New Britain Herald Newspaper, February 12, 1916, Page 6

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

NEW. BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, ' SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1916. I Ew CVRH:A;.q HERALD ] To this end they would be guided by vears abed. And during all that time Milwaukee A Teutonic City. ye e ; 5 his doctrines, would shape their lives the optimism of Mollie Fancher never (Providence Journal.) = S = h —_—— s “ e il W i ) HERALD ©0REToTSeG conpaxy, | 1o live as Americans should live, a5 waned, her cheerfulness never depart- | Milvaukee, where extra precautions nczent Ity o sn - NEW BRITAIN'S BUSIKST Proprietors. Ahpaha it inacin o ARG AL e S el R e | ere Rtalienlit o finsurcf breal dont BT BIG STORE : ; : S S OR G SO ® ° | son’s safety when he made his speech “ADWAY$ RELIABDE" as he saw they must live if the nation whiled away a pitiful existence pted) at 4:15 p. m. ¥ | there the other day, has a larger pro- R . Jt h Id Chureh St. would survive. writing letters of hope to downcast | portion of German inhabitants than nce oman rong o — eriNG That America became a united na- brothers and sisters in far off distant j any other large American city., Of its & FEBRUARY ¢ . 373,857 Inhabitants in 1910, #11,529 DAYS £ were born in foreign countries,Jand of | \ohington, D. C., Feb. 12—“Nish, | seaport of Saloniki, and, thence, to | Our Salespeople Are Never Idl¢ besh carrier to any part of the city o ¢ % the latter, 64,816——considerably mOTe | {5 third national capital to be aban- [ Athens. Thus, the little place has not for ts A Week. 65 Cents a Month Because of his precepts, where once more invalids who hore their afflic™ | than one-half were born in Ger-|qoned before the necessities of war, | been so far out of the world, as it | FOR SATURDAY Britain tion is directly attributed to the won- lands, and knitting serviceable gar- derful influence of Abraham Lincoln. ments for the poor. If there were ubscriptions for paper to be sent by mail| . — 5 - a : < 54 X Payabln;in ‘ndvance, 60 Conts o was all division today friends and tions with the grace and resignation | many. Of the remainder, 17,124 Were | i3 one of the ancient nuclei of the | centuries of nameless obscurity might Month $7.00 a year foes stand forth as staunch supporters. | of this wonderful soul, hospital work | hatives of Austria-Hungary. This | Serbian nation,” says a primer on |lead one to suppose. : | oy vve | A CLEARANCE SALE il makes nearly three-fourths of the | ar e e el ana b Riennd B oniy pron | the South, where the name of w o, o added lustre nnd | M2k i : . geography just given out by th s aroun e only profitable advertising medium in ould take on an‘adc city’s foreign-born population natives | National Geographic society. “It has | been strongly fortified h modern the ety ioireulation books and press | Lincoln was the embodiment of all human nature in general would be | ,r'{ne countries of the Teutonic Al-|heen the heart of things Serblan In | carthworks. The frontier toward Bul- | ATS' 5 Sl g s that stood for baseness and meanness, greatly improved. lies. the Balkan peninsula, since the days | garia is one dificult of invasion, and | OF w‘NTER CO IIVI"I:V‘AL'I will 'rmwl ".“ q.\.‘, ;, ,,;,.a. he is looked upon after fifty years as - C‘F'l‘""\o ‘))|:Phr;?(;eranlte of 1::”4‘;:;::‘121‘: w h_e?hrhis .:I?\' peor;lqli hcca‘me }]:m ][\hc' f:fl:;’lnsi"i‘ilnnrks of ()hr <-fH.\' ~0‘l1'!- ; ing's News Stand. “nd St and Rroad- e a e PRI NS ent in Milwaukee's populs neighbors of Tmperial Byzantium. The | mand the vallev approaches from the | A $5 00 and $7 50 h B o T Searatwall hoieavion ang resemenotiho Ui, IOAEIS) CBI) H (O more apparent, however, in the par- [ other capitals which have been aban- | north and south The Serbian rallways | t $09.00 an o eac 2 ¥, artford depot. the man who was big enough and S | entage statistics. Only 79.871—but ! doned in the course of the war are ' are administered from Nish, and, here, | Women’s and Misses’ Coats in thie o F HONE CALLS. brave enough to follow the dictates In a Connecticut town high school | yii410" 6™ than one-fifth—of the'| those of Brussels, Belgium, and Bel- | the railway has its factory for the | sale values up to $15.00 ¥ siness Ofice Sieee338[of o clear vision that saw down the :':"I;”“:'r"fi‘l:““;";he';“)"(":;flk’; :,:\“Cssin““if city's people in 1910 were of nafive | grade, the poace time government { repair of rolling stock, its stores 0f | When you buy one of our Coats At : i ¢ YT ] T T sl e T G S o e Tanq | Parentage, while 199,922 were of Ger- | .center of Serbia. (ne other capital has ' subplies, and central offices for oper- | these prices you can pat yourself on TR i vation complete, a fire-building and | man origin__natives of Germany and | been nearly menaced, Paris, which ation. The city has an iron works | the back and say, “Well, quite a sa B s e { mistakable ‘erm.s. That is the Lin- wood-chopping course should h]§ l'": the children horn here whose parents | was temporeraily abandoned by the ' of some importance. Hng, the $5.00 to $7.50 I saved on this A i coln .that America looks up to now; troduced in the bo: school.—Balti- | were born in Germany. Adding the | French government, but successtully © “In time of peace, the king and the | Coat purchased at McMillan’s help's Estimates approved by the school | the man who died with no words of | more American, 24,570 of Austro-Hungarian parent- | defended against all of its enemy's government make Nish headquarters | some.” You might well have it o2rd. and recommended to the board | praise ringing in his ears, but with M"-]il is found that 224;22 :‘f Mil- ;;SEL-‘:‘;M Nish nl_n:; beent eelrlving‘ as ;E:“m:‘e"f‘e m"“":?" vfjvh 3‘e?"ymn\\1'h€1';'0- | SATURDAY. R ST 3 3 i - - i waukee's 373,857 inhabitants are |the § an capital, practically, since he constitution o . the Pf finance and taxation for adoption. | hisses and stinging rebukes from his Statistics show that this na:fig Aeisen o nlndr‘:nh Sl b 'hel’war.(a R e S | WEEK END the two Centraj Powers, while the na- “This ancient city, once a promi- The Turks were driven from the city tive element and those of foreign |nent Roman stronmghold, lies about during the uprising of 1878. Before 45 origin, other than from Germany and | 130 miles southeast of Belgrade, in the present war, the city had a popu- c or edicational purposes. T & ; e lesees L ses oo Bl it | Austria, number altogether only | the Morava valley, through which lation ef about 25,000, and was re- | ,-.ALE purposes. The sum | dent on this the anniversary of his | hile and the chewing gum than ) ) T Bl b e e I (i b e e | S otal marks an increase of nearly forty | birth, with all the wonderful ad- does out of its navy. The &““"t‘i“"‘i:: tinople runs. It is only about 40 miles | “It was under the walls of Nish, 9 housand dollars over the last annual { dresses in his memory, it is difficult | S, Uit useful for defense and 'he| o O W west of the Bulgarian frontier, and ancient Nalssus, that the Emperor OF MEN S AND BOYS s necausct o s maditionad (| eleen ot R A R ly Forgotten! is defended on every hand by a com- , Claudius destroyed an army of in- submarine is that you can’t stick the (New York World.) 'S i D. 2 can h is air , . . 5 3 < plex of rugged, lesser mountains. It vading Goths in A. D. 269. It was eed is directly attributed to the ! naught but cynical criticism. Every | submarine under . the “edge of the The Bishop of London is beyond |is Serbia’s second city only surpase- | here, also,—which adds still more to NlSHlNGS rowth of New Britain as a city, With | true American should spend part of | chair when you are not usmg it.— | bounds in excusing the refusal of a|ed in strategic and commercial im- ithe past glories of the place—that | MEN'S SHIRT he added burdens on the school sys- | this day in meditation upon the life | \Vatertown Times, trawling skipper to rescue the crew | portance by Belgrade upon the Dan- ,the emperor, Constantine the Great, Coat Shirts, Work Shir Flannel em, the necessarily large addition {and career of Abraham Lincoln. e Fhl'orate I b ‘r‘ésgge W:',O(éked 7;_cppe|m L~19.]_‘y¢\0 | n‘be. &winz to r“s position, it domti‘n- l“t'as hgrnhin AA‘_'_ln_ 27:‘_ T}sl\';\as d:in | Shirts, Night Shirts. SATURDAY 45c¢ o the teaching f. . he i i v ri i o S i i 2 e satisfies religion or morality. ates e way from FEurope to he * stroye v ila an his uns g ; orce, and l \e increase | Therein may be derived doctrines of | yangements for a hand-picked pro- Only the pleas of Military Necessity | Orient, in war time as a fortress, in | the bth century, and in the 9th cen- | “* e MEN'S UNDE nsd, f salaries due to the sliding scale | purity, prudence, patience and patriot- | ¥ MEN’S UNDERWEAR | | Fleece, Ribbed and Merino, shirts gressive party convention