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NEW, BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 3 NE BR{[A’. “HE KEPT US OUT OF THE WAR.” | to light pink, and eight-centers are } [ | unaiEsal eniopent to. thone waker for ; Wiille the BHE} wprking people of | uii" atio 4L not dimin Nor- wo Mzd els 0 osed | field Republican. C HERALD PUBLISHING COMPANTY, the Kast have little or no time in (j.) Record | NEW BRITAIN'’E BUSIEST Fropristora. which to follow the reported speeches — BIG STORE | . | s * . 3 . > " tasued datly (Sunday cxcepted) at 4:18 p- M. | of President Wilson on his tour of I th W ( ; 1 ALWAYS RELIABLE ¢ 2. 7 c If baseh: ¥ ates did t have & 0 muudine pETiChuon L the Middle West, they do now mnl‘ isahslmesenatosgdicing n e ar o ianits — —— | ample worries at this time they might ln(araa.'ntsgx‘l}oundP(n..:;w;)fl\l;‘:fl&lflf&:r.gl"“‘ then get a chance to scan the head- | be concerned over the bill of Assem- < lines and note the reeeptions téndered | hlvman Herman Kramer, which re: Washington, D. C., Feb, 3.—*In the ; Wand, and here the Vorarlberg joins 484 ST“RE V!SITS i Special Sale o] | “ | | ‘Derl!ven'd by carrfors to any part of tne city | him in various American cities; The @ duires club owners 'ulwn:wn;t‘ a '\‘:(' = war of giants, two midgets counterbal- | the Liechtenstein frontier. Vaduz is ‘"anlrcrll;[s;‘:‘!(n Woek, 85 Cents & Month. | ten report every week te 1‘-‘ ance, San Marino in the éntente camp | the cabital of the state, a residence of or paper to be sent by Commission. and also M-} and Licchtenstein in the camp of the | about 1,040 inhavitants, where are Payablo in advance, §0 Cents & | SR s b i sloneand : : y e e Month, $7.00 & year. G E CEORIERT DRE) CRENTIT AL i 1 poses a fax of five per cent. on the | Teutonic powers,” begins a primer de- | the government officés and where the | : d 1 ” each and every stopping place, and |And costly warfare with the Federal|jjes, fssued today by the National|of the Schaan railway station, beyond q The Oonly profitable advertisin, ‘ . /ortising medium 1n e it o ey B o oo e | et ian 1Ll wveda. | eakneinic fiol Nationalkand s Amer=l G ograpnictsoclotyl Ticchtenatiln lailithe notice) theiwotries mudl the vanis D“rmg Month ol Jam]a[‘y correspondents traveling with the |\ 0 room always open to advertisers. fcan organizations o hard blow. In | the suggestion of & valley and a slust| ties of the world, 5 I _ oW Wilagr s fastiearning a WETM | {heir leffort tol recover the magnates i ter of mountain craigs; situskied off'the | | ‘Liechtenstein possesses & constitne l'l?‘:rl;lernld will be found on sale at Hota- [ spot in the heart of every true Amer- | will have little time to devote to the | horder between Switzerland and Tyrol, | tion, glven in 1862 and amended in Way.. New pond. b St and Broads | jcan. Those papers that are staunch- | Albany attack.—Brooklyn Standard- | and it shares the distinction with San| 1878, 1895, and 1901. The national| During the month of January, the ¥ BATRRHE OIS nd ey Hept e o Marino and Monaco of being the smal- | diet consists of fifteen members, three | health department inspectors examin- —_— lest independent state in Europe. | of whom are appointed by the Prince, | ed 484 stores in New Britain, this h whil ness program Ccontend that hile From almost every statistical ~view-| while the remaining twelve are chosen TELEPHONE CALLS i e . i g F w Businees Dmoo the Presiderit s yociferously received | Tho two problems—industrial and ) point, except that of square miles, it | by a male electorate. A ropresenta- | 15Ure including the re-inspections. or omen xat Reoms i nd his every word listened to with | Military preparedness—are really '2- |y congiderably smaller than either of | tive of the prince resident at Vaduz, | The stores were where food is sold o % separable, but the President-is pru- |, wrapt attention, this is done merely | Gony (o apprmach the latter firsr. ae | 18 Tivals. is the chiof cxecutive. Appeals can be |and there was no let up during the NEW BRITAIN’S FORTY. because he is the nation’s ruler; that |'in his speeeh bofore the TRailway | .. LRe obscure principality lies south | made to the prince’s court at Viennd | month in the campaign for better 7 : : e S el Lake Constance, and includes more | and to the sapreme district court ot When a United States court relaxes | those who belleve in his doctrines do Business Mens Awocation i New | ihar sixty square’ niles of rocks, | Innshruck. 