New Britain Herald Newspaper, March 1, 1916, Page 6

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BRITAIY HERALD LD PUBI, SHING COMPANY, Propitetors: (deily (Sunday excepted) at 4:15 p. m. $€ Herald Buflding, 67 Church St. Post Office at New Britaln Cliass ' Mail Matter. d'at’the ~Second f8d by carrier 10 any 45 Cents a Week. 65 Cents a Month Jriptions for paper to be sent by mail DRy#bla in advance. 60 Cents & - Month $7.00:a vear. only profitable advertising medium 8 city. Circulation books and press Toom always open to advertisers. part of the eity in ferald will ba found on sale at Hota- & News Stand, 42nd St. and Broad- Ay, New Tork City; Board Walk, e city. an1 Harttord” depots i TELEPHONFE CALLS osn Ofice : 2l Rooms. GRESSMEN CALLED TO SHOW i THEIR COLORS BW that Congress vered the fildent Wilson's i8¢ on Rules urging | ‘the resolutions ol upon armea ng patrioti that making 1a be the of ion. Congress-stands befc of the fonsternation he floor | was reflected somewhat shock attending letter has from to the Com- anaarly vote with' regard to merchantmen and m to order, it would a clean Dreas hest way out A bad nation a sore dilemma which took place of the House last week to some de- enate has given both rise to in of of to believe United States divided against it- that the Congress is not with the sident, that White hse does will be sanctioned people or the Congress. * So, ge has been done. ¥ variou country impressions, and abroad. Because other led L statesmen on the side have been of the water the pd as people a house whatever not the ny reat It now © Congress to show its hand. The", dent, has h is i re the - NEW, BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, island becomes as inuch a de- D¢ of the United States as w We finances, the Hendency s but his works will probabl among those “ba in the olden days. are to of Hait domestic police and foreign relations. In addition to th® our has secured the right, of intervention ! when conditions of almost any warrant such acuon intellectual treats of James ~ assume control afforde (uaaint master the En mavernment: sugee. Henry is noy remains to be seen he sort Works will live The life of the ]\!\HPCU)!‘H(P hd‘# been fixed vears “fil force’ for, another of ten vears if, for specific reasons piesent- ed by either high contrafling party, the purpose of this treaty has not | been fully accomplisifed.” From what has $happen®&l: in Haiti even within the past year.—it is ~ Here like * must then March h: Spring” lanth. Iying. at twenty is a ten years in “further, in and, term be it - ND FANC Germany | Congress is —New York not vet World. Guropeans refuse to raids, however military value. not long since Rear Admiral Caperton was sent lea down to squelch a revolution,—it will | successful, take more than two periods of i each to teach thlese people proper mode of government. the ten the rem- year | A 2 | to | feel better if they could where they would get many be victorious | ehy present condition of their country's revenue and finances, and, set forth the preamble of the ! traty, “to carry out plans for the 2co- nomic development and the republic The job is going IR, o (e emim be a mighty one and because of the | “""° dyes e R oIk | racial characteristics of the | there it might be a as in A veracious corresponden the Kaiser's mustache as prosperity of | black.” War paint, or ju to There arc only five Repu didates for Governor of M present time, which leads s that Maine will not go next fall by more than tochester Democrat and people good idea to send | down some of the leading negro cdu- the United States. better with the cators from would fit They in proposed scheme and succeed where white men might fail. Booker Washington have welcomed such for of his Zood T many persons the love of money evil,” for he took in is the load would an op- portunity some pupils. | a out of that Albany city Argus, for his THE CAMPAIGN IS ON. At midnight of submarines last the commanders to the Teu- tonic powers looked at their watches and remembered the from their That marked belonging The Czar the opening of and the event cance, by prominent Duma, to the emancipatic serfs by Alexander II. in possibillties | dently these members | cians.—s was present the Duma is likened in instructions in respective admiralties. the opening of the new submarine campaign, the of which have been discussed up and down, pro and -con, backward and | o T forward in all neutral countries for | yrecident in (he the past of his letter. responc manly an The month From now on the ! spirit < callggfor the cards. Tome: new. on A}fi\musl be some Iy in ¥ ngton. Those igressmen who have attempted 'to ore the Constitution of the United ftes and usurp ;the powers of the cutive will be called upon' to take ¥ medicine. Those who have in- ied the wrath of all true' Ameri- people seemingly attaching nselyes what looks' like out- huveia chance to {Qn the toZ# of stigma that over their shoulders. ' Those _ would desert all the traditions rights under the law of jons must cringe hefore the search t the President has crawl for cover. times h by to foni it American thrown on pm, his or is_the ;ima for a general Se-clenn ng. ft\r’ setting things in or.. 1t doubtful if the men o £ anythigg: their is very been to withstandingd, i black agAikd « wvrath of a wi. in some onal yainglory. to po- bther tever was done ent can be atiribu surc. to pers il ambition. to 1 It Bearts were allowed to run sundry in- {ganses. was unfortunate 1way cadl But now the chance hi ta t, up flingzs that hive been created. amends® #6" set things the ake to misundzr And b the vote the President wants il ave been cast it is hoped that of wha look elear fore "wjll be no _abridgement iuterigin rights. that fith gluttonous ey b division will @t America shall 1 the glorious our forefathers. And it is to he believed thigw those s upon the spails be disappointed and adhere strictly to hopes and ambitions i I - hio® cither ot dFvesert. ent .at the Fayenly President's & or cowardice, or Dol nder. foreign favor, insipi MJ] on {8t now stand up and fight i so, reveal the reasons for on; or they back v\ way to the might of right. hiter is the easier way i ro any sinister motives mixed he: whole affair it were better ever come or or 1 nee, have brought the crisis and. their and The in must down and ap they the surface. Ameri to ‘a | { ana | there | in | whole affair is lifted out of the realm | # of probabllity ool senductiolithe forele estate of fact. happens f fore i‘l')]\‘ :‘r::;:?mm'rlm:n::: rlv: from now’ on must be dealt with | its leaders. They should the merits of the 1t must said that the opening of the new cam- and attains Whatever on case. be | and conspiracies dent absolute as New York and give surances to Times paign is very auspicious, there are twelve huge inasmuch as ocean liners | either in the war zone or itsr immediate vicinity. of it this would that another be recorded however, hovering On the give cause for If Denmark three little in is willing islands she the West Indies at fair | should buy them. They { our sphere of influence and | | e face P alarm, & Lusitania incident Oon latest fear might thought, from Berlin gives assurances that :he new campaign will be cording to the rules of recognized in- ternational law and if that is the case there should be no immediate need Instead of flying off the is the duty of all peoples to hold their something action, be dangerous in the hand great power not yvet posses: ritory in the Western h They are worth more [ any other country be used as a base tack us or to Canal.—New second the report to unless -t from wi command th York Comme conducted for worry. handle, it in this nation to Growing Old. |a A A horses, | A little more tired at close « happens | then to appoint- wait until little less blame; little more name; s0 we end, | Where time i blend. ready to s which warrants and leave the matter to the men A care for a ed to take care of such things. And are nearing the WHAT DOES HE and eternity To get White House of ernments. MEAN? Woodrow Wilson of the the out is one of main ob- | A-little less care for bonds jects many men and many Zov- | A broader And view and a saner a little more love kind: A dittle more careful of wh | And so we are faring a-dow Some would have him would Ge they w. thrown for out tonight. nor wait the morrow, Perkins, however. is more ate. He complete consider Pr then the But following would let A little more vouth; LA dittle A dittle | A little And so And pa his term he | * love for the would resort to the peditious method set less zeal for more charity in our less thirst for the ¢ we are folding ou ssing in silence at cl forth in his own Janguage: be possible to White ea how it would Wilson out of March ol he asked Mr, before have been wet House H 1 said If { the | A little more A little leisure to sit & more real the thing: A little bit nearer to those | With visions of those long dead; so we next said it could done, I the way: was doubted. Col. and the word to the capitals you think g what Here Roosevelt is sent | And of | the “is elected on Nov. the nations are the place know. jover cables S ihan To the living do that others will the White turn e much Ovster | Kaiser { thought they or to House? little tear: And we years hook more liughter, a will their eyes (o hall have told oun to divine (?) Mr. Perkins “Do thinik will give much It jusi what very difficult the Honorable is said, are closed and t are | means when he as you And we a part dead Thrice happy say others White the Kaiser thought to or the House?" ‘We then it —on ss today of the Civil there is fraught Presi- vatohing Er has since its Congre: the move as éve " Bvery is terrible it Wis Bed-a brave body. The pig§ move' commands ven the-enemy's Ut “igg this Furdp@fmay know from then on that khe United of ek of its President, el its flag. possibilities and to be in- such on shows himself Tousnedg re and if he wins man to chadlenge meve au camp, fight every nation in States America stands i its traditions, OPPORTUNITY FOR NEGROES, For the Wilson inistration eriticism ad- of a once during there is no P'resident for bringing iy laces the T ey plac of Haiti under. American ratified States about little re- ublic T Senate Treaty wherehy pumes all the d Quver that revolution-infested land and arey unanimously the 5 of g protectorate the United as- ti | promises to place it on a livable plane. f Undér the terms of the Haitian treaty it know that much thought is now being | « — |4tien, t83the White House in the cap- | “others and re all fathers to the wi live way because he h, “—Springficld nations. 2 A Confecticut (Waterbury Harey C vitle 1 Wasiington "e | meree throuzn "‘, W impre: | resentation strong the bhest of fo { Another thing which Mr. even more significant tha is represented as saving ab Wilson is gaining in the confidence of congress an | Smith's opinion thix stan to | growing strength in the c admits weakness in mog | ¢hanges of mind, which . ( uncertain matter to pl: What- [is jnctiped to feel that something 7 every re hing | thoughts a Obse Dges Mr. Wilson will that Americ the Perkins mean out of to sell -out once Smith, der, the editc who Chamb, is gotten way.” it the; natior [ busy be easier v ag convention, that Connec congress foreign power? must that, for all attempts to Wilson have so far failed. some comes sion in is as of fate men Tt a strange tri that makes the little is. things do seem the same token loses the of happened great and by in This Whatever wonderful things a maze mis- apprehension. Henry James, he turned hand ridicule and buffoonery. fooled his did than n ¢ his to in ultra-seviousn with time for ever he aay on Suines changes and his developmend and more imporiant of experience, Who with - great mar people’ in Washi not of he more personal is 3 something where 1 rely as comi amusement anything else. the 3 This editor talked, formed who 'is political stamp of greatness was taken from the safe and immediately af- fixed thereto. He Jeykll-Hyde of letters. sook his native land for Great Britain public was a verifable | Because he for- students who the shape of something ovi membe: 1861, are g pringfield Republic; | repress and restrain such efforts, | A little more zest in the day. for going wher of the has his My “President’s L] has been looked upon with disdais; | vy live long the this enjoy d nglish by ian- T ow long his dead. are coming Somebody {18 has invaded Congress.,but another Belgium. rn that air are Louis Times. The little countries of Kurope would | yin red | off should Ger- —Berkshire Eagle, be as nt describes “suspiciously subtle of st a onopoly Herald. blican can- aine at the yme to fear tepublican 100,000. Chronicle. Billy Sunday must have convinced a Trenton that root of all of root. in er $32,000, ampaign. person at n Tuesday its signifi- s of the of the vi- zo0d politi- an. m 1 a danger " to. the patriotic of attempting to emharass the president n relations ready been e minds of resolve to plots the presi- that effect ) sell the esses in price we are within they would s of some sed of ter emisphere. 1s than to hey are to hich to at- e Panama reial. f day: little less anxious to have our way;: cold and brother Journey’s meet and and gold; s of old; mind, all man- at we n the way e friends of established truth; views, laily news; tents away ose of da ind dream, s unseen;: ahead. loved and e all nust may never little more increasing he prayers countless e soul can passed my Republican rver. an.) o of been of Coni- back with ticut's rep- almost s rmer days. Smith says, n what e ove, is that espeet and d in Mr. ds for a ountry. He frequent wakes it an him, “but Wilson he in the time \ period e can ounted on. an and ny Ji-in- ngton, , And wilson’s 18 from met of no | | yard he ¥ ‘X/EDNESDAY, MARCH 1, 1916., ‘The Popular Authoress. (Irom Judge.) over there looking lady *© going thoress!” tnuns our well-known an- hantly stated the landlord of the Petunia tavern. contributions are printed in the newspapers all over the country. jis an old maid. Her name i | Clessaphine Clatter.” “Strange, but 1 do not | having heard anything about said the gtranger, “What does write—poetry 2" ope; testimonials. She has been cured of ‘most all’the heirs that hu man flesh is ill to, as the feller’said. “That strin by big She Miss 1) she New "Haven's Best'Answer. (New York World.) | Only two men were in a position { to know with certainty whether dan- | ger signals were set against the New Haven local which crashed into the j stalled express near Milford; why, if | set. they were run by, and why, if by and with 700 feet of clear >w ahead to the express, there was faiiure to check the speed of the lo- cal enough to prevent a violent col- lision. These two men were on the locomotive of the local and they are dead. To these questions the New Haven company may never he able to © tablish satisfactory answers. Byt the New Haven is in a position to do something better. It can provide safeguards which will make a repeti- tion of any such accidents on its four- track line practically impossible The contract of this city with Interborough respecting thre subways provides: “All signals, wher cessal by the commission, cquipped with. devices for cally stopping any train danger signal.” This is not requiring of borough the impossible. It ing for the new subways only what has been tried out on the old sub wa th so great a demonstration of effectiveness that there is no rec- ord of a collision from running b) these signals and no record of their lure to stop a train where for any reason the driver had become disabl- ed. Nothing but the cost stands in the way of the New Haven’s installation of automatic trip signals on its elec- trified four-track line, and it in no position to ¢ount the cost. t the new, deemed ne- shall be automati- passing the Inter- is requir- is The Modern Apollo. (Meriden Journal.) Therc have been so many perfect women discovered in the country, so many rivals of Venus that we are | glad to observe that the Philadelphia Public Ledger has taken notice of the perfect man. The National chant Tailors has dragged to the light of day the symmetry the captain of Harvard's swimming team as comporting in every particu- lar with the measurements of a fault- less figure, such as that which stands {in the window to be the waxen cyno- sure of the sidewalk throng or rous envy by its irreproachable propor- tions in a street car lithograph or a magazine advertisement. It takes more than ten tailors make the Prince Charming or Brushwood Boy and to give world the clder brother of Little Fauntleroy. Meanwhile. the notoriety seems to find the Man somewhat ill at e. It his fault that the gvmnasium meas- urements failed with those of the Apollo Belvidere or Michael Angelo’s David. In the frosty dawn that breaks over the deforested Harvard wakes and finds himself fa- of Mer- blushing of Association to the the Lord sudden Perfect s is not mous. He is the target of ecugenic cor- respondence upon far and near. While Harvard's impececable scholars languish with their green shades over their eyes in the rays of the mid- night lamp this young Greek zod dis- covers anew that beauty is its own excuse for being, and finds that tn look like a life insurance calendas assures him his niche in the sartorial Hall of Fame. pal Life in the Country. (Waterbury Democrat.) It has been said that the tide ! prosperity starts from the farm | that agriculture must always take the place of the most important voca- { tion because it produces the food on i which mankind subsi This is self- { evident. but perhaps it is less mani- !fest that in the artificialities of the i great town are the seeds of degener- acy and in the more normai life of {he country the forces of renewal or reinvigoration. “If you will observe,” a prominent educator has been quot- ed as saying, family of which three or four generations have lived in the city, vou will observe that the last generation has in a meas run seed. Degeneration is the foe civiliz tion will have to fight in the future. Country life is the weapon to meet it with In other words, not only is agriculture the bas of commerce and industrial enterprise but country life is the foundation of every virile civilization. The Iinglish have long since recognized this. Nobody permanently in their great terrible London who can afford to live out of it. the more prosperous classes spend- ing three-fourths of their timo the country. We have found ‘W in America, Loo. It has long garded as desirable to live a hour's ride out from our great and every wealthy try home where his family spends at least half the year. Dr, Oliver Wendell, Holmes, in his remarkable novel, ‘“Elsie Venner,’ took the ground that city people are stronget and healthier than country people, but perhaps this was because his practice was among the rich and he was thinking of wealthy city (who enjoy both town and countr: in comparison with the small New Kngland farmer. Nowadays, while poor farmer bo& anll girls are rest- lessly secking the towns, being from monotony and isolation calthy city people are crowding more and moie into the country, the one tide heing now perhaps as great as the other. The tide to the country seeks not merely health of body but to return from artificiality to nature, o' escape N¢ is ure | lives i 5 0wt been ve- half eitics, { w “Her | i remember and | man builds a coun- | | folk g 3ulgarzans Pin Thezr “ shington : is the iwéfl; to which the their “Dedeagatch vi-’n the ulgari hopes for Sea of commercinl Aegean pin rich an, some brighest future,” accord- ing War geography just prepared by the Natidgal Geographic | society. “A free outlet t8"the Aegean | and the Mediterranean was something long coveted by Bulgarian statesmen, who felt that their foreign trade would first begin with their acquire- ment of port upon the opem se: In Dedeagatch, the pattiotic natives see.a future New York, a Hhikan and the possession OF 1}).\ appears to them one Of, fhe benefits of their war with Bulgarian products frém of roses to srain and hides. ate leave for the world's central markets in Bulgarian boats from a Bulgarian port “Holding their a | | to a study in a a L.ondon, harbor areatest Tur! attar soon to ey. port so important, it is small wonder that the Bulgarians felt the loss of the railway, through Adrianople, which connects Dede zatch with the interior of their coun- try, to be disaster that must be made good at the earliest possible moment and at all hazard. The re- cently reported cession of territory hy the Ottoman empire restore to Bul- zaria the land through which ihis railway runs, and restores to the | sturdy peasant nation its ardent hopes for the age to come, With their small strip of seashore along the Aegean and with an export city at Dedea- gatch, with its communications safe upon home soil, the Bulgarian feels that his country has become more than a Balkan power: it has become a Mediterranean power, a member of { | | | the fam future as wi “Dedeagal Gulf town under to captur f the be; Al formerly of Enos, | was | the i healthy | when | hetween | Sea | eastern point of the Guif of Enos, !the sout river. huts, st roadstead zrow populatic confident tered int First of its ra it with ( and sout coastal “The i all al were tion and | farians. and ship hands. their Constan 1896 place, s | natural however; [ narbor, stead, port.” it mer among Salc mostly bre ra port Surope, a state with a 4 as the oceans. 55 situated upon the bout ten miles rorth estuary. The little k<! career as a seaport amid I1, when it began e ##uch of the wade that had been done through the which lies upon the south- on bank of the’ Maritza years ago, Dedeagatch ely a cluster of fishermen's raggling back from an open 1. Since then, a new town 0 up. small, with only 4.000 but alert, progressive, everal faclors have, en- o this promise of Dedeagatch. its advantages, is that ilway connections, whicl link ‘onstantinople, Sofia, Bolrgass niki. Further, its rival to h. Inbs. succumbed to un- clinfate and to the shifting of ndbars. nhabitants of this harbor city, ong the coasts of the Aegean, Greeks up to the occupa- administration by the Bul-~ Greek commission houses pers had most of its trade in The opening of the tinople-Saloniki Railway in yught rapid prosperity to the ome of which lost again ilway connections were made the interior and the Black of Bourgas. The city is the outlet of the Maritza valley, and, an unsheltered, will probably Bulgaria's first B hern Forty m, wa open road- become a rich Mediterranean a the nerve-racking atmosphere of | urban civilization and go back to the | first principles. as it were, which are } found only ncar to nature’'s “heart.' In the old saying, God made the | country and man made the town. there is recognition of the fact that the fountain of a nation’s®life, of its | strength and its virtue, is to be found j in the wide free spaces rather than | in the cramped confines of brick and | mortar, although it is true that intel- ligence gravitates toward and finds its chief opportunity .in the populous centers. ISugene Iteld once said that you will find “a streak of the country” somewhere in every success- ful man. At any rate, most great Americans were country-bred. While every third or fourth generation of the city may not have “in a mecasure run to seed,” the virtue that will re- new a family’s strength seems:to be lacking in the hot-house town. Ce - tainly the lowest types in our civili- zation are not in the country but in the slum districts of our zreatest cities. Even the poor and struggling farmer is in closer touch with truly | humanizing influences, notwithstand- ing the fact that he suffers from lone- lines, and ceaseless drudgery is in- separable from his lot. As for the prosperous farmer with his labor- saving machinery, aytomobile, tele- phone and rural mail delivery, he represents one of the most fortunate clas in American life, though, of course. the ideal life is that which is divided between a city and country home. Now Talking of Recol (Meriden What is record for gunnery, was cruiser San recently. Record.) declared accurate made by to be a world's nd rapid the armored Diego at target practice | According to despalches number 11 six-inch gun ht perfect hits out of eight seconds, firing at a range vards. The crew of number lineh gun, also scored cigh in as many attempts in 48 the range being 1,600 yards There is something decidedly ulating about this revival of publish- ing records. It is something of which heard little that we had | actually forgotten that there were cuch things as records in connection with the United States navy. Secretary Daniels, for reasons best { known to himself, has seemed to think the navy could exist and im- prove without amything to live on. There was no stimulus to endeavor, no spirit of competition with naval of other nations. Appropria- were cut and the what's-the-use atmosphere could not be erced. Since the prepared issue took on such substantial form the navy assumed position of vital portance and even pussy-footed Daniels has realized the necessity doing something which will vindi him in the eyes of the public. The people like to hear of the maui- of records at target unless all ns fail much more of this future than in the \ scored shots 2 of 1,800 14, three- ils ey seconds ef | in | | stini- | we have S0 has a im- Mr. for ate | wraciice and they will hear of thing in the ing past Penalized Short-Cuts. mind about like the mect of Making whether the first like reading You may quently don't) { curate impression, of suspense, the { of surmise into | ferever. vour vou will instant you the “end (thou secure hut peo- m or haol e a h vyou fairly the unfolding it lost thrill | § all gradual certainty, STEAMER AIE With il From Stem Loaded She Blazes to Stern. 12:47 1 er Spiraca, from while discharging 6il in caught fire last still burning along of the ship. Manchester, ~The British Philadelphia, | barrels here, {The firetis | full length p = l I tons net, ieft Manchester, : 78 The Spirae 07 Philadelphia Feb. 5 for rriving there on Feb. 2 it fire | | much | ever CONGRESS TO GET ARMY REPORT SOON Military to Be S Com Wash fense le, Progress dicted t preparedness fore the The 1 gan tod: ure ten fine'-wor morrow, days for report tc By ag oral national pre | organiza putting 0 a joi senate it po next JUSTICE toche: liam k. the cou On an snleen 2 unti develop 1y D) Amste Vienna ia visit to HIVE TA IPriend tor Benja from W b congre: | Washing siciar rec phy HORL!C IFeh. oper: D ubmitted Next Week—Final mittee Report Tomorrow. 1.—National dc- rapid s pre- the ington, Mar. gislation has made such in committee that it w oday the army part program would house and senate next week house milita committee its final review of the me: agreed of he- 1y tatively upon. T nmittee vote will be taken to- but it will require several Chairmam. Fiay to prepare a accompany- the bill. recing to phsért only wvision forf federalizing guard in fits regular army re tion bl leaving the task of this lefgislation in final shape nt,conference committee, the military committee has made hle bring the measure out we ) a gen- the to elk. WERNER DEAD. N..Y. March 1.—Wil- Werner, associate justice ster, rt today. of appeals, died here Justice Werner under ation for the removal of his and was on the road to recov- 1 a féw days ago when pleurisy ed MPERORS HOBNOB, London. - Mar. 1, announced from Ferdinand of Bul- that ity a rdam, via m.-—It is that King 1= ivea on i in Emperor Fran LY’S ILLNESS KES GRAVE TUR ls in Indiana of United Sena- min F. Shively received word 1ington that his condition is than ‘when he = reached He is being treated in =a ton- hospital for cancer. His ns express littie hope he will over his full health. orse and GET K’S | THE ORIGINAL MALTED MILK - Cheap substitutes cost YOU sa price. ASK FOR port ! despite its unfavorable | ( of Program Is Expected | went McMILEAN’S NEW BRITAIN'S BUSIE®ST BIG STORE “ADWAYS RELIARDE" The New Spring Wash Fabrics Bring Cheer to s Qur Store After a long cold come these beautiful for early Spring and 1 | winter ‘we wels new creations Summer wear. | FLOWERED SILK MARQUISETTES At 59¢ Yard REGOR Stripes TS Plalds, IMPORTED MACG In checks, : yard. and SILKS at 39c SHIRTINC Blous | WASHABLE 5 hirt® yard. For and 1o S9c¢ POPLINS yard. MERCERIZED Yard wide, at 29c¢ | SHII and ITING MADRAS White ¢ at 25¢ yard IMPORTED GINGHAMS 15¢ 25¢ ANDERSOY'S I'AST coLon inch wide 2 at yard, angl “BATE At Our assortment larger now than, at the year: every time GINGHAMS Yard of 1%e ginghams other time of bought some colors, is ago, assuring fast AND CLOTH At 12%4¢ Yard recommend it Suits, Blousc TUMBLE 1 ROUGH chil- Dress Mothers for dren’ Wash ete. IES AT Y DEPT. Cuses NEW NOVE oun JEWIL Vanity 1d plated 19¢ o oxidi at alsc “Dorin silver and BAGS to § GATE TOP MESH The new fish mesh each. Gold ;and Silver Vanities, Coin _Purses, something 25¢ and 50 cach. Bead Chains and ported novelties, special and 50c/each. EatiDrops are in vogue, here at 23¢ and 19¢ each, different, Necklages values the mlewest shown 50c pair. D. McMILLAN i 201-203 MAIN STREET. { 199 WOMEN'S WORKING CONDITIONS On dnvestigation Plants, To Carry Munition March who American in York, Astor, i | | | New 1.—Mrs Ava Willing sailed for Ilurope the Holland-Amerioa Nieuw vesterday on | Line steamship | will ufflertake the working co ployed in the Amsterdam, of ditions of women em- muhition factories of the belligerent nations as a part of a campaign to promote their welfare. Mrs. Astor has undertaken this work in behalf of the welfare department. of the National Civie Federation. She carried letters trom official af the American. Federation of Labor t officials of “tive British - Trade Unigk Congress and of the General Fede | tion of Trades 1 in Lofdon. gy The campaign result'in part of reports that wom emploved in the munition "factories abroad are working under wditions which [ seriously menace health the health of their descendants an investigation + is and HENRY SIEGEL RE-ARRESTIED, End 'en Months’' Confincment and Is Into Custody. 1.—Hens and depart- whose tem Monroe county today, was re- by Sherift county D ivingston Taken N York merchant sentence in penitentiary expired arrested this morning George Root® of Livingston issued yesterday Wheeler v hanxker IRochest Mar. Siegel, New ment store months’ o H on o warrant trict Attorney county, Siegel orge A taken before Benton to arrange was Justice for bail. BRANDE) THE CA Firm Testifies half at Washington, shington, ‘Mawh -1, —Edward lennen of Beoston, member D. Brandels’ @w firm g again today before the schaic ‘.n;?. mittee investigating thedfitness of M Brandeis to be 'a memler of the su- preme court % Mr, McClennen is giving'his explan- ation the various charges asainst Mr. Brandeis which the committec s inguiring into. Today - Phew witness continucd his statemnent regarding e United Shoe Maehinery, company ters which hc began Member of in His Be. w Met Louis ot | 21 RATLROAD DEA New Haven,? March ‘f: tatgl Afty-cight Accidental connecticut during the L ¥ebruary aceording records, tyentv-one were ohlite road, ten of them being cauged ix \||and wreck. The number: G Tent iths in the state difime [ 1uary 1was unofficially- rec orded, o | nst 78 in the presedim There \Were three homicldesi suicides\l« the lis / s aga

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