New Britain Herald Newspaper, February 8, 1916, Page 6

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NEW, BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1916. NEw BR{IA[‘ HERALD A CORPORATIC “ROLL OF niacs will try this stunt.—Albany Ar- I but a regretful explanation of how 7 ] 9 HONOR.” ’ [ LR to protect the interests of New Haven A I i d ver in HERAL NG 2 ver 1 i tos RIT, TEST ALD PUBLISHING COMPANY. | Ever and anon there has been the The new director in sports at Yale | And in this trouble the state polico n sian e z | NEW BRITAIN'S BUS of disapproval against the “heart | iS to receive $10,000 a year. How the | have played their part, having per- I BIG STORE tssued datly (suna xceptedr nt 4:15 p. m. | e 5 : - b i % . ’ < 3 day exc \ Sasinin|{oa R Al g 5 ofessor in Greek st like this!— | haps, been used by the interests op- - ALWAYS o) #t Heraid Building. 87 Church St less corporation. And young men ‘ Stno J(":‘ must like th e it B b op. h M d r LWAYS RELIABLE! Bnterea at the' Bro Gmce at Mow Britatn | 2POUE to embark upon careers have i Merotis et indidenta increass e — as Second Class Mall Matter. i been warned against signing up with | Following the New York postmas- |ing cause _1‘or the opinion, held by b Deliverea vy car those firms who look more to mone- | tership, several other burning polit- | many well informed observers from 20 l Tiol ny tne city | | : o s iy 7 TSNtaRansRpALHIOISIT ical issues arc striving for second |the first, that the function of the Washington, D. C., Feb, 8.—"Corfu, “About the time Grecian states Su‘h‘fcrlyfi Cents = Week, Certs a Month. | tary value than to personal merit. - e . A 7 i DI fos e o e st by amatl| e e state police is not, except in rare | whose occupation by the Italians and | broke through the uncertain veil of Da; nb;:ni‘r:hnd‘v_ug‘;:e, 60 Cents a But what must be said about *ll\:h S cases, to operate in the cities. They | Serbians recently brought forth a pro- | tradition into the age of history and o th. 3700 a year sreat concerns as the Pennsylvania | Boston wants some one to tell her | Should serve the interests of law and | test from Greece, is one of the parts | criticism, Corfu was settled by colon- SEASON g e order in communities which lack an |of the lock that secures the Adriatic | ists from Corinth, the date being L ,Mth:"f-‘f rrofitable advertlsing medium '8 | railroad that recognize services ren- | how to celebrate the tercentenary of & I °ity. Circulation books and press dered by employees in such fashion | the landing of the Pilgrims. Get | Organized police force. They should (sea at its narrow neck from the Tonian | placed at 734 B. C. The colony grew always ooen to advertisers. o e e el i T e vl et dl He v st WALl keep out of the cities, except at the | sea and the open waters of the Medi- | rapidly in wealth, in maritime power, RO e e L R a & ames | come easy.—Philadelphia Pre call of the police of those cities. terranean,” begins a sketch on war[and into a confident spirit of inde- Py ""5’;_ NN“;’ s;;«.s. 42nG St. and Broad- | honor” and taking care of them in — — geography issued by the National Geo- | pendence. In the course of a dispute Atlaatie cnr;rkgnf“}’;.;n?«f'gddext‘k' their old age? Those are the things Spain sold the Philippines to us, Picking Ivory Nuts graphic society. “Every power and al- | with the mother-city, it allied itsell = % mhroly besr of and i Te vomn End e arpavently are soine fo Grop (Waterbury Republican.) liance of powers, which have sought | with Athens, much as our colonial DRAPERIES TELEPHON: x y ( v sre Japs o8 Fhate BT master; f Adriati a S e refs ers alli emselves v ustnens HRELTPAONE CALLS Whilaito knowithat on the firat dayiotyl H,"‘ m where Japan can pick them up What's getting into the faculties? T)e”'ns; o (ma‘hc \fvinors. from the f‘fiyo;‘nl;rs allied themselve \\y-‘\h dttcrial Rooms . _ hi S hdiE ne [ty eeostoniClobe: Are youth and wealth and athletic lian league in the fifth century be- | England’s great rival, France. More- o this veariiuicro fwerefiacred —_— | standing played out? Must a fellow | fore Christ to the entente allies in the | over, just as our alliance with France | A BRIGHTER AND MORE CHEER. “Pennsy’s” honor roll the names of | Carranza has ordered that Villa be | in an cducational Institution stand op{ tWentieth after Christ, have warred for | is held to have been a contributary FUL HOME YOUNG AMERICA. fifty-four employees, five of whom had | shot on sight. Still it is presumed | fall by his ability or inability to learn rmssesTlun of Corfu. Corfu, then, in| cause to a far greater, an overshad- See the New Draperies displayedgat 2 &) % i A3 2 AL, hat the fellow wl 1o he job will | his lesso ° i the role of storm center in the clash | owing conflict, sa the alliance brought | our Drapery and Rug Departm: There is now a pla = ved the syst for more than fifty | ¢ e fellow who does the j s lessons? = X i < g P W a plan on foot where- | ystem take carc not to let Villa get a view | Here are 220 midshipmen, about a | Of Southeastern Europe's rivalries, is!|about by the Corcyreans was one of | third floor. by each and every boy and girl in the | Years. Altogether there are now some | o,y g 00 20 g B 850 0 quarter of the membership of the | Put experiencing another of the count- | the causes of the outbreak of the Pel- four thousand names inscribed on this | £ Naval Academy at Annapolis, likely to | 16ss repetitions of its history. oponnesian war, the world-war of SCRIMS AND MARQUISETTES, ) ‘White, Cream and Ecru, in a splén. fime and with the entire amount coi- 3 roll and in the sixteen years that the | Almost anything can he expected to ! be turned out hecanse they failed in “Cofu lies like a watch-tower in the | classic times. did Wikeeiion. briced i 18- 10 B lected have built a battleship called | plan has been in operation more than | 20D UD. first or last. at Newport News. | examinations. They Hmugh‘( there | Tonian sea llv(’fl‘)x"e ‘the narrowing en- Next the Romans, hecoming a jeal- | £1G selection. pric ic, 7c, 1 fAmerica.” I for mo othor ressen | twelve million dollars have been suops | FICSUMaby it Was the home port of | would be such a demand for them for | trance of the Strait of Otranio. To| ous power on the Adriatic. felt tho 3 | ¥ ason | g " & { the Flying Dutchman Rochester | war purposes that they would be |the north of it, a rugged finger of Al-| need of the island that a desire to SCOTCH FIGURED MADI han the fostering of patriotism, there I'in pensions. Here then is a fine | Posi-Express. passed whether oy no. Some 60 stu- [ banian 1mountain-land reaches out| control this vitally important sea-arm White and P(,r'u m'u'(-d‘ 19¢, 25¢, 20¢ representative — dents of New York university have [ into the strait, and, hending back, | always brings, and took Corfu under | and 35c yard, daeh A high scheol in WinsteA, Conn., | been dropped for deficient scholarship | forms the splendid naval harbor of | their protection in 229 B. . Byzanti S i B 4 benny S BRI tr I = heis very bestibe has added to its domestic science | including several foothall men, base- | Aviona, one of the golden hopes of [ um held it during the middle age FIGURED MADRAS penny, a nickel, or mayhap | the men to give 3 cquipment twelve enameled washtubs | ball players and track athletes. It was | Austrian and Italian ambitions. 7To|and the Venetians, come to world- In colored effects, priced 25c “And B quarte i1d easily be available, | cause they know that when their usc- | and a home nursing department, fur- | N0t supposed the university could get | the northwest of Corfu, the long Ital- | power as dictators of Adriatic wate 29¢ yard. depending largely upon the financial | fulness has departed they will not be | nished as a bedroom. Girl pupils wil! | along without them and hold its head | ian heel cuts out into the waters of | held Corfu, defending it by bribery, > y . be given instructions in laundry work | UP. “Apparentiy it is goinz fo 1ot its| the lonian sea. Together, these thred| wonderful naval combats, and stub-| . OVER DRAPERIES. e e hen. Many other corporations could | #0 in Nome nursing under competent | head droop, if it must. At Yale thero | clements dominate the Adriatic’s out- | born land fighting against the most | New effects in Green, Brown, Old i i o . cachers. Vocational training is re- | 2T¢ ominous reports that several men | let, and around them the strife of our | hitter attacks of Turkey until 1797, At ose, etc., in plain colors and figured In our own city of New Britain we Iy profit by emulating such a 2000 ceiving much attention in progressive | absolutely necessary to recover the | civilization among its own members | that time the isiand fell into the hands | 46Si&ns, priced 39¢, 50c and 59¢ yard, Pould do some yeomanry work along r | communities. Connecticut evidently | athletic honor of the university are | might almost be said to have kindled. | of the Ottoman, only to revert to a CRETONNES, SR e - | helioves girls can be fitted for greater | below in their sckclership and are n;)! _“There is great fertility and much | modern Grecce, With its government In pleasing new designs and colors THI PULSE OF THE NATION. | S91¥ice to themiclves and others by likely to he able to pull out in time to | picturesque heauty in the island, the|in ancient Athens, more than 00 | priced 15¢, 17¢, 20 to 39¢ yard. eing taught how to do the family | WOrk on this year's teams. most northeriy of the lonian islands| years after the end of the Delian fome patriotic yourig American boy 1 As if there was any doubt about | washing most expeditiously and effec. It actually looks as though the|and one of the most important. It is| league. READY-MADE CURTAINS girl. In cach and every schoolhou.e | the success of the President's trip | tively and how to take care of sick ;W'"lties were in a conspiracy to “;IL :hn‘(.\-cight miles long, varying in “The town of Corfu, cn the east, Priced 75¢ to $4.98 pair. Faaige A A further- | Members of the household—Troy | PTains and application above muscle. | breadtn from three to twenty miles, | " . e : : | _fi':l'(f;”’:f ‘:‘N “]:;‘:‘:r:lm‘ S s, et [ We nope they have haa the sense 0 |and containing 275 squarc miles of rellibulleiandsl comiontanty, Mol oy | QRN SASE OURTAIN 3 | 8 < 2pa ss program, | make an agreement in advance that|area. It supports about 100,000 in- | stanced, is the principal community Ready for use, 25¢ pai BChools of America shall contribute a s much worthiness in this project. | piece of work. It is he amount need not be confined to | of real American honor. It insoires condition of the particular boy or | unmercifully cast upon the scrap he campaign is the active interest of n the town the boys and girls could heir love for a nation that is tnae | the Southern leaders of Democracy § » ¢ i i a natic at s t e S eaders o a s 5 sach she s secure for | habitants. . ¢ untainous, | o sla s ¢ lation of . preatest on carth, the most lib- | are now up in arms for fear Wilson | ilic Tonlle (Caniotric. ffiéfi nl:xdxlwi i:‘wi:it‘:::x:n:“fl:: e ar ath- \\'fk:hl?i;hh- vi'\l?zl‘iill'!:::.\\'all'r‘\‘\i”ll»‘(\‘l‘\:“r:‘ln ;!y:nix}:es‘;‘v)‘:(;l a)‘xld nn: x'.J?:;ff: handle FLOOR COVERING 5 i s £ \ £ ys . 000 Rugs, Linoleums and Oilcloths. fral land that ever sun shone on. And | will invade their territory. A South- (Detroit Free Press.) letes which other institutions turn | Corfu follows the nature of the other | the whole of the island’s trade. Olive T 3 Things are coming to b retty bad | out It is thi. o tition which has | Toniar isl; ds. Pantokra r, 3,000 il, fish vine, salt, honey, oranges, AR e R ienriond e Chiid (i g to be pretty bac ut. is this competition an islands antokrator, 3, oil, fish, wine, salt, Y, ges, " e eetlox cinfitripibasibcen nlangea R “ € | in American railroading. The employ- | despoiled schclastic virtue and un- [ feet high, rises the loftiest peak on the | figs, and other fruits are the articles ace, after the last penny, or nick President. From that section of the | es all over the country are talking | dermined athletic decency island. Its largely bald head is the| of its export. Its imports are manu- pr dime, shall have been gathered. | country there hail many Congres: seriously now about a general strike - only present-day memorial to many a | factures of Central Europe, brought F]BRE__FIF l Y fhat 2 proud moment it will be when | men who are bitterly opposed to pre- | [0F more pay. and the latest statis- ree Press ana Free Republics. prehistoric fable and myth. in from Brindisi, Athens and Fiume.” ; : | tics—published only this - H paredness. In order to find out if | showed that the owners of :‘1‘1?“;1:;1 (New Tork Worid) ARD ROBE Bg to the President of the United ese statesmen really represent the | roads have alrecady g ; r 2 r 3 3 ftates to help build tr St G ° fo e st = w’rr;af"\ Have aiready igonefon fa st Deferred after a hot debate, the |gon who have been on it from the |the state pays about five times this Ip build the great dread- [ attitude of the Southern people, Wil- | The compiled returns given out about | censorship will come up again fov | pegintii® “mycy may be good or they |sum annually for the maintenance of TRUNKS jouzht “America.’ | son would have a word with the con- the first of the vear revealed that | discussion tomorrow in the French may be prejudiced, but to an impartial |the school in addition to the rental % Tom v nio 1o or sl Mna Ga R R ;1;m~: had Dbeen fewer miles of track | Chamber of Deputies. Dissatisfaction | cve’ it 1ooks as though the known [cost, the advantage derived by AT $15 00 EACH o buir boys and girls present their offer- : ¢ id in the United Statesin 1915 than | will doubtless force some loosening of | ¢, v ted them Bridg s manifes ay $4,00 hine and liberty, there is the duty | be derogatory the Southern leaders in | in any of the preceding fifty veare f el e facts rather corroborated . ridgeport is manifest. To pay $4,000 f cach and oy - = % f preceding fifty vears and | its vexatious curb upon publicity. But the recall of such a report ;cash per year and receive $24,000 val- Other ach and every person who en- | Congress are ready to do everything | that more roads are in receivers e ehBeen=or=nin i As D con W in | e Bl e b iss onil | el b i na e e 0ys its hospitality to lend a hand in | in their power to prevent this in- | 1ands than ever before. These two |some ways more severe than that of |mpere’ can he but one implication, | city would be pleased to drive. statements mean nothing else than | Germany. Tt may be a wise reti- [0 "5 ¢ its suppression was ne- e . FIBRE—FIFTY ler nation, to come forth in time of | At.this particular time it is unfor- | Ly e en and women who have | cence that since the beginning of the | cogcary. Tvidently it was not distaste- | Can the Bicycle “Come Back.? DRESS AND STEAMER TRUNKS. RS ith any needed ald 5 % - & £ been investing their money in rail- | war no figures of French losscs have | ) 5"\, Morris and the two other (Louisville Courier-Journal.) Friced $7.50 to $13.50 cach s with eded aid. to answer | tunate that the President of the | roads arc as sore over their earnings | been given out; but the seizurc of La | o O o f B 0 ission who were 3 i s he summons of its officials, even if | United States should have to leave | S the men who work on the railroads | Croix for printing a prayer of Pobe | rccent at a meeting where it was | _Lnere have been rumors, time and POPULAR PRICED TRUNKS lagain, of the revival of the bicycle | In all sizes. Priced $4.25 to $10/00 ¥ that call life itself must be sacri- | his e es : | are over their wages, and as far as | Renedict is a stupidity to match the | o noc mian HIE0 R e e s s post to participate in a tour of | . 5 ag 5 = | propoccdl o are the members |25 2nd s . g I can be seen we are gefting to the | British censor's blue penciling a key- [ PXOPREC TR0 800 K00 e . |28 a pleasure vehicle, but in America | cach. ced. At this particular time the : Inforoant ccause there | poj s ; ; : (BT an T the land. Unfortunate because there | point where neither party fo the ar. | note speseh of Premier Asquith. S oo I the “wheel” which once was the fad nited States needs a greater Navy |are those ever ready to impuzn | ranzement will go ahead unless ils In empire or kingdom or republic g baw i 8 ofRotisty el likasitholyehiclofol ' nd while the national Congress is the | political motives and also unfortunate | CoMpensation s mcreased. (he permitted blurting out of military Endowing Housework {the multitudes, remains in an incon- < . spicuous position. Dealers say that L] b Special Ward Robe Trunks It would pay you to see them elping to make it a bigger and bet- | vasion of the South rad - " The railr ow o .y e secr var _will not again be pgical means of assigning the appro- | hecause international troubles de- . W coe W cans st ofl secnets Al pWalRt U] S : ry Democrat.) i because int when they don't like the situation. xo | known. All countries have come to (Waterbury Democrat.) many bicycles are sold; they are used riations, what a gallant and patriotic | mand his closest attention Yet con- | can the railroad employes. But the | Gen. Sherman's opinion that it is not About a hundred thousand dollars |by workmen to save carfare, and by ping it would be if every boy and giil | aitions are such that the President is | sreat third party, the public, cannct | well to let a thousand men die bhe- | was turned over to the Chicago School | messenger hoys to save time that may the entire United States contributed | absolutely justified in getting in close | § m\;v It is absolutely dependent up- | cause a military plan is published in nl" Don]:f“-ll(‘ Arts ;\n]fl Smenr-r(‘s ‘n:e | be dm‘:)tcd to dime novels. But they Bime to build a ba DD ee fa1ly % 5 . T on the ilrond for its supplies, an.d | advance. other day as an endowment fund to jare not seen in the parks and on the | since the beginning of the war thaa | Haiaas \_h:‘;l]e(;’h\:: C:l"‘:f("‘;(l“ touchimith she Deoblr ‘“_“““”‘"vhc {it can do nothing but intervene, ra- | But the proper censorship of mili- | help in the educaticn of =irls and ' country roads, straddled by pleasure | it has had before. 5 s 0 L 4 | pulse of the nation, so to speak. Un-| ther clumsily, and try periodically | tary news, and nothing else, degen- | women who have homes of their own, | seekers in smart outing costum It is not merely the sentiment for [Ame And if this plan is going | der the Constitution of the United |to adjust the relations of the two dis- | erates into a danger to free govern- | or who expect to take up some line of | The cycle path in the Bois still is re- | national defence that is strengthened p work out, New Britain must not Lo | giates, vesting the executive power in | Putants when they get too badly un- | ment when it becomes a censorship | domestic service for a living. This served for the exclusive use of cy- | by the president’s speeches, but the ehind ‘any other city its size in the | a President, it is stipulated that “He | "dlanced. over political agitation. Under present | fund has a x';«l!10vl' vmtov"(\s:m: history. [clists, and many Parisians ride in | American people as a whole have been Btion. R T e el N A e 2_‘v When the owners were taking foo | restrictions, the Crimean despatches | Many of the mhn_ns i the Woman »“Hw Bois every afternoon. English- | brought a little nearer together, the T many | shall from time to time give to the |jarge a share of the raiiroad receipts | of W. H| Russell, which overthrew | building at the world’s fair held in {men in England and on the Contin- | gaps have been closed, and everybody pces and bloods here; but we are loyal | congress Information of the State of | the public stepped in and reduced tho | a British Ministry by revealing faults | Chicago in 1893 were gathered by the | ent, use bicycles for pleasure, and | has a clearer understanding of the evertheless to the land of our birth | the Union, and recommend to their | @Mount. If it is found that the balanes | of military management, though pro- | personal efforts of Mrs. Potter-Palmer |as a cheap means of transportation. | policies that the president has en- 2 was not well adjusted and that the | perly silent as to strategy, would not | and women associated with her on the | But Americans do not. The loss of | deavored to carry out in maintaining : e : i 2 7. | owners are not getting cnough while | be possible. Ry such censorship the |board of lady managers. These exhib- |interest in hicyeling in America has | both the neutrality and the rights of It is for (Ah young folfi to get the | shall judge neces: y and expedient. the employes are getting an undue ;\rm‘\' itself suffers. i its, many of them most rare and benu- | been so complete that it does not | the United States. Public opinion is flea of America, what it is and what | That seems to cover the whole case. | proportion of the income, it may be Nowhere is this better understood | tiful, did not of course, belong to the | seem possible that even the follow- | not only better informed but it<is means, and then to lift up their ¥c- | ¢ theve is a better way of finding out | that the public will be obliged to | than in the land that remembers the | exposition, and at the close, the exposi- | ing bit of news from Palm Beach can | steadied and made more cohesive. step in once more and to try balanc- | Third Napoleon. No people more | tion board save the lady managers |turn society toward fhe wheel as the The speeches themselves, in tone | ing the scale all over again, | clearly realize than the Trench that | permission to sell the exhibits and |latest craze and in substance, have been models of | The public is learnir a lesson | free republics cannot endure without | keep the money. They were sold, all | “Mrs. Herman Oelrichs was out on | political oratory, with no appeal vestigation, no one has yet come forth [ about a zood many things these days. | a frec pross. except a few Isabella quarters which |the edge of the golf links learning to | passion, no appeal to fear, but plain, the idea. The President has | Among others, it is realizing that in- E are still for sale, and the proceeds |ride a bicycle.” simple statements of the difficulties creased railroad profits come out of Is it = My amounted to about $36,000. This Mrs. | The Chicago Evening Post, whose | and dangers that have confronted the ) public and not out of the em-| , (x v Al Gonticr Palmer invested, and in the twenty alert correspondent sent the porten- | executive in the endeavor to keep ihe { our national defenses from reports of | 15v0s of the rallroads, and also that e b st bRl ”A Eonsieny) vears following it was more than |tous news, heralds with confidence the | country out of war and at the s;nx:e army and navy officials. which, under | increased wages come out of the pub- The news comes from Hartford | t).q Two vears ago a committee |return of the “craze” and bids younsz | time maintain the honor of the natifi the constitution, he is also required | lic and not out of the employers, | L&t the state civil service commi was appointed to arrange ahout its fl- | women who would be smart to buy | Nothing could be more effective than Either form of advanced cost or | Sion recalled from ihe, sovernor US| pap disposal. and while they were in- | bicycles and begin to practice up if | the manner in which the president has urces of information and they can- It the people of the nation | CVCTaUON is passed along and s | ANMUAL Tebort, - made 0 Bim o SOME | vostigating the subject, for two vears | they hope to retain social standing. | explained to his audiences that the Gy A e El G saddled upon the ultimate consumer | VeeKS ago, and that at its meeting of |, "o egt was paid over to the In-| But the Post overlooks the geo- [ menace lies not in what we will a9 think of any plan he might advocate | in the way of higher prices for every- | 15t Wednesday, it struck out the por- | ¢, ¢'s \elare fund The decision | graphic aspect of Mrs. Oelrichs’ bic- | but in what somebody else may do, to remedy conditions. Were we labor- | thing that enters into living requive- | §on 0f the report slaned by Presi- | as finully made in favor of the [yele lesson. The “wheel” never suc- | and over that we have no control | ing under the influence of a king, a | MeNtS S ;]]‘:1“" "h‘e‘“‘r‘o“v‘)(m"“_’m’","p '\,”h:“;'tfc"';“;: School of Domestic Arts and Sciences, | cumbed altogether in Florida. Tt sur- Hardly less significant than e Sord, or = duks we should not heve | . | Public Isibeginning to et @ |0 ot without (his sates | Which seems most wise and appropri- { vived about the coast hotels to serve | speeches has been the manner of thele ) 8 ; | 1S5 AN oD I s state- | te. The work of the lady managers |the purpose of the riksha In the | reception. The tens of thousands who 1 | dim idea, too, that no really perman 3 e e this opportunity. But we are a free | cnt adjustment of wage troubles on | Ment. Naturally speculation is rife as | " "\youa's Columbian exposition | Orient. Mrs. Oclrichs was taking her | heard Mr. Wilson speak knew in- to the meaning of this move. Ts there people, working and enjoying life un- | the railroads is possible by merely in- I : [ creasing wages, becauss the increas- |2 disagreement among the civil ser- | ing mean increased living cost all | Vice commissioncrs? Wag the report scurrilous or improper? Why should S 1-20%8 MAIN ST? F adoption, whatever the case may | Consideration such Measures as ‘i ands in its defense. The strength | the exact state of the Union than go- Jf the nation lies in Young America. | ing out and making a personal AS*VIEWED IN BERLIN, Wi been made aware of the weakness To get the real German view on any estions relating to the relations he- preen this country and Germany it is | pbmetimes well to 20 o e besi G : to the best| roceive. It is his duty then to find t always be found in the lobbies at are being conducted in the United jtates. Rather would we take the ews of a man like Alfred F. AL immermann, the Under Secretary of ate at Berlin, who in discussing the gality of shipment of American: arr.s y, unitions of war to the allles, |\ ,; nation and whom we can re . for that matter, to any belligerent, as these enlightening remarks: “‘We ave never contended that this act is | marked a milestone in woman’s prog- | bicycle lesson at Palm Beach, and | stinctively that here was a president r People were astounded at the [nof in Newport. of the United States who was think= successful team work displayed by the “The days of the bicycle craze | ing neither of partisanship nor of polis " | around, including the living cost of | L women, and at its great results. Help- |are coming back, as surely as the | tics, but was bearing a message (o move from office at the next election. | the employes, and by the time fthe | it _be recalled? ing this school to cducate girls for the | sun rises and sets” predicts the Post. | which no patriotic citizen had a right All the way through we have things | extra price is added to commodities | Ferhaps it is fortunate that —the |; /o jjigent accomplishment of home | The prophecy will seem hazardous un- | to close his ears. In a republic there ! in our own hands and it is up to Amer- | the railroad wage increase is caten | FePort has already been printed in | qugjes fittingly perpetuates the work |less someone in society ventures out | can be no higher form of leadership breach of international law, nor has | | roldo o AieliIr Walson! coes into || A by theRnIeTen ieostRo AT INInE Band full in many newspapers of the state. | (%0 1 orq. upon hicycle between which the chief | than that. If the voice of the nation BB German government ever repre- l(‘ans‘ i Gt H" = the wage raising process has to be | Briefly it con ists first of a f}o cription il centers of fashion lie in summer has spoken through t}}n presidept, p i SPTe | the South, as he went into the West, | hegun all over again. Some day, per- | Of the purpose of the civil service ate Trade Sehoo VA then so much the better for the na- el as holding a view." | | d finds out that the majority of the | haps, a real statesman will solve this | 14W of 1913, followed by a descrip- ’ : ZRTEN tion. at is probably the real Germdn | .. == . civor preparedness, | Seemingly insoluble problem, but as | tion of the purpose of the civil ser- (Bridgeport Telegram.) The State of the Union. _— g Ml g e e | ;fl’ the answer has not been discover- ;‘(:(‘fl‘\-;lv\‘\(‘n:\l‘;lm :‘l\f(:)s;;;;z:n‘;‘elnth a;\ "Thexte ]l_-s ih:\ m;ft»_““;m :"0;’.‘ ! (From the New York World.) TO DEPORT WAR REFUGEE! | pare. And under the oath of his | T Ao e PG SRR (i || L G UL HEsERLT UHC SRty ““He shall, from time to time, give to S quotes William R. Webster, Jr., the congress information of the state | Fifty of 108 Who Arrived in Ame: sacred office the President must fell | : : body may draw any inferences they res ,‘ e e Saigtolice choose from them and bo subject 1o | the local Board of Rducation, in | of the Union.” Thus the Constitu- Yesterday to Be Sent Baclk. —Out of et R e e if the | speaking of the State Trade school. tion commands. b g ’ 2 ) e Onel neaaino L U e et cor(:':r(",: ’?\\'Q°fy~'fx.f~ifi P here cvll:u\l{l_\ is no question of { In ‘:l('('m‘rlnlnco wy;:x(n'x‘njmrngss(:r‘n_ ::( u::l{(:‘, ‘\x'dshyénr:“!;, il . - . grand flourish with whi is 2 or paragraphs speak of res: its value. Mr. Webster is a manufac- | President Wilson in Dece SRS LA B 6l pidig: EACTS ANDIFANGLES nounced that the S‘A[:mhp(‘,‘“;: R 3;":1'.0“.',2\‘?'11,'13‘,,7"’"3& e et | fren, and he knows it, utility throusk | the congress vitally important infor- | arrived here on the steamer Manila made a big raid on gambling placL:;' commission. The balance of the re- |the skilled artisans which are grad- i mation of the state of the Union, 4.|n.’1l~\(‘ux‘n, from the '\\rwm yesterday, Some of the dances called “extreme- | in New London, to know how much | port consists of statistics, and a rec- | uated from it. Hundreds and hundreds | the congress proved itself sceptical fifty are held today at the immigran and indifferent, playing factional poli- | detention station for deportation. ed, or are learning its value, through | tics and party politics with the gravest The Manila Maru brought a carge of young men and women have learn- situation that has arisen since ihe |y zjued at nearly $5,000,000, including Civil war. 1In a series of the most | $3,000,000 worth of silk and $500,000 remarkable speeches ever delivered by | worth of platinum, = a president of the United States. Mr. der a man whom we put at the head pinion of the whole contention hich, it will be remembered, was Iroached to tiis nation by a note from ustria-Hungary and not from the | . “ . o e taes erlin Foreign Office. There is such ? @ gister.) thing holding to strict interna jonal law, Secretary Zimmer- ann’s remarks show. | | | e —— Iy .u-u;n;v“ are merely extreme.— | good is done. The descent on five al- | ommendation concerning the pay of : L 5 Newark News. leged places of zambling and the cap- | subordinates in the state service. It is interesting to note,” comments R, }m,.(, i s ot | o fectricalledtication mn Al ol e Hartford Post, “that the National The Naval Academy displays a fine | pressive. What we need to know for | very dangerous material to put into | proved craftsmanship which a course Leazue, which observes its state of unpreparedness.—Piti:hurgh | accurate and final judgment is how , the hands of the voting public. that |in the Trade school has afforded New York | Gazette-Times. many of those persons are convicted, | it ought to he suppressed. Tnasmuch | them. T);ose who have !fllt\'_cl\l('\‘(lu;n— 2 p citfofithe \Unjted Staces Mo : i how many of the vlaces are perman- | as the report is signed by the presi- | tage of the courses in practical trades | Wilson has now been gt e - 2 2 Eresday, has had two Connecticut ’ . | ently closed, how much 1 : ;.’.‘.’;;:,‘ (‘1:..‘”:\1;:\:,(”:: oo Al ettt only bettered themselves, | people themselves “information of the| BODY FOUND IN HAYMOW, len as presidents of the organization. | As & milking machine, will the sub-| ol 0 (here is in New London | the expressions of opinion are his | have not only made it possible to se- | state of the Union,” and the response | Mystic, Feb. 8.—The body of Joha on. Morgan G. Bulkeley was head of | SI4IaTy company cver be surpassed? | (y.n (hings settle down again. And | own personal ojinion. They may be |cure more certain work and greater | is instantaneous. Hinton, a farmhand, about 49 years ST R0 [ weaneed to have ome other questicn | totally without justification or they |remuneration, but have bettered th Not since Lincoln's day would it [old, was found today in a haymow on = answered in a fair and final way: Why | may be well founded. The other mem- | community and bad workmanship | have been possible for a president to | the farm of C. H. Willis, by whom he At all events we shall hold that | did not the New London police do | bers of the commission might readily | gives a community a bad name that do what Mr. Wilson has done, for|had been employed. The body was strict accountability.— | that same thing, and do it first permit an expression of opinion In | clings to all its products. there was neither the occasion nor the | well-preserved. Hinton disappeargl 1913 New York Tribune. | These raids by the state police are | such a report. which did not strictly The State Board of Education has | necessity for so frank_mui intimate a ] ghout two weeks ago and it is bes the Na- e too often, as they have been recently | accord with their own views, and yet | notified Bridgeport that henceforth it | discussion of the foreign relations of | jjoyed he had been dead about that here in New iaven. a cause and an | which were not sufficiently divergent | must pay the rent for the Trade |the country and the possible outcome | jongth of time. The cause of death evidence of friction hetween the local | from them to rvequire a minority pro- | school in this city. This action is | of those relations as affecting our 4o- | pagnot been stated, but it is believed L e T DG GG e BT || ot under a state law, and if the cily | mestic affairs and our domestic insti- [ 3™ o5 0T (0 qhe to exposare 1possibly political county commis Rumor has that some of the | does not choose to pay the rental, it | tutions. The president has taken the [ sioner system. They say that the lo- | members of the hoard were not pres- | may lose the school There should Amvrn';n\“\\mlvnlr»‘ ey his (‘4xxyll|‘dv‘v\("e 1 ea hlice are ha icapped because of ent a h meeting when the repori ot be- and »robably is not any in a way hat would 1ave resulted in - - - Eni chicf exccutlve than this same cfficient enough whenever he has the ! SOl it Dt G PO s L B el il et e v oo o IR LASICA'S QONTRROK TAR fhomas J. Lynch of our own New = Opportunity. — Philadelphia — Public | {7 550 (i o discover what is the i in the report are facts or not, entireiy { matter. The Trade school is far too | taken by anybody who was less a mus- tv the Hon. Morgan G. Ledger. source and nature of the politics. Tt | regardless of any personal opinion, valuable an institution to let slip for | ter of self-expression and self-control | from Alaska for the year 1915 were be found that there is some poli- [ and thev are subject to confirmation |a matter of $4,000 a year. which is | than Mr. Wilson, and in consequence | $55,000,000, and the imports $28,000.« I An automobile at Newark, Ohio, de- | ties back of the trouble which forced | from public records. The opinions a the rental cost for the two buildings | the country has a clear nd sancr | 000, according to the report/of {he 1 isb: measured up o th | Chier s come hefore the city | the opinions of one of the two mem- | which house the branches of the state | idea of the serious problems that its | colleetor of customs at Juneau, res | railed a train the other day Let’s | Chief Smith to ¢ dard. xhuye all the joy riders and speed mmlvuuxt and receive, not a reprimand, | bers out of the five on the commis nstitution. When it is considered that | government has been grappling with [ ceived here today, i | i | | oo P | | Be league during the first years of g existence, and Thomas Lynch ot ew Britain was president from 1910 | o oo o7 €O It is also safe to say that onal League, which has numbered Mr. Wilson was greeted by crowds as large as those that turned out for Bryan in '96.—Boston Transcript. | mong its presidents a few governors states, has never had a more hon- | Jrable, upright, courageous, and effi- The German sailor proves himself Vast ' 8.—BXports Fitain. As o Jalikcley, being from the Nutraeg will

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