New Britain Herald Newspaper, April 4, 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, APRIL 4, 191 6. RITAIN HERALD all of it, however, is hcnlnn srnt(‘ tro lman’s frailty it would seem that some Sie mEaan ¢ BARD» SeECh AR H T } - | Great Britaln and her allics, as Ger- | improvement should be made on the = — 1l WHAT OTHERS SAY i i i ol Lm0 LB B ¢ tual W | ‘ T merres many is not in a fair position present system of signalling and auto Kinsey. Mo oct Tn erpe Uua aryare i Proprietors. ceoive any large consignments. Yet | matically stopping trains running Newspaper World, sl Germany does not seem to be worry- | Derilously near each other, The more (The Iditor and Publisher.) HiamYiens re i e O'd :h"c" (Sunday cxcepted) at 4:15 . m. | | Gl far brok ; : questions as discussed In ex- i + line over this, as when the war broke {recent wreck at st, Ohio, | robaly c mos fie . n e O reck at Aniherst, Oio, bul Probably the most prolific newspi- 4 e ns aatin OB i out that nation was described by those | bears out the need of some such , Pr poet in the world is the “Bentz- Herald Oice. the Post OMce at New Britaln | who knew, as belng “loaded to the hilt | device, town Bard,” Folger McKinsey, of the | |— i A e With copper.” This condition is said i Baltimore Sun. Poctry just seems to | Washington, D, C.. April 4.—“While seen that a good quarter of a mile of i f | : | Wit Look back ist of 0oze from him at every pore. Readers | .iiilized man s cngaged in the might- Peach has been added by he de- The South Awakened. carrfer to any part of the eity (0 have been hrought about by a ¢ - woking back o 3 0 0 S S0 es er .~ i = bt o g S e =, 1 R , | carrier to any patt af (e eft ¢ beer ) ck over the Iist of old | of the Sun semetimes wonder Whether | {oi" dash of arms the world has ever fended since the old lighi was crect (Washington Post.) a & Week, 67 Cents a Monih | vition of taste which demanded things | family names, William H. Clemens, | it is possible for him 1o put anything | witnessed there arc otacr forces also ¢4 /0 advance, 50 Cents a Month, | made from copper. Door-knobs. 10¢ks [ editor of the Goneolosy Magazine, on paper that hasn't a rhvming jingle. | ¢ war. And while there is hope that “Rockaway Beach, lLong " Island, | great cotton-producing £ the ear. ; 5 e e A W X SRR it There isn't a day insthe vear that his | e great sturnalia may soon STOWS westward at the rate of nearly > o ST hinges, paper-weights, culinary uten- | finds that there was a Charley Chap- | column of verse on the cditorial page | LG Bt human s alin may iR i ASE I nation have been made o [requent r crse on the editorial pag : 5 at @ Mile every fwenty years Nag Sl P e e Ll ey e X . end, there is no such hope in the great e G and for aple advertising medlin 1 sils. ornaments, evervthing was fash- | lin living in Massachusetts in 1724, of the Sun does not appear. And it | sumiggle of (he forces of nature, for it Head. North Carolina, the land has ays open to advertisers ioned on such a seale as to demand { Now some one come forth with the | IS ®ood verse, too. Tt seems to flow | ix a truceless war that the waters of ©Xtended into the sea at the rate Of | gon that cotton from his facile tvpewriter much as | {he world arc waging against its lands, LNrt=five foet a year. In 1804 DI\ gouipern sausage does from the nozzle when a | Mr, John Oliver LaGorce, associate ~dthaniel Bowditch prepared o chart |, o References to the Souin as the %0 long a time that the rest of the country hy gained ‘the hnpr e basis for a activity. As n matter o : : % however, the Sguth a ording powerful hand presses the lever of the | cditor of the National Geographic so- ©! Salem and Marblehcad harbors, ) " Lo oyt figures colleciod by the w York City: Board Walk, at- | country. afterwards given over to the 3 “stuffer.” And tl rod e g givin the = ling: 3 tv, and Hariford Depot = COM b € nd the product is as de- | ciety, has rccently prepared for that 2 g g oundings -~ over YA | Manufacturers' Recore - 2 rage for bronze. All this material in OMMUNICATED lightful to the intellectual palate institution a study of this striking ©uS ledges of rock. Ninety years la- so"ny:"riy?m:‘:r:rr | " sprogucedid SR ter similar soundings were taken, and ? of ali agricultural pro in all cases the water was found to be — copper. 1t really became the style. | film. will be found an'sale at Hota- | . Rt be found cn sale at Hote: | Hividences of it were seen in this 3 D o . i i the porcine product is to the gus- 5 . : ; fermany o s servic : i zus- | struggle betw e q the & . 3 : BLEPHO el | Germany can be pressed into service | uphis Endorses Stand Talk o e e Lzeleibol <;y:”|ll::w. !r]llrl ”\‘:\‘I“I‘F}(‘ dlm. vear, and of this onls en | > shoreliness o s worle about $§750,000,000 was represented % b P o the situation demands it. From this oms .. B e fiS \“ s ‘"'I““'I“‘ L Citizens of German Birth, RN O Gl o0 Srn e O e s e considcrable deeper, once ugain tell- | as heen statec at (derman pre- r P - % 5 7 % e L1 > fale of ¢ S rings v — i n stated th ¥ S St {hrough Mayor Preston anneunced After calling attention {o the fact ; "& the tale of cndless warring i PIE AND PRIMARIES. parcdness was far-sighted enough to (o e s T i e e e e e R s e On the shore of Cape Cod, near [Put litt] In regard to the statement printed | ad (o the wr Chatam, the land is retreating at rate "'%')’ agricultural product in today's issue of a morning paper o i = The South has awakened, It | b per be adopted the f o 5, ? nngles F tr a o 5 . | of a foot a year, and on the southern i - g i S ks 2 g pted as th ity's Anthem. | inngles of tropical growta into lands . = W York, who bears the pes- | cumulate necessaries and ornaments | signed by a number of prominent | Thore wore n larse number of com. | of Dernetual ice and enow. which have | Shore of Martha's Vineyard it is giving alive industrially and agriculturaily me of Mrs, Bessie C. Iiluck, | made of copper, with the idea that all | Citizens of German birth or ancestry, | petitors. The affering of Mr. Mcloin. | brousht the tops of mountains o the | U the fight to the encmy at the rate | It Is not merely pace with the rest bt the German Crown | articles could he re-molded in time of | | Wish to state that their sentiments | sev was the one accepted. Mr. Me- | lottom of the sea and the hottom of ; Of three feet every twelve months, | of the country, but is beginning to war. Thus it may be seen that copper a< to malicious elements or any while on the soutnern face of Nan- |Set the pace. TIn 1915 the gain in the ¥ 3 X i . tucket the tretreat has been as much | value of all farm crops in the United as six feet a year, the records tell us. | States over 1911 was $526,070,000. Of cotton. Cotton therefore comprised but. little more tha one-rifth of the er of a song that would | formed the polar regions from dense Bie o picce Ot mince pie start the “style.” letting the people ac- e it o 'I\"v‘nuw ];!T:flv writes the “Sunbeams" on (\:v‘v"] sea to the ‘,”'“ of mountains, are jam without any other aid | Plays an important part in war. | Americans first, last and all the time, | “hean '1: '\J:z.|,),;:"';; ,”m,(;\rm{ LR e i SR I{]‘,’,’”,‘.‘,‘”‘: k‘h{flfm:')f[:”\, e AU should meet the approval of all e 2 moves so siow {hat we can net por. | *In its incessant warfare against the | this gain, $317,209,000, or a little (ol Dl e citizens as it certainly does of mine. is Enormous Output. celve their moveront . it LaGores |land, the sea literally takes its cap- [ more than 60 per cent, was in the s going on | 2 More strength to their arms along It would he interesting to know just | continues turcd hosts, and makes them do battle | South, an amazing illustration of the etely surrounded by Turk- | When Houston, Texas. was con- | those lines. i 7 [ how many thousands of poems Mr. ‘Along every consi line on the face | under its command. The boulders |Increase in the diversification of < who rushed at her with | fronted with the paper famine that Sincerely, McKinsey has written. Say am aver- | of the carth there is perpetual war- | that are shattered from the face of a |Southern agriculture. CURTIS age of fifteen cach day. three hundred | fare between the land and the sea, | Cliff are dashed up against it again | The zain in the entire country out- and sixty-five days in the vear, for fif- | with the wind as (he shifting line, now | #80d again, hammering other: ) lnrvsel, side of the South was $208,861,000 1 e PR ) teen years. might approximate it. | throwing its woeig 3 S amoe | the while being ~worn round and |or $108,400,000 less than the gain in Russian eaviar charging | Department of Commerce has warned FACTS AND FANCIES, o o ol e R R S e e | a0tk i M elprojectllesf o bimguns | tHeYRautn i = and he was writing newspaper poems | Here the land is taking the offensive, | Must. As the process goes on. these | To make the matter plaln, the per long before the Sun discovered him | driving the sca hack foot by foot, jhuge shells are worn down and | centage of increase in the South in and enlisted his services His fund | ways with the aid of the wind; there.| crumbled until there remains nothing | 1915 over 1914 was 13.55 per cent of material scems inexhaustible the sea marshals a great drive, and | to tell the story The sobriquet. “Bentztown Bard,” | cats its way landward slowly and la- | against their own stronghold. save |the rest of the country in 1915 over originates from the fact thai Mr. M- | horiously, but none the less suceess- | rains of sand on some distant beach | 1914 was only 5.26 per cent Kinsey was born in that suburh of | fully. The varying fortunes of this re- | OF the soft carpet spread upon the| The South is growing more corn Frederick, Marviand, known ns Béniz- | lenlless and age-long war, which | floor of the sea many fathoms deep. | It is growing more live stock than town. As a cub reporter on the local | Deither truce nor treaty will ever “How rapidly this process goes oMl ever before in its history. It is ad- papers in Frederick he often told his | bring to an end, can be read in the sometimes strikingly *“‘\'“‘]'_I :1 vancing industrially. Not only is it fare seem more than ever nople— New | SLOTies in verse, and finally hix verses | shifting sands of the scashore. At hooner laden with ‘hrl"‘k:fi‘sn;w"h:\:? own future assured, but the South he physical and mental suf- | Houston Chronicle: Orders were is- | York Press. became a feature of the paper he | Many points alonz the coast of the {on some bare shore in a storm; thECe |is adding to the worked on. Folks used to call him | Northeastern states are found bold | bricks are rolled and tumbled a dis- | who1e nation the “Bentztown Bard® in fan. The | cliffs, ana the charging sea attacks | tance of five miles or so in the course . sum if anything. The dam- | all exchanges, and every paper print- It is not safe to underestimate Ger- | name stuck. and when the Sun induceq | thiem with the shot and shell of loose | of a year, and by that time attrition The Parallel ; % : S has usually completed its work, Au- L : j captured ris, that lm- prisoner of General imitars, Of course, she | is due in other parts of the nation, . B bther things too terrible to | and which Secretary Redfield of the duel between a German com- threatened with compulsory suspen- | merce raider, the Grief, and a Briticn too numerous to mention, | sion. Because of the combination of | armed merchantman, the Alcantara, °h caused her much annoy- | freight congestion and an actual “'T* "‘:]‘“l”““ ent of fthe older davs 4 when John Paul Jones Iz s Rich- | shortage of white paper in that | ., dalonesjeidhisthioh | short ] wrd alongside the Serapis, lashed them \ds recompense for the loss | vicinity it began o look as if the citi- | together, and announced when his alian macaroni fight- | against. Houston newspapers were i | (e | furters, and many battles of forced fighting |while the percentage of increase in unbearable suffering. Now E Slimber, and to that end is | zens were going to be deprived of | vessel was starting to sink that he was “just begining to fight”. Submarine pie manufacturing com- | their news. Here is how the im- ! i assassinations make real naval war- 1e tidy sum of ten thousand ; pending crisis was forestalled by the prosperity of the® sed by her nightmare is |sued that all complimentary copies, ot ce pie can do is not to he | ed for which actual cash was not re- | man resourcefulness. In the ship- | him to give that newspaper the re- | Shingle. Some of them, however, are 1 h oras Lot oBaratand contal| coived. mbatial be cut e Oa'top | ¥erds along thel Baltlc‘dreadnaushts|| sult of hisl peculiar ability hiscolumn | 2damant landiimpregnabie: in Wthelr jjthoritiesisay that on the " anose s o and battle cruisers have probably been | was captioned, “The Bentstown Bard.~ | {rontal fortifications and hold out | Cape Ann a fragment of © i rushed at maximum speed. From| Mr. McKinsey I8 on the shads side | a5ainst the sorest scige, but between | as a nail keg has been worn comp & O T ‘ ; B them have occurred stretches of soft- | ly round by its constant turning dur- ght. The drive on Verdun ha an Institution. there have | Jiven the employes in the office were | sible to argue that a long war may | fifty would be nearer correct—and has | ©F FOCk Which —have been literally |ing the course of hu‘.lm-e !l't"i:.ll\w-u\— rr::rlcc«‘-lzmarmm: H“.v“;:wl‘“‘ r \w el \‘H‘(\(Ml e very fervid sensations | stricken from the complimentary list, | DOt be 5o fatal to Germany as is usu- [ an interesting family and heautiful | Pounded to dust by the ocean’s heavy SO Y e e ricsl an | the 8ocialistidares in | the rofchatas 4 ally assumed. If a long war means | home on the Magothy River, a short | A tillery, thus permitting flank at- | ered in the British eu“_(h’ o | soaai e ebn thi th e it for Wngland an opportunity to build | ride from Baltimore. Al tacks on the hitherto unconquered |elaborate map of the North &G} ool Bil ol ko Ferdinand and bis eriences of Mrs. Bessie C.|been surmounted and the two-cent|up a tremendous army, why may it | Mr. MeKinsen sas oditor of th ca coast from Cape Cod to the Nave- y erdinand and his : i red to date | wife at Sarajevo was “clutched at in > indeed very interes‘ing, |street sale price was restored. This | not mean for Germany an opportun- | Daily News, Irederick, Md., six vears. o 5 ahout1Tip ,‘: ;:f-‘c‘:;cwonderlul the downfall of Germany, thinks the So.far as her narration |is only a fair sample of what might {1tV to build up a navy that might take | Then he bought a half interest in the | CYer the rock-bound clift is the excep- jfrom about 065, F 5 i0hcos ™ that a | many circles of -Germany as an act gemiething more than & Aesperate | Weekly Times thers and eetablisned | Uon and the long stretches of glitter- | llustration of 19 e e chance?—New York Eveni S it : ablis ing sand the rule. Here the sandy |coastline may undergo in 200 VEAT% ;" meaning . W York Evening Fost. | the Dally Times. He ran the Times | ;- .; reaches out farther and farther | To begin with, it shows that Cang text of a wanted war, and no light- ; f¥olyearshandlitnent returneditontne |l 8 T8 IS Ui e Et s i e il v < et finae time andIsland sand SRt R DAt El S8 TSRS ) B0t e st e X Tllinois follows Nebraska, Minnesota | I rederick News. enabled to penetrate farther and far- | near the point where tie natural pas- :Tf i«x\ls l\n)( ourier-Journal, “when be sure; and the fall of Gen- | waste paper now being totally de-|and Michigan in the roll of states in | [ 1898 Chas H. Grasty. then editor | {05000 Tand, because the attack | sage from the Atlantic to Cape Cod | fhe whale Wath will be learned by the ; but it leaves out the one | stroved as rubbish, The expense of | which Mr. Roosevelt has caused his | ©f the Baltimore News. brought Mr.| i'{ho sea is usually a frontal move- | bay. The point is located where the | German people; how they have been McKinsey to Baltimore and made him | piont and that of the land frequently | channel existed, and the following no- | victimized to save the Prussian dyna his we oun acoount | tatlon was put in by & British officer, | I; mads food for poder 18 perpMty. (New Haven Register.) The Louisville Courier-Journal long a watchful but not a silent waiter for in mere mbus discovered this land,| this, the street sale was increased tem- rince pie had its day, it is | porarily from two cents to five cents. | this viewpoint, for example. it is pos- | of forty- perhaps the sunny side of an aftermath to its eaiing. | After one week the difficulties had defenses, . 3 | “*Along the southeastern coast, how- | sink Hills, w hich htaing all the elements of ro- ppen in any community in the ion. But it does not go far | United States unless the people begin It tells of the capture of | to realize the value of old rags and event of contemporary his- | paper is going up each and every day. | N8me to be withdrawn from the pres : identfal preferential primary. Chron- | Managing editor of the Baltimore | 5 wedge attack; y ! ; os devouring his children is not a mors | NeWs. During the period of his ser- | for (he long stralght shore on the one | probably Capt. Cypian Southback, sent | ate the autocracy; driven like hogs to ew Britain between His | gestion, may cause some newspapers | interesting spectacle than Mr. Roose- | Vicey on the News Mr. McKinsey con- | pand and Tia (_,,H"‘ onl ihc other { out to capture Bellamy, the pirate: slaughter by the Hohenzollern and the o Quisiey, onlihel onell 1o acet (helpianlof vellaf moustht hy||[veitirelscting thalnrimariesiin favor orll dlictedis dailvicolumn wliverse similar | & ionotroriid ianiortie Beachiimmarl[i iy € placeliwnerel 1 came (throush [ HADSbUEE; andwh e Lhas Hre axcipes wicked old-fashioned nominating | to that now appearing in .the Balti- | giately guarded by the Cape Henry {with a whale-boat being griczediibyiieveniink Berlinyas IMEEOOUS TS o onyentionsll Hquaily chare toriticyerl| tnore Sun oI e b e e e A e el Governorto ook Ruttor) yopiret | mord Wil besdtolE slEAt it et ; the Roosevelt brand of politics is the | tioned “Mado in the Shop.” the came only a few miles on either | ship Whide, Bellamy, Commander ButiUiSp o ierenting R QIS M estion did not eat the mince | now is the time, unless we prefer a | abandonment of the progressive party He was with the Baltimore News | side hecause of its somewhat protect- | castaway ve 26th day of April, 171 deliverancefof icolonsl JrWattarsons the confines of this grand | famine. by a New Jersey politician, who savs | five vears and then joined the Wash- ;.,, position, due to the many sand hars | where I buried one hundred and two nr"- \nymr |k:\< o.m,»hn,\“\ ”f the ““rf"j that supporters of Mr Roosevelt for | ington Post for a time. or reefs far out from shore, which, act- | men drowned.” , 1?| between |7|: ,nu]“\‘ht war betweer the 1916 nomination should work Ten years ago he became a mem- | ing as the first trenches, serve to On this chart the islands of Nan- | the states, which jt calls the “War of within the republican party There is| ber of the staff of the Baltimore Sun | hreak the charge of the white hor: tucket and Martha's Vineyard are ection . The two great nflicts, ! chown as a group of six islands. Every it says, “‘considered historically will t changes in [ found to run on curiously parallel lines and to possess. many feature 1s to take notice of tke cun- | This, eoupled with the freight con- Councilman Orson F. Curtis | the Houston sheet. This wilful waste ler. This might be because the | has got to stop sooner or later and Had this been done there pee ve been a great saving of | QUT OF SIGHT, OUT OF MIND. worry, We should all know | wpen Marjorie Sterrett, the little | superparadox in the mere headline | and during this period has done a | of [Rather Neptune as they dash in hich one of these two war- announcement, “Quits Moose to Aid A. | wide range of editorial work in ad- | from the ocean., and, because of this great number of other R.” Fight the Progressive party, in | dition to supplying his c. Lot L line topography are noted. = . v supplying his column of | knowledge of defense, it is plain to be shoreline topographs 2 : i b order to help the founder of the pro- | verse every day common to both. Germany's ‘place in lecting dimes from all the school chil- | gressive partv!—New York Sun. e i e the ;-.m m.’\\\ \rt‘.rl\kr"nml to m.' |»|.,mlht es cast at the various polling | 4. T RS e e Loy samplas : y ] e A ‘Rights in the Territories. whilst the P el i "f; o dren in the United States, she was — showing the Bentztown Bard's style: Why People Like Him. consciously set forth by a \m_»q‘u. e~ | Teutonic ‘Superman’ conceit corre- s a M, a very unsatis- ful ex-president of |]hu U l!l!evlf‘ ates. | Conds to the widely spread secession 5 T Mr. Taft's philosophy is of high | e gelusion that ‘the north would not Wherever \\Hlmnj H. ‘y(m, former | wortn, not only to the students 1n | g SEONAR TR, e South Carolinan president of the United States, makes | Yale, but to folks generally. Coild el alE - Yanieas WO e obe stalk." " Women's Consclences. And this is the summary of the New York girl, launched forth her ld come out of the battle | jjoa of building a battleship by col- As it is we must trust hailed as a patriot. When men with Congressman Linthicum has intro- The Little Soldicr Troop. (Springfield Ttepublican.) ethod. There Wwill be 1o | . mmercial ideas and some sense of | duced a resolution in the house asking | [ listen often in the spring ince pie then, there will be for an investigation of the production | To hear again their footsteps swing St : 5 and marketing of dairy products. The | In that old rat-a-tat again el e Tetts Woatiieehlp Dropasanca v«‘”‘\ resolution suggests another system of | Of boys that marched away like men |# speech and mcets the people, he g g ® | linked it with’ the “movies”, Marjorie | government inspection with all its ob- | [ visions of a dear delight leaves pleasant impression behind | | advertising took up Marjorie Ster- night-mares to go around. him it gotaes %o Producing | i ot Lo aorewhat of har slambe. | moxioils fenvires) and in Uhis Mr. Lin-|| wiin enly wocden eurs to nent him. The personality of the man (Waterbury Democrat.) comparison proval [Welly haveenonshigfeds In what far vale are pitched loday |and the breadth and good temper of e o uer bt the New It is the glory T . proval s We Sneyeineychenollshiifed Their little tents, Ah me! his speeches please demoerats quite | yorx bar, testifying before a congres- | were able to hold L same experience; but not LG Gl il i TR GCE Gl EQUORIRGE Wi G Belo S| @il TR I 6IG (e o i as much as republicans. So 1t was | Gouai committee deciared: “Women | such odds during four years. It would 3 the battleship. The fellows who saw | national industries as it is. The pub- T e e Ghrnl e v in Holyoke Wednesduy evening with | Lo 0y horn smugglers. Young | be to the glory of Germany tiat she ce ple—from primaries. lic will look with suspicion on any fur- : ; i {hose who saw Mr. Taf( at the higi | arco et 1oq or unmarried they are | has held somethinghnore than her ow ther attempt to introduce the search auditorium and In the Ho'- | o1 alike s accusation . has | =0 long except that her arms have beeu and seizure process.—St, Louis Times. | g con 0 Syl oo 8 S : voke club. Fspecially appreciated | mpoused it temin 1o | tarnishea by the dastard and useless subjoined bit of satire, burlesquing | Verbally blasting Bernstorff at 2 epvalorfotith armon i e ol rn s ise e T e il s nouaod B gRtoni oL ROt NOSHE R urders of the airship and the subs frho were out in the vicinity | Marjorie’s original letter to a New | every German offense or near-offense Aspwithiithelsiwooden s words che x| D SARRRT, ISt il i I NI of 1 tent Spanticul el vt o suffrage lead- he. At the outsct the soutn woR# gina 2 . Fheeled toosevelt “places the presidents o Ottt hanlretosts 1) i og | munl 5¢ has become ridiculous. He is here to W ers. e o e haitiay T bbb work for Germany, and we aren't Jikely to punish him for that. Ameri- I am a little girl six years old. I |ca's best bet just now is to learn believe in capital punishment and T |something from him if possible, in the of the south that we ets. If Mrs. Bessie C. Black our own against someone tonight must un- It is ever the way. Down at Yale the the commercialism of this campaign R, A VALUABLE METAL. started a crusade against it The How bravely all that village clan school all alike. In line across the old back ficld, the United States in two classes, one | g yggie just as much as women do, And with the clover to their knees | (¢ Tincoln class and the other the |,nq niore. Men smugsle on a gigan- L 5 el e T ihel e ey BlIE icHanan i and laaded Mineputaintmat| SR8 S G S S oGy S tarapt | 211 theawhitebchie EORTSCRREEES HES On_what campagne of silent groen | SCIf In the Lincoln class and me in | \ngevery time a woman tries to bring | 400Ted 48 Bow T0H ZHFC Y ohilg. o 4o i e Sieh wieion 1| | TRey res tomignt 10 kmow " | {he Buenanan’ The was aid i i"one e and st cawant, the pa- | 07T oy pmomaiion, - which Sevaral firing jobs in our own govern- That little soldier troop of mine ne jutmostegocd Maie e Ol hheraiuite aboutiit The wholesale | 27 e @ ChTift to the one will bring ment, The public has already nomin- In the town of long wgo! L Lqot might have heen added tha' fsmuggling of business men goes un- | glc"Giner to with a round turn. Wi e miners were all out of | want to buy an electric chair and [ated Josephus Daniels for a quict Sl e | noticed.” Another woman admits | poy ©CHOT T O inding his Wa oon after the war began the | hereby contribute my dime to the | place in private life. ~Why mnot pro- .}h, often when the sweet spring day el Sy | the charge, but says defiantly: “With [ ¢ oy 0 o0 Bolaie plains: the Hohenzol (Fwok’’ anicoppor ialealindl|ioay s e b P MDA llcesaliwith iToseph usibefotale SoRIMIGICO ERIDE L all the bloom of May expect women serupulousty to keen | 161" WM Ronupartes, presently ther In sizing up foreign diplomatic | T think I hear them marching on > s e ik laws which they have not been al- | .o |orrid, historic memory. men, began coming in. and | hoys ana girls will give dimes foo. | oparactors in - Washington >——Boston | In sweel platoons across the lawn, tluniciof i NEhCEEAL ENor R etractionBli ot Sl Sl S e e ment s e ot 1hoh | graftea on them: isn’t it natural that | Germany would be better off without population was put to work. | yours truly el With wooden guns and dishpan drums, [ 1S Very catching, = Most of the —as- they should try to get a little of thelr | the autocracy. Cotton was not king an that, nearby towns took | “MARJORIE BUNTING.” e e As in my heart the echo thrums, BIE A e s ]'l‘lw polatias MARJORTE BUNTING. T g Oh. never, never may I see quincCRURISEhab1cRa B g LoRNT e N Gwn b by grafing on the govern- | yre is the kaiser the Lord’s an nd baggage and moved over | The note was posted in a con Sunset and Byening Stars Their swords of lath again ncaling of the division in the repub- |90 (RS W BIC U8 B0 D St o m-”('l‘hc”‘ S e b Webb City came over o | spicuous place near the campus. Our | (Henry Irvin Nicholas, in Philadel That little soldier troop of mine lican \_f':“:‘;\‘:fl'_::"‘\‘ “rl"'v‘:i’;“f:‘: T Mae. | ent anti-suffragist, and confesses: “Tt| pand, will reveal the will of God and b el YU s true that women are more inclined | restore their own i« people sachusetts just now. Tt was not 2 7 : 4 ol been brder for copper that attract- | (pic chair would, in the long run, | The resy glow of eventide Gens S e e (ol pmuggl o than man W omen Ha v Not alone here has parallel beew Aok e > ¢ a loss keen sense of honor, and are | noticed. The essentic wture of it, ! Gatiarsan i zreater v Transfigures earth and sky; Just do veur part and take no count . he on was one calling for 100,- | pyuke zreater headway than similar ,”‘}‘x ;:y\mr’v"nim\‘; ’nm e an (O T TomT B R e s mony for men who desire the nomin- | & 108% et senst of RAIAT AE AT ot as the south in the end succumb- Glints helfry cross on high. When others add their bit to it ation of Mr. Roosevelt as the vepnb- | 10" 3 Mipehest AR el B b 30 st Gerriih y France and England. who | eship. S0 long as thinss g 2 Of laughter. sunlight, zladness, wit MR amaee amalie 0 cnaes | et suher i SHIE S B U + | firs? twenty months of the war, the P ss of Germany has been muc vess of the south. In remains, the , Mo., about sixteen or | york newspaper. gives some idea of onths ago, shortly after the | how Yale is divided:— has crowned the Imperial eagles Yet war started, readily realize of copper. This little Amer- | is completely surrounded | gon't believe we have been killing r. mines. Before the war |cnough criminals in Connecticut 1 by edict of both Mr. Roosevelt and Charles §. Bird. When you come {o | of five thousand men. The ' gyess is that a campaign for an clec- phia Ledger.) Asleep in some green glon! ounds for the allied nations. | energy expended in the interests of lican candidate for president this Just do your part and de not fear year to indulge ina cantoon oty = (isience of ia. “parasite class’ \ . | repres s ex-Senator Cry > and Se K It was then the price of ¢ Kissed by the setting sun But what some hewrl will feel ifs|ZXenresents ex-Senator Granc an N consiting of, women whose smuggling as then the price OD- | need for naval action. the people of Kissed b, & ; . e ator Weeks as dark-lantern men. The N ) Ralito ba skyward this country are prone £ Je blue and red, they pierce the e s e is “due {o sheer folly and weakne ike o v are prone to forget there i Just do your part from day to day assumD : & and iznorance rather than criminal in- | whatever time of the war g for 135,000.000 pounds wWas | ship. If Villa had not made the raid Pheloiai St el i And, oh, how steadily they srow tol ave heen ithat “the honorable I SENSE S S S BR e ore | outs - N S o re 5 : T ; . e These parts that =oon together flow zentleman from Berkshire was seek- G uentlRtL on: Custom house In this connection the grankness of or Now we are informed | an Columbus, New Mexico, we might | The waving pines. (he plodding tramp, | e ; & ing to lead the man who succeeded | freauently than men. Uy i spokesman of the south § S 5 5 one wide. heauteous stream of love | N8 3 Lenthi : L house l this great spokesman of In adoration hoy _ S G R e T et iled S tatest senaie i lot) \nspeclorsare pdisposed SR o ESUSPOEG 04 tie. though this is not the first The moon. & solemn evening lump, 4 b o L0 e A h et o0 (112 o Deirly Bl W meng nn tilfithe s ilipro e [ PELTLC 26, M L P e " - = ; « the rightness of the outcome hus Lights adoration’s blow, s 5 st the mie. | their innocence And vet few eritics | time sfrslgdive lone wants 25.000.000 pounds | Mind lehin® like swimmin® fime, publiciimontination= AL ostnelnloafl SLHInE R LR T S o ren in men- | Deen) xecoknited JAN LAY SHEn S | Mind. Hard thing 1o wait ture was silly, and at the worst it E {he south has admitted, it has res hetal to be delivered duri = | 0, weary man on city streets eral of having less tender consciences Rl Sl fian i Your lizghts blot out the bloom larth-worms just elegant, for many vear ”‘ 4 Talk ahoug bait! intage over thosc That from on high the peasant greets i trusEn g1 And lights him through the gloom e order through American |ajong ax they are. with little or no | Twin evening stars in beauty hloom n January of this year an or- | js such a thing as a navy or a battle- her great order hax heen | have forgotten all about the cavalry the allied nations. This time | The rule here is. Out of Sight, Out of ized applied @ needless and offensive 1 than men. It is commonly felt, in- |1 deed, (hat women are the chief cus. | it hasrthe i period af which the indlvidual or |todians of the morals of mankind. ""\:,\“,,1(‘;"4,.,‘. United America stand There is a distinction howeyer, be- | Virtu that can possibly be th and next month and far In 1t report on the wreck at Mils ritant to o sensitive situation. Most grown people have passed hevond the | Thus within six months of (.4, where eleven passengers Just Bumblehees hummin there will have been taken ' theiy lives. the I'ublic Utilities Com- That old drony way Med nations a total of 160.- mission after thoroughly reviewing Why Portland Mourns “}‘\‘;‘1\‘\ln:')l‘(()‘vv"’::d.v”v‘\w‘ within themselves or in their ranks | fVeen private morality, of which wom- | "0 5 4 “North and south alike have pounds of copper, all of which all phases of the disaster strongly (IVM;“ e )_"_N‘_ ; L08Ry all virtue and to denounce those | €0 Are the bulwark and public morql- | TER0 00" o lesson ) S NencrabloEve S, who differ with them as representing | It¥. concerning which their Jdeas often —_— Our local orators would do well o i the sum of wickedness in polities. It |S¢¢m rudimentary. Their smuggling Where Sousa Got His Name. this may be taken as s e ineen o] " 2 i Sellows Icalls - " i his ) zineer, John . Trumbull, to the ef- | blue-pencil the hackneved pharse, (Bellows I7alls (Vt) Times,) never appears to occur o such people | falls into this latter class of immoral (From the Birminghum News.) of the great struggle that fect that the New Haven road de- | “We have a harbor large enough They are making considerable noise | that their method of fghting ix at | Acts. Perhaps.fuller participation in ot ymmer 1 spent in Maine public life will give eyen the “shel- | . Tyt SO hrver. “there was niversity there who was continually etting up inter- tell at night as the the group assume to eomprehend against any “War ked in the making of war s recommends the report of its en- b, and it should he because . voiop and perfect an automatic train |@Nd deep enough te float the navies | up in St Johnsbury because o man |utter variance with the square deal of the world.” until such time a=|who lives in Sutton has been send- [let alone the golden rule, Bxtreme | {eTed woman™ a tendered conscience B acientine warfare, it would | block signals could he oporafedt sucs | aoir s of the mnr\:rn‘klfl\mllfjl.vh‘ can fing the weekly news of hix vieinity [ youth er he abnormally developed |0 all community matters, a reater . S8 2 E il mp to our docks, carrving 1 [ te one of the St Johnshury paper feeling of responsibility for the pub sting things to the allied nations are reaily cessfully on the road's electrified sy capacity cargo, without oceasioning |for 47 vears. Down here, however | oon he offored for sl listoried | lie welfare and a greater respeet for ‘"m 2 L around the hig wood fi v seftling down to business, tem, according 1o the engineer's their commanders to run the risk of | we' can go the Sutton man a few {and unlovely point of view Fovernmental authority One night he told a nervous hreakdown in the under-'| hetter. We are informed that . Plenty of people who disagree wit his name. AsS a matter of fact hid { taking. This oratorical phrase, :0 | Chandler of Chester has heen Tart in politics value him That Child. name is Sam Otts. One summer Je : 2 ! frequently employed to Portland | pondent for the Bellows Falls Times, & example of a4 publie niui who | (rom the Tiger went abroad and had aJl of his trunk to be a very valuable pro- ' the entire line is a matter | spellbinders, has been responsible for | first from Grafton and then from disagree with others and yet Tommy — Oh. mother, look Pmarked. S.Q. U AL and the ba will undoubtedly grow more | of conjecture. Since the Milforq | NeRlect to take advantage of our op- | Chester for over 50 years. If ghere is|avoid being angry and unjust in the [mant He's only zof one arm ce men ran it together into ‘Souse BRI W prosrosses; Most | swreck has besnriald at the door of r‘;»r‘v\mlth’s and has set Portland back |a record in the state that strpasses | process. The ohject lesson i af cs Mother—Hush! [le'll’ hear you ind since then he has been known Ay i at least 20 years, this, let somebody speak up. pecial value at this time, when u.x-l Tommy—Why, doesn't.he know it? }that name. one of the greatest essentials | stopping device. These atttomatio professor in somc ego arve the only explanation which of how Sousa got uring for the long conlem- | of thinking. Just why such bring drive. American copper tem could not be installed an

Other pages from this issue: