New Britain Herald Newspaper, February 5, 1916, Page 6

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NEW, BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 5. 1916. IR RRITAIN HERALD | oo mmar o rmeramso, | xaces ao mavaus WHAT OTHERS SAY McMILLAN’S Greek Business Interests ‘ e T St | | o The only hope of ultimate justice HBRALD PUBLISHING COMPANT. of the human heart, ! One moment, goems to be that all three of Villa's 5 Proprietor |At can be in the depths of despair, | wives will he waiting for him some \BIG STORE 1 % 5 2 “AL & ! " el sued dally (Sunday exceptedr at 4:15 p. m. | the next on the heights of hilarity. | evening.—Boston Jouranl. ALWAYS RELIABL ‘ Views on all sides of timely * &t Herald Building. 67 Church St | e Ml e Explain Rigid Neutrality Foreign newspapers aren’t getling Herald Office. It is only a step from sorrow to jo) faterea at the Post Omce at New Britald | fromm tears to laughter, from the | ! ; g e ) as Second Clans Mall Matter. : J niuch information out of American | | ° A e sublime to the ridiculous. And it is | travelers just now. They refused to| Washington, D. C., Feb. 5.—First | the Grecian peninsula. The whole Yor 5 ook, Sorriers to an® part of the Gty | 4504 that this is so, for were human ! interview Iord, and Housc refuses to | College Courses for Everybody. | amons the reasons offered in explana- | coast country of Asia Minor, from the i | ubscriptions for paper to be sent by mall | hearts given to travel in but one direc- V¢ interviewed.—Syracuse Post Stand- payable in advance. 60 Cents a i ard. . | Greece is that of the widely scattered | dotted with innumerable Greek vil- | b tion life at best would become a Gollogo 5t corrine ouit ot therw b s tha y L - Y S EHi o) A veax i e i = ; L i J Hellenic populations and business in- | lages, many of the inhabitants of | he only niontable mavertising medium tn | MOROtONOUS existence AEC i L e BT e i { sbells. They are trying at, 1ast 10| (erests in the Ottoman Empire. An {swhich are the descendants of the i the ofty. Cirenlation booke and prels | shine would not be appreciated with- Awake!” cries the colonel to Lring higher education to the people. of the of | proud Greek cities that first felt the Sl At el { important part wealth Foom always ooen to advertisers. out an occasional lapse into dark- | (OUDIIY. Bl when an alirn cloel | Instead of standing aloof in acade- | Greece is earned by {he enterprises | wrath of the Persians in classic times. Gy is zoing off twenty-four hours a day.: mjc exclusiveness, they are recogniz- | ¢f her people without her borders, and | The Greek language is preserved in e Weel,, 65 Certs a Month. v v ‘ ‘ : o (South Norwalk Sentinel.) * tion of the tenacious neutrality of | Dardanelles to the Gulf of Adalia, is | he Herslt will ve fo - r comedy have a value I i e 2 > founa on sate at Hota- | ness, nor would comedy have a value | roljic jnst patur e ) it 7 5 : 3 b S S Tl LSl At S eetnsed “pA"Q.'ml‘ ing their duty to their communities. | her sons, as captains of Near Eastern | these settlements, and they, in their | : Way, New York City: Board Walk. unless “relieved by an occasional | sleep right on.—Binghamton Press. They care less about turning out-a | industry and commerce, have taken |importance and the number of their | Atlaotic City and Hertford depot tragedy. | o TELEPHONE CALLS. It is. indeed wonderful, the way | If any policy of the Wilson adminis- | ing the general level of intelligence. | cxploitation of Turkish lands. In il- | important languages of western Asia | -'“.:. ?zm“ A various things act on different. na- | {ration ever required the compelling Harvard is a good example of the | ustration of this phase of the prob- | Minor, ranking with, or higher than oL - e Hamily tawe neople are alike, | Personal advocacy of which the pres- | new tendency. President Lowell an? | jom confronting the statesmen at Ath- | the other four idioms of the land, | UES ardly two people are alike jgani alone is capable, it is the policy | Tounces that tlte university will here- | ons a study prepared by the National | Turkish, Armenian, Kurdish, Svriac. | ng's News Stand, 42nd St. and Broad- | ! H : lf(\\\ scholars and more about rais-|a leading and lucrative part in the | people, have made Greek one of the | ! IT COMING TO NEW BRITAIN? | For evidence of this take the Presi- | op pnagional preparedness, now threat- | after give any college course that is!