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familiar close to the to to stand mo- FACTS AND FANCILES torman, some — L | some pushed into and almost out of . V& MUt | Viila while the windows; but they are all aboard. | prookivn / BRITAIN Proprietors. hanging stra) he mere waiting® for lagle walehful Carranzi cager, apprehens — m., | somewhere, ve, anxious to the 17 (Sunday excepied) at 4:15 p. get Herald Building, 87 Church ice 87 somehow, mar- an The the boys, the women and the girls are all | on | Now that thc dealers have { abundant erop, what arve they to do about | >—Albany Journal. going ! velous trolley. men and d at the Post Omce at ices New, Second Class Mail Mattc Britain | there,—rammed )‘xm::'h‘ ‘:m‘ like hay in a rack: but all happy | be sent br mail, | Pecause they are going somewhere. Cents a Month, the common I down-town the in, shoved in, packed The to Swedish government the mine field laid off the Swedish will be more effective notes of protest—Fur- has decid f6d Dby carrier 1o an 15 Cents a Weel, iptions for paper able in advance, 90 a Year. ed which the coast than have | f. part of t remove 65 Cents a Germans That sending IIxpress to 0 That is the trolley is tolerated. reason car The somewhere. people lo pn iy bhe home. he born profitable advertisinzg medimn in | L0 20 may city. Circulation hooks and press always open to advertisers. | Mr. Baker, the new Secretary of = ] War, favors peace, even to the poins theater. At of heing a pacifist, but, unlike, Bry the he anxious for pe. he willing to fight for it—Burling Free Pres it may be on a shoppin it may rate they . —_— tour, be to ferald will be found g's New Stand. 1°2na and Broad- | . New Tork City: Board wain ool | way they can get there without walk- i is tic City, and Hartford Depot So they stand | on sale at Hota- | any must and only is so ce even \ : ton |ing is on a street car for this of thing. mighty TELEPHONE CALLS Office s 5 Rooms E At a recent dinner a moving picture of was shown and the | made on the .pacific coast was trans- mitted to the audience by telephone | Wonders cease—Wilkesharre ry of the task of for- | Record. against the out ages | the street car companies. My, mavhap, the people them- | War oLt Shemday shington breaker of wa in We ocean sound 5 ial some man will arise in his might and smote the directors who in e refr PEACE PROPOSALS, amount are growing wea !ever howling from furnishing the of car proper pacing. Newspapers | E never Pporting to outline tentative P proposals that may be advanced frmany to Great let the dogs of to keep the rabies out Aneric This sounds well, but and | . " | there are some matters which car tory is | stop granting charters to those com- | not he settled by cpigrams—Hudson of that to recognize the | Republican. It is the peren- | difference between humanit. Tt and Iryan to fight, bnt | of Britain and her | committed b savs f Washington dispatches feature | Some day burces of this information brities in The revival s high | selves will realize their power Berlin. interesting as a gos- | panies refuse hothing o more. s0 German diplomacy nas boon aecusen of hot-tempered and quick Lo take offence. but this mnsi i goats in box cars and ship them off [ wrong, for nothing that [f1 do of Bbrediction of B the peace. Many times | many lower animals might he all heing war began the same story | right to pack sheep calves and e ppeared and at re an Ger- intervals provaking ot war, ftever peace capabl of could appears to a declaration Republican. terms are advanced but when real this | We | i to the slaughter house; must he necessity discounted. many that eat Brit- the Ger- crated call a live human e attention beings are in many z i make no offer D way is time to hali be snatched up by G call to the Arch strect to up is military 1 ha from the found basis to start the ihe a machinery re- York Our whole he broadened The only safe a standing army £ 250,000 men combatant services, reaching 750,000 after of intensive training rINg? | firements gets to work there | Tribune. syste for the tion from Srble reaton viee people would allow no great con- = Great NO EQUATOR. NO SPRING under including with the o1 ny nature anc e Gl non- ain TeRerve el would demand redress. > There is now much contention going be to many's advantage or weather among philosophers and ind quick New is terrible struggle while she is h for allow to what to In prophets as to just prious It would be fooli Some are beginning believe Bt Britain and her allies the terms. ( to no such creature. the long and T far pas led to the belief that spring began on th day after the ides of March war to end until str And now there 1s talk of condens- ing the ten commandments into fewer paragraphs and in the hope that people will remember theia better. But what the ten commanid ments need enforcement and not revision. Their non-enforcement ha caused the tahles of stone to I shattered into atoms the hig the | tillery of Buropean battlefield Watertown Times. i distant we had been alwa) ed on more equal ¥ is master of arms. _ Gireat Brit- Words, the sia fhas control of the seas. IFrom h an a when the spring-beauties first showed hy the ary standpoint greater odds Germany is their pretty noses above ground he From eco- and sent forth their slender racemes Great Britain has the sit- pn well in hand. It is Ptudents that Germany tlon of a er later ic view, i when pretty rose-colored flowers; hovered the by remarked = the : the birds outside is in 4 bed-chamber in rly morning besieged fortress and — hours and started an incessant chat- | It scems that the zeologic con- ditions were not sufficiently consider- hills and ' cd in the first plans for digging Cul- bathed the dells mellow light; | ebra cut, and nu_- slides, due to the when the school hoys were overtaken | Steepness and height of the slopes e { have increased the of the : feel- | ¢ several million dollars. They the sensation that meant the do- | made the excavation with about cubic yards more swimming or must be starved into ter of song and twitter; when the conditions ission. - Under these g glorious sun shone over the will bhe so hs of not by peace aceept- Looking back in her enemies. cost cani have of events that have transpired of the seen that feat tentative been offered. the by dreamy, in | ing. ing drowsy, dreary the beginning 1914, it y great war necessary after 30,000,000 = A away shoes and stockings than in the first es- not endanger th the (Panamay unreasonable to pect that a permanent channel will established in time to meet the world commerce at the wir—Rochester Tost- included do success of It not military was and expeditions in the ¥ brook: lightly timates, but they ultimate waterway basiionosals have this after when a man's fancy of That is what unsophisti- | €3 cated youth thought of spring and its ';" il | demands But now we have changed ; AR Kxpress. younz : i after the move on | any did R o o n turned to thoughts love. Verdun o These probably ! All bore the ea semi-official. Now, the ex- A we in our tion they bob up again ors of will - be ed off as fiction of resent, all vould The peace s beginning. the same fashion much in of other ¢ I our mind, s reing Yeace L K in ea were wont i What Our Avmy as the days - i to give way in their opinions and lis- more men Is And Isn't heen o much talk establishment, and = of what was well meant mystifying and mislead- zood to down 1o they Taid he- ihe be desired he on while much to concerned. would futile, Thara ha about our military ; much even discrediting of | 1o peen of a byzone | ing that it stribute its period over | the bare facts s months, | fore the leaders in Congress War Secretary in asking for the president to recruit to strength. bheen libly stated the United 100,000 men. that some in pos safe to proportion. hald facts Army s Officers 189 en to the reason of older and another peace merely bring come, | of experienced beings. It had to of drawn A participants any sooner or later. this The wiscacres would be back again B9 the r bragged of its conquests, as they 1d When there absolute there Pnant is ot wore spring era saw fit to di | three strange March, April be ; | causing doubt 2% It things have whether the swirl when one side or as by and freakish after first incep- | new au- thority full war | 1t has again that consists of known duty it is areat a are the States be sure to do S and May, deadlock can as to its very e, or when one side decisively eaiana Army conrse them across real- tion. was never firmly estab- s the other. These States or of ssions lished spring come to hezan on the P | March, | § | it terious work- | vet : 3 twentieth or the twenty-first of was thos; than my | no more Y | ers of the calendar on but were i MYSTERY OF THE TROULI CAR whether say few the are sure sens, ized how These the United seven days of nothing ides came after The wi little the of how made up: Men 6,100 rkings Roman an- the astronomy Fhen an architect with offices in | RONCS | tiquity has or on upheavals of modern And ignorant his the | be modern building - takes up day Panami . Hawaii the Philippin Alasicn Porto United avtillery In n In In n n Coast il and paper and King plans prepares so today we arc in a quandry . of a street car he main- to ! S of what season of the yvem wres on one thir Seatine loas midst. whether We and is holding forth in ow Rito State he not That Whatever the he ity i doe it is spring or winter. e quite it her about. standing capacity that ends | had all-maniac—mak- The not summer, The, them f B is take Sure Bl s archi. | our certainty. almanac.-—we i oy s About 12.000 Philippine s the staff corps, added up the valued 100,000 There a 24,510 in the 1 is swept with rushed ! almost called ers have something to explain. outs and make knows that if the car plans seat comfortably, or otherwise to this, sun has passed the equator and when Sol journey It e seventy people it should stand only men avail- I ir every cle To Congress old accomplishes that ring is supposed to he with us. venty more. Ordinarily hundred he rast s Bblel ior® cuvice ¢\ would mean one and and it post this garrison " is proposed, legislation just 19,947 men, 51000 That isx how “100,000," could comfortahly | MAY be that the equator h ) i Well poor people without by a sub- that warning to i thronzh, the ed\and stood in the car toupedoed f e im event there would | add increasing ood rine. In 8OO0 | to about no equator and likewise no sprinz. | Without doubt this must be the ex- | for ithout doubt thi y ! ! So planation. No equator, no spring. thaticould not accommodate twice (BT A undger eoil e, anayisis, than a third work chitect On | shrinks | that | something the the a plans many s that bly the corner hundred’ On comes as to a little more vin. he his “capacity, many more number ready to like German Crown at enough Villa, to wo h Prince YVerdin, a for the Whot marks down with pencil one-six the number of his plans The, the Kaiser has con- e that Admiral Now been car is then de willing ! battie. | ta T isnt ainst job “the spend single ex- ed o von Tirpitz of fer first time out it more or An- pred its Commanders with Hohenzol- subma- | the Grand of for show, Star pedition a faced a Truly, a n up to expectations. Sword the House Lok e er hundred passengers are added retiring from the Army was not farcical.” lern” % an aiificor b still the car is not stretched onc il would he rine there should be great re- | it it S0 patiet h. It has srown no longer, Mo . joicine amongst the star and sword | vet eats a hundred more e Back her; bpie than orizinally the ¥ the tors it el Jiah When (Bridgeport intended the Springtime Comes| n and con- Standard.) talk ermine t o motormen of e is our idea something not | > of short- | | This While we hesitate t jects so painful to the we rise, figuratively, spring, gentle sprir Ler ministrations Monday afternoon. Just |after that date the ficklc 3 arrive depends somewhat s | attitude of Old Man Winte (Entladelphia iBulleting | certainly been monopolizing in!| Representative Bowdle, of tention of us for vizgorous anti-suffrage T GO feature of a suffragc the weather experts recent dinner party in Wash- | spring will not arrive suffragist. If she repeats her performance of 40 desirious of showing | vears ago, she will be kept shivering of servitude, in the cold until after May 1 when psnow fell, | Some of the amateur gardeners and Tack yard farmers are consoling (hemselves with the thought that when spring comes it will be a glad- some rush, whatever that may be. contended that the height of the it impossible for the broach a sub- ave over the marvel. They Sver: person that hegin o'clock soon will the has the at- the last wager, us, that schedule, t excited Be of will to with this | | aze limit trip the to remark due 5139 how iadies chemicals used in bleaching another There saven hundred mark has been met The directors of pany hear about the wonder. the so on the next out i 1t e Car e there be a scarcity of straw hats this summer. i conquered the npon Well, e “Go it boys,” they say, and so am- Ohin, most of It fous crew, anxious of a raise | whose speech is safe to the | sat at a ington heside a The suffragist woman's serfdom “Mr. Bowdle, why when she marrics a ges, keep piling on are passengers. | was debate, assure mark. | The ey nearing the thousand rrah! on They have attained jt P originally designed to carry Ity ndin passengers seated and seventy does 2 man woinan, has now the carrying of somewhat power take h a modern battleship, course, name in- But Mr. iow of | Woman's shelterca and easy economic position, smiled and answered: “Why does she take everything els he's got?” passengers must be Bowdle, desirions to in the later st age is process. put the bauk platform, some allowed Invenienced Some must be out i Thomas | | Cathoun |along this line weather to remain cold much longe | but thus far it hag succeeded very 2| well in baffling any attempts to soften its disposition. Until the immense | quantity of snow on the ground, both here and to the north and west, Is { nielted; and the earth begins to radiate the heat it absorbs from the sun, it is safe to wager that gentle spring will not be very gentle, no matter when the vernal equinox oc- curs. THE What These Wonderful People Have Americs Haven Union.) Tt was about 1720 when the Irish legan coming in numbers to America and they have been coming, seeing opportunities, and copquering, ever since. Into this meciting pot of our common existence they have hrought many strong qualities and have had « marked cffect upon our social, cconomic and political life. Al his- tory proves for us that a steady mix ture of the races, acceledrating as they approach nearer to an equality and a similarity in development and cus- toms, is an immutable law of nature. Cnly under the conditions of bar- barism «o races preserve their purity. All races have some good qualities to centribute here to America where the fusion of alien peoples destined to flower in future gener in a manner of which we only e dream and \lready it is work- |ing out in a marvelous way. So. with full appreciation the fine qualities hrought here many other peoples from the four quarters of the globe, |the sons and daughters of the Emer- ald Isle delight on St Patrick’s Day to take of the fine things done, the noble lives led here hy Americans of Celtic origin. T with much satisfaction and eep pride that those who frace thelr ancestry to Ireland realize what a sreat part has been played by their | Kindred here on this soil dedicated to light and liberty The roster of the Revolutionary war is bright with Trish names. Gen- cral Montgomery native Donegal. The Declaration bas 12 Irish names. ton, James Smith and George Taylor were horn in Irveland: John Hancoek, William Whinpple, Robert Treat Paine, Goorge Thomas McKean, Fd- ard Nelson and Thomas Lynch were Irish parentage. The secretary of congress who prepared the immortal docunmient from the rough draft of Jefferson was Charles Thompson, a native of Derry, while Captain Dunlop, still another Irish- man, printed it and published it to the world. Captain Dunlop was {he founder of the first daily paper in Philadelphia Presidents Thomas Jamos ter A, Accomplished in (New is tions and ages n ness stocl was a of Independence Mathew Thorn- Read, of Jefferson, Polk. Arthu Trish ancestry Andrew Jackson. James Buchanan, Ches- and Williain MeKinley Irish, said: “War may but alone ¢ mike both great and frec.’ There were many Irishmen and sons of Irishmen fighting gallanthy noth sides in the Civil war. Among the many Irish cducators must not forget Horace William 1 Harper, H. Maxwell. The list ren too long to However, one cnthusi has declared that to- rise in the morning the water from Croton Trish James Coleman: Cudahy bacon, then take the subway. planned by John Me- Donald, past the College of the City of New York, Dbuilt by Thomas Dwyer, to office in a skyscraper built by John D, Crimmins. Arrived at his oflice. he may cable \laska over a telegraph line laid David Lynch, order certaln freight sent by James J. Hill's Great Northern rail- way, and then rest and read William Laffin’s New York Sun, delivered by the American News Co., founded by trick Farrelly. Then, if it happens be springtime, he may lean from | his window and toss a coin to the hardy-gurdy man who plays ‘St Ealtrick’s Day.'" And not the least important part of the above is that it is cast in the form Irish wit which been @ to this people. matter how large one's capabili- one has a kecn sense of cannot get the best of perhay hecause the this quality in unusual they able to of men of the short this were also miake us great us on Greeley, William distinguished attempt writer viney and of even stic day and bathe dam, built brealkfast on one may in by his to by to quotation of native has God-send ties, nnless humor he 1life ana so | Irish dearce such a out it is Dossess that wonderful i tirction ana tory the are present Tisst in lifc eon dis- hi of civilized side Atlante Single Blessedness, (Chicago Herald.) contrives o tell Dardanelle, When The meaning comebody of one elimb skillfulls Pyrence, And One mountaineers Rocky., Alp or RN And Into ians mumyp, crudite physi an unattended snatch the surrounding flock measio Or from One or one chicken pock, from sinnder from When And horses suffer one, war comes nst one Plander, news doubtless will singular this world w You Th agree Both Happy. (Tid-Bits) \ minister meeting who had been quitc and about whose piness terrible storvies we ed him and said “Well, John a parishioner of his recently ried, domestic e rife, salut- and how is all going on h.” returned it You John know, “Oh, happy cnou, “I'm glad to hear there were rumors of. rows or- “Rows,” John. Ol are plenty of rows: wheneve me she catches (he rirst nand, a dish or anything and fires it ves, there she s sitid thing me. If she hits me, sie’s happy; she doesn’t, I am. Oh, we're getting on fine!” of | . ment mar- | nap- | | dealing not 1 Antivari Was Possession of Montenegro BIG STORE “ADWAYS RELIABLE™ the Proudest D. C. March 22—"An- possession of little consciousness of for Antivari, Kingdom on a Washington, tivari Montenegro. was the produest It - gave: the country a pleasant international the seaport, made. the Mountain’ one of the community of nations interested in the commerce ahd the control of the Adriatic It.gave the Jand a rank in the world sich as wak not even enjoyed by its far more powerful neighbor and ally, ‘Serbia, that of being a maritime power. Montenegro had a three-fold pride—five centuries of tradition and of glorious vesistance to the a daughter of its royal house upon the throne of Taly, and the ownership of this Adriatic”seaport.” Thus hegins a statement given out today by the National Geographic so- ciety, describing the port recently brought under the guns of the Aus- trians. The city of Antivari, shielded on every hand hy mountains and embed- ded in olive groves, is built on an island. The town is more Turkish than Slav in character, and helonzed to the Ottoman empire until 1878. Tts sefting peculiarly picturesque. & niche in ‘rolled .and lavered ns. all overshadowed the peak of Rumiya, which reaches an altitude of 5,148 feet. But a little outside, the town is invisible be- a position: sea. a great nioun by Wi ruined walls of the sombre neath its trees, the its village-enclosure and age of its houses hidden of green. “A fine bay breaks by masses | | ural harbor, a Marquisettes and Tissues Many exclusive 10-INCH At VOILES 25¢ Yard | | hour's drive back from the bay, protected largely from the storms that sweep over the waters in autumn and winter. Prstan is the port, bar- ren in suwrroundings, unencouraging forces of mature, has dominated the | _ Voiles. Maraused trade of this small region, as the | Will be much in favor. it Montenagrin narbar 1o gifeult of ae. | designs are shown now, such as can Eaatel 2 o A€ | only be found at this store. Look here cess in bad weather and as but little | & A o b ke G Al | for something different, your bound the successful campaign against | . key by the Balkan Alliance in 4| Antivari benefited from enthusiasm | of the Montenegrins, who hegan {0 concern themselves about the future N s . into the rocky, k western coustline of the Adriatic w I ] in aspect, and at the mercy of every | gale that hounds and rebounds ils down the rock-fringed sea. | ‘Austrian Cattaro, a splendid nat- | - its possi- | ; bilities. ms A port. Austrian Lioyd | 10 be pleased when making your sc- e O 1 or e e || ection§ fromYouriexclualvetlines, Flowered, striped prettier than ever of the port. Fishing Is the chief bus iness of the people of Antivari, which with the industry of olive oil refining, Values up to and plaids that arc DIMITY . At 39¢ 40-inch wide, in the VOILES Yard new embrold- lies this narrow strip of Montenegrin | seaboard. Antivari lies about an way deep pocket-hasin hlasted out of the rocks by the to maintain a regular service to and | from Antivari before the war Affer support the town's 2,500 inhabitant ered Velour effects, WHAT OTHERS SAY sides of timely disc come Views on all questions changes that Herald Office. Than in Alcohol Question, York Sun) A rccent report of the United States public health service discussing the “Sale and Use of Intoxicating Liquors furnishes data that should give paus to those whose well meaning effort in the direction of prohibition has been based chiefly on sentimental ground From the available data it would ap- pear that the annual per capita con- sumption of aleohol in the United States amounts to about twenty-two gallons in 1850 to over twenty-two zallons in 1910, since which time there has been a very slight decrease. The fact that the steady and rapid in- crease of alcohol consumption up 1910 has at last been checked proves conclusively that the former senti- mental temperance agitation ong drama and litcrary output wa la- mentably unsuccessful and that the decrease in consumption did not b gin until sentiment was substituted by logical demonstration of the depre- ciating action of alcohol upon the physical and mental activities of the body. Legislation manufacture cating liquors rapidly During 1916, statewide Sense B Sentiment (New A to by to T nse strict the and of intoxi- has heen winning plac in the past five years the year ending Januar) cight states began to enforce prohibition. When the law of Virginia becomes operative in this year at total of ninetcen states will have adopted this system. The ex aggerated data presented by partisan prohibitionists have damaged the cause of temperance seriously: for ex- ample, Captain R. P. Hobson asserted in an address at Germantown, Pa. that about 2,300,000 Americans were killed by alcohol in one year and that 2,000 Americans are slain cach day by alcohol, when the fact is that in 1912 all the deaths between the ages of 14 and 50 would be about 1,000 a day from all causes. Captain Hobson also made the unfounded statements that alcohol caused 3,000 American men to murder their wives each year, and 2,500 to kill their children. In nine prohibition siates twelve per- sons in 100,000 population were con- victed of and in the twelve licensed states 3.6 in 100,000 were so convicted. Georgia, a prohibition state, had 715 prisoners condemned for murder, and New York only forty- two. The IHobson argument proves a veritable boomerang. Malignant, narrow and unrelenting partisanship has been a serious detri- ment, hesides causing a disrespect for law Dby reason of its failure to be enforced On the other hand, Chief Surgeon Maus of the eastern depart- of the United States army yorts that alcohol is the greatest fac- tor making for inefficiency in tae army, and estimates that its interdic- tion would reduce the sick rate 15 per cent. He adds that alcohol is re- sponsible for practically all the crimes soldie it diminisaes capacity work, marching endur- and accuracy in rifle practice, and impairs the ability of officers to command troops. Such facts are util- zed morc and more by industrial concerns. Railroads of liurope and America that have adopted rules for their employees in respect the use of alcohol are not primarily zoverned by moral considerations, but chiefly by their demand for fliciency and by industrial economies The public has hecome that whatver encroachment called personal liberty may volved in autocratic is unimportant with safety de red sale only murder, re- committed by o ance to convinced upon so- be in- restrietive in com- of the people. these rezulations parison An (Waterhury Imitation Republic. Democrat.) The thing that makes our Mexican problem baffling is that mercly with a nation that established government, but nation that is apparently incapable self-government. Transplant of Americans men or Germans to any the world, and they will set up a political system and manage their public affairs in an orderly and ef- fective way. Every inteiligent Amer- s0 we are has no any English- quarte community or immediacely SEED And Satin inches wide, CHIFFON VOILE Striped Voiles, all 9c yard ican, Bnglichman, Frenchman or Ger- man has, within himself ihe seeds of | zovernment—a lknowledze of funda- mental political principles. 2 scn»nl SBURTON of public duty and a capacity for pub- | lic service. The Mexican has no such | talents He lacks the instinct for | self-government, because his Indian | ancestors lacked it. and the sliznt | admixture of Spanish blood, derived | mostly through ignorant and ruthless | adventurers, has done him little good. He lacks a tradition of polilical re- sponsibility, because nonz of his an cestors have had it. He lacks train- ing, because never, under Diaz or anv | other ruler, has he been treated as a citizen Every student of Mexican | conditions realizes that 2s a ‘‘repub- | lic,” Mexico is a farce. It hasa con- stitution modeled after our - own, which is an admirable document to read, but has little to do with the { actual political life of the country. As Francisco de la Barra, former pro- visional president of Mexico, says in | a recent newspaper article: “The thors of our constitution did not ceed in creating a political organiza- tion suited to the peculiar needs of the Mexican people, especially as re. | gards the power of the zovernment. Nowhere in the constitution 1s there evidence of a study of the people | Whom the instrument drawn The history of more than half a tury proves this’” So Mexico the props of absolutism removed, | sinks into anarchy. Her government | doesn’t fit hier people, and her people don’t know how fo. frame a govern- | machines type yted ment that would fit them And this | various be scen in every is the fundamental fact that has to be | part of the civilized world, if foreseen | taken into account in our dealings | at all, was but dimly decried. But for j With the Mexicans. We must recog- | Our complacent of epting in- | nize that, aside from a very small [ Novations as if they had existed from GRS of TGl . s no | the beginning of time, there would { body of people in Mexicy worthy of | have been as much surprise here being called “citizens.’ There is no | the fulfillment of many of startlin responsible middle class, as there predictions of Jules V So e here. There is no intelligent publis | take our automobiles, from limousing sentiment, no national sanity to ap- | to jitney, with about as much wonder i peal to. There is nothing but ignor- we do wireless telephone and ant prejudice and hatred of all “grin- sieam engine's s.urdy goes,”” among the vast majority of when one stops Mexicans. And this blind hatred of things not great. foreigners is the only thinz that binds assurance of the { the people together 1t ix thelr permanency and the prosperity of stitute for patriotism. makers, ig to be found in the stand ardization of units, which has gone ahead so rapidly of late year Thet | standardization has enabled the man- ufacturers, the Amerlcan manufaciur- er particularly, to keep down hi of manufacture and SO his price, and has opened up new ficlds for selling to the automobile uscr, whose name is today legion Applied to parts from motors gnition lighting systems, and cariureto to tires, rims, and the elusive n standardization the success of Ford brought the average retail cost over one-half of the American cars under a thousand dollars and ‘other phase he industry growth show how yressively it has gone forward, and with the minimum of had efiects resulting from suicidal competition and the ordinary mush- room growth. The show which Hotel Taft which 10 at . FORFE Flowered, overplaids and fects, at 69¢ yard. GN VOILES triped ef- SILK MARQUISETTES In designs of large sprays of flow ers, also stripe and flowered combina- tions, in beautiful shades, at 59¢ yard. SPECIAL SALL OF TMBROIDERIES 1214¢, 20¢, 19c. 59¢ Yard. width up to 1 ard. Value Flouncings and Skirtigsy Hemstitched Baby Floun: inches, all Edgings, 1215¢ 18-inch 27-ineh ing | 22-ihch sheer cloth Values to 50c. Fine Embroidered, Scalloped Edge Flouncings, inch, Embroidered Allovers. to 98. Choouse now at 49c¢ '.Mll at to e All on 29c¢ yard, Allovers, choice Baby Your Ruffled and sheer, 23- Values and 59 au- 4, McMILLAN 199-201-203 MAIN for | up. | cen- 4 with was STREET. dev to of various should way ac is as the which, these One our SuUCCE:( to think on automobile’s o it THE AUTO AND THE HORS Faithful Friend of Man Rapidly Giv- | ing Way to Modern Inventions. sell vew Haven Journal-Courier.) | There are the lovers of the horse. It | is doubtful if these will ever go back lon their old friend. Then there are i those who do not sec the way to afford | a substitute for the horse and who therefore, continue to this beast of burden in the most economical ways they can devise. In these cases the horce is apt to suffer. Ungerfeed- ing, neglect of shues, and placing the reins in the hands of youthful otherwise inexperienced drivers make these not the happiest days on rec- ord for the horse. Not only that, but there is heard the protest in our great cities that the day of the horse, o far as his usefulness for business in large congested communities is concerned, is about over. Within easy memory the horse was indispensable; he even fur- nished the horse-power for street cars. It comes as a sort of jolt to be told that the wheels of the big cities car turn with less difficulty and with more ex- pedition when the horse has been al- together eliminated. Among other things, it suggests at what specd we are learning new ways and adjusting ourszelves to different agencies for car- rying on our work and contributing to our pleasure. There can be no § test against a & lameat that so faithful a viend of man a5 the horse has proved himself to be, should have to pass. Sentiment siill its pleasant uses. But of the arrival of the day of the automobile there can be little douht Moreover, there can exist but one reu- sonable view as (o its permanency. The acroplane is the one tareatening rival which the imagination sugsests, and no demonstration necded convince that here there can he serious rivalry. The automebile will undoubtedly undergo changes i the process of refinement and greaicr utility, but essentially it must remain the same type of locomotion which it now Starting as a craze durinz its experimental staze. the automohile presently hegan to reveal irs ities of permanenc:. Lioubis the, t. the feasibility of the “horseless ar use Henry o1 or e opens tais eveni indication the automobile reached and of has come to play in the Haven. It is predicted vear 1916 something and a quarter of manufactured thousands and thousands use. Not only that, but we arc to believe that with the incre put will come a betterment quality. The wheels the turn ast and skilfull Not kind can get about by m % vet a surprising proportion of our pop- ulation manage to wo up somecthing morc than a passing acquaintance v ith what but a short fime ine mysteries of the “horseles: The advances are impressive The only regrettable feature is the shameful way we obliged to go back on our faithful friend and ally, thc 5 of in- it New that for the a millicn machines will bg ind sent e at ine the stage dustry has is ¢ the part city of already In ziven sed out- in actual industry all mane tor. A raise passi S0 ha ago wore carr G made of it have been tricd and horse is to | One Good Feature, (Louisville Courier-Journal.) think the “Do you good thing “As an economic prepared 1o say it stopped a lot income tax is a measure, 1 But 1 of br i ot thet am do know is. suffr to The petition They possihii- agists Congress long should have piresented wore tweniy-o as ki wagon,” and money found its way mto | the suggested new field of investment very slowly. The day when or Congressmen in prima likely to mistake it for the regular mynrad | primary ballot.—Chicago reraid.