1ts population It about , from its regular routine and conde- | S0 merely because he is President. | YOFK. Ordinary common 5‘9“-‘9‘ "|' ] bleak mountain sides, avalanches,; 9,000, and, such is theipr thrift in m: stores were ordered cleaned Ieias to. go niore than Bhif ‘was to | The wild ovation he 'got in - | Pl DL ‘flf‘:y‘:“‘ljigp‘:(‘“":‘" erial | evergreon forests, high pastureland, | ters of public housekecping, that there | The reports of the hranches of the LRICH ‘1,11:('!" Union Suits haveng $ 3 prosperity, b on of | un3 brook-scarred valley bottoms. It | is no public debt. Before the aholish- Nl - side seams and are knitted at the ce sencies ; s to sl i 1 ri P ¢ i hdence arzedive ) E T g department for Janus fol- < R —c~roee ttmirely gofs toishow | wenkoe 15 attribufeditorthe fect thabijihefidsals oft nationalfindeps ndence | iy ahout twelve miles long and | its | ment of compulsory military service . 1 January fol- | waist line of finer thread, doifg that courts, afier all, are made up of | those citizens of the Wisconsin town | and individual liberty and political | width varles between one and six |in 1868, the army of Licchtenstein Communicable Discascs. away with that bulky, uncomfortable human beings ready and anxious to | wanted to repudiate the accuuation :’“‘(“"““‘ 1 {L’-' """i;"}']!i"“' t]hflhf’ 0';‘"65 miles. Tts highest summit reaches an | was nincty-one strong, well-officered |y o CHERERCEAS DRGS0 feeling, making it a perfect fitting gy 4 "™ [ hefore everything.—Philadelphia Led- | alev, b . et Toues € 13, diphtheria 14, | ment assist thei 9 i elevation of 8,445 feet, the Rothe!and well-trained mountainecers ks ht] - Y Sib Sellows. Tdnlgntiin Hart {liandunwarzanted Sibellstifishat Rthelnl) com % dipgiherie carcieraif. facariet 6 fever In this Sale we offer medium and ford there will be held a special ses- | city is not loyal to the nation. 3, typhoid fever 0, measles 16, whoop- | heavy Cotton Suits, medium welght sion of the district court in order that | On the other hand, the same op- Ingfeougn iz smumps 0, (chickenpox || Wooll Suits; a class of forcigners from the New | position forces contend that just at m?‘\‘\rlr\‘:.“""‘l‘v‘;"'m‘ COOD ARRAY OF NEW BOOKS NAMED A it "I'.H'H‘l-:ltllil" Cotton Suits, 1§ iritain Grammar school may take out | this moment Wilson has a magic SR ) " T y 2 (T o Sarle ; Regular y extiy first citizenship papers. There are forty | control over the people, who bless | ._‘.h( r(nfmm?'_mx?”m”"(v”h”"i the IN INSTIT[JTE’S le’l‘ THIb “IEEK ture imined 113, .\(l\( ond H\':‘I\(nv(lll‘O T Aol (,,,1 ;‘,a,fi.‘l"":l,.\.‘: R N]‘,],‘..:p X: B e of Lhls Glas Sl o iaiactialihimibecause! Uhellept Usfout of tha lack of proper ventilation in the trol- cultures cxamined 91, first culture 1eck, no sleeve, QI hoane: iheoaresof ineldayj (et Beace land B EoR o e R ey oeaine yereltor atst [In el as ool s o et “',‘:n“‘:,,(,:\‘v;:.’:n,‘fi;"{"‘h'i,.i';?'}:r,c,f';""“f,‘”_‘, have dlligently gone to school every | greatest assets of the President, say (=00 thioy u“.“(’ Jed Tnod o by W B. Braithwaite. Booklist. | Plood test for typhold 5, positive re- [Monday, Wednesday and Friday | his critics. And there is naught but | noiform The mew pay-as-youeenter | | COntains a review of the year, tho = actions obtained 0, sputum examin- night, in order to grasp the real idea | truth in the statement. Mr. Wilson | cars may solve some of the difficul- | 2Pthelogy, critical notes of the be Outlines of international law, by A. |ations 17, sputum showing tubercii- of American citizenship. Headed by | has made many friends on this trip [ ties which passengers are called upon books of poetry and the best books B. Hall lar B. positive 2, miscellancous exam- o 1ge about poets and poetry, an index of | “A popular, non-technical SUrvey |inations 9. WOOL SEATING -GLOVE heir teacher, they will tonight realize | that has carried him through states :;‘ encounter in riding to and fro. But ; e g jthe first thrill of their ambitions. closely aligned with other national ey are absolutely not usable on the "RICHELIEU” Union Suits ee round neck, elbow sleeve, knee length condition§ in thes stores. Iifty-nine | made of the finest fabrics, KNIT TQ FIT, in sizes 6 to 9 elbow sleeve, ankle lengths Al<g “RICHELIEU” light weight Wool Suits. Regular and extra sizes, special $1.50 each. Made Dutch neck, elbow sleeve, knee length. ley cars only emphasizes the general poets and poems in the American | of the whole field accurate as to Sanitary Report Wrist and elbow lengths A R e mwr(-rnwdmfi:‘i”:g“?