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NEW, BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, MAY 9, 1916. BRI’I’AIN HERALD place that from all accounts misrepre- | tered policy of the Imperial Govern- THE COUNTRY NEWSPAPER, sented the name home. ment”. Nothing could be Dplainer. . = = | - o e | Granting that the charges against | Dismissing, in onc sentence, Ger- | 1ts Humanity FExpoun Pvadaializas ; ; ! Proprictors. i the keeper of the home for the aged | many’s attempt to adjust her dif- "“:'“’“ 3 57 S l e rlmme daily (Sunday cxcopted) at 4:15 p. m, |and infirm at Windsor is proven ferences with’ this country by drag- | (Willlam Allen White in Harper's Herald Buiiding, 81 Shurch So guilty, that she administered poison | ging in the offenses committed by Wagozine ) . y d at the Post DMMce at New Britain | to the many old folk under her care, | England, the President says that this | Our papers, our little couniry pa- | W e e (e G o ! DRl et pers, seem drab and miserably pro- | i h L she must be branded as the arch- |government cannot for a moment en- | vinoial to strangers; yot wo swhe ) oL "y carries to any part of the oity | criminal of creation. Her crime will | tertain, much less discuss. the sug-[read them read in their lincs the | <z WISE SMITH & CO.. HARTFORD ptions for paper to be sent by mall, | zo down in history as having no par- | gestion that respect for American sweet, intimate story of life. And all | > 00 o Yegn ' ance: 00 Cents a Mouth. | 411 The killing of innocent babes | rights should be contingent upon the :3‘:::1;::1“]"1"‘~d ot IT 2 Uzo makoiguy 7 < cashion dictates white Hats for immediate wes ‘he new medium : S 5 vondr k is the country . and large size sailor effects, prettily trimmed with choice flowers, imported by an e vas ted | ¢ d 8 rd party. It is the : et o and large size sa 1 3 Iy profitabie advertising medtum 1 | DY the Roman emperor was conducted | conduct of any third party. thel oorirer bringine oo ; " i2s whit soiin noveltics g fibhon ehec A e B c“i Circulation books and press [by a wild man. The murdering of | old principle of dealing with one of- the threads of the town i e 3 worth $4.00 and $5.00 oo S YAYS open; to advertiserd, poor, helpless old people merely for |fender at a time, and it is admirably | ing them into something erald_ will be found on sale at Hota- | the sake of money, or for any other | set forth in this phrase: ‘‘Respon- |Stranse, fil_“d :F’“n‘a"j“‘;‘ l‘d“f‘r”la“ i ° or uic g’s New Stand, 42nd St. and Broad- v 1a o 2 3 sibilitvy in s eavesgainocuing QORI RIS v, New York City; Board Walk, at- | Motive, is so dastardly as to be be- |sibility in such matter single, not | ; the cloth its color hy mixing the gk 1 Y ! tic City, and Hartford Devot yond the power of condemnation. {joint; absolute, not relati lives of all the people in its color- (Jlea['ance & The whole affair will have a terrible A e pot—it is this country newspaper that | . . e boffp.(:t on those [\on[\lf‘ who are so When those members of the Pro- | our country hearts quick and our | ne un re Olce n'mme a s - 3 easily led to trust their loved ones to | .ji [ysitania meeting in Boston | country minds open and our country WORTH UP TO $4.00—ALL STYLES the care of strangers, to those some- | 1, .o the President of the United t:n\t\]\l strong. | times ungrateful sons and daughters | ¢ "hen the girl at the glove counter o States, they but took advantage of a ! [FIGHTING AMERICANS. who, for various reasons, allow their | . potiestheipoy 1 fne wnbleeal Honse : ’ Y s e e : privilege that belongs to all those | the news of their wedding is zood for Ch]ldl‘en S American: can read the record of | A€€d relatlves to seek surcease from | ,eqpn)e who are pro-anything but pro- [ a 40-line wedding notice, and the 40 3 Crockett and the stand taken | Worldly cares in professional homes. | \ . .ican Hissing having been done | lines in the country paper give them | Trlmmed and that faithful band at the [ If the happenings of Windsor have |y tne pro-ailies and. the Pro Prus- | Self-respect. When in due course we = i Sty i R £ 8 ®" | know that their haby is a 12- a I Bpubiicsling asensatafnride th.'; ‘:fl-om B G O BRI BT | e om Greemrl emien daaisind G | S TR o e S s s bravery of those old ploneers | Will have mitigated their own horror. | ;.44 he a good thing for the pro- | row, we have that neighborly feel- eld forth on the border. The A L hibitionists to come to the defense of ‘\n‘: that breeds the real democracy. i B O o ‘nt with ‘thres ‘rousing | Yhen we read of death in that home =) il PEACE PROPOSALS. (G Aot vl L = ® | we can mourn with them that mourn. which.occurred a few days ago cheers.’ W : t 5 ; n Springs, Texas, the news of | That part of the German note which Behwe scentuenimoving fupwatiliing| : ; erm i e the world, into a firm and out toward reached us yesterday. There | States that “twice within the last fow FACIS AND FANCIES. the country club neighborkood, we ro- emp >hnapes ite emp dsShapes en, members of the United | months” the German government ==, jolce with them that rejoice. There- 2 VALUE UP TO $1.50. c Large and medium Sailor and Cavalry,. made a stand against | “announced before the world fis Oh, ves, a cheap and reliable sub- | fore, men and brethren, when you are | | g g e Mushroom styles. Well sewn of hreo humdred Mexicans and |readiness to make peace on a basis | Stitute for motive power is availahle— [ riding through this vale of tears upon finest quality braid. 2 : DR e B ke Ao, the California Limited, and by chance t was not:the same sort of fight | safeguarding Germany’s vital inter- pick up the little country newspaper | 2 anama ats 980 bok place:at the Alamo, it has | ests, thus indicating that it is not Ger- |\ Texas town called Two Beers | with its meager telegraph servica of b i blance of the same scene. In |many’s fault if peace is still with- | would have its name changed. Prob- | 3000 or 4000 i —or, at hest, 15,- | dinelygblcacheajandublocked i80 Ieghorfl HatS er instance the men,were in a | held from the nations of Europe’ has |ably has grown large enough to be | 000 or 20,000; when you see its / Domest stylosttoschiooseittom all s ; ‘orlq | called Three Beers.—Rochester Union. | Tay of countryside items: its inter- pecfett Freciatiof themoment s Deat ode shack. Eight were asleep, | been seized upon by writers the world z = minable local stories: its tiresome ed- ; &3 sl i habg i guard duty. Over top of the [OVer as a prediction of peace in the| Think of precipitating a street car [ itorials on the water rks, the | : ' $ I ® O O nowestishanes Sy Liesular Bvalue hill the band of Mexican mau- | near future. Reading between the [strike just when the poor people | SChobdls, the street railroad, the crops — — $1.98. Special $l 25 L crept under cover of mid- |lines, it is argucd that Germany | Were having so much fun over the [and the city printing. don't throw HATS TRIMMED FRE high price of gasoline.—Pittsburgh | AoWn the contemnptible Jittle rnz <with They were on top of the |stands ready to make other offers PR the verdict that there is nothine i before he could awaken his |alming toward an end of the war. On e it. But know this, and know i{ «vell: e compantons, but he fought |top of this the Pope’s message to the if you could take the clay from vour | 9 o9 ar or %%, killed many of them, and | President of the United States which There has been a marked slump in | eves Aavnd read the little paper as it | 4 many think presages a way out of | S0Me chemical prices, which would |is written you would find all »f Ciod’s pught his:way to the hut and T DECEAESS WAYRIOL RO, em to point to the fact that Ameri- | beautiful sorrowing, strugszlinz, Inpanions. Together the nine |the difficulty seems to foreshadow an [can ingenuity is recovering from 1ts|ing world in it, and what von 1a their precarious position for | attempt to get the nations together. |lonz period of apathy.—Rochester | would make you touch the littls papoer ours. During that time they | Bmperor Wilhelm's autograph letter | Herald. with reverent hands. Mr. Roosevelt in the summer of 1912 did not dream of the possibility of a biore than forty Mexicans. At |to Pope Benedict on the occasion of - | . ven from their place of shelter [ the Easter festival is also significant. | Col. George Harvey has come out Where the President fs Ris | Peter the Her mlt fiorn prldinsxatesianibeIn il fad cimes burning roof toppling over on | After all these things are considered | for Hushes = Colonel Harvey is due e U o s B o S o S the possibility into account in framing hey took to the hills, three |then, it is interesting to turn to the [{J i avs in store for the fellow who, | The sreat heart of the people beats s illedin this last desperate at- | British reply to the charges in the | because he has picked a winner once, |on regularly and — anietly notwith- | n mens ear erauy | - vankon national defense—the won- o retreat. There is mnothing [ German note to the effect that Great | proceeds on the assumption ‘hat he | gtanding the surface indications of | der is, one might say it ¢ the won Bful in this retreat. On the | Britain has violated international [ €2n pick the winner every time.— | s 0 po0i0c ang eruptions and der of wonders, that Mr. Rooseve g CroTias S e revo- ARt L e . AT left “the duty of preparedness’” entir b, there is all of the heroic in |1aw in the matter of the present [ Charleston News and Courier. lutions. Tt is only the froth thet |, Wochinston, D.C., May 8.—The Na-| woolen, silk, cashmere and velvet ) ',u¢ or nis scheme for a nes : i Seoeraphl jety has issue anufactories have suffered greatly. | : it of those three hours’ fight- | blockade of Germany. This repl AP a = tional Geographic society has issued | manu 3 Hoblentoommonweaith Tn! Chic oams and hisses and makes a noise | r i dGuarter ashine] . also reclai 8 bied i Ho8lag et from its headquarters in Washington ATrasliaiEoliveciaimediviasinoten | SR REO RS B I B was the real stuff. Not the | was made in the form of a semi-offici = 5 i a great he: it i for i . a . ofore | 2 Wihen meithertoft tolmentwantatto |Los 2 Bneat uDhe when it is not | un interesting bulletin on the area pop- | for its woolen manufacturers before o "0 0 T i o tio plugsing away with ma- |statement issued Saturday night by | hegin a fight there is always a pos- | Sctudlly stirring ansthing but itself. | ulation and noteworthy features of | the war. In medieval days its tapes—| |} “Ching of the occldent;” but by ns at an. enemy miles and |Lord Robert Cecil, Minister of | sible way out of it, and generally en the great occasion comes then ' the territory which lies between the! try hangings were so famous that the | 7t B12 CZFNE O G BETT PR B, TR T way, as is the case in the | Blockade and Under Secretary for |2 graceful and satisfactory wa his ““31 p;)l)\fla)- r.\lyg(x u‘m be quickened | yresent Lattle line on the western | name of the city was adopted as flrh(; mmw‘f‘ helped us to sink ”H; B chos today: but the ac. | Forelsn Afairsh e answers that|is! @ principlefwnichiwe: belieyelwill [I250 LI of the people to the . front and the line marking the c common noun for draperies in Eng- | ¢ LES JCREE TR 0 N BE e : 2 P i % 2% 1 be recognized hy everyhody as in- | SRl Will he unmist: The little | of the Teutonic invasion which swept | land. Maximilien Robespierre, —the | 18 &S ASEWSE LERHEC S0 A2 dming ofirifle and revolver at | part of the German note which speaks | controvertible. When neither of two | Side issues and the smail and com- | qown through Northern France tow- | revolutionist, was born in Arras, also | 50, O (0% 0GP0 S0 B850 o on within speaking distance. | of peace, in this fashion:—"It may be | nations wants to break friendly re- ’““l‘.“']“‘;‘]y L °"]“" ons over | ard Paris. The bulletin says: Joseph Lebon, who conducted the| ' .., C00 tt s and through : : 1} i . = 'y T~ | which there has heen much loud . ; e e e e (R S (i ce s s irough 2 2 hmo was a far greater and jthat the Germans want peace. If so | lations with (hn, other is the G il ol e bl ol s || o :\ :un\o:}‘ of lhr\‘l.rom h lines v": Tef“." with great c ¥ with pacifism, even to the two battls kand. Glen Falls was a smaller | it is because they fear defeat. 1t | different.—New York Sun. N il Nonthen ”;““‘1"\ while fl:]: Ghr Sne tive city. ships a year “for the present” only grand i iy : o armies spend their strength in a ti- —— : 5 B t none the less glorious. The | may be that they want to appear —— quench all lesser issues. ‘”’1"'(‘, \“_’ug“h‘ el (h’i P ST T TS Miss Jane Addams would never have o figured in that affair should | peaceful. For us it matters not. Our It is true that the great majority This, we believe, is as true toc Verdun, affords an opportunity to| o e ‘:‘;’\‘10!-t-dmt‘l\:]_f<ix‘f9jn::{ ]}”:,’,”,‘ :'v:‘:;cr\} o Lir names carved high on the | attitude at any rate is unchanged. | of the Progressives nave already o ltth:‘hm:.:f“ all "‘]‘“}"f ”_‘]“‘" ‘\’\’;‘”‘" com their location with the line | The Preparcdness of 1916 and the ® col S SupJ k Le 7 - _ Allinzly. | Pack into the Re; 4 party : Y, and President WIISON | wpjch the onsweeping Germans gained Vear-Pacifis ¢ > fnt of affection. They have [We drew the sword unwillingly. | JAEK fnto the Republiean paxty WAd | has never come nearcr to expressing | o tnsir farthest sonch and ‘farthest | Noargbacifiom ot L jhe fighting spirit of the Amer- | We shall sheathe it gladly. But we |, number who would stick to Roose. | . [Pe Whole truth and nothing hut the | oot marches toward Paris and Ca- dier, the never-say-die spirit|should be untrue to our trust, we |velt if he runs. So it is possible ihat _”":%"v than when he put his faith | pio” quiing the early months of the made our army, small as it is, | should be betraying civilization, if | there may be a most delightfnl and | " {he sreat strons, ultimate purpose he mostigallant organizations | we abandoned our task until we have | entertaining mixup and that the plot thickens with an increasing number | not squared with her well-known con- | victions. (The Springfield Republican.) The colonel succeeded in polling It occurred to one, after reading Mr. | 4,000,000 votes on his pacifist, or near- ; Roosevelt’s Chicago speech on pre- | pacifist pfatform and thers was noth- i el S war. )aredness, to turn back to the na-|ing to indicate Foodrow Wilson ::‘rt\li‘r‘o}mxlrh 1“0”mnno' cibeiot “The present line of contact com-| fEEh e mr'»]y‘ }'Ii‘d(m\x‘thmr' v\'\' rln;: 1 2 tes s e e old shows its firs : i th ever'saw. All through |re-established in Burope the suprem- | o po o0 Renain . extracts from that address contain ““:Cd ‘i\,:”“‘hw:']{l k,l:”', N | an interpretation of the question Of |in March 1913 that the colonel was s complications.— Sibataned : : iation sma at | nations fense as offered by alarmed hecause the army he n history the American cav- | acy of law, the sancity of treaties and | Pre ”“’1 "?"l“‘l"““ of the whole and are | 4 o"ri st prush the Germans overrun '“‘:;";"l “;'“” e I:’L‘:‘”]“’\ll ::< ”‘e"[""”"," hecauncgtliel nrm of th 1 " s niably correct: = o | Bre: ounder of ariona T O i Tnite: tes n this continent wag L fought against heavy odds |the right of all nations, great and = T e e Nentost || this thrlving eapital of the provinge oflll G Sos TE on 1 o yaars ibatora fha | not aver. 50,000 strong and our host cases.came out the victor. | small, to live their lives, to fulfill vhat woulc e Artois, but subsequently they Were| (.. war began. That platform was | had already e 3 2 A ) Connecticut and Roosevelt, doubt of what would happen when | X% LU0 PEIEINIT ) B W esa b had already fallen behind German events they were unsuccess- | their destinies, free from the intoler- (Harttorc S America called upon those of her | oty ohee e el venant with the people” and 1t |in rank among the navies of the in Custer’s last charge, but |able menace of Prussian militarism. {he mext dlvergence of old and new | heralded the building of a “new and | world. In heaven’s name! with such | nobler commonwealth.” 1t professed | armaments as Mr. Wilson inherited " citizens born in other countries 1o | If The Post knows anything about | come to the support of the flag. Why, braces a large triangle of 2 to lay the foundations of the iiew re- | fro p »decessor 913 whe which the ancient city of Amiens is| 0 f the sie | from his predecessors in 1913 what public. actual military weight conld hey went to their death heroes, Seemingly, there is not much hope | the temper of the Connecticut dele- |they will come with cheers. they will and resisting, to the last|for peace it the Under Secretary’s|gatlon to the Republican National | come with a momentum which Ypien Mo anasnt e om0 bunce oftendurance. In these | utterances may be taken as the offi- ;Ol:‘;lllmnexr{ :]!ncagn it belleves it |make us realize that Ame s | “wfl:‘cci‘(:\]fl“‘r Alx‘u.\.‘h} '“sfl i In his Chicago speech Saturday , president have cast into the ng daysiwe are apt to pass | clal sentiment of Great Britain. These Sl )::‘r;:’;‘;":jav‘:f\)te:; once more h;’_‘(‘!{v“rv("ylvml.(r;\‘ ::‘: o | converge and coincide until Soissons is :;I"t‘h\:;(..\1!"anli‘fv4|.\4‘\t'l( _eould not .Tn\f-‘ )f the Buropean struggle which eds as that of Glen Springs [stead, they are the measured words| State Chairman Rorahack, who 1s|who dares tamper with the spirit of | 10 the wel, showing that the GOVMANS| oqp1q5 it us the prime obligetion of he e R e raed. of a man who has given the subjeot | members of the delegation, was like- | America will be casi out of the con i:‘;‘s"‘\“f\\‘li“(’)[ ‘1;‘1@::: ‘1"‘]‘:“y‘lizt‘r']‘f“,l""‘!:c a modern state. It comes first, it |gosnel of national salvation sho T T, Nk O R e :cl:‘eve({w or:e?}::morig:zt{\arl\:‘io:fx:i\?nd fidence of & great nation upon the O s i S ot ‘C“L"I:feswl;fi‘; it comes all the time. |have been begun 10 y sooner, in WINDSOR HORROR. the form of an answer for Great Brit- | afterwards relating how he sat up all | sod forbid that we should be | Compiegne. This is the section where | ;g (G2 Shi L T ain itself, it may be reasonably sup- | night to assit in the process of steam | qrawn into war! But it we shonld he, 1‘\:0‘(”:-;;'1’\“::: i \!\o‘.‘\:”tlh(c‘:‘p\g}x}-i-(lt('lvi: Be inie o burelies Tt Wb nnnet B e e T t, as t A . be true t urselves, is absolutely {519 Fhe avost 5 2 France during the early stages of the ue to ourselves, it is absolutely late as 1912. the a e Allan Poe, in his wildest im- two combined opposing forces are ly means the terrible sacrifice of men knowing. In money, some fifty billion dollars have been spent. And after Two Prayers. e et Germany's | rollering Roosevelt delegates. What- e scem once more to never bethought such a con- | P25® Eh daloyed el (Lo ey America would scer © i o for it was in this drive down the v s rould tell | i ition & “];m[: seem; tha,tt w;:do:: wou : where he takes his position there te guard our own national honor and in- inspiring reading for 1 Addams all the nations at war that an early | stands, consistently. John T. Kin e raditions of Amer- terest we sha ke ourselves an ob- at Windsor. i The whole af> Suihadifoteoiten (Hhisgtial) WIEE || inenl mfes i (I O MIe i FEE WO DR SRR IR i It el horrifying, so appalling, as to | important, of course, is Rheims state “who will go to the shores of |tegrity of the United States? And in In concrete terms, preparedness meains why he had come to prefer Wil Lk now under arrest, charged condition can be approached. The | Oyster Bay Ternor until frost sets in in | which would be raised, all the world | Rheims and a few miles west of Ver- . compulsory military service. months to prepare the I'nited States has stated within a week his opinion | hear the voice of the New World | fhose death is directly attrib- | 204 money, with nothing gained. Just | {5 take Roosevelt under any circum- |of liberty.” | Duc and takes in a thin slice of the | o C ol 1o iro i 01D the colon®'s truth of that will be established at didate and take a heating with him in |is able to find confidence and security | birthplace of Francis of Lorraine, who =, 700 Ll i deplores the were committed in this home. 2 The progre party deplor A its self respect again the possibility of | acter, under all the surface asitation, | BR feiibioliew mnsiana | viit | countriesiwill flook back wpon It all ||and fook Roosevelt out of mereidesire|isce that the neoplo are 1ot honor nd e hr e | o= sver infamelof pene andiih e A ybntnkood plifted arms and and say, just as we do in recalling our | fo Win. right and justice whenever they are [ The B = consequent impoverishm of the life faced the rders than were ever before |Shame: cause they are the politicaliv active [ to submit these things to party lead- | pegained from the Germans in France | siitute judicial and other peaceful | O God of er, grant me power! O men. Thev are the men who will|ers, or to hold publicit upon them, | exceeds 2,500 square miles, or consid- | means of settling international differ- Go strengtl grant me No sane man could dream, Four short paragraphs are required | anq they will he found hostile to the | found in such matiers to he in har- | war was in the ncighborhood of half forces. Pendi such an agreement, a conqueror's crown at len en think of such a state of | by President Wilson to answer the | Colonel to the last. mony with the voice of God. a million. and as the hest means of preserving: Till when death's shadow Yet the arrest of this woman : ; R e nominated, although that seems les f the most interesting places in | for the present, t polizy of with suc _ i vords; but in this brief m istto (29 Neet, E 5 9 A Slta GO i : hig such a heinous crime is | words; bu 0] likely than a fortnight ago, but it Curious Condensati Trance, notably Rheims, the place of [ huilding two battleships a yvea i Peerless amid earth's mightic Sl e ever else may be said of Mr. Roraback | shake herself out of a drcam to R A S i e e e 00stle afpenanac: f affairs ose nted af n . | Marne valley that the point nearest peace in a most desirable state. The | and Charles Hopkins Clark are also jica? Did any man >m that he ct of scorn and der fowe try The : or ican or pre Lt unbelievable. Mrs. Amy B. | “The old line and the new coincide to Mr. Roosevelt a big navy, a stand- and a part of his answer we hat iy with the murder of one | fUrther prolonsing of hostilities mere- | Hades. Stil another of the felegation | would stand once more (hrilled to | dun. The final bulge of the old line . : eadsta ac It is somewhat astonishing, conse- ' for war than his predecessors had that the Republican party ought not | asserting the standards of justice and | boint almost directly east of Bar le Further, the state | 20W many wonderful men have been | stances, that it would he better for the The presiden faith in the neople | Meurth-Moselle valley, including the | philosophy of preparedness expressed Jeast when the army and November if necessary: but to preserve | in its steadfast and dependable ch | became Emperor Francis I of Aus-} 0 000" 0 Goilization of the nar- bnnecticut is shocked at the la a - | reigning family of the dual monarchy | ! Skt . (From Har Weekly.) | ich may be henceforth These are the strong men of the | put forward as the qualities for which | tury. of the toiling masses. W pledge the | “0 God.” he 4 with earnest | | 3 ce in this state, ! dtat one pla THE LAST WORD. mould the sentiment of the others, ra- | for they are of the cternal veritics | ecrably more than the area of the state | ences We favorllan. ihternational s Roosevelt he “Within the redcemed area are some we pledge ourselves to me 6 ey e TR A sult of wild rumor or specu- [ be found more meat, more substance | geems safe to predict that vnl (Pittsburgh Dispatch.) coronation for most of the kings of | tPhat includes every blessed word in ! could I gayly die ] Recent examination of the coal de- posits of Spitzbergen indicates that terms will not be acceptable. It L elac mavil : < politically, he’s no weather vane, |‘Did any man deem that we we one else. If we are not able to safe- a near-pacifist platform which madae bse’ ot th H CECCTD - el e SR G R se’ o e Archer Home for asleep Did any m v | Paris W reached. Among the re- regulars of the type found in every |could tamper with the honer or in- to stand up for the rights of others.” editor in rural Illinois who was flligan, proprietress of the |SUrely in dead-lock, as near as this|yake Michigan prepared to resist the | the great voice of rational enthusiasm | again some fifty miles due east of ing army of 250,000 men and uni- Wilson had actually done more in 16 | over the present trenches occurs at a R. Andrews, a former in- quently, to fnd in the national pro- dene in 16 yvears. The aporoximate Eliove that some twenty more killed to date there is mo way of | party to nominate a strong, sound can- | is, we believe. welt founded and as he | important town of Luneville, the S S5 before Conzicsa s rer 8 : | tria and the founder of the Present|, ., g gom of warfare among na- revelations from Windsor. In |1t 18 all over the people of all the | saying that it swallowed its orinciples | so we hope that he v he able to 3 tions, with its enormous waste of | hy marrying the Archduchess Maria | own Civil war, “What a pity, what e : a : - ] as the scene of more whole- | °% B what a | qojagation. with Colonel Ullman, be- | the nation stands. There is no call “Roughly mecasured, the territory | party to use its best endeavors to eVer. “eve MYVishort dav be Aone: today a spirit of wonder, of ther than he influenced hy the cthers | and the voice of the people will be [ of Delaware. Its population before the | sorcement for the limitation of naval | Ta fo my way to fame, to German note of almost four thousand Tt may bhe that sevelt will . peace, t comes after an investigation | than in any of the previous state | tremendous avalanche of sentiment France since the beginning of the|the platform of Mr. Roosevelt’s party, It is a calm, cool, deliberate | toward the Colonel sets in the Con- Capetian dynasty. The most famc which was dedicated to the upbuilding ' A man, still strong b i necticut fourteen will he uncomprom- ceremony of this character to take|of a “new and nobler commonwealth,” care. by tempering WO years. {sing 80 1 a i e hey tai tl 1,000,000,000 r o anoints R 5 L o ising so long as that attitude possesses | they contain more than 1.000,000, place here was, of course, the anoint*| on the duty of preparedn ATIR ot enelt otelhe ot it is shown that a = : r ; s 3 < ISne L eteRiiey SIcnoRuL 2 2t at least two | nutshell, one that leaves N0 r00m for |, "yirtye, tonafor tusllorinem Ayl able pmity: ing of Charles VII, after Joan of Arc|the emphasis was placed on the har- spirit purified of the home died as the ye. | further bartering, or dickering, or . It is estimated that $10,000,000 [ had driven the English from the city | parism of war upon infernational | “Grant, G poisoning, for their bogjeg arguing by Germany. The President AntedatinElGreact worth of gold is destroyed .nnually | walls. It was here, too, that Ciovis|tpeaties and tribunals for the pacitic low ng exhumed and subjected to | accepts Germany’s expressions of o by a Chinese custom of burning smail | was baptised on Christmas day ,in 496. | settlement of international disputes i p (The Argonaut.) pleces of gold lcaf on certain anni- | Before the devastation wrought by!and upon the limitation of naval arm- | The pow ’ . e k, revealed traces of arsenic. | fz i it w ¢ in the future = Vo ; O altheink tha thit will ey fan Sine Lty A nohleman, talking to an Amer- | versarie the most heautitul structure produced { yments. Even the established poi R L A s the certificates of death |to confine the operation of the War |jcan friend ahout the antiquity of his During the six months from April | during the middle ages. of two new tleships ‘ S The sense compassionate. and cre my [d natural causes, thus fore- | for the rest of its duration among the | family, was told roughly that he was | to September, 1915, 620 motorcars of “Amiens, with a population of 90.-| jndqorsed only “for the present.” working sou' iakes fligh o suspicion. During a period | fighting forces of the belligerents. | & mere mushroom.” “How is that?” | Amecrican make were imported into | 000 before the war, is next in import-4 for the army of the United States—no | Lot me forget myself. to wuke sune ; ) o ask igna ©. “Why said dia as against 407 made i ance ¢ mg e salvaged cities. Its| gne would have known ! g i . N it B ears almost fifty persons died | FTom now on the future relations be. | N¢ asked, indignantly. “Why,” said | India as against 407 made In Great | ance among the sa 1 | one would have known (1 AR light the other, “when I was in Wales the | Britain. cathedral, onc of the most imposing{tents of the progressive vlatform that rome, a home that harbored | tween the Uniteq States and Germany | pedigree of a particular family was The number of liguor licenses js. | piles of 13th century architecture inf it existed, much less that it needed to e he course of each year only | rest With the Imperial Government, | shown to me which filled more th sued in all the five horon of Gre Jiurope, was scarcely less famous than | ha increased or that u csal, com- | It is small consolation to the ge of ten persons. It is be- [ for “the Government of the United | five large parchment skins and i er New York last year was ahout 12 the one at Rheims. It was in this { pulsory miltiary srvice was ever to he | to be te that Germany is in at many New Britain people | States will rely upon a scrupulous | the middle of it was a note in 000. The state’s share, net revenue, | that Peter the Hermit, the great|a necessary part of the American I trol of Russian Poland. All he ) 1, ‘About this time the world | Was around $3.000,000; the sacher of the EFirst. Crusade, was|tem of government ail R thar TuAne et bl v s ric 5 henceforth o h P margir LI e r g ,000; the city’s | prea i 2 g ! R ¢ ol @ victims of violence in this | execution orth of the new al- » about $5,700,000, born. Since the war Amiens’ noted! The wonder is not so much that | Turkish Armenia.—Springfield Uniony tate police, a search that ex- | papers. pver a period of answer, one that puts the case in a | vas er cated.