at Chicagv | as read by the Tmperial German Gov- | peace time as merchant city able to | tury the Bulgarians became its mas- ystem. Again, the school plant has [ism. Kvery man born on a forcign | next June are simply to preserve an | ernment, fits the case. A submarine | exact a toll upon strong currents of jters. The Hungarians and the Byzan- | o g0 @ 0P fite UCHIE 0T een enlarged to permit of smaller | shore, under the dictates of king rule, | Of&anization that will not amalgamate, | Commander, we. are (old, must sink | passing trade. Of its importance to tines possessed it in turn in the 1ith |° MEN'S SOCKS. | because amalgamation would mean | an enemy merchantman with her non- | the Serbians, it might almost be said, century, and, next it fell into tle Ipswich and Middlesex, medium or the end of {rading, and trading with | combatant crew even with passengers, | that sh and Belgrade complete hands of Serbians, who entertained |, weights, SATURDAY 4 pair for : republicanism is what Bull Mooseism | even with women and children. if he | town life in this kingdom, and that the German emperor, Frederic Bar- | g0 pom, thus assuring better individual | duty to follow the footsteps of Abra- must subsist upon now that it has | fears that she may ram or fire upon |all the rest is rural. | baressa and his crusaders in the city. | " 400 BRAND COLLARS ttention to the pupils, and doing away | ham Lincoln, the poor boy born in a | lost its votes. All of which goes to | his craft. Thus fear is officially in- | “Many of the prinéipal roads of the ' Frederick marched over the course | njoq op Boys', SATURDAY 4 for bith overcrowding and its attendant | log cabin, The very mention of Lin. | Show it is not the republican party | stalled as the motive of Schrechlich- | Balkans converge here, while the | that his nation is marching é\nqg Ay ils. I % . s “" | \hich should worry over the situa- | keit. The same fear made a British | Path of the Orfental Express, the ex- again today. In 1456, the historic | MEN'S TIES . . - folns nacie should bring furth vely ;05 - prookipn Standard-Union. seaman resist the finest instincts of | Press through from Paris, Munich, | city’s Hght went out; for it fell then | (. \ipiaY 2 for 450, What money is expended in the | thoughts on the womderful possibili- | : o his calling tugging at his heart. He | and Vienna to Constantinople, passes | definitely under Turkish rule, anrd | Giqippay, 45¢ eacl ehool system of New Britain, or any | ties that await the struggler in Amer- | In a letter published in The Tribune | could not tirust foes armed and more | (hrough its gates. Also, a branch rail- | remained a part of ‘the Ottoman em- | ypnsg LINEN HANDKERCHIEFS ther city, cannot be looked upon as | ica if he but hew straight to the Ine. ; Colonel Rooscvelt, does a tardy jus- | numerous. way goes from here to the thriving | pire for 300 years. | SATURDAY 3 for 45c. Value 19¢ irect loss so long as the masses are | And, best of all, may be recalled the ¢ to @ New kngland and Princeton The Germans have skilled chival-| ___ o 4 each. S i e Aol ST 4 e sal worthy. He admits that ‘there | rv.,” laments the revered Bishop. | A . | SATURDAY 4 for 45c. Value 15@ enefited by learning. Education is | great kindliness and sympathy which , (. cni s particle of the mollycoddlc | Slain it surely is among the com. | adobted a name which society woulda teacher of Americanism to millions fhe light of the world When young | marked Lincoln nature. Especially | | et forth items’ approximating more | countrymen, spends more on automobiles 2 e N it ] chewing gumn than on its navy. That ith all the words of praise poured | ' o"UC Yiue. but perhaps the United © be used during the scholastic year | out in memory ‘of our martyr Presi- | States gets more out of the automo- han three hundred thousand dollars lasse: cutting down the number of | and who has come to this country to upils from fifty to thirty-five in one | escape oppression, should make it his : % o 1 | each h about” Jonathan Edwards. Possibly | latants. The religion of mercy is| enjoy. He has married two leading| of immigrants who are for a time BOYS' SHIRT inds are trained and directed along | at this time when men are in fever | this truth has been dimly suspected | swallowed up in this conflict. Hu- | society widows of wealth, legally (!l’je[ lnrgply dependent upon it for such in- SATURDAY 45c each. roper channels