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BRITAIN HERALD ERALD explanation of the “late” trolley car cal] is at hand. When John Jones, day at the on the street corner await- , efe after | agg: office, stands im- . m PUBLISHING Provrietors. COMPANY. patiently daily (Sunday excepted) at 4:15 p. m., Herald Building, 67 Church S Brilding hareh st home at a reasonable cost, lo and d_at the Post Office at Second Class Mail Matter. w Britain of that his developing the Lehold, the chauffeur car is | idea | little zarden. e out in the country tilling now red by carrfes to any part of the city r 15 Cents a Week, 65 Cents a Month. iptions for pa to be sent by mall, | yable in adva 60 Cents a Month, 00 a Year. patch of land Eventually, the | 1iight remember his trolleyman-farmer . not patrons along & war, advertising medium n | (he city streets and lay aside the asri- T1 books and advertisers nly profitabia e city. Circulation om always open o be founa on sale at Hot: Stand, 42nd St and Broad- York City; Board Walk. and Hartford Depot. | cultural implements long enough i pick few fares. one bles that wisdom up a he grea erald will w's New kv, New e City. ing in the whole scheme is nature is so beneficial in its that farmers do not necessarily have | York to stand of their | of t bor The | I of the | s TELEPHONT = Ofce s fa) Rooms .. B 1 CarLLs while the seeds fruit, by bear or vegetables. trolleymen after a sho in the one session PARTY plant of the common do the rest. | and il who made it possible to post- | The only sorry part of the affair is | mak action to install that those who have to wait for trol- | the leys on GET UP members ploughing can se eds and leave nature on the plan al hting system on Main street street carners cannot plot to i te Afte I spas the have a t for nore data and knowledge of the | little of land of their own to plated tire change are laid before | cultivate are and the The question | Here then is a chance to with while they waiting assembly have acted not | the motormen conductors. | of isely but well. do away | let in- the old and of ring out putting in asphalt sidewalks and everybody ter start of great | is I | the | | in The system lizhting farming on an ew Britain and when ve scale. more the merricr. | prey ing men ; of adopted it must be carried out all In the ps ¥y has suffered from \nmr‘\\}mt‘ IN POLITICS Hitcheock, 11 United States, <ed upon by those who know him | erefore, that great deliberation | and his activities in the light of what times ly, or not at GAMBLING Frank H. fetion on the part of the council | master Gene hers in matters of this kind. It is | is1ool former Post- of the the Feised, that each and every man | is som described ‘an xu Tall Hitchecock fect than the | of vim and dash established, and | him the These thing gambler And the i about them is to ns in nearby cities, places that as astute | 1 athletic, and red of | have | Wer tes on this question know just | politician.’ 11 happen better There is no doubt | hair has always been full lighting e one can be iy e and carried of always willing with the to he ! put in his appearance at Chicago and someone noised it with credentials him as manager of the Hughes salient He take a chance mitt it attributes at lower cost. determined. was best Therefore, when | | | | | | | | learn is study half about that he car- | fack ready made like improvements. ury and Middletown are two es. The street this ity is a delight to all who view gnificence ried him aming boom, there was a quick flurry in the camp of the Old Guard. Assembling the leaders of the Republican party of the hotels convenient to heart of Chicago the gallant Fi ne main of of and fhen the lights are in splendor at It e a good idea for all the mem- he common council and other: ed to make leighboring communities some d get the effect, then consult engineers first owledge that may guide them in | to m the tcheock | told the old-1 { ers just what was his mission in the | convention city. Further than that, he intimated that Justice Hughes was willing and ready to accept the nom- | ination if tendered to him and that if such was glow. It | one plac | is purported to have teda, an excursion into past to and obtain ~isak e intricate paths of financial the case, H. show and it Hitchecock had to be, | once ure. There should be enough Frank one the the patronage, Hughe tretch the was to be with of course, the piles handy to carry a party to whole in dis providing, defeated Wilson of the part rensing cons piective ithe points during pleasant evenings toward one or in final This assumption Hitchcock got the ola exceed- of June. All the idea needs is and race of the It Titian nergetic whole-hearted | o, oost it along. gentlemen of Guard speec Civil crial GREAT is | ingly riled.”” of looked as if young HE -re BATTLE there Fran locks was the delegates in London, for | from so many states jump through his won the greatest | fingers, While | the out to joy in Berlin is | dictate