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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