| Geographic Society on the Greck in- | “The Turk is the least businesslike | the Windy City failed to pass its | 400ut how the thing should be worked mple requirement. The same thing ’ done in Cleveland and six of the ven hool board members and the street a pretty little dog; (Bridgeport Telegram.) went into a storm over the prepared- | He—but we can do no | It is rumored that the Now Britain | dent’s preparedness program. While | cned with disaster at the hands of the | desired by any thirty persons living | terests in the Levant is timely. It | of all the elements in his Empire. f hools are to ado 31 <t | @ great many, and pos | ‘ 5 A OF ALL adopt the Binet test | lyn Eagle. trict. It dosen't matter what the so- “From Damascus to Adrianople, ' tory down to the present day, has 5 | details. [very man has his own idea the Cawc 1 Hope that he | feach them mineralogy or Assyrio-| cial life in spite of the heavy odds of by necessity, working as a tiller of the o P ye has on other subjects. And | v consors, This is J 3 ation | op S , = ut. as he has on other subije And | the consors. This is the first intimatic v buisness law, Harvard will get on | jitory, where western capital and ' ces, the professions, or the indolent | Coats left e Record. by it, except perhaps a little acade- . f nst 1 : difficult matte P such an extent that plutocracy in the terprising and the least importunate | .. ..1ce These prices at which they iled to make a good showing when S While those Pennevlyvania oil men of mnationality. Equipped with the | Bast; for hessits hy his wares and | policy. Take the case of W. T. You can afford another coat at he | at Atoka, Oklahoma. Brain really | new oil ficlds the average automobilis give, with practical experience in the “Thus, business in the Ottoman Em- hd curly brown hair, short legs and a asoline.—Buffalo Commercial. States, and on it draw an imaginary | ness acumen equal to that of the Jew, | Arabs, the Jews, and great Western | There are Children’s Coats, value ibly a majority, | little politicians in congress.—Brook- | Within the Boston metropoliton dis- | yeads: His role, from his appearance in his- | RS R o i Tnited States are | b s H | b measure the mental capabilities of | ©f the !H‘"pl.e in the lm» el e cial or educational status of the ap-|and from Smyrna to Trebizond, Greek | been that of the conqueror, of the ackward students This same test | in accord with the general idca, they | = ) ] e plicants may be. If the thirty people | capacity for buying and selling, and ' overlord superior to commerce and now being used by Chicazo to sort | Will mostly all disagree as to the exact ord comes irom an astropomer it} agree that they want Harvard to| for banking has quickened commer- industry, though often, where pressed at its defectives Even the Mayo discovered cw come > e can- | 1og; 3 s r is R e Icorered pranenucomet but hetats logy or Eeometry or Spanish or Vie-| (he outworn forms of Turkish admin- soil. The carecrs open to him have | Jneluding Women's, Misses' and” ‘ NOBEO 1y b Prals b crian poetry or short story Writing | jsiration. Throughout this vast ter- been the army, administrative offi- | (pildren’s COATS., We have just 338 1 o hat the war is he = offect upon j 3 [ the emation can be worked up on | (Bt (he wir is having any effect UpOn | the job, leaders are not to the fore, Big Busi- of landlordism. As a seller of | g e Sl as onlany other hewshicayoulEaDbo dics ==Wilkesbarie And Harvard won't lose anvthing | ness is in the hands of the Groeks, to merchandise, the Turk is the least en- ALLSTORBI FEOLID: preparedness as as Beak S EsandsolthefGreoks, 25 S 0% Profits to be forgotten during this any representative Clevelanders | aT8ument. It is no — mic dignity that's better lost any- + SR i 5 P AT o G0 I s Tevant has almost become a matter and annoving of all the peoples of the | o " ™ fo ol BEE (8 00 T o : : . 4 - e e : : ; quickly. it through the Binet test, which con- | NS 3 ., | arc on their trip through the West = best training that the commercial | awaits phlegmatically the pleasure of | 4 sts merely of this sentence: “T saw | Brain, publisher of “The Gladiator.” | ndics and South America looking for America’s Vital Organs. schools of France and Germany can | Allah. | these prices. has his glasses trained on the sky hop= | & ; big forms of London, Paris, Berlin, | pire is completely in the hands ot | ONE LOT OF ‘_(("‘Pf:(‘i“""“" DA ing to catch a glimpse of the price of w00k at your map of the United| anq Vienna, and with a native busi- | the Greeks, the Armenians, the | Rl J & 2 . , . . | 0 $5.98. Misses Coats and Mack- ohias line ffom Norfolk, Va. to Erie, Pa. | the modern Greek has been able to | firms with branches in the Middle | P 10 s\'xl'u\' e ng tail”’ Those who are unable to | ness poli Weat this sentence after hearing it | Petter than print his own version of | i how it effected him as set forth in a | Forbes Winslow, the British alienist, | and from Erie to Portland, Me. carry everything before him in those | Bast. To the Greek has fallen the | = it = man, “Alfalfa | it may be recalled, predicted some| The territory bounded by this line | lands neighboring his country where | lion’s share of the business. He has| WOMEN'S MIXTURE COATS. « | years ugo that it was only a question | and the Atlantic ocean forms but a | business methods have been at a stand- | always managed to get on with the | 10 two lots now §5 and §7.50 each, e really going to add the Binet test -o. | ©f time until the majority of the world | small part, physically of the United | still ever since the days of Joseph. Turk, whereas the Jew and the Ar-|Values up to $15 in a good assort- the regular curriculum in any local “I read the Presidents note on Pre" | oulq he insanc. ISurope’s condition | States. It could be buried in some of “Beirut, Smyrna, Alexandretta, Con- | menian have often failed signally to | ment of colors. hool it is hoped before they try it | Pavedness, and I have also heard | has strengthened faith in his prophetic | the vast western states. But if a for- | stantinople and Trebizond, all great | maintain the favor of their overlords. ALL CORDUROY COATS. | some sly hints taken from the papers | ability.—Pittsburgh Dispatch. eign foe ever succeeded in invading| ports of the Levant and Middle East, | Especially, has the Armenian succeed- Reduced to $7.50 each, values about what you have to say in regard ! ; s America sufficiently to paralyze this| number among their most fortunate | ed in bringing down upon his luckless | to §18.00 i By the time Russia, Austria and | strip of territory, America would be | citizens the wealthy Greek merchants, | head the relentless disapproval of the | NOT MORE THAN TWO DOZ pwn to the members of the Common " | Germany get done running back and | dead. bankers and shippers. Navigation on | Moslem, Turk and Kurd. | TAILORED SUITS LEFT. buncil and the newspaper men there | dént's ideas had a wonderful effect | forth gver Poland, and Jaying waste its | Our coal would be gone. Our iron | the eastern Mediterranean and on the “Shrewd in business and in politics, | A1l must go, now priced to move great respect for the Binet test. | On me. They buoyed me up, and I fields, it will malke little difference | would be gone. Our steel would be| Aegean Sea is largely in the hands ! adaptable, quick to make the skill and | them quick, $7.98, $10.00 and $15, R o h Advance | thought npreparedness was the one “h_ut the territory is called on “\t" New | gone. All our sgreat manufactures | of the Greeks, and, on the Black Sea, | methods of the West his own, pliant | values up to $25 | fovable T thing: I was down, and | POst ljf‘”\’n: map of Europe..—Burling- | would be gone. Our munitions of war | they successfully divide this business and preserving the Greeck has en- | ppAIN & STRIPED SILK BLOUSES S e T e woon L iecerce would be gone. Our means for mak- | with the Russians. Iven the interior | joved what might be termed the inside | Al] new at $1.98 and $2.98 each ¥ PRESENT AND THE FUTURE, | ¢Vervything was lovely z 2 — . ing munitions would be gone. There | trade of Turkey-in-Europe and of Asia , path in the commerce of the Levant. | BLACK VELVET VESTS. [founeinigh SR TEwentihomsiandiarnec No one questions the right of Great | would be nothing left in the United | Minor is largely upheld by the vigor ; Turk and Kurd, for the most part, At $1.08 e B | myself with two big guns. They | Britain, France, Italy and Russia to | States but a mob of human beings, un- | of Greek enterprise. i have looked tolerantly upon his suc-| - ° rned to his post after a triumphant | weiohed thirty-five pounds each, and | attempt an actual biockade of Ger- | armed, and helpless before any armed | “Greek colonists have followed In | cessful enterprise; and, thus favored | r of the Middle West, it Will be in- | pejieving that T was then cock of | Many. That is in accord with the| organized foe. the wake of Greek business, and the | above his competitors, he has devel- esting to watch the effect of his |} b T e Ry G G oneull rules of internatioral law. But those Yet this strip i¢ the most vulner-| larger commercial cities of the Ports | oped a thousand and one lucrative ol o Sarasll B ioc rolicy on Consrees the walk CHLEAG an€ | powers have no right to interfere with | able in the whole United States. It is| have acquired a considerable number | sources of income in Turkish lands }_n\ IIY BAGS AND PUR & 3 S- | gave a Tecumseh warwhoop. commerce between neufral countries, | on tHe ocean and the Great Lakes. Tt | of Hellenic residents since the days of K and these mean much to the welfare The newest for Children in all erywhere he went an enthusiastic | .1, 4 few seconds [ was surround- | even though one berders on the nation | is connected by fine roads, and bY | Greek independence. Moreover, there | of the people in the motherland as | leather, priced 10c, 25c, 49c each that iz being blockaded.——Brooklyn | railroads. Tt has ro natural defenses. | have always been large native popula- | they mean to him and to .the future FOR EVENING WEAR. | Standara Union 1t is the nearest to Europe of any land | tions and settlements of Greeks in | of all his fellow colonists in the Sul- Gold and Silver Laces, in Bdgings, ! = —— we possess. It is a starding invitation | the realm of the Sultan, outside of |tan’s realm Bandings, allovers and Flouncings, | to know what I meant. I told them | to invaders metal trimmings, Bead trimming® ce are classificd as being under | letter to his Congres ill” Murray. Here it is yelve years old mentally. If they | jt on any public citizen that due arning is ziven From the Mayor | S | to the same. Yours and the Presi- each WIDE FLOWERED RIBBONS. AND SILK MOIRE: At 19¢ yard and values 25c. Now that the President has re- leption awaited him and the honors pre tendered by men of no particu- | ed by the Sheriff's force, city police | and many citizens. They all wanted party. In only one city was the P of politics brought up as an after- | p.¢ 1 was prepared. Then I found i Counting House Vs. Editor. | In the face of these facts, who will == 5 fancy colored chiffons, figured nets, it and that was when the citizens | i+ that they were prepared also and (Waterbury American.) listen to the silly talk that the| peace, may well be regarded as im- State Trade School. | ete Milwaukee declared they would | o thing came off. This morning, | 10 his sermon Sunday morning— | UUnited States is too bix to be invaded? | perative today, when the world is at (Bridgeport Standard.) if he would call it that—to the So- | In a fight, no man is bigger than his eat him by “four German-Ameri- g 3 Ry RGN : : war and an economic reconstruction | T e s | votes to one.” But the l'resr;:l(::l Sl e 5fm;“ | ciety of 1thical Culture in New York, | Vital organs; if they can be touched. | or civilization has become inevitable. i \x:\‘; rrelc‘o‘i:"é‘d ‘;ro].:'.m:f\:-l“:n::M:»m“ | ! i rtes ) one. Bu ars s front of seven of the | | celi Adier scussing r he is dead or paralyzed. The territory e 57 s & hearses stand in Dr. Felix Adier. in discussing pre- | C T 3 “mav!un(‘ry in the trade schoo] there, | . & i { B i not go forth in search of votes. | yoct homes in town, and I am in jail | paredness said, as swamarized in the Pounded by Norfolk, by Brie and by S valued at $16,000, for its vocational | New York Times that “the moral f“f”""‘}s:‘d-‘h\;‘":’i“‘}‘l"g-‘w‘;:"‘s‘:i: Tuposes A Crisis, But No Great Men. i high school. This is an instance where : Tt | qide. So much for being prepared.” | nake o raid on this country and , Stvike at this territory and strike hard. Great crises in the political history . [HE0 €9 o prm‘"‘(;‘h‘ I.‘m'_‘ ”‘\_“:“"m;”m‘,‘r i done there is no such a thing as rer. » P d ies in order to hold them for ran- e have bhee lominated by ity i | rest The Bittners &z 1 R ' €8S | into a fever. He became addled. | ies y gt e 5 beleve voked, or have heen dc ated SRbVAECE i et e e e e et he Bittners and Ray were som’; but while acknowledging that the light of European events that such i opimion 15 e Joras) (2% | o plow might be fatal to us .There is | personalities whom history calls great. :‘!;:;(scll‘())?yl{fl '1"\1:1?;:“1.\-;0',. !‘nlu}:‘ place | :!:lvyfizul-:,‘m‘”“ .‘m‘:]:. i:;x;:{l i‘.’,‘f‘x :“\‘j;'l[y\\ \\\\1‘:‘»: 2 | he 1s paying the penalty for his sins |y cwspapers he declared that the | little Teason to believe that we could | Out of the welter of the civil war in | ASxt CUEUSt and he Gl:\‘lv ( Millcon din Shi e sl iy and e mch vote, or a “Colored” vote. 1If| o preparedness. But there is a g00d | opinions of some newspapers are | "°S S i ’ » England in the seventeenth century e i l::\ ‘w |“~ ]‘”"_' T s A e ol fe is such a thing it has never | 4, satire in the Brain—we moulded in the counting houses.” Sxsinfiaycunsfouniniesid n R omll Dxommelliansss faslon ol Eionasiof O 0 s o % T t’““r lhie | made a mistake and din’t know the je to the surface, and if it aon\-‘i'lvn wE e i e This is & ‘very popular ocharge | S3P Americans differ on the safety of | the French revolution Napoleon devel- : 7 (ERS0 \.(,,\p:’\, ‘:-m“”-« e S e wa teibing ibaul ‘Wi Mk A | against newspapers, that the control- Amerlca? oped. Bismarck In his time, so short | ~ " © Lpieg ‘c)) v ”un“l (m‘;r: [ e ns aboutine ,-,‘(‘, "aml it must not be taken too much | 4 . a while ago, really dominated events, | he conduct o h judge i y 1 I ¢ went to tell the nation of a dire | with one eye shot out, a broken leg, essity and even in the “Munich of Jegt | Sentiment of the German people” 128-201-203 MAIN STRELET ! and my skull crushed in on the erica’s they promised their support | esman-American vote, any more { sng now, if we are to believe him, pn there an Irish vote, or would not call it brain-less,—letter s year then it is time to do away | h presidential elections and turn Ingyinfuence oty nosnaneriopinion ) actually determining what events , SCOOL Tt would seem the part of j Court. Itetty told how he used to s the counting house. It is a charge | e . |wisdom to keep the authority undi- [ have a girl named Pearl, and how he seems to be contained in this epistle | usually made when ncwspapers do | S Ets Sl Bt it = & (uesiion whether in | Vided. Either let the state pay for and | imagined she was the girl the Bittners prepared- | N0t agree with the view of the per- | 0 e e ‘_) . i R conduct the school, or the eity as- | were talking ahout brge, or some other equally as son making it. This undoubtedly, is EnepENenty oMt IR ach SLEEE e e e W e DS Rh e Ren Gy Oy Fetly said when the fight started B e it veonie oS oY * | the care with Dr. Adler, who seems, | horological reform scems queer. But) styled Eehiue l;]»“tlr"h- tnam i direction. There is no longer any he was 5o busy {rying to keep his eye= | Western country, and especially (his | \j(h naive and childlike German sim- | it is learned that this old method of | Seems unlikels e Ll By e gument available against the trade | glasses from being broken that he United States are tiring of the | ..oi0, wherein the publisher of “The | plicity to hold that the (German peo- eebint | tinol bk Towl Deent adopted | St aBDEAT 'l!_hm-vv a “'('“,-]‘,'.f x];\j‘t education shop. Bridgeport nceds ir, | did not have a chance to hit any capacity and of steadfast will; but .5 qoes every community in the | Ray said he 1':? e Gt l.hm‘\““(““““‘ > holds forth, “willl readily liple have & moral sentiment which s, " penmark, beginning New Year's ([ 5ot it oy Lot giamara nor a U 1 8 e : b be no better time than this to | p would prevent the German army day, following the esample of the i G R e |1[(m States. A | maker and Albert Bittner denied he i from raiding the Amecrican coast, if | pearhy countries, Sweden, Norway and LA é“ ~’I(jr|"11"“'“' ;‘t“l ner "‘_ "‘_ The only questions open for debale | had anything to do with the fight. . for any reason, the German Sovern- | pucsia. Spain, also, has the system in nor a f””d a1 ing iy “U“_‘” & lare: Shall the state or federal gov- | John Wilds, the hartender i Street with only two guns. He didn’t ment should decide that such a raid \hc'\"\i]r(n\(l rvice. « Boneparte in France nor a Pitt in |ernment make grants to such schools, | did not remember details of the" fy on the fighting and America | ovon pave a start on preparedness, | were the thing to do, Newspapers | rhe change from the time-keeping | England. ] i |insist that they receive pupils from | fight, because he was “knocked kind ld be a formidable colony for! . .'p.q pe really done what he says | Ae not accepting any such native and | gystem we are familiar with is made | Very great crises before this one fany cemmunity and provide such | of silly” when he tried to quict the B side. childlilke view of the infiuence of £ oclack in the afternoon, which | have failed to develop very great men, | technical education that has advanced | men Henry Bittner asserted that 2 1 the German people in preventing a | hecomes 13 o-clock. Midnight is 24 | The whole course of the thirty years' the artisans of Germany so wonder- | Fetty was the aggressor. The fudes would have been his life. They are | yvajq on Ameri 1 the collecting | g'clock. Half after 6 p. m. is 18:30, | War showed no single statesman or ;fully; and shall the city maintain the | deferred his decision unti] Frid always prepared for such rampa of huge ransoms in case Germany | ang se on. The symbols a. m. and p. | seneral of the very first rank. unless school? Every facility for perfect- J rica, or that great .portion of it | 110 olatime wild and wooley. SO ik e oo o co Dr. Ad- | m ate of course, abandoned. In the | the brief-lived Swedish king was an |ing himself should he provided T ere many true Americans abide, | ler's reason for making the charge. | twenty-four hour system they are not | exception. Indeed, the death of Gus- the worker. Every advantage in Child Labor——Or What?, s i with | T { But the animus of 5 e i 5 ~and the possibllity | tavus at Lutzen removed the one |} technical education should be given (W shown itself heart and soul with Fool Talk. the charge needed Some labor and I y e e e e cross (e et o A not all there is to it. In a certain | of s reby avoided. force that might have | Kemident o > Traited: Sta i i s @ confusion are thereby L b SRehe e - President of the United States. (New London Day.) | sense, of course bread policies of | The tolegraph and telephone com- | strugsle to a decision, so that for lack individual the greater the superiority | | | to heart. On the face of it, there e T e T I country over to whom it be- The Twenty-four Hour Clock. s, —to Emperor Wilhelm, or King | ;¢4 argument against | ness. But anyone who knows the ona, tried to act as the peace- ealize Brain did not live up to his i oeder the banner of some King. | ;5,0 when he came down Main Py need more subjects abroad io | said he | he did, instead of losing an eye, it here is no danger of that, as| : even if Milwaukee is peeved. terbury Democrat.) Even if the admira Keating- Owen child labor bill becomes la it will not solve the problem. It pse people received him not he- Over enthusiastic support of a good | newspapers are determined by those | panies, it seems, are the promoters of | of great genius the thiry vears' war |©of the mass. \ | pe seems, America is great, with vast posi- bilities, but intensive education along | good so far as it goes: it is well {o jtechnical lines would add immeasur- | forbid the industrial exploitation of ably to its standing among the na- | children under fourteen, and : tions of the earth. The jingo notion | strict the maximum working time of {that just because it is America it | children under sixteen to elght houss annot bhe surpassed in any field i5 | a day Pcople are pretty much ' |a mistaken one that is slowly being | agreed on these points But all this forced out of the minds of thinking |is purely negative. What is t 5 jmen. They realize that preparedness | qone with this time takes in every field of endeavor and | children which otherwise they might,. | touches upon the ethical, the physical, | <pend in stunting tofl? Tt goes with the educational and the religious. oul saying that children’s regulap Se he is a Democrat, or a Repub- | cause often docs it as much Narm a3\ who own them. But that is very | {he systers m Demmark. Iis useful- | dragged its slow length along to the n, or a Progressive, not because of | direct antagonism. The ape Who, injfar from meanins (hat such persons | ness for railroad schedules is obvious. | exhaustion of all combatants. political faith, but because he is | 21 excess of solicitude for his master's | control the expressions of opinion. | It is not necessary, of course, to re- In appreciation of what lack of i e 5 | comfort, smote with a great club the | \Wherever ¢ is obviously the case, | construct clocks and watches, but | genius means to a crisis consider what | President of the United Stats | fly on the latfer's forchead, the re- | the newspaper i killed. Over and | simply to metk the twenty-four hours [ our own civil war might have been b the welfare of the nation at | sult being a spattering of brains, Was| gver again, capitalists who bought | in a Gouble circle on fheir dials. i SR e e rt. Had he been distrusted for a | one of these enthusia Note remote- | newspapers for that purpose have | Sl few now realize, was not only the soul ly suggestive of the same mpulses | j.on frustrated because people would Changing His Mind, of the morth but also the north’s will and the same results are the perform- | no¢ Luy that kind of paner | The | (New York World.) to conquer, ances of those persons of “rn'«w- _v""“- facts show that Dr. Adler (-nnrge} b about The German Kaiser is brilliant and ves unworthy, they would have | dict u;\l";ld. ml“':”{‘n 1;‘”-.1.\‘1 }\(um;\\‘h is as foolish as his reason for mak- | | shrewd. But he is neither Bismarck ea A 5 Ashcs cir especid otions of con-| ;o | 4 s 5 e e e ervatiam wte not pub into lnniedinte||iE i | recommending the ereation of a Tarift | nor Frederick. The machine he in- il Destowed. . Unpopular Presi- | Lo & rmission M LEhwilhaveRtolibelade ierited Bend B S SinestectcdpMERVastv B < ther B riag sport iwantsi fokiiake!|wooupation in | Lol Courtech be ts get no more encouragement | rrpae jen't the least doubt that our “ooti | mitted that he now favors a proposi- | capable, but it procecds of its own |,ver the state trade school is a ques- | jeast, should be i momentum. Nor has Great Britain ltion. It it must h unpopular ward poli in | negligence of rational measures for : | tion which on other vccasions T NI R of birds has donc and opposed. e has changed his mind | found herself a Marinoroush, who fnent, had his sincerity been ques- hed, had these people thought his Sl i be We shall hear a great deal v the inconsistency of the president in ab going to school, al- support the school | though some rself a in whole or in part it might e h e that was the inspiration of the coalition |ter to follow the example of N against Louis XIV. And certainly the { Britain. sacred looking little Russian czar is no Peter the Great. 5 i ARSI e o s or fifteen do ork or go to schoo So this is a peculiar struggle—or | THENE ARE PEARLS AND PEARLS | 07 floey dooeh otk or g0 | jincy ll else the perspective of history will in school, what is he going to learn be required to reveal the proportions | Showing It is Dangerous to Inquire there? What compensation 1o (o 1. of the actors upon the present enor- | Ahout Pearl Unless You Know Pearl. | made to him and his parents mous scene. leeping him from gainful et (Indianapolis News.) ] employ- u ment Is the national government Clarence Fetty, 429 West South!or the state, or his local community Street, was musing over a glass of bing to sce to it that he shall ha states have not yet principle effective through compulsory attendanec The period: from fourteen to sixteen is (roublesome If a child of fou Vi SRS srotection : | h1l towns. By this personal cou- | the pr _ | Mr. Newman had scovered | is doing a great dear of harm; or: anw | o € EIEER, TG S l"” ’_“““," | and he frankly says so. doubt that we shasll pay a high price | SR §owas BERINE 94 70 ) those adamantine intellects that, | | i with the people the President has I ven his present popularity. Whetk- | £or our indifference if we do not | £l once receiving an impression, never | more. (AR 5 s “The surgeon,” he remarked, aid v oo he will hold it from now on is | adopt a new and more serious point, o A% SUESEO- O6 TR EC: SAIT poyise or obliterate it, will see hug- ther matter There are grave | of view towards birds. But nothing | 0 ", b & hears and hobgoblins Imnumerable in is to be gained, in the way of enlisting lar interest in this subject, by| “Well he 4id it, didn’t he?” |0 CsEe, ol 19, W popular es s subject, 3 twixt the cup and the lip. And P sensic: ries ¢ | the friend. 9 0 : wix : p and the lip. fantastic and nonsensical cries of “He did, indecd.” responded Mr.|and capable of considering the vici rge W. Perkins, the money-bags | “wolft" | 1 g Newman, “T had to sell my motor cap | situdes of nations, it will not appear the Progressive party, says “Mr.| A bird advocate named Davy from | | blems ahead and “there is many a | A minds, awake to the logic of events Sy - remarkable. Mr, Wilson has changed Oniogtold angavcionceSin B CIRR his mind, indeed, but the economic csterday thatiatithe Recmnoaoe conditions of the whole earth changed disebpoatance INSLRENCHN SEe ol The Probiem Solved. first. Men who are able to revise their Lide if this conupiry would be gxiinc opinions and correet their judgments prove that mentally and morally they are not ossified. The desire to be consistent has heen North American.) Sarlicular attentior tnd st worse than ihe ISuropean war be. i K 5 a sts future with any degree of cer- The rosult of this sort of talk is Great Author——But I ean’t waste all | the stumbling-block of many a states- As a proof to friends of his unhy- | self that it was her name—Pearl g man, and on more than one occasion : IPetty desired to know how his | | | i | | ty? Wilson holds no such divine | inevitable. Those who might other- | that material. | . : ' | phenated devotion to the land of his : g et 5 bird conserva- Great Publisher—Certainly not. Our | of political parties, It is the counsel Pearl of days gone by was getting rozative. |'wise be intcrested in bird con a HREY | getting | | | | | to pay his bill.” son’'s western specches clearly W that he is utterly lacking in ity to forecast the future Too | B! But, where is the man of con- | in ten years and that the result would | SWORD SWALLOWER AVY. ° a greater earning capacity for the { : - s sl rest of his life? Occupational Alive,” Says Recruiting Sergeant. Streets, vesterday, when he thought i . . . he heard the name of an old sweet (Chicago Dispatch to Thiladelphia | heart of his mentioned. e paid " “Now We Need Bosco. Who Eats ‘Fm | Peer in a saloon near West and South (FFrom Judge.) train- be the immediate destruction of all Great Publisher—We find this novel what are the national government and the states and the local con munities doing to train the boys' and girls' minds and bodies for profitable cmployment ? | | z | i i elay, President or no President, . i $ swotation by insects and a disaster | of your is twice as long as it should Biean prognosticate, or forec vegetation by | - flon becaine dlsgusted and refuse to|idea is to cut It in half and make two | of fear rather than that of principle. | adontion, Slgnor Gregorio Carcuitl, & | a)ong. He moved along the bar to R A T e | e o To such obstinacy. reckless alike of | sword swallower and cannonball jug- | the group of men he heard using the | Notice here will be great relief felt on | ter fails to become one of general in- S progress and policy, innumerable | gler, has offered his services to the | name he thought helonged to his olq | To Creditors and Noteholders Govtinent now that the commis- | terest. The bird murderers continue wrongs may .be traced. Those who | United States marine corps in the | sweetheart | The First National Bank of ] rder he various sorts of hese | Ville, located at Plainville in the State pes or police of the Dominion of :,':)x‘fl,‘&l”"ficmf:: !:}’lvc an increasingly (From the Yale Record.) fail to act upon them are blind lead- | into a foreign war. days?" Tetty asked. ‘I Know ‘\,.“,. S| of Connecticut, i% closing ,.;:l & \fr : v‘: @da has concluded the destruction | egtor time of it. Young Mother Hubbard went to the | of the blind, “Now. if we could only get Boscc “Pearl is my wife and vou don't | All stockholders and other creditors of lhe Parliament building by fire was If the ornithological societies would | delicatessen store to get her pug dog! No principle is involved in the ques Who eats * em alive. to volunte know her,” returned Henry Bittner, | Stid association are therefore notified he dircct result of a bomb ex- | suppress some of their more ridicu- | some mice caviar. But none found | tion of a Tariff commission, which is | sald Recruiting Sergeant Putnam, I'd | 520 West Abbott Street. That wasg | (0 present their notes or other claimg lous publicists they would be doing | she there; the shelves were all bare. ! altogether a matter of expediency.| feel that the United States marine the start of it all and when it endeq | A&8inst the association for payment on. It is to be hoped this ver- one good thing in the interest of the [ He'll have to t liver till after the | Many measures deemed inadvisable | corps was pretty well prepared for | Fetty, Bittner, Bittner's brothers, Ar- A. A. MacLLEOD, p s correct. | lpurpose for which they arc laborins. | war. two years ago, when the world was at | any eventuality.” thur and Albert and Bittner's broth- Cashier. YD e " Plaine New Mother Goose. recognize facts and through timidity | event of this country being plunged “How's Pearl getting along

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