New Britain Herald Newspaper, March 9, 1916, Page 6

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w BR!TAIN HERALD | such attacks has been the post office. Now the doctors come forward with Uncle Sam, Ah Yew Prepa‘ed? 5 These people would do away with the a new disease, “Monday morning | (By Representative Jacob 15, Meeker, HERALD 1‘;};m SHING COMPANY, custom of appointing the ['ost- paralysis.”” Too much feeding and no of Missouri, in the Washington roprictors, ' Date Palm Flourishes | McMILLAN’S In Lower Mesopotamia | ™" ===~ master to office, would take this posi- = exercise on Sunday are the contribu- Post.) 5 | r:‘rlilw (Sunday excepted) at 4:15 p. m. | (ion out of the spoils system. and put tary causes. Horses attacked by it Dey's a mighty lot o fightin® ]! ; Chureh St it under the civil service. On top of | usually dic within a few days. But [J¢ at presunt goin' on | Mongst de rulahs an' de peepul uv‘ Bd at the Post Ofce at New Britaln | tH€ many bills that have been intro- | where is the newness of it? [t is as e 1 Class Mail Matter. duced in the House of Representatives = old as the hills. this Monday morn- | An vit, what it is al] about = £, yas] gte ) are 9. — ‘oo s e rics lerod by carrier : to bring about this reform Congress- ing paralysis. We know thousands | I'm not quite shore, T swan Washington, D. C. March 9.—The tree as the American packer is of 1. Lo hoYonnt of the ol n Dinkh: 4 STCHE e T - But I reckon dey all wants dey're | conditions today in the lower part of every part of the pig. The American B et Mon R g Lk et ol ah assachusoltsla ddaes Rl S AR e L U T e e Mesopotamia {hrough which the river pork packer loses nothing but the et oo i 5 another which would place all Tost- — - s T i Shatt-el-Arab, or united Euphrates squeal, but that Arab does not even n 60 Cents a not de leas ne'vuss Lt = O Month ot lcrentho . ot A ltlae Tols 0L fun tsbnowt beinzipalcil bl Naeaie el i i d o and Tigris, flows, is told in a state- lose the bark. The pistils of the date ing, under the classificd list of tholl the late Irish-American conventon |13t I'm jes azackiy what yuh mout [ent on one of the phases of the blossom contain a fine, curly fibre only profitable advertising medium in 3 calll Goatea geography of the European war given | which is used as a substitute “or our f 5 o ek a ising medi ivi ervic: held i Ne York Saturda and Sun- ki acd % = B | Circulation hooks and press civil service held in w v durday and But I would like to ax yuh out here today by the National Geo- rubber sponge. g \ always open to advertisors. | While evervone admitx ihat it day. Ttx poliey perfected there NE 0 s W R o graphic society { At the extremity of the trunk is - i held up s the acme of logic: Abso- [ Cnele Samuel After calling attention to the fact 'a large whitish terminal bud a hun- - would be a good thing to remove ihe ah yuh sho th Sfald will be found on sale at Hota- | oflice of Postmaster from politics, | Tutely neutral, so long as lngland i Do A that the uphrates and the Tigris dred times as large as an almond, hut B8y, Now Toric it e e . ‘h chance of Mo | lickcal : unite at Korna. and that the sands and | resembling it in consistency and taste " y e et S e i B o Cherus it which they bring down through This bud is regarded as a very fine = { inkham's Dhill getting throuzh Con- — Iim e int iy ovet dis auestshum Mesopotamia arc adding ninety feet table delicacy. Syrup and vinegar are Hony | zress. There would be little joy in A smile is like putting money ¢ "Cause T love: veh, Tnele Sam, 4 vear to the length of the Shatt-cl- | made from old dates, and even brandy TELEPHONE CALLS ' : 4 4 | : €8s Office ol 925 | American life if the time honored ! at interest. A frown is worse than a Yo' de only onc foh whom 1 evah | 44D, the statement continues: is sometimes distilled from them. Prinl Rooms.......... ... 0 00 il leze ca'ed “In spite of every kind of adversity “The date pit is ground up and fed - 3 0 \ bad debt.