terms, to mak no ly depression have modern history. mans ttle this in So great a war was waged on Hitch- and great was the b2 reports from the two citic from This cock, s0 feeling against Justice Hughes that those who lines | saw the situation wondered what was the Germans |in the air, what the game might be. | eat naval fi hrow a veil of confusion over between the that , reading sily setter of the sey n st | In an instant, there was a rally around | 2rmy Coming after a [ the Roosevelt camp. so far unsuccessful seige by | North Sea Even those who | a1 heartily opposed the Colonel preferred | Ingla | to | es agair fork of & mren e tirring effect on the men | 1y jeft Verdun this mar- the German back him in preference to getting | distar sailors like Hughes who had seeming- | ¢anel the like Hitchcock. For, it has | been reasoned, and justly so, if Hitch- | a tance 165 fighti all patronage in the hands n the the trenches for the Kaiser. | of 4 man s atrocities committed by | the of the battle nd dreadnoughts and minor the pes, worl | cock is to dictate terms in the event of | Pave a f lor Hughes winning out in the presiden- navy tend to place a | tja] race, where do we get off? Mean- | AUStr and | ing, of course, those who naturally op- ¢ of | pose Hitchcock. They were brave men and | rap e men who fought the noble | . York and Washington he North Se. Mheir | : the orth Their | and stopped off in many other places. back to the days when a |rqpe to the s a Navy and Navy's | it that o . ‘Hughm the of surre s i f surreptitiou: was exceedingly | the accomplishe e plishied KUunking | worried and was on the point of send- Hitchcock de- also on German fighting, the 1 ponents higher in the eye: | far r So the consternation It left Chicago on the midnight, eached trans: ew wor! story was discrediting did a 's | bLeen the reliak boom Report had himself | | : | >rand Justice I by er-sea craft. The submarine o telegram and 5. The abroad to the effect that the Frank H. was called to the long- | nt and made to a e it osition place in modern be | ing war- | nouncing his activities e wa will never as honor- | { rumor shou as that occupied by vessels that stand up on the he wave This well | wiry woul distant telephone there and fight fight the fight N ack | listen-in led conversation | K At consider on a one-si is to mny's v oul Y8 inot M will | very complimentary. any rate, as to her credi hed J-boat operations, the atmosphere is now bl Loor fhe stigma atta ques- for a cleared and through the ministrations | : | ot has come that he credentials which authorized | Hitchcock who out — with complete denial ever | Want para the LEYMEN—. | held any not ARMERS, him to speak for Justice Hughes. Fur- an uncommnion sight to | ! L ther, woman, | | to do so in any sense | he aia he even assumed | What would he denies A make or mayhap a n, impatien the street cor of the word of of an dan a assume was that no man ing for coming r It e | decline a nomination to the presiden- ¢ a fidgety sort I on the extracts cy if tendered to him by a reputable | .. . at best In case of th he political party. Therein of he shows He B “ of yc¢ generall again the traits the zambler et cigarette ’ notes is always willing to take a chance on 2 pipe, ciple atch a m peric T. and WHY WE through the streets f MUST PREPAR of v stop- Co « 100 curbing, ser-t requesting Hz the Connecticut, | § thou- | If it price, as ¥ hoves | ford, the have there will contem- | sand men and women in a great pre- who have | Whi suburban ind nd still, no car in capital city we to & just march some twenty According few trolley ing in the By are frequently held for a tes awaiting orders have ound and started gardens. | gpare moments these men b-axe and hoe cultivate their l s of land, raising such estibles as might grace the reason, S0 a nen jaredness paradc, le groups of towns | their brother men sister women ind 1 boorr stand along the line of march souls will the flag for the na- of applaud, these patriotic the f their country, pi itself from carry Stars and Stripes, in a a tion to & a state lethargy when a rouse | the on | this and make ready for the day foeman’'s foot might Yet step cur shore in the main, T ble. ¢ sum- | tica story be true, and no one | parade v e forth to deny it, the , mons not in the sense that it would ‘Slw‘. preparedn ing the one vehicle that will take him | carth would Dposition. paredness [ i to | mightily nation suddenly saciety. teres ettention, of the rights of neutral nations com- is pos might realizing alarming when Nor realize that various foreign powers fense for this nation, is no longer |ried any from Wall street to a rail- vessels were the only available tran ports and steamshir Theodore Rooscvelt, touching on this | >me whose ships control it. transfer times as great as that across the At- army corners Drogri ten times ranks of the United States army have | Ibell southern vanced for son or tlie emergencies paper pussy-footing We should wrangler preparedness NEWV BRITAIN DAILY HERALD. SATURDAY, JUNE 3, 1916. IFACTS AND FANCIE: 6,591 soldiers in our four months’ war we lost a total of 1,857 soldiers—Holyoke Tele- for the but men to arms purpose of | so that they war preservers.of peace, the sion o1 ingland lost weelk while with Spain officers and gram. [ It seems that one tograph 1t be the nders so strong that no power on challenge their fundamental last | dare That preparedness is the campaign It is pre- of the sweeping the country to be generally admitted place where neither a dic- nor wire tapping can hope | [to bring results is the Washington | residence of Charles Evans Hughes— i New York Herald. for honorable peace, preparedness for war, but against an | | has been numerous he natianal Congress touched the t demonstrations throughout the thirty The parade in New by e Still, we suspect that Billy Sunday | isn’t particularly peeved at being ammed by the Unitarians. His turn is coming—and his facility in slam- ming beats that of the Unitarlans all hollow—TLoweli Courier-Citizen. ~ | litigation one of the steady ha- of the people of Connecticut? R. L, | The annual calling of the docket of on ; the superior court in New Haven ig | county brought out the fact that there | were about 2,000 listed—-Bos= ton Glebe. . the past days. preparedne; in n in < was the awakener of the pulse The one following and he count 3oston was an endorsement, the | | 15 bits three great parades today, in Hartford, the in Chicago, Providence, impression duty it wants and yield the of the people. } r a period of some half century | with intermittent war one the other in e all the mare men whose to the demands worn cases sten When we see a in furs on a cold, Fand in hand with a little tot of three of four whose sock reach only ahout an inch above his shoe tops, we don’t know swhich to pity the more—the foolishness of the woman or the Dlght of the kid—Philadelphia In- auirer. woman bundled up int raw day, walking | yeace, a m of battleship realized after the sinking of Maine, the nation Y lack of Dur- the a sts today. gold and fortune yaredness that e he rush for have entirely forgotten the needs While the busines; < of the country have absorbed bent over Whatever defects I have, vfoot.—Col. Roosevelt. Ao If the Colonel does not pussyfoot, he will be glad to answer certain o8 | Guestions, namely: (1) Ts he a re- oblivion.. | rublican (2) Is he a candidate for le violations | the republican nomination for Presi- dent?—New York World. I do not while have and sterner demands men ticker rolled in the e been let ry, sink into o e it not for the terr the belligerents of ible that United have century, ed a foreign foe, its state of utter helpless- Europe States ed by A sartorial reforme feminine attire, that the pose of dress has five aspects, the functional, the ethical, the artistic, { the psychological and the economical. However, in observing some of the contemporaneous styles it is difficult to notice any aspect but the psycho- logical.—Providence Journal. T, speaking of pur- the says gone along for another or, until suddenly at- by without a state that grows all the more the martia] strength ny Buropean nation is summoned | iind. Mr. Roosevelt seems to helieve redressing the wrongs of small - | tions. But when he was president the | small Boer republics in South Africa got precious little help from America | And Mr. Roosevelt doubtless followed a correct policy under the circum- stances.—Springfield Republican. in there the same self com- | na- in evidenc this country is cney in v that has been prevalent for the Men are beginning interests of might make it ad- | ble for them to swoop down upon | The Atlantic Ocean, | a wall of de- | o great fifty years. James J. Hill hoy carrying empire his to a he hegan water builder career horse. never c: as As r- t any time. viewed as the great Pouring in the Mesaba $750,000,000 to sweeten the Northern was not the trick banker-management— Brooklyn gle. road. iron ore worth Great | of safe as when sailing idered as were unknown, in of on Mem- of the question, the Kansas phase veterans City h the W Day before | | Tow;; ?lfi'ogz:cis | in pointed out that the ocean w a highway for any power In support of pointed the Army | that a wave of automobile and fatalitics is sweeping country and Connecticut, in- cluding our own city of New Britain, { is having her share. Already this three | : . : | spring three New Britain children have met their death beneath the wheels of automobiles and fully a of automobile accidents, more have been reported to As far the court jud James T. Meskill is en- deavoring to protect the public by in- Ing extreme on reckless where it is driver | | 1t scem accidents over the contention by Eastern he sea of Siberia to a Russian to France. necessitated a sca voyage Next, he gathered at painted the of the huge Dardanelles, ore less serious author or from the ind, France and Australia. The the Dar- | les is even greater than the dis- |.fli to Niorictil S that men made_up troops ies as can 1ce from Australia to penalties careless dri that a recklessly Europe | others drawn from the far | motor vehiclc of the globe. The men of | ence of liquor should be administerc o PG LG SO i BB || e eI the Bri ers who are reckless and carcless continents, and the | the vast majority of autom .,,nm:. . i .areful operators, yet they mus i L ;l?: at nulv altar of public opinion Troops numbering | 41, ‘raylts of their mad brethren. as the men in the | tnis city Stanley street, between corner and Shepard's hill, a veritable speedway by automobilists as is West particularly west of the Rock bridge. On a Sunday or autoists speed continuously thoroughfares and in life and limb is en- police department should detail couple of plain clothes men to watch these streets on different occasions and make some After an example has been made of some speed fiennds possibly those inclineq to “speed her up a bit” will he more thoughtful. which the nation | Residents Stanley n particularly indignant over some the automobilists who speed Hartford sounds ST Thrermates e oA some striking the smooth pavement throw open the and let their machine hum 1 breckneck speed. On this hich rapidly becoming thickly settled, there naace 5 for serious nt children uide the fingers e e ShE o another motorisi s from Bombay New proved itomobilc the attempting \ hen cas 1 herc the disregirding of a in the trenches of ng been or is te unc inf himent 1 re ar le dri but u- some nen from ish Isles, 0. removed fers were all ess of war, as many . is as of street, used scores speedy, | yroon Black This is | @, ad- | holiday | along these | many dangered carried from the northern and hemispheres in ble transport steamers. of the hest arguments ye If the day one ri States for preparednes instances The when, for United target 1d ever come the as another, d be chosen a at- by any forelgn nation. there arrests a s from a be no trouble in transporting the world These are | 1y portion of ttack on this countr: Quarter are of past that or of for such to W prepare, as the one in autoists, ¢ concrete thrott instructor, to this rument printed European violin > the playing of ins & hass invented a diagram Strceh 5 is every Little rush to be pasted on the neck ¥ e fiddle and thus ¢ liable danger to produce the proper the house and many ung The ource of idea is on the same prin- o not heed placed therc mounted the 300 rning sign They that the policernan out their once a day, and turns around and - They would reque that dgment be used to determine and on Sunday afternoons or holidays they feel he should take a spin out there when traflic is heaviest. But on the other hand the poor au- tomobilist has not got everything in favor. 1If arrosted, whether he is Zuilty reckless driving to testify that excessive rate of opinion will be that . ought to be taught a i | Once arrested it practically im- o ! possibic for a motorist to vindicate preparedness parade indicates | hi for witnesses will honestly | [ as that black spot where all true < SR yrmers beat the bass drum = comes Roosevelt will listen-in the lonel on ‘hicago convention at rate of a day for his private telephone. at that hear is a sensitive , he should instrument, be able to any his = really of hc vitnesses flock an Hitchcock York he Frank a boomer or a driving at and public nerang? w Sun \“ say is a boomer lesson is mself amount of sentiment that the | swear him into jail or to a heavy fine. movement inspires, but | It is from little children however, nantetthat slvelaloras: |tnacrautomobilistst iavel the bmost o light on the subject—Baltimore | fear- Little tots from three years of age to & dozen years insist on play- § | dential the road. A motorist never knows just when one will dart in front of his car and many children should verely spanked for their irritat- ing of seeing how near they can stand to a passing auto. children will start as if to run in front of a car and then, as soon as the oper ator had applied the brakes, stop and laugh with glee. Parents of some of these children, for it is they who are at fault for permitting it, should also be hailed into court and taught a les- son of how to bring up their child- ren. Of all pests of the highway, these children who play by the road- side or purposely try to annoy a mo- torist are by far the most dangerous. The practise of hopping on and off teams should als stopped for al- ready several youngsters have been struck automobiles coming from behind. One little fellow has been killed in trying to hop onto a moving automobile and another little tot lost her life in blindly running across the street and not looking in both direc- tions. Parents cannot be too careful in impressing on their children the nec essity of carefulness in crossing a street. A little sensible cooperation on the part of everyhody would go a long way towards eliminating many of the unfortunate accidents. . e ing i be a need of a dimensions to New Britain's glaring public hall of sufficient accommodate any iarge crowd such as might come here to attend a big con- vention plainly set forth in the coming of the Swedish Singers’ on June and 10. Not only Is Turner hall, where the convention will have to be held, too small to hold all the guests but it is also too small to seat. all the guests at the banquet. It will be impossible to seat more than 600, and then the gallery and stage must be converted into a part of the dining hall, vet there are fully a hun- dred more who would like accommo- dations. In this same connection the need of more first class hotel accom- modation is plainly seen when it will be necessary for the Swedish neorle to house scores of the guests in their private homes, for lack of hotel room. o ox is visit Newspapers, public officials and the police in particular are almost daily recipients of anonymous letters, but if the writers only realized how little attention is paid to an unsigned letter they would either sign them or spare themselves the trouble of writ- ing. Some anonymous lctters are written in good faith, but many others are written either as a practi- cal joke or in an attempt to get someone in trouble. no attention to unsigned communi- cations unless there an easy meth- od of verifying that which is written. If a person writes a communication to a paper, signs it and requests that his name be kept confidential, this re- quest will always be respected. The name is wanted only a sign of good faith. A person would be sur- prised to sce the large number of let- ters received in a newspaper office in the course of a year which are un- signed. Their contents range from alleged practical jokes telling of the marriage of some people, who in fact we not to preferring sen- sational a 8 various citi- zens or officials. Public officials like- wise pay but little attention to anon- ymous letters and the: are cenerally consigned to the waste basket. Chief W. J. Rawlings of the police department states that he re- ceives many anonymous letters each month, some concerning petty things and others purporting to deal with more serious things But the police department can place no credence in an unsigned letter and if a person de- sires to make a complaint or furnish the police with any information that i truthful and legitimate they can do so in their own name and a request that the transaction be held strictly confi- will be respected Chief character a 1 man is well he to break faith es word. All wri‘ten him and properly good faith on the will be regarded if a, re- absolutely business to pay any communica- is as c married, char Rawlin when complaints gned as of as stri 1est contrary ethics or attention tions. complaint tiy confidential made. But it to public policy good judgment to unsigned such is is *n Within the next week, probably, the civil service board will meet to exam- ine regular patrolmen who are candi- dates for promotion to the recently cated office of street sergeant. Such candidates ‘do not have to pass the rigia physical test of those seeking regular appointment, but their men- tal test"will he more stringent. Head- quarters’ gossip credits ten or a doz- en regular officers with seeking ad- vancement and they are said to be William C. Hart, A. C. Malone, A. J Richardson, Theodore Johnson, Wil- liam O'Mara, Willlam Murphy Frank Moore, Charles Johnson, Herbert Lyon John Carlson, Alfred L. Atwa- ter, William McCue and possibly one two others There does not seem to be any sible question but what each of candidates will pass the examinations satisfactorily, so it will simply be a getting contest in which the commission will be the last word General opinion seems to be that Officer Hart will receive the ap- pointment unless something unfor- scen in meantime. It will be remembered that a couple of years ;o when Scrgeants Bamforth and Kelly were appointed, among the can- didates at that time were Officers Hart, Malone and Cosgrove. At that time Officer Hart gave Sergeant Kelly close rub. Concerning the present promotion however, it is said on good authority that several of the officers seeking promotion have been pri- vately advised that there is no use for them to work the advancement as it a forezone conclusion that Officer Hart is the man who will be named, civil service notwithstanding. It is said that th has heen working for several to secure his promotion and that after the civiy e have been passed it will be influence, of old, that will se- cure the appointment. All of which is not to taken as any boost or criticism of Officer Hart, who has proved himself to be an energetic and pos- the vote safety the oceurs a ed for is officer months tosts be Other | | ple light and standard on West Newspapers pay | | | council capable man, but rather to show that civil service will not be what is ex- pected and that influence will continue to be an important factor in making future appointments. . At the May meeting of the council the question came up of approving the $5,000 contract with the United Elect the new white way stem. members, chiefly Councilman Orson F. Curtis felt that the matter should be further investigated. Following up this idea the company placed a sam- Main not was meet- s Some street but apparently.this did satisfy Councilman Curtls who instrumental at the adjourned ing of the council Wednesday night in a further postponement In re- gard to this matter Couucilman Cur: tis maintained that he is not struetionist but takes the attitude that the council should not take everything at its face value. He says he is tired of having contracts all fixed up by the city engineer and board of public works with instructions for the coun- cil to “sign on the dotted line.” As Councilman G. M. Landers inferred, the question is whether or not the will be any better informed two weeks hence than it was a fort- night ago. It is somewhat peculiar that inasmuch as the meeting Wed- nesday night was called presumably for the express purpose of either ac- ceping or rejecting the contract the council should again vote to postpone final action. As a rule the council is willing to abide by the recommen- dation of the board of public and in this instance the hboard too the trouble to journey to Waterbur: and inspect a similar lighting system there, which met their unanimous ap- proval. a works . x ok Reports at police headuarters show that during the month of May ther were 224 arrests made. After care- fully perusing past records, Chief W. J. Rawlings states that this is a rec- ord number of arrests, the police de- partment having never taken as many people into custody in a single month before. And yet some people insist that adding ten new policemen to the force is all nonsense. o ox During the past week two Turks ap- peared in police court. One was charged with stabbing the other and admitted that he had tried to kill h victim. During the course of his trial he told the udjge that for the past seven years he has always had his knife with him and even slept with it under his pillow. This, ac- cording to the official Turkish court in- terpreter, is but the transplanting of a native custom to this country. The interpreter, who was born in the Sul- tan’s domain, states that it is a law of the land that all Turks are permitted to carry a knife or revolver and they all avail themselves of this privilege. On the other hand all Armenians and other Christians in Turkey are strictly forbidden not only to carry wearons of any nature but also to own them and have them in their homes. Any Christian caught with weapons is im- mediately subject to a jail or prison sentence. The interpreter stated that shortly before he left Turkey a large number of young Armenians in Con- stantinople became imbubed with the preparedness idea and purchased arms which they hid in their homes. The Turkish government, hearing of the plan, sent out searching parties and the arms were taken from the Armen- ians and distributed gratis among the Turks, after which the Christians were punished The Retr (New Dinner Hou York Tribune.) Just why the hour of more or less fashionable dinner—as disting- uished from plain, old-fashioned American supper—should have inched on to the late point where now it rests one of the all too frequent un- solvable problems in practical soclo- logy. A generation ago it any- where from 6 to 7. Now it is nearer 8 ¥han 7, with the later hour as the one really right moment, we have been given to understand. To a very considerable extent whole programme of the day has been moved on as well. The lawyers and brokers of New York begin work later, lunch later, and leave later. Courts sit later. Theater and opera are later. Of course, the great ma- jority of workers are not as much af- fected; and once the large cities are left behind the old hours hold with less change. But there has been some shifting of the social clock—and in the direction of daylight wasting— all along the line. England has been a parallel change. The Georgian dinner hour was from 5 to 6. Theaters opened at in Crimean day As late the '70s the dinner hour at Oxford was before 6 in all the colleges. Today the schedule of fashionable London is later even than ours, and of the resurrected daylight-saving plan are pointing to this voluntary shift to prove how little clocks have to do with regulating human habits For better or for worse, the larks who delight to arise with the sun seem to he losing ground hefore the owls, whose eyes are hrightest after dark. Is that simply the general way of much civilization? Or is it the ef- fect of successfully perverting night- time into daytime with electric lig Or is it simply the general ness of human nature? The savers have yet to answer. ating was [ the as critics ht cussed- daylight June. The bride and the groom profess; is a cure for their vows June loneliness The board is free, June is groaning, the warmth a cure for poverty graduates their lore trance, June a The with is a cure for ugliness the church cure for sin. Vacation days for begin, June is surely a These a few of the things 'tis for Hope that June is a cure for war. McLANDBURGH WILSON, are > Light and Water company for | an ob- ! | | | | does honor to | cession of calamities, sistible | forts | 5 more condition “HOW DOSY W One ARE." Mr. Last Bryan’s Remalining Chauce. York Times) (New is stirred to Mr. Prohibitian Every humane bosom sympathy by the report that B nomination for president. The report the unfailing kindness of human nature, and only hopeless cynics will hold that it is too good to be t Even Mr. Bryan himself, his old optimism all but lost in his suc- refuses at first of it, ex ryan may receive the believe it. He had “He never expected cept through the ne how misfortune ment once bland He, whom the Cure blight, who survived hope the unpa paramount never heard hear of wspapers to cankers a temper e T could n flesh and many many uncheer- of unin- des go?" there in ths next losin 101 of God t amounting of issues, the of elections, withers uncheerec able, after less than a year terrupted disaster. ‘Too quic! spairer, wherefore thou wilt Hope on, hope ever. While life there is nomination; great words of Mr. Fox greatest pleasure to winning ‘Who has had more second-class plea ure than the infallible Hoodoo of Ne- braska ? In i is and the is this merry month must he be glum? Is it nothing have wakened general pity by genius for failure? The country loniger with him Review his sces in him the victim of and passionate irr for defeat From tl] silvern glories of 1896 Brother Charles’ last in the Nebraska primaries he the most obstinate, persistent the world; and the Comic accompanies and at nterprises and designs. State, he himself uncom- fortable; he couldn’t shelter himself as often as he liked, often though he sheltered himself in the tents of Chau- tauqua. He displayed an in and invincible ignorance of ness of the State Department was a memorable absentee; and if I babbled dangerously to the Austrian_ Ambassador let one high service of his Who but Mr. Bryan a edonian of May why to 10¢ ng angry it instinctive career, an - craving his and fall to stand and has heen loser in ever grins his ba Secretary made even omparable the bu 3ut 1 be remembered could turned eagle into a Dove of Peace? I be just to a good man against Fortune, other than of the pl shows her bile. it will soon year since Mr. Bryan ran away from the department where he had been so unhappy. What was in his mind? Surely that now he was to do an earth-shaking deed The retirement of Diocletian Charles V. to considered bu a trifle compared with the tion of W. J. B, He went He waited He bulletined He He tempest of anger, nation-wide disaster, ¢ ceipts be have war us whom tform, be a was he ahdic heard followe heard shortly Child of the thee ? a by a guffaw, an nothing but prosperous for The later chapters, too, in the tory of the msolate Knight the Silver are in every How he ht his mighty upon congress, and be how the long-sufferir braska to his candi make Brother governor effective cal bay steers at last, beat and wouldn't nd hi gate-at-large to St. Lo fill steady purp trouble for the cemocr It is a for Mr. Bryan, all-baff to think of doleful full of dole: « I The Tw unexpected manna, this of a Dr Dry, who has been a for gate re with Disc memory, influen wouldr brot o cong t he lers democrats of prohibition senator and Charles their with what a itration, the long Mr. B even s influence Ve or to N elect so on, nomince swallow tes for for resounding n a s of millic suffer yan on n as his all-huffeted ur; f any G the » Orphans.” story T led think s0 h For- saken,” of * like tale, trut for the great tional who sees the go: health for this nomination = years, old h comes prohibitionist some the demo to pel Neal will suffer office ratic party Dow he and o if madc prohi bition party and he wer for one another. It is small, bt n make it smaller. Tts vote is dwindling, but he will furiously of the than one another temporary corvention lot in politi harm the prohibition he The some or make i It i impracticable he, They Save & ar employment Mr. B ro part no m parts conjunction Luxurions Iife, (Omaha Bee.) curious existing cans the e of lives in nee t pre of. ficence & nev dre has in it the imagined way through life umphs man's conditions hon Jast ior mi gener but never enje is padded of inge on to We d rge us of pleasure comes easily. N equall as long hours as we now who material ally, in ac have n the P want with a tha prepared pro: tu it all. but rule of nature e this tent e tell u does not If ment ore othe ows discc ard of life wealth on envy real rew in worl standa st consist that ¥ it ily obt One 1 ohserved 1ined consume create, comes yo pe for Summer. (From Louisville “Why did dous refrigerator “I wanted one that would hold a watermelon occasionally without pute Courier-Journal.) get such you a tremer ting everything else on_ the floop™