the future is some- | heat over questions which should not | DY othe but its authoritative dis- | manity is forgotten! first one died) and has been ‘“right m} sl|"n('l|0n, ; s i BOYS' TAPELESS BLOUSES bhat insured. Ignorance and crime | be allowed to occupy so much atten- | COVery and proclamation were re- - e tho swims until some oSy Dewspap M ne Getmuanepriniipuess s > SATURDAY 45¢ cach. 11 al hendiin hand 0t | o ? & = | served for the Sagamore Hill savant. Wrestling With Local Option. men bhegan crossing his trail. : icised w m? most reason. No one can | CHILDR PAJAMAS ave gone all along hand in hand. tion, when the intercsts of foreign ! mpere wasn't a particle of the molly. s A Now if it had been discovered that( quarrel with it for favering the Ger- SATURDAY 480 each. therefore, a good investment for | nations are sometimes placed above coddle about n great I a N paEcPort paos) z “Jean Harald” was a thief, thet he| man cause against the entente. When ' o Soc o pr oo oF VALE Jny city to see to it that the youth are | the duties of American citizenship, = metaphysician’s theology: and vet the NewiJerscyisinreslineghard Swith w5 alallibariine forfthat il iy a) it takes the German side of contro-| TINES. B L aad pith hsore e in . 4 ey L heee eyt the an issue which Connceticut settled | grunkard, or gambler, “sociely” would | versies with the United States, it be- | N eated, 1 Sy prop: when the brotherhood of man is rapia- ' colonel “doesn’t agree with™ it. Ut | thirty-five yvears ago, that of local | not have given it a second thought.|comes a wedge of dis-union. But in ntive for study, given the best coun- | Iy undergoing disintegration, | when f""l e "‘1'}",”““:”‘_“”’* “‘V“l“_"g'“i option. There is nothing new in this | Sych things are common in the “best| this attitude it is by no means a unit. | and it is a notable posthumous honor | eituation, R e dvice, showmwhyiit s mecons|ixace hatrodl IalbeingistizredBupiiit st Wil o it - oy el Ao b ol oie as we have pointed out be- | society”; but to think that our imita- | Some of the strongest German-print Rry to take advantage of every offer- | well to recall how Lincoln wedged his | most renowned. coloctic Seholar and fore. Connecticut has ever Dbeen|{jon aristocracy was hoodwinked, | newspapers make it clear that they | E | L] . i o . s % 5 vears ahead of all the States in real | completely taken in, and bamboozled | are for America first. More would do g in the educational field, and then | way, “With malice toward none; with | politician—New York Tim practical lsgisiation. At the same| 1o :'he;yéo\- that i€ too much. I e | jlowed to pursue the best methods | charity for all.” e time she has stoutly resisted fad in-| ~ Jean St. e ves o lakelinis The anti-American press, other than san a1 20h MAIN, STREET nder .ideal conditions. This the | All true subjects of the sovernment | vasions and is now secing the wisdom | place in the national gallery reserved| German, is almost negligible. Turkish hools of New Britain are striving to | of the United States. Including those | of her course: for our eminently successful hoax ar-:and Bulgarian champions are few. R i e WOMAN AND HER STYLF ! of forcign birtis. and especially those On this question of local option Con- | tists. Talent must be recognized. Most of our people from Austria-Hun- - E 3 B & P It is presumed. upon the absence of4 °f German birth, who have chosen | necticut judgment carly .decided its | gary are bitter haters of the land they snced from the fact that national | [ voliable autherity, that even in the| |0 P° Under (B8l sovernnient and ens | wallle i plact iof that prohibifion do/| Jeft and mnot likely to palliate subma- lucators rank our schools with | joy the privileges of freedom and | largely a name only Sixty vears ago | s rine atrocities, | s o T mere Eiictie | : " L { 3 4 = 3 Bristol T'ress.) £ S | B¢ the larze citics and deciare | days of Mother Jive some attention equality, ought to desire to defeat of | Connecticul tried the theory of pro- | - - ectacle 1s presented as | This analysis of the situation should l was paid by Father Adam to the par | that imperial power which has made | hibition Experience demonstrated | -+ ¢urious spectacle is I | clear the air Honorable men who | fat in some departments the work | | o Gn which she attired her- | @ Prussian autocracy of the govern- | its fallacy. The State promptly re- | We enter the 1916 political campd§% | h;ve sworn alleglance to the United | ve Is par excellence. The taxpavers | . | ment of the German people. Real | pealed the law and later instituted | Period of a half dozen or it of i Biew Eritain will never besrudge | “Cl» And so the custom of men ., . ican srmpathics can only be on | local option. We are not cortain | Presuming to dictate to “‘,eh.'es"f | blanket indictment of disloyalty G ) R : E B : e additional forty thousand dollars | SCTutinizing women’s dress has ccme | ype side of the Allies in this conflict, | Whether Connecticut was the first ! . ‘r‘nf:; l(‘*"'o('?