——DPresident Ho rd Lot > N spoils system were relegated to obli e: n lowa Sof LWish that yew ud tell me that has befallen the region of lower | to cows and shecp. Whole pits are % : . e New T, o sroverh; : = = | jon. It is rather an injustice to thosc ! of the New Haven Some« prover While we've gol a chance to talk, | Mesopotamia it continued prosperous used as beads and counters for Arab HELL, ON THE BORDER: | men who start in at the bottom of tho | but frowns take all the interest out On de level. Unele sam., ah vow | UP to the out-break of the war in that | Children. The branches are stripped prepaed? region, for there the date palm has ' of their leaves and used like rattan | flourished as perhaps nowhere else in | to Make beds, tables, chairs, cradles, aly, craven, marauders who { WOtk up to the top—or as near to i 7 1 heah some folks oratin® the world. In some parts of the val- | boats, etc.. the leaves are made into cked the American border town of | the top as they can get. istant post- Of the dozen killed during the 185t ) poyt qje veuniversal peace. { ley the rich profusion of these trees | baskets, fans und strings, while ex- 5 bmbus, New Mexico, at an enriy | mastership—only te have some | Zeppelin raid on England, nine were Lan' o singin' whout de brotherhood | Femind one almost of a banana plan- ccllent fibre is prepared from the et friend of the politicians planted at | women and children. Nine more iron n man, tation along the river valleys of Costa bark. The wood of the trunk thoush 8. killing and | e R R 0 An® hout some scheme er other Rica and Guatemala. light and porous, is widely used in oSt 8 | G ¢ T make war furever coase. “Some one has observed the proper bridge building and architecture ese are handits, to be sure. these | 1adder in the post office service and | of smiles. Mding American citizens, A | the head of the office. In the men who are thus appointed to s, they inust be dealt with: shot | . o (Ah hopes € goodness someone fin's | €0At-of-arms for all lower Mesono- | “The Arab seldom sits down to a m, killed without mer From | Postmasterships know little or noth- IPACTS AND FANCTES. plan.) tamia will be a date palm, stating that meal at which dates are not ser '(‘ % I s Ar s = e L D it s . or > Sie and o yasts that his wife ar o : ing about the dispatch of Unele Sam’s it as yito dex's nutthin® doin it is the ‘hanner of the climate’ and and he proudly boasts that mentary first reports Villa, Gen- | u S1 they inter. | . The president’s vlew evidently is|fvabody on de joh the weaith of the country It has can serve them in # different way ¥ Francisco Villa, the King of Out- | Mail. Very seldom are fhat before congress marries dipio- | Acks Uz if ctenal wa' haz been de- | 'eon estimated that the annual date | every day in the month £ was at the head of the bana | ©Sted Dbeyvond drawing down the | acy it must prove thal it can sup- cla’ed | harvest of the river country of south- Up until the outbreak of ‘he war, 7, . 5 | montniy stipend. 16 they ave. it must [ port it in ihe manner in which f{qnroush Yo hav ot yet bin tackled | S0 Mesopotamia approximates one ' southern Mesopotamia was sradually We make this sale on Sat- 3 o four vear lease on (heir | has been accustomed—TRoston Record | iy th” mad an’ warrin® mob yindred and fifty thousand tons | srowing more prosperous because o Feip SR T ing houses and shooting down | P¢ Only with a four vear o o Bty | — 1f vew should he |~,,,.';‘,‘.”, e o “The date tree consists of a trunk | the steady expansion of the daie in- urday when the children d» b, Women and children. Now that | interest for at the end of that UM | g Senators Todge and Wee vew prepa‘ed? ¢ about fifty to eizhiy fee high, which | dustry. Mueh money was being cx- | 10t go to school and you can a5 seen fit to eross the border and | the change of an administration, theY | were among the voters in support o is crowned at the summit by a cluster | pended in irrigation projects, one ¢n- bring them in to be fitted Hish | t00 must zo the way of the lame duck. | President Wilson's plans. 3 achu- | (horus: of Jeaves dropping somewhat in the ! terprise alone having been preparing 3 g o p = | setts is not in the habit of forsakinz I'm a axin, ete, hape of a huge umbrella. The trunk | to spend $130.000,000 for the irriga Sale hcgms Saturday at of tion of some 4,000,000 acres of land. | 8:30 3. m. Coats are in all directed the nefarious work o st American soil with his he ! some instances postmasters have Ik there is no other way out but to | 11 S0me instances postma the president in National bw him into his Mexican fastness | Proven great men for their po " | River Terald. Hev vew o ammunition ing covered with scales, and these | It is estimated that there are 13.000.- | —." i - | numerous other g is an ad- | Se Bl yo! rifles laid away rought foot-holds enable a man hold- { 000 acres of land in Mesopotamia that sizes from 2 years up to 14 mitted fact that the assistant post- | vm,lfi mysterious aeroplanc \«hvr!‘v 3 3 amplitide of othah wah ¢ :::i‘<2‘i\vv‘:j1‘;lx:y\“1‘ i‘l;‘r- :r.;:» h(\‘} a \nnpv;‘\‘ul\lll)v \|:'\:Ilit::jll}‘(rirriyz;:,!{f‘tim "' ‘Qx‘f years. And in this sale vou master is the man who does the work. | has been wesrying Duluth turns ou plies » (o the top with case. would make 2 ritory approximat B R hate to | to be the toy hallaon of a practieal [Fev yo' zof youah navy ready The Arab is about as successful in | the size of New Hampshire, Ma get for $1.98, Coats marked o diplomacy needed in the deal- s R o 4 Duluth worry | T get R i making use of every part of the cate | chusetts and Connecticut.” ™ 1 260 the systeny abolished Ounsvess | Jolst Bub wht should Dulull wors in de game an' play, cletel down from $3.98, $5.00 an | men might be slad to have the DUrden | Comimercial ¥ = We propose to clean with Villa and his gang. All that | | when Milwaukee is calm?——Buffais |10 anvthing should take yo by " $7 50 | of supporting candidates for the posi- FEE [ e yew (hink yo' got a plenty i ' | out all our Children’s Winter ¢ Department sending a goodly o e ho andy with a gun? ; " S e ifigns takenfoit theinthands; Ut icH S8t WD En SR L e b B i s i ol | COOD ARRAY OF NEW BOOKS NAMED Coats on Saturday and we ; the more common A’ enemy : g N e vonle cherish | MM in the more comn 3 ady Colonel Slocum has sent some | 0Tty of American people cher work: hut able-badied hohocs con- da’ed T S = , . PN cxpect the $1.98 price will ac- Pers from the Thirteenth Cavalry | the idea that like every little Dov i i e to thrive and walk about wit! a shol al ouah Old Glory? ”\ H\STIT[JTE S LIST THlS “ hEK Somblish P | having a chance to become President [ the same complacency at heretofore. | Kin vew fight, ‘er must vew run = §= 0! ‘D 1sh our PU‘PUSCg | they too have an opportunity to he- | —AMiddletown Press “""“;'_:l’::‘?e‘:;"' if vew ain't, please &€l | Ap of dhe moving picturc, by N. V. }sketch “which may enable him (ths .(’OMS il d‘SpIayCd. IR0 I Biing about the desired end; but [ C0Me Postmaster. - So why take all i G G rader hod (he : | Lindsay. reader) to obtain a correct perspec- | Window and notice if you he event that this little sroup of | (M€ 10 out of livina? Let them 50 jjop¢ 4o pesist even caplure. and it |Chorus: “Interesting and original discussion : ' Put which will need to be filled | please. None sent on ap- in for each several country and per ” aric: 80 S | on and thrive hopes | would he strange, indeed, were he I'm a axin, ete, ¥ % 5 i i o 2 % e American soldiers is unable to | ! :W’\V‘l ‘” "‘” 'r:‘:i‘i?dd'h'” e in which Mr. Lindsay compares the 'jod of history by much careful study” | proval, no tclephone orders H A i = > € i S = e motion pictures to the old Egyptian ; —A. L. A. Booklist cC S i 1 | fainl Acstructiontl Tott iU is nothi=l oo 3 e vD! o accepted. Cash in full must B e i TR it i L THIS BACHELOR BARS PAINT. | picture writing, classifies the seveiul N b pt \ _”‘ ull m v‘ : el STH AR RRan T Al e e e e e e e i1y n o bk o= S WO D eEp aid a titime o fisaleRGiame 1 1 | the treg has the appearance of he- | get his scalp, get him if the h must extend all the way down he lower end of Mexico. There | ¢ But even at that we wuld ft take place is an order from the bpursuit of the murderers. A ple of zood machine gun platoons le with the situation, every soldier Columbus should be dispatched mand on the pretext that the sub- A = “ ¢ [ in motion, intimat > " c "I marine js defensively weals and that | iefuses to “Mess ‘Through '“'; " i, B '“m’:“ n”"’y"] :‘niltlu. o paint \l r‘lahlr)(})l IR e for warm coat for the tets millions of circus-goers over the lanc b ol e [N ivee Gonte of Rougen (o Gothiiss bl D=8 tion, splendor pictures or A helpful hook for the teacher o el it belor | 3t is impossible to supply prize crews. | e oats o uge” | 3 d ; TR Bell where it belongs. in MeXico. | 1\ on a¢ the funny antics of the Al e U T e e T i, | aenitecture i motion, and prophe- or leader of girls. coniaining studies $1.98 each on Saturday. sh an | Overlook e o Slwood (N, J.) Dispateh Phila. | laws of nations the) Slivers is dead. No move shall the | t haste over the border and carry gl : s e NG les i sl tically speaks of their coming im- of women. Biblical and modern, world's greatest clown, the man who ! S B s R North American.) | portance He has initiated photo- adapted to use with groups of youn } impersonated fwo baseball nines all ! B o | play criticism. That is a big thing women in churches and clubs. A BRING ON THI GLADIATORS, | imity o mitigate the practice of as Robert W, Hunt, of this place, is @ 3 ! e PG . 1l anithettan hari Roor: inder ; ' ed rollege ins SRl ci- | 1o have done, and he has done oLy 300klist B h e rilly ot the Bifth wara| Y 2lmselffonitheltaninaniaionlind et sassina tion e ilicine v ctims S ilfontyS{iretited Scoll imstzictor il ol leRpniniion e a G iieRliaaidon ll' = v o | the great tent. The one-man hasehall | mive up a right they have possesscd | dentally. o zood looking. well-to-do {0 ) 1 oaction. Tn- ublican Club Tuesday night one | ! hachelor, As . result of this com- | timacy and friendliness, and splend- - Mysticisin, a study in nature and . Sl by common consent from time im- % 5 ) n i me. Slivers died his own or.” Francis Hacket! in the New R development of man's spiritual co hand. Frank Oakley., the- king of | Mmemorial pi et ilioniivezaral{Bhinatintand Sl ecenGlingl colBRERIREE £ ol ciousness, by Bvelyn Underhill “The 199-201-203 MAIN STREET. mayoralty. O. I°. Curtis, failed to 2 2 | to ancient customs. is. In short, to | Iiwoud post office, inguisitive persons i1 ¢ 55, by Fvel) ) -201-203 s SET. oo style is fluent and the immense | them all, is no more. i 3 w 3 o = appearance) Mayor Quls : : | enjoy 2 e advantazes to be de- | of Ilwood are looking for leap-year jn his appearance. Mayor Quigley | | end 1l the advantaz | Letters from America. by TRupert Weight of learning carried easily ooke. and without pedantry."—Indepen- | has made it come true hefore the candidates for nomination to | Don’t you remember those old days | rived from the new weapon. whiiz | desclopments. : received i letter from brossed his resrets on the situation 5 when the circus came to town and | Germany's foes are to abandon even funt recently | refused (o take advantage of the | o 5 T 0T reted youy | their ancient rights for fear of _in- | a nearby (own, containit bill for i e \ YU ring the new weapon-—-New Yo §0 cents for “tint” purchased by “Mrs way into the sreat show. and then |3 00 Elunt o Instead of gelling angry, They are delightful. “testifying dent eyes.”— Life 3 With a charm than increases as he “Admirable alike for its restrained .o goes to ihat quest of unprejudiced style and for its balanced treatment | Bildad the Quill-driver, ; Culture. the trie poetic, fhe vision ©of @ subject which has been so often Caine. ; ‘how you laughed when Slivers. (he s : + following communi- | <! 5 J be' deplored that Councilman | € g i Hunt indited the of the life of man. which was fo associated with the opposite quali- rtis and the Mayor did not mest in | 2 the gaunt the lank, the lean. the | Prenacn(hnair e ‘\r‘n“. have nad several offers of mar- | PTOYe the livelicst of hix lmpulses.” tie ation, Drusilla with a million, by Blizabeth whom he would have invited | jdebiate on municipal affairs, It is 5 ames Cooper. ringe, and one or two ladies have a = . - Poeticall orkal by Iionel Wonnaon R | Most interesting American (Theodore - “The poet had two passions, one | Mans reach, by. § N. Roin Roosevelt) by Tulian Street devotion to the Catholic church and | “A good novel of modern Virgin- wiris the other love for Treland.” ian life. The characters are clearly On the {rail of Stevenson. by €. M. el drawn and the interest well sustain- Hamilton Robert HMugh Benson, an appr ed throughout. It is, moreover, on “He has himself heen a traveler tion, by 0. K. Parr excellent temperance story, though sits &% with nothing about it to suggest the B Goicie on that what wouln| ) Ul clowibcame outiof fhe little (Waterbury Republican.) S Seesin Sl | entrance and made everybody happy? | President Wilson =aid 10 the mem= | 1ot we were engaged without B nave been edifving to have sat | 1S WS ol funny, with his big flap- |bers of the Gridiron Club at their fimaking any offer, and It is wilh fear SRR S | pety-Nappety white shoes, and (he [ Tecent dinmcy ; and trembling we pass cach day of fl listened to these two giants of the |1 wonld o great deal vather know |0 which is dixisiblel by our Bieo1 arena. - But the sugsestion | Sy e wallked. And then when hel o). they arc talking ahout around 2 Y However. when Mrs, Hunt does ar got out in the center of the ring. how | quict firesides all over fhis country a good one and should not e lost he played the baseball maume all by | than what they are talking about in f ) o "G L0 ke the heavens, with the shuffle. Mayor Quigley and the along the trail of Stevenson, has seen fhe places he saw and {alked Snirit of man. an anthology, in Enz- | tract."—Publisher's note with the people e knew."—A. T.. A lish and French from the phil- Dooklist : osophers and poets, made by | Naval occasion irtimeus pseud fined zold, or to add another tint fe faral Bobort Brioses. 8 I 1s, by Basil e i s o sy RenBongthcReldistonclase fiici i¥ens ‘Spirituality is the basis and foun- | Side of the angels, by Basit King o e > us 2 vironment. life. and ar. by T1, dation of human life—rather than By the author of “The Inner nigigujousifcxceRs WNhc e an Gl . Oshorn. i the apex or final attainment of if Shrine,” “The Wild Olive,” et “In (his volume Professor Oshorn Preface. 4 " has done 2 splendid service. hoth for “The hooks consists of passazes in [ Three things, by Mr himself. Tiemember how he went to |the cloak rooms of congress. T would | o1 jike (he rose -and with lips uneilman should meet in the foren- : . = deal rather know what th t and “struek out. an sl forum, as did the orators of old in | 2 B nd then fmen on the had a fight with the unipive? And | ¢ige and in the shops and on the ! Sl like the damp of crushed strawvwherry. trains and by 20 WENT | <he <hall have no need of ‘tint.’ cient T hetween the I'alatine “To tint the HIv. to gild the re- | 1 rive she shall come as nature yml!fll'd‘ | | i | i sometimes he'd knock o home run, | farms are thinking about and yearn- e anditne Capitoline SRWHCOULU IS G o8 ne samcl fori hisisine ol | i fon than) beatlanvofilig woditen: THiovas Sioat fon analanthail vel iy us prociamaticn SROCE ROl I IGH ted to draw up rules oyl it is w0 ecase to hear and so casy lo S TR e stands used to laugh hemselves gt pleking up and scrap of t a committee of Republicans be ap- Kiss we don't propose to mess throuzh . sick at old Slivers and wish that vome printed paper. There fs only one [ 1 v thr coats of painl to zet it | way to hear these things, and that | Pt > | his chosen science and for the read. poetry and prose, and fhe Laurcatc drews hort story which tells how anp o h : “)“ ‘)’ L '“";"”“\ day when they arew up thes 1 s ; 3 i ! - 4 o the finish, or until the L Ao e constantly to zo back fo the i = 5 . ing public. His work is af once a has chosen them according to his own | e i o o T e unEas he. For L R e Al h S e “The Seven Little Gover 3 RS ST T i ‘wfi”\‘ “,f {aste. net according lo what he sup- | American lad learned wl fighting was the funnicst man on cartl REN | fountains are not to be found in any (Philadelphia Public Tedger.) coveries and a surprisingly human ine ' Doses {o be the taste of any Public, | for Belgium that his ideas of cla he had on his paint. But back in the pyecently discovered scources. o A pood deal of fun was poked at | troduction to Palacolithic man “in high or Jow. It has, tnerefore, the | pride, race prejudice and God :vn;\ partners knew him Te-the President were {o he on- [ the “seven little Governors”™ who | his home.—N. V. Times interest of telling us what a grea:c | been all wrons and that after afl ving with the interested popn- | 0550 Ghca ) man whose | €0WCd for a moment with omniscience | carly in 1912 precipitated the move- v master in the art of literature most | he agreed with his mother’—A. L. Probably it might be a ood or:8 N o 8 he would probably discover that peo- [ ment for Roosevelt which led to the ! Spi of France. by Owen Johnson, . admires, what has for him most com- | A. Booklist In lieu of the market-place ize hall could be filled to k dressing room his heart was laden with a great burd (vle around the fircsides and on the |schisin ai the National Convention: fort and import in the present tiinc - 4 sorrowful man, an unhapy ul. | trains and by the wayside and in (he | but their part in that political reve Lenten Reading. of trouble.”—TLondon Tim Covernnicntal Powers Mads Clexter, And the while his heart was breaking, | shops and on the farms are reading | lution was a memorable onc and omrades in servic by M. E. Bur- PR fiuit. not be absolutely nece 3 the ne apers. Zener e V uence initiati on T - he went out there on the tan bark ana | the newspaber In general cach | their influen in initiating the re- ton Three score and ten, by M v Sl S o is reading the newspaver that | volt against the leaders of the re-| “FEleven biozranhical sketches, in S The recent unpleasantness at Wash- made the people laug at Was s | jeases him best. If his newspaper | publican party was not by any means | terestingly told, of men and women | “In a friendly, intimate way the | inston arising from consressional husiness. He swallowed the lump in | should, for any considerable 1ength |as laughable as most of the critics | who have found satisfaction in serv- | author speaks to those who like her- | meddling with diplomatic matters has E o ; | his throat. put on that funny wrin, | of time, make “vociferous proclama- | pretended. Their part in that strug. | ing A% feachers, social workers, 'self “are living in the TLand of Old | had at least one salutary effect It —which must mean oratorica . 1 tions oliey” S ore abhor- i boen alacs a o Tars Ao o : s serves to make clear the precise funcy e A mced FandWR(mbleq over thiskL e lhlionsEoSEnOls¥ iy hich FiweroRaliiox ) Elcha dAbeen RaIn1ostRforetion JioNes ines hers. doctors. for the most var! ~Age,” giving her ripened reflections | 5¢T make clear precise funcy Curtis tell of what has not n e e ¥ ient o his own opinions he Would | ever, and it has remained for the Ney [little Known peaple some of ofher on a variefy of subjects, revealing white sh Al dEnCCLON Nt IO | g pickly cease to read that paper. Tt | York IHerald to recall the seven races. Useful for missionary studw the inspiration which has come to | érnment with regard to foreign re uproarious lauzhter. {is a fair inference that in fthese | public notice by inquiring whether | classes.—A. L. A, Rooklis( L ilior 1 Arings spivitual ana | tions.) Many Fan [honest and | iwells Slivers deserved a better [ale than | days of free choice and multitudinous { they now think that the salvation | * in a God who is “the sirength of [ meaning congressman has realized, newspapers few persons will long {or the country depends upon another | Drama of the spiritual life, Ly A, L. our hearts, and our Home bringer.” | With a shock of surprise, that our ing to bar the women. As they oW Ve not the vote their . (Waterbury Democrat.) d-thon the antagonfsts could 2o the it Do not miss this chance, Botever - clse happens. To hear tions of » different branches of gov- Bue. what should have been done, Mat could have been done, and what As haen undone by the present - b o to die by the hand of Frank Oakley. > % 2 ! fhistration, would be worth goims continue to read a newspaper which | Roosevelt candidacy. M is significan; Sears, A T0 A, Booklist diplomatic negotiations with Germany, 3 Slive the comedian, was too much | e f he 4 - v 4 L . 2 ¥ SRR s iles.to record. To listen to perori- consistently offends them in the mat- | or the drift of political opinion amone Taterial collected from e . England’ or any other couniry: are of a bore to Frank Oakley. the heavy- | {apg At lie ares e earts, . e-time progressives of { ranze of cla : § B s ficiz siness. B o aton L ana o Poreto ARk Qs T b ters that lie nearest theiv hearts, 1 one-time progressives that of the [ range of classic and current What may 1 hope? an inquiry into | none of his official busi The % % hearted. Slivers was the face of com-| There is no way in which any | famous seven only three remain loy- | ture illustratinzg the social. or more {he somrces and reasonableness of | senate, it is true, has a good deal scitatory, to see the gvrations, the | R L T agedy he. |man -or any azeney can ascertain, | al to their 1912 choive. and one eonld | or less practical side of relizious ox- | the hopes of humanity. especially the | do with our foreign relations, becaude lesticulations of His Honor in render- s v : | absolutely. the feelings of 103,000,000 | not he reached. Of the others, one | pericnce as opposed { e pe H 1 " jous, by G. T. must approve diplomatic appoint- i SR Sl S e S G : clinssg 0 ! & i ! ; Lon : 3 ¥ o the personal | social and religious, by G. T. Tadd it must approve diy ppoi | yersons. Certainly it cannot be done |is for Hughes. one thinks a business | and emotional aspect. In an intro- A ments and treaties to make them ef- he had amused people heneath the |y one man at Washington, who, in [ man is needed and one preferred not | ductory note Professor Royvee ,.,“.HJ sty fective. But even the senate ha ™ ; ; great white eanvass, and at his death | moments of crisis, retives to his | to discuss the situation. Whethep | ont hier elaims to originality™—Open | Licton authority to dictate or modify foreign at etherial region wherein they tell | o 2 0 0 forty vears, | Closet and locks the door upon cven |these proportions represent present | Shelf. Cleveland [ Aladore, hy sir Henry Newbolt policies of its own initiative As for s no man has yet set foot To have | s e “ . | ; " | his closest friends, There is no ageney | views of former progressives is one * | “The slow. rambling method and | (po house, it Is a sher in forelgn sportunity of sceing battle reve at least could have been ten |, pe universe which feels the re- | of the unknown clements in the po- | Ephesian Gospel. by Perey Gardner, ' archaic stvle will probably alarm the | relations, until it comes to declaring { more years of mirth and merriment | action of popular opinion so quick litical cquation “A scholarly. sumpaihetic study of Novel-reader. hut the hook deserves | ... ,p appropriating money Oug { for his followers and at th nd of {1y and so sharply as the newspaper | the boolk of John. wriften from fhe careful consideration for its graceful | . itution places the responsibility his side of the story would be far gore interesting than a glimpsé of | hiese two gladiators of old vit- et azuinst each other in mortal com- % s 3 . y sics. no less the e its rhythn . - ! that time he might have refired and |In its own community it constantly viewpoint of liberal criticis rantasics. no less than for its rhythm | g pat would be an event of a life-time, | : ler of his diys tell. | as its feelers out for this reaction Not all children under sixteen who | author helieves the Fourth Gospel and beauty of phrase’—Athenaeum. ARG vock the voiv foundations ot | TRCAC the romainder of B duys tell- pyge ic its Lusiness And, if a nev arc emploved are engaged in labow | he an attempt {0 rewrite and inte: ‘It Uus romance is an indtestion § L Tt GE o o s nel | ing little boys and girls of his life in || aper can hold its readers through a | that wears them out physicaliy t [ pret the life of Jesus in the light of of the spiritual faith that is comling | SR IEERS RS TP TEn T8 TS 1 ] : § | the circus ring. But he chose dif- |year of stress and controversy, it | an early age. and by no means all of | the exalted conception. of Iis Ter- into English literature after the uur.‘w e de i ; ”"‘ re- pjoyved h A feas B e ok xhen the ciios v be assumed that its attitude re- | them are cruelly treated. A majority | son which the church at Ephesus had | the prophets arve right who have said | (BORFEE 0 (0 B8 bl Bn, we say, bring on the diators! R 5 ficots the opinions of ai least a falr | of employves are not heartless task- [ hegun {o hold in the ecarly sceond | that the old art is dead. Nothing to PROLL im—as it did late- i ly—by its apparent disapproval. Buk officially it cannot interferc | comes aroun » shall all miss Sliv- ; o 2 o | " ) 2 £ ‘ . con ol e il Gl Sel 1 of those readers as ac- | masters. The principal indictment | century. \. 1. A. Rooklist. equal the purity and spiritual faith | gress can no more take the Lu conducting foreizn negotiatior | solely in the hands of the president few Britain No Roman peror roportien ers, the sreat. 014 and younz. men | cirately as any human agency possi- | against early employment is that L of this romance was in FEnglish fie- and women. girls and boys, we will | hly could reflect them children ave deprived of the educa- | Ethiopic litursy. its seurces. develop. | 1ion just before the war’—A. L. A he President is learning lessons | tion provided between fourteen and ment and present form, hy S A, | Book Boston Transeript cvery day He has said so. In the |sixteen years. TIn states where no B. Mercer. L problem out of the president’s hands | heginning he stated thal he did not | provision is made for continuation A Gift Put them in the arena before the Iprimar Then let it be “Thumbs | 7p.” or “Thumbs Down,” for the one | e 5D e e e 2 | miss him. No one can fill those hig 1tmen for the other, and may the hetter | | shoes of his nor play the one-man than the president himsel Belfrey. by May Sinclair. | sntimental optimists feel that, by = MONey sury without a congressional an win m o out of the United St | haseball game as he did But while | Long the newspapers. Now he reads [ schools there are no educational ad- | we are laughing at the pranks of {them but disregards the message [ vantages whatever after the : sevenih hishop , botanizing in the human garden in- him. Ultimately, he |limit has been reached. [If the new of New York, hy George Hodees, stead of rhapsodizing. Miss Sinclair | ¥ s xe has deprived them of the pleasure of | - LET THEM LIVE IN HOPE. | other clowns we shall soon forget the | they carry for | dateali Lo | sarn this lesson. too—that it | paternalism means it is a crime for Bl ors far some ears pasthave | one fand only, nor remembsr that bes x.\”:.,v::«f‘r i i i i R :m} child under sixteen years to ho | Tlistory of Christian missions, by . ! reading a fine writer. “Why couldn’t The man who calls himself “The B icifcd (neir qattention’ o varlous | neath the masks out there in the Ting | ‘redium of contact with his people | put fo work, somec atlention should o L S e e SRR G e e hings in the covernment service in | there may be hearts bleeding wiih jihan to shut himself in his cloget | be given to the problems that aris “Well arranged. well halanced, and | pleasant things?" Well in “The Bel- | land, but James knows his: ol e hove of doing away with somic of | serrow. It is the strange way of the [and refuse all contact becajise he | hecause-the children are taken out | up-to-date work including {he mis- | [ she has very delightfully done | prestige. Where he sits is {he head i Aige s Epn T Glivers (Ivank Onkley) fo . CAMNOL obtain the perfect contact |of employmeni There ought o he |sions of the Roman Catholic and She has taken a melodrama, ' of the table. What king of Irelahd jlie ‘plums that hang on the 7 LAl Bayer I8 it could come only with perfect | a readjustment all around - Wilkes- | Greek Orthodox churches. The an-|and, by elothing its characters with ever had a toga to keep him warm? tree. One of the main objects of | dead, a suicide. omniscience, | barre Record. thor has intended this as an oufline | an irresistibly authentic humanity, | Brooklyn Iagle. |

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