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NEW, BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1916. sentment highest tribunal, of Oklahoma were in the right this ruling of the that the Democrats The against EW BRITAIN HERALD HERALD JPUBLISHING ¢ ' Proprietors, COMPANY, have had to deal with the negro ques- ed daily (Sundajy at Herald Byil tered at the T as Second excepted) at 4:15 p. m. ling, 67 Church St way 'round and declare licans justified for what happened. In the eyes all neither side will wonder of it all fights are not tion, broad-minded men The more such the to <t ‘Office or ass Mail at New Matter. Britaln be condoned. - is that pitvered by carrier to any part of the city ffor 15 Cents a Week. Cents a Month. bscriptions for paper to be sent by mail payable in advance. 60 Cents a Month $7.00 a year. perpetrated on be- poli- since men are so petty prone come wrapt in partisan ties. no man in the United States will be 8 only profitable advertising medium N 5 tha city. Circulation hooks and press | | justified in sizning away his whole life room always open to advertisers. in in the interest of one political party. but will move about from one to the other, choosing the one that best con- forms to his ideas of honor. and jus- its ranks the the @ Herald will be found on sale at Hota. ling’s News Stand, 42nd St. and Broad- way, New Lork City; Board Walk, Atlantic City, and -Hartford depot. abandoning tice, and moment it goes against doctrines of When comes there few Americanism that day i i | such scenes Okla- will be {as that enacted yesterday in homa. THE HERO OF ANSONIA. When the of Ansonia ached the full zenith of their wrath, | strikers had ACK HATRED. of learned Perhaps the people the United States en they were ready {o surge into | Boiling mass of humanity and wreak | who have to ‘ribes of the world, of have suffered a servi- ngeance. shoulders with the @t came their w 6 them a mmers applied “ihe oling ointment. This 06" Grohol, faced the surging strik- | through narrow little slits off a | they have become accustomed to see- then. | ing within their gates and have learned to sce so much good of manity that they are not prone to look for the bad that good upon anybody or anything | y. there stepped ho- [ With the wandogevs the four cor- young man of twenty-five | ners of the globe ous expansion of mind. have grown and necessary ] | youngster. | out of the habit of seeing things only Perhaps s, threw the main tform agitator into the audience, and so many strangers dre: the gathering successfully in the worst specimens hu- L Seven different languages. brought out .an asgreement. whereby the of | mprising ‘three ‘men from each of | o lurks'in the so-called At America jmous committee “thirtv-three, peoples any rate. one way | Pven various nationalifies, met and | or another, comes nearer to eided upon some form of action. | the approach of tolerance for all races that” the of An- idea of they under vious. to strikers creeds, and nationalities than any nia had iking. @rohol, o men and their jme chance of getting Justing the difficulty. The Tower of Babel esented more <disorder on than Ansonia when these strik- 5 speaking many and divers tongues, ddenTy walked eut of the shops and er attewmpted to frame their “de ARds” Tt/ is believed they went t at the instigation of an I. W. V - Won't Work) agitator, the “Joe” Grohol put out o and who disap- the “action no why were | other camping sround in the world. Now, the leadership | ing their their glish bhrothers, who is absolutely neutral. spleen upon employers have | Americans can show no together and | &reat warmth of sympathy. the English might have to say agair their Teutonic brothers. could have For America of no and con- has seen so much good in each these people she lieve the bad within is not prone to until rectly her own When advertently, territory. the German propagandists in or deliberately, on | step | | American the case So it toes, is different. Britain rule to same fan whom would be if Great en- | I mission soon deavored to extend her these | ared from of hatever benefit this agitator hoped derive from the strike has passed him forever. In the long run, the n will be the losers for time mis- ent. whereas had they remained at ¢l and. presented theiv'demands ir [gular order they might have fared fter. Tt is nol recorded they were treated. They illed laborers and, as such, drawing shores ake German lengue which has been started Englanu and which is now paigning to raise a membership one million. tead the manifesto put forth these of al | hatred and it is ecasily seen how the | scene into consideration the anti- | cam- | of n by promoters rac has no sympathy it American thing although he: average were mostly un- | With such a not directly ¢ upon him. stringent German immigration laws, a high pro- irly good wages. league would have anti- If what promised to be a bad situa the credit the man of to bar German and Aus- the United to tective tarift trian pn has bheen mastered, ust “Jge” Grohol, goods from King- | His preparedness work preaches the | dom. and would elect parliament in all its his earlier knowledge of some hour. of Had ¥§ gleaning a ver languages, he would never have e petrine ory only members who take the anti-Ger- all would offered The: exploit German inventions and ask the al he not spent man pledge to of the league further en able to cope with such a situa- \Z"\'l’l"lv‘n?n! to subsidi manufac- | . flad he not reserved all his | ysical his d thus proved able to pick up the | kitator and throw him bodily off a | atform, Grohol would not have com- of the strikers, physical the strikers The no hitherto if it last | tories putting out This indeed, the hatred, energy. in adolescence | made in Germany were carried out. would he word engendering 3 if there hatred it brand in i as is not already cnough Yol particular anded the respect in‘those countries at war. that for commercial is easily seen this and to is mentality ppealed cqually prowess | is attemped the main pur- and mastery of ambi- pose of fostering eir employers. ven languages mean task. rohol immediately caught the ntion of the majority when he dem- his physical strength and up this advantage when he power of The manifesto specifically statc as regard to G Britain is tions. the people of Great the parting of the ways. that on one side at- | that crmany have come to strated llowed splayed rough is drift and apathy while on the other Yet perity and empire may all diminish at is prosperity and empire. pros- his this medium louble may be wiped 'ought out of chaos: Lrown by right, and Ansonia brought ek to a state of normal conditions. pith the great influx of ter the BEuropean War there may be ied for many of the Groho!l pe. language the entive | ! the end of the war, of to depending on who to fight fram- away; order and one the best ways warfare might over- | wins, wage is go out and field, not hy It Civeat the enemy on the manifestoes of hate. is doubt- if of X acquiesce ing ful will foreigner Britain D must the people adily in such a pro- doubtful men because they gram, the trenches of | realize that soldiers in accomplish more than thoughts hate running bent on commercial prosperity THE fizht between ECHO T'ROM PAST. through for all AN After the free lemocrats and the floor of the Oklahoma Representatives many called of the old days in the political West. the rampant There tepublicans yesterday House | and we never hear of them harboring hate even against those they are fighi- And these the the burden tales may he men who ing. beal { ll i i and of the war. fistory of the wild woolly et it was not the Boliness of the West that precipitateil wildness nor i | has heen Four” of Mas- “absolutely his tumultuuos scene so much as it an The same thi Announcement the sachusetts pledged either for or against any MecCall, and “s partisan politics in its ige | Republican *“Big eminious colorings. stands buld happen in Hartford if men grow as put P un- can- ernor Weeks v Crane. are candidates for delc- b narrow minded to Senators hove everything in life, as many do. ho was right the Okla oma City is a matter that will never Because it all face over an election law intended ke the place of the famous ther nstitutionai States jupreme court, differ- party | didate.” Lodge and ex-Senator Mur gates-at-large to the national conven- tion. will constitute straight | opposed to the self constituted quarte! in fight i i at H | ecome known. took These men the Republican “Big Four’ as rand recently declared Gardner, who recently for pledzed themselves Whether there to the ices of opifion in the North and the | Massachusetts Republicans will be de- puth. The Southern politicians will by which of these groups bably hold, if they do harbor re- |is sent on to Chicago. clause. un- | under | by the United { Roosevelt there will be is be harmony among termined { | Tndies. tion will view the matter the other | the Repub- | pa p na- ! The day is fast coming when | tainly the | Transcript. | | ‘ | | | AND FANCTES. s 25 old as the man she her husband thinks she FACT! A wishes womitn were inhabitants of those states who never | is.—Peru, Ind., Journal. If the knockers would only use their hammers to nail lies everybody would appy.—St. Paul Dispatch, “Girls should be able (o support hus- bands,” savs Governor Some of ‘em have to.—Grand Her- ald. erris. Rapids For dispatche: once we agree with the Berlin the Germany reply is cer- limit.—RBoston Kvening What has become of the old-fush- | ioned drug store that was known an apothecary’s shop and sold nothing but drugs?—>Macon News. ns When a man is lazy lazy. but who ever thought a irl lazy-— unless it was annther Albany Knickerbocker-Pre: we say he pretty girl? The question is asked. “‘Can Colonel Roosevelt ‘come back' 7" he can. He is only “Deseret of going to News (Salt course West Lake the [EGIT) ! L of the Connceticut minds | rub | are And when Germans insist upon vent- | Nashville Tenne in Neither | cars pass. For instance while waitin: can we take Kindly to anything that | for the car one could [ the snow off the sidewalk. Snowfalls {are so frequent | perpetual it is brought di- | when | imaz | five | ed very gr | junior ed public vation | to be sure | tect the wheat crop before it sent does | cold This | still c T | house |c v T members | prohably so much for a new offensive | offensive. | winter are tried men and true in the trenches | made that | The awners of the Pacific oads ik 1t the disapno! rail who delay < B only ones are not 1Med over the Par in reopen 1 the ma canal, te publican anton A a fessor in London sa sing in dis the the diszuise is 10st perfect. It the must in that Portland x- war be pro hle admitted event, press. is Tiise, More than 1,500 students are now studying the Turkish language in thir- ty cities of Germany. The (iermans still set the pace in preparedness.— New York world. Judging rrom Major General Wood's report the weakness of the United States army, we are inclined to believe that it niust have the grip.— can advantaz- et There is living on a corner practical where the str some he sweeping that this is an almost job—Milwaukee News. The man who laughs at the ostrich | the fool hides its head and ]| es that you can’t see its hody usnally the same fellow who feels safe because he cvery he takes ~Cincinnati quirer is a clove tine En- chews a drink. The fact that there miles of .new railroad construet- in Texas last year ought to le tifying to all those senior and statesmen who have proceed- the theory that railways are enemies and ox carts the sal- of the state Dallas News, was less than on It was kind of the weather to send the snow burean, to pio- the would have heen had not sent the especially to the eight-room tons of bhut if it at all who is heating an all winter with six Indianapolis News. wave, it kinder wave old man ~oul massing of thousands of the western front, Amsterdam. is The nan guns on reported from not allies’ putting great ready for Germany of into smash Mail the is her the on and spring the armi- task of pre- the western Empire. as to get product ment factories venting a front—Toronto There wits =ome talk at State Hartford the akirs” at the vavious Teld in Conneticut included the managers and directors of the fairs and the concensus of opin- the fairs and (he consensus of opinion was that while some of (he sionists may be 1ousht in their of doinz busincss are an pensable addition fair, person go for the purpose studying the agricultural exhibits.” Waterbury Republican, the meeting Fair as activities of county fairs Those present tion at over consen- wais they indis- to any sole Reti Haven Pathetic New No soul or personality tleship, and yet ment. ) tegiste s has the - senfiment sticks some of them as do the barnacles. This is not more true of any of the vessels in our present navy than it of the battleship Orvegon. “Our present navy' is not strictly correct, however, for on Tuesday the Oregon placed on the retired list She now come under that pathetic “unserviceable for war p > She will be classed along with itution and the Hartford. will be marked “ob lete liké the Issex. More likely will be taken out serve as a zet, was the Texas before he The truth that “the good dic | jung has often heen exemplified in | \ips of However, age goes in the navy, the Oregon is old. In the Spanish war she was onec of ouw newest and best, but that was a long time ago. The Oregon was only two years from the builders when she made her famous dash around the Horn in 1898, Of the first-line wa <hips of that time, only two others the Indiana and the Mas chuset Really, the Oregon is veteran, and was hound to go. Now we are building battleships more than twice, almost three times her size, and of immensely superior armament. We cannot afford to keep such a vessel for the zood it done. The ancient navy reiic are preserving, such the Constitution and the Hartford, have far stronger historical appeal, but only great popular protest has availed to save those. It may be that some such appeal will come to the rescue of the Oregon. | to was will head poses. the Cons! I'erhaps she e 1o tar- « Le- as war. as survive, | as | | | {ing of I Weve | Calg out | tion FITTING OUT A WIFE. This Little Matter of Buying Fine Feathers as Scen in the “Movies.” (By the Commentator In the New | London Day.) of the odd incongruities habitually mark the malk- photoplays is the size of the dressmakers’ and milliners’ bills that the frequently-featured extravagant wives spring upon their harassed hus- bands. 1 wonder if there is anybody who hasn’t been partly amused and partly fretted by the utterly nonsensi- cal figures that the producers use in their cfforts to make the fact of ¢ travagance obvious. One that A struggling young real estate op- erator, for instance, or a junior part- ner in a small brokerage business, or a salaried accountant—who strikes you ag being fairly lucky to be living | in a $7.000 house and to own a thou- sand dollar automaobile, Whose wife runs her house with perhaps one and certainly not more than two servants the Kind of a chap that anyvone can see is skinning along on the short side of $5.000 a year and figuring close to keep up a front; whose social affilia- tions are with a set of similar people (this chap's wife spends more money than they can aford on clothes. Nothinz «illy about presenting that sort of a situation. of course: there are plenty such But in the movies the wife not only well exceeds the speed Hmit for a $5.000 a year man— she blows money for clothes at a that would put a crimp in the bank roll of a millionaire. Did you ever yet sec a bill that priced a single SOWN even at so heggarly a figure as £50 or $75° Not much. The bills look something like this: One evening One negligee Two hats Opera rate zown $240 cloalk And when Mr. Younss the fourth of {hese bhills three months he merely ventures to Suggest that if the girlie keeps on at that rate she will get him in a hole by and hye. Why, as a matter of fact, just one such assault as that, on the | purse of the grade of man depicted would bust him higher than Gilroy Kite and send the two of them to ing in the tenement apartment ou any mere ado. oat gets about inside of | iv- with- About the only easy thing to figure out from these millinery bills is that the wife is trving to doll up at a rate that would use up all of her husband's income and then some and leave them ! a vacuum minus to the eats | and various expenses which the dressmakers' aqcounts no figure. As for the ‘\er\\anv\“ it's plain as the nose on vour face that they not only aren't likely to get any money in {he future, but that it is quite im- possible for them to have had any in the past. supply in cut as Persapally I'm prepared to chip in a quarter toward a $10,000 honus for ! the scenario writer or producer or whoever is responsible, who will ex- hibit for our entertainment and moral edification just one extravagant wife who extravagant within 80 per | cent. of the probabilities My heart would go out to person in the deepest gratitude being credited with even a slight of the fitness of things it no gratitude to the baobs who persist in supposing that we haven't enough to know even an extravagant wife doesn’t usually fry to use up twice her hushand’s total income in clothes-—or that the average of the kind of peaple dealt with in this particular kind of photoplay could get credit for the dubs in (he first place in any swell shop on earth. | is say such a or sense owes sense Forgctful. As T go plodding down the lane Of life, T find daily harder Men's names in mind. Somebody stops me on We stand and chat And after parting | repeat: “Now who was that?" It to retain the street, somebody cries to me. reply. wonderingly, “Howdy! “Howdy!” is my And then 1 mutter “Who is that guy Somewhere I've seen My memory's lame. met a dozen times what's higs name?” his face hefore, or more, Jut Thus | forced to hluff And make a show Faking with men. from I ought to know, Sometimes | run That stops my And then [ say: But not your ® And At ) my way, day to day inst ame, “1 know name.’ o case your face, St. Peter welcomes me life's end my name A gentle friend T'll stand upon that And in shame, know your But what's you name —HEdgar A in Detroit when this and to tries be heavenly shore say g I've seen fuce before, Guest Free Press Belligerent Musicians. (Waterbury Democrat.) The Damrosch Symphony orches- tra of New York is going to Canada f the Canadians don't st territorial troops along the bor- to kecp the musicians out. Just our northern neighbors are excited about it, ecing in the projected invasion dark conspiracy and mcnace to the empire. For there are German players in that or- chestra! To be precite, there arc nine Germans, four of them naturai- ized Americans citizens. Whether or | not these nine—or five-—are likeiy to turn the orchestra into a maraud- ing expedition, blowing up govern- ment buildings and railroad bridges and slaughtering the natives in their | heds, he determined, perhaps, from character of the rest. Nineleen of them are plain Americans, fifteen Russians, four Belgians, two Frenchmen, two Ttal- jans, three Hollanders, one Englisl:- man and one Swiss. We rather guess der now much | | may the racial | describes ! crowned mountain-land, inciuding un- | texture and excellence ot tinsh ! that Switzerland | only about one-sixth of it can be tilled. | plants on the Ithine should perchance | War-Bound Switzerland Fights Economic Battle Hungary and the United Siaies times as much wheat it It produces considerable Washington, D, C., Feb. 19.—*War- bound Switzerland has been confront- ed, probably, with the most discou aging economic difficulties brought about by the world war for any ncu- tral country; for it depends upon other National Geographic society, which for much of its supply of wares tor| home consumption, and for the hand- ling of all its over-sea business,” be gins a bulletin given out today by the National eGographic society, whic how war geovgraphy has sia, three duced. in timber. “Morcover, there is no important mineral production in Switzerland; for the mountains Lo geological formations unproductive of valuable miner: Sume coal is found in can- tons of Valais, Vaud, Iribourg, Berne, Thurgau and some, iron in the Juri. Rock salt and building stone form the most important mineral product Lie hurt the small republic's prosperity. | Swiss have to depend upon wood and “Although not quite one-third :s| forcign coals for fuecl and upon tor- large as New York state, without any | cign ores in their metal working i important coal and iron deposits, and | dustries rmany and France con unable to produce enough food 1o cov- | tributed metals, flax er the cereals to Swiss marhets, Liverpool 1and, nevertheless, has, due Lo sey el | sent the cotton to the greut goods and great advantagos which balance nirowdery factories at st Gall, while tavorable conditions, progressed taly furnished the straw, vealth and comlorts on even (e i planing, grains, fruits, wool, ski Vith its powertul neighhors, It has!a Certamn proportion of the cottun hecome an industrial country of (i “So it was upon the output of mau- vank, and, at the outbreak of (he war, | ufactured articles for cxvort that tl it possessed an important and growing | SWiss depended for their =upport. Mo commerce with many countries. | than one-third of (he were e- “Like Holland the remarkable proz- | g48ed in manuiacturing and ress of Switzeriund must be credited to | 1M Zurich, Bern and St the character of the people and to Lhe | ©verywhere made the neouragement of litu- | America forgel Swiss tions, Neariy half the countr) I'think of home. In Gall, the cotton largely unproductive. Al or that part | industries center. Cloths, of Switzerland which i tured here, wre made of American cot- in the south is a pr vaiue belong | | | oal and demands of its people, Switze r- | 1 peopie dustry; Gall, business trom scenery and traveler their free in { St of is manuf; :s toward Laly show-and-ice | ton and are noted for their finesess of Here, swi d etched bare exploited | tou, are made the well-known tures. forest and -a few high pas- i In the north, arouny !ake Con- | Machine embroideries stance, are found rich vineyards, whiie | laces. Watch clock making above the vineyvards on the miadle| ¢arried o around Geneva and alons slopes of the Juras, are pasture lands, | the French border. This industry where the cows are kept from whose | Sutfered heavily under increasing milk the famous Swiss cheeses, and | €rican competition; for the Americ equally famous milk chocolates are | factories turn out watches every made s good and reasonable in “Industrial Switzerland forms a wide | 1 he silk industry ot Switzerland belt, which stretehes fromsthe Austro- | found in Zurich. Basil, upon border around to central | 1hine, is the first customs station. Here cotton, laces, embroider- | ~The advantages that have aided the ies, machines, silks, straw-plaiiing, | SWiss in their cnergetic strivings fou ribbons, locomotives, watches, clocks| material well-being are, for the and leather wares are manufactured for export; while in the hills anad flat lands of the central plain arve situat- ed the Swiss farms many of the im- portant dairics, straw-plaiting, wood carving and chemical industries. and \in- mn it | | as willle their neighbors on ever. war. One of the great industrial progress superabundance uf wats tle use hand aids are at to Swiss the fas been paid for labor, nearby markets for the purchase of raw materials and for the sale of manufactured and excellent system of communication by railway and splendid roads. crland, also, was so placed Irance, Germany, Italy and Hungary, that she w Lle to t certain toll in transit upon the which these lands did with one other. Lastly, splendid sourcc revenue to the Wiss ns have been coaxcd! incomparable mountain scenery. It home industry, as is that the Swiss wood-carving. Despite slation in the midst of great in-| dustrial competitors and its lack of al- most all of the important raw mate i it is to its mills and factoric mainly owes its is a of its goods, betweer Austria k wealth ““The mountain republic derives less support from its agriculture than any country in Kurope except Norway; ior i | | | | an a o has been Many of its fa Ac into beimg on the abrupt sides. and, literaly, it is as dangerous| ties have been regularly a task as that of the structural iron| worker on a sky scraper to till them. | Fully half of the country lies above the | zone of agriculture, and much of tae that could be made productive is as pasture land. Switzerlaud hemp, flax, caraway. fruits citron. lemon. mulberry, orange, olive and pomgranate, corn, maise, oats, poppies, potitoes, barley, rye, spelt, saffron, tobacco and wheat. In nor- mal times, it had to import from Rus- bringing intc lion dollars of of these sources of income, rived from transit freight tourists’ money. that and <oil uised Erows | | . | destroyed by the war; and it ful that the amounts thus lost to the be made good by even strenuous at markets. that if any German in that orchestra ventures cven to sound a belligerent note on a trombone or beat a bass drum with undue vehemence, the al- licd players will of him Hill argues. which he made on Monday, and The Dye Industey Haven Bill. Register) perhaps the greatest task before (New sixty-fourth congress. A Glorious Winter Day (New Haven Register.) An earth hlanketed with pure white waked at the touch of an unclouded sun. Tt drab spots were garlanded; its scars were covered. The coverlet was unspoiled in its whiteness, virgin in its purity. Nor was the dust and smoke immediately able to sully it. An undimmed sun looked down and brought out the beauty of the pic- lture. From a million hack its rays in diamonds. Tt brought out, for eyves that could bear it, the c spotless beauty of the scene. It was knows but the An-'eapth in bridal array ,coldly perfect. ely be compelied “'J'rlm air was crisp and dry and cold, vet the bitter wind that beat upon and disturbed the coverlet was lack- ing. It was cold, but bracing than unendurable. It was not such a depih of snow as the upper regions of New England know There was lack of the most tedious drifts. There was not that disorder and wreck auvd general stagnation which some lesser snowstorms have brought this It was, if such a term can be applied, an ideal storm. And the glory which followed it was almost without pa allel Yes, it ter day. tion w Congressman Hill became verily dramatic in his introduction his speech on the bill to promote a dye making industry in this country, made in the housc on Monday. We are on our knees to Germany, he said, for the permission to purchase in Charlotten- | burg the dyes we must have to produce money and our postage stanip face the necc it ol modifying color of the uniforms of our sol- beeause the supply of dyes has “1f the long con- <nid, chemis to s We the dier ziven tinued,” out is he war ind the be destroyed, who fion might ultim: change the color of the national flag.” But these re minor matters. Mr. Hill gave the best of authority for the statement that more than two mil- Jion working men and women are cw- ! ployed in industries which are di- rectly dependent on the use of artifi- cial colors and that “the total girect and indirect, now heing borne | by American userk of dyestuffs and | dved wares now amounts to noi than $1,000.000 a day. Such is condition that we arc utterly at mercy of Germany. The vroposed is the sage, without material delay, of house | resolution 702, which Mr. Hill intro- ! duced on the opening day of the cion. It is more than a tariff bill. It provides first an anti-dumping clouse to prevent the unfair underselling al- leged to be practiced by forcigners in this country Second, the taxation on the coal-tar intermediates, including explosivos, medicinals and dyestuffs, an entry fee of thirty per cent. ud valorem and 71 cent pound spe- safie. The effect of this should be to prevent dumping, and to make pos- sible the competition of the home pro- duced dye-stuff in price with whatev may come from without for vears to come. But it makes the important proviso {hat no protection be given to the maker of the finished dye unless he combines with his assembly process the production of the intermediates and thus helps to build up in {his country a self-contained industry in the products of the coke ovens, which are now being wasted to an enormous extent, one-sinth only heing saved here five-sixths in Germany ofiecting loss, winter, less the the has- remedy glorious of unanimous was in truth a Yet the chorus not perfectly win ses- Defense. Leader.) John Ir his veins No one ever looks on national as a religious as well a | duty and severely criticises any-price advocates. A paragraph from land’'s funeral oration over the body of Colonel Josiah R. King, said by Minnesota's historians to be the first man to answer President Lincoln 75,000 volunteers in 1861, to put down the rebellion, is worthy of My have social and commercial peace, that we may have the prosperity to make us great in all things good ana have a quick response to patriotic duty. We hear much of peace-at- any-sacrifice. Peace with honor, ves, acainat [ Peace to the glory of our For stuch a measure, the | ves. Rut if it means that we are (o main purpose of assuring the develop- | be the prey of international ambition ers of a dye making industry in this | if it means that we are to the country of protection against over- | bidding of every other nation on earth throw ,and the waste of all their cap- | and that our flag must dip in disgrace, ital, by competition from without, Mr. lthen we must not have peace. No National (Rockville Archbishop rich blood in American this. He land and sood is loyal questioned defense patriotic peace-at Archbishop Ire- may do has price. is the most | | part, such advantages as can be of lit- The | power, the ncarness of the Frencn coal | straw-plaiting is made by the peasan-| flelds of St. IStienne, moderates wazes | | i, an Switz- trade their mountain | cording to one estimate, natural beau- witzerland more than a hundred mil- Two de- that created annually by thousands of free- spending visitors have been completely is doubt- mounain republic’s yearly revenue can tention to the special needs of the war It was a powerful spec-n nis { facts are stubborn things, even for his free trade opponents, If he can secure legislation to effect the end he showed so desirable he will have accomplished the points flashed | rather apprecia- | for | repetition. | prayer is that our country may | country, 'McMILLAN’S NEW BRITAIN'S BUSIEST BIG STORE “ALWAYS RELIABLE" New Spring - Dress Skirts Smartly tailored in the most wanted all wool fabrics | $3.98, $4.98 (0 $6.50 cach. | new season's priced WOOoL rovt SEPA value N RATE at SERGE AND SKIR! $2.50 Joxtra § | each. | EVENING Balance of our $10.98 cuch. and DR SES Saturday Values to $25.00 WINTER COATS All Marked Down For Saturday Women's Coats at $5.00 cach. Val- ues to $15.00. Children’s Coats values to §7.98 | This includes | mixture coats | to you to | prices 1t $2.50 ecach stock ot interest little entire of coats our It will these e see at LINGERIE BLOUSES At $1.98 Liach Dainty new creations voiles broidered in Em- spring batixtc trimmed organdies and etc lace | | FLOWERED SILK | At H9¢ | 86 inches wide MARQUISETTES Yard NEW SHIRTING SILKS, At 39c and 59¢ Yard inches wide I | Special | Bags now on sale, | CATHER GOODS SALY, of Leather Hand 19¢ and 98¢ Each. purchase | NEW “COPLEY"” ‘ PATTE WOMEN'S WASHABLE CAPE GLOV | IFancy embroidered | $1.29 and $1.50 pair. | butter, grey and tans | backs at $1.00, pearl, ivor UMBRELLAS, ATUR- Colors, purple COLORED SILK $3.48 grade special for ONLY, L8 e garnet, navy Our S, DAY red, price green and ! MEN'S COAT SHIRTS, 1 values at 4 69¢, 98c cach. { [ Kood -1 v PAIR. the for MEN’S SILK SOX AT You can't beat them at Visit our Men's Department Furnishings 129 25¢ price. vour | | A | n1 nation can be weak today in prepared- ness and strong tomorrow in effi- cienc An Excuse for Killing. (Bridgeport Telegram.) We have maintained that the state of from the deer law in Connecticut, which is re- sulting in the slaughter and probable extinction of deer in the state, wa hypocritically passed under the gui of “protecting the when no such protection was necessary, and that the 1 greedy desire to kill deer. This view of by the expert Platt, a farmer, Platt states that plentiful, before sulted in their extermination, he had seen as many 17 deer on his farm at one time, and had often found | their tracks through 2 den. But he never suffered what in his opinion, to five do! lar's worth of from them On the ot wood chucks and coons deal more mischiet th and in | inclined to think that of tha | trouble made by the smaller animals has been charged up to deer. Bearing this in mind, and membering that the state ! necticut had an arrangement farmer who suffered damage | from deer was compensated by tha | state, how much is left of the ples | that the deer-killing passed Ly | the 1last legisiature passed protect the crops Help! | (Utic | Help to make the cit Help to make the city | Don’t be just a constant Add some beauty to the You may not, indeed To crect a gleaming ¢ But clean up around your stable, Beautify your little hom start present tho crops” real ohject on the merely of hunters was part the subject is testimony of of Southbury. when deer the present upheld Isaa Mr were rey law as ing his has amounts dams hand, he do deer, | great an 1 soma also of Con whereby any law as to Help! clean a fretter. cen be able yme, th to be TTelp to make t « n at Help to stoy will pay Since your Would ones who st It tive ou a interest kyvard herc nd are your tion? What abot Rubbish help: Neatness "thought | bring the do it if he pre | Help to make f | You can And you'll | T the 't forget hat you might Let there future | O’er obstructions at grumbling something mor stuthbling door. splendid bye an | Do while you are do be no your Help to make the town more spler Do the part you have {o There is much that may e Through a little aid from Help decrease the dirt that's | Help to purify the breeze When it happens to be snowing | Clean your sidewalk, if you please. do a ing