\:‘\’l}lec:i:flu(; d\;‘[to‘nnho;": | drawn against them. Tet individuals aITison’s eSIg[laHOl] I‘mgS L eded this year to carry on the worl, | 40WN to the present day until it found | not from any feeling of hostility or i State to try Jocal option. It certainly “'_’e“y'"a;, ] RO o G G || RSO U e Al | : Gl T h ;i s N | a elimax m a bill introduced in the antipathy or of dislike toward Ger- | Was one of the.earliest. i 20 et b 2 —— - ! HOUSC Commlllee 0Ser Oge[ or is an investment that will reap a | mans or a nation of Germans as such, Now this question is the vital | 9idate for governor. The grotesque | e Bidred-fold as time goesian, an in- | Legislature ofithe Commonwealth of} |\ %\ "ine government which | issue in two important States, | Pes8 of the situation is nof relleved Zach His Own lce Man. i B ¢ < 1ose Misigards i be ae. | Vireinia which spught tol prohibit| 4y s ot Anved for forty vears. is w Jersey and Pennsvivania, | PY the fact that the dictators have | N i s e P e s lovely woman from making her ap- | (he very antithesis of that which | When Connecticut was satisfied | Made the game work in the past, The | pearance in public wearing a skirt | Americans believe in, and is a peri] | M iWo important States was satisfied | buzzling (hing is L eut"fom:efifelfii’c"‘ge"““’r may be kept chilled by |tional defense problems was struck higher than four inches from the|to all free government and to the | of ils practical value, the law was | should stand for it. By S0 COIE ‘NeY | s scheme. Set a pahi of water oyt | i the Hou military committes 2 | future peace of the nations of the | 4Uickly passed. Tt is'a much harder | 'acitly admit their Incompetence 1o | 4o to freeze. It is not necessary to | yesterday as a direct result of the | world. The triumph of the Allies is | Proposition in the two States men- | Select for themselves. There are hun- |y, ¢ jt freeze solid. When the ice has | resignation of Secretary Garrison of than three inches of chest or back. | ho oniv means of puiling a stop to | Hioned. The last Pennsylvania Legis- | dreds of men in Connecticut . today | ¢ormed -put the pail in the ice com- | the war department. Tt found ex- Furiher, thesc garments were to be ! (hat and promoting government by | 1ature defeated it and now a, cam- | Who are abundantly qualified to fi‘f‘?pzn-lmcm of the refrigerator. To pré- | pression in the adoption of a resolu- absolutely opaque. No (ransparent | the people, for the people. That is | Paign is on, conductéd by the Gover- | the. office or f‘"‘!”""" ,,"’ ;‘ manner ]\rm a-pail from bursting in case the tion declaring the committee’s ap- e s much o be desired for (he sake of | NOT. to secure a Legislature which | far superior to those who have held | witer should freese solidly, place n | preciation of the confidence President . o 5 Germany as for France or Great | Will deal with it properly. the office in the past recent vears.|gmajl stick in it. The ice will crack i‘\' on reposed in it and in the Sen- nse of years that separates us from | Jowed. The idea! But the bill was | Biifaimioni Russi=ndlit wolll In New Jersey the issuc has boen | It is supposed to be the business of | and rise up around the stick instead | ate committee, as disclosed in his e time of the Great Emancipator, | defeated, as defeated it should he. ! £ : Ooud AN | fore the Legislature for many years, | delegates to select a suitable candi- | of bursting the vessel. | correspondence with Mr. Garrison. | a triumph for the institutions of the : | : S iy e sl s lcans are prome to forget that | who are these men of Virginia that | (nited S(ates—New york Journal of | DUt as often has been defeated. Noyw | date in the state convention. However, | The non-partisan character of the i f 2 r . a chance it | in these days of Rorabackism and feeling was emphasized by the fact e martyr Lincoln was not then pic- | they should decree what should be | Commerce there seems to bé a chance to get it (1n the 5 Yo s, that | NI ! that the resolution was offer s i i e s v i | S through. It has passed the State | bossism under various names, hat | | tha e frer red in the same frame he is today. | worn by woman and hoy she should | Hehsibla actien has ibecomora | | Representative Kahn of Ca z { H Senate, but by a close vote, 11 to 9. | sort of l | o is was a life filled with trials and | adorn herself? Gallant gentlemen A War of Brutality. The difficulty will come in the House | fiction. Do the people of Connecticut | WILL BE RATIFIED | rankingz republican member of ibulations. On all sides he received | though they are they have gone out of (Boston Tost) where fhe cities are strong and the | really want an able and independent | | committec, brewer vote powerful. governor? If so, it is up to them to | —_— | Members of both u]ho , A ~ 5 ir ov i i P P 1\ P | 1 n ttee 3t 1r sec From a Connecticut standpoint the | do their own thinking and above all ! 3 p Lo eommt 1 . significance of it all is the strong | their own selecting. Simply rubber- | OPLoneits Admit Wilson Has Enougir| reta: rawal had brought out position of our e on vital matters | Stamping the dictates and wishe Votes to Pass Measure in ‘.')I\, he "" “‘,_,"‘, e _“_"I;\% of this character, with special 2 boss is a mighty poor apology | ongr shou \Iv" <ol T L ence {0 our farsightedness and citizenship. Senate, problems in tho light of ils own best ohe value of a legisiative svstem which | ————— e R . k o i _:ud!tm:-mr. 'll ”‘;\ e ,,(,“, i ] ”""', D! i + s B8 1 h 2,- ) a srence or co nits ) v » | makes sue 5 possible. Cheap S ashington. . i2.--Debate on | ference rialil oin <l B e s Saee oAl | e ieeRsuc DN 2 s ih] P 8% the Tl | scheme advocated by Mr. Garrison | ang the army war colle The net o n ! 50 MeT | States are justly aggrieved when a| ’ i ic i - | of ar Yy anc co-0pers o - B2d when theBoys and girls of fo- Without buying ice in winter the | of harmon 1 co-operation on na hy step forth to the estate of grown en and women. ground and a bodice exposing more WITH MALICE TOWARD NONE: WITH CHARITY FOR ALL> | | | Looking back over the great ex- | translucent, or diaphonous gowns al- . the hrutalizing effect of the great war is found in ; his every act criticised. Yet he | the length of skirt to be worn by the | the story of the skipper of the British trawler who left the occupants of a L wreeked Zeppelin to their fate in the | ) ‘\Am-vh sea because he feared that, s doctrine with malice toward none | pinning she may expose. | outnumbering his crew two to | | | buse and calumny. His every deed | their province when they resort mi Another instance of i s attributed to some sinister mo- | tape measure and rule as applied to aved the storm, sacrificed his life | female of the speci or how much cause of his principles, and lived | neck, collar-bone, chest or under- d charity for all. fsleyicslofivamaniansiasichan=cgll oG ol etnihey huon oiz il i i (Bridgeport Farmer.) j the Nicaraguan treaty was resmued in L mulEaiat b NG e L G ORI e R e e IR, The St. Louis Times complains that | the senate today with indications that | .yt they agreed, was a clarifica- I 2 vee: AcPD 1n every Amer- | weghavefwatehiedithom evolve from i oo enanimity towards a foe. | (8t. Louis Globe-Democrat.) the Interstate Comnierce commission | it would be referred before arjourn- | {ion of the congressional atmosphers an heart. typifying the spirit of | the old time dresses of long ago to the | But Germany can hardls complain Patrick Higzins. who handles g | costs the people of the United States | ment for the day. Opponents of the | anad the a nce of support for the erica, a government of the people, | pert and dapper little draperies that | if the theory of reprisals is to hold. | Well-known line of cigars and radiates | in 1215, more than four and a half | treaty admitted that President Wilson | bills that will he drafted from ele- the people. and for the people. | milady wears today, we have no fault | ATe Non-combatants o rescue fighting ' 890d humor, likes to tell this one on ! millions, and s it will cost in 1916 | had Won enough votes to command | ments of both the mocratic and Bd on this particular anniversary of | to find. Surely the woman of 1916 | MeN: AL Dossible perii to themselyes, | @ certain St. Louisan, who scrved one | five million It would withdraw | the necossary (wo thirds for ratifica- | republican sides, that 1“:[ heretofore 3 ra L kN 4 ~iin view of the fact that these very | terin congr | the appropriation or cut it to a nes- | tion, | been counted against measures. § birth there exi g ey nation a more finished specimen of ish | men with their aerial war craft were The new congressman happeneq | ligible quantity, alleging a number of Under the treaty the United States | Substitute For Continental luch the same condition of division nd medish attire than her sister of. | cither from or on their way to the | iNto a barber shop and sat down in | reasons, the chief of which is that ' by payment of $3,000,000 would have In substance, it believed, the jat marked his era _in .the White v, twenty years ago. In those old | Work of Killing non-combatants of the ' the chair of a vencrable negro barber, | 41,000 miles of American railroads are an option on aguan inter- | will represent an effort to make Buse at a time when the country, | days of the leg-o’-mutton sleeves and | FAWIEr'S own country, and met disas- “Uncle,” said the St. Louisan, “f|in the hands of receivers, | oceanic canal route and would ac- | jective virtually all of the ple {ter on the errand of slaughter Buess you've shaved a good many | The reason isn't a good one. Were | Guire a naval base in the Bay of Fon- | the war department with A modern Mme. Foland well might | Prominent men in your time, haven't | it not for the activities of the Inter- : seca. Costa Rica, San Salvador and | ceplion that fede tion Seot. | exclaim today. “Oh, reprisals, what | YoU state Commerce commission more | Honduras protested that the mnaval | national guard will be sought at where more than half a | woman was not onc-half as lovely as | crimes are committed in thy name!" “Yes, suh, I has,” came the reply. | railroads would be in receivership. | base feature would violate the sover- | substitute for {the continental “I has shaved, senatuhs and cabinet | There would be little or no public | eignty of Honduras. | plan membahs and congressmen who have | knowledge based upon official in- As drawn in execcutive session the inal steps toward beginning the College Co made history, suh. Why, suh, T has | Quiry, as to the conditions that have ' ratification resolution contains assur- | drafting of the measures were taken e - T SIS used this very razuh on President | Produced o much receivership. { ances to the Pan-American countries | yesterday by both House and Scnate Fay them: a veritable civil war is ) ern woman a dapper, dainty, busi- | 8 b © Grant, suh.” . Robbing railroads is an old indus- that their rights will not be violated | committees. Both will take up the Jaged hecause of a foreign struggle. | ness-like woman; vet none the less a | “h“‘r{llfi‘:jam‘f\l1"‘alfl'":!‘j\'}i:“ 0“;” U:fls“"e“"“ “T suppose you got to know some | try in the United States. It was an | in the establishment of the naval ; wor unndayfl .n\ml: :.} )‘vl:xfmbmi to ‘ere Lincoln alive today and in the | rea) parcel of femininity. And if she m-;ng'h.xr.e{- R T (e people, | Of them pretty lwe_n‘.'“ asked the con- ind;:]st;}\’ Hetan im:r'h ir{)l(f\jferpd with | base, and \o_ic.:‘ nn.:;n"nes‘[ hope ;,,r ! :‘x;‘l:‘ll‘clg-:?\‘l;ss; fon ilr\v\uj‘\\‘,(.\‘\l::] Pt‘l;r‘x' IR Viriiho L vouial bt btn i ns e i i aitea il s ding albor in acadcraa [EEcesmaniimuch imprcesed) until the commisslon obtained actual | continued friendly relations. Admin- | bus E S g natn : ; i e L T e e Yes, suh. Yes suh. I did, suh, [ | Power of supervision. istration senators believe the policy . With much the same problems | them? Surely a curve cunningly be- | cXclusiveness, the ° TeCOBNNE | a6 jes noticing something about vou At this time looting railroads is not | outlined will satisfy the protesting na- P at surrounded him there in the be- | {rayed here and there will wreak not | Neir duty to their communities. They | 11,45 jog like President Grant, suh. | half as popular an-amusement as it | tions he HolRe O e rouEny it E e G | - are less ahout turning out a few o - SER 4 i a close yesterday public hearings o ning of the sixty’s. IHe would ; % ! e What i it. uncle? The shape of | used to be. T 2 Nl - scholars and more about raising the | . 4 o0 1 o e ey When the amount saved in freight . . army plans and ordered an elaborate many suppose. Let .her cXpose her | general level of intelligence. Harvard | 7o) 1Besf 1 suppoac,”™ asked the fat-| —WASH (18 amount Saved in: freieh (PR (O8] EELAOR, | fadex on: the ‘Voltminous' testimony B Anditiey would apply today | neck with its velvety and plush like | 8 & good example .of ,the new ten- "“e\'o‘ - l;om[@:uj» ’ b ;he“"_(‘]-m;:wh‘)’:r ;‘h-:t‘“s' ‘:‘te Cgst of Berlin, Feb. 12. via London, 10:50 | yrepared, so there would be as little s well as they did in his time: | sofiness. Tet her exhibit an ankle | dency. — President Lowell announces B el e s oD T8 Al SRoNEN) SincHcen Tresaldep i dolay a8 (pEaeibls Ralthertin Soommty that the university will hereafter give —— concerning the alegel treatment ac- | tee consideration or the coming A e e e e V«thh H. lf)d\\nr(! St. pretty we! atisfied with the Inter- {he circumstances of Secretary Garri- struggle on the floor. Similar steps thirty persons living within the (New Haven Union) state Commerce commission. They son’s resignation, the Lokal Anzeiger | were taken by the Senate committee of the fair of their daintiest charms on motropolitan district. It Jéan Harald dward $t. Cyr is said are not at all satisfied with the men 'sees an indication that a majority of | Present indications are that the [@ignation upon him, and might even | 514 make them as nuns in the | n't matter what the social or edu- | to be none other than “Jack” Thomp- | * 10 T4 the railroads, j congress is opposed to “the new form | House bill will lay its stress upon up and assassinate him, as was | cjoister! Without women and their atus of (he applicants may | son the bellhop, newsboy. chorus man . of ~militarization, by proclaiming | provisions designed to federalize the e bofore. ~ Then, after a lapse of | ci-les there would be no morriness | T thirty people &gree that they | and former soda fountain mixer from brth and south, was as a house divid- | jong flowing skirts, with high necked against itself. The difference is | waists and hats that knew no bound | pntury ago men of America were in | she is today Shoes, skirts, wais er heat over internal conditions, | hats, all, everything, are bw they allow outside influences to | ¢hey should be They make the mod- I —— e | Public Hearingss End, disaster upon the human race, as| ctice and preach the same doc- fen would hear and heed them as re- | apncased in silk. Have a heart, ve tantly, would: pick ‘flaws in *’"?'1"“ Legislators who would rob the faii rd he uttered, cast slurs and heap | The Loyal Foreign-Language Press. | which President Wilson expected to | pational guard, while the Senate ! want Harvard to teach’ them mineral- | \Waco, Texas. (New York World) take the wind out of the sails of his | committee’s main effort will go into Bther fifty years, when the heat of | j; this merry-go-round of life. L ogy or Assyvriology or geometry or Society is hovrified at tht exposure A careful study made by the World | republican opponents and, above all, | the regular army angles of prepared- ment had cooled and the nation I LA S | Spanish or Victorian poetry or short| *in its midst” but the cxposure puts| and printed vesterday shculd forever|the sabre-rattling Roosevel This | ncss plans. The final measures sent fitied down to peace and content men There was recorded in the press of : story writing or husiness law. Harv- | the laugh on sociely and not on | set at rest the umrgo that in the 'jc“ 'D“\'f" expresses the opinion that | to the President for his signature of | vard wili get on the job. ~And Har-| “Jack.” Any man's name is what he | present world crisis the foreign lan- | CONBress undoubtedly represents the | will be a compromise, it is thought, o) > Pl vard won't lose anything by it, except | calls himself and *Jack” simply de-| guage press is the agent of disloyalty | majority sentiment in America in op- | cach house being willing to accept™ les of Lincoln and hail him as the | Miss Mollic Fancher, a helpless in- 10 WO B W (0000 BT Gignity | cided to marry ioney and mingle with | to American ideals, policles or institu- | posing the abandonment of old prin- | the judgment of the other to a large gatest Amcrican whe ever Iived.‘valid who had spent more than %ty | {hat’s betfer lost anyway. the elite. To make the plunge he | tions. It is quite the cpposite; it is | ciples. extent In its own particular field, 1d remember and recall the prin- | yesterday the death in New Yorl

Other pages from this issue: