New Britain Herald Newspaper, April 12, 1916, Page 6

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BRITAIN HERALD Proprietors, Sunday exc rald Building, pted) at 4:15 p. m., 67 Church St t the Post Office at New Britain ond Class Mail Matter. by carric: to any part of the city Cents a Week, 65 Cents a Month. pns for paper to i, in advance, 60 Cents a Monta, Year. profitable advertising medium in Jity. Circulation books and press always open to advertisers. ha win New City, Stand, 42nd S York City; Board Walk. and Hartford Devot. TE dMce Rooms LEPHONE CALLS. SERVICE een minutes after the closing punting machines in the vari- jds the Herald of yesterday nounce Through 1 of the result the the energetic co- reporters and compilers those who 'phoned to the ot the advantage of remari Within ‘flash” vice thirty minute e first the came in over bne presses were roaring 1 after that boys on the street | nouncing the “extra FROM NOW ON. time immemorable the ¢ nnouncing the banns of matri- as preceded certain weddii ies, T 1 the and it is during that time, between the announce- and marriag of should banns the those persons who know json why the marriage place are invited to come pd state their reasons. Other- such persons are admonished they The day of the services that lold their tongues forever. is to When office true, some deg ¥ election the candi- »r municipal announce tention to assume public re- announcements are of moment lity, these bnt to the publishing the Between that :I|'ll! of the voting is the propitious | for all those who son why know of candidates should not | to come forward and state | After event ed the the were 1Se. votes are cast the easons and hack r Qu to the highest office in the city i £t returns show overruled, they and be silent. | ey was vesterday re- | atest the people he- That was the th announced, | can a citizen here. Previous ceremony to anns had been us sources were heard from in | bn to such a union, but those ! rformed the ceremony did not | seriot | Thus any to tics one complaint stop the rite. of Mayor tr past are Quigley and his | fmin tion admonished to let ad he bury its dead, to 1 personal enmities that en- nto the campaign before the 1, and to be silent. Those ift it is to e peo- o hold this in their hand duty of A, Quigley have decided the their affa the city. that is proper man nd to irs. Realizing nors that have heen heaped fhim is inconceivable that will violate the done in the past that h the approval of dis- ers of the city’ for that overy It all eves must " of his mak otten the nonce. ahead 1 loyal ci municipality should put to the wheel and help yment a hy success, mu me election in plura is the favorite On his election two years e mayoar exceeded this advan- by 5 votes, and at that time his les of winninz were conceded to the Yesterday he to the away with flving colors. returns will of victory it termed, since he is the sole lord minimum polls the favorite and ere perusal of the terday for that the elections ye almoét a complete ayor and his own party can haster of the situation now 1 it was not as complete as had The hoped bis of well the Mayor and sers. olitical opponent fiavor, to begin with, was not n among the voters of the city, js well known as @& man should hopes for election. Yet, not feel the his against be elton should serious setback to poliii tions Running an e hced campaigner and facing a that for perfection ine stands d to none in Mr. Pel- >ditable showing. He this state, in the one and yet he polled 2,086 votes campaign were to spend the next two years | beping himself before the public, | propounding his doctrines, in ing and mingling with the masses, b.is no reason why he should not another 2,086 to his present fol- e next election is a long way off, ana ‘Quimey we must attend. | | | | | be found on sale at Hota- | and Broad- | was | peesi| | over L over { in its handling of the tariff. wi to the best in- family | of most of the | but | to Mayor There been differences with him in the past made mis- of With the security that comes the crim it in have has not and undoubtedly he takes, things he will he guilty again. to a man who holds office for the sec. shake off the of the more quiet he radical ond term can now past ymewhat spirit and settle down to a and { dignified proceedure such as befits the | Mayor of New And he can | do this t as his critics can i the sepulcher of silence and hold their Britain go into | tongues. Hevald will in no way deter the work in hand. The ahead with high hopes and blessings for this So long as it is possible the two are pregnant | ! years ! ) | city. The Mayor has been re-elected ;U: v out the work he has set un- { der way and because of this and the [ which the support him tends congratulations. Ax manner in I ready to the Herald ex- In the natural order of things, however, it is the duty of the newspaper to stand ever as the of the to if oS watch-dog city’s interests, | warn of impending dangers, and such occasions present themselves we hope and trust they shall not, the lierald to the New and stands ever ready After all, that we are individual of tor alarm. it is the city Britain working not any one party, creed, or clan A KEYNOT SPFIECH. Aunother keynote spaecn hias been nade, this time by Senator MeLean, who last night sounded his ringing a | raignment of the present administra- the This speeches, tion at republican state conven- tion. is the season for keynote preliminary to the miain | drive that will be made after the big conventions in June It is th peech of a taken protection and partisan politician and must be as such Its own keynote is tariff preparedness for Therein it this country after the war. the whole discourse loses the force | would ordinarily carry ple reason that no one knows what is the will going to happen after war, nor even when the war end, the Airerican people are .starting The a battled And they far with it. Democrits, e taken out of politics entirely history of nightmare it this great bugaboo is Politicians have year in, year out. have never gotten ver) Hepublicans have assailed Democrats have abused Republicans. The North and the South went to war | one phase of the question, and i | the Bast and the West are ready to lock horns over the same issue. Be- cause of the great expanse of this coun- try tariff will meet demands of each and every no aw ever the section. No party will give entire satisfaction This be- fully I'ple of the country in known today, and the peo- haad of all it ma having their {eves open to the futility this { argument on the question, he | sately presumed that the tariff will | I not be a paramount issue | Nor capable for has sug- ne the presidential campaign. Mexican situation be too the that different | making any great stir. pure reason no one yet | | sestea a policy,—not even Col. Roosevelt. As to the war abroad, well —. So when all is said and | carries its greatest weight in th aragraph.— | % presidency of this republic is of- Tt writes the ficial position in the world. highest and most honorable more name in lar letters into the political history of the world. But of it. only one few men dare to dream | fewer aspire to it. and ca have it. J"rom among those who en- ter the race accident frequently picks the winne It is the grand 2 in No No man is equal to pr of demos. to it. Any t the lottery right task. man [ any the man who gets it | more than he deserves. and the man | who gets it is under a life-long obliga- | tion the which it ! him.’ 10 party gives to It would take a divine being to sat- isfy the entire people. according to the Senator's way of looking at it, The job. i nd he is right problem now, and it 1is no small to go out and get some one nearer to perfection than Where he? numerous ¢ | Woodrow | There { no one seems to measure Wilson is are ndidates but up. | | With | tamous all the little interest that oup Morning Visitor in New Britain’s municipal affairs it Klett chairman of the re- publican is not now town committec. The his duties there R. the per- Senator relinquished me two years ago. Raymond at it, admirably Fiealy had a whack and duties are now heing ormed by E. (. Goodwin, | Somebody possessed of unlimited time and patience has fizured that the | Bible contains 3.586,173 letters, 31,737 hooks, form- 1,189 he This indeed is our ing 775,693 words, verses, chapter and Eava { Washington Post.” idea of a to do. busy-body having nothing people stand | sonnd | For the sim- | right | now on their demand that the tariff | | pear in the com- ! will | of { done Senator McLean's keynote speech | Still n | has | | killed the { some more executioners like O and i should know that Senator George W, | | hoy NEW, BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 12, 1916. zard. in New York Evening Sun.) rd is a Loafer In soft and slothful He slithers through the clover And slumbers in the Slime. ne The Lizard is as lazy any La nguid A dozy, drowsy -daisy, Drone. The Lizard loves in leisure To linger by Lagoon With melancholy pleasure A-swooning in Simoons. He's Dolce far niente Manana—Ilaissez faire: A languor-loving gent—he Never has a care. 0! lovely, lazy Lizard To swap my lot with yourn I'd give my heart and Gizzard And put myself in Pawn; And if T were a Wizard And the magic art had conned, I'd make myself a Lizard With my Metamorphic Wand— A Lizard and a Loafer In soft and sultry clime That slithers through the clover And slumbers in the Slime. Sunbeams. (From the Baltimore Sun.) Gotythat tired feeling? The capital of happiness is the | heart. Spring house-cleaning spring hope-cleaning. Mexican jumping bean. as there's Funston Villa—the As long there's hope, Surprising how far potpie will go toward making a sunny | household. Every now and then'take her home a new set of waffle irons. “Much Record.” fishing. Good and Some Bad The same might be said of Sleep with your window work with your mind open. up and “Rang Dinner Bell for Fire.” It'll bring ’em quicker than anything else. Not the Same Meskill. To the Kditor of the Heraid:i— In your issue of yesterday there ap- a an account of a disturhance on Myrtle street in which the name of Thomas Meskill was mentioned. In order to correct an impression which was thus created, will you not kindly clear that I am not the person who is connected with the affair THOMAS J. MI3 29 Laurel St TLL, Query. To decide a bet, wiil you kindly give me the definition of the word phorice? P. s0po- is no such word in p1 ish You probably re an adjective, which or tending to produce sleep. The noun, soporific, is used widely in nielical circles and refers to a medi- cinc that produces decp sleep, as d tinguished from an anodyne.—[Ed. FACTS AND FANCI certain, take dinner Mr clse sent er to means Ther day Eng soporific, causing One thing is Col. velt will never liam Barnes beacuse, quitter with. he may gle. whatever charged Berkshire It is reported that, owing to the ex- rise in the price of paper, sev- papers in the capitat cessiv en vernacular will suspend publication at the end of | this month.—Pekin Gazette. Villa, like victory hegin with v But which wch case, docs the omen York Tribune. that Germany con- new type of submarine no periscope No need iscope has a U hoat com- who is temperamentally distinguish a neutral New York Verdun and side, in favor?— said is is ies mander un- able to from a belligerent.— Time: Pennsylvania o Professor Pattee of State College thinks that \merican short story. What would eall “Murder as one we suppose De Quincey of the fine arts,” Henry please step lively 2—Collier’s Weekly. Noah in Dratton Dakota has the person of John Rule, a farmer who, helieving that water in the streams thercahouts is a forerunner of another flood equal to that described in the scriptures huilt himself an ark. There's prepar edness for vou!—Worcester Post. North a new With An Afterthought. (Collier's Weekly.) newspaper humori quotes letter received one of congressmen: “My voungest son enlisted in the n't get him out. me? He a good sing him for my In one sense the father hoy to \ Joke this) the A from Georgia by a h away regular Won't hoy gone army. 1 vou help and I was own use. joke— a joke who was bringing up much work out of and the young sol- chuckled over this is a on the him possible dier probably has it more than anbody clse. Rut {he stor is mor than humor Thi ran away to escape threc years of hard labor for profit. Unfortunately a children cannot slavery to parents owners. Georgia ha orers under thirteen North Carolina 9. olina 4,154, and it is up to or Federal Legislature to as serious or four fathers many their his zood escape from and cotton 2.819 child Years 6 and South (¢ of zive their heritage of sunshine, play, and schooling. suggests | litgle chicken | Its | Roose- with Wil- | Barnes isn't | be | hoth | vessel Henry | Wil | the high | has mill | Iah- | e. | the State | ther | ‘McMILLAN’S BIG STORE “ALWAYS RELIABLE” DAINTY UNDE MUSLINS Exquisite creations, trimmed with | the finest laces and embroideries, the kind that after washing. | This is a good time to select your fu- ture needs. look right | | Corset Covers. 25¢, 49¢ and 98¢ | each. Gowns, 75c¢, 98c. $1.49 and S$1.98 ‘nvelope Chemise 98¢ and .49 Combinations, 98¢ to $2.49 each. Short Skirts, 25¢ and 49¢ each. Long Skirts, 49¢ to $2.98 cach. CREPE DE CHINE UNDERWEAR Camisoles and Covers, 98¢ and $1.49 | each. Envelope each. Chemise, $2.98 to % cach. Gowns, $3.98 and $4.50 cach. Washable S $1.49 cach. atin Camisoles, 98¢ and “NEMO” WONDERLIFT CORSETS $5.00 each Other “Nemo” models at $3.00 and | $14.00 each. NEMO” WONDERLIIT CORSETS made for e figure, in models | are Ve that have the very lafest fashion lines. The hygenic feat T also p duce a decided T the fig- ure, are all on the inside of the Cor- (hat the thinnest dress a perfeetly smooth cffect is at- es, wi - a rduction of set, so even with tained. The NEMO WONDERLIET BAND- 1 uplifts, normal position the vital organs of the It s the useful Corset ns of freely by its preventative sapports and holds in abdomen, one of greatest and most inventi all time, many and s endorsed physicians fc as well as its curative FLEXO FORM CORSETS flexible, un- Priced $1.00, properties. Spirabone, they are Dreakable and rustiess. $1.25. $1.50 to $3.00 cach. Choose your neat Corset from these reliable makes: NEMO." ROYAL WORC BON TON, THOMPSON'S GLOV LA RESISTA, AMERICAN LADY, MADAM LYRA, FLEXO FORM, w. B. WAR C B, R. & G., hown STER. FITTING. n various styles, in frent and back lace models, D. McMILLAN 199-201-203 MAIN STREET. Peanuts and Less Cotton. (Bridgeport Standard.) It is a fact that the goober, or pea- nut, is coming to be an important wrticle in the agricultural products of vome of the Southern states, notably | Texas, where it threatens to take the place of cotton to a considerable ex- tent. Cotton is subject to the boil | weevil, but nothing seems to inter- fere with the growth and maturing | ¢f the peanut, and, acre for acre, | sume farmers, or planters as they are called in the South, find the peanut more profitable, It made More is can be ground into meal and into feed for cattle that is cven more valuable than cotton seed, and peanut oil is taking the place of cotton seed oil in many sections, { The peanut vine makes hay worth double prairie hay The crop ranges from 20 bushels to the acre to 100 hushels, and at 60 cents a bushel pays better than cotton. Some ofg the chinery is now Jeanut and said to be used sults in all the <ced has been made sced oil used in expressin the new product with equally good which cotton useful cotton mit- oil re- ways in of says: otton de- holl The county demonstration agent nanche county, Texas s will be an al Formerly we cotton. The never country again l pended upon all | Pennsylvania on asler Sunday‘ Nowhere else in Connecticut, under one roof, will you find such vigorous styles as featured here by STEIN BLOCH SMART CLOTHES KNOX HATS THE LUKE HORSFALL CO. HARTFORD EAGLE AND MANHAT(AN SHIRTS FRENCH, SHRINER & URNER SHOES Women’s Shop 140 Trumbull St. Men’s Shop 93 Asylum St. weevil ruined cotton, our only crop, &nd it hit us hard. But it taught us “It Pays to Buy Our Kind” “4 lesson. We have a variety of crops now, and if the one crop fails we fall Save 58 ects. per gal. the work of the Comanche Cotton IT'S SIMPLE THIS IS HOW Oi] company of Comanche, where the cotton seed mill was turned into a === peanut crushing plant. The manage lig) Just mix 3 Gals. Linseed Oil costing about = $2.70 say After a few preliminary ex 5%“2’ periments we began crushing peanuts TR in June of last year. During 1915 the mill crushed between 900 and 1,000 tons of peanuts, handling some- thing more than 66,000 bushels. Gver 60,000 gallons of peanut oil | were produced and shipped out in tank cars and ahout 500 tons of reanut cake and peanut meal were made. 1 do not believe there is the slightest chance of overproduction of peanuts; certainly not within the im mediate future. The United Statc has been importing large quantities of peanut oil. We have just | scratched the surface of the peanut ! possibilities of Texas. Our future is to produce here at home the peanut | oil that we have heen importing. | From this time in judgment, we ar to a dominating factor peanut oil production of the into L 4 Gals L. & M. Semi-Mixed Real Paint, at $2.25 per gal. You then take 7 Gals. Pure Paint for I's only $1.67 per gal 'Made - with right proportions ~ of Lead. Zinc: and Linseed Oil, to insure longest wear Use a"gal-out of any L.& M. PAINT you buy and if not the' best paint_ made, return the paint and get ALL your money back. _9.00 $11.70 ot AINVILLE sUHN BOY L BRISTOL HARDWARE COMPANY—H. (NI} COMPANY . BRISTOL, e e IS YOUR HOME LESS MODERN THAN'YOUR STORE OR OFFICE? Do you do without coriveniences in your home that you expect as a matter of course in your office or store ? on. be my going in the world. Hire Your Doctor at So Much a Ycar. In the April American Magazine is an article called “Better Doctoring for Tess Money” by Dr. Richard C. Ca- bot, chief of the medical, staff of the Massachusetts General hospital, who cails attention to what is per- haps the best medical system in tlhe world. The seven thousand students of the University of California, he says, pay five dollars a vear for a health fund | that supplies the mall with the best | and most expert medical attention when they are sick, pays their hos- pital charges and enables them free- Iy to consult specialists about little | ailments that might grow into large ones. There is nothing charitah about the system, which is on a pa) ing basls and gives excellent remun- | eration to the doctors in charge of | the infirmary. “I studied the work the spot, and, after experience of medical practice here and abroad, I think T am entitled to say that the work done in the in- firmary of the University of Califor- nia is not surpassed in any place with which I am acquainted. It was thorough, accurate, up-to-date, kind- ly, humane work. The infirmary has an Out-Patient department as well as wards. To this the patients are free | to come any day between certain hours in the afternoon. “The successful application of co- operative medicine as I have desc ed it at the University of Californ is only one example, though I think the best. out of many. The Univer- | sity of Michigan has gone almost as far as the University of Californi and has the same ideals in view. The University of Wisconsin has also ! taken long steps in the same direc- tion. Harvard made an auspicious be- ginning last year by putting one of the wisest and most skillful medical men in the country, Dr. Roger T. Lee, in charge of the studenis health.” and stores is considered offices It Practically all have Electric Light. essential. But how about your home — the place where - ygur family spends the greater part of the time—where you LIVE ? The convenience of Electric Service in the home is something you owe your famil for myself on | a considerable This Spring you have an unusual opportunity for securing Electric Ser- vice. The wiring and fixtures can be paid for on easy monthly terms if you wish. Ask about our proposition today. he UnitedElectric ight & Water Co. “Electricity for Everything.” Phone 230 Phone 230 been directed to a | miner who with seven has adopted eleven ion for large fami- among the Pennsyl- vania miners it not strange that | there demand for higher wages At last begin to comprehend why costs more.—Providence Jour- Attention h children of his owr more. If this p lies is prevalent is a we conl nal.

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