New Britain Herald Newspaper, April 8, 1916, Page 6

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SATURDAY, APRIL 8, 1916. nings Bryan would not mind being | coast, who formerly fished for shad, i | democratic town committee in place 000. The campaign here will [ cost of $1,20 per, ssu re vard, as BRITAIN HERAI-D President. And, with Bryan, La 1 are now becoming cxpert bowder ’ of Mr. MeIntyre may be regarded as ' follow the general systematized lines | ugainst this at $1.24, which Svis s T fa - ' own Top cs [ but one of the steps to be taken by in general use throughout the coun- | given out without a ll‘:ompow, ALD PUBLISHING COMPANY, the democratic party in going about { fxtive; St & Froprietors. dent. “It may not be right now. |another inroad on the pleasures of 113 owa reluvenation. By infusing .. We willitake another angle on this . vounger hlood into the official posi- Hartford, in the recent . election, | matter about t¥ cet being din=¢ tions and gaining the interest and . showed a somewhat selfish streak in | finished. = Sec. 58 of the oty @ support of the young men it is hoped voting “no™” on the state constitutignal | 'er, says when a stregt: lag@ ‘lette thinks he is going to L@ Pre makers. Thus it is that war has made ‘ | Y . | v (S . ug o suspeet it will be e ln(il;”l u;lv»‘if“]rv\. ; ql,“,.‘:':ih\,, m., though 1 rather suspc e | American citizens and sh ¢ Y1 The unanimous nomination of el pretty soon,” is the characteristic La € living up another notch Frnest W. I'elton by the democrats ambition. What plow could help zo | to it? When ambition’s hand guides ousers that the boy ccases to man Several years later he at muan’s estate and his en- therein depends largely upon fecond Class Mail Mattor i may assess the wiolBNOR Bl 15 Conts a Week, 65 Cents a Month By Way of Showing “How Soon They | expressing o desire to run for the i not | ing such gtreet and the owmer 0 1 advRacedeoRcentagatibtontn, fance at the city convention was a | that in the fifth ward the democrats | have to travel to get to the capitol. and this shall “he ¢ v profitable advertising medium . 1 o inie lanc arks of the profession are i | v 2 : 3 C [ 3 il (o3 flaxes MR Smednnd . commendation of both democrats | expected defeat at the previous elec- | Only town that has not yet voted. A i ment for the cost of the same, stigh M SO0 Ago are e err gone or forgot- SRR s BT - ald will be found on sale at Hota- gl s0sn Ui Gl than to assure the public that if | known as a strodg democrat and his | S48e s = thus practically 2l actuall car fan b g The approved printed *recopds = ic City, and Hartford Depot. N newspaper writers appear in the | ©f New Britain to the best of his|he greater than some imagine. Tt is actual car-fare to assemblymen dur- ¥ rds of i ing theregwas orderedwngld fo thes ROomE s > :’,,.; | end of the furrow although, mavhap, | gld-timers were everlastingly at the & e A R o liv. | Permanent pavement ¥ <ponsive chord when he referred to |on the council floor from thelr re- [ but $300 as their salary and those liv- p "OR THI: - ! and die. There is only one thing that FOR THE BOYS. G country knew them and held their the Senator. in speaking to hordes of | Bngland there were many men who | ¢al plans which would reduce the ex- [ “good night.” it is claimed. e ¢ (Y 36,284 94 andidate for Governor of the e |mess ar cficiency. By his attitude | will he recelved more enthygiastically. | £ociety has its ®nual banquet mext | “%n - E R ragh g8 No 26, No, 36, e-mart of men; yet withal he is | word in every household not so wan Dol detetleal ne e b oan it [lcratic influence: the recent wisithctl| famousipgadeadyosate ® inEthis Shi I whlic o N i > a ¢ by o inowski's fol- | support of-every local citizen for Eliju X Heri e he | 1ublic would not hesitate to impose.|in a body by Father Boinowski's fo pport o : £ 1 | ment Lafayette street from M 4 i M to his | that he is willing to spend many four- | few who recall his achievements, and | but a few republicans, are making a | congressman refrained from urging e f le blushes rise to his referred to the board ol at the Post OMce at New Britain Toollette manner of setting it down, SRR for mayor was not unexpected. Mr. ; : 3 i folisttepminngees ke e T e Sense & oehtE | fo build the party up and this plan | amendment providing for full mileage | With ‘other materiad thily mae = andifhenithe: Senatosasksia e el i i S el s ea Ut or Hinooir |7 be be furiten ddedlized. I to and fro for members of the gen- | it by carrier to any part of the elty | (o ot 0 dves the subseauent cn- andidate ¢ 4 nself, | e |'erdl assembly. Their reason is ob- | imMPTovement om the property ptions for paper to be sent by mail, | lightenment:—But what's four years? R e nomination. His speech ‘of accep- [# There Is overy reason to helleve | Vious. Hartford assemblymen do be .compelled to pay not Bexes 0 a Year I never put my hand to the plow that ONEIliS i« stretehing forward e e 5 4. | one-dollar ana fifty cents py A ) o Tl o e | s R S e 1o [ (B U0 Bl o (TN ‘nesdtiniel [t elitolime lcel all detexminec Rattort ot NeiBrlalniwil Iivo L efoni I R en O Er o7 3 o8 | 80 & J y ar ! siatements that has received the | stdge a *come hack” after their un- | ment Tuesday, leaving Ansonia the | 0 %) (g B8 S0 0o o CREEE the' city. Cireulation hooks and pre ot e T el dr fe e completion of the work and absesse B wiways open to advertisers That Is the wonderful assertion of | DOINE :. f:‘l'l" l:jl‘m(“m o enaration | #nd republicans, He wisely stated | tion. Rev. Lucyan Bojnowskl, pas- .run,mm\ «’.r the ol h.i\pl nl( sn in esy. el kno char: s of a g atic L pd o < S S T e is | favor of the amendment gnd its pgs- ! - L S one ; hie would make no promises other [ tor of the Sacred Heart church. “m”_?d_ ases ment s!‘?“” be final mnd domed Fa New Stang inL fn sale at Hott~ . jnz straight through to the end of the | (en. Because this is the day of im- ] AT e e Ay clusive on all parties interest, ete. N o stand Broad I | i e s pat sonal fousnalism, when few names | Clscted he wil] serve all the people | influence among his parishioners may ( Briefly, it provides for the paym nt of : Board Walk, ~t- | fi1row when ambition’s hand is put son: alism, amies I | I Rt 27" | the common coun > 9 : | Journals, there 1s not 8o much known | abllity and will appoint men he |the'clalm of the ‘democrats that the | In& the legislative gession ine gv"“’] thée thatiatiihe N"Ir%)hi:r'?tr‘rll’:;‘!ié TELEPHONE CALLS. | the plow it must go through to the (0.5, \‘”""”m_ enhcration But the | thinks will work best towards affect- | two Polish representatives from the from 'l\vlr‘h_mn(‘fl to the (v.4mtnl ¢ 7 Oftice SR ing a harmonious and economical | fifth in the council. althotigh repub- | return. This is not unfair when g & R v . . is it N I 5 licans, recelved but little recognition | I8 considered that the members get| 5004 TRoads Construgtion™ Co. Ui | the man holding the ambition wither | front as long as their day held out, | @dministration e touched a re- [licans. & p 170.08 1 E aders in various parts of the : d - Jct. 20, 1916 meeting ... 7 Ud ceaders in ; the “already overburdened taxpayers” | publican brethren. They were per. | Ing in border towns have tg pay most | jo0 5§ g5 SR 3'3;;'* s overcomes ambition, death, So when SR it teny | and declared he has several economi- | mitted to say “good evening” and | of this out for car-fare®under the B .oi2 : when he dons his first pair of favorites deeply cherished. In New d ! no To many | Present system. b4 £ s 4 : i nses of sovers Spar s - | Poles this was distasteful and thew - Thus s i fiseBnsin progressives, reealls that he | achieved success in this undertaking, | Fenses of several departments with : : ’ Soutty A Thus settling in ful] for e, e e || G REMRERGARG S LEEAT {he compiling of news, and ameng | ©Ut Impairing dither their effective- [ feel that in the democratic party they | When the Elihy Burritt Agricultural | ;) : 1™or this pa¥iggs he realm of care-free land and .| them was one whose name was a : " ey 4 Ses ate in 1896, in 1898, again S o | throughout. the campaign he has | And there is ever the finfluence M‘t\\('E’k,‘Plfln.fi U1 be dusaned 1ot L0 | v bader 1. $04 aating A 1900, in 1902, and again in 1904— | voars ago His death occurred last | clearly demonstrated that if Quigley | their religious leader. As a demo-terectfén of a fitting memorial to the | ¥ Iows, i & reads as five times in succession—and he has | Tuesday in London and yet his |15 to ! iy 8 e 2 .| #I°rom the board of public we : : - v ; : ; teilly, A | home city. ,This should be given the o public works pe- [ heen a candidate for President but | Passing is practically unnoticed by the | ¢o it, for his type is such that the | the Hon. Thimas L. Reilly, attended porting the completion of the pave-ggl | twice up to the Present time, he meansg | & " U : e . Gtk B rats. and |Jowers. Diplomatically,- the former | Burritt was a man known and h¥®n- . ’ de and manner of his training | z » Springfield Republican is one of the stiingnim S8 heRdemocrats and 2 ored all over the world. In New Brit. ;";‘;;2 ;-nr:\irstrem at & cost g g a g : : e i o R o ,582.38 recommending that ears-in-waiting for his ambition te | has the following to say about this old- | determined effort to elect him and | his listeners to vote one ticket or the ;‘1'6“ i:*“v:'lrl”_‘(‘m: “;_"‘c ““":P“zfl‘r‘:”‘(‘,“‘l"og | _matter be * | time correspondent: he is sure to give the G. O. P. man j other, leaving it to their judgment. s A 2 compensation and assessment to make when a zaping muititude be- | J ol ) : ] rdaq hel B o a hot fight, Fowever SheSrenresontingitho/ldem il €sent all e REllo gL Serng i | ™he proper assessments of benefits a2 Mr. Pelton is a native of Pough- | cratic party. endeared himself to his | Smith,” a man who became a greal | yroyvigeq by the city cha : 2 na s MG RO netit by iEmaine hie ot ok v the city charter. keepsie, N. Y., and is a mechanical | listeners by his fieree attack on- the | linguist by studving while at work | " Accepted and adopted p cngineer with degrees from Amherst | Burnett Literacy bill. This bill is | over his forge and lastly as just | The board of compensa % 1 : . advocat Backed by his own | geq Pensation and ‘88 and the Massachusetts Tnstitute of | distasteful to all foreigners and | peace ac 2 3 sessment has given th. i i | 5 il hi sor hard earned education, it was a e : interesiu Lechnology (from whence he was | Father Bofnowski himself Is working | har c . property owners a hearing. Some craduated i 1903, Tle has been in | hard against it. The Meriden speaker | Peace advocate that he beecame the | members of the board have been Ly i e ol il ot | BN ave v el Tearalian d imars[[fusther iatirackedithe inlaudiis fotiih e motlgs temousim an s egdld Sin 'r'< to sce the j8b and the board still hme 1925, and 1932, and 1936, and so on | oo 0T e B on e N told that | Tied A local vouns woman. Te is |audlonce by his complimentary ref- | brain their burned a holv desire for | the maftd under advisement, s 1 do he lane of yéars h.‘ . q '],,,‘,' ”',' ranklin county, | the superintendent of power at the | erence to their patriots and his ad- | unlversal peace and if sm'h}'\"l' comes | * Mr. Humphrey is president of thu- ELY hadef SR s 2 el b Ll AN Y, | Stanley Works. Six vears ago he |Vice to “think, fhen vote on April | about the memory of the New Britain | board“of public works, the hoard thaf B ernatruction of s saieble| -l e mevatot Wil erlsbiate Sihey Si, e s e Uin | Was A unsuccesseul democratic nom- 11 was significant. Added to this, | blacksmith should be credited with | reperted the pavement comploted, thaf the I £t It sixty-first anniversary of his birth on e H"_’m' N ““;‘ hl."l‘ the | ince for councilman and five years Father Boinowski's arzument against | ho small share of the honor. I-‘H_hu requested ahother board to pass upoh e hoya of this city. 1f thePe | ihe fourteenth day of next June. | woad old colony stock’ 1s by the | 350 he failed of election as alderman | the present administration gave the Burritt was among othier things, vies the work as completed, und which. the A : ; . ke 3 Ny R0e hoth from the third ward, He has |crowd food for thought. Tt is evi- | president of a peace conference in |charter says when a street 1s paved, uEtna g izgsom ethinthstiabiiion :'““'“’ Ir'|‘ ;‘f:""'l ? & ‘”f';"“ i \‘.th cerved as chairman of the board of |dent that the fifth ward democrats | Brussels about 1846. He was thrice’[ it does nog say partly paved. fThe T AT O i LRl GOty il (e Gl B || o e SR ,.-,\.\ff.\ Lo this Ve | eharities and is a close student of |are working hard and in this_move. | secretary of peace conferences .in | charter also says on completion of the 3 i days to follow. an. but he Mad passe e O the | municinal affairs. Several vears ago | ment Fon. T. L. Reflly and Rev. Bo- | Paris and was also secretary and | work, etc., it does not say partly com. B Ul iasthe e Whioh Homnte Greclas founded. | Mr. Pelton was one of the prime |inowski have no small share. | prime mover in an English peace | pleted A D Smalley —ae nerheos the last [ movers in the Ghild Welfare exhibit. .« movement. He was homered by the | Now Mr. Htmphrey is quoted as Mr. Smalley was perhaps s United States and by foreign ooun- | saying the street is unfinished and the tries and if ever a man ‘deserved a | council knew it. That in the face af survivor among the group of brilliant ‘e lever hefore, states City Clerk A. "hose anadromous fish referred to [ men who got a foothold in newspaper The republican primaries of Tues- |1+ Thompson. has the democratic | ;1 onument erected to his memory. by | his boards gnd probably his partici. the citizens of his home town it is he. | pating action sending an official com- work and made their reputaiions day showed without the slightest | PATty seen fit fo indorse so many of correspondents during the 'ivil war. | qoubt what the republican voters | the republican mnominees as they | qpoqac the only monument to Elihu | munication taat it was. e was graduated from Yale in 1853, | want, 0. F. Curtls, Quigley's op- | have this vear. Practically the entire | pot8% 138 BT MOTIRERE S0 Lk 00 | e 0E is not, does Mr. Humphrey e in all running streams stamps them | read faw for a time in the office of | \onant, was so badly smowed under | ticket, mayor excepted, has been en- | ST Bewe 18 B plocR of POBRITL | S o s to walt four pears. ve. ] [ as harbingers or advance agents of the | George . Hoar of Worcester, s udied | {hat it is doubtful if he will ever | dorsed. But in this very action the | FFREE WEEE T MO BT ey | fore assessing 1t? i he improvement of the Doy [ shad, have put in an appearance in i the Harvard law sci ol. and was | jie able to dig his way out again, | unselfishness and fairness of the dem- | , o S0 hie know its location. Did the property owners on thaf itain has before it & great op- |\ g U o | Almitted to the bar in 1856 Having | iven his own ward, the third. where | 0Crats 15 mirrored. City clerk, tax | ‘7, BEGRE AR L8 BRI oo | straet have an opportunity to tell the | & sore south for nis health just prior | ne was supposed to relgn supreme, | collector, elty treasurer, city comp- | oo 5 4 and financed by Burritt | Kind of pavement they preferred? Can 4 | Spectal bulleting from the front an- | “he authreak of the wae Mr. Smal- | zave him a plurality of only fourteen | troller—all are positions filled by | oTEam=er anc Ananced =—aw, BURTiH) ol be compelied to pay for worlk im- ¢ nounce the fact that the Cromwell |ley, who had been writing Ietters (o | Votes, Quigley has proved that he | Rdmittedly capable men and are po- | SROUT SUEL LORs S50 WD RS BT fortectly done? Can they be compelled fisherman caught a couple of these | ¢ ~ew York T steps toward crecting some memorial. [ {0 pay until the work is completed bune ilinmivative of | i< the man the majority of the re. | Sitions in which established efficiency ificent club house fov the hoys. | oo © T esterd all of awhion | 1Avery, was commissioned by that | ahlicans want (o steer their ship of | SPells success for the city. The dem- Bl I so, can they be again compelied to B 10 : paper one of its war correspondents f siate. He has also proved that he |OCratic convention was open for anv | g o chairman Babcock of the | PAY When it is completed, if it is higt presages the early arrival of the Con- | when the break between the north | stands assuredly at the head of the | nominations and a number of demo- | AACC FOEIMAR SRACOEE O T2 | now? recticut river shad. Paradoxical as [and the south became a reality. He | 0. P. party in New Rritain ana | CTats were urged fo let their names [S8fow poard m o BUDIE (B eriier B How can a hoard make a satis it might seem the early arrival of the | W43 at the front until late in 1862, | there is reason to believe that poli- [ Pe placed on the lists but they rve-) .. " 0" fire departments and as|tOry assessment of cost on work if it when he was called to do cditorial | ically he ean have any position the | fused, believing it to be for the best | i S is only partially completed, and there bty 3 were due here some time ago. This | juigns o » She It ang 1 < vietor: spe i in office who have heen tried and Bery. ek £ ey r P ¢ e Jraigns <4(|ln Shenand ,‘h and th it. His victory has spelled, seeming 1 GORN | pensed with were somewhat indignant. how or with what it will be completg year the alewives are running hehind [ 'otomae Correspondent Smaliey made | v, final and absolute defeat for the | found eficient. o decoF i s e At igha e hedule time, It is a late spring, | his mark. His story of the battle of [ o1d line republicans and the old G Rut some of the republicans feel, | 1€ FOVE O \"(_I'“"N";mn e It looks as though the willing and t. There are some six hun- (o0 5 never muke | Antietam reached New York in ad- { 0. P, machine here Quigley has | despite democratic protests, that the | & TS Tre SACONS GRCE MOTE B0 | ever-ready taxpayer will have to plank embers of the boys’ club in SEd 3 % [ vince of other aceounts, and was a [ demonstrated that he has built up a | Alnost entire cndorsement of the re- e h_“("-'wo“‘ assured by Mr, | 40Wn another 35,000 or $6,000 to get their appearance until this scason is sicce of writing, The knowl- ; ; »ublican ticket is a campaign scheme. this strect in proper shape. If Mr Lrilliant picee f writing, he know naw and powerful republican ma- | T C paig! Babcock that the board will look o his s I.s T T ¥ . Humphrey or anybody else's grounds for them He states that he has| g, "g,ngerous charges and miss > “The death of Geo + W. Smalley in Loondon at the age of nearly 83 vear: 5 recalls old days of journalism. The manner in which Senator La Foilettd's | rassing of one who in former thmes ambition lets him look at the end of | meant much to the readers of the New {he furrow. Sure! Suppose it does | York Tribune is duly recorded in the mews columns of that paper, but the Suppose it don’t hapg in 1916. rments. Out of knicker- ; There's 1920 and 1924.” That is the. [0 it is that anything done for in his ’teens must be re- N thé man of later years. This < B . v New Brltain islin. | DOU even hanpeniin 19247 The interested in the campaizn last night to raise a goodly | L] ! ilto the experience of worldly 1 | | | | v a worthy object it is per- in & movement to better the s one instance where politics THE COMING OF b by the board; where all races eds must cast aside their |, ;60 (he fishing fraternity as pies; where men and women | 5o yives and whose official capacity n common ground: when all tizens have but one eud in Every man and woman ity will take lively interest in Fk planned, in the building of made attractive, as it will be, 8 will be interested to zreat Otherwise they would form wn clubs, as did the Lovs in s now, and the clubs the b emselves are not always the itain, so many in fact that they o » * |'surely on its way. The cominz of [ edge which Mr. Smalley had gained | chine of his own and when he pulls | They argue from a democratic stand- | the shad is vne of the sure signs of | through direct contact with milltary | (he strings his many little manikins | Point that hy doing this and simply térs. T is the first | Cperations served 1o inerease his | will jump fo do his bidding, While | ¢hanging the head of the ticket. many all be accommodated in the f R sv-»\l'yolnl ‘xvn"n;lu 1 Hv‘;\""fl("fl in n‘\»nfd‘ :\Ill': St rCatE huve hotbattaniha b a new building must he | . vaiue as a member of the editorial | Quigley may not win at the polls | "¢publicans wil 1 say to themsely it "':x\r‘.; len “DUBEC: a8 200D a3 9ne | (hig ‘Tiwould i advise them' to' Kedp There is probably no other fish “Well. what's the difference. TIf T |18 approved. et and that building ould e 4 staf Tuesday by any sweeping majority, s more delectable, more delicions than “In 1867 Mr. Smalley was sent (o S s Slen ue) ion | vote the democratic ticket T will be ——— Next! ment to the city as well as a the consensus of conservative opinion the shad. IFor every one of its many | London to act as luropean corre- | o that he will he the next mayor voting for my republican friends with Respectfully, Fathering place for the boys. |y 1 oq it carvics a wealth of excellent | SPondent of the Tribune.. He wrote While Quigley has heen raised to | the exception of mayor, and T don't COMMUNICATRD. O. F. CUI then be up and lending sup- ) b i letters from the German adquar- | the fore. his opponent, 0. T, Curtls, | Jike Quigley anyway.” TIn this way, — T taste. When planked and surround- |y qupring the Franco-German war | Lus proved himself to he 8 very poor | the republicans say. the democ About Lafayette Strect—O, . Curtls FACTS AND FANCILS con- | hope to wean away many G. O Comes Forth With Some Perti- - coutrements it makes a dish £t for a |interest in Paris and Herlin lie was | wratulations to his conquerer but in | votes and whether the plan was pre- Nent Ouanmient pn Prring Tere, We have so often turned the other~ on hand to portray them for the Trib- | the same hreath whoezed deflance | meditated or not. it is not unlikely | g check to Germany that we may not une. For twenty-cight vears Mr. | and publicly reifernted all his admin. | {hat this will so work out. liditor Evening Herald, have the face to do it again.—Brogk- New Britain, I¥n iHaxle TRt Please allow e through your bntributing our bit, whatever | = | e with the proper and dtting ac- {in 1870, and on oceasions of unusual [ joser. e sent the proverbial Those who are able only to ; kums of seeming insignificance | . King, if a ruler is supposed to have ot be abashed by the BIVINE Of | 1y 00 yetter than other men. In B L © M siadley remained the London corve- |istratjon attacks which, when the ol d other years there has been a super- | spondent of that paper. He became | compaign s fully analyzed. soem fo Recent notice at the post oflicc ; ] abundance of these creatures that | enamored of everything English, and | pave helped G. A. Q. more than | the carriers’ window would not here- | (0lUmMns to answer statements con- A senate amendment (o the army make their home anywhere along the | ¢dme to he dubbed by hi ties the | (therwise and made the voting public | after he open in the evening for the wrnm: mfi‘““ and the Lafayette | yeorganization bill will add a National all the shining brillianey of | 500 50T ing between the | (C10 LoTY squire so extreme was his | feel that he was a downtrodden, | public distribution of mail has caused street pavement, as reported hy a | Guard section with five officers to the e T e R, | e (R iy S en the | oonservatism in all things British. His | oppressed under-dog that should be | some wonderment about the city. For | MO'NINE paper as being made by the | general staff. Those politicians in con- two salient gulfs of the North Ameri- | pelation with the Tribune finally tor- protected many vears the carriers’ window has | President of “f." board of public | gress cannot grasp the idea that the n continent, the Gulf of Mexico and | minated when Whitelaw iteid was But if Quigley is clected next Tues- | been opened promptly at 7 p. m., and | \0Tks at the First Ward Republican { purpose of a gencral staff is to devel- 5 club rally Wednesday cvening, last op national defense, not to provide magnificent proportions by hble to do so. This is a time @ dinie of the poor man looms i orzanization and energy fliosibe Buch e fiontt Tl he Guif of St Lawrenec, Iovery | Peaising Gldstone and his o fvish | aay and (he ensuing twe years bring | kept open until 8 o'clock, during raise the munificent sum of | : : 3 : home-rule policy and Mr. Smallos was | hardshing {o the taxpicers they need | which time anyone could call for ana| He 5ays I have slandered the board | honors for individual officers.—Buffalo L . river of mny elze alons the Atlamtis [ 0000 B B0 BEE L SRECHEE S A : 4 s of public works, that I have made | Express o thousard dollarsd he | : fiving hot shot into both. vo e | ot let out a whimper for they will | receive their mail. Bui this system Bl : Ixpres | scakvard is nonored by the visitations | hired an English liberal to conduet [ have only themselves ‘to hlame. | 18 now abolished on orders from the [ Mis-statements In regard to city e | of these fish in the early spring. And | the ibune’s cable service from | Phey have lauded Quigley 1o the skics | post office department. The move to | 2ffairs, but he only cites one instance | Cheers for Colonel Dodd! He g : ; and tires to explain it, I will take | obliged to retire spon hy il hich him up on it. He says Lafayette s that when a man @ his age strect is still unfinished, most eve he must quit the fighti e, Dodd one who has scen it agrees with that | is able to continue, as i< +hown by his » worth that much, and more, AOEE TR latways their coming is a siznal for | london, and this lead to Mr. Smalle, and after due warnings, which have | abolish this system is an economical ERE AMBITION LEADS, | the joy amon retirement. In 1895 he was very fit- | jever been proved wrong or even | one and the tremendous saving can be tingly sent to New York as corre- | protested seriously, they have seen fit | imagined when it is understood that spondent of the London Times. This | (¢ return him. [r there fa any eelc more than ten hours’ time : e is any |in a week \ : s time | © . ) 3 Lhha Bl - ition is a wonderful zift what ad is the great American fish. | arrangement continued until 1406, | crambling during the coming {wo | was consumed by the elerk there. This 'fi‘t]('mlf;nt. a_ml‘. Hm; 1; what I have hrilhav:t feat. W I;«n he ,iyn,: :vr“.m it everlastingly keeps its pos- | This year, however, there is going | When Mr. Smidley left journalisur aind | vears there will be a very small ma- | is more than one man's pay for a day's 1.'“:" ; X"flxm- a\:l(‘(“. mx “mn‘" tha Jibe a1 '\g.m;*q‘.:yn:-rw 'y';~ .' Juid ‘l..“fl mentEbacil RLandon RO s 1 o tisllo st olns nublion il voters Bltol o iand iwneniEm iy litown= il d (FECR-E SSRGS LSRN O R ER S e e e declining days can truthfully say to their neighbor: | cities are included the figure grows | Vervene in the common council, my- | Ma, SRR x by "here ne was thoroughly 1t hoine. 1 told you so.” very larg self included, knew that the street | means. That is, even {hough he 5 2 B il S Y : was shed. ould retire tomorrow.— Philadelphia | The atmosphere was to his Jikin= and s e The order is not working much ot | V&5 Dot ”’r‘"*"‘cgmnd Pt g e [l : proves it so. Since time im- | these fish that swim heneath the | his residence was always a meeting- a discomfort here either. Hardly mm”;’;f us:d Rt “i‘:';" m‘; = rk‘c R v s: eria B vith vork- - — P e R e mopelmess MW hanship. The street is practically [ France's military laurels have not cver called for thelr mall at this win-| 4yt "ang very unever. no uniformity | been withered at Verdun. Ter herols dow evenings and the majority of cit- | | "y, "o\ reace and it has very little | armies are still undaunted; her spirit izens who called did so stmply trom | 3,08 S50 TEC 00 G0 TN e | is unshaken. So far s there has been ¢d. Many thought the rce would | force of habit and a chance hope that | ;o arfment who have supervision | any moral victory in this tix woeks' he closer. Zeigler, alihough cam- | they might veceive a letter. One |, o roaq construction knows or | test of endurance it has been a victory Scheuy and | €lerk at ‘»m\~\:“”-|-“|\|\ kept an account | (poyiq know that even a base to a | for the Allies, and rot for Germuny, In f his lett ( | llin for registrar of voters hy a | 0f all those who called on a particular | yyeet pavement should have the | the larger moral sense the buitle of many of his letters in two volumes en- % . 4 o evening and found that of the eightv | " 2 . 2 " everse to Germ il s - e 2 40 v greater majority than was really ox- & e o onrlandl ranel D) Verdun has been a reversc rerman eached, but ambition has no | States. The shad will be scarce this | titled ‘Londo iaray e a Uly ex g ano S 2 necessary crown and shape so that | titled ‘London Letters’ in 18 He | Lected, Inoidentally. Mis wiotory for. | t%o Who asked for mall only Sfteen 'ms almost as far-reachin cffcet . TR e A o T B e A R o G g S : N 5 the finish coat or top would be of an | &rms almost as abition Dbids go and, lo, men | year and consumers will be forced to Dbl lurll b udfenl of M neond i fover closes Seheuy's long carecr ag | Teceived any mhis one iinstanca (o ORISH 980 EaR BOR RO I00 8l et e kbathla for Flandexalon o pren: rd o b A hiEher R antovar becains 0 and the next vear his ‘Anzlo- |, i . shows just how i a ¢ “ 5 i e ; yori < r h hard on the ground v higher rates than ever because of \ republican politiclan. Tn his own | Shews Jjust how unimportant his | Lenite, asphalt, brick, block or other | Ue of the Marn New York un E oy | American Memories’ appearved. Mr. | sranch o o il Hoolink N gin the journ hopslesshithesravagesfot war N mhetwhciabroad | SRS FEsIOISF SRt words. he realizes the people no | PFANCh of the postal service in New | .,y omont, Tt should also be under- Smalley was fortunate in his contact | o G0 IS BAE PEOPIC 1O | pitain was and its abolition, while R i e, with life on both sides of the Atlantic o S AS o=Sibly a little Inritating atinoeti1s by |Lood ihatga sinin fpavement taimiar ) | were there any contests for the coun- 0SS @ ating at first is b spha i ie, o ¢ the createst exemplification | thing, and placing the hish price ot | ile became an uncommonly well in- | G5 T BoN ST Toeph o Cans | no means lessening the efficiency of | 0 ":""hm' Dlegiing, i 0""":1" ]M > ’ fOT S P wresting > % - i) i SLILY seph An v A must have a very rough an clean . A man’s ambition means. | shad at its door may scem like the Jast | formed and interesting man. bt the | il o oug v, (o Avall fap | 1he local service which has been for | last have & Very roush and clean off or not stick, scale of his liking swung to the Buro- | .ounciiman in third and W. K. Kap. | Many years one of the city’s boasts. venski going down hefore Louis Arita A The Lafayette street pavement does pean side, and this made him less of |an American than any of (he men o 5 . the cross of gold he has had | on the shad industry. This is the way | with whom he had made his start in | ano John Tomaszewski in the fifth, | M. Bard. financlal campalgner. Is | not or will not comply with the above ition, to be P l £t Instead of fisl life He had much breadth of ae- | The defeat of the veteran M. T. Ker- | in town mapping out the prelimina conditions. At present it would re- y o be President o e i orks. stead of fishinz for shac 2 e hac DECAC of a yrmer N ~ g 5 g o e i g 5 n e it wor for shad, complishment and too little democs | S0 former democratie alderman | steps for the campaign to raise $85.. | quire a top coat of three times the . from the fifth. by former councilman | 000 for a New Britain Boy's club | thickness in the center, over that at j the path that ambition peint- in this way have gone into the more i e : L[4 A1 Paonessa, was a bitter pill for | bullding. The movement is a meri- | the curb to get a sufficient conves n his day he was a wonder 10 formoy and his friends to sws 5 e . : i surface > and three times has he fallen remuncrative industry of making | o er e (e Ay e detfil | the former and his friends to swallow. | torious one and should receive proper | shape. The present surface has not v’ Fat ambiic s : sl Sfuatiey. g the naming of John Riley as a mem- | support, as no doubt it will. No one | the required roughness and it cannot vayside. Yet ambition knows powder for the fighters abroad: they | ile lived when the game was in its in- | her o the democratic {own 5 ) Dencnsi 5 5 4 Wn commiftee | questions the heneficial influence of | Le very well cleaned after three or leat and Bryan is ready and have laid aside the nets and tackle, | ey His memory will linz for a tin lieu of the veteran . . MclIntyvre inhabitants a'onz 1he ion balks at nothing. To have | banks of the various streams The n the verze of nervous pros- [ Lo be a scarcity of shad taken from To feed the fire of ambition | the briny deep. There may not be a r must be ever up and doing. | perceptible decrease in the number of Reviewing the republican prima- vies and democratic caucuses there are several mild surprises Tirst, Quizley's staggering defeat of Curtis was greater than many had expeet- ble men have herished, | waves, but there will be a noticeable | place for interesting pcople Mr fostered. fondled ambition. | lreak in the ranks of those that reach | Srnalley’s wife, whom he married in was Miss PPhoebe Garnaut of Boston, the adopted dauzhier of a sorry place. It is the sume- | that the Bureau of Fisherics has not | wendell Phillips. She had the social it the old world would soon | the shore This in spite of the fact hat pushes men onward, ever let up in its work of distributing | gift and was of much help to her even in the face of disaster. imany millions of such fish for propo- | hushand i paign favorite, defeated i o Smalley in 1890 collected a far off zoal that may be ! gation in the waters of the United The principle on which certain steel companies and their officers were in- dicted at Youngstown, Ohio, for eon- spiring to fix wages is that lahor Is & commodity. If labor is a commodity and employers may be prosecuted for limiting wages, it follows, of cour-e, that labor unions may be procecded against for combining to increave wages. In the Clayton anti-trust act congress has specifically stated that labor is not a commodity. The judge who quashed the Ohio indictments took an enlightened view of the mat= ter.—New York World. it be, William Jennings has been blamed for almost every- first sounded the keynote of | act of cruelty: but nevertheless it is tical success by the exploita- | true that the war has put its mark States. Three tines has he the men who usually make their living racy the Boy's club on the rising generation | four years’ wear and Superintendent R, H. Crawford is Much of the roughness on it will old-tinmers even thongh Melntyre did | at present complling an interesting | be worn off and then it will be nearly step aside vather than enter a con- | campaign book which is to bhe dis- | impossible to fit it for a top coat (Hartford Post.) test. Present indications are thei | (ributed, setting forth at lengtl ractic brok : a Vi i 2 ; b wted, sc g fo at length just | unless it is practically broken to It cannot he said that New Brit Jlaugh at him? What cares cured the fishermen to work at this | fate might treat him so. Howsver | i (he first, gth i l i | that may be, the whole OISR e career but shows how soo; v o but after a while he will be | was also somewhat of a jolt for {he forgotten as those who went hefure {him. Had he clung litile e cares an ambitious man if along the coast and inland have se- | tenaciously to his American trnditions oday to go over the same trail. | and taken up the gentle art of prwder Victory Not Altogether Sweet : g y 1 ogether ¢ . his ambition. making, The great powder plants < second, third and fourth | what the cluh does for the hoys and | pieces. Alsa cvery spwer and subway [ain's republican powers that be are heir scoffing? Ambition oyer- ' occupation. Good republicans will elect coun- | what has heen done elsewhere. This | manhole, cateh basin, and receiver on | pleased with the renomination of cilmen and aldermen Opinion ex hook will contain photographs of all | the street would have to be raised. | Mayor Quigley The mayor is of too forgotten, these old-timers. The last | precsed s : : o s, welcome crown. Here ativaction than the gambi el e e ressed i that in the sixth ward Pa- | the public men and women giving of | A new intersection with the Main |independent a frame of mind to £ gamble of fishing | work pmajley Gid as a Pewspa el joncesa has a zood clance of heins {their fime and money as well as the | street pavement will be required. Al | suit them. He is of the opinfon that . Ta Fole Vis- yr shac - some 6 ahs corresponde as 4 2 Portsmouth | olected alderman ane i 2 or La Follette, the great Wi ‘1" shad, for sometim had do not 5 '\',,',, 1w"'VLH‘”)§" ”"‘“‘I’I“’w"“fl‘”:”'['1‘ i I‘ ted alderman and men who have worked for the | this will cost two or three thousand |a republican mayor is the actual as statesman, the one and only | bite or get trapped as rveadily s at | ST ST S ‘”W'-_'”- i “”' f s has an equaily g ..NY chanee club in the past, including the various | collars more than it would to have | well as the titular head of the part Bob”, who confesses that | other times. Rather than remur, fs e c i sbheing - clected to the coun- | superintendent. This book itself will | 1uved the street properly at first, | and this does not make for case of sia and Japan. He then wircd the ! ol with his runnin i i | | | 1 1 il s i g mate it S = argume S GF | n 3 ds, ob is ver: v s > ho the owner of an ambition, a speculative pursuit when fheye | T.ondon Times. on. whic h W he & nvincing avgument in the cam- | In other words, the job is very much | mind on the part of those who hold U T ¢ Lenehan SN InEthe it swardithe con: |l pai=n. & Mi Bard’s record showel i ‘ «f a boteh. v different opinion. The possibilty S s rordina y ambitious. | chance to make real monev and . orking, that no peace was possihle, | 8 o T 5 B is still inordinately ambitious. | chance to ma Al mon vl ey | work L 153 eI WD FiTosens andiiyvithi e ineadl (os S e i S 1 The state builds roads of the same | that Mayor Quigley will be re-elected 1 not mind heing President of | a pay envelope every Saiurdiy nigh oW il e old n il sublicans at present in control the | vaiens of this sort for in Haverill he ; mater and thelr report shows |ix not conducive to a state of ofl 71114 { : cached the last lap in a coce tha ed States, just as William Jen- 1 the men and boys along the Atantic LA NG hal wages paid resu- L all these things and makes larly in powder mills offer far more Ge Qe M ALk ) | proved oo fast, [chanees ave considered more equal. ! paised £851.000: in Poston he raived | miles of bituminous concrete (i | timism on the part of (he organiza< \ ed oo Last, | The naming of Mr. Riley on the ' $115,000; and in New York he suised | much better pavement) built at a !tion leaders in the Hardware City,

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