New Britain Herald Newspaper, March 8, 1916, Page 6

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NEW, BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, mAKUM &, 1910. w BRlI"AIN HERA[D responsibility of the right to shape a | ACTS AND FANCTE Respect for National Anthem. = ¥ = ‘TV!P?@ is ground for hopes; also for 9 diplomatic function and declare (o the | ST (Meriden Record.) | WHAT OTHERS SAY |[fears Mrs. Flannagan's forelock CM] L S SR i HERALD ' RPUBLIS st ars right of the exccutive.” If Mr. Camp- Laymen will not seftie this cque: The Record is of the opinion (hat neatly pasted down and a white apron 3 P"]‘:'![l-!""."%i\hn i AT hell had put as much time studying !0 of national defense; but if ‘he lthe explanation made lw_xm.«‘p]pr(»:en;«;{. | f‘"\‘hmmlmz her comely form should | NEW BRITAIN'S BUSIEST LR T his constitutional law as he did to (he | Solution ‘was left to them they would | tives of the G. A. R. of the reason Views on all sides of timely Eo forward heightening the illusion. BIG STORE fed e 01y (¥ipT.y. (Koopted) at 4 vy - Iy hardly bicker as much about the kind | why they did not stand when the questions as discussed in ex- | But will she listen to the jokes of “ADWAYS RELIABLE" at Herald Building, 67 Churcn | framing of that very feehle sent=nce o¢ 4 fleet to be built as the men & few strains of the “Star Spangled changes that come to the James with the same keen air of ap- - he would have left himself open to no | doing who hold the government | Banner” were plaved at a recent en- Herald Office. iveciation as the barkeep at the f@red at the Pasr Oflice at New Britala 2 5 a5 Second. Class Mail Matter. such prods as may hereafter be his. | honor and safety in iheir cha tertainment is entirely adequate ccrner and take his steenth order coming from a man who always St o 1 Preparedness Is = The people of the country know just The ruling made by the G. A It is exceedingly doubtful. She tvered by carrier v any part of the city oficials dli g frored 1y carier ans part ot e o oS Sl fMicials regarding the introduction atriotism. of the national anthem into a medicy (Lyman Ahbott | | | vas star k v v S now s Mhe i ety atifiec " The O L L R by 280005080 I B O e e o B s | et 57 BRI W o ot e oo |orebly Wi il b Qe Cry Today P; i o is made great., no by its | 8nd C J e ar ep s 4 ol | pserintions for paper to be sent by mall | Month $7.00 a year. tled, and know still further what wiit | the United ites senate makes Haxti [ columns of The Record is eminently fruitful has 1 T 1 that et (o) (e e e e fye ) 1, SR st proper and correct. ftful acres, but by the men who | When one has had enough and fhat | | of the United only profitabla ad <ing medium in Stater, having much he same status| o cultivate ther t by i e - | of the most indulgent wife there i oty Lizhle s SR, g v i s . having n i There must he some radical chang . I notibyjitel ereati for. 5 = ihe citv. Circutation twoks and press norance and palpable weakness on the L gl Domingo, The Haxtinns will [ (he ot emeinven e tro ests, but by the men who use them: @ sad but wide divergence. S great questions of the day. When the | continue to govern themselves. DUty i national song if it is fo be a not by its mines, hut by the men who | e Wil the revolution work in them: not by its railware be found on sale at Hota- | LiMe again comes to send men to the , they have to stop corded the respect It #o (horoughly Fast for a Big Ship. stand, 42nd St and Broad- | House of Representatives in Wagn- | SAme. Buftalo lixpres deserves hutiodithefmeniwhofbuildiana fiin (Bridgeport Standard.) way, New Tork Clty; Board Walk . g | iz So long as “The Star Spangled | 1eM- America was a great land ) & Atlantic City, and Hartford depot. inglon it is the duty of our people to | : . Tt o S A Snent bl G o] e B el e e B b The mnew United States battleshin Evidence that the commiander Of | B s sandwiched in with popu- a : [ Pannaviden Sh o % % e ek B i i R T B R o e icans have made of it a great nation, | | sylvania, which is one of he the eubmarine that sank the arablc QHEER, just fone Tn 1776 our fathers had a vi gest of the new ships of our navy. TELEPHONE CALLS. tions of those seeking the honor. | 1 L there he people i S| ] ot G . c went down with his boat and thus there he peaple bobbing Up And dOWN | or o now nation “coneeived in liberte | {UTAS out to be reasonably fast for | rial Roo SNasel| : ¢ be no more such weak- ncver made (hs s Aitributed [ and a general misfit effect at public E conceived in liberty ngiol torial Rooms........ 5 Sexef| Thicreimu n B S \‘ ismade Shalstate men ey pshie - publC | gl dedicated fo the proposition that superdreadnought. In her stand | lings as the poor benighted legislatof's 10 him, that he thought the liner wa 8. al e s ated ardization 1tests off Rockland, Me., o should not be un- | ©Our ideas as t \at constitutes | & equal.” | 279 . | men in the House. true: but they are | p° 0% T remman o | et i e e o Y| mreatest of existing world empires | KNOt in excess of the contract re- | fTo protect your clothing, your health e et e ; ould relieve {hem of a humilid Eome day we may | fE e 08 SLAHNE ; auirements and her fastest mile made | The usual Spring rai 11b be the r I i | o pitifully in the minority. so smoth- | ing imputation wpon their seaman- | develop so far as to realiz that | realize this wision. |3 0cen 0 = oy speedy for [ o s bt . res he resemblance of the Midwa | honor for the Stars wnd Stripes cane | & (NI of A century” later. without | 411" s ch is speedy for 4| \ith us soon, better invest in a Rain | —— pause long and consider the qualifica- TAKE 'EM DOWN. now holding forth. There are strong | | : | erec cath an avalanche o tter- [ ship which they have azain * 5 Vi D sedihencaln s SIS G L & Doy @ navy (hey fought the greatest mavy | “NiP of her class coat and Umbrella and be prepared in the world that they might win for their nation the freadom of the sens i cc Vhere “Little Egypt” held to | again shown they do not deserve-— )10t be secured so long as flags are X When the great advantage enjoved o e s S St e =0 Philadelphia Tedger. used in such dezrading fashion as is | i dist Low Ve R dbowing ows £6 sight musi be discouraging to men 5o often illustrated when the colors | hrains as to be praectically lost by a ship even a little faster than | cellent values. " C o onhe numerous | & Tlalf a contury later {hey fought | ith, or of the outside of a sideshow ! | ! cne with which she has one 3 | of such calibre to be cast in with a | are used for “decorative” purposes i ol oghas at aany z rds and advertisements that = N British Admiralty instructions to When “The Star g o | through an unparelleled Civil war | /™€ to contend, is considered, it is WOMEN'S RAINCOATS crew of incompetents. Great dam 1 o hapledds S e Star Spangled Banner 4 matter of surprise to the unprofes [ armed merchantmen, now g 15 DEGERL I e et G0 R 1 Priccd $2.98, $3.98. $5.00, $5.08 ¢ has been done by the foolishness of | the public, make it perfectly clear | in wyip : 5 : : | on this continent the inalienable right | F.2781 observer that speed is not more $8.98 Lacl A manner as to compel ai- 3 £ 81 insisted upon even at the sacrifice of 5 ity of life, liberty. and the pursuit of ; ; o A happiness. A {hird i 0. | some other qualities he fastes 3 * J ! i (00 et i SR e CHILDREN’S RAINCOATS AND later they fought t ancipa a ) et e, e EE SR E o mnel e ik SR CAPES wom Eave back Cila is the Giion.)2nd Jf nandled with eny sbillly, onn Priced $1.98 Fach Sent an arme of sehootmasiens ¢t | be depended tpon for results other G I [ eelinne D ) UMBRELLAS — MEN'S, WOMEN'S Wl o war indeinits e el The Pennsylvania is an oil burnecr AND CHILDREN'S SGERer) oo from ARET | and thus far in all her tests she has e R . | remy, but paid him lib i Priced 50c, 75c, 98¢, $1.49 Fach S e shown herself to be a little better . J e or his property. Meanwhile | T Tis Tt Men's and Women's Umbrellas they offered Tand freely o any farm- | 0 [°f comtract calls fon 1 | priced up to $5.00 eact er who would live upon and cultivate | 25 it should be, and the Pennsylvania N e, v ) @R was built somewhere within the fim- | (o0 o : . fta of a reasomable time. It was mot | 8398 COLORED SILK UMBRELLAS needful to first build a navy vard pecial $3.48 Each. at which she could be built, as is the | Colors: Cardinal, Green, Navy, case with the big ship ordered by | Purple and Garnet. With the ad- Secretary Daniels to be constructed | vanced costs of silks and umbrella L e . o at Mare Island hardware you are bound to pay more The cxnic who can see in this his- later on. while this lot lasts is the fe been pasted aver store windows that they mizht estalish for all tim § other places of prominence. As | 3 e e W e ‘- | that such celi are armed for de- [ iang 2 ; days 0 on, as the first harbincers S eanle B et \‘;h se only. They musi not aftack tention andl respect it is good. Euesss e maing now to be seen how Woodrow NS0 0N ¥ 5l not attac ing that the outward evidence of ap- Spring wing their way across the | oo 5 i . 5 e submarine, they must neither attack | praciation will he f ne avens we' may expect ,mmv,.”m} iisonfican imake itheimostiotiater i, o1 Fnterferel with menchant vessel Saan il ben nrthum..m-w” i rible mistake by Congre fishing boats or any craft whatsoever | cuoucie 1n this ount " LonBLS The Unltod) StatediGovernmant ia|| undert an' eiraumstancend Smhta| pant sy iinliE USIeoUR R of aroUss el ticular paragraph seems to establish | hevond question the zood faith of the for the defense of American rights. | 2 ; tain., Tt is in the air, this advertis- | : = British Admiralty in its denial ol |icorded it. There ave - people the prevention of massacre of its|the German contention that Brifish [ (10 heljove e ;1 many T ‘l o : - v 3 \at “The Star Spanglec | citizens and the upholding of the na- | merchantmen are armed for the pur- | g s he Star Spangle v T e e janner” is mot a representative na- X | tion's dignity and honor. Honor to | P liberate attack upon tional anthem and it has been Sug- e stringent rules pertaining to the | marines—New York Press. Pl AR (G T o & attle Hymn of the ) " take the place of the Ger- All the influence of = mobilized | man-French-English-American air to e i pro-German propaganda has been | which we sing “America.” A cor- reraente N amanes 0 A PHE RAG DOLL OF KUROPEAN |SSUNE against the president. We do [respondent of the New Vork Fvenirs L e ; : not care what excuses or apologies [ Fost Tolds that the “Star Spangled omes vacant someone runs for GRIEVANCES! or explanations congressmen mav | Banner” i« a “hlatant, hlaring mere- ste pot and posters and liberally There has been a lot of resentment | Make for the aid and comfort that |(ricious affair. typical of the eagle af ""1‘.‘ only a theme for his cgotistical 3 time to buy at the old prices Biars the windows with amuse: | aeoian oot it for hiy rer | HheY FI¥e this enemy propaganda. Wo {his worst. and also Englien: and | Si0i® & o true American. what-| Mow the Pork Barrel Works. o e i & e [[do mot eare whether they are idealists [ she sugzects that “The Bartie Hymn | o i parentage, whatever Wis (Bridgeport Telegram.) COLORED SILK UMBRELLAS sig us marks anent disloyal citizens of this | who believe in peace at any priee Jlic” a na 3 SEhplae T ol oo e e . RSESIORN vy < ; fthetic works af art t Naturally. en of foreign | or whether the ; B i By Hr:* St of the Republic: a name in itselt - | \pon fiiis listors which Bl n’uu“ NofinidTiyearsghasithclsenatscons New novelties, wide file and figured ; : | nation. Naturally, m an | v hey are Bryan or Hearst | spiring, written by an American | hon (L DSt : fathers | dtee on transportation to the sea- | borders, very smart, at $3.98 aud ivertisements are all right and | hiph resented any insinuation against | factionists who desire to pull down | woman and wedded to the ai of. “"‘“ vritten by their heroie deeds. | po 4" neld a meeting, according to | $4.98 each, 3 . f | 3 S P e e e SR o LD o) Ll who accepts with grati in- 5 . 2 foctly proper in their waxi hul | them, They knew they were person- | ¢ President or Republicans and | “Tohn Brown” also indizenous, would | 1 Seeehts, with r \(itude the - linformation furnishes by _ Lynn . : - tooseveltites who would gladly [ give us an anthem worthy of our = rave beaueath- | yaines, secretary of National Voters' POST CARDS AND NOVELTIES ally loyal to the land of their adoption | ¢pame ; : S 3ts 3 ! Ol ed to him. and who highly resolves | > \ ND I / shame and discredit the United States [ ind, and one that is * on = reso ag Yet the ¢ ttee has rooms ip hand over everything else. | ang o L ; S nd. ne that is “simple. digni- | league. 1o committee has room: e CBl A e 2 | and could searcely believe anyone clse | for the sake of scoring & partisan | fied, improssive. and even majestic. | 2 P7C% 0 ) maintained for it, has stationary and eus posters and banners of other | could be disloyal. But the President | Advantage over the president. or pro- | when sung by many voices.” paired and to pass it on to his de- | .,mmittee, employs three clerks, and Post Cards 6 for 5c. peription should not he promiscu- | was right, nevertheless, when he ac- | Germans who are seeking to promote _ R £ s¢ T\:hnl\u enlarged and enriched. 15 | Senator McCumber, its chairman re- Bnnplv(s d Novelty Cards 5¢ Each e e n tng | the military advantage of German: T ) G e NGk metlcan RLel Bl b laceonl [esntviint roateetilalire ofutioniical)ing) | [AVlEenyeioRe el e d iyt ; e s ertain citizens of betrayinz the | 41 tj0 expense of American rizhis e T hisEnancechnham ity for the appointment of fourth v f area, nor on private property. | nation. That he was right has been | and American honor, they are all en- 5 et —_— clerk FOUR PILCE MANICURE SETS i ve sl . AT Sl e J jon for adoption of the . | 2 2 e move should be made to restrict | proven time and time again by ex- | gaged in the same Infamous | Vous, '_("‘f"yf‘_“"l” r’_‘ ‘:“_“] " _!“I" *'H"‘ The American View | cedless to say, the only object of 10¢ Each. [~ New York World L opsticqiahvenh clpylicty (Wat v e 8 | this committee is to divide up among Including File, Buffer, Emery and mometer probubly will not be more aterbury Democrat.) ; t | orange sti ) ) : - {its members the right to appoint | Orange Stick successful than the movement for | It is evident that the notion, that | o €M e (A8 PR 9 H ther the zeneral pse o etric s al cricans of German desce 4 5 TANT he general use of the metri fin Americans of German descent 21 | pyypoge than this wilful misuse and | GUARANTEED ALARM CLOCKS ar signs hur plastered, pasted, | i must learn to value if more truly before we can zet the rev- erence for it which ought to he ac te, tuck, strewn, or scattered 4 "% | now free to carry on its proccedings ng the main thoroughfare of New busine and as the city grows it, , will grow. Why not then make it. opened to foreign immigrants on equal terms fhe door of industrial | opportunity, shared with them poli- tical equality. and provided hy uni- versal faxation for universal educi- tion those who still look to the Stars and cing of these commeretal placards? | : - 0 P S Stripes. Down with the traitors! Republic e is no gainsaving the fact, Main | bv\should not berallowed to hold the | to preserve this inheritance unim- Bly displayed over the entire busi- zes of outdoor advertisements | posures made by our own Department ced on vacant buildings. trees. or | of Justice, through its burcau of in- | | ces. This should be done in the | yvestigation, and by some of the lead- | crybody Else Crazy. | Jmediate present or the near futuve, | ing newspapers of the country. Now Waterbury American. E” YH e United Stat The habits of lSee iy v‘w I many i her | oo of the public's moner One | D i neratior annot 1 hanged at |1 ru il e ITrencyY | yould think that a congressman with once by legislative enactment Pas- | than it had a year ago. The latest sense of honor, respounsibility, or fess this idea is allowed to run vild | the New York World comes out azain One symptom of certain forms of any et inter the | insanity is the delusion that all 11 override all the interests of the | with documentary evidence sho : sage of a hill hy véngress making the [ evidence to the contrary is an ad Elrest of the world is insane "o duty 10 the nation, would scorn to & New Britain at best is not the | that there has been a lobby conducied | Rev. Jenkin Lioyd Jones. prominent | CeNtiETade the standard in this coun- | dress delivered by Dr. Henry = Har-| . gh by such an arrangement, and Bt beautiful city in the world, but | in Congress by an organization of | survivor of the Fard peace catastio. | 15y Wil net make —the Fahrenheit | buugh Apple, president of Tranklin | vy pore we find the pork barrel ben- § 3 obsolete-—ut least nat for 1 lonz teria [ and Marshall college, speaking as the it, but . L looks will never he improved upon | ., i SRR o cational | PHC. seems to have it. “All our pee : > \ficiaries not only walloping in nation-wide activity, the National | DR Seetys fo Bave 1 AN our Does | o voqie Alout evervone recognizes | representative of @ scction inhabited “'_'““L RN E L G T ey Py ehash it e Ponnsy v “Duich = S 15 iC < 199-201-203 MAIN STREET. UL ol rdentices u fincezin Benpsylyapla D aich Dr. Apn'e | 79 ho exaggeration to say that o s TREET. point and .changing to the zero of | referred to the part that this class | the centigrade requires (oo much | of citizens and their ancestors have | ile such conspicuous conglomera- | Giorman-Americs ity e by s s erarien s 1‘-"‘ man-Ameriean Alliance. | deciares that the expedition was 2 s of paper and canvas are alloved | the most astonishing of all the | sneeess but the newspaper congress is honevecombed with ram- fications of the famous old ‘“pori |, 4 s thinking on the part of people who | Plaved in every epoch of American | MiCations OF CRe = AmiHs o man with | 2Ppearing in Harper's Weekly, the ot along very comfortubly with (ho | hristory. beginning with the time | PATTel | Sugn o e e a conser. | fententious jester, Stephen Leacock Fahrenheit markings of heat and |iwhen' they rendered such valuabie |5 (288 Sut B0 O ol a B et | takes o fall out of the modern teacher service in provisioning Washington's | 17 5 £ £ of English. Grammar and rhetorie | congressman supervising the expenc s X - are drier than dust, and about as use iure of the pulic’'s money Not, how . A ful English literature : presentea cever, until the people have spoken | = LRHET CC o very sharply and made the ‘‘pork J le last stage s X r cpen only to minds that huve already barrel” a real issue in congress, will [ Ueh ST e MiNds thal this misuse and muleting of the pub- i EEEDING R d T I : toric Shakespeare, we learn the un | lic’s funds be stopped. And in the : comfortable truth, did not know meantime, every department of the [l 105 S ECEL b T Bnel bk national activity is weakened by i g g inglish and the publie is burdened to mak up the wastage. men | dazzle and bewilder its beauty. To | charges magde against partisans in the | ‘spoiled it all.”" That's just like {hem. : {the scoundrels, always letting in light | land laughier swhere only obscurity | [ and gloom should he! A impression on the visitor to the | ried on for some time past to prevent I The Rev. Jenkin, heared like Care This in itselfl should be enough | jegiglation from passing through Con- | ranza or Dowic or Skoudoulis, or the ¥ the least they are displeasing to | puropean war. It is absolutely prov eve. Anothertthing, they make a | that a secret campaign has heen car cold e experts demonstrated years | revelutionary arimy. In every gen- azo that the metrie system is super- | eration. he marked. the Pennsyl- 1 them to municipal r \”h"zr(‘sa which would be detrimental to | three combined. h me home to |50 e hased upon the inch. But | vania Germans have shown their at- ! the military policy of Germanv. The :fh:w(,m',.(",:;’,”.‘l:“ o s ar Wi | the people have not discarded the old | tachment to American ideals, even | Gore resolution was favored. backed | jess forms of warfare we should place mnrnm\l rule ‘vhml‘ In;m:m-nn':«\:.“\. :-Jm;“ pre: f,‘»:‘.n: u:.'-;;; y‘.»l,::;]\m,r:1?1|d,;(\,, f & are made in inches and feel as if the d ror e e e OWN WITH THE TRAITORs. |and promoted by this organizatlon. | the ‘war on preparedness™ very near K":m,: = (,,‘mm mofric svstem nover | said Dr. Apple these .people are not | The MeLemore resolution was also a | the tp. The one (hing on oarth {07 ]y,q qeveloped Tor certain purposes [ so critical of —Germany —as certuin s, more lately become known as | fBvOTite ‘:vjvt‘vll,k.':.”,\',f”,';,,,',',:" v»’\r\v;v:mll FLI‘\ ’; ! : the metre is the better standard. and | other elements of our population: i 0 as e I celaLE (hol (B SRa i smenred b SOME | it s used by many expert workers, | they have no fecling of vindictiveness. Vhen the House of Representa- our education departments” to grafl uate from a kindergarten and But it does not appeal to the popu- { But “they have the firm conviction not have passed an examination in one Jar imagination— probably nine- | that the hest future of the world —— of his own plays set as a college en tenths of the people do not know (he | i somehow bound up with the amn N A zam® | trance test. We make our pupil in an attempt to et them to take a | Jenkine. | L hing of such words as millimeter | and purposes of the allies” And after i i e spend two hours a day for fen years it A k,,ll G e whateverib o Ay canl DYt Y o ATl cen s ade ki Tiiye | eI th e heatod Simuen (8o il e A (Providence Journal. | the sitly pursuit of what we call Eng & want an international police force to | oo o yntil the public sees some- | twenty months, that's ahout what th | Never again, savs Speaker Clark, | jigh," we are told. We find ourselve United States. His comment upon | keep one country’ from siriking at | Felected il Lie PR SEE SO OO e e Caverage Ameri will the United States be caught un- | wondering if. after all, we did reall his success, or defeat. was yvu'-\vuhnrl|‘.Hm|h' Z An international police | 71 I8 el nenneitisoalc amounts 10. lle may be hazy as to | prepared throw away all that perfectly goou & action the House followed the | Yesterday. It was planned to take “."" samas :"\'r‘v'"”{“_"“"""'fl e “'f""u"; i LSS (he precise causes of the war, and | Observing the contortions of Con- | time g away from the Exccutive the consti- | LoiFidm. Bu SoD DL GIaZN A Honey Ford and the Newspapers, | the responsibility for it, and the le- | £ress at the present hour. we may be | 7The criticisms noted above muy o1 { ran amuck and now the whole foree | 3 2 | &a1 and moral aspects of the methods | moved. with the ineredulous crew of | may not be warranted And vet the Bt Gore resbiatien avnien | utionslitunctionEyhichiyesta S BUIRHI e SunBingu aeesronnlliwhioo ] (Bridgenort Telegram.) | adopted by the rival powers. But | the dreadnought Pinafore to exclaim: | faci remains that an understanding { the duty to negotiate with all foreizn | even the TRev. Jenkdn, #4 With| Wil thoee suspicious persons who {10 nas a feeling “that hest future | “What. never!” AL e ioiun of vl abod 5 | the millions of Henry Fovd. ihus | imagine that a newspaper never ex- | oo (e world is somehow bound up | The Speaker of the House reminds [ ture is confined to a relatively small el e o e e e D L ol piace it funchionttingthelhanad (B EREEED unableglofston presses an opinion that is not bought | \jin the aims and purposes of the | us that in 1898 “war would have been [ number of men and women, whether the V_' 2 4 i i = and paid for. or that large advertis- | ,jjjes’ declared by the United States Govern- | graduates of our institutions of high f Congress. 0o do this the ol ling carries with it editorial support, = . ment at least thirty davs before it | er learning or not, and—what iseof method of coming out buldly for Ger | (Eoston Mleraid please give their attention to the case Pootrests for Hushands was, but for the fact that we did | greater concern, since it touches upon stead ; : el of Heniy IPard.weho jisthimselli under. | (Washinzton Post) not have even three rounds of ammu- | the everyday business and intercours Satenidayiacoia fedptainfolEindisy nition apiece for the guns we had.” | of the majority—the Quen’s English Luckily, our opponent, Spain. was also | is constantly being mistreated in writ wretchedly prepared for the bricf [ ing and in speech. Surely we have struggle that cost her the last scraps | vight to expect that our college grac i of her oance imperial domain. { uates shall be able to write with a re How impatient the publie was while | sonable correctsess nd cleaness and the prudent Administration at Wash- | in accordnce with the-established rulc a | 01 good usage, that they shall spei » house oft Mis-Representatives, ves- | head of this lobhy visited and inter- | express a willingness fo be smeared “T am for preparation hut not foy preparedness.” says the Rev Jenkin Lday voted to table the McLemore 6:ion which wonld abandon the| YieYed Senators und SItepresenlitives bhts of American citizens the last stize of respect was saved and a jetus put on the fear that America hs no 1on the land of liberty. By ample set by the Senate in dispers- yuld withdraw from American citi- ! powers in matters of diplomaey and llizerents the protection of | hited States zovernment. Had either Two Dreamers, these two resolutions gone through, S 1 In: it § i many was abandonec noits e American people might have Jing an awakening process just af 1 £ There are fimes when fhe skillful Lpposition of titles and slogans simi- | was set up a propaganda having for | | {Yar in sound but far different in | | ! fry. o man of millions, died in New own that the men sent to Washins- : present 2 York. His mame was John A. Hill Ml Tord int i lcampaieni aga et and he was the publisher of the Tin- 5 gincering News. the Mining .Journal, | its purpose the engendering of hate n to represent them had deserted | 1'% PUTF against Ingland Knowing cvery “preparedness.” is now taking large ¢ ranks. had enlisted under another meaning does more to illustrate the advertising space in the newspapers to give vent to his views. Mr. IFord, with others, has shared the expressed | helief {hat many newspapers advocate | preparedness because they are paid ta advocate it Such is the sy and srican’s dislike for things Fnzlish AmenicantBdisi it X ! changing current of events than all the labored arguments that could he marshaled to the purpose. In an earlier day and one of more on t = Jximitive. thoughts and tendencies | Soodsized skirmish! The people of prevails no virtuous home | the Atlantic port cities trembled at the rumor of an Armada. coming over the Coal Age and other trade publica- t .\ quarter of a century ago or a hit more. he was engineer of a freight train in the Colorado moun- { tains. One day. while the train wa bluna le ‘took || 2dion e siding, bollh e an g s Noecl|fa ) el explanation nevitaliiviado The first blunder made ‘tool place : : il blanationline ilabiiedorio Bl hands of what looks like incrim- | The first blunder ma o | man leaned from the cab and gazed | T year ago when the United States dreamily al the distant mountain mner, had waved farewell to all the ' i ] ; | because of the way this country was Bditions of this sreat republic. As | Pecau s S e s sated by Fngland some 1undrec e or . ington was ftryving out to be only ! or more vears age, the promoters of ; Be 1czisiative chambers who will do | S | this new campaign acted very wiseix | | | | | i | | | with accuracy and that they shall fi- nally be aware of the existence of timt {than now e | was without a sad-hued volume on the by fhose \; ho. thin u‘n_l ];: nately | ¥ L able in the parlor. The inner | the ocean to “ravage” our coasts : & on any sublect, conclude that who- | cans | Caug | - ne ne. spect- acoused of helng pro-British. 1t [ tops. The fireman spoke first n _subj t who- | S0 e of this book by no means | CRUSME that way next time, a respect aceus : e : ke frst, | ever differs from them must e erazy, |0 00 RS PO08 ok 11 was | able cnems would not wait until we | never was pro-British, is not now pro- | ¥ v e g, || SR TR chinL : : 3 [ame” en B idious lobby conducted by foreign | NeVer was pro N ol o venal, or hoth. | hnown #s | “Rasters Saints Rest." | sot ready. and It would take more British, and never can he pro-British. ! e 1 e, IR G mneee | oo || i FHR e ) P was dreamis at 'm zoing i 2 b i s halover preferance s oW T Te Lwae L iy e o 0 | tiealy every newspaper in which Mr. toush The chances are a hundred fo one | > 1Pord has advertised (o date has taken gard to the belligerents of ISurope hy | answered the engineer. “What were the men. women and children of this | You dreaming about Bl ‘to explain their stand, to wash {hey do not. Proofs of such hort | mucn-maligned subject, rhetoric. But ating cvidence. Out of the nation’s | A known to call for discussion here | Where shall the blame be placed? How shall we distribute it among Apital there are coming stories of an | gents for the purpose of defeatini | those responsible for home train i perhaps more, the saint had a haihal 2 3 and for instruction in school and cojourn here below, with fAowery hed at we will never again be caught R AV ai o “kick the stuffing” o z 5 4 ¢ . e A leRe pains Kick the stuffing” out of | ¢ cast at the final station Con- [ in that predicament.” says Speaker | (E0° i T ouplesome questions SAtis o ; ; what he advertise: The claims (hat = x Clark Tie L] 5 # American citizens. Ivery man SON, T was dream that 11 write | W&t it | versely, the ungodly reveled in pres- ark et us trust Congress will z found we may insist up 3} e 1 FEE Dhe! tabling of the | nition Anotibyithe so¥ernmens st ae R Bl ,»l\x Y\‘y Mr. Ford has advanced in his pur- | en( delights—but, oh. what a finish! | Make that a positive assurance sl r‘lunilthrr;': el : en vho voted agains > tab A hook some day.” answeres o \ = . oh. what y on a grater degree of respect for the [be traced to the propaganda started | fieman hased spa ive been ripped (o | And in the perface was .given the e K Iohi wa emDloy! every dil Ihe President of the United States in | gis, his battle to uphold the Tighis | esolution yesterday now has some- S ibrialles _— pic in the ria Tumn Thig | grory of an impossible hoy, aged 9, of our lives and which, therefore, de- by German agents at the outset of the The story ix true The lireman RS = 5 told it. His name was Cv Warman. | painful shock to the “bought and | who said just previous to his un- The Queen's Enclish carves better usage at our hands tham ing to explain Fven in the moment of defeat the | g o and he published his ok e \..,.,.Ity'"" forkFthealy of newspaper opin [ timely demise, “Let me read dear (New Haven Journal-Courier.) indifferent or ignorant employment. | susted with some of the things dome. | 5y 00 55 et __and reached the | ions. Mr. Ford has discovered that | Mr. Baxter once more hefore 1 go. e e e o e ce | B iicat of mdmitting the error | thalisall. The campaign that is nowW | jieqpis of millions by his songs Thus :j:""““‘“‘y‘;"']'lt""”::“"\_"::‘"“_"‘”i";" opin- | Now for the SWift chanze of rai- | under fire. That is to say, the atten- € their w: rtainl menibers made || BeE conducted. while in it:=if not | the dreams of those younz dreamer Stlienine bribe iy ”A”m' in- i ment Recorder Cain, of Bayonne. N. | tion of a public with a surplus of in- | \lloyed Pleasures. b way. rtain 1 s e I S canial fiue e, AR e :]H\»rH\ in the form of advertising or | J. in the recent case of Mrs. Flanna- | {erests has again been directed to the (Cleveland Plain Dealer.) ?,“ e sl red than! the old imethodlof lihaye followed them have the same m”!;; divectly in Ih(\.fflyn\ of k‘m,‘..m | gan ve, James Flannagan took under | murderous assault which college-bred khe President tried to put his diplo- | 3 . iy dreams and others. And do not Allowing, however, that Mr. Ford | ccnsideration the charge against [ men and women are persistently s | Plowing up buildings and destroNing | Lugh at them: most of the things | i homest in his advertising campaizn, | James that he neglected his home | making upon the Queen's English. In property. By discarding | worth while in history have been ne- [ 20 thar he merely seeks fo get his |for saloons, Then came sager advice | a recently-published leaflet the New dynamite and taking up politics these complished vy dreamers “lor the “!fl“< hefore the public. and not (o | than ever Sancho Panza handed down | York Institute for Public Service has | campaigners bring their methods on ; ‘iveamer lives forever. but the toiler | bribe the newspapers. then he is fool- | while governor of F aria, Your | dwelt upon the subject with pain and ffat Congress tricd to usurp the con- | CAMPAIE p’ dies in a day.” and “of all {his broken | ish. Practically &ver) reputable | husband might be Induced to stay | golicitude. One teacher is quoted as | a plane where they can he dealt with = 000 (00 clee endures, =ave only | newspaper would give publicity to his | home if you vigged up a brass foot- [ holding the opinion that failure suc- peaple. who are fast | dreams?" views without pay Such publicity | rail.” was the sapient suggestion. | cessfully to instruct the student in would he labeled. of course. as AMr. | Flannagan thinks {he idea a good ! grammatically correct and clear Fng- Ford's views, and not the views of the | one, and Mrs. Flannagan has it | 1sh is the most glaring defeet in our the lovelight papers in which it appeared The | under advisement, modern system of education. On the Then it's heaven to jog alon war. The nation merely hecame dis- ouse had to deliberately misrepre- peeches which, translated. mean that When vour engine's softly purring, and you take the hills on high''— the country rolls beneath vou, and above you shines the sky-— the roads are smooth and dust- Jess and the sign posts do not fuatic responsivilities on the shoulde 2 o the cressmen. No such thing | American g true. What replly happened was gtitutional function of the lixecutive ’ je— | by the American v taking our foreizn relations out of e ) N i 3 M growing tired of having their country o When beside you sits & niaiden w his hana I'his explanation of Mr d S 3 | ety ampbell 1o a5 the height of ig| beins made theragadollECIEEURODE A Poor Iellow. | ampbell stands as the height of iz- , | X G k i HisLlevanacs (Jack-O'-Lantern.) same distinction is painstakingly And this is all there is to it. But | one hand, the blame is placed square | “Poor fellow’ he's an orphan.” brought forward when Mr. Ford aq. what of “Baxter's Saints’ Rest” and |1y on the preparatory schools; on the | When the engine 3 | “Are his grandparents alive?” vertives, as he must have discovered | “Hushand's Foot Rest” as momentous | other hand. it is impatiently contend- and of gasoline you're shy President has asked Congress to as- | This Lenten season, in view « Faisel Re i e Bl e e e o it 18| WhenEoalnare ainash Sitoubtic i and the wi lowed to travel tranquily through the amuse the passerhy | sweep of the fierce spirit of the glass | work of the college curriculum with When the roads are full of mudholes, e L with a broken arm eaused by crank- |and sevthe? Whether Flannagan and | disregard of the requirements of re and a storm is drawing nigh- erandparents are dead, [ ing an automobile has a hard fime | bis kind will find the suggestion cap- | spectable Iinglish. In a whimsical, | When beside you sits a honehead who porance or a stupdi attempt (o arts in mi misrepresent actual facts: “The sume the diplomatic function and de- | utter hopelessness of humanity. s “Poor Lellow.” — - change of thought clare to the world that its vitizens | evidenced by the madhouse of ISurope. “Worge than that.” In this self-starting age the man bids fair to be a real seasonvof peni | | have the ht to travel on an armed | l His zreat- tence Have you pul on your sa to keep up his soci standing— | able of realizing their fondes( desires | but not altogether unreasonable persists in asking “wha | too.” cloth and ashes? | Pace 40— et tema ~—mantapions pamaira to ba scen, | criticism of “English as She is Taught” Ain't it ferce to wheeze alonz? merchant ship of the belligercnts. Whic Jlouse is now confronted with the |

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