New Britain Herald Newspaper, March 21, 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)

NEW, BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, MARCH 21, 1916. BRITAIN HERALD| an entire city be imposed upon by un- serupulous mendicants than will displea he does he ple. F as if Mr, and that one in the he In ev BERALD runLisniNG cOMPANTY, | man nation go without bread ron Proprietors. when is needy. 'y city in the land theve are places of refuge for the needy. In many instances these institutions are beneficiaries to the shirker sites of society Ca dally (Sunday excepted) at {:15 p. m., | Herald Buildin 67 Church St fed at the Post Officn at New 8 Second Class Mail Matter. known likewise we Blue Sea Britain and para- | The “Spring rather than those Ol¢ who would profit honestly | istence of such places, With the going to ed by ca Br 15 Cents Fiptions fo yable in a 7.00 2 Ycar Week part of the Vel o 3 5 Cents a M : 2 hs be sent by.mail, prove it by Cents a Monta, { of the famous bread line ot Cooper pa 1 | 3 = 1AC | Square in New York it is hoped that lonly profitabl he city oom always o advertising alation medium in ne'er-do-wells | and - press to advertisers. the many vagrants and who glean th e Bal How burn! books existence from the crib | to other making talke of and | of public charity will ferald will at Hate- | and Hegel bel torically pr found on sale g’s New Stand., 42nd St. and Broad- | ay, New York City; Board Walk, st- | living. jantic City, and Hartford Depot more worthy this when the United States is at the height 4 way a A Tn day generation TELEPHON of its economic career there is no rea- hess Ofmce fal E CALLS. What we - . »n why any man willing and able to ( | work should be out of employment. | London | I’actories aré begging for while | are begging for bread. There SHALIL men, OF THIS BE Why not Tuary TH SUBJECT DEBATE?” re | tabrook hoc men is. something wrong in such a situation. On the event of a life time will | arranged,—the or TOM = | | Tossibly TAGGART. i i saving ‘‘'no’ Kvery state in the union, in cach of | (aijon (o ne debate between Quigley and Councilman | s, Forget French the clash of Germnan | its political machines, has a man like | arms at Verdun: cease | Tom Taggart, who has been appointed ! ering over the of the | by Governor Ralston of Indiana to fill ! fard-Moran® aff let the United ! the vacancy in the United S When th heard on t pockets for Chron outcome ies Sen- s troops and v fight it out in ate | . Shrively jut the diplomatic controversies be- | known the length and breadth of t BN the Hapsburgs and Hohenzol- | land. will probably take his on one | the Lansings ambition all and caused by the death of Benjamin | cisco mountains of Mexico; care not The redoubtable Thomas, 1t must considerably At today 5 demand of never 5 hand and the Wilsons |and realize ambition the be satisfied thus i other; forget | life-time, for the one | could the | this crisis on the & Possibly to that indefinitely polls. | nature is les af the ma of in the regular order room sce it event this~time, Bn Quigley and Curtis. Inary dual | of things so exercise The pre- |:thelr have, been taken. long as people legitimate choice the The | Mr. Taggart has little lenge has hegn. hurled, and ac- | tions for a place among the elect féa. Tre ulated. ality nbling fect for at ant item. at 5 steps or no qualificii- It | being L is through a zovernor who was placed & Tassart Vermont . but if you will buy mechanical State line. final plans are h The debate- will be =oon | where he is because Mr. ggart can There seems to he but one beings that Ta intrigue. place such wets That The block is. findinz a | such a reward. ggard is a master debate contestants ' of political His record The have fact thix the >r-heads on In the event agree on any given subject bly submit that they hold a all thrashing What The interesting | logz one iin- | stanc his line ol as a classic . for i the people nomination will claim for him no such distinction | declines to being fit of | Worth much United States ability | a they can- | work. Iiven of TIndiana we pre- the Senator. His ends where political machinations and manipulations cease. There to be filled and he upon filling it. it. His into could be in one way only, through the door of appointment. He out when the elections take as fog for wearing mary debate and use the in problem. The story Potatoes a | told us | months ago | stock « B That is all there is to | :n?:(' ;Tm;-. entrance mentative the perplexing il be the subject of debate? powers o vas the vacaney insisted foined would make an ect: Itesolved.—That the sub- of this preliminary debate shall What shall be the subject of the n What shall be the fiect of debate? the Senate | PARA must get Curtis Worl, Healy, Wh The ford Post mayoralty angle and Jecularly here. This An intere debate? or, place in November and go back to his famous health polit h fi BOSTON? the one and only Boston, averted the scene | | i ANOTHER WORD. narrowly indeed to be regretted that lynching. - A big, burly, two hun- of the pound negro man attempted to ' standing of Colonel Edward I°. Glenn, chief of staff under General Leonard With such Wood of the Department of the Fast, | should so far forget the proprieties in LYNCHINGS IN oston, GET It my erday is an officer reputation and d to go throu election. date for fact that notice by Republican Goodwin, the chairm ! to his ca a | known | who Dst little, frail, te child on the street Ins as “hello dearie,” the negro fol- a fifteen-year-old re | | | an after-dinner speech as to label the United States army “pathetic”. Prob- | coffee to Gl truth statement, it public gathering led the girl along one of the prin- t the Hub City noticed street thoroughfares of il his actions were by a ably his went his head. | orman on a passing Whatever there may be in his frightened car. for at of uncalled The girl was too to cry was swooned away almost in AN the 5 old South help and at of the diately Station. Im- the inten- formed w the brute { would have o cer ! of much concern to the people of the | 1 255 M58 Mavyor a mob. sensing United States who would have it a | But to s of the negro, and to thr burly bigger and better organization. it [de an attempt- to there have { mors that withdraw clined to the rumors has been never referred Small, ¢ the Dorchester avenue draw- before “pathetic’. it it always the river below. | as may % police reserves with drawn re- | Gallant it always will be. into surging & has been “Patheti To describe a thing as “pathetic” it Loyal, A The little girl to her | was, means that vers saved his life, put on a dray and sent 1t not has anythir withdrawal id that M port of Spe: Governor, t ing that in it | ley winuning lively of great | Healy expe: of bravery, firhting | Dritain’s St apirie Follow the | j“f""“::f'\_"'“’ little band of soldiers that went over | oy m%(. Hyde, Mr. tis and two corclated f do with {1 rumors tha 4 is by nature abounding | 13 & triis v it is not pleasant | In pathos: that it arouses tender emo- contempl yroxi : the terrible eriticism |tions; causes sorrow. sadness. pity. | s Boston | The United awakened such emotions the mind te States .army has never hurled at effete Iynched on its main all rerrible | trary, poor to the deeds well t m be | | On the con- of negro bhe puld a Wh the mere mention brings old eet. t. with aignments of Georsia, visions e done, the Boston negroes are lynched seemingly and patriotism. mere pastime, would he said the supposed refuge of the has been the border after the Villa outlaws and | see if the “pathet Look back at the national Congress the army fared at its hands and brand “pathetic man? HBoston of Georgia. orec ever army is c’ attack on the crimes of If Boston, the of grand and glorious Massa- center see how off as bital hut 4 Ever since the days when the old many setts, were to openly court criti- | that treatment as ln the one wild and outlaw state of | never use the word in connection w The Quigley course it s him, but it port some f man “buck ! tain that tr | far it the Mayor, | primary the chance; campaign probably d the Mayor Mr. machine that he the persons affairs. mac W Union might expect vindication. | the army. r Boston's hehing was yuld not play many ny as there ld towns of Georgia the races should bec Hub. > glad George Washington led Con- but Boston There Boston, sake we the tinentals through so sieges the postponed; line in have fallen into White and troops that back of the old Red, valiant with fir are negroes in not so Blue. They have fought they fought equipment ire in the smaller cities have been The 1 eas problem | against odds, but nobly one in | and well. Their has not been always the best. but their hearts el = have been stout. their courage never | dimmed. Our boys in blue have al- - PASSINGROURTHESBIEADS account of themselves, high the present wa their s given an LINE. written The is record on fo w cf Un- Army ators of the Bureau of history. day finvest ployment New leadline must pages and the Salvation army. small as it is no exception It troopers e decided that the has been many years since the be abolished, giving Tor engaged in war, but they Tt anyvic irmishes | crats are n uation, inate efficient a man | ments Pro- | have taken part in without is action two excellent reasons: many their own land. up- down ssional derelicts have monopolized | within and and no ! They have quelled the Barn Ch wh of e benefits of the bread Yinc insurrection, the laws of land, put countries, willing and physically or | held to work need be without New e who is entally able rebellion in smaller have in York even done police duty. at present ployment late Sa in sur to a expecte, it all they have manifested that fizht- | the | to | zo i | republican sistant sup Works and | rul, ally | pected extent ! publican his friends more than e many of supplies g énty. Fax better would it be that | troops over Mexican railroad lines hel the way, f some two hundred men offered en- characteristic of the Amer! = Whether ten | ing spirit battle. loyment at zood Finced any interest wages it be with the his but ffer | can of the zreat- | pick in the in handle, or gun, vs done broom Charity i one e, t: That e hum A virtue, American soldier has alw The s to which been there are some members of he 1= army, y family who prey upon the | fighting well. arm « sagacic merosity of others seems a sin and a | belongs has A great army 15 to fron & it has been done and it | though mayhap a small @i, ut il he done o long as the world rolls ' Pathetic? Get another word. ) long human nature is what is It transport not for permit the American Jecause of these abuses there Carranza does who go hungry in a land of itself.—New Mexico is that we don’t have to get it legatee of the toward Wilson.—Anaconda Standard our vour New Britain, which city is preparing Mayor Quigley he that that, deputy United States has been ever the source | Labor Commissioner William Quigley that he would stay superior together dares in fight Quigley Th And through | well connected, the grand-nephew of democrat’ it will displease his own peo- it appears za is between the well the | ase the United States. 1 this distance arva popular 11 known and popular Deep Devil and Land of the Pyramids Fitted With Inventions March 21.— and telegraph Washington, D. C, Railroad, telephone, | make it a muck more simple matter to marshall the elements of defense in the Land of the Pyramids, than it was when Napoleon 1 brought his soldiers therc. The irrigation and | railroad departmen have been treated as the most important public tervices under the British administra- tion of the' eountry, and the railroad development has taken on an especial importance' since the outbreak of the war. The railways of Egypt, now con- tributing manifold their investment toward . the security of the British frontiers in the middle ecast, are de- | scribed in the following bulletin, i | sued today by the National Geographi society: ‘Stretching from the Mediterrancan sed, across a great continent of burn- ing sand, bevond the Nubian desert, into the heavy jungle of Central Afri- ca, there lies one of the great steam | routes in the ecast, by rail, by boat, and then, by rail again. The building of lest Inhabitant Says: as came: but you ean't me."” TS AND FANCIES. of Brandeis Americat. ears must | timore ieved that nothin was oved until it had repes York Times. ed like about the news from Journal — Boston T. Coleman du Pont Henry W. —Boston Transcript. malke m 7 Justice Hughe,; persists in | because he's in a good lo- | ste the trend of sentiment Cairo, thus linking up all the more im- portant cities of the rich delta and both ends of the Suez canal with the Iigyptian capital. These lines have branches throughout the region of the 'lower Nile, where is located the most productive of the world’s cotton fields From Cairo, one line follows the west- ern bank of the Nile, southward, to Nag Hamadi, where it crosses to the east bank and runs to Luxor and As- souan in Upper Egypt, serving the ir- rigable and fertile core of the greal sand-waste. ministration, the Bgyptian State rail- way was in a bad way, 1ts roadbed was out of repair; its cquipment seriously deteriorated, and its locomotives and rolling stock were, mostly, out-of-date. Its income was not sufficient to keep it in the ways of progress. British army engineers were put in charge, and, just before the present war, the railroad had me onc of the gov- crnment’s principal sources of enue, bee rov- this way first made it possible for Eng- land to bring thc Soudan into . state of comparative order and safety, and consolidated onc of the wildest reaches of land remaining at the begining of { the twentieth century. Around this steam route, the prosperity of modern | B&ypt has been built up, while, along it, the methods and standards of civ- ilization have encroached more and more upon the wild, hazardous, want- burdened freedom of the desert “Erypt's railwa with few and un- important exccptions, are state un- dertakinzs. The Kgzyptian Dela Light railway the largest of the private lines, with 625 miles of trackage. It, like the other privately-owned lines, operates in the rich agricultural delt of the Lower Nile. “he main lines of the state system run from Alexandri, Port Said, Suez. and Diametta {o e horn of hunter is he hill. go search in his license to kill.---San Fran- icle. the depress not to anvbody dead Ohio State p Colonel Ronsevelt posi alive Journal, be ir a on or in cifists are hoginning the millennium. has been postponed an'i that human mich the Atlantie. same New on York hoth | Sun, is has vated for local option believe in i nor for puUrpos this Portsmonth Times. safety von cinal edi e < e “There were, at the war's outbreak 1,700 miles of trackage open to trafiic in the State railway syster Port Said was connected with C: a dis tance of 145 miles, on express schedule of four and one-half hours. From Alexandria to Cairo, distance of 130 miles, the winter rushed throuzh to Cairo hours. The Egyptinn linked up with the Sondan govern- ment railway, to Khartoum and yond, by a steam service between As- souan and Wadi Halfa “Thus, the long British frontier, from the Mediterrancan to the darkest wilds interior Africa, was bound together with steel bands be- fore the world's peace ended. and, now, fthese lines of rail form onec of the highly important factors in the loure pean struggle the east.” ire an tourist was ihree wis just tem in sy be- blue of that Justice es enuld Republican presidenting merely for the asking, and ask. proves 1hat it ien't Dallas Ht of approval dacy, but for him on Mr. Pelton’s candi- there is a strong sentiment nevertheless. ow — The Man Who Mecdi (Boston Transcript.) The other day, in congress, re- publican leader began a speech with these words: “As L. was meditating in my garden last summer,”” Never mind what else he said, or what he meditated; his thought may not have inspired him to wisdom; we note merely that the congressman was in his garden, thinking about public affairs, and that months later his reflections there inspired his public utterance. And almost upon the very day when Mr. Mann made this speech. Col. Winston Churchill, returning to the house of commons from the front to express his views there upon the conduct of the war, remarked that “his mind had be- come clearer since he had been in the trenches.”” Watching. waiting there, with long intervals bhetween the alarms, and the cold sky Thung emptily above the trenches and the silent rows of motionless. armed men the English statesinan found the apportunity for reflection which had come to the happier American n his garden In each case, the mo- ment of reflection was highly val- ued that the speaker made public acknowledgement of it in his address, a hoon to which he owed thought which he expressed. To think, in one's garden; is it a rare privilege, and one which few American men of action either scek or appreciate? Generally speaking. meditation is out of our character, and gardens are to be gazed at quite ! objectively, or shown off to a visitor, or merely stocked with rarc flowers and succulent vegetables. Who thinks j of sitting down on a hench in the G ates, that German: not affect same thing eizhiteen and we e austed our mpathetic sizhs at that | delphia Teiesraph. is short of os us. They a DOX TN POLITICS. ks for Fyde, Tricnd of 0 is Backed by Quigley. on the Hart- viewing the local fron Capito] City discovered that 1 ing paradox ex is what he savs about it: sting situation prevails in fcal expert as heen ight e gh the travail of a city is a candi- in spite of the has been served with a he new chairman of the Town Committee, Mr. the committee from an down, is opposed ndidacy. Tt has been Orson F. Curtis. in the oflice of State | S. Hyde the support of the organ- this made no difference and he insisted in the field. Now been recent persistent ru- Mr, Curtis is about to nd although he has de- dmit any such intention, persist. -election, S0 as not know whether the fact | to do with the Curtis | ng WHAT OTHERS SAY Views on all sides of timely questions as discussed in ex- changes that come to the Herald Oflice. Weston, the Walker. at (Waterbury Republi Edward Payson Weston, the vete walker, who came throu on one of his trips in celebrated his seventy day at his home in Rifton, Ulster county, New York. He is still hearty and Is talking of repealivg during his cventy-cighth year, onc of his famous walks, that from Portland to Chicago. He first took fhis walk in 1867 making the route of 1,328 miles in a little over twenty-five ¥S. Forty vears afterward, in 1907, at the age of sixty-eight, he repeated the feat, beating his former time by twenty- nine hours It was on this occa- sion that he passed throvgh Water- bury. After reaching Chicagn he extended this trip, intendinz to the coast and walk back, but taken i1l and desisted. It was only a temporary indisposition, howeve probably brought on by ¢hanges of food and water en route. He was vigorous and full of snap when seen here. The veteran hiker was horn at Prov idence, R. I., March 15, brought up in Boston. newspaper reporter in his vouth. and first attracted attention by walking from Boston to Washing‘on to attend Abraham Lineoln’s first inauguration. in 1861, fifty-five vears ag: Tn- cluded in his notghle walk one from New York to San ancisco, 1907, eventh has ) birth- was . and was He was a wits garden at the close of the day, the dog at one’s feet and a pipe be- tween one’s lips, In full subjective sympathy with the spot. to ponder and dream and let one’s thoughts ripen and glow with the reddening berries? The measure and type of our wisdom is far from this; it is to think in a rush and decide in a hurry; to keep in the hurly burly, and he ‘“quick under the hat.” they say in the west. Tn other words we insist upon having the tumult always with us, priding ourselves upon being able fo think in the midst of lt—cven by the aid . If we seek relief from it. it in more tumult; from the legislative melee. the stock exchange. the keyed- up and noisy office, we fly to the bah- ble of the mob on the heach. or the swift clatter of the musical comedy. As an escape from all this, the philosopher might even be glad lof the hour of nothingness in the trenches, awaiting the next shower of shrapnel. 1For there rumors or not, but it is ayor Quigley has the sup- aker Healy, candidate for he natural assumnption be- the event of Mayor Quig- in the primaries Speaker cts him to deliver New ate Convention votes. One Healy's: closest friends rnest supporters te William S, ndidate Cur- who put two believe that these acts have something to existence of persistent Mr. Crutis will retire is mmissioner Hyde Those as he t of is Mr. of | to up- see hine o olidifi also to ways. opposition his to It will go to defeat done in a jeopardizing in the fall leaders will to defeat that if “ride” the term and considered republican oppo in tion two the attracts - clubs, to voters ke a the he no machine.” is cer- organization the effort If it can be without of success the party their utmost they wins e v the rest of his ill have to be 1l dictator of as is not merely content- ment. but strength. order, reason and mature judgment in the hour of me- ditation at the day’s end in the ga den. Washington shaped his great purposes for his country as he rode his horse alone through the jungle paths of the Dismal Swamp or over the slopes of the Alleghenies or brooded over the brimming meadows of the I'otomac from his lawn. Burns thought out his appealing poems as he followed the plough over the fields of Aire, and Emerson ponder ed the great thoughts which inspire men of action today while he watching the ripples chasing one another over the surface of Goose | Pond. The logic of the process is: plain. Bffective thought and cogent | reasoning require concentration and | calm analysis, nd neither one nor | j the other is possible amidst uproar and distraction. Shut out the worid. or that part of it which crowds and confuses the brain: replace the up- roar with healing silence; put Na- ture's orderly suggestion where there was chaos, and we may have thought worth proclaiming. Any people ~vhich ceascs to meditd&e ceases to be great, With hustle and clatter we are ing waste our inheritance of almost anyone else. The | qom from the fathers. We need noth- town organization, by |ing so much as to learn how to medi- has not yet put his stamp | tate, for realiz will vent New Britain i ot worrying about ey are preparing t W. Pelton, a harity Commissioner and 0 possesses unusual ele- strength Mr. Pelton is demo- the sit- to nom- former 0 sat muel J. Pelton, and likely yport that ordinarily would republican candidate, He d to prove strong in the Third Ward. He is as crintendent of the Stanley is well known as business man. would 2 care- Natur- he ex- nsiderable in the opinion of us profit to a ) the quarrel amp. but the is that he would profit o [ | wis- which he made in 104 days He then made the return trip by a slight- Iv shorter route in seventy-six days, Another famous walk was undertalon for the Church of Engiand, walking 5,000 miles in 190 davs delivering a temperance lecture o evening. Weston and The Steel Car Again (Philadelphia Public Tedger.) The stecl car appears to have per- formed handsomely in the wreck Tort Roval, Pennsylvania. gine and five cars left the rails, cars remaining on the tracks the passenger train plowed wrecked east-bound freight passenger was seriously injured. The fact that the cars werc made of the unyielding material undoubtedly pre- vented i heavy toll of human life The satisfaction in the thought of the tragedy averted will not. course, be allowed to obscure at two when into the and of the fact that the accident should not have does company from re- it appreciates occurred onerate a railway sponsibility hecause the extraordinary expense incurred in providing safeguards. The use of steel cars has gone very far to di- minish the loss of life from accidenis There must he unremitting effort fo abolish the accidents themselves, hy eliminating the factors of \ carelessness and mechanical quacies. Tt is inexpedient to cele brate the victory of thé steel and overlook the seriousness of the catas- trophe that gave the rigid material chance to show its superiority. The public not ex- hun car France. in in Morris Confidence (Gouverneur New York Tribune.) I went a&ll mer, but on 1 should not over Verdun last sum- the understanding that write about what 1 saw —that in detnil. But the battle now going on i important from the point of view of public opinion, stock markets. ete.. that T think 1 may fairly give the general im- pressions which 1 carricd with me: First fortress means 10-acre gained s0 1 aw the city and of Verdun no more than lot. If the ground, it so-called fall, it of & have the " should the Toss Germans is because “In the beginning of the English ad- | reach | The en- | no | inade- | McMI {New Britain’s Busiest Big Stors 'FOR ONE LLAN'S Always Re:lable _ DAY ONLY 300 [ECONOMY - Auto-Roller Bearing - CARPET SWEEPERS Price $1.09 Each--Regular $3 Value On Sale Wednesday Morning at 8:30 Don’t be misled hy the price, Sweeping is a full size carpet money. It costs us more than $1.09, have a daily reminder in your nes This is advertising, pnre CONDITION Onlx one to a customer. None C. 0. D, None sent on approval Come in person. None sold to L0 MUK CAPUCL Lo 2CL vle None Sold Before the Bring Exact Change W.th"\'o You. |— See the Big Window Display and be convinced the est opportunity of your life to get a FOR LESS THAN COST. This sweeper is fully manufacturers of Sweeper-Vac, Pacific Exposition, 1915. French have only put up such a per- centage of resistance as scemed worth while to them. Second—The intrenchments cntanglements back of Verdun | just as important as those in of 1t Third—Any position French decide to hold at all a position which cannot be by the Germans. The Germans might just as well try to make a silk pur | out of a sow's ear. Fourth-—Americans, centage of whom ed in this war, should remember that war itself could hardly exist if ! wasn't for the French. Tt is an and a passion of which they arc bless them!) masters. (God terms of war, the names of things used In war, are French. If we cept Galahad (who was really Frenchman,) our best heroes French—Roland, Bayard, Joan Arc—and these wonderful people were not exceptions; they were and | are types. Fifth—The French are wonder- | ful that to be alive in the same world | with them privilege. | | front which the costs a small per- past a are is a Journalism Schools. (New Haven Union.) of colleges offer courses in more will join the Ohio state university the latest to take rank with the | ever-increasing number of schools [ which are granting special | in journalism. Following the recent | action of the trustces authorizing | new college to be known the col | lege of commerce and journalism, to | be added to the eleven colleges of ¢ university July 1, a degrce of | bachelor of science in journalism will | e granted. Three other degrees will | also be given by the college—bache- | lars of science-in business adminis- | tration, social service and public vice. At present journalism offered cnly as a separate department in the | coliege of arts with three courses, instruct Prof. Joscph S. Myers of journalism work here two years ago, resigning as ging editors of the Pittsburgh | and Post to join the faculty. This is perhaps the most hopeful sign of the times in the newspaper | Feld, this demand nen of ideals and of culture. Juite a number and | universities now | Journalism and list every year is | a as ser- is s who took charge nman- Sun a certain standard | | { Our Manners, (New Haven Jonrnal-Courier.) What of our manness? The ques- tion is constantly recurring in various forms, and the answers given {alwghort of satisfatcion ahout often For in the first place, it a4 to take the measure of good manners. o far conscious efforts to well- { mannercd 1 in intermin- able suibjed auette 31 s is ¥ as o evidence writings the styles have che | period the ct spect for e lies at | the very heart of good manners, went on of n ntmost A womanhood, v and are is {aken ie are really interes'- it art The degrees | the Economy sweeper, home and simple. S aranteed winner of the Gold Medal at the | | [ own for voung college | g .n) | | | | | the auto-roller bearing carpet $3.00 stanc the Imyone's loss to busi- and is worth of willing to 1 a in yut we are that we are weeper or lelivercd mail AL Nonc «e charg ent No children, not cakes, Sale Day of v weepers to Be Wrapped Whe 1 Purchased the great-, sweeper this sarpet high grade regular §3 by the I'anama- for one vear and is made Earn $1.91 By Taking Home a Sweeper D. McMillan 193-201-203 MAIN STREET and at other today for »ther period with manners tahlc places which those of the boor. In an so much thought was put on the ritual of good manners, 1, that the spirit was lost and purportedato be acceptable in socinl inter- of the day th wretched the very mistake whic always been effort to breeding visiblc at would witat the was course in reality the most But has of ‘manne ~ 1 we fan in the world lies the igogether Hy ghe outward and 15 of an ward and spiritual which ‘2 often is not given thc chance to exigly With such changes in styic as diffeytit modes of living bring in new periodd of what we call ot itization, there is a the mjfd fixed if good m$ Good mann¥es they are demo B made show ey conscious one’s good condition of heart and ! which must remain ners are of all cratic o to times ng a springing {1 and for the other virtues. I ing the result of study, g« are the natural expression considerate, and chi toward others and a at variance with | which too often pa There are our modern manners this discoura not persist and no are netions €7 for i agad ar from, de. »d ma (.r; of a kinadiy, attitude v odadly apings man decry gone Certain indications w the class and superiors ym respect among the good who simy some of I resnec in the ners thc | backwards Iy there that we do grace which lovers older and simpler school might counsel wero they willing to compromise their own 1 in are vl the th manners hy dnin e zood so doi 1 our mies a thé ars cities t unid f m of arc are fe courtesy and c to stand _mgh -Afincn arm tmong Avid the cther amenities in which women while men elevator pre the sit the remain in cn withou i may ing, i be movies e reckon the city life enemic rush arch-enemy W How nanne is perh: ere shall shall to talke times we fin nodyr ve stop the ti eat. or us back less enlightene Where in 7 and the hom work how schools and and the school tion? If arity make manners find ourselves enlightenment the passing civilization hecame To give strong inz and « to our al h that with come \ SrOWtH, their place to ntier and md wonws things of lif every r en en content themselves wi the of station mnst be willi 1 simplicity that nind f reproach homely practices the of the show vituned Thus that Y"I'V tive Feart q good ana thir shall we refuse manuers are not fhan of the ha hefore us finer 1y our hettes, hat thosc generations « gone e Don’t know what the French up for =0t Verdua,— Philadelphia North Amecrican, =i Lent t

Other pages from this issue: