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BRITAIN HERALD ALD PUBLISHING Proprictors COMPANY, l@aily (Sunay cxceptod) at 4:15 p. m. | forth on the'Rialto. he is entitled to Herald Building Post Class 67 Church St Ofice Mail P oat the a3 Second New Matter, Britaln d by carrfer 10 any § Cents a Week. 65 Cents a Month. Iptions for paper to be sent by mall pdyabla in advance. 60 Cents a Month $7.00 5 year part of the city iy profitable advertising medium [€lF. . Circulation books and press 0m always open to advertisers in jerald will be found on sale at Hotae % Xews Stand. 42nd St. and Broad- ¥, New Tork City; Board Walk, iitic City, and Hartford depot. ANUFACTURERS? of the surest ess i3 to profit EXHIBIT. ways to by the experience This applies as well to the ipality the this in mina Britain as a facturing might do well to ® the success Louisville, K ttained simple gement. 20 'omme a ers. as to individual. New city through a very Less than Club permanent a year al there J exhibition €ts manufactured in the city I near the business section, with space of twenty thousand square was leased for two and ~filve manufacturers and arranged their products so catch the Exhibitors are the rate of years have taken ey ed nominal one a square foot for a year, and lommercial Club furnishes all the e for the care of the exhibits. uisville could not far excel New In In this matter of exhibiting if nce jieh a display is not only to secure got down to it. The purpose Bt returns from the sales of sam- but to bring to the attention of local public visitors points what is being made in the It is a recognized: fact that a one-half, or-less, of the popula- here knows what is going on in way of manufacturing. There are e wonderful goods made in New jain and, if possible, they should ket up in permanent exhibition. plan in Louisville is meeting with at suc According to the re- from the Department of Com- 'ce: A portion of the exhibit hall t apart for noonday lunches at huent intervals, and special even- meetings of various local clubs are kil there, as well as special functions the different exhibitors the object g to get as many people as pos- to see the exhibit. The space set ¥t for this purpose has a seating jgity of 300 or 400.” Then the paittee in charge of the exhibi- has offered prizes to High school ils for essays on the articles man- ptured and why they should be wht, all of which stimulates inter- in the city. [lhere are Britain and from S8, many visitors through the course of a year Louisville gituated, would Ip materially spreading a There is plenty of it for commercial development and ix is one way to help it,—show the ople what you've got, and the rest It takes money to make It takes success to breed suC- ss. It takes strength to grow, and lew Britain has all these. in il such an exhibit. as asts, conveniently in trade, room oney. WHY NOT? ‘When at the close of the day's toil e laborer goes home why should he st discard his overalls, grimy cap, il sturdy boots for the conventional iening dress, the high hat and the Jolished pumps? Why should he not en disport himself amusement, a theater, a r mayhap a lobster palace, and there lapging.sound of the shop, f* the hummnig and buzzing engines? Vhy should he not? The question been raised and demands The business agent of the in Worcester laborer in some place “movi as an nswer. Moulder's Union ere is no reason why the fhould not appear at his after-dinner airs properly garbed. It would re move one of the artificial lines that he thinks. savs ow seperates the classes, nd.if this is so, if there is to be a | significance. between merely ne of demarkation drawn the laborer and the pr a tuxedo, his employer of full or anything ine, we iffake haste to say, away with all The after dinner #ees fit,—or before dinner, fiinner. In fact, it thing if all these were removed. The by dress suit, in fashion's donning a laborer is if for he' falsity mtitled of it to dress or would of dress suit barriers aus becn looked upon with distain by tae | but old and It fe thi »an suit that looks like the of the 1 thas slways caused a Jaugh among the Jaboring man for eons eons. something entirely the spie and natural clothing crow. Baboring classcs, claw hammer, Ahe 1o justly so.. It has been Flbadze of aristocracy there the “Soup outfit.—and held in nus’ un- up as the country is aristocrac where no estab- | of | fame | the | be a good | Feb. cliss | | i make | H avowed purpose of taking out of politics they must eventually, — i of the hands of Congress. that five perfectly good and healthy jobs are going to be created the mo- ment the federal lie | drew Wrick, who has just entered his | event dude, | | world | put ‘While under the law any tariff com- mission will and scope, it has been the history of these federal always crave more power and gen- erally succeed in running & their backers of this proposed mission comes these five good jobs will be viewed by Congressmen and others in the same light a father looks up his first born baby boy. good as the man at the desk. The man in the overalls helps make the g0 'round, and his spiked if he chooses to on tail coat and go do as he pleases. The business agent at Worcester has the right idea. One of the best ways to forget the cares of ible- ness of the night, and the dress suit is the agent of Lay aside the old the day is to assume the irrespor advance pleasure. togzery worn dur- ing the hours of druggery and put on the of fun-making. garb of frivolity, of fashion, Surely it will be a thing for the American to the latest dictates After squirming and twisting in a dres he softness and flexibility of a pair of for hi country. good laboring of night man style of suit take to and fashion. a will appreciate all the more the overalls and do better work his —off self, his employer and ail then to the new, with the old TAKING THE TARIFF OUT POLITICS AND THOSE FIVE GOOD JOBS. Much consternation is now caused by President Wilson announcing him- tariff com- provides that self against the proposed mission measure which two members of the board he by the majority in Congress, the minority, and the fifth by the chief executive. Naturally the Senators and Representatives named two member by would want to have a hand in the making of such a commission, If it must come about, and for reasons of patronage they would be reluctant any measure that would enable the President to appoint five men of his As o or in passing own choosing to these good jobs. under the Constitution all laws taining to the laying of imposts duties on imports or exports are sub- ject to the revision and control of the Congress, and as tariff making has been ever a function of the national legislative body, the consider long and well any move de- signed to take from them this power. members will be limited in its power institutions that they from th com- way As tariff swaddling clothes with the the have started out tavift f they wish to succeed,—get it out There is no gainsaying the fact tariff it commission into being,—if does. And —only five times more so. For various reasons, not set down here, Congress would do a lot of dickerig, and bowing and scraping, to be to name any one member of this com- necessary to every mother's son in able mission. Another reason why a long drawn out dispute may tween the take place i President and the Congress over these five good it jobs. This is more than polities, the vein of politics, it is patronas is the way on the situation. down to bed rock it is jugular That the looks But at least public right aif ference to the average Congressman getting malkes little in this case, Wherher the President or the House and Senate mixme the five members to the tariff commission. At best there would be only two or Th¥EaTT amber who wo'd leaders in either c have anything to about the mat- ter. The others would fols low the leaders like a herd of sheep, And differ- ALY merely knowing not the lay of the land. in the it ence to them who appointed the com- whether it was the Powers that end would make no mission, President or the be in Congress HOW TIME LEAPS. This is the the extra four hours we have saved out of every day, twenty- four years and put in for good meas- ure during leap year. In some parts of the it as Prosperity of the globe country it is being ‘telebrated Day, other it in portions takes on a different Down in Monroe county, Pennsvl- vania, at a place known to some few thousand people as Fern Ridse the the thet Ap- natives celebrating ary - of inhabitant. are today twenty-fourth birth of their oldest annive one hundredth vear. He worn 29, 1816. This really showld be his twenty-fifth hirthday, figurjng the 20 as hys first: was one away hack in 1 “ather Time skipped ¥im the in 1900 and so he is ome birth- day party shy There is only one shortage grandmothers the credit the old belief in And the of humor, the survival man has a saving sense as cvidence his to it his sisters and brothers lived to a ripe reply query which sought to learn old 'H old. age. they mnever got very when she But ninety-nine the My sister Anna died was only ninety-cight. brother be What old man knew, if any, must have died Joe lived to other sisters and brothers in infancy. in their latc seventies or eighties. he has lived to see the great day nyway, century mark, and there will be rejoicing in Monroe county to- Because he has heen so con- of hope he He de- sistently cheated in this matter birthday celebrations, we lives to see the twenty-fifth serves that many, anyway. What must those militant suffrag think of Mrs. Nellie Best, of the Women's Anti-Con- League in Ingland, who has sts of London secretary scription been sentenced to prison for carrying on a propaganda to prevent enlist- ments? She spent her time “keeping hundreds of lads from recruiting” be- “the Lord has told us not to A very good unless obeyed a cause kill.” that replaced commandment hoth injunction ‘“an for an eye and a tooth for a tooth.” by sides, is by the eve A Georgia man suggests that war be settled by the Free Anotlw‘r good idea if it would work— Berkshire Eagle. the Submarines may not break internationalflaw, but they have the bad habit of diving under it. Gloversville Herald. If the Father of his Country were alive today he would find his offspring armed only with papier-mache hatchet.—Brooklyn Bagle. Eugene Nable business man House, any a Hon, that a White name ger. IFoss beliaves s needed in the but he is too modest to names.—Philadelphia Led- Yuan wants a China. A constitution about the most useless could have.—Pittshurg mperor tution for seems to be thing China Dispateh. new The Russian capture seems to have started another Mara- thon race in the Furopean war, only this happens to be in Asia Minor. At last accounts the Turks were still lead- ing the Rus: Burlington Free Pross of Erzerum ans Why all of this hubbub dyestuff? Some of our can furnish formulas herries, hickory and the like about a for utilizing poke bark, walnut Tulls Louisville Times. The the effect of the steady exhaustion resources and depreciation of of the Teuton allies cannot be concealed, and efforts to prevent this situation being reflected in the international cxchanges are futile. New York Herald. of Of political significance in the selec- tion of St. Louis there is no troce, un- less one choose to credit the state- ment that democratic Missourt is “doubtful” and will he confirmed in her faith by this boon. Rather be it accepted as full proof, if any more was needed, of the disappearance of the Hon. Champ Clark's s0 heartily and faithfully Mr. Bryan.—New York “hoom,” cupported nes, Within a few shape of the total rec rying comyanies has increased from forty to fortyfive per cent. As the advance cannot*continue there is a corresponding inceasc in the rates the railroads are prrmitted to charge. the public’s interest in what promices to e a country-wide demand by rail- way workers for mora Day almost as great that of (I them- selves.—Rochester Post-[Sxpross. a vears the cmployees ipts of the car- unless as mien However much anxicty may exist in the United States in resard to the Per- sia il seerns to The Worid that a thousand times more anxiety must exist in Vienna and Budapest. At the worst we «re merely the victims of an official lie, but Austria will have ostracized hersclf from the courf of civilizatiow unless ghe voluntarily .and unreservedly makes good the pledge that her government has so solemnly made.—New York World, B All that the American asks at this time foolish legislation shipbuilder protection from Upon him, as on the shipowner, government interference weighs heavily. The present scarcity has created an unprecedented demand for new tonnage. No competition by the foreign builder, concerning which the politicians have been so anxious in the past, need now be feared. All over the world the shipyards are working to full capacitp. The menace to the American shipbuilder is that »sperity cannot last under is such thing, really two, bothering the ven- | cutting a | erable centenarian,—he | is Oulside of this tittle wentleman pair of wisdom tecth and touch | old veritable patri- | fight- slight annoyance a of rheumatism the ix dollar, He sound as a of a I arch old comes from where | ing stock and aftributes his tenacious laws.—Philadelphia Tedger. ORDER MODIFIED. Ieh The commission in the COAL Washington state modified anthracite coal the hard coal increases in rates 24) inter- today so-called s0 as to allow ing roads slight prepared sizes commerce order case carr. on Jtho man i the bench is every bit as | sticking to life to pyre arit and a | and on pea and smaller sizes. ithem. existing { Masons. | intentionally ! | other to note down, marked that of the fittest. | my | 4 A HUMAN RULE. ments of Save Trouble. Remember Measure Your Own Body (New York I wish I knew that opening,” and American.) the dimensions of said one man to an- other, “but T have no rule with me. T guess 1'll have to come back this afternoon and measure it.” The opening was a rectangular hole in the ground that had been cement- ed to the top and which needed a cover. ‘Why don't yon said the other man, self the extra trip? “Why, as T tell you,” have no rule with pace it off. but yvou can’t tell that way to within a few inches and the mea urement must bé accurate.” “Well. don’t let a little thing like that bother vou. T have no rule, either. hut I'll give vou the dimension of each side within half an inch. an way. Will that be near enough?" 1t would and so the man measured it “My shoe is exactly long.” he said now," vour- measure it “and save vas the reply, ] me. T might 111-4 inches fake a memoran- dum of what I do and we can verify the measurcments get to a rule.” Placing his heel (o a line drawn from the angle of the corner and put- ting the heel of one foot to the toe of the other, he measured off ten shoe lengths and make a mark at the fore- most toe. Then he stretched his right hand in a span, thumb at the toe mark, and scratched another mark at the tip of his middie finger. To this latter mark he placed the side of his thumb and noted that the opposite ide of this dizit just touched the parallel mark, indicating the end of the side he was measuring “Now.” he said, “vou have ten times 11 1-4 inches, which is 112 1-2 inches. T span exactly 9 inches, mak- ingalod inches, and my thumb is just an inch wide at the first knuckle, making 122 1-2 inches, and that is the length of the opening. Now for the width.” Following the measured eight shoe lengths marked the distance. Then he his hand down flat, the heel of palm touehing the mark he had made, called off 71-2 inches for when we he and laid the Just the and down, same process, placed his hand again. palm | hut this time measuring with its width consti- | | within | osity | made i | | |11-2 at the knyekles. The side of his hand came exactly to the end of the nar- rower of the two sides “Put down 4 inches more,” he said, “That is eight shoe lengths, or 90 inches, plus 7 1-2 inches, plus 4 inches. The opening is therefore 10 feet 2 1-2 inches by 8 feet 5 1-2 inches, and vou'll be perfectly sure in going ahead on those measurements.” Testing the result when they ar- rived where they had access to a two- foot rule it was found correct a neighth of which was near enough. “Long ago,” volunteered the unique measurer, “more as a matter of curi- than anything else, I suppose, 1 measurements of several mem- bers of my body and remembered Here is the schedule. It has helped me out many a time “Length of first of forcfinger, 1 inch. “Length of first inches. “Width of palm at pressed flat, 31-2 inches. Across palm from second knuckle, 4 inches. Around palm inches. “Length of middle finger from third or palm knuckles to tip, 4 inches. “From heel of palm to tip of middle finger, 71-2 inches. pan from tip of thumbh {o tip of middle finger, 8 inches. “Length of forcarm from tip of el- bow to tip of middle finger, arm hent to form a right angle. 19 inches. “From heel to top of knee, leg hent to form a right angle, 23 3-4 inches. “Length of shoe, heel to tip, inches. “Height “Tip to tip to be an inch, a joint Joint of thumb, knuckles, thumb at knuckles, 81-2 11 feet 8 1-2 inches. of fingers, with arms outstretched. 5 feet 8 1-2 inches, “Ixtreme reach, standing on heels, one arm extended upward, to tip mid- dle finger. 7 feet. “With vour own measurements mind.” he continued. “vou can only measure short spaces, but can quickly construct a ten-foot pole, or one of any length. for that mat- ter, and measure a plot of ground a building, a fioor, the walls of a room or almost anvthing else. even if you haven't a rule with you. Of course, it wouldn't do for surveyving or any other process that requires absolute accuracy, but for the general work it isn't at all bad.” To Trai (Meriden in not ou Maids. Journal.) An innovation is beng tried Kansas City that housewives all over tiic land will be interested in for it may bave a bearing on the solution of the servant girl problem. The board of education is establishing school for the training of girls domestic science Those who have wrestled everlasting “‘maid problem” yeur after year, will undoubtedly agree that incompetency is one of the most common faults of girls who apply for domestic service. There are. of course, many other features which make the problem one that con- stantly acute. The reluctance of girls to enter house service h its foundation in the social disadvant- ages which are wrongly associated with it. The m a n with the of “mis- in 5 personal disqualifications many women for relation of tress,” complicate the prolem large proportion of ances. Bt most of these aspects of the situa- tion are purely side issures. They do not go to the heart of the trouble the absolute unfitness of a large ma jority of girls in domestic service. There ave a great many families in this and cvery other community which would gladly remeve all the ineidental objections which “hired girls” usually raise, if only they could get maids who were competent to perform the tasks for which they | guest at Mighty Fortress Guards T he Gult of Finland a “After | naval the Washington, D C.. FFeb, more than eighteen months of war upon the Baltic sea between fleets Germany and Russia, the first successful shot has vet to be fired againsi the mighty fortress of Svea- horg which guards the neck of the Gulf of Findland, and the water ap- | proaches to the Russian capital” be- gins a primer on war geography jus issued by the National Gieographic so- ciety at Washirgton veaborg, he known as the ‘Gibraltar of the Bal tie, powerfully secures Its holders' controi to all the wide basin of the Gulf of Tindland, thus giving them a most important base for disputing the control of the northern inland sea Tt was the acquisition of this stronghold that constituted the strongest impell- ing force in Muscoviet politics toward the conquest of Findland from Swedes. “Across the fhe gulf from Sveaborg, lies Reval ,the seat of other powerful shore defenses and of portant Russian navy-yards. These twe points block the way from the Raltic against any naval power al- most as securcly as the forts Kiiid Bahr and Chanak Kalessi hlocked the Tonglish ships at the Dardanelles, Re- val is situated on a sharp bay at .the northeastern gulf shore of Fstonia Sveabors fortress stands just before Helsingfors, the capital of Finland. neek of | thinly-flung the | ! tacked im- “There are hundreds of small, thickly-wooded islands strewn over the coastal waters around Helsingfors. It is upon a of seven of such nds. which are larger than taeir neighbors, that the almost impregna- ble Sveaborg fortress is built. More- | over, small redoubts and batteries are | well concealed in several of the out- lving islands, Which surround, like a skirm line, the fort- < near the coast “Many a vain seaward shattered against aroup t h re attack has Sveborg’s defenses, | in by-gone davs; and, in recent vears. | Russia has brougat the strength of | the place up to 20th centuy require- | ments. Tt said that more than 1,000 guns are monnted here: and sev- | eral thousand soldiers are quartered in the fortress even in times of peace. During the Crimean war the allies at- this point violently and with- out success. The story goes that Eng- | lisch guns alone hurled more taan a thousand tons of shot and shell into | the fortress, almost without apparent | cffect. Tt has fallen only once, and | then bribery is credited with victory | and not the force of arms. It rendered {o the Russians without effort at defense, surrendering at same time that garrison of | thousand men laid down their arms | and turned their formidable de- fenses, the whole country of Finland.” is sur- | an | the | its six | over arve hired. Tt must, of course, be re- garded as a condition precedent that the girl in service shall be more than reconciled to working in that pacity. There is certainly no lack of ap- preciation on the part of a thorough- v competent maid. There is far mors than appears in the joke hooks (o the art of being a good cook, or a “jewel of a maid.” Dances Tife Away. (Philadelphia North American.) Foolish e lives only one day, and spends the greater part of it dancing. You've doubtless heen a one of their dances held over stream .on a warm summer's eve- You've seen the insects in leaping up and down in eps and intricate figures. insect! a ning. swarms, fancy s You've attended the dance of the May | flies. There is a general supposition that all May flies live only for a day. As a matter of fact they will live several days, if the atmosphere isn’t too dry. Then again they may survive only through a single night. Tven this impending fate cannot stop them from sancing. This brief-lived characteristic, how- ever, applies only to the winged exist- ence of the insect. Before they grow wings they pass through several stages from the larvae, which live in water, through several moults and transfor- mations. So while it is a May fly only for a short time, it exists for longer time, and perhaps we can par don it If it dances during the brief period it lives in the air The fly has two pairs of wings, one { Mich. pair much larger than the other, and two or three long, bristle-like tail Its mouth is small’and soft and not made for eating. The May time to cat—he’s too busy dancing. Whose White Coal (Waterbury TIs T2 Democrat.) of navigable the sum of kind now in According The Ktreams water power greater than all the power of cvery use in the United States. to Gifford Pinchot, the Shiclds hill, now hefore the senate, would zive to the power interests the use of this water power, without any compensa- tion. Bills similar to this were vctoed by Roosevelt and Taft. Why thould they today? This is no pirtisan matter. 1t has nothing to do with onc’s political preferences. Iaven the advocates of peacc-at-any price must admit that the kind of pre- paredness represented by conser tion of national resources is wisc, Franklin Lanc and Gifford Pinchot both opposed o (he passage this bill. Says Mr. Pinchot: “The water power men charge that con- servation hampers development. The admirable recent report of Secretary Houston shows, on'the contrary, tha the most rapid development is in the tional Forests, where conservation is best enforced. On the other hand, 120 public service corporations own and are holding undeveloped and out of use an amount of water power cqual to four-fifths of all there is de- veloped and in use by all the public service corporations in the whole United States.” Whose water power | < this of the navigable streams, any- how? Or of the National Forests, which the Ferris bill would also give into the hands of the power intorcsts- Is it our white coal? And our chil- éren’s? Or is it the exclusive prop- erty of a fow grabber If the ordi- nary citizen docsn’t watch oui—and watch his senator—it's easy to it's soon going to bhe! pass arc whose property MUSTN'T Woman COWS GET DRUNK. Alleges Milk That Eat Ensilage Con- Michi Animals n of | tains Alcohol. (Mich.) Free (Lansing Dispatch Detroit | Press.) | Michigan's preading COWS. The, prohibition It has now movement is reached the propaganda in favor abstinence from alcoholic commodi ties among Holsteins and Jerse) came to the office of the State dui and food commissioner in the for of a letter to Commissiones Jam: Helme from a woman at Portland She informed the commic sioner that cows were becoming i toxicated cating fermented ensi and that their milk was injurious 1o} babies, in that it created a taste for alcohol. She asked that an order pro- of total fly has no | hibiting silage to Helme replicd feeding ensilage vears and has vet farmers cattle from feeding be issued that he had to cattle for {0 sec a cow made drunk on it or milk which could honestly be said to be alcoholic as a result of ensilage feed. en- | been | Johnny's Twin Brother. the office manager, the staff, and ‘Johnny,” said “{here’s a vacancy on | I rather thought of giving the place | {n your twin brether.” “Twin | brother, sir!” echoed the office boy. | “Yes, the one I saw at the football | mdtch when you were attending your | grandmother’s funeral last Wednes- | day,” said the chief, smiling grimly. | “Oh-—ah—er—um—yes,” said John- | ny. “I'll—er—go and fetch him!" | | “That's right,” sald the manager, | nd don’t you come back till you've { found him! Johnny is still looking \for his twin brother.—Rochester Times. Of Those Who Walk Alone. the New Burton, in York Mail.) carth, (Richard i Evening are on mos high, lose their own, reft and lonely, Women there sweet and Who and walk be ? | | Loving that lost heart until they die, Loving one only it And so they never see heside them grow is like at | Dept. wide price range, 22c, | cream, | LACE | or 'phone No. NEW BRITAIN'S BUSIEST BIG STORE “ALWAYS RELIABLE™ THE NEW SPRING SEASON’S DRAPERIES of Drapery Now Drapery selection the city Floor Largest erials in our 3rd and MARQUISETTES cream and 10c, 15c, 17c, 35¢, 39¢. SCRIMS AND Shown in white 25¢, 29¢, FIGURED CURTAIN MADRAS Priced 19¢, 25¢, 29¢, Beautiful new designs in also pleasing 15¢ Yard new colored fects. QUISETTE Neat lace edged cream and beige, priced One Special Lot of rims in white and beige price 10¢ yard. effects 25¢ yard. lace NEW CRETONNES 2150, designs 17¢ 20¢ and Priced 1 15¢, Smart coloring over-draperies ete pillow covers hoxes, SILKOLINES At Yard and Plain fisured OVER DRAPERIES In materials green priced plain and figured brown, blue and 9c, 39c, 50, B old yard. 5¢ Yard ot ed Fixtures Do Drapery Rod See our Rods Double special Rods 25¢ complete Ma displayed McMILLAN’S beige 19¢, white and ef- EDGED SCRIMS AND MAIR- white, edged to 45¢ Yard for utility n | BALL FRINGES. LACE EDGINGS Drapery WINDOW SHADES > Upward size shade made to order. 21 and | ments to have your | after before the spring rush Any make shades 199-201-203 MAIN STREET. NOTICE OF RLIN B Britain ORDER OF DISTRICT OF | Court New A. D, 1916, Estate of of the town district, John K. Tey of New Brita deceased | Children, whose coming breath of flowers; i | Consoled by subtler loves the | know | Through childless hours. | angels ! Good deeds they do; they comfort and | they bless In duties others put off till the mor- row; Their look it balm, their touch is ten- derness To all in sorrow Betimes the world smiles at them, as ‘twere shame naiden zuise, vouth's departed: God's Book they name— “The faithful-hearted.’ i | | 1 | | | | | This long .after But in bear another Iaithful in life, and faithful unto death, h souls, in sooth, illume with lustre splendid That glimpsed, glad Jand wherein, the | vision saith, Barth's wrongs are cnded | Upon the application of 1llen Reynolds, praying that as trustes will of John ¥ be author der the of Reynold ceased, she ma zed coll estate convey and located empowered terest in real Britain file more fully ORDERED, he heard and determin bate Office, in New Britain, in district on the 4th day of March 1916, at o'clock in o fore and that notice be of the dency of said and time and place publishing in appear That saic A ) given application of hearing thereon, this order once in arrange- looked 0. McMILLAN HEARING. Probase New said pen the Py some newspaper having a circulation in said and by order on the town in said district, and not to all parties, sonally or by mailing to prepaid postage a copy of and return make fo this Court notice given. Attest BERN district of this post in posting the of a public New by either each this e ARD F. GAFFNEY, Juc Why don’t you make waffles more often? It’s hard to think of anything more appetiz- ing than crisp, golden TOW browned waffles with LE'S LOG CABIN CANE MAPLE AND SYRUP Makes Home, *‘Swast’’ Home, Indeed Try the recipe below. Cabin Syrup now. Order Log Always sold in log - cabin -shaped cans — your guaranteeof the flavored and pus The Towl 10c, 25¢c and larger sizes most delicately rest of syrup. e Maple Products Co. TENY e Main Of St. Paul, Min: LOG CABIN Refineries and fices: Log Cabin Waffles Three eggs beaten light, one pint sweet milk, 8 teaspoons baking powder, 8 cups flour, 1-8 cup of melted butter. If batter is too stiff, add little more milk. Fill irons 2-8 full coy sl Eritain gtving pet orde