among their | der land, and, also, one might say, a each. crags are treacherous. Wind, rain,and | race of peasant aristocrats. There are | frost has scarred them with a multi- | humble people here who can trace the tude of shapes, with teeth and claws! family parentage back unbroken and ugly wrinkles. Yet, despite the |through centuries and who treasure fierce aspect of these mountains, they |anclent family documents signed by have fascinated all who have visited | popes and emperors, doges and great them, and brought many tourists back | ncbles. Some of our sturdiest immi- stmmer after summer for tramps in | grants, Italian, German and Slay come | the bracing air that bathes them and | from these mountain fastnesses. Few | for feasts upon the richly varied scen- | of them remain, for their wonderful | ery which they offer. mountain homeland calls them irre- | “The Dolomites are not the same | sistibly after they have made their from year to year. The rock of which ] Washington, D. C., Jan. ghostly Dolomites, the wildly ruins of mighty Alps, all the forms the signed, and many mor 20.—*The plendid a once architect. cut, SPECIALS " Domestic and Linen Dept. CHED SHEETING wide. Sale price from our yard today PILLOW CASES x36, made of good durable le price 10%¢c each. LIN TOWELING yard Sale price s 200 alar yard Sheeting worth 34c yard. reg stock, Size 4 cotton. ALL Worth " 125 FLANNEL price 6%q OUTING sale ACHED inches wide. TURKISH TOW! Towaels. e we Sale ; at lot price value TABLE DAMASK All linen. Value §$1.00 yard. price 79c yard. New designs. Sale prices on all Sheetings, Case Tubings, etc., for the of this month. 1,200 Yards of New Embroideries Now Sale Pillow ralance at Januar Prices. on sale at 12 1- and 49c yard. Embroidery Edgings up to 18 inches i wide, in this sale at 12 1-2¢ yard. Value 19c yard 4 inch CO0D ARRAY OF NEW BOOKS NAMED IN INSTITUTE’S LIST THIS WEEK worth well the reading of any moth- er.”—A. L. A. Booklist. T ow o ! Storfes and story-telling in moral and religious education, by E. P. St. John. | e | | Baby Allovers, 29c rd. Value to 48c. 18-inch Baby Flouncing in dainty new overwork edges. price 29¢ yard. Value 39c to inch Hemstitched Baby Sale price 29c yard. sale price the Sale 45c. Floun- Value to The Teaching Art. Camp and outing activities, by F. H. Cheley. “Collects from many sources, much useful information, chosen because of its “positive all-around character de- veloping value.’—A. L. A. Booklist. .« o Camp craft, modern practice equipment, by W. H. Miller. “Gives many helpful and specific directions on tents, beds, kits, fires, } accessories, etc.”—A. L. A. Booklist. | Publican. PP The child and his spelling, by W. A. Cook and M. V. O'Shea. “A series of investigations and tests of the spelling ability of groups of pupils form the basis of a thoroughgoing discussion of the psy- chological causes and defective met- ods responsible for our present-day | poor spelling.”—A. L. A. Booklist. P and cings. | 48c. 27-inch and 36-inch Flouncings of dainty Swiss and Embroidered Or- gandies. Sale price 49c yard. Valud to $1.00. Teaching in the home, by A. A. Berle. “Those who disagree with the au- thor on certain points will at least | : Standard Fashions be stimulated to think out the prob- | selves—Springfield Re. | The new Spring Fashion Book now lem s for themaelyed L | ready. Price 20c. With one pattern | fre: 0. McMILAN' MAZN SPRING STYLES and P Teaching of poetry in the high school, by A. H. R. Fairchild. A~ suggestive, even stimulating various | Study, of interest to every high school { teacher of English. The author em- phs the aim of developing a real appreciation for poetry rather than of instructing as to its form.”—A. L. A. Booklist. | PR ! Trades and professions, by G. H. Palmer. “Attempts to clarify the distinction between the professional and the com mercial attitude toward work and re- muneration, with special reference to its bearing on teaching profession. In- spiring reading for teachers and oth- ers.”—A. L. A Booklist. PR 139-201-201 STRFET could our officers of the higher ranks be expected to handle large units with which they have never dealt bg- fore except on Our para- mount military is a regular army with a minimum active strength of 250,000. When we will be time to decide ab serves of second and third lin York Tribune. by | scholars, i Christian schools Mrs. A. D Sk W. . by Athearn. Church school, et that i . College life, its conditions and pro- blems, by M. G. Fulton. i “It does the student the further and far higher service of almost compelling him to think what his own | aim and business as a student ought properly to be.”—Spectator. ko troops. 2w as Von Bethms world that So long assures the ! plenty of everything in foodstuffs, how can the pect the Allies to allow the shipment of milk and cream into their coun- try from the United Stat —Syra- cuse Herald -Hollweg Germany has the 24 Germans ex- Fiction. Between the lines, by Boyd Cable. “A series of vivid sketches of what is going on between the lines in the western theater of war, and also what may be read hetween lines of official despatches. They are real and vivid and so touched with humor that they way College sons and college H. S. Canby “Professor Canby shows here the rare understanding of the college fathers, by At the | man and his problems that makes him so popular with cla: at Yale.” —Boston Transcript. * % E Learning process, by S. H. Colvin s inlis Manual of stories, by W. B. . » Forbush. . Natural history of the farm, Needham. “A series of studies for the entire o year, giving methods of examining wild plant and animal life, also cul- tivated plants and domesticated ani mals, and rccording the results s: tematically. An interesting and s gestive book for teachers of gr mar grades or high schools.’—A. L. A. Booklist. h in New education, by Scott Nearing. “Revised and enlarged from a ser- | d ies of articles recently contributed to T the TLadies’ Home Journal, this book has a constructive end in view—to put before the average person, in a style that will hold his attention. some | of the successful experiments in ed- ucational re-organization that are be- ing made in different schools through- out the country. The writer obtained his material at first hand.”—A. L. A. | F Beoklist. p | . = | Practicel drawing, student & A. Lutz n u » a book for the neral reader, by . L mary han k, by E. V. ive guide to the use of the table, scissors, clay, —A. L. A. Booklist. . of high by C. H. Judd. “The science of psychology applied to the many problems in the teaching of the various subjects, and also to the general problems of secondary education. A helpful and informing book for high school teacher: .\'\'—i perintendent, and progressive par- | ents.”—A. L. A. Booklist. . or o School credit for home work, R. Alderman. Alderman. “A friendly logical in its Transeript. lwor I w i ete. tt ! Psychology school subjects, R by L. | | | i ; T sana and ' —Boston little book, suggestions. & w Self-training for mothers, by Mrs M. S. Chance. “Advice on a variety of subjects, vital to the home and child. Rambiing, discursive, full of old-fashioned wi: se tr are not painful reading.”- born French with an enemy of La Tonty by J. G. fand a waterwa i to Fort St. Lou ome historic | Ameri youth of gay ing N. and generally Maid of old Virginia, a romance for love, the other for money.” furni ripened ldom, up-to-date and progressive, ; should be plunged into war, how Living age. . owow 3eyond the frontier, by Randall Par- about 16806. A nobly 'l forced into marrizge alle, and M. de the chief characters, journey from Quebe now Starved Rock, river, the setting. An furnish n the Illinois interesting story, combining love and ardship and thrills fact with Book- in plenty A. L. by Emily Viele Strather. “The heroine is the daughter of an an army officer who grows up 1 Paris. “It is delightfully written with the irect simplicity of literary mastery. he spirit of youth pervades it, a ty and tears and white- ess of soul. atholic World “But it malke: sual and wholesome little story hav. ich heauty and idyllic charm Y. Tim “The story is replete with intimato sympathetic descriptions of rench family life, and affectionate ictures of the people of Paris and of rench characteristics and institutions —Springfield PR Republican. ittle Tliad, by Maurice Hewlett. “The “Helen” is Helena the Baron- | Dobbs. | ess Von Broderode. She is pitied and loved by Hectory, by his three broth- cardboard, | er: his own and their father, each in y. plot gives The outline of the nothing of the book, which reveals all he kil author’s well in character! known mannerism, ation and amused interpretation of the situations he has created.”—A. A. - L * Booklist. & i ot ! Bacon’s William Sage. rebellion, by P ogue by compulsion, an affair of the Secret Service, by Victor | Bridges. | soft w. of . . reasurer, by “The story Dane two marriages, Our army cannot be made a chool for officers until | it begins to raining. Staff experience is of the growth vears. How , on the whole, an un- | | delignts tr Bank. | , one | h complete faciiities for modern ! l | HAIR DARK } WITH SAGE TEA ed with Gray Hair It Darkens aturally « The old-time mixture and Sulphur for darkenin streaked d faded hair is ‘mother’s treatment, and folks again to keep their h goo0d, even color, which is quite sible, as we are living in an agef when a youthful appearance is of the greatest nta Nowadays, though, don't the troublesome task of gathe inussy t sell called “Wye Compound” cents a bottle Tt because nobody can discover been applied. Simply moisten comb or a soft brush with it this through your hair, taking one small stand at a time; by morning the gray hair disappears, but what 1¢ ladies with Wyeth's Sa that, besi the hair after a few nlso produces that lustre and appearance of abun- dance which so attractive; besides, prevents dandruff, itching and failing_hair. are a sen using we have ng the mixir home.. the All drugs product Sulphur to-use and bout 50 popular it for is very has your nd draw and Sulphur tifully darkeni applications, i is scalp ' BOWLING, real | Cinbhs and Private Par. Accommaundated. Hilding Nelson 172-174 ARCH STREET. s

Other pages from this issue: