New Britain Herald Newspaper, March 15, 1916, Page 6

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

i, NEW, BRITAIN DAILY HERALD. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 15, 1916. EW BRITAIN HERA , HERALD “ PUETISHING: COMPANT. B S0l Proprietorm. i unday st L aund!mi\, URAY Post OMbs kI Tew Britain Second Class Mail Matter $hd) wt 4:15 p. M. Yethuren St ‘ered by carrfer 1\ any part of the oty IF 15 Cents a Week 65 Conts a Month. ptions for peper to be sent by mall Payebla in advance. 60 Cents & Month §7.00 a year he “onir profitabla advertising medium the oity. Circulation books and press rosm always open to advertisers. Be Herald will be found on s=als at Hota- 5’'s News Stand, 4°nd St. and Broad- way, New Vork City; Board Walk, Atlantic City, and Hartford depot TELEPHONE CALLS Offes 5 Rooms isiness litorial | cheating. y in which to ap- | peal to the rank and file of the Amer- | this to be the one w; ican, voters. He was not the only one who believed then that the primaries | were As just what the doctor ordere result,’ the movement some have swung into line. | New . gained impetus and now twenty states The Hampshire yesterday | voters of | had their first opportunity to choose. by direct primaries, political party same time the first presidential pref- held Minne- national At delegates to the conventions. the erence primary ever in sota was being enjoved bY the voters. And on top of all this those who ad | vocated the newer order of things are heginning to hack down, to hrand this method a failure. It had been byand- ed as a “cure-all’. the champion that | would do away with obliterate What clamored political caste, | and to swindling happencd | that would has those who so long and =o | i S LOOKING TO THE FUTURE. Some of (he - cities of the na periods of prmal growth that the shifting of | ir business districts called for a plete adjustment of plans. Where ice wa re ints, jries. iness i discovered after ab- a- residential the section, soon | came business establish- | later to the fac- | left aces vacant and abandoned, zive way Another shifting these | for residence, no zood for busi- ( houses for fae- After a seige this, the des decided to mark out districts for idence, ses. too expensive of | factory business Then and of pur- out chaos came | er. ‘( [New Britain will some day face this | to | | are | f same face e with pwding fldentinl p matier problem The upon now it. factories fast the one choice street in the whole city. | hail ranklin from where visitors ey frank to admit uare is one of the by With ay lined lic of a tic, grand. way to the Iroad station is moved are pretuiest streets | have seen its wonderful | of close trees it stands a bygone dignified, ma- | But factories day, doomed to When the Main it | to the later it must shift x\n\li‘ streets. denotes | | e, as sooner or business section will residential for it regulate, bution of th life, business? | bwa is is as it should be. pwth. e f: ee cssentials of city tors here never will be any upon more But why not in the distr se | | residence. | shion and zreat home ilding until people know that what build ally ruined by the shifting and mov- If a man does when will not be marred or about of various things, ilds nt ilds rance ted about commer on speculation he not permanency; but he home he wants some as- buf- as his going be the whimsical enterprise. it is not to wi District city then and let the people have by ial fiic idea of what might be expected th Otherwise there will Tt the future. depreciation diflicult for wilder to look untold losses by not he =0 puld illcd cve of a future master and where the should 6 the say just and the Hap- anotlrer residential factory, giness sections be. but h development is of fzard pdamentil cause 1er taxe (e it desivoys rair ratio of What it zenerally does the assessments where decrea be decreased, and The districting of a city re nor less than common e should he appointed trictions commission to < probicm IN BANGO would have thouzht that Maine the 1o in Bid old ¥ partment Angor tHelstrcat would le center of & rible graft expose’. that politic amuek a lould so run to place this New d out cemed city in a with und other so-called wic of the statc brk rces nation Accounts within of than tripled. and vet Bangor that avery the atreet years the cxpenses partment morc e people had such great faith in eir politicians stioned they never que Now tearned thit it is eir honesty ad e pay-roll ller grant ore famous | e guise hood-winked were the junk ames carr of men’s one finest steam was sold other of under for and violations of ethics worthy took If time 1oes place of honesty Bangor it s that the ople of other susceptible cities yed more attention to their mu- eipal government, a thing which the erage citlzen is prone to neglect THE DESERTING Bince of years PRIMARIES, American suffered its polities me big exposu ten or relve the eference primaries have heen in the back, presidential elight hecause this method has en advocated by big men as the real of of free from innocuous qualities. ) getting rid 1 11 3 some 1t remembered that the great 1912 thi he in mpaign of jount. No pre Roosevelt ue was para- than Theo- came in favor and said he believed light out e primaries, { loud for the primaries? | tion | action. | ing ! word, ! 'mobilization of our forces. on | ol can practices of They are be- | drift back to the old rut the to for it is because stampeded so handily under the new political ring can An explana- | of the “hiz ginning o cry old systemr. Probably a convention cannot be order, while the still hang on in the old from some 1s due zuns' ATTENTION, AMATEUR BOARD OF STRATEGY! conditio climatic such the Were not gathering of the the to prevent amateur ! full methods Villa As it is the hoys orners. he clans strategists would ussing the various “Pancho’ on street out in force by which one ’ could be bearded in his lair. have te gather in lunch-rooms, in pool-rooms, of the gather other hold But the and they of With pencil and paper man drawn the outline of an the fight- they Utiited libraries, in and places where men world they just outline forth. the plans same, of them have extensive campaign against Mexican Also plans of the outlaw are anxious lest the States army fail, for fear the -punitive expedition which the President has ordered into Mexico be somewhat late ' n in getting down to business. a the amateur hase They are sending To this end they have nothing but criticism to aim t directing the strategists become restive. impatient the evinced troops over the border. at delay in our at the army Be old Be calm! “Fighting 17 Funston is on deck. and he will attend boys! Likewise, he has with the old camp to the matter. Zround a Together him tonight on other than Brigadier neral J. Pershing. warriors of long and should without none John these varied experi handle the the ences be able to situation calling in ama- teur board of strategy. HOT TIME IN THE OLD TOWN. These like those of Spanish war times, when tramp. blue note are historic days, something the tramp, tramp of the hoys the predominant The decided that the in furnished over everything Congress of the nation has now regular army shall be brought up to war strength. dded, while the Villa of the that punitive chasing be so expedition and his is bandits in the hills Mexico the American citizens on border may This is a good chince - be protected a fellows who have the for those young ways wanted to enlist in regular army but are timid about makinz 1he venture alone. Good men and G | are needed in the army and there @re of opportunity fellows military asc of interests of the coun- many young ! who should take this serving the best and =lory all recruiting try. There will be honoy who of- enough for The open for the youngsters who | i and experience rally to the flag, Bees ar {would fall in line and join those sinz- those bells o hot hear “When you There'll ing. ding-a-linz. he a time in the old town tonight.” all Mexico of newspapers | What with their other troubles suffer from facts of the informa- Maxico residents of n overabundanc false pub lished the A tion of the brand of the evidence served to magses in the story published in a weekly new i paper Duranzo Thi thit the printed in Spanish at makes a fairly good sample the informafion Villa New | article contains eaptured Mexico his | General Francisco states of Texas and anl Wilson were flecing to Canada {that “President and fam- iy for safety.” The next edition may contain the news | of Villa Congress capturing Speculators in Germany holding back products for higher prices have now brought about a condition where Potato cards have heen issued {o reg- ulate the consumption of these neces- sities, according to a Berlin dispatch bhutter Al in Bread cards, and cards already in vogue of which to that business men their in show even Germany the do not miss chances to make in a time of profits tional crisis. Why blame on Americans with commerci instincts? then place all the 1 i Twenty thousand will | £ 1 thd land. | are | soes | na- | PACTS AND FANCIE! In comparison the Nobel change. with the peace priae lonks Albany Journal. war loans like small You a fight mopped Press. wouldn't know there had heen down taere. now that they've up the Gore.- Binghamton Lots of has somethi nothing like New York citizens Mr. to him pence prize Bryan it think coming Nobel e the rol Switzertand he Now are offers U, S, a said Lo he \mericans pro-Americans. zood ex- ample fivst they Herald i pro-Swies how Rochester Tet The failure of By congress against the cles greatly surprises notency of scems (o nal n influence in president’s poli- Washington. Toe smanship =rape juice stat be waning - Newburgh Jow The Tom cal group has by the Wilson Johnson-Sam heen well administration Jones radi- remembercd Newton | Balker is secvetary of war, Brand Whit- ok to Howe for New ard minister comr York and I'red immigration Post-Stand- Belgium of -Syracuse ioner to get war The craze New for the York joke papers news is a to any newspaperman who knows ihe inside fact: about the “lemon editions™ that are rushed intd the smalier towns and as late evening extras, The other night the Democrat with spe- cial war extra which went to press after four o'clock had to give way 10 New York papers with news day old And still there are people in Waterbury who pride themselves with havineg brusheq the hay out of their hair and cnt their wisdom teeth Waterbury Democrat. a a divided against itself must republic cannot command on the part of its cit- izens ¢ or other form of government ! have to make ours over into something else. I an- other nation out of harmony with us is a unit in national sentiment while we are weakencd by treasonable fac- tions which attack from within, we can neither clves against aggression Tionorable stage until system power or coerce into monious clements. A n. much 1 house I oum yalty monarchy we as us proteci ou take part on the international we create a governmental ful enough to expatriate quiescence its inhar- _Rochester L'ost- nor an xpre-s A Real Argument. Republican.) resistance, (Springfield potential not propellers potential the of needs " then escape? {he German contention serutiny The pledge liner unwarned, sumed that they would attempt to escape, but if they are armed the presumption is that they will resi But by the same reason- ing the presumption is that If they have speed they will in running away. Moreover, may attack Ly ramming as by gunfire and it will not be forgotten that in- tention fo ram was pleaded and dis allowed an excuse for sinking the Arabic. was also alleged, quite carly, British merchant ships had orders from the ad- miralty submarines by ram- ing may guns are arc At why this point logic some to nk told, pre- not resist not we are or use it ship well as 1t that received to sink used to defeat a subma {ack. it would appear a logical next step to limit the pledge once more, and to make it apply only to unarmed liners which are too slow to outfoot submarine. It must not be for- »iten that a merchant ship has under fthe existing law a right either 1o resist capture or attempt escape. While T sting or while attempting escape it is to attack. When it ceases resistance of Hight is he treated according to the estab- I'shed procedure for the visit and scarch merchant ships, I, then actual flight nor resistance s carrying a penalty “poten- “presumptive” flight or re- be viewed as such a pen it w of neither & erime tial™” tance can hardly crime or a West's Omaha sending of of the Island Middie Strategic Value. Bee.) radio i message to United States, from Arsenal as o central be of fay greater sers viee than the cstablishing the pos hilities of usihg the =« ateur wirc less operators of the United States an adjunct to defense. should empha of the great importance of war. Our hoth Iast and hemoaned and ¥ we } able heart within | const, a all the point, parts Rock ought o of 1t valie nafional 1he Mississippi of s friend West thein ize tatesic valley, in and control in event the seaboard hysterfeally conditions, {he vulner- States lies Aflantic singla industriz| concern- other on have exposed © been fold of the United aven along lger the than as an searcely al western finan this ractor solution tportance s may he true. hut some must be considered in of the problem Between the Alleghanies tretehes cmpir fe must tates the ssion and the un all depend would Mies of and of mdity Rockies an value whose of the 1 i, the to nothing. This i Valley, for the invading army the most is wholly exposed. he taken for grante of forcign nations attention solely to attaclk on or seaboards, or that possession of tha the country conquest. caualed on | the Without shrink rest ion United o might despe issippi which an | pected o be ex make te efforts. And it 1t must not that strategists | have given their the ility of the other of the | they Took upon factories and hanks as the key to American | This would eredit them with little real I mititary ability. Nor should our castorn friends put too great stress on I their charge that the Middle West s indifferent to their conditions. Teople are thinking on this side of the moun- tains as well as of the other, and the Middle West is waking up to the situation. po one that | | ize again what history [ tetter influential, | | himself and | self depends in no small measure the [ depends It cither cuns or speed. then, | | 1s that I the answer L as we WHAT OTHERS SAY Views on all sides of timely guestions as discussed in ex- changes that come to the Herald Office. The Pope's Wish For Peace. (Brooklyn Bagle.) The world has ceased those who pray for peace. solute annihilation of the which all bellizerents foretold such assurance in the first vear war, fades and recedes as event suc- cocds event. We are coming to real- has taught the world before that decades, and not vears, are required to “crush’ a united neople. That is why to to scoffl at enemy with of Pope Benedict's Lenten Cardinal Vicar Pompili. in which he pleads for peace to save the world frem ruin, will find an echo in the hearts of neutrals and belliger- ents, no matter what their faith. Tt is a true plea for humanity, a call to sacrifice and penance through that Tenten period which the Christian church has set aside for closer com- munion hetween God and man Each group of nations still for a peace more favorable to them- selves than (o their enemies But cach group Is already thinking of con- cesslons. The radical socialists of France have abandoned the demand for the conquest of Alsace-T.orraine, the same thinkers of Germany op- pose the ahsorption of Belgium Ilamboyant talk ahout the invasion of Tngland or the complate destruction of the German navy is recognized as futile. Predictions ahout the future map of Wurope are less radical. It Is good for the world that there is someone in Europe today who ap- peals only to charity and compassion. Sane thinking has disappeared so complete that the note of quiet tender sympathy with all affliction which dominates the Pope’s appeal shines as a star in the night Tts practical effect will probably be nil. but it will at least remind the world that an appeal to God for victory in battle does not represent man’s high- cst moral aspirations. hopes As to Boys Being Boys. (New Haven Journal-Courier.) It would have heen difficult to find more important subject for dis- cussion than the problem of the hoy. which was chosen for last Sunday evening's Center church forum meet- ing. The hoy is one of the things we have always with us. From more than one point of view he is a prob lem. From one particular point of view, that of the community's fu- ture. he is an exceedingly important problem. Upon what he makes of is helped to do for him- a in no smal wter of the measure the coming generation. 1t therefore, reassuring, to realize that the hoy problem is heing tackled with energy and with intelligence and that the general interest evidenced on Sunday evening is heing shown in him n story runs is the war-plagued country fhe here some- thing has entered into the hoy proh- lem and aggravated it till a veritable epidemic of juvenile law-hreaking he broken out. especially in Germany and England.. The undisguisedly per- turbed query from abroad runs “I'rom every part of Fngland comes the tale that the hoyv Is getting ouf of hand. that something has gof into his blood and set him wild. What something?” The guess that is to he found in tha movies (which have heen in ex tence for some time) seems to he farther from the probable truth than that the ar is working such change. When one thinks of the vrimitive boy Instinets, is it a far cry to fanecy him as uneasy. excited vearnizg for adventure, perhaps va- guely d:sirlous of destroving ana otherwise trying his strength? While Tis elders are busy with the unecdt- fying business of war, which the hoy if e does not express ugly thing, is it strange thas fall a victim of his primi- tive, wild. predatory instincts? 7t scems not. At seems that so long as continues to be the approved method of mettling differences and 1he flower of manhood must he sacrt ficed in that sort of strife, an added price in the spiritual endangering of bovs must he paid. For, after all. the problem in at war and in this country is different only in degrec tendencies to err exist and manifested in the New Tlaven and in the hoy of Tondon. The serious one, and as ht like to we cannot comfortable theory said and done otherwise is it aware even is an he should war Bu- in The are rope peace same hoy prol much dismiss than will lem is a mi it the when all i he hoys on hoys I Am the Grade Crossing. (Irom Life.) “ 1 am the time spanning 1 am patience times I wait for s But 1 power, grade crossing, | railroad track personified vears for Sone one small he law helieve with the wail for men consciousnes is in sure of on and my side many me. Their | trust makes my I am the grade laugh raucously to in the dim watches of the the tinkle of bells on the T pleases me to hear sound Many times they have tolled too soon. They should wait. | 1 love the distant shrick of fthe | Jocomotive. T love the whirring sound of the wheels, and I love the gay and careless laugh of the pleasant voiced children, as they chatter ¢ the chauffeur. |1 love the chauffeur | dares me. He tries to circumvent land succeeds nine fimes out of I Jove him for the tenth fime, ) as 1 brood and meditate between erals [ rejoice that 1 crossing. 1 croon to myself the song of the shining rail and the dashing train, harvest erossin myself g, and 1 as I night o hars, wanton cross the tolled, i he me, ten. and fun- grade because am a | nmerce That ab- | | Breat the spend | listen | | Ships of War Range From I | Rafts to Floating Palaces Washington kinds D. C., March of heen 15.—All of into of n in the great ships war and ve pressed Buropean conflict are over-sca hoats, on-the-water boats and under-seca boats bttlc commerce there are super- | dreadnaughis, ST el T £uiced raiders; there greyhounds that yester day were floating palaces of the ocean, carrying the wealth and beauty of civilization on their migrations across the sea. but that today are grim re great ocean and the shriek of anguish have sub- stituted the carnival of music and the sound of mirth, But strangest of all the kinds floating equipment that the war drafted into service is the kelek. De- scribing thi sstraneg boat, the Na- tional Geographic society, with head- quarters herc, says “The kelek is probably one of the earliest forms of water transportation used by our ancestors in Asia. It cou- sists of goatskins inflated witn air tied beneath a framework of light poles, Often az many as cight hun- h com- | service i There | , hav- | ens of suffering where the wail of pain | dred i such skins are used to give the ) boat the desired buoyancy i just is b L riml tam regu | distance between dad ! hun places the river com draft, But ) cannot den i { ant barge, after journey phrates Whaen sopotamia to move over the shoals and shallows of two of the earth’'s moodiest rivers and has now come to play its small part in the greatest J “The cargo is loaded on to the keiek as though it were a flat bottomed which the craft begins 1s the Tigris or the Hu- propelled guided by oar: reaches journey’s end it up and as skins and down or it sold it roken ser. The Mesopo- ver: air and while two rivers of are \ery and ilar in their depths. The Diarbekir miles sreat crooked Bag is four hundred the water route via the Tigris is about one thousand miles. At many is deep enough to ac- modate boats ot congiderable put at others it ghallow a man has difficulty even over shallows where a min g0 as swimmer, a well la kelek will float without accident. For thousands of years this buoy- boat has helped the people of Me- their commerce dred is so in swimming. war of human histor; though T and the me by in- my work delights to for even sphere, passes too, do Death and I am occcupy a satistied, hunible human crowd vet, 1, world, and hono differently, in the do me n Lynching. Record.) bod Opinions (Meriden e eminent Georgia opin- ions on lynching: Judge George Hill- ver of Atlanta, “The best way to stop lynchings is to stop the crimes that provoke lynchings.” The Augusta Chronicle, “The best remedy is the inculcation of a moral sentiment that lynching plain, flat, unadulterated murder, and will have, in that dread- ful day to be answered for as such.” Judge W. W. Lambdin of the federal court for the southern district. “One sherifft who shows real grit and courage will forever puL an cnd to lynchings in his county, and a few hangings of lynchers would stop this crime in our state.” There is a cuphnous the opinions but we Here are thr to all when sound imagine it comes down to real prevention the|America was probably in the | News Yyears | was reported Campbell, last one would be most effective. Last year Georgia had enough dis- agreeable cxperience in the lynching business to warrant her in wishing for demand on the part of the people for a new deal which would tfake her out of the list of which for had to make for her conduct. There is more a ver than the ethical feature involved as anyone who has watched the development of condi- tions in Georgia must admit. There comes a time when lawlessness acts as a boomerang. The state which is so lax in its morals as to permit lynching with their subsequent ap- peals to blood lust, is bound to find something that its material tages well its moral reputation are imperiled No one ha locate in a place allowed to take own hands and happens to suit order or decency. If a few of the lynchers were hang- ed or imprisoned it would he a com- paratively casy husiness to stop lvnch- Ings. Where lynchings are frequent the leninecy of the authorities is re- cognized and the grewsome deeds are accomplished in the knowledge the good old scapezoat “came death at hands of unknown,” duty. a particular desire to where people the law into their to execute it as It them, irrespective of to will his do Soldiers and Clvil Scrviee, (Waterbury Democrat.) bill now hefere the A scnate provides that soldiers w and received military o have served their time an may be appoint- positions with- honorahle discharge {o ‘federal service out taking the usual All that would required of would bhe a favorable report board of army officers ure would amount to the vi lition of the civil service however, finds its have no particular upholding civil service tendeney would be to make ment departments a dumping ground for time-cxpired soldiers, and de- partmental efiiciency would inevitably be Certainly the wouid not he so well fitted as who had study them by a ual abo The army intentions. interest in hoard would govern reduced the men pr and their elizibility by Tt would ainst from service proved examinations discrimination poor reguylar i unjust civilians the standpoint Surely it i requisite out Dbribe: ready it well pol of good public le reeruits for the v American a ¥ possi to obtain army with- soldicrs al liherally {han Never in heen more world there e treated n the has others of for is the 5 any of some any time regard there has strong neace more American soldier than | And never. perhaps patriotism heen it to hribe e the today, all 1ug sort othey i of nature, is necessary offer Then (Waterbury History and Now. Republican.) Republicans who are out of sym- pathy with the of President Wilson foreign lowing excerpt er has copicd from 8. of the celcbrated American People,” by son The cause M. policy in ard the relations will enjoy the fol- | which a political wrii- page 252, volume “History of the Woodrow Wil- itself had be- | and his war Madison come cabinet, those very re that | standards. The i (Doesn't seas the Whi our W grag mos son hap thet How 1 | o . | “ed Bosi | time the maa at the head of a news- | b | rap: lits mor | tisher. paper were usually Printer,’ was not [l }ll | tury | Bon letters the *‘ publishing departmen advan. | became more and more separated the | wora !quent use, “nm pile | teer Tos tor. i To A w f1s s Tell The! I s You Then You examinations. | | You But Such a meas- | i [Tt t | What we mean by | | | Tt's | Whe soldiers | At night, when you go to bed, Henry, Do v red themselves by hard | And 1o K Are the | o you mina if they leave it kickin' | oOrd Do At or « it should be | \ng put safely away in a vault? Do v Or You Por country’s | When And But Al T s Jefferson and who had nothing sug wiong wusdonetupanil like Mr. counselled him, gest, whatever 1o That them, except , close the harbors and wait national tered than history, He didn’t days he might was Coleman’s Our Henry's | Our Henry’s bin over the ocean, Our And, rhoi sounds sort put ‘i\\ hen { vou does that Your Have accepled your own point of view the until hand of to withdraw from be at condition and wa who uneasy inevitable should le they waited every polities shifted and watchful men action had grown deeply vhen President Wilson was busier he is now aboui the writing of he penned the above pard and it is part of one of {he widely circulated of his work know then what Mr. Mad and his cabinet faced in those early in the Nineteenth cen- but he knows today and per- s if he were rewriting his history write with a more sympa- ic spirit. W ph 1 THE TITT Came About in the News- paper Game, ot (Bridgcport Farmer.) he itor” in to a newspaper man Boston of 188 wherin date Letter ago, bearing March the “many News-Letter.” death of John vears editor of the ton * Prior Yo that referred to author and or “pub- 4 news- “To the and cen- ‘Pro write er was variously “undertaker’” or e frequently as “printer’ Communications to addressed Publisher. cighteenth well advanced that 0" and his tribe began to directed *To the Editor.” As editorial, business, printing and s of newspapers o) until the or the was “cditor” came into more fre- although as late as 17904 cditor of one New York paper described officially as ‘the “com- r." By the beginning of the nine- nth century the rcferences to the became more general, and in when the New York issued its first number. name appeared Willin AT t Bin Over The Ocean. the sea, he's Henry's bin now that posin’ write ads fer you and fer me. page in the mornin's paper fer us folks to read. fer preparedness need, o' foolish to me, Hen, quite inconsistent, you know; say one thing in the beginning, cat your own words, down be- low. pleased operation, point how the encmy tcll me just where they Hen, hem others pared? over he's back, pre pread out in' us thet re really is not any ‘re with ti' Dardanclies fared, would be, not been had pre- Prepared’ is in surance mean fight), like lockin® windows n we go to bed for the night e'll e lookin' fer our. doors and our | ou leave all vour gold on a chair, ave yvour front nnpro- tected, things awa vou pick out in, Hen, fussy fer door some care? for your with a bank you how it is cared? | around o you pick out a bank that's pre pared? leave | all wnd Hen, like a your pupe plans our fact salt you night, v hag of cheap | lo have them collected each our huildings carry insurance, kind of talk raise vour | ire? can't that ideas may Henry, the whole world ao you, all Rulers and Kaisers and be in favor of water, | means ‘“‘prepared” fer a fire. | be well enough jus feels as Kings while all he, Hen Surope lies bleedin' and bared quee but by e we'd ik prepared things remain as they gosh! we do feel | to hev our own foiks | first application of the term | Bvening | | makes { the | ed; | first night we couldn’t do anything to make that | NEW BRITAIN'S BUSIEST | BIG STORE “ALWAYS RELIARBLE"™ GRISP NEW 'McMILLAN’S ~ UNDERMUSLINS - Are Prettily Displayed- We suggest | carefully garments. This | ward all the obstruction early selected st v time. that mi | progress, even the little things are little things ignored, for it round out a | vice” more perfect Eyes tront the business are he ock of 1 e i 1 keen ght and make re alwa CORSET COVERS Lace and than twenty style 25¢, 19¢, 98¢ each. SHOR 49¢ LONG 8¢ 1o and Hambur Sk SK Lace SPECIAL ATTEN’ the quality of Lace s used in trimming dainty, exclusive kinc will look right after DAINTY 5C 10 $1.50 E ENVELOPE o1 « COMBINA 98¢ 0 $2.4 WINDSOR CRE 98¢ Ea In pink and | CREPE i In | 98¢ cach. | CREPE DE CHINFE SATI pr white. Corset «'over a Covers, Cami velope Chemis cach. | | | | | 49¢ i White and Colors. “MARCELLA" Priced 98¢ For which we tributers for New | EMERALD GREE | For t. Patrick’ L | Crepe de Chine narrow Crepe Silk s in all widths. and Booklets w Cards 199-201-203 MA SLIVERS, THE Was for Many Barnum & Ba Ev de | Who York in (New Perhaps his additional ecvidence Hamburg iced Ties trimmed AIRTS Each. IRTS $2.98 Each. trimmed T1ON i nd i 1s that laundering we FOWNS sach) TIONS 9 Each PL wch. light Gt blue wl Drawer COMBINATIONS impede from, paid Embroiderie: Undermuslins, know choosing from ou nder tor & 1 at more at in ach. (Real Gems.) CHEMISE o $1.98 stile, and WASHABILA N Gowns 98¢ to and $1.98 Kach, re N day, Middy Windsor Ties St for IN Years iley Circus. cning ath may that in exclusive Britain NECKWEAR Green ck mailing, D. McMILLAN STREET. With Post.) be En- $4.50 SILK CAMISOLES and COVERS Fach. COMBINATIONS dis- Ties, Ties, Rib- Post et A DEAD CLOWN, the read personal- | tties whose dominant characterist 2 proclivity for fun be found deep, niorbidness. Grimald of the gri all time, were this hind the scenes of with Slivers ’WHV on his all the | expected to J solemn, man, with an extr mouth, and a diffder ner. Ilis first word ! light of today ox, two make-up, see. He underlying before he low-speaking making i and eatest way Barnum's , he was was a lanky emely nt, s retiring then—in are strains George clowns Sitting be circus had begun not sort of person the visitor blinking, to at had voyug -seem significant sensitlve man- the indicating his temperament and trend “1 never the 1 heai | | ‘ of thought. ights go up and the band strike up for the grand procession, but I think of Dan Lubyy said. “lle friend of About 10 in some place he | ®ood | ner. | tent ma | phants. Dan | low-spirited about was mine was i 1d had day | That kind of talk years ago + hunch he great , my in in celing heen had that clown, slde part- the Indlana we ched out together behind the ele- kind talking all a blg of some- | thing was gzoing to happen to him always makes me shaky, but T cheered him up, and vw until the grand entry they brought and Dan their 1 was the fellow all out and 1 At jumper who tries sorts of fu Dan had just the sam thriller—you of stuff. Well, the him make his sprinb-hoard over back “lie heza Loles. lea 2004 course. to but his too over to ot away ng the himself as tanbark flat velled see. 1 in clea Tast it in T he s on with knew wt knew. of a three erowd stuff, we unhappy. 1 1 friend T ha with bhi= bac came the other cl ed him up and carric doing funny stuff ever the spectators roarcd When we got Dan we cried over him of life all oves were his dress bunch the best lay there Up a clown's Sliver's ed away painted his face so vou smiled when he t vou. He put on his I white costume, hi d his familia to Cyrus B. Tucker, in Boston Globe. iy period with ribbons and chicken But frolicked along behind the hig beasts was over. Then to Dan n st 1 to jump nny ‘horse had e he 1 know time 1mp four from hack he hould his back laughte He hat it days’' was ip-flapped d on k owns broken We »d poor minute with ¥ That's in a he ing table, skillfully urned it aggy black B T honne [cathers. shape tumbles, his to put the came the clephants agnin jump over did was the faker, he and or act sort for the elephants’ didn’t it The funny up earth stay, had happen- the and tn He dead pleke Dan ofr whil laughter. hehind the scenes two sides nutshell.” turne iTs that towary nd postero he ot a

Other pages from this issue: