New Britain Herald Newspaper, March 10, 1916, Page 8

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NEW, BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, MARCH 10, 1916. BRII'AIN HmLD | to do about our grievances with Great | vanging a New York newspaper and 9 | Britain. Conversely, it is mnone of | delivering it to a New Britain pub- chl || .AN S pr X itain’; i vhe an-1 o S, ar as “ AGEN | s N B B o AR AN, Great Britain's business what hap- | lic. , So far as the “features” go, . Proprietors. | pens in our relations with Germany. | the funny pictures and ial NEWIERITSINGS BUSIKSE - - ) v | ®ow and speci BIG STORE datly (Sundny emseptedy at 4:15 p. m. | That is the essence of the whole thing, | urticles—the late afternoon news- “ALWAYH RELIARLE" Herald Building,’ 67 Church St. | as simple as two and two. \Were | papers from the metropolis are all b 4t the Dom Ofies at New Britaln| GEFMANy in controversy with some | risht. When it comes (o news, how- as Sccond Class ‘Mall Matter. other power she would not welcome | cver, they are far behind time for the . = @ by carrier v, any part of the city [ A1 hints from this government as to | simple reason they are printed in the h 25 § Cents a Weelt 63 Cents a Month. | what she should and what she should | wee sma’ hours of the morning. It or ptions for paper to by ma : : B e e not do in her relations. We did not | may be well to remember this and not an t $30 a Month $7.00 a year. advise her upon any diplomatic busi- | get excited over any New York 0 Iy profitable advertising medium in | 1SS Previous to the war. She has no | “extras” that may appear here. 3 BB Caiin ooks andipreas | right. to advise us, ‘There are good e a e u | Of course, you can buy ‘oom alway: on to advertisers. - " i SRRy nvertiscers men and competent men in the State | Villa, like his name, has ever led in lots of clothes made to a erald will be found on sale at Hota- | Department at Washington who know | villainy. : § 5 News Stand, {2nd St and Broad- | ‘ ! = : : m measure— but in this Ay, New Vork City; Board Walk. what they are about They are now e . fintic City, and ‘Hartford depot. determined that Germany shall give | FACTS AND FANCIES ’ gty i reat event we pound R N oA sonie definite information as to what Ay s i g g8 Ommce.................. is going to be done under the new | The newly bolstered forelgn poliey : S N | down hard on the fact Bl Rooms. . | e | submavrine campaign. The United | proclaimed by President Wilson 1 2 W\ = l i ; | [ his : s ) | a S othes are O WAYS TO GET VILLA. States wants assurances that the lives | Nis letter to Senator Stone has as its 3 that these C | foundation the honor of the United f , - | Zf its citizens travell rchant- | o " Urs - B .. .| s citimens travaiing onimercnent: || GERSREST M0 Monor ot fuiio] Unltad fla s J fi’fi i made to YOUR MEAS 5 i g . 1o | Mmen, armed for defense only, shall not | pass where our decisions in dealing erv Bver the Mexican border to URE. Every measure- ke the slaughter of Americans at | P© jeopardized by the undersea boats. | with international events must be . =% - e et - 1l and ever, imen- straighten out. And it can be done | PI® eXpediency of our interpretation ent ¥ | That should be an easy matter to | Pased upon our honor, not upon sim- b That the boys of the Thirteenth | 25 & | of lTaw. Upon the degree of support | M A B | > | . s . B know how to fight is eyi. | O71Y between the United States and | pledged to this American declaration n" a / [ ] il sion recorded by our ex- | Germany. There can he no hcad- | by the American congress and tha | A il ¥ > d by the g - H 1 v < S " 0y the fact that they killed | " 246 by making it a three- | American people depends our future pert who knows the hu than one hundred of the bandits standing among the great auog i . : i sta powers o , R 3 j o Bursuca. But the main object | PEN9CT E¥ME Relot1a s o I or Rl | i | ; man anatomy like a B thasc was not accomplished,— | ¥ R e A Y s U0 o accomplished, oy MOB VIOLENCE. [ : ‘ | book, a skilled worker japture of Vill The government | | Water power legislation now pend- [ ] jow asked permission of the From Australia comes the report|ing in congress is entitled to closer who fits and adjusts the cloth to your figuce that fourteen thousand troopers re- & scrutiny than it seems likely to get in B ver the 1ine and at one o'clock | cruited for duty in the European war | & e when so many more {mme- We make this sale on Sat- so as to atone for any physical defects and at el | “went on strike” while encamped in | Giafely engrossing issues are betore [ urday when the children o = the same time enhance the evident advan- afternoon the order was 1\’5\\(“!‘ the legislators. The Ferris bill, ac- tage of a man’s makeup. and of Villa, outlaw and mur- fan authorities to send more | hem to £6. 1t is (4 the in.| New South Wales. They went into | cording to the hest authorities, was | NOf 80 to school and you can | of Mexico and the United States | NeArby towns and caused mumerous | generally a fair measure when i | bring them in to be fitted. | riots, topping off all these outrages | Passed the house, but the senate ; « o 0 this be done, that Villa, the ban- | l-‘\h v ‘:‘p e During the course of | COMMittce reported it with some un- Sale begins Saturday at 3 B 0ut out of commissibn, The | With looting. = wrse of | fortunate changes, among them pro- | 8:30 a. m. Coats are in all = 0 ar 0 B nzistas have proven themselves | the melee several soldiers and civilians | visions which tend to promote the al- | o+ ' 5 : | y 1) | were killed and all the hospitals in the | ready strong tendency toward mon- | SIZE€S IFOM 2 years up to 14 petent of takinz care of the sit- Rty % H 9 . Tt is now up to the Unitea | immediate vicinity were filled with the | OPOlV by permitting one development | y€ars. And in this sale you 4 g 52 Y ; S voundeal Scenes' like thisthayel ocs | conoerngtolacquire fas Smany public {e i $1.98 C C 8 to rid civilization of this man | Wounded. Scencs lik 5 o power sites as 1 desires.—New Yorx | S€T 10T $1.98, Coats marked | Thefereat yaristy fof sabriosffor Vouraseecol i o R ver the curred time and time again when | Dres down from $3.98 $5.00 and f feature of this event making possible three most desir- vith instru-tions to =ct Villa, and | huse groups of men have been gath- —_— $7 50 \x/c propo’se to c‘ean e y O able elements—exclusiveness in materials, made to meas- U - - Gl i rery v 3 aves = noney Bhe10 be ‘kept there until the | ered together for war duty. Under e may sssume that Germany will ure fit, and a very low price that saves a man mor f« wecomphihed, The blood of | discipline they are all right. they act |abide by Ter promise (regarding out all our Children’s Wirter This Sale enough to make this sale worth while. Mo s sovine for vonmenmco | On thelr good behavior, Given the | Submarine war) That is her most | Coats on Saturday and we These Are the Days ¥ 9 3 s 1 :p | Probable course. 1t is reported that A 2 can e but one satistaction— | freedom from their military work it B0 C SR T 1L TATR ST VT | expect the $1.98 price will ac- | have added a merchant talor- life of Vitla. Dead or alive, we | G0es not take much to drive thein cejved strict orders to ertain compllsh our purpose ing department and for a “GE of this wonderful offer—positively no orders taken at have hifm. He must be shot, | Into an unweildly mob. Somethinz | whether merchant ships they may 4 ACQUAINTED SALE” we will make this price after Saturday, March 18th. ed. tin throush with a sword, or | Of this same trouble must have in- | OVerhaul are armed. Quite aside Coats are displayed in our | to your measure for a limited time F | po 4 rind . 5 1 Thursday, March 9 I (11 country at the | fosted Villa and hismen. Asilong as [ 297 fhe extreme dificulty of secur- | Window and notice if you Ol e e G i Vriday, March 10 ; r were r ing | L ormatlolfatsses, Fulien s our $25.00 an 30. abrics T Satun _ of a rope. Once an example is | they were recognized soldiers fIshting | sue of that order would not in the please. None sent on ap-| c;‘g 75. ’ : :?(:;“L(:‘:“' :::"::: :‘1 e of (his arch-demon, his half-fed | £07 @ recognized principle they were | least change the situation. from our | proval, no telephone orders | . When you takc into consideration Tsdee | Marchlid B i e he |all right. Disorganized, defeated, | POINt of view. Armed or unarmed : - the rapidly increasing cost of fabries ? cday. h 13 BB Vi fears. 16 respect the | 12 2Rt ot wonte must be aarnen ana | accepted: - Cashiinifull must| N e . i onRRes. N 5 - 2 e s e e e linasseriserafaia crewll nu L S be paid at time of sale. Come | necessity of taking advantage of this Forduty March 17 hold in contempt. To the man | ated into a gans of | place of safety. That Is the Ameri- | fo £ | sale. Saturday, March 18 gets Villa the American people | bandits. Were they kept busy fight- | can position—New York Tines, r warm coat for the tets - e 4 ¥eady to crect a monument, It | Ing Carranza and his followers the = $1.98 each on Saturday. L 0f American citizens whom they | discouraged and sent to rout they Our Restaurant be no mean task this gathering | Outrages on the border which took | As the race between the gun and ‘Phone orders an ftdeal place B 1= of the worst crim- Diacelyesterdayimorning: would thave the. rm;ltn:a:-(j.: tone ;‘.w‘sl‘]:hf"fn -r\':\v] ! Charter 3050, for a light lunch, K that ever trod the face of earth; ! never occurred i s o5 0% ’ L4 a cup of tea uvr nothing new in size or range of Q and Mafl Orders fhere are Anerican soldiers brave | _ v R Ut the R G e 1 I rubstantial re- B ana cqual ;v; the task. Let| BRYAN'S WAY OF THINKIN ‘am:‘n“r‘nox'e‘o1nr;nrx:ng:3n= t‘l‘v\«\n(\ :\:2 fl- MGM'L“&.AN e HARTEORD y. T ‘ i 4 i i P T e e brought into action OUR DATLY AUTOMOBILE DEDIV ERY INSURES PROMPT DELIVERY OF YOUR PURCHASES i | 1 get him. Poor old Willlam Jennings Bryan. | mhese German howlitzers 4o not out. 199-201-203 MAIN STREET. | Daily Delivery iu New sritain, Elm wood, Newington, Cedar Hill, MapleHill and Clayton. One begins to wonder, after hearing | range largest naval guns or those some of his off-hand remarks, if his | mounted in permanent fortifications o T e 2 = o | SUCh as we have at Sandy Hook and | 28€S: encouraged and supported ecause Germany's latest memo- | Wif¢ or some other member of the | o "eo s around New York, Thew | It Will do a manifest injustice to Ru- B e Chie new subinarine \ family does mnot write all his set|jpave nelther the range nor the strik. | Pert Husghes, Tiobert W. Chambers inceasing tremendously, and the large - ches ¢ hi {s gres v I3 5 a Ty ifty o and Elinor Glyn, and serve to fois: | - i e S a pro. | SPeeches for him. He is great when |ing force of a twelve-inch, fifty cal- g i number of bachelor apartments goin oo end e T | handling oratory, but becomes insig- | ibre rifle, let alone larger guns now | UPOn the alert minds of the coming atewa tO up in the cit v Sroct W] that the United States settle all & £ & S generation such puerilities as Danicl | Dt Shs clt S werd Lieldolit 84 SOy - b oo | mounted on battleships cosst nificant when stacked wup against| ~ % they are mobile and can he | Webster, Patrick Henry and Dorothea 1t may be that the rural Sistviety and VO THRIEEE-HAN ‘D GAME rences by a system of bartering | | bargaining with Great Britain, | 2T8umentation. His thinking seems | fired from concealed positions at pe Hemans,, to name the least objec- . the small towns have found the secret shington officlals find that the note | t© Proceed from the cellar to the gar- | manent fortifications.—New York ::;:nul‘fl: arh the ninc'm[\‘!s \l\‘hnw: wrl!b an o applness | | of 1ove's success, which is being over- s 2 : e 7 s may be read withou ctensiy tirely unsatisfactory. The whole | Tet @nd is always a little late in get- | Commereial. JRESRCR LR Ye | [1ooked in the cities. Maybe the city i ¥ i . {oh e spurts 2 expurgation. nothing more than a repeti. | HinB there. Take this which he spurts It would be much better if the .v e ; S ] M || e e we T s ) e e e ot Washington, D. C., March 10.— |end of their important trade rou Like | 2fter the vote in the House on the Mc B state officials of Washington wers {o £t !1 ond all possible chance of failure | Lemore resolution: “The question | | the rules or to have them changed | - o = & ~» 3 I zateway into . - | = = reconsider their too hasty action, Let Aden is the unhappy gateway into g 5 : et ack | hasn't a ch . ake & g b school boys engaged in a quarrel, | | in the midst of the conflict. The only | i o mens i A gainst superior and sustained un.ul_» 5 ! chance to take aim at him. | was presented in such a way that!ining to insist upon, so far as neu- | Lo, C'Hioven o fhrough the maga. happy Araby, and, moreover, it 15 sqen may.be last In maiters of cli- | Neverthelessit is a fact that the amall there is little significance in the vote. | tral rights and interests are concern- | Ao h’(“‘»m- r‘"gi;‘m‘“ meens r;”(‘l:-‘ 5 :1“ one of the foremost strategic points .iute, but it is among the first in ';\::1\2 In once more acknow 1’omtzed';n: i 2 hen be h0s o censo o con- ki 8 4 2 i S ) 1e nation 'he fac al - oes .d, is that they shall be adhered fo. : ; °0- | Emgland’s trade route through malters of fortification. ] ld-like method of blaming thmr‘.“’l ‘(‘"“‘ zot \xepresentiithe seniimen e e (e e el o e BnaTHon el i 61 ”“‘ r:“i e o lie marrow poninsula on which [leap-yvear comes once every now and R e e naial s SRR SnsEess A SR OB IR R ST0I BOD Saal o) I i el maresisubinaving|naygestcohead i fosRhalinarenta (the B O - = y AC | ihis Queen of southern fortresses | then is the sole balm to the city. When G % e h to read Fast,” begins a war primer issued t0- [ roarg jtself is anly about 16 miles | the year arrives when man no longer did that. 'l stop if hel attacks upon merchant vessels o i 3 5 ears itself is a forhae Euth i 3t “ |imsrehantmen e AthISERaueston (frtlure i sod much il the Fbetters MSuCh e ¢ay by the National Geographic so- in circumference. It is the bowl of | Proposes but is proposed to the orop 8 b 5 i 8 s : ‘ e alia aiio of maidens dwin somewhat, and been presented and the opinion of “ks have no right to be made. un- SRR LG A LG cioty at Washington, which tells of jan cxtinct volcano. The llh.\ ";”s s s dvnv\\i‘””r‘h; nd & i i N g tegister, & v d arc the remains of { ater s up te economists to find Conzress asked upon it. there is no | less warning can be given, the char- (New Haven 1 vhxlmm the first stronghold on the TLondon- |#oUNd arc the remain e eyt cvantin ibince=ts makd B - \ R doubt that a majority in both Sen 2 ‘;‘H“r the et “:l "\rlm ;Jn-trn:;",‘,fl dll‘ . \nmd:lcmt‘(f\]m\"‘“—y h.]:\‘,‘,.,i,,?“‘: India route to withstand a severe lan altitude of nearly 1,800 fect. All | Women go more in one year than tic ¥ y admn 3§ ki e ang es are saved No civ address tc Ne Tk T |C © 1 | a ca P e ’ o hot 'basn condncted in. a and House would express themselves | {jon should assent to naval are | convention, if there were not abund sttack by the Turks. “One Arabian {feod znd water for use on the pen- | Man can go in three. It's a nice little | in favor of preventing Americans from | on other terms, or be a party fo | ant signs at Washington thal the re- |author says of the country behind finsula has to be brought in from the ’f'“‘f""'p‘y‘“‘ ”,:'r:r:”‘::fiffg P zf::s""r’sv | traveling into the danger zone on bel- | any agreement that merchant ves- | publicans intend to make use of Mex- [Aden, that country known as A1 ouisilealueh R0t Lo S aler Bl Py I toiis (it e of smoke, i ips’ T Y sels shall he made defensel and | ico and the cvents there in the past | 17elis ‘Its inhabitants arc ol plied from the government conden- 1 e ade up s ymarine i w she contends there | ligerent ships. The Commnonsk evl g g Tt will be harder to main- | four vear 1s an issue in tie cam trong, sickness Is unknown, nor sers, whieh were designed to make 8asoline fumes, the smell of orange arine is she contends . 5 b ill he harder to ma e vears, as sue e cam- 8, sick £ - 2 UL reakting coffes. o violition of the old law, a pretty | @ently thinks that when the men in | tain the vignt stand frmly after the | paizn. They will point tc the appar- |sre there poisonous plants or ani- itie (fortress independ in casc of | Peels and the roasting of coffee, and ! ~ | the national Congress decide that il | vacillation that has occurred, but it | ently slow progress of Car . pro. |mals; nor fools, nor blind people, |war's necessities. The population of | where the sun comes down throush it | 3 t ) BrCSE U , he wo re ever voung: the |44,000 is a mixture of all the ele- |leafy covers instead of fighting to get is right to act in one way they rurn | Should be done. TIf it means a hreak | visional president by favor of the ad- I KE, B £ 3 = 2 ; b ¢ through the smoke stacks and sky | with Germany, it will he beemuse | ministration at Washington, in the |climate Is like paradise and one wears ;ments of the Orient, with an inter- | through the smoke stacks and sky- pols 2% | there was no honorable way of avoid- | work of reconstruction or the organi. {ihe Same garment summer and win- {sprinkling of Western drummers and | serapers of the clty streots. Love 13 is likewise guilty by her | There are individual c wheve this | jh0 §t We can gain nothin by | zation of a permancnt government. |ter” Aden, however, where the Brit- iI'ritish administrators and military flllna” s thvx A”r ks lS o | has been true; but, as a whole, the | cringing and lose mothing avorth | Bapecially will they point to the wn. |ish and Turkish forces are opposing :men. Arabs, Chinese, Persians, Turks, | chance and a cour prospects of neutral ports and seizure | & ) . . - e e %4 | Hindus Parsces NWevatiansisud e | | votes in Congress generally register | keeping by erting ourselves on | avenged destruction of American lives | one another, enjoyvs none of thesc Hindus, Parsces, Wgyatiar idanese | o e ena alogued as inherent land Jews compose (he stoiid, stable | the side of civilized modes of war- | —seventy-six according to the goy- |advantage rtalogued inherent | und i} . s > : abia el ipo i at endures i A C vison That Tells, | Eon ) Sy fare and the defense of established | crnment’s requested report to the sen- [in Arabia Felix : Bonsiatian (et owiunee e il o] Mt 2 feels that it will then be in a | Members, whether they are risht or | o New York Journal of Com- | ate, many more than that, according | ‘“Spread over its ragged hills of ear in and out, and carries on the | (New York Commercial) jon to offer some safeguard to | WIOTE | merce. {o the opponents of the administrn- | sun-made ash ;.m;_ rm«]lm-i m\e?rcrn:g ibors of the great fortress camp. | et us compare this right to sail 4 and children | s lon-—-as the result of the un in (eloom, sudl uurelioued By veEets — - | the scas with the right to walk the erican men, women and children { 4 Nosino: fion, Aden invites little atlention in QEREthe Msh seas. Very good. | G i | LI (35 B0 T8} MR, | There is not a little reason (o believe | peace times. ‘Aden is a valley sur- | Woss of a Bachelor ere is no gainsaying the fact that | New Britain folk have been time | (Washington Post.) [ that its Mexican poliey has been (h rounded by fhe sea: its climate is N Toihlsunty | Once the proper impetus is given | weakest point in this administration, |so bad that it turns wine into vine- | o ooy oo o0 Ghicaga, a | MUrders, bomb explosions and othex to the forward movement it is mot | In fact, onc may read between the |sar in the space of ten days’' com- | Judse J. Eoi & g lines of the president’s message (o incd onc disappointed Arab trave- | bachelor, is entitled 10 sympathy de- congress in December his own e lor of the Middle Ages. And in the {spite that fact that he 18 to lack fifterences with the United ‘States, | in the late afternoon must carry the | 2rTanged point. Out in the State of | yjction that he went too far in inter- | centuries since his visit the climate not improved. Tn spite. never- 2 it | Washingto i . Sl re. We wasted a good deal with Great | Jatest news. And so often they have | Washington, where the full tide of | ference there. We wa . ererl Chicas s GOt bE Dosbatiat et e : b/ ® | progress Is the only thing that is | of money and some valuable lives in |theless, of the terrible heat that | OVer Chicago's Court of Domestic Iic full these days, the initial momentum | the expedition to Vera Cruz in 1914, |zathers over Aden’s valley and cling | lations and has been so shocked by ir state department. The United | news hot off the press is indeed Stuff | has run amuck. One entertaining | and we have mighty little to show |to its low hills and its lack of a good | the revelations of marital infelicity man is so busy dodging the cars and Bt the old story Of repr { the confidence men that the love god fmany and Great Britain ever since war | n have resorted to the Americans traveling on clligerent her memorandum, which s | olesome in tone and kindly in spirit, ance with recognized principles international law. But because the s sion However, says Berlin, been any violation of inter- right ar g o he other way. law by the submarines, Great | TIEht around and vote the other way neutral commerce. If Great Brit- fa hindered in that work, Ger. |&accurately the convictions of the udg. | streets of New York city. Some blocks !in this city have been the scenes of e one main contention set forth hy | and time again lured into the belief | ermany comes near the isst but | that any New York newspaper which | erimes of violence. Gangs infest cep- 4 4 s possi S = e 1in streets at times and defy e method proposed of settli the [ appears on the streets of this city | 41 possible to stop at the pre- tain streets at tin v efy the po- [ lice. When some of these gangs are nerve. He has heen presiding of late | p ¥ i Bt on the warpath it is unsafe to walk A the streets in which the old forl ritain, never will be condoned by | discovered that what purports to be he s ich they h forth. A prudent and peace-loving citizen . i i At o place ma : will stay away from their haunts. The ates is not zoing to heco a party | five and six hours old. An example | educator, not content with the text- | for them. But ': “‘]:'(‘ ']"‘ “'”]"““” S ":.”}:‘,‘,’l ‘, - \‘hlu":l‘(vly;\b ‘-l.‘:m('”"' # I'brought to his attention that he s | police will advise strangers to keep ar system. of reckon- | ¢ T .vidence vesterday when | books, has been teaching his pupils | the case agains SRDresics aslde ARl e i 0 Lo ios . a0 . | away w R EOLRIe s Branine ik Seese s it e IO e S English fr e PUPS | om this, by the mumber of Ameri The town is huilt on desolate vol- | asked 1o be transferred to some other | @Way while trouble is brewing, if they Snglish from the magazines, he re- i 3 e SR hat e . field of judicial aetivity he awk- | are asked—but they do not order any- sult is that he has been impeached | lives sacrivics Elihu Root said can rocks t constitute a pen- | 4 awk . . Menar T Vo < s { body not to walk through such street “ s h o cula near the entrance fo the Tted | Ward position in which his Honor 3 ree for lese majeste against the scheol | “40.000 Americans has e Sty N . - 5 Sbly They protect the toolhardy to the best g the outcome of any controvervsy | Mexican bandits. The attack on Co- | ook corporation, or whatever other | fortunes in Mexico.” Tl s, . The Strait of Babel-Mandeh | finds himself is considerably compli- C t A s s ed D . f. is is leap | Of their abiliy \3 S S Ll e s G ROCK coERaTsL O, RrYRaLoNe e T Ao lexnloltery Mexio es 100 miles away: and Aden is the | cated by the fact that this is leap % : - [Npendent upon what that third po lumbus took place before six o'clock :HI\\.’HII\\ :‘“(\I\IIV/{‘IH”::]Ml.vl.“\ i S o e e s e e e e e Ir. 8 .sangster kills a passerhy His aged by ash radical con- ) g fPomises or does not promise to do. in the morning. The first flash’ it lives for dollars in various rts of | Ocean that keeps an cternal vigilance | cial seclusion and a heavy heart for | . o : Great Britain has found disfavor at | came at eight o'clock, when the wire 9Uuct jieand Shlmy tog thet electric | chaltes Tog =, is not going to he drawn into a | the big story of the day broke,—the bntention with a third power, mak- | invasion of American territory by | police run him down and the courts cepublic. Considering that, if the |over the safety of the rich Ingzlish [ some time ta come | o the rept { murder. The murdered man may have been advised to stay away and may have been foolhardl but he was But why not n sines as text- e al goos e X 5 4 : e hands of the United States-zov-!opened. The complete report was in | uks in English? Taking the run of | Number of American dead can be i «(h,x 7 !u-. vay. t:.( It 5 mm]r I‘i“ to avoid the conclu- e . o s sl = 5 asured by three figures, we have ritish captured ancd annexed e I sion that Judge llopkins has, with et because of her unlawful in- | shortly after noon. Yet, not one of | literature in the past, has there ever | Measured 3 ek < i 5 i a . pe] SR A e s et e e e e place on January 16. 1839, since | undue precipitation, facrificed an ap- | MAY have been foolhardly, but he w Brference with our commerce. the late New York papers, reaching E However, it is easy to puneh holes |which time they have made the place | portunity that most bachelors would v xerci his right % 5 ; ime more or b s than is found i i to walk throug yublic street ¢ Bas been also accused of arming 1aer- | here at five o'clock in the afternoon, | lime more or better than is found in to walk through a public street and 1 adr stration's Mexican po'i- |a most emphatic fortress, one of the | he glad to enjoy. By daily conteni- !the so-called ephemeral productions | N the adminisirati e W & et MEM- | 1o law must uphold that right no e cy. It is easier to do t than it is |strongest anywhere in southern Asia. | plation of marital woes and the | | of the present day? Something of | - i S & | atter what it may cost : | : to the satisfaction of the Am- | Money and labor without stint have | causes that lead te them a bachelor | ™ voof of charges has been given | only another instance of what must e e noetiy feTiesll to show to . 18 ] N 2l So wi Bist natton . . Eidoa 00 the charges ha n only another g o 'St | oratory, morality, poetry and religion | ol T ocorate how it might be im- | keen expended there to make the | judge should be in a position to ac- S l\h this nation. Let us hdve fae vet. Tt is up to Germany to gather | not he expected from New York news- | is admittedly to be found in the “read- St City absolutely impregnable from 1and | auire valuable data on how (o he | PEACE, Ut always peace with honor §his evidence. We do not admit the | papers. It would be utterly impos- | ers” of an carlier period. But what | . and sea. Massive lines of defense, | paoie though married [nsre o i tlwv.fi; than death. As | of psychology, physiology, sex re- | strengthened by a broad moat, guard poor little Madame Butterfly sayvs: “To s | i lationships and other keen bitin Almost, the neck of the isthmus, and these — = die with honor!™ It i be wise to @iter hetween Great Britain and the etting the same news service, St (hose back numbers have | (1zoston Transcript.) Gefenses conceal powerful batteries. avoid risks on the high seas, but this country cannot take orders from oth- thant vessels for def se; but no arried a line of the story. This is jesality of this blockade, but this is a | sible for them to beat local : Bachelors, | United Statég#nd must be settled he- | ple seem to forget there is e Lo offer? Very little, as any srand- Mrs, Kawler—I understand tha! the |quprets, hidden forts. mined ap- ! Biwcen these two countries, just as the | hour raflroad run between New York | mother will allow after a brief beavt- | eldest Jones boy went west and got |oaches, bastions, towers, batteries (lockville Leader.) ers fo abstain from exercising nat- her grandchildren | into politics. He became mayor, didn't | agazines. mole batteries toward the | What is leap-vear doing to cut down | ural and legal rights and live with Bubmarine controversy. shall be car- | and New Britain and that newspapers | Lo-heart talk with honor. Let us cease quibbling @ : . | . i "l on any of the modern themes or is- | he? res. mined harbors, great navel BuNS, .. wiosty of eligible backMarss: e | Fied on between Germany and the | have to be set up and printed “ef“‘Cf : Mrs. Blunderby—I don’t think ‘hie | pstruction piers, barracks. redoubts | &2 L cHslans follow the president in the path 4 of Uéite.l States. 1t tis mone of Ger-|they can be put on trains. In all, Nearly, the latest Washington de- | quite got to be mayor, but I heard he |jn solid rock, all arc clements in the | Years ago it was said that the propor- | honor which he has blazed anew in m"-ly's business what we are golng | it takes about six hours between “r‘icision is a flareback into the dark | was an ex-mayor. Eritish plan to guard this southern | tion of bachelors to married ‘men was | his letter to Senator

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