New Britain Herald Newspaper, March 4, 1916, Page 6

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[EW BRITAIN ‘THIZ BLULE AND THE GRAY. HERALD | ! In the honor list compiled yesterday i BLISHING COMPANY, Proprietors [Sued dafly (Sunday excepted) at {:15 p. m. At Herald Building, 67 Church St. Post Office at Class Mail HERALD P in the Senate, made up of the names | of those who stood behind the Presi- | dent, | nity who resolved to uphold the dig- and honor of the the votes of every man repre- ! senting the North and the South, with two nation, there htored at as the Second New were Matter. Britain carrier exceptions,—Gallinger of New Cents a W bacriptions for paper 1o payabls in ad Month § o any ek. 63 part of the ity Cents a Month. | be sent by mail 80 Conts a Hampshire York. the the and O'Gorman of New These two men chose to make that mpathy one rent in manifests of s North 1| War days and which reached its July, 1913, when t of the blue and the gray ass | i unity o only the city room Circulation hooks and press | always open to advertisers. tween — C ® Herald will be found on sale at Hota- | Hng's News Stand, {2nd St and Rroad- | climax "fi.‘/. New Tork City; Board Walk. Atlantic Cit and Hartrford depot. in bond existing be- the and the South since in veterans embled at slebrate the of 3ecause of the old half to of one in history. the South Gettysburg, Pa., | fiftieth greatest battles the North and SATD. ys enemies century TELEPHO! ome Rooms a versary B .. inniversa Jiitorial NE CALLS, SOMEBODY Gore were more than a because to what would ago. these it Senator said that il him that somebody said that he ard i at ew somebody is mortal of con- know what engage in combat, know the severance to all grown somebody say that somebody the Union mean there was somebody that Pres be who said they have closer until at th somebody cerned, o of n said that thi fany. said somebody | Wil- thing e Gt by day. moment the most loyal blood in the nation can be found in these sections. it would a good There is good red American blood in the Western coun- try of did fighi- nation So went to war with Ger- told the trouble Senator And Gore that to B ot too: but with the exception head: : at came to of which goes to show | Some few commonwealths they mean thing. it is to repeat | MOt have the heaviest part in the ing Dbetween the states, and quently the Civil War did not leave iie cor somehody sald i that o drift? els get | i lasting somebody somebody said You impression it did in some others. The people of the South will UNGING THE MIENT FIRE DEPART- | Dever forzet the Civil War and all the CP TO DATE. sacrifices their sons went through for The people of North will always remember the ter- ta lost cause. town; a full- of New ihe has Britain is no longer a reached man’s No than estate rible conflict fought baitles And North the frightful the and dzed city. better the evidence - A to preserve on. is is needed budget of ex LEsachys e because they do the remember. the they nses required to promote its va- and South, this that know it yus activities for the because of fiscal year. how sacred Union is, how up- he board finance and taxation is . holds all is near and dear the bw busily engaged in considering off | their Jatriot’s -heart, ey will not suffer ese items, is attempting to trim 3 Brt Beheyay : ne representatives in Congress to e rough edges, to do away to do anything that will to let this with the turn traitor necessary, remain And submitted the only the % tend toward a conflict in the nation, od, in work there has especially when the nation is aligned en to the board a plan v putting of 'w Britain on a permanent basis, to ing it up to that by a city : against outside influences as it is now. fire department - That is why there were only two de- the The latter we can ex- | serter: from level ranks,—Gallinger of to of efficiency and O'Gorman. manded a nearly sixty | cuse after a fashion. His loyalty has away | been questioned before; | rioe | caught red handed pl municipalities | ‘& De2 it rotes. ohailehave [Bosnats s eusand population, break he has been ing for par- What Senator Gallinge Staid om antiquated methods and Jjoin the st of froughout nation number the motives are. no one knows. old that de- dy attained somewhere near per- | New Hampshire should see to it To do this will be no difficult | the rad- | jetion. sk for e department Dy t a this is his last term It is to be New Britain, because plored that these two befogged minds the here has been g prevented the North and South state where it needs attention desired 3 . ; | worla. For it is the North ly accomplished. Tt | : i South that must ever be expected to a matter of expediency,—it means R 5 3 o e bear the brunt of all the battles o bala { the nation. They so in the past and they stand fight God raised to a from presenting a solid front to the little and the and the sults will be eas doing today which not be put off until tomorrow. cry of of thé bnses the city did in shoulder to shoulder the economy is raised of has been asked to con- should should wther a be the common for it. All T N et ex. | ready to now for defense. bless them ler, the fire department honor to the Blue and the Gray. It not the insti- DO YOU k. made zht of tions suffer, have WHO THINK THIS I He west way over many farm miles Maury 13 because born on two Hill, March little it means a protection was a life County, her runing propérty. b be There of Spring where and are available the | Tenn., on Friday, a knife can applied with | storm; had but schooling, be- the rate of taxa- ind, roper dexterity and cause of his aversion to teacher on materially and judiciously les- | as a pupil. never saw the inside of a bried. schoolroom after he was fourteen In ared vears of age: went to Texas in the fall of 1878 and up the trai four vesterday's Herald there ap- cowboy, “zoin of mountains a masterful array of facts and became a in the early the Mexico. 1879 of working sures showing how the fire depart part hent could be thoroughly motorized = spent years in nd put on a permanent basis through ' Colorado and New of 1m, he expenditure a comparatively | part,of the time as a miner, sometimes It spending significant can be accom- as a printer and newspaper reporter. of for hished by the less than :and occasionally prospecting zold but without making a El went 11 en- n thousand dollars over and above and silv to at spring of 1883, Chihuahua e the de- ' “strike”; returned xas artment last year. to it ¢ expenses required to run As this work will aso, in the and ave be done sooner or later, and « from there to and Pa an be accomplished with less | Mexico, spending several months and doing special for from pense this year than next, or the | zaged in mining ~ after, it would seem good policy work eastern news- stall the necessary appa e way for the the pre newspaper returned Mexico in De- 1883 of Texas ever since, the atus and | paper: additional men cember, and has been a resi- The is of to dent After scription of a jgment sent force. the horse-drawn sing, except for c ney, as is the time when ffer the inconveniences and unsatis- the day vehicle rapidly reading aforegoinz de- ses emer- wried career would vou, a city will without knowing to whom it belongs, be willing to place a heavy wager that the iday little hetory methods attendant upon man who was born in a storm cn eall-man system.' The old er fire departments were supplanted hen the horses trained volun- the thirteenth. who who wor Western schooling, and were pressed into newspaper reporter in towns rvice and to the exigencies and Mexican mining camps. is now the | states | NEW, BRITAIN place them in the hands of Congress. All these things have been conducted improperly for lo these many until the Hon. Lemore took his seat in Congres anyone vears. Mec- it ‘the refer We never knew it is further in of Mr. to his biog interested career McLemore we them aphical sketch, vrrit- ten by of the the himself, which appears on page of ty- his 109 this Fourth mnal Directory of top Congress the Six of all he s first session Congress. On other accomplishments, { bachelor of Mr. Ford’'s ordered told because “what are Peace zet never The Secretary Pilgrimage has been to of Germany and to And all knowing, fighting for?” Even a more insulting lady out come back. he in- sisted upon vou question than asking a vouns FPACTS AND FANCIES. when he good A Legins night's little pride to a Glohe, man is aging to point with sleep.——Atchison From recent utterances it is plain that the Diets of Alsace and Lorraine continue to agree with the German constitution.—Baltimore Sun refrain- would him Star. Garrison has anything that to welcome Washington Seeretary from sayin Mr. Bryan co-worker.- as a Crushing Germany 'ms to be about painfui cupine Charleston ier. s¢ Zing a and por Cour- as as quee: News Jane Addams admits that if to lead the choir, the DProgressive hymn will have to revised.—Pitts- burgh Dispatch. she is be Pankhurst anything her license to some day—To- Mrs. Emmeline loves children more than That ought give throw another brick ledo Blade, else.” We good what ty dianapolis have there is more where News. mighty of it; and there it from. navy— plen- In- a came sold the expects to for the house in President. remain at some little Mrs. Wilson has which she wmarried vidently she the White Honuse time yvet.—Wichita Federation undertalken in women's first step Worcester Eagl The men’s sade The to of Wo- a cru- dres: he General Clubs has for modesty federation” define it should Post If President Wilson really has de- cided to deny Germany's right to blow up unarmed merchantmen his next step ‘may be fo show T. R. that he is not afraid of his, either.—Wash- ington Herald Of all places in dent Elliot of the rot to have heen reporters when he address before the school of ourjnalism the world, New Haven misquoted was making an students of a Boston Globe, Presi- ought by the Aside from the military value of taking Verdun and the moral worth of such a feat there is perhaps an- other inspiring motive for the tre- mendous efforts now heing made to this important French defense is the desire to restore the pres- tige of the German Crown whose popularity and fame have not been increased by tunes of war.—Brooklyn Union, win Prince so far the f Standard r- “The deal in President is expecting asking the women the men of the country to inter- csted in his project (preparedness) Lefore he shows any interest in theirs -—A New York suffragist leader. The author of that particular of feminine foolishness might ask the women of Belgium whether they thing suffraze or national defense the more important.—New York World. great as well be 15 piece Quitting A. Chila, wateh the days Time. in N clock (Ascor I used to hood vearn storied way ) join brave sublime It seemed so long 1o w time! i in mes.) boy- And to leave my tasks for knights' adventuring ait for quitting | The vears swung hy hope and zest, seemed each hour's best— and. swayed it living was the moment erime. 1 never stopped clipped from happiness a to think of «quitting one of international lawyers and polished diplomats in the Would more The hors the greatest oards as cities grow and expand and, ecause of the fewer » do duty with the motor apparatus, | he knew tory and f alarm. s must go by the men necessary | nation? vou be willing to say »f economics and Nis- literature and all the kindre:l Woodrow Wilson, historian ahol- It of he call men must be eventually hed as of to relics a by-gone day. studies than whose that 1nd was first made > Well, make the bet be the board fame asa nance hoped and taxation will ponder long | college professor You prob- nd earnestly over the data that has ; ably would not until you is that But board " found out who it possesses (his that peen presented by the safety in egard to this question the | wonderful carecer then when of the whispered to you that nis Jeff first nmerous this someone fethod of advantages newer onducting fire depart- | name is McLemore, who i pent will commend themselves to the ' serving his term in the House of introduced all staried, jembers of the board and that they | lepresentatives and who gill see fit to sanetion the ion The bout the whole thing is. appropria- | the resolution over which the asked one salient fact | trouble in Washington was your mind. that You ihis wonderful when motor | you would change would know then of knows the United States bpgines are standing in the stations varied the do not ¢éat; horses do man many and experiences —— more than President of Al the to heap even more than the heir troubles on the ( of the barber who expiained helligerents trying the Constitution I old drafted of uld document and nited States re- . men who United Statces. cause he w that take our foreign relations out of the hands of the State Department aad ind us the hy he dropped a steaming jhis customer’s fac 1t was too o hold. towel on | override staid hot time! But now 1 hand, taught derstand: vouth cager prime, nought ting time watch the hours dragging And, at last—I1 feel and un- Hot is gone! Past manhood” I've to do but wait for quit- Friend Bry Again, (New York World.) that if Mr, n We suppose the national democritic convention dctermined fo vote for the remomina- tion of Mr. Wilson, he will have other Having helped once more the candi- next and adoption of the adminis- Bryan zoes fo to purposes also. make the president date of the greater task @ platform tration, Tt the pariy, his will be the repudiating by this kind peerless of that his is tactios od-blesses nominacions he thinks he Although Mr. Bryan miuch at varience with Mr. Wilson heodore itoosevelt, Elihu Root or | Dr. Dernburg, it pleases him to cover | the pretended object of his affections with rich, warm treacle the better to leader friends who win and Coections titled to which is en- is as DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, MARCH 4, Woodrovw s a fox admires disarm him. He loves { Wilson as unselfishly a chickens, and he is seeking the same high and noble ends as the president {but in different ways, the chief dif- | ference being that Mr. Bryan’s wavs |and aims are diametrically opposed to Ar, Wilson's. Woodrow does not depend upon favor. 1t ought not to be conferred by a convention under the influence in any degree of an enemy masquer- ading as a friend. Nominations be- ing out of the question for himseif, Mr. Bryan cares not who the candi- ates may be if he can write the plat- form He has been writing platforms of retreat and surrender he left the state evervhody Wilson | pimselr, nd Bryanism, and all Wilson's renomination Mr. Bryan's since and The Wilson Bryan God-Dble; cver department, nows what they are platform should be disassociated from treecle, HCARMEN SYLVA. utiful mania Life of Queen Mother of Who Died Thu Mothe 131 widely rsday. The Rumania Queen beth of known under her pen name of Carmen Sylv: Thursday last of age of 73, was born princess of Wied, one of the tiny prin- cipalities with which Germany abounded. Her youth, however. was that of a country girl, who romped in the open with her companions at the village school. She was horn De- cember 1843, In her childhood absorbed innumerable fa stories and. with s of her own imagination added, delighted her playmates with fancies. At home she received Spartan training, and with a father who was an in- valid for life, and a brother who incurably ill. she experienced many sorrows and hardships Among her home on the evinced an almost matrimony, and tion. had often want to marry of Rumania.’ Rumania had wha pPneumonia died at the Gl many a she me she Her a was friends her Rhine, about the girl had savage dislike to according tradi- exclaimed “I do not unless 1 can be queen The principality of g at that time just been founded. and there was no sense in the young princess’ remark. except that she believed it a sufficiently safe way to say that she didn't want to marry at all. Some veurs later her suitor becamne Prince Charles of Hohenzollern, who was refused on the same fanciful pre- text that the princess would mnot marry unless she could be queen of Rumania. In 1868, Prince Charles was chosen ruler of Rumania, and in the autumn of the next year he re- turned to Wied to remind the Princes Elizabeth of her desire to rule over that kingdom While her marriage sarded as a love match sense, that it there can be row over the from which ered, was women of Rumania Some years ago her confidant, Helene Vaceresco. gave to the world the inner life of Rumania's queen. in which eloquently depicted her SOTTroOW: gentleness, her for her adopted country and her demo- cratic companionship with her ple. In describing to Miss Vaceresco her troth to Prince Charles, she said: “Not one syllable of -love; not one stray compliment was uttered during those hours. Ours was no love mar- riage then, but a union hased self- devotion, duty and a fervent desire Lo do the best toward each other and the which 1 already loved. I sleepless nights and the steps what my of one little would the de- Hohenzollerns opinions. Re- chains of tra ce and his prin- was not in a romantic a congeniat union doubt, and her of her only never fully Ly the humblest ro- was no loss she shared child recov- love peo- on nation passed days pondering over taken, wondered would be by the side known to me. What scendant of the stern be like in feeling and membering the heavy dition entwining ciples. these reflections appalled me. King Charles turned out to be liheral and, the whole, ruler. He not only a “prond Hohenzollern.” but he had Irench peasant blood in his veins, his parental great-grandmother being the rcele- brated I’anny Monchard of the French revolution, the sister of the famous Mavshal Murat; nay. more, the very crown worn by the queen of Rumaaia was the diadem worn by the unfor- tunate Josephine while empress of the French. That the queen was a broken-heari- ed woman there can be no doubt. In concluding her interview., written about doden vears ago, Miss Vaceresco, after heautifully describing the death of the little princess. Apart from the sadness ing in her soul, cheerful.” Althou restless I had and future his r a on popular wa a e ever reign- Carmen Sylva is had written verse for s not until the death her first and only child, at the of four. that much of her work published A poem on theme has heen translated The h she many it wi age was a favorite as follows: fairest word earth heard, human on that's lips the fairest Is mother. such On word, To whom name shall once belong, High honor hers her wholc long ifc mother carthly jovs A Lut all her are o'er then whao mother. s and A Who is no moy translated into German tumanian folk and short novels and dramas. her publications E Thoughts of Queen.” “Ildleen Vaughan,” “Shadows on Life’s Dial” and “A Real Queen’s Fairy Book.” She indefatigable Interviewers found her answe letters herself on a typewriter of which machines she had in ant usc. equipped for writing IZnglish, Rumanian, French and man. Once a pupil of Rubinstein, slhe was §killed in the playving of the piano and also artist Her husband., Kin Charles 1 of tumania, died in October, 1914, p 75 years of age. Since then the queen mother herself had been in ill-health, suffering from cataract in both eyes She favorite wrote some me of was an worker, ng —fou in Ger- Lin 1in and | like this. a hroader outlook and a | wide the | her | 1916. Bagdad the Magnificent | Is Now a Decaying City | Washington edad, the fencing generations of the Juropean diplomats and as of the most strategic centers in the forms the subject of a the few vears the war, and keen, hasty, were mul- restiess of ¥ engine w replacing ways of the don human. Oil Karun river nd Ameri- of T time-burdened city in of.| before the outrea kof agents | hints of the nervou important [ modern life of the West Near Ias(, | tipiying. The bheat bulletin issued | American oil by the National Georgraphic society, | the more deliberate which sketches the great political | key and heat-oppressed and economic advantazes of (he | vwells were sunk in the ancient capital of hte Mohammedan ; rezion, of Bagdad. The bulletin reads as follows: | can well drills were emiploved. il Bagdad is the dominant city of the | refineries were built here, and mod- eastern part of the Ottoman Empire, | ern Bagdad contemplated industiries vielding little in importance to its | for the manufacture of native mater sreat sister metropolis upon the | ials supplied with this fuel Before Bosphorus. As Constantinople is the | the discovery of oil, Bagdad's in- 7 guarding heart and brain of Turkey dustry hampered by the exorbi- the so Bagdad is the strength | tant which coal hrought in of the empire’s eastern defense, With- | {his rezion so distant from its souuree in its boundaries are the administors. | ©f production—§15 and $20 per the officers, the supply depots, and the | Bitumen —and asphalt Jakes bureaus for | springs nound the northern and supply. cs of the Tigris, and promise of fo a future Bagdad. Mesopotamain divis of Turkey. | “The city has a population of about The ancient city. moreover, lics | 200,000, and is governed by a Pasha upon the natural line of communica- | assisted by a council. The tion between Persia anl the west, and | Pasha comes Constantinople. botween the west and the Persian | There is somedifference between the b AT I e it ruling Turks from Constantinople and one from Khorasan. another native Arah population of Bag- Iuphrates into Syria, and the last up | dad. as the Turks Sunnites ano the Tigris into the Armenian plaieau | the Arabs arc Shilites. Thie religious and to the Black hehind it., were | difference has many times prevented tre elements of Bagdad's trading | harmonious co-operation between the strength in ancient times. Today j Turk and the Arab. importance is almost wholly hound | Tmhe does the potential wealth of its normal in rounding plains, watered by the Tizris | ports of about the uphrates: where | cheap cotions earth’s earliest civilizations dawned, | western manufactures, flourished. decayed and shrank into hides, wool and dates. oblivion; and in its dominating posi- | ngland and Russia have been tion upon the lines of communication | sirongest dealers in diplomacy hetween India, Persia and the west commerce at Pagdad “Bagdad the magnificient now a | ‘“The city lies aout 500 miles from decaving city, and the vears that have | the Persian guf following the course rolled by since Turkish over-lordship | of the river. The Tigris, like the first hegan, for Mohammedan lands of | Danube, is the great water highway the Near lsast have seen it sink of an agricultural country: and it Iy in importance mart for inter- | the main artery of Bagdad’'s exter- national trade, station on the | nal trafic. It maintains, in times of path of the rich merchandize caravans | peace, steam communication with its from the cast and the west. and as | port tloward the Persian zuf by the center of a land of abundant har- | nieans of one British and one Turk vest. Tt still. hofever, the second | line of steamers. Steam service on city in the empire. and 10ss {he ! 1the Tigris ends at Bagdad, vh(ou:n Turk would be relatively almost as | sailing vessels ascend much higher great as the loss of Chicago would he , up the rivgr. Two lines of telegraph, to the United States. But than | one British and one Turkish, form- this, the nation of the west controling | erly connected this city with Europc. Bagdad, would control the whole while, to the west, the Euphrates fur fruitful area between the world's two a water highway through most historic rivers.—the Tigris and hundreds of miles, to the the Euphrates.—would dominate th- Bagdad and Teharan, for Persian Gulf: and would A v’s chief Near Eastern have powerful influence in the a e Southern Persia Thus, n conquest here, would place us- pire’s northern frontier Levond the peril of attack ‘Bagdad has awakened during re- and h given its strength ground skillful and secret as most | | one south world was we prices ton and reach- riches organization. operation on which constitutes the hackhone defense in tre whole m who is fom routes. ap. the | the its up sur- trade and ex huying and other and selliny Germany, the and an annual n imports $15.000,000, city times roes among | oil is slow- as a as a its to more | nishes I'many northwest. vears diplomac ihealers of strategic endeavor heen places of keenest interest the foreign offices of ¥ngland. | sia_and Germany. In these two cities, | the one the second city of the Turik- jxh empire and the other the capital of the decaying Persia, the great to schemes for reclaiming the vast | game of eastern politics fousht waste areas about it by irrigation. 1t close range with all the dexterity, planned the expenditure of $130,000.- { which the great empires could bring 000 for the reclamation of 12,500,000 i to ear. There, thus, attaches to an acres, and as an immediate project, |invasion of Bagdad, an importance it decided upon the reclaiming of a |far beyond the importance of the (ract of more than 3,000,00 acres. A !city's wealth or its military value. exercise airs of English the em- about India cent years, was line with wisdom drawn and present. Let all inside stand shoulder to shoulder, without panic. no matter how near the war phantoms come, and there is a zood chance that the peril may be averted. But if any rash hand breaks { down the defenses af any point, not the wisdom of Solomon may prevail against the powers of darknc The good sense of Congress as a deliberate body depended upon in a c needed now is for Congress representative of the natior and patrioticaily in mischief caused individuals away traced line by from the past The Handicap of Congress ; (Springfield Republican.) Congress is perhaps never desti- tute of statesmen of ahility, wide Not happened and zood sens knowlec im- | probably it has sometimes it surpassed in president of that that the pres situation can profit repre- that these day dent in by the sentatives. But the handicap of Congress when undertakes interference with for- affairs is that it is composed of types of men, some of whom lack these qualities, though in the ordinary affairs legislation they may be able to play their part credit- ably Congressman are not elected for their knowledge of foreign affairs, or international law if they possess or acquire such know!- edge so much the hetter, hut not required of them several men in the Always it is true a difficult wisdom of qualities acting usually be What as to way senators and can ) is the act to few sie it eign a by whose soberly t a mp iheir undo members a siveness he many ot has run with dis cretion The (New Movie Problem. diplomacy Haven Union.) stay, and $500.000,- business here to The movies represent an investment 600 which the Moreover, on Kindred |yquking and exhibiting them ffth in subjects there are usually to be found list the country’s higgest en- congressmen enfertaining extreme and prises impracticable of various sorts. | There s Ordinarily this little harm. than their heresies free : States are finally the opinion in internatior men harm to hers are sure are it is piaces of these and | the of 1 and ! ing views A community of in the a motion try has the very vears have such amusement returns the country scarcel 1.000 which | house. The i hrought the photoplay of who Leen depri £ oany | enterprise Tt i= shown {that the picture shows of act 10,000,000 paring spectato means that women does inhabitants has not indt to for more { United average | ; time of may do their num- spoken arter thered uphappily such sm iy But crisis proportion Frequently the most not the but the v ock- those who make np their minds 't particular wait- ing to see clearly all the consequences Now for those in cign affairs of the e a faoors those o by wisest evers one anid a This I every ten men, children in this country hotoplay theater weekly (he time long ago passed when of apen mind could afford his at the moving pic- |tires. They have come, been scen {ond have won a big in Ameri- | can tife and American business. They { must reckoned with. They should | not be ignored by people who think 1! ¢ir taste and culture above the com- on point. without week. i of | charae visits country of the at for- time | het- a balance is needed to of President its chances anyone turn up ter dom to is As to the Wilson’s course and of of divergent agreed that few had thorough a training as Wood row Wil for gravpling the highly complicated situati which , .on level the United is A I Many of dent of history wovernment, | Ard have sufficient merit with a solid b und of fact {isfy the critical, Some are medi- precedent, well vorsed in the history | 0cre but give excellent entertainment of tho United Statcs, he is well qualic | QUhers are of indifferent value. . Many fied to the problem whole, cheaply made and poorly and the more the problem whole The problem i get Studied’ {he Dotter excellent ones, a zreat policy is likely the ones which supply What his the demand for tj‘n!{'!‘l:?'r\n\?ul with- Congress appear cut violating artistic values, and a the difficulty dirth of the objectionable films. That 2 only by educating the wis- nose as success is (here divergence based: on place But it have obinion 1 widely reasons, is presidents be s0 a on with n in placed of 1 o pictures ave wonderfil States S the pictur v nier rtistic o and o and e crude, conceived more of the sufliciency of sec as to as is impression his to malke. nervous erities 10 appreciate of touching one point in ; L symmetrical without damag- | the whole, of masic when the wise at more in not cun be done policy rublic. n spirits ing the davs evil swarmed Repealing Pree Sug ceometrical fizure (Washington Post.) Outside they | The fear of but within { democratic party the | cans might take advantage rovement repeal the free the Underwood magician used (o keep them iy with mystic the a of the republi- of the sugar tarifl dissi- some members that the floor gihber drawn ht there v on mi howl < safety provided magic to rovisions of law to play been Jated by the report made by the ways committee of the house. izure was kept unbroken This may careful and the United to at how!l outside. symbol of the which about it demons (hat for a neutrality drawn serve studied States has the war has keep bay lind means v a Bt t ¥ 1 a d 1 b : 2 L c 1 t (s ti = 1h or tr 0 of of pe art aster m h i = ha £ Tic f we 1t ot th cu Ja of gate movement of on sugar Nevertheless, | ltrade should tarif violated. pension they only Th jagio IMcMILLAN’S NEW BRITAIN'S BUSIRST BIG STORE “ALWAYS RELIABLE" v ; S The New Socing Seasons Coats and Suit Suits 512 a < 9% 1o §1 priced Coats priced $5 DAIN LACE BLOUSES $3.98 cach, STLK TAFFETA BLOU Priced $2.98 cach, In the nev rired ctfects. . UB SILK AND CREPE ciNg BLOUSE $1.98 and $ and plain DI Priced Striped ariety HS color cach in a big BLOUSES Priced 97c to $2,98 cach. NEW BORDERED VEILINGS By the vard at to 50c yard. 25¢ NOVRLTY 3 59¢ values to PATTERN VEILS 98e, BORDERED PAY The very lat Look this hings ¥ O 19¢, for 25¢ to store FINE new imy KID pring »rtation SLOVE shades $1.15 In the Our own pair, WOMEN'S WASHABLE GLOVES and colors for street $1.00, $1.29, $1.50 CATY White Priced wear. STERLING SILVER HATPINS Special values, 19¢ pair, DEPARTMENT vanity AT OUR JEWELRY New coin holders, top mesh $3.50 each. baz=. priced AT OUR LEATHER GOODS SECTION New purses, 10¢ to 98c. Leather handbags, 49¢ to $1.98, Silk bags. 98¢ to $2.98. ) “ WOMEN'S SILK HOSE Fibre silks o 50¢ pair. Thread pair. , $2.00 in this hronae, pink and silks navy, white. Showing MecCallum seasons’ new grey taupe, suede. black, sky D. McMILLAK 199-201-203 MAIN STREET. the duty on sugar least $40,000,000 revenues, they true to the doc- The present duty hut cer nothing at of enue, would to retain nd thereby save at the government's vould not have been rine of protection. is not sufficient better than the standpoint the ain all its it From is re di - treasur that perfect No oss to e strous. Secretary epartment his duty ound in clitical raca G government McAdoo, in recommendin retained be was doetrin durc em- trade openly. operation the pres- pretty to f months that all i his democratic pariy toda e policy is free tariff law close recent cr cent. of 2 free dut The democratic ampaign was only. ple nt showing nports are comir ' the | tariff for solem of party i pledged with and ce cyento ity the gitimate irbed Lvi ff e equal hat be was made n dis of a present from "the was essen industry would the basi only i iven on for revenue defective. Tven standpoint, i small e mocratic al that a duty on sugar pledge was he retained if th of & for revenue only not to be Th e republicans have joined in advocating th free sugar clause, democrats su of the would and likewisc advo- wool A a tariff is just the duty join in duty revenu as essential iting on ool duty on even from standpoint retention of on e 1 xquisite Vowel Harmonics, (Collier's Weekly.) hard to tell whether laugl spit when a critic runs off L ack and goes bumping along ‘e ties. Here rakespegre the rites of “Lyric Diction rubbers the line “When to the lent thought,” and blurb, “Note how vividly the surd’ sibilants is to to a s a case wher His cofft Ttic rapturous. is zoat as follows swift hustle the rush settling the the subgle he was past the serenc vowel h prolonged the the suggests memories in how which winged set’s heart, and by of contract, of it emphasizes of the that the the ou exquisite follow double ¢ in long i in ‘silent ooding in ‘thought. " We vield to no one in our admirgs n and awe of Shakespeare ve A felt that was also a escape the read that “analysis into a roar of whole- laughter. This certainly of how mot read poetry is also a splendid example of how write criticism—a higher art tab the “brooding r- onies the rill of 15h of ‘sweet.” and and ways besides being poet he we can’t could burst Some- that he eat W man notion he »uld uled stance is an to to an kecping on tha matter enti- the pan regards an alliance as a expediency rather of Some of rumors indicate than Let the pattern ,,el If the republicans had blocked the | ment.—Washington Star,

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