“:_(:;'”"y':"""; dnd reviews, and 1:11(:\.# |mn‘m’lr;d "{L'_rtvsrdr, eve ,‘,\‘;3 Defective plumbing (other than | 98¢ pair. When men become serious on any | heroes, many of whom are already | ang poor ventilation is most danger- ;on A”]:{u((:kli]::o“h published. ‘::[):1(}?‘.: ‘lf‘“ “--m{ i’_rzj:fi“‘i“ its | toilet plumbing) ordered repaired 1, : question it is but right and just that | beginning to totter and fall—notably [ ous owing to the length of time SR . Pl ’H‘C\':(\‘}'Orf\ ;‘“ X l“;];k”\“ defective toilets ordered repaired 1, | CHILDRE WHITE LEATHER. hose Who know should lend a help- | Bryan. So long as the President of | that the majority of the passengers | arms and the race, by R. M. Jonhston ¥ SR Bl ;\pw (olh;ls olrderm me:lcd tl‘; awel- o ”1 l'][la (;L()\ E are st > S @ 8 . by R. M. J S ings ordered connected vi ity ashable, al c pai fing hand. These forty candidates for | the United States keeps his people out ::v(na}(::k ted to these undesirable | «Outlines the change in natlonal | Songs of Brittany, by Theodore Bo- | BE% ©C€Co, COITCRe T8 m“r"“‘g = = s 7. 3 , 5 & - C ns. ) itarv { I re! - % . A 3 < ~ r dmission into Uncle Sam's family are | of international troubles he will be ot 0 o G Ff“ml)i{fl" mmie-“rand _mlht'l‘ll.\ ol trel. . ordered cleaned 31, garbage cans or- SILK CREPES AND CHIFFONS, fanxious to b ac itize > yith a great degree of : i . § sasi Cre 4 O 5 Rnmbing, s ; . dered 2, garbage, ashes and rubbish > become good citizens, | looked upon W & A still awaiting some genius to devise | tions of Lurope, Asia and America, | War poems and other translations, by | oqct ¥ EWrORES, ashes and WBDOR | 4o eyening wear, in the wanted otherwise they would have never taken | approval, as something more secure | a public conveyance for the use of the | claims that our military experiences | Tosalchen) e i e aeh s e ehnaba: 11 the pains and trouble they went to | than a promise of a change for the | trolley roads w hich will more nearly | have nroved the weakness of our P unwarranted 8. K‘,;,M," “,m,mmm,\ = n order to learn of the intricate work- | better. There is no getting away """m””‘ I'l']”‘" ‘,‘\," '-‘".“I of car, to be | national forces, and suggests a 108i- | Wealth and income of the people of | received at office 51, miscellaneous 40-INCH CHIFFON CLOTH B e e Vit ol troiaio)) Ava o ttne end thatine wiil ' itis fflml settle the | cal policy for defense and the or the TUnited Gl i 7 O iR 1 o Erant At Special at 98¢ Yard. : ! 3 problem of overcrowding. Only more tion of a model army. Author . careful statistical study of ing a grasp of the English language | continue to keep us out of war what- | frequent service or service better ad- | assistant professor of modern hiStory | wealth and income distribution, ex- Plumbing Inspector’s Report. 36-INCH GEORGETTE CRE ese men took up the study of civil | ever money is spent on the national | justed to the state of travel will do at Harvard."—A. L. A Booklist. tending from 1850 to 1910, made by | No. applications received 39, per- Price $1.50 Yard. overnment. From reports of their | defense so long as the people are not | that. But if the car designers had MRS an instructor in statistics at the Uni- | mits issued for work in newbuild- 3 5 - s(l\f‘ out :n devise a more uncomfort- I‘zlrdu]r_mlllvs \._»olm- sl:o\(\vl;;“r from Gal- | yersity of Wisconsin. He has seleci- | ings permits—old buildings 36, (‘ffh(:’l]:i ?:;dl.q.‘:,‘(;; l:r -:.‘u:]lk nnd“n:::;:'l e 5 . able, unhandy and disagreeable con- lipoli, by Norman Wilkinson. ed his material discriminatingly and | permits issued for new sinks in old acts, € g8, edgings, allC hem would put to shame some of our ."“““‘““- So long as ““‘3”“““ SAY | trivance than the type of trolley ears o presented it clearly and systematic- | buildings 31. permits issued for ney | and flouncings. pwn High school boys and girls. And | “he kept us out of the war” he will | now in general use on the Connecticut ghting France. from Dunkerque to |ally with a wealth of diagrams and |laundry trays in old buildings 1 hese night school students represent | never lose his hold. Nor will he be | lines, he would have a difficult tasik, Belfort, by Edith Wharton. | tables. ““Cllearly the best and most | plumbing in new buildings tested 18, in our estimation. “A book to be thankful for. One | comprehensive attempt yet made to |plumbing approved in new buildings The open cars in use in the sum- | feel%. upon closing it, that it is like | gtate wealth and income conditions | 14, final inspection in new buildings In ailbtge varieth; Beh fri b . : mer time are cqually unfitted for the [ COMINg out of a great cathedral, vet |jn tre United States.—A. L. A. |8, final inspection in old buildings 10. | gogp — Oonyapy, entines, Tally hip that may be well thought over [ They believe him when he says the [ rush hour service, Passengers have |1t 1S merely simply told narrativ 300klist. permits issued for new toilets in old [ carqs Favors and Place Cards,: 7 of things observed.” Bookman. buildings 18, permits issued for new | o oo FAVOLS @ b el o, “Mrs. Wharton's war book, lik bath-tubs in old buildings 9, permits progress it is understood many of | palpably taxed will be taken as good VALENTINE . ic to 10c Each. fmany and divers nationalities. Surely | condemned as a militarist because he ere is a lesson in the value of citizen- | advocates extensive preparedness. y those fortunate enough to have | nation’s ' defenses must be made |to tumble over one another to get heen born in a land which is looked | Stronger, not so much because he is | aboard and again to get out and a Writing of today: models of journa- il : her novels, is written in a style tha pue * new wash-bowls o pon by the peoples of the world as a | the President, but because he talks (‘”“d’"‘:fl(l) hasito be much moralotianiiec el R ric o tla oo e h‘or;-“% listic prose, compiled by J. W :;:;3?“;:'3"0“‘.‘0..,‘- n,}:p’r’g:\?; ::‘) o:g > & acrobat than in the closed car season Ty 2 : Cunliffe. 2 S : sen of fre s a lover of peace who “has kepl us o —N. Y. Times h s bt iy i aven of freedom. The United States | a: peac O nas oot o et (siaren Tt 1k nolito hs wonlmtl n o Rimes “Specimens of contemporary writ- | buildings 15, sewer conncctions in spected 1, defects found and remedied [ MATY crpgee ourt in Hartford does well to elimi- | out of the war.” That is the thing | gered at with conditions as they " teals at s as they are, - ing, chosen from recent periodicals 1 C @te the red tape in this one instance | the people of the West seem to like | that travelers hail the jitney = with G?‘,X‘:yn:;‘o's;’urf]; L e n{’n"e‘eg“’""‘ and newspapers by faculty members |4, total inspections 48, sewer ) nd make it possible for such a loyal | more than anything else about Wood- | delight in the season when they are |y gcholars, among them J ’A" of the Columbia School of Journa]hsr;u sued 11, bana of men to attain their ideal, They | row Wilson. Even Governor Cap- | feasible. If some auxillary means of | Thomson and Michael Sadler, attempt | LhC Selections are widely varied \a | Report of Tuberculosis Department Y = 4 transportation were devised for the | o give the general r ¢ character and length."—A. T. A. Caet Nt e o oravions fill repay the trouble by becoming | Per, of Kansas, who as the editor of | ;e (00 VG (18 e 0 glve the general reader both = an Hlp ' qier e e ‘ dairies ordered properly drained B 0 et i sy publcartons 11 ihe et tnik ould doubtless meet with | 5ecount and an estimate of Germany' OSE month 136, new cases reported 11, | o cl B e B gger and better citizens in after vy p he West that | general approval. contribution to “knowledse, litera- 3 cases discharged 0, deaths 5, cases | g; "0 o ondemned 8, mil 5 CH0 OFL] SRty g VTN 6 B ture, art and life.”—The essays, n Fiction. under care 141, cases at sanatoria 38, d REO0E 8, com- E President’s plans, praised him yester- AT cessarily highly condensed, are d Boomerang, by W. H. Osbourne. cases sent to sanatoria 8, cases dis- HAT MIGHT HAVE STARTED A | day also because “he has kept us out At Milwaukee, tinguished by scholarly detachment ; )' ; i = ":‘“"“"d[ "'“’"‘f““““’”“ il PR 2 " i P i e ala Sectin and impartiality.”—A. L. A. Book- | Bronze eagle, by Baroness Orczy. at sanatoria CRAsE I FURLTER T Do . P i olion g introducingi the (inzonta Sentinel ) ¢ |nst “The story begins with Napoleon's |milk 13, cases supplied with sputum e e g, President in the Municipal Auditorium | It was more than half expected that return fron Elbe and ends at Water: | cups 23, calls at office 93, calls mado | ¢f Railroad Station Employes yesters 3 at Topeka, the Governor said:— the president would meet, if not a | Guide to South America, by W. A.|loo but chiefly concerns the love of [by nurse 245, regular nursing care [ day made demands on the Boston & @in to plow through a mass of 5,084 ' Waterloo. at Milwaukee, at les o i Tl i 2 he y i Maine railroad for an eight Hour i j ) e e O aterloo. at Milwaukee, at least a Hirst. three men for Crystal de Chambray, |given 4. daine ad for an eight . eople walking along the track, and | of tne terrible conflict in Burope. | Chill reception and a scant audience | “Compact guide, giving general [a staunch lovalist, whom the best | Report of Welfare Department. | WOrking day and a ten per cent b fll them all at one fell stroke, a| He has set undismayed on the |that would emphasize the detestation |suggestions to those planning a tour [man wins after dire adventures”—| .o\ oo culture taken for Te- | pamounced Last night that conime p - reat cry and hubbub would go up | hottest lid that has seated any in which he is said to be held-by the | of the continent, historical and de- [A. L. A. BooKlist. Jease 66, diphtherln. cultutes’ talien | minis wolll fe mads o - oy President since Lincoln. German-American. He was spoken of | scriptive information in each country : e fo disgnosinl B0MAnvastEntiondion | mbics & ATbios A "\“"f‘“‘ “'"h“‘: j We are not.a craven people as going into the enemy’s country and |including Panama, much in the man- | Clipped wings, by Rupert Hugh ohtapionalandl anapisioy TR el el e i QR i€ canse crespdssers on ral We are deeply and intensely pa- any the phrasc appeared to be |ner of Baedeker, but designed for | . “Published serially in Harper's as | SORHEIE B2 SR L e SR G TR T oad tracks do not go out like Sun- | triotic. We are not afraid to ‘onceived. Yet what, as a mat- | travelers and business men rather | “The Barge of Dream The hero- | cpicious cases 42, fumi R ) ay school picnics, nor is there an fight if we must; but we hope of fact, happened Monday to the | than sightseer . L. A. Bookilst. | ine is a great actress who loves both | % 5 P50 0T o that necessity will never more | chief executive of the.United States SO her caredr and her home lfe and il ot q6its migattons of -robme iin= | Sl o Lol S arise and we pray we shall not | in wha s been called the country of | Higher individualism. by B. 8. Ames S, i o6 o i it ([BROET SRRl e TO REMOVE DANDRUFF be led into temptation.” enemy? He was met by cheering “Jight sermons delivered at Ha J claims. X houses quarantined 17. quarantined iine were ; 1 ; : : ot e iorareioroost il ch a Killing were probable, would | (yer the mountains and valleys of | thousands and more thousands packed | vard Univ v by one of the most b0 . 3 houses carried over from previons | prap Ch.poktie ol Tt ¢ country arise a5 one man In de- | 1y nation the phrase rings and cchoes | 1S Nall. Where he delivered his ad- | noted teachers of the psychology of | Co-diroctors, hy V. L. Siiberrad. month 10, general investigations 20, | 4¢ any arug store, pour a little i8t0 unciation of the railfoad for killing BT e | dress, speaking straight from the | religlon in this country. They em- | e ‘ot Trun. | daily assistance in laboratorles : yoBir hand and rub well into the gl I eople? No! The agitation, and L 55 a8 kept us,out | ghoulder upon the necessity of pre- | Phasize the social nature of the in- | Handle with care, by Margarc calls mede by nurse 228, With the fnges tios B mi A gkl oL » And | o the war” Out of the West it | parcdness and of loyalty. Instead of | dividual and the value of soc F i buil. Food T sotions ¢ all, of this awful £ perhaps investigation, would be direct- 7 5 iR et e - things, the ! ing story of the regen- 'ood: Inspection: most, if not all, ‘of this awful S5EN 4 & Sudih e direct- | somes, into the Bast, and back ; | hostility he met a triumph. vice, and, among other things, ‘he An cnz g otgtnel tesor e e AT havelAlshBoane ) To or SR g against the authorities who put up | then to the North, bounding back to There has been no more cordial and :'Orld—old quest for \n mzn'o‘“‘]\un_ .»‘l.nn: n;lnvx; -‘\\k;;hn:‘ n .\';‘“m; hit ‘m ”""-'%n"_wv Inspécto 12 applications will destroy every bit eof B the practice of ws il ) sinc Jeome ziven Drecident Wil. | dant and ideal life. An earnest book | who handled o 5 Sanitary Ins : ’ c . Lot t LSy king on rail- | the South, sweeping over the entire | S e Welcome e e = | for the scholar or thinker who is of | every other observer seemed biighted. | Inspections and _re-inspections of | dandruft; stop the scalp itching and 0 acks. uni £ % S0 1 any part o 3 ry R £ o s of 3 : < L o . e e g ’ E e And - the punishment, | naion like a maglc voice from on | that miven hinm Monas oy thy roel | religlous turn of mind."—A. L. A.{Full of the war human Interest that [food stores, bakerles, candy mfgrs, | falling halr ) high whispering “he has kept us o e g e eharactorized the authors earller |restaurants, ete. 484, pounds (welght) g e 1] sl e e ke SR Do HessRthey £ o novel, “Looking After Sandy of meat destroyed 53, no. articles of | DYSPEPTICS ! END of the war.” n riend and foe, vished to make it clear that the scorn e i LR o 5 roy e 3, cat boxes ~ = e e e he had for the disloyal hyehen did not | INterpretations of literature; by Laf- i . other foods destroyed 3. meat boxes STOMACH MISERY, SeelLin ity bl s ety DRtilin e a St ypAach, eadio Hearn selected with an in- | Mrs. Barnet-Robes, by ( & inspected 418, meat boxes or c INDIGES Gentile, men and women, Young and | (neir first thewer, o, hem and that troduction, by John Erskine. | M nwe girls of contrasting types of | cleaned 38, foods ordered covered 123, GAS, TION e S| rought, as his " s 1 o " irs e i o 3 S . r lea b v ola, will rejoice that it is 50, and they | was for Amerien. 1 L- ot tROUERL | wopivercational talks on Englisn | character hold first place in tho | stores ordered cleaned 59 ) — will sweep aside the narrow lines of | how the great ma nrmw‘w! SOt Ger. | literature, chiefly of the nineteentn | reade s B LUCl }'“‘T Milk Inspector’s Report. «Pape’s Diapepsin” neutralizes acids B 5,084 weré traspassers, persons ; man blood [n this e UZeNs of Ger- | ceptyry, which the author gave to |cross but rarely and it is proof o o e s lot QEITM in stomach and starts ai 5 . party and stand united behind the % (Ahis country feel, When | yig giiqents of the University of | the author’s skill that she has been | Ot SERP 0y 0 s, dairies in- gestion. bifiagrantly violated the law of the | ;a1 of whom it can be said, “he kept | LS Onor and its satety are threatened. | moiccr "Gaken down by some of = his | able to give an impression of a uni- [Mits to sell milk issued § e nd. Had they remained where they | ;5 out of the war,” hoping and trust- ,‘A,"Z.’(."‘tlf'i\,‘""f""' been uny honest chal- | gpjer ctudents. -y interesting, ori. fed whole in telling their stories.” — Stops any sourness; heartburn, or food elonged, off the railroads’ right of AT e R e R e e "1:«::\‘»(“,“ to the republic | gina) yut appreciatively reverent and | ook Review Digest : 9 rising in few mo- 4 B and Vil - the gies St thoreshisabeen o : sound; the style, simple, clear, ale- (1t is a study of environments, CAN YOU DO TH[S SR o ay, eac ar ese persons | ;oo d ther vill be roar and | tified crticim beca N i’ o s ] 2 ™ 5 saratullv. ponel d.”" 3 b ¥ ived and there w no 2 and ecause they have al- | pg studi The ama; r ul and carefuliy considered. S—— 2 3 gant, but not studied. zin t{houghtf DS BHmbored among the living | 4, lowed hot-headed and disloyal per- | thing s that there should be such | —Dial. = bday. But they left the quick for Sonos to misrepresent them and en |unity, such oneness in style and mat- | “The novel is dmirably written, BRGS. ¥or the miost part they :f—l:fl\;‘:od (n.-“smmr,« printed in the |ter when these lectures were not ' with a ACTS v AN OIS icrman tongue to insult reason in ritten. 1 Booklist. i Tim'es. a axy FACTS AND FANCIES. Wwritten A. L. 00 N. ¥ ere members of that great galaxy il their laudation of everything German | DT l f gymnasts who are ever willing to T aa e v and n}:‘n- abuse of everything Ameri- | Issues of life, by vood Worcester. | Th promise, tale of the fsic life and Ilmb to save an extra : magiihealiinaes & | can. That these men, few in number T Northwe 3. Hendryx. MU B or & Dty secdndiof timeiAna | Toman: She knows where the roos- | perhaps but malignant in purpose | Mechanistic view of war and peace, D 3 ter spends his evenings.—Meriden | huve created & vast s . &. W. Grile. ; B. Delano. OVERINDULGENCE OF : il e sad part of it all is, they always | Journal | ast amount of mis- by G. W. 5, _ % . THE TIME YOU FD | drugs, but a re-enforcement of digese 4 X 3 purnal. understanding there can be no doubt, “The author speaks from observ N eIt is altogether delight- | T s VD SCTENTIFIC | tive agents, such as are naturally g et nipped in the end. = They should have been promptly and | tions obtained from many years in ‘oviginal’ as 43 | € UL ANT s ) J 3rita it i | | effoc ! ; e tive world of Gc- | TIRIZATME work in the stomach. New Britain knows what it is to Onthe syhole people’s lawyer” | €fectively checked by the German- |the clinic and from viewing the be- | possible in an imitative world o REA 5 e reaanan the People with weak stomachs shoutd e these appalling tragedies. There | will not be out of place in the ¢ a | Americans they were misrepresenting, | havior of man under {he stress of | tion Boston Tr: When the nerves ha i i 8 ac . e 8 e Diapepsin oec ; i ile i . any pre- | breaking pi 1 you are facing |take a little 2 e . But their repudiation is to be f war while in charge of a hospital *Notwith many pr breaking point and 3 % eill b re many of our people who, for | States supreme court. It is the peo- | B s to be found Y g it 3 R e s loni | domblate Herve exhaustlon) when ou | and: thers wi e no more ple's court ew York World. {in the reception given the president | Unit in France. He “Gives us the | decessors in fiction. Rags is a re T it o It | tion, no feeling like a lump of Monday at the very moment awhen |fundamental philosophy of war. The |fresh creation, and the author has | cannot eat with the old zest, otuet | Hon inotiasion Has S with Germany deepons ang | effects of the profound emotions of | succeeded in making her a bricht ) sleep, are fidgety, unstrung and fret- B e i oyl = * or the secretion of the liver, the [and parkling presence.’” V. | ful about the smallest trifles it is time L l & ‘~(s~| Dl yl »: c nh_g ardrenal glands, the thyroid and | Times to heed the danger signals before it 1s | of undigested food, headaches, dissls g 5 2 p ness or sick stomach, and resideg the less powerful glands of the body, too late. 5 2 AL o BE . and, in turn, the effects of these | Scally, the story of a perfect gen- At such times Margo Nerve Tablets, | what you “rmh“m”nm ferment _and i M ety Srie »oison your brea witl ause Jght punishment. A few good = ex- fow Who willliesitate . effects on the conduct of men.—A. 1. {leman, by Tan Hay the wonderful combination of nerve v D ales n ith nauseouff st 11 hesitate to select the one bur—is & | tallzing elements is recommended as | odors. All these symptoms resulfsil nples might tend to make men stop | that has given them of its at A. Booklist. “Seally—otherwise Excalibur—is a | talizing s re ! od 3 d o ifici ; its libert: i grundangs puppy. He shares in a pretty romanco | specifically helpful. They contain ab- | from a _sour, out-or-order stomach I ore McHlaging JNelr | ere getting & bunch of Erlish 8 liberty in their pursuit of hap- | pogern study of Hterature, by T | and divides the reader's interest with | solutely no harmful habit forming |and dyspepsia are generally relieved B Ssia manner. - The' ratlidads | MeTe setink & buneh ef Hnilieh | pinoss. end the president sought G. Moulton the wooer and the wooed. [t is in | drugs and are guaranteed to give | five minutes after taking a little Ija-p | capitalists who are flecing to this | when he started on his s bee! i 3 > & 4 : 3 e o braiol dhiely B8 constaptly hammering away at | coutry to cscape the income tax. Let's | attaimed. The ‘l i :',' Arib has been | .p"remarkable result of learning |the author's best vein and the only | quick, lnsting .nv._(:l :“tlir\:‘::‘!“ u:1h] t L ok © same idea, but all to little or | put 'em to work in the munitions fic ; vos. .o rousing as one | unq experience of years in literature. | grievance which the reader will have | or money back without question. Th Yo DR SIORENL SUCUERY . A s PhtbriaT T i man to the necessities of national de- | with all #ts information, its phil zainst it hat it is not four or | Clark & Brainerd Co. and other re- | cent case of Pape’s Diapepsin now, | tor fense. The cast has been uroused for lhy, itu sclentific Teasoning, the eru- |five times as long/—Living Age. liable druggists sell Margo Nerve Tab- | and you will always go to the table ong this line and it is up to tho ! i some time and the far west is keen i is essen- L L lets on this guaranteed plan. If you | with a hearty appetite, and what you G ! | We have a president on the stump, | jop (1 R dition behind it, the book Is essen i Ublic officials and/the people to co- | Sdht op ftheir Eainuls bl OGS prepared- | tially readable, delightful. in fa~t. | Stories without women and a A At L er rembas o an Corgress knows now that the | and . s el welll wi g Ath women, by Domm Byrne. not go another day without them. Get | stomach and intestines will bo clean orate. If the same number of | g nix-president on his h and is informed as well with en with women 3 ) ) ’ ¥ e 77| velees of cowardice and weakness | thusiasm and the appreciation of a | ‘‘The -stories are virile and vivid. ; a packet today and see how hanly|and fresh, and yvou will know thers RISUCRAC met death'on the rail- | Brooklyn Eagle. that they have heard of late are not | born reader. There made many ori- [ He puts on his colors in broad. | and they are take, how |are not going to be any more bad ds last year had been killed 1n = representative of the American peo- | ginal ideas, many clever devices and | sweeping strokes with a keen eye for ckly v ¢ | nights and miserable days for you exico the United States would have Under the dye shortage, two-cent | PI¢ and it will act on that knowledge | diagrams, which are most suggestive |the general effect, the result being | they put a new joy olf ll\'l]m: into your | They freshen you and make you ro’_ een urged to go to war. postage stamps are turning from red | Proriptly. and make it a book for reference as |that his stories are vivid and afford | jaded system. Do it today. like life is worth living. 01 - \ spected 29, dairies ordered cleaned,f, demned, qts 4, prosecutions 1. o If it were possible for one railroac jver the land. But such a thing is not gine powerful enough to kill that @any fools at once. Granted that such were meted out, would neces- Iy have to be directed against the Jificials of states, cities, towns and lots. Last year the steam railroads of the fnited States killed 8,621 persons, of The question as to how long you aj going to continue a sufferer from in- digestion, dyspepsia or out-of-orfer stomach is merely a matter of How soon you begin taking some Diapepsin, If your stomach is ladiing in di- gestive power, why not help the stome NY SORT. | ach to do its work, not with drastie CAN YOU CARRY A GLASS T distinction of style.”— | FILLED TO THE BRIM WITH WA- TER, WITHOU SPILLING? 11 L YOUR NERVE STEM LACKS great | CONTROL, IT MAY BE DUE TO TOO 'CH SMOKING, TOO MUCH EAT ING, OVERWORK, OVERWORRY, eir own convenience, are ever ready | b override authority s -espas | : ! Y and trepass | o hoys in the middle west re- I wiamises ot the rallroad They | cently gave the startling information | 9 When the moment comes e never haled into court or, if they | to the court that a film play was the that choice must he made between 6 axraigned they are let off wii | means of gaining knowledge how to | l0¥ally to the republic and loyalty to | attempt to wreek a train.—Middle- | the empire far away there will be @ avail. There is much to be done few | need Margo Nerve Tablets you shou'd | eat will taste good, because yeur