New Britain Herald Newspaper, February 23, 1916, Page 6

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NEW, BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1916. EW BR[TAIN HERALD plications are coming in day after day, ferentl The pastor has withdrawn | for good reading will be more than &3 = g : his influence from its support and our | spasmodic. Iducation is the oniy - = | that, if anything, business is pick- Y bl I pess s picts L oy work s sutering and Wil | hins kel 1o cene s woms acre | J370 ysiness Boom In | HERALD PUBLISHING COMPANY, ATEaLD continue to suffer from the want of | for the best in literature. It is a cur- Proprictors, | Not only does the war fail to affect a united wholehearted support. Al- | ious and sad fact that educated men 3 3 ¥ ; S : : . BIG STORE 84 dally (Sunday excepted) at 4:15 p. m. | the barbers' business, but the weather thoush it seems to have been lost sight nmm always have written so that re War at Herald Building, 67 Church St. Win- of just now, that was the first cause | only educated men could tead them. McMILLAN’S NEW BRITAIN'S BUSIEST | 2 EEGAL B e of dissatisfaction. The great thinkers have always de- R tered at the Posi OfMce at New Britain | teIs summer, spring and fall. the In regard (o the culmination of the | lighted to presume a vast sympati e — = o { . As Second Class Mail Matter. barbers keep on shaving. The volume present trouble, it goes without saying | and comprehension on the part .of Washington, D. C., Feb. —Just | The empire counts more than 50,000,- vered by carrier 1o any part of the city | Of business in the barber shops re- (hat there ix blame on both sides. | the reader. — They have a hesitaney | \jat Austria-Hungary's economic out- | 000 citizens. Nor are the resources of Bt 15 Cents & Week. 65 Cents & Month. | mains about the same. Men must he Lhere is dissatisfaction, and it has about being explicit, preferring to |y, \was before the war, the peopie of | the land nearly so fully developed as Soriptions for paper to bo sent by mall | o ’® been growing in the past months. |leave much unsaid. Perhaps they be- | Augtria-lungary did not know them- | In the casl of its northern neighbor, payabls in advance. 60 Cents a shaved and although the barbers ad- | yome of it is in regard to church |lieved (hat persons unable to find ~alr s R : { L selves,’” 'begins a bulletin just given | Germany. Though ancient, there fis NEw SPR]NG 3 e mit that the safety razors have cut in | policy and some is. undoubtedly, per- [ their meaning would be unable to un- | o4 by the National Geographic socie- | still much fo he done for the upbuild- 8 only profitable advertieing medium in | On their trade somewhat they assert Sonal. It all culminated in a desire | derstand it. But that assumption is | iy which eives a brief outline of bus-| ing of the country, and many more BB city. Circulation books and press | that ag g rule men are becoming . [°F @n cxpression of opinion at the an- jEcmen hat cruel. There are many g00d | j,0¢c conditions in the dual monarchy | people can find a living there, Austria DRAPER!ES Toom always open to advertisers. | g i < "MINE L jual meeting as to the desirability of | and carnest people who are Mot Dro- |y fore the August of 1914, “Before| has a population—density of 260 to — | lazier and want their whiskers ‘4 change. By our constitution the of- | found thinkers, not students. They | pe quthreak of hostilities, the empire | the square mile, Hungary. 160; and o & Herald will be found on sale [l vs 5 o S > S 2 Stor dow: sould 2 s " s wis- : L B i ve Siona J‘_':,’}( e ;‘m‘l‘g}l | Whisked away to the tune of the ton- | ficers of the church from pastor down | could derive much help from the wi was undoubtedly doing comfortably | Bosnia-1lerzegovina, less than 100. de ) grea writer f A o L2 way, New Vork Clty; Board Walk, | sorfal song, the barber's incessant | are elected or re-clected at each an- | dom of ihe srcal writers, it they | oy thoush it possessed few places Austria-Hungary is largely an agri- Flgured Curtam Madras b Atlantic City, and Hartford depot. | chatter. Business booms or depres- | NUal meeting. At the opening of this ;"”"‘ ‘””‘-‘ gel at ity Would it Mot} .4 fewer industries which knew | cultural country, and more than half 15 S x f he | Meeling if the pastor had given them | be ln noble task for some scholar to | ,ught of such business enterprise and | of the people were engaged on the| 19¢, 25¢, 29¢. 35c¢ Yard B O;:;LE.I"HO.\FI CALLS. e sions have no signiflcance for the ' i¢ |osicnation to have been acted “mnA(v r\v:v‘n?lqul \m»m!\f of the \\;\l\\j success as exemplified in the United | farms and ranches. Less than six per White torial Rooms............ 0083 | barbering business. As lonz as the |upon and himseil have retired the | |”:['n i e great masters of thought; | aiates, Germany, ana Iingland, More-| cent .of ihe area of Austria is unpro flowing Whiskers force their way to | result would undoubtedly have been to translate allusions and ‘(f”ef‘_ iy | over. the Bovernments were heuvily | ductive. The country is rich in raw | the same, but the personal clement jIngs info plain Jangutge? Occasionally |, gent, and the people had deeply | materials ,and has important iron might have been eliminated and the | such a thinz has been attempted, but committed themselves to investments | steel. machinery, textile, gzlass and R d M d door left open for reconciliation. As | Not on a comprehensive scale. in futures. beet sugar industries. Vvast cattle €4 y aae and cream with self or col- ored figured WAIT FOR THE FACTS. Up until the terrible disaster at Mil- | S {at the old stands Until someone | it was, the pastor himself acted a Peiiden “Politically and industrially, though | and sheep ranges arc found in Hun- M d C . comes across with a new method of | chairman of the meeting that was to The Abuse of Language. outnumbered by the other races in the | gary; and the foreign market to which adras Curtains getting rid of a pestiferious adorn- |decide his own re-clection. His rul- (Boston Herald.) empire, the German Austrians domin- | Austria-Hungary has looked as pe- $1.25 Pair n involving the lives of passengers ing against the voting by the young Whether 3 -h i serve us | a he situatior Chey stood sc v | culiar! »r the consumption . 3 ment the barbers will thrive. That | 8 28 3 1 hether our speech is to u ated the s 1. They stood solidly | culiarly her own for the c ce the fatal day in September three | 2 { people may have been perfectly legal i o nitten or as a glove depends on | together, while the other peoples were | of her surplus products was that of | IScru only Extra value at this ars ago when the White Mountain | P68 the case, long life to the barbers. | Lut it was reversing the ruling uvvx‘\‘ | the pains we are willing to take With | divided into many factions. The Ger- | the Balkan states. price. B e o the custom of the church (|‘n|lll its | gistinctions like those in "»‘l?ould” man Austrians were in control at Vi- “In Hungary, seventy per cent. of ] . ] S AL arDor Sl first orzanization, and will hardly be ‘and “would,” “who' and “that” | enna and Venna, more truly than Ber- | the populaticn was engaged in agricul- MOTTLED AXMINSTER RUGS press at North Haven. That was on KEEPING “THE GREENBACK® | accepted by even the conservative i «ipe hoy* and “of the boy.” 1or | Jin, was the center of an empire, Dur-| ture, and 1 than fifteen per cent. in ize 36x6 e very day that Howard Elliott h i members of the church. Chen his | gy thought, both in seeing things | ing recent years, filled with an ardent | industry. Six land magnates are said cended to the presidency of the sys- | GREEN. putting off members of the board 00 {,na in mulling them over, i far | spirit of nationalism, the Magyars of | {0 own one-twelfth of the ecountry, % g trustees who have been connected b gyptler and more finely shaded that | jfungary, ihe Czechs of Bohemia, and | though there is a large number of with the official board for twenty | the corresponding string of words | the Poles of Galicia have striven to| small holdings, more than 3,000,000 i years and more. for simply personal | yha( we address to our (riends; i | compose all their differences in solid | Favorable harvests were enjoyed by At Old Prices use there has been great improve- | 168 something were done pretty soon | reasons. will hardly he endorsed Y | qyeh expresgion as we can reach, We | racial organization, Hungary In the last few years before size 8.3x10.6, at $11.50. ent in conditions on the road since | 1N the dyestuff situation the Stars and |even his warmest partisans. The §gepend on the trim distinctions “For many years past, Austro-Hun-| the war, while industrial conditions in| i 0 ox12 ft., at $13.50. ! el TR e e G ek .n‘n\n:\' meeting uvtli;y.“nv‘v’ltivmll ! our grammar as directly as “y.c :_vpx»{ garian finances have been merrily ad- | Austria were bad. The dual m;m;n'vh_\ i 5 SR ey i AN into an election wrangice e pastor | gy the distinction of her keyboard | ministered in terms of futu hope. | receives millions every vear from its ) < ’ ere will be no hasty action on the i "f’"""' not as the Red, White and | accomplished his re-election, but the s the wood carver on the differences | jzailroads have been laid (!\' :,\nhu'm. citizens who come to this country. COCO I DUOR TS B* of the public in condemning any- | Blue, but probably as the Pink, White [ 1'eople’s church remains a “house di- | of his gouges. To lose from 800t | fine roads and bridges have been con-| “The foreign trade of the empire he or anyvbody for what happened | 8nd Gray Naturally there was | Vided ..:,«.n.\-‘n»- elf {"hm"'\ .\4«;::\;,‘{" usage even one well-based m;um'"“; structed, all branches of the govern-| increased steadily during the wlvv bsterda her w o DAL ghter at t i o remarks, | P€ N0 door left open for veconcilin- {yical distinction is to lessen by just | ment have been strengthencd. a a| years preceding the war, the imports : 3 R ¥ netnen it Rene ey mpn | SRR ESElE s s time lof Chic e ma | tion. But let us hope that better | (1ot amount our moans of matching | powertul arry m‘c:‘:fi‘]:‘\(t“;:-]ommlvx | taster than the cxports, Germany led| Brackets and Fixtures of all kinds. | 1 counsels will prevail. — We kinow that | 4y thoughts with our words. pense. Students of finance, who have | all other countries by large margin Window Shades in stock, 25¢ up- atched the struggles of the road bid | an eve always peeled toward the tint | cach side has the real zood of our i yphappily our careless use of the | studicd Austrian budgets and Austrian | in goods purchased from and sold to let us (ry o mother tongue is confusing forms and | enterprise, have passed the verdict | Austria-Hungary with England second \w under way disclose facts, There | the Bureau of Engraving and Printing | edlize (hat anything that dishonoxs : gropping distinctions that even collo- | {hat the dual monarchy was in dan-| and the United States third. Russi: 5 the church dims and sullies the life | (yia) wording can ill spare. Our en- | gorous financial condition .that an| was a good customer. The total of the and traditions of the Great Founder | g.n0us vocabulary grows faster than | ingivigual in such a condition would | Austro-Hungarian foreign trade is con- | looked after. Satisfactory work guar- e everything is known { dve the American “grecnback” would jof the real church which have come | {ha dictionary makers can issue ap- | have heen forced into bankruptey long | siderably in cxcess of a billion'dollars. | anteed. Make arrangements now and Because the engincer of the train | @1S0 change its color and might even | down to us roukln the centuries of | hongix and new edition; but our ago. One-third of this passed through the Mich caused all the damage died at | dissolve into a “sky bluchack”. Hor- | the bast two 3 nll NimLDON, | rammar, like an aging tree is de- “However, Austria-Hungary is the| ports of Trieste and Fiume, which e throttle of his engine, one of the | Fors! Forthwith, the governments of c SEERERAS 1 caying at the tips. Take for IU-|jargest country in Europe with the ex- | ports the empire holds of nemcndofm SPLCIAL SALE OF TRUNKS e ] 3 | stance “‘would” and hould. tiere | ception of Russia, having a territory of | importance. Low wages, a compara- iCL st sources of information has been | Germany and Great Britain were | Anaiyzing the opening question of | )" New Bngland, the distinction lin- | 960,000 square miles, or 50,000 square | tively low cost of living, abundant $5.00 (o $11.50 Lach moved. It may be that this man | €alled upon and through their kindly | the aforegoing lette “What has | o In the middle west and be- ] jlcs more than Germany. [Further-| fuel and iron, sufficient timber and as to blame. It may he the signal | races enough dyestuff has been al- | ¢reated the dissatisfaction with the | (onq, “\would” has hopelessly mergsed | piore, this land is rich in fertile agri- | rich agricultural lands all contribute FIBRE-FIFTY TRUNE 3 E | pastor of the People’s church?” and | with jts own service that of “should.” | (yltural and pasture acres, in vast| {o assure the dual monarchy of an in- $7.50 o $15.00 S m i prevent our dollar bill from losing its | e, [eading the very next sentence, | The smoother phrases “I would like” | rorest and mineral resources, and in | dependent economic life for many gen- : gman who sacrificed his life in a | g its | “There has been no statement made | anq ] would he grateful” already aP- | a5 intolligent, industrious population. enaie e T It WARD romm tile attempt to prevent the disaster | Wonderful tint. Granted that a rose |in the press that nli'l' Jjustice l;' <l\‘:l>\‘ | pear in formal writing, and only the iy I 6 G RO N I T S TRUNKS e fen oy invalus rit- | bV ¥y other name 5 as | Pastor or people.” the casual reader | yoprhalist is vexed. The distinction of kit 3 R béeh ax vsiuable wit- | SnYEcEmameiould Be el e e e s S ”‘?;,;:‘ S R Feeding the World. tions and organizations of women of | 2 Specials at $15.00 and $22.50 Each must be blamed for any injustice that i examples in the talk of street and A s the state were strongly represented in jssion had he lived. The fireman is | €0lor would have the same purchasing | might have been done cither to the | snen and in the common version of A rv‘p‘;;;‘E;}}f“’:%el"(’l'c‘_“:’;‘f(‘:")e)m o st e T Lo R i STEAMER TRUNKS so lost. Thus it will be difficult to | POWer, there are those of us who | people or the pastor in question. To | (he Bible, is as good as gone frovl | commerce on a single month's exports | the poverty of argument on the other $4.25, $5.00, §5.98 to $9.50 Bt first hand information from the | Could not but regret any change in |Cl€ar up any misunderstanding that four modern hook In “a running [ o American foodstuffs shows what |Side was well typified by the telegram i I might exist it should be remembered 4 igni “hy running a race.” “I saWw | America is doing to feed the world |from the southern textile association, ! 'v]m( whenever a newspaper -\JIH"' Hes i -'f’h”‘ running,” I \w John's run- | quring the tremendous foreign c dated at Charlotte, N. C. : These em- —_— termine whether the block system | ]its opinion on any subject the editorial | ning* how many of us can ftell | Duping Decomber last our exports of | Ployers of child labor asked why the fds at fault, whether it was poor rail- Henry Morgenthau, ambassador of | columns are pressed into service. In {,papt, as adjective, infinite, particivlg | wheat amounted to 12,619,927 bushels | national child labor committee, if the . bading or just bad luck that caused | the United States to Turkey. has just | the resular news columns onlyEsue h ians verbal moun, those four “run- | orth $15.219,221; of flour to 1,695.- | conditions in southern factories were = = ks % arrived home on.a leave of absence, | Sttements and facts that bertain o | nings"» is it any wonder that we | 583 Larrels, worth $9,195,552; of |28 bad as they had been painted, had pis horrible. accident, whether -the ; &1 men and cvents arc used. and when {ape Jofting slip the zood distineti bacon. to 55,405,666 pounds, worth | never spent any money to relieve the % run-down me- | Since the war began he has heen much | gpinions are there espressed u;r» - jetween “He didn’t like Tom inter- | s7.686.016: of lud (o 46,134,309 | suffering” and place the children in dividuals in question are quoted. It yypiing” and “He didn't like Tom’s | ;oinds wor $63,207; ham, to |school. may be well to remember that there | jhierrupting”? A graver loss has cone fif‘;’;?'{f;\oyx:;‘u,f;'\‘ “.0.?(;1 ‘;{",,2:«3‘111:; An analysis of the strong vote by 199-201-203 MAIN STREET. has been no editorial comment in this | of oup laziness with subjunctive | or’ fresh bheef, to 96,688 pounds, | which the house a second time has paper unfavorable to the pastor or th forms. Our school children think | m_m'(‘. 294.111: of pickled pork, to | passed the Keating-Owen bill, to put puld be no voice raised in denuncia- . It Was Morgenthau who prevented the | people of any church in the city.— | ys quaint when we say. “If he were” [ 14 506 795 pounds, worth $1,47 a ban on interstate commerce in the | ©Ur pevple have become famiilar B Turkish government from seizing t not. at least, within the past twelve- | or “Wherever it be.” § Jes of De- | o comn fo 3591258 pounds, worth | broducts of child labor, discloses that, Nothing today can surprise u It French. British and Russian am- | Month.—(3d.) | mosthenes and Cicero! What could | g1 g22 346, The figurcs for a month |except for the Carolinas, the southern | may be that the daily flying mail te cien the orators have done had Rome | ave pretty large. Take them for «the |states’ delegations are in favor of the antucket will prove epochal in its - PACTS AND FANCE and Athens dulled their. stiletto-like | cajendar year ending December legislation. Bight states voted solid- | Way, vented a Vegeruor SRS SLIntEsicevs | subjunctives into hlunt indicatives? last, and you fairly gasp. For wheat [1y for the bill, four had a majority - While the Milford -wreck fresh « giploinac which has been held up A successfnl man s one who can | Language is the world's oldest won- | 4pe y totals are 205,333,799 bu- |[for it and only the Carolinas were CONNECTICUT DEFINED. | the cheeks and necks of struggling manhood so long will barbers he seen rd yesterday there had been no Hous wreck on the New Haven sys- Special at 0 Each m which had been suffering so many | 1t Was our own Congressman Hill . TAPESTRY BRUSSELLS RUGS ishaps. Because of this record. be- | Who first warned the nation that un- r. Elliott assumed the leadership, | Strip 75¢, 89¢, to $1.50 Kach WINDOW SHADES Btic natures of those who have | But soon after some one who kept ward. b . e o investicationo | of araollar hi scoverec P inless | littie church at heart . em wait until the two investigations ar bill discovered that unles PESIE0 B SR S e i or ’phone No. 21 and have your sha&cs ay be blame enough to go around | Were given the necessary amount of our shade man will call upon you. fstem was out of order. The brave | 10Wed to come into this country to bss before the Public Utilities com- | SWeet, or a dollar bill under any other ilroad men. Experts, however, may | the color scheme of the “zrcenback’ man equation or enical equipment was to blame for | in the limelight and has proven that | | he is one of the most brilliant and | rear-end collision in broad daylight. bntil all the evidence .is in there | Capable men in the diplomatic scrvice. i i bassadors as hostages and thus pre- PROFITING BY MISFORTUNE. the minds of travelers and others it by one of our own great Americans | make other yeople think asanuch ofj jer, No one really knows how it be- | ¢hejs which brought $281,815,044; for |solidly against it. If Carolina public : him as he thinks of himself-—Paterson | zan or how it attained its strygtural | p,,.0n $31,164 pounds which net- | opinion be judged by the expressions | Gets Its Title From Corruption of Two Press Guardian perfection. The Greck grammar Was | ¢oq $69,305,517; for lard, 450,098 at Asheville from representative or- Words, “Connect” and “Ticket.” [ finer than the Roman: the Sanskrit S pounds which sold for $18,107,- | ganizations and people, it can evident- e the repairs that seem so necessary ' Morgenthau is considered. And there ' The General Federation of Women's| finer than the Greek. Language is fresh beef, 262,003,348 pounds |1y be asserted that the south is ready (By George Ititch.) flons portions of its roadway in this | are many. many others like him. | has underlaken a crusade for|pe onc taking avgument for a bre- | (ith sold for $33,510,989; flour, 75,- [for an end of the business of robbing Connecticut is a narrow strip of BT people of New Eritain have . | madesty in women’ The feder- | historic Golden Age. Its Jaws have | 5o 698 barrels, which brought the |children of their childhood in the in- | ]and along Long Island Sound which ¥ =5 ation’s first step should he to define | ycen studied and named and marvel- | o obohous sum of $94,399.720. terest of profils But this is not say- | is used as a right of way by several supposed to | Worcester Post | ed at by men like Grimm and Mueller T ing—more’s the pity—that the fac- | lines of ailroad an automobile ause of what they consdier poor | he the majority leader in the louse | —_— {and our own Whitney as if human T e tory interests of the south—largely | speedways leading into New York city lquipment. Tt is a recognized fact in | of Representatives. now announces hi= | Conditims haven't ¢hanged much | specch had some mysterious life of Uncle Sam; Homemaker! controled from the north, by the way | in fact, and its name is a corruption in Palestine sinee 2,006 vears ago. A |its own. The least the rest of us can (New Haven Union.) —are yet ready. The handwriting | Of the two words “Connect” and certein man goirg duwn from Jeru- fight be well for the Connecticut ' gas “the laughing stock of Europe.” Bmpany to set at work making some ' needs no apology after the work of een complaining for some time be- | (Jaude Kitehin, who i il that a dollar withheld to- | opposition to the "Tar Commission ; 2 i is to pass it fo the next gener Despite the ever increasing compli- | on the wall, however, is unmistakable. | “Ticke(,” the two principal topics of tion with the least possible damaxc | . ions of the foreign situation, U-boat — iy conversation among a large ma SO R @ni IR sis, Mexican hacklings, trust inves- Do fay in the repairing of rolling stock | Bill. Up to date the sentleman from | l e spent later on. It is economy. | with his party on all issues o |l=cn Gall i - - ——— neutrality plots and the mil- | i | | 1 | alem to Jericho would he pretty sure freans probably a hundred that must | North Carolina has been out of to fall among Turkish troops.—-Pater- S e ity of the citizens t Texas now has a raiiroad mileage of CONOa 0t M & Blesnl Mty Blind Jion and one other things occupying | 15,628 miles. > (Meriden Journal.) his attention, your Uncle Swmuel s { e 1o “Witomobile road up pikets | WPCFC from thirty minutes o 150 Some of the Pacifists have recently | find time to actively interest him {po.y js the highest highway in the | | €ATS aWay from New York. Its pop- heen expressing their dislike of the | zelf in the problem of creating (Wo |y q, 3 alation in the day time is about 500 Iiagle, used as a national American | homes where before there was only There are now twenty-four rear ad- | Lo0; Put this swells to over a million symbol. To their minds, the cagle is | one. And when that can’t be done, he | ivals on the active list of the United | *t ™ providing everyone catchies ! bird of prey. a robber and w {hief, | devotes the energies of a half dozen |Siates navy. { the last train home. Owinz to the fact that Broadway is within cany herefore, Lo keep the equipment up to | good thing he was not appointed IhofNatlon bl with pleasant towns which are an is said that w Canadian coins will bear the ¢ an Amer- QS =oce miters e polioyof e g | icar I That oughi to hold them fhe highest level of efficiency. There | President Wilson's “Kitchen ¢ renchment is permissible to some ex- Henry Ford has begun a campaisn | ai par—Ilouston o ent. as in the case of the New Ha- | against national defense. Millions for | : ’ | Now that we arc assured ice prices | fen: but where a company is a recog- | advertising but not one cent for pre- | NN T WE AT fEsuTed 166 P f i r" A R R | arrogant and over-hearing. They re- | of his departments to making that More than 70,000 motor trucks of all Ki 3 g O e e e endoy, | 2rd him as unsuited to represent | home a better place in which to live: | kinds were built In the United States | }AIKINg distunce. almost all the big they wouldn't I evaland Lea e O bious A R Irtasitr Treasury ilabor andll Aty ear | theatrical managers tr heir new Seming need in withholding proper ; | s agle is of course a milit e et R e e e e e plays on Connecticut audience It P COMMIUNICATED. | 7The groundhog’s performance will| The easle is of ] commerce Dej b listory of this 8 i | | fized money-maker, where the finan- | paredness. Bial condition is healthy, there is no ——— Becommodations from a public that bird. Ilis great power and dauntless | {ies divided among many smaller de- | country has copper metal sold as high | ("¢ State ever becomes unpopular it urage malke him a typical fighter. | partments are working in behalf of |as at present. |GElilEvahecatiso ol which His picture displayed on the banners | homemaking. Some idea of the extent | The new $2,000,000 Widener Memo- ‘h!‘”r]!u w‘wvvy(flu. oliras he chief product< of Connecticut are firearms, pocket knives and eollese he hrief, but it gets plenty of ad-| all and gets but little in return o R i T ek R | S 2 Writer Gives “U ed Version heen but a few days since the - % of ¢ icisn rer Mo < egister and | - i B R1a catica attention to tr : CLELxcEcntEbINcull gt £ eriticism.o—Des Moines Register and | 0% (0 Gon ¢ Rome gave the battling | of the work may be obtained from the | rial library at Harvard university has i o e People’s Church it legions confidence and courige, “atement that the Reclamation de- |sixty miles of book stacks. ) X This aspeet of the cagle’s nature | partment of the Interior department | Ikvery evening, at home or abroad, Scems inappropriate 1o our mational | alone has organized more than 200 |the Czar of Russia - writes his daily | graduates. Connecticut is one of tife | 133 Brown of Tabler met the writ- most peaceable states in the iondition of the roadbeds on Arch and lubilee streets. Since then there have What has created the dissatislac- | i St e or on the steeot Ssturday and forced = st 2 = Tioress i S heen many communications to this of- U\nn x;\uh I:I‘v ]r.i.s:!) :f the I'eople’s e e eahe Gy o liecy The habits But the cagle also .-(,”an\- for | ¢lubs to study the home problem: The nm\u mnf 1'_u i (I|‘,;x : . ) 1 church? 1ere has been o state- ihen L a marvelously clear vision © ris ork has extended over sixteen states. A recen ‘e in Mercer, Fa., de- attentd t1 s Star coming.—Chickasa Okla.) WIS | | i saliing attentlon to other defects ment made in the press that did jus- St Ul i e E to vast heights. and his clear secing Homemaking in the territories and |stroyed a hotel which in its carlier n the system, notably among which tice to cither pastor or people. St the whole eve overlooks s the uncleanliness that sometimes ! venture one more, I hope, unpreju- . i : s The National Guard can be success- 2 i diced version of the present difliculty e xists in the cars plying between Hart- ; O Y e o peon . S There can be no question of the up. | Tully used for defence in case of war, fora and New Britain. This 1S, 0f rightness or zood intentions of the | Merely by asking permission of forty- union, never having heen known to turn g rascal out, hut it furnishes the ons by means of which the gu rrels r | of the whole country ar Lrried i cane = s G e .4 States is | days had entertained Washington and | f ried o 3 dependencies of the United States is e No western ar southern quarrel is conn That is certainly symbollstic of our | going on steadily, In Alaska, every jLaf | y going ; | sidered a success unles American freedom of thought. Our | tencher is a social worker. Not only do | . When cyclones threaten the Cocos | 5i¢ a suc i it is eked out tea 3 o | by a nickle-plated undertalker’ | prosperity and social advances are | (hey arill into their charges the usual | 81ands, in the Pacific, the natives take | ”_“;” Coniaiils o I er's friend due to the clearness with which our | cenool studies, but they personally in- | ml;w in the lagoons and stand up | MM Connecticut. g e o o is issued (o them, | People have discerned certain truths | spect homes for sanitary conditions: |t their necks in water ionnectiout I8 chelyisanioucnh e partment to supervise. But if the 0 his retention.. Both think that | CYOT¥ lime an o f “{ which the 00 World has been slow | Garbage removal is insisted upon, and | The deepest mine in the world s e meeniBoly (Connecticut Company is wise it ‘\-iu‘;h"’ x"I]f' right, hlnl both ecan not sce 2 L l"]lw}ll”“)’ \Ir'Hul. ln. the ;y.rl.l l,m[l e 4” o “n 4 ‘u, 1y s o { from the same standpoint. = 4 3 Feriiphin o A ~ | Brazil, which is being worked at cored upon about once every thre mot wait until it is called to order | e first real difference betwoen The London Chronicle chides Punch Wonncrs of the Xelepione naLge! 'h,mr"f ,”:T‘”s and S bulldtholl usht e e niile below the Yale is situated at New ia : by outside forces. It will spend a pastor Anderson and members of hixz | f0r sativizing President Wilson's pa- ™ e he oo e Heiee “Pfr‘» American cottage. | gurface of (he earth.—Waterbury Re. | ©xeent after a fontball vietory, wi dittle time and energy and money in | official board was over matters con- | tience. [ the patict f the Ameri (Easen et 16 2 e Noptn | Publican. it overflows into three state Tt cerning the carrying on. ot Our inia | contpeoplasthut inyilcsfconsideralion A guest on the thirteenth floor of | are carrying into the krozen North " _ fains more than 2,500 st slonary work in Africa through the | But it secins (o be rcaching its end -la nhotel was handling money neur | the standard of vegetarianism. ot A 1013ing Mail one of Gospel Missionary soclely of which | New York Sun an open window when a gust of wind | m years ago the natives of Aluska L < more nor less than the old. old story| the People’s church is the head and - appropriated one of the bills and | subsisted entirely on meat and fish. (Boston Post.) i et I Jiiiec af Drevention —alwayewhoving ifaclorl |l bron ite iy No ety ever lost its liberties that| hastened out the window with it. The | Vegetables were unknown, or at least The Dostmaster-General seems to | his university. New Ieter than o thn of cure. e R S A e Pad 1,154,905 telephones in working | man immediately turned to the tele- | considered only fit for animals and |shave taken seriously and to have giv- | captains of finance hy havin S ’ subordinate society. with the “Afriean | 0rder. Panl Revcre was usciul in his| phone and told the private branch | birds. Now, thanks to the American | en practical consideration (o the sug- | (he Yale football team a son om — — | Tnlana Mission,” with headquarters in | Lime, but nof and melodranatic. | exchange operator what had happen- | sehool teachers, vegetables form —a | gestions of an aerial post route to the | Yale Is a very wealthy sehool LONG LIFE TO THE BARBLRS, | Philadelphia. Our work on the mis- Arning by telephone would be pre-|ed. With the usual quick thinking | regular part of the natives' diet, islands Iving off the Massachusetts | if its old ot ang 3 ‘¢ TS ion fleld was separato, but under the | ferred now, even in the neighborhood | of her profession,” the operator knew To all practical purpo: the same | coust The advertisement of the de- | off and leave their money fo {1 While nearly every business known | general supervision of the Ihiladel. | 0f Boston.—Prookiyn Fagle, at once what to do. She called the | work is going on in Porto Rico and in | partment calls for bids for the car- | leze at {he present rots he to the world has been in one way or : phia society. | neced not cnler into haggage man, who was situated just | the Philippines. In the latter place, | riage of mails from the mainland to | will eventually hay Bother affected by the war, the : details. .The clash came over the de Topelea found fifty-two persons | nside the entrance to the hotel, and | {he bureau of education has co-oper- | Nantucket daily during the winter | mitor Tts students are very dem mand of the A. L. M. that our so- | vanging from teen to forty-four | he hurried a porter into the stre ated with the Department of Agricul- | and 13 trips weekly in summer time, | ocratic, the captain of = et f ciety give up all supervision of the curs of age, daneing the dog walk in | Looking up the man saw the bark (e and has been instrumental in the | with intermediate stations at the Vine- | team beinz often seer \,w””""'"“'v gheir shops, shaving, shampooing, | missionary work on the field in Africa, i TOPeka's only cabaret, a colored place. | note just pussing the fifth floor! The | esablishment and supervision vard over the shoulders of some comor g E#tropping their razors and pouring | turn over the title of all mission prop. | They were all arvested. Hutchinson | telephone saves money in more e ho e This Is to be done through the air: | senator’s som nmon Balos 0ld and new into the cars of | erty to that society and confine our (Kan.) News than one LN it is the first proposed regular and Connecticut 3 ity e raising of mone O % : rermanent use of the aeronlane :(:]\I:\ i:x“ Ax:l\-w',dlw,'.',(.h : frit .,’,, sevious Reading Make Him Prants. Child Labor in the South. i he fomplanaiin to be known only as A. L. M. work CWarerbuey Democrat.) (From Jack-O'-Lantern, ) ourse, a matter for the Health De- pastor or of those who are opposed | ¢ight Governors and State Legislatures | to recognize the natives are urged to discard the | en con- cach rest of in order renovating its property and putting B, i its house in order. Tt is nothing i Gounire hustbesn sitcice audience Yop York is full of graduates confinue to_ die Eola cach student m individual dop. Dbarbers are still walking around in Wiy never prodoced S L president, but it educated 1n postal service, and of what things cumbe s (Springfield Rzepubiican.) Tl e e LA [ nau b an AT Lrectly affected by the war. | Reports We could do that or sever our con A New York observer of litc ) This freshman wore corduroy pants; The 12th annual conference on child | see. — With what has happened 1o the | time o fire alarm is sounded ; recently cofbpiled by the various state:| nection with the larger society. The ufairs notes (hat sinee the wi [ “Aha!" cried the bold sophs, “Our |labor, at Asheville, N. C.. which has | work of transportation on the surface | in (he United States Sl AN Y astor was in favor of giving over the | g sre has been a larger pub! chants! just ended, disclosed an unexpected | by th multiplication of vaiiroad lines, | 5 . s th Hicense bureaus go to show that the | P25 A gan there has been i 8 ants! J : t s, | imsurance center of the ficen “| He = work in the fleld entirely to the | demand for rious-hooks. This may And the garments fresh wore, interest among the people of the vicin- | to the facility of communication same nuriitber of ‘barbers working last | ppijageiphia society. The executive | bo true—et us hope that it is, but | When the contest was o'er ity in the cause for which the con- { through first the telegraph, then the l:eur are on the job this year, that ap- | oard of the G. M. 8. thought dif- | it is doubtful if war inspired desire [ Would never look well at a dants. |ference was held, Labor organiza- tclephone and later the ‘“wireless,” s a present capital is Harfforq handsome city which sht . their customers. For this, the barber- ling Dusiness is the only one not di lers evepy here e fire ountry . and automobiles bough in the town since the San % earthquake. there have been no Francisco

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