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

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» NEW. BRITAIN DAILY HERALD. THURSDAY, JUNE 8, 1916. “ BRITAIN HERA { R ata s ANOTHER COUNT AGAINST THE “An Amazing Blunder. LD N (New York Tribune.) Today is June 8, the comparative WEATHE %‘ | GOOD ARRAY OF NEW BOOKS NAMED et el able disinclination to distribute prfli.«'n\ IN INSTITUTE’S LIST THIS \VEEK | | WHAT OTHERS SAY | | ALD P S; c d I ava icers show an unaccount- HER. UBLISHING COMPANY, frigidity of the atmosphere notwith- We lack only the sun today to Naval officer unaccount : . e i [ ! A er : &1 ak S Views on all sides o mely roprietor: | standing. he weather is having its| riaxe mo esRtel e e i questions as discussed in eXs = changes that come to the Herald Office. the coast of Jutland, sastern Division if Dretending that no useful conclusions ‘ued daily (Sunday excepted) at 4:15 p. m. | fiing in a totally unaccustomed man- e ooy oo = e at Herald Building, 67 Church s grious ne and a totally unwelcome one, | pecteq with the Life of Robert Hugh Benson, by Houses, compiled by W. P. Com- ntered at the Post Office at New Britala ¢ Th ¢ - C ne: B Saredl can be drawn until the main facts » a . expese of everyone concerned. o nion of Swedish - el C ti Eos a8 Becond Class Mall Matter. at e 1( pe il e thefrrerican Sl o . “11' have been revealed. Fortunately, we | Cyril C. Martindale. stock 1 fl 1 vy | The delegates at ago, the farmer, | Singers, With a littic bright weather j, = i ; 7 * s “Consists largely of floor plans by S ith € ave one critic, untrammelled by | ; ; o r Denmtcratic! Conndende °"‘t';;e]d,bgecnrrte-“}oknnsy part of the city | the shop keeper and the man along | ine appearance the city would be professional prejudices, whose genius | Moral Obligation to Be Intelligent, | many architects, with photographs | . - = . 5 Cents a Week, 65 Cents a Month. APRCaT: 4 i 7 & ; = R e ) and drawings of exteriors and inter- | (Chicago Herald) becriptions for paper to be sent by meall, | the street are all under the influence | greatly enhanced. However, New and intuition enable him o determine | and other essays by John Erskine. jand drawings of exteriors | ; ] payablo In advance, 60 Conts a Monch, | 1 MO T ¢ eatls i s and bunting | exactly what went wrong with the | “Four essays on the same theme— |io e Republican leaders ar sorted 10 $7.00 a Year. 1y ‘skies. Eritain is gay ags ar & | British fleet and how it was that the | “the moral use to which intelligence | have revised their vicws of Wilson's At Chicago the quarters of the cleame is *here despite the g lea | Might be put, in rendering our admir- | Cement Houses and Private Garages. © only profitama advertistng mcdium n | " - ) Geibendy i === || Marine-Amt ‘was so happily enabled Hea el | = This collection of designs has been | strength. They no longer insist that . = ~o: ecticut eleg: or s bee: he 1 skies. P o rres vies - N E: and ou oyalties at once m S C BNS L - the oty Creulactnn o Tiid press | Connecticut delegation has been the | cioudy skies | to announce a great victory over the |ations and our loyalt t ore | This collection of de rmlhffi ;_I‘r";‘ i Vi o gl n They realize FoomsAlwayaSopeniic (advertisora: ene of a riot involving a number of | e {‘entire naval forces of the enerdy. | Sensible and more noble.” A. L. A.|prepared to meet the demand for any republican” can win They e | Roosevelt supporters and men from ! The whole truth is that the impe- | Booklist. proof homes at moderate costs. that it is not only going to take some ; a A e - | Rooseve »porters and men fr . FACTS AND FANCIES. e o ox e < e s T v heRteunaion saloiac ool = : FAOLS AND FANCIES | tuous Trishman commanding the First S b | carful picking but also some strong red AL et B b S i the opposition. We have word from - Battle-Cruiser Squadron, instead of | Northern Countryside, by R. Richards. | Country Plumbing Practice, by Wm. | | ching to elect the republican nom- lantic City, and Hartford Depot. | that quarter that the weather, com- The well known eity of Philadel- | oo B =00 TR St hcelran be A serics of connected and sketches Hutton. liae ' | bi I : »hia, which was Billy Sundaved not | .5 5 , X S | of scenes and people in Maine. The ! L e oW he | bined with the tension of the occa- |l ought to have done, had the folly to | This is a wise point of view. TI PELEPHONI? CALLS. | ¥ long ago, recorded seventy-three | .itack o \rior force, “with conse- | @uthor is a granddaughter of Julia | Foundations, by M. A. Howe. S % St an wilso: mexn-Oftice 928 | sion, has created a spirit of uncer- | o attack a superior force, “with cons e . 3 1 _iman who thinks President ilson itorial Reoms ........... Ml 5 S 5 { divorces in one day last week.—Al-| yences that might have been fore- | Ward Howe.” Publisher’s note, { “Devoted mostly to the principles | .t o ono \ith a very large portion e - | tainty and nervousness that ‘““““H bany Journal. jtold.” But there was no one to warn e . underlying the dt‘FmX; ]‘:‘:f k‘]’"‘i‘"’“’ of the American people is an unsafe | in the fight and may result in more. — and result is that “Germany , i foundations.” A. L. A. Booklist. e & Tenublica 2 Ao ROOSEVELT VS HUGHE i g d may res 0 ) | him, and the result is that 2 o1alcontora ige AN R, ! s adviser for the republican party. Al g Lack of outdoor exercie is one of the| So long as Charlie Chaplin re- | has won the greatest sea fight n mo- | ZIG BRSO O S0 P8 SAHnERe | o p g by K. C.|the man who imagines that the dem- Beports trom Chicago seem. to in- | excuses offered. We have no official | ceives $300,000 a year from the |dern history.” No wonder his eritie| ;0 €FRAC A0 BEGAT (10 THGE OF | Heating and Ventilating, by K. ocratic party lacks confidence in the - B B 5 3 s tempted | is unmerciful and refuses to listen t . e At Carpenter. 2 . ,. o & ate that an early momination of | word as to whether the Connecticut | MOVies maybe he will not be tempted | Lty e Lo e aty | from writings, tradition and family Rer PO issues on which it is prepared to i1 X % ’ x | 4 e clistic field— Roch- | excuses. ere cz be no a us i e < at ¢ e res > e omifg e Tt oshmiaypelitho fresultioflliG o1 2h tion a eleeping | wellan moo| Lo cntenitlic BettE ldeorn e knowledge.” A. L. A. Booklist. | Home Bullders' Guide, by W. Arthur. | Sist or in the result of the com ol B Sf e [[BEriet Sais R R Ry oy | ““Concerned with the details of | campaign P ‘convention of ‘“regulars” now in | ,cither do we know whether any of “Whatever the purpose of the com- ¥ q v Y s 5 e ; g o < t any = 3 f i e T (6 f S 2 O'Laughlin’s dispatch = from sion in order to place In the field | cur represehtatives were in the| o ilsere e | manderio the British cruiser isquad-|| QUE Sierican Wenderlands BVAG W | butiainganlorainary nouseBHould [IC SoE S BHEIES FCRRER T SRR i GEit LR ¢ BRS Sr | TYelidognecdibattle crLisex e e ey have been) lic comnittted an|| o, Jomes. : . .. iinterest the home builder and small | Washir g Gis i P republican candidate for president | fracas, We wish to send them our | swift cavalry of the sea, which can | g e L ot S s Descriptions of the Grand Canyvonm, | contractor.” A. L. A. Booklist. | platform which President Wilson is ore the progréssives are able 1o | fficial condolences however, with the | both scout and {ght and, yet more | 'U”;v‘\“e";m““‘ There 1 nothing in sea | Glacier and Ranier National Parks, | PR preparing—and it is conceded that he pinate their candidates. Any com- | pope that they will be able from now | hanging upon the flank of the crib- | oo unless its possessor js always | tHe Franciscan —missions, amons | jopbing Work for the Carpenter, by | Will come very near writing the plat- o e e e | pled and fleeing enemy, strike him |; "5 ..o equal or superior t the | Others A. L. A. Booklist. i E. H. Crussell. form—shows that he is neither fear pmise between the contending divi- | X o in force eque uperior to i ither m e onMtoRESt oL n toRth eloDeT e e o T | his¥ddathiblows evenllasshoiouns: Bt at all points of oot .. n ful nor ashamed of anything in the s of the erstwhile republican Party | a1y and work off thelr surplus| s g sea power we cannot do without | SRemY 8 2 B O o irals o T e . Bishop, | Masonry, by M. A. Howe. democratic record. The party will i 4 The latest re. : 128 st ‘ b 3Y e g STIbIS %% | Story of the Submarine, by F. Bishop. | © . S < & ixs L Pl Sl S s m to be impossible. The latest re- | opjpjtg | t erdreadnoughts, the floating | (oams to have had some inkling of DR It e e e A good, concise text for students | stre peace and prosperity,” but it ts are that Mr. Hughes is more | S G R (T, T G the heavy arilllery of Uic | thig great truth. Yet it is not eom- | yorine the first hundred pages to the | Who have but a limited time for the | will also stand behind everything thit . o % h must fight and w the nly recognized as Lalter: = 7 i o . subject.” A. L. A. Booklist. has been done in congress. ess certain of the nomination, With | where has the sale of straw hats and 18 s tRUE LR andigyin monly recognized as an unalterable | gevelopment of the submarine since J el 3 . T | attles upon which hang the | axiom even today, and we must not | 4 i ; i It is a good thing for the republi- probability that Theodore RooSe- | cummenr cuits rone? I , .| 8 ! axiom r s the seventeenth century.” A. L. A.'_ = : S ; 1 3 ) summer suits gone? Frowning skies| (o or wars and the fate of nations. | ha too hard on Sir David Beatty, He | e V¢ J Vacuum Cleaning Systems, by M. S.|can and progressive leaders to real- of various places, including OyS- | 1orhiq the appearance of man Wwith | —New York Pres s he it G 6. e ome S * % o Cooiey. ' I . |ize that their democratic opponents Bay and the River of Doubt will L ey ellis . mpetent seamen hav 5 i “Based on the author’s seven years' | not o - el satek of inatky B . an excess of .sartorial embellish- | k i very competent seamen Thave been | poplems of Readjustment After the | 2 sl et e t {nyl.\ have the asset of party wear the horns sprouted in 1912. | ;o5 Muddy underfoot, sloppy The Roosevelt campaign is under | misled in the same way. “I had rather War experience in : g omplete | unity but also that of party confi- al s s a N ) S Sl NG ~ | fuil headway, and the itizen who | see half my squadron burnt,” wrote = I e 5 | plants installed in buildings under | dence. The democrats are prepared ppears: thatitherstand: patiaivi= | e > 3 Cautious and thoughtful treat- el T rSacu DT : tisfied that if ¥ugh : Sraead, tho apbesrance of MUMARS|yoted asia progressive in Oyster Buy, | Nelson after a flect he was watching | ments of the problems, by seven oS control of the Treasury Deg to put,up a hard fight and it will S B UENES 1S |ity demands that we conform With|pot many weeks ago, is leading and | had managed to evade him, “than | ceon o icts % R /ment.” A. L. A. Booklist. take all the harmony and resources iinated in its convention at the| the iweather. Despite the lightness | calling the wiole country to book. | risk what the French may do in the e S | ey of which republicans and progres jes SS 5 e { | = N 3 " 1 . v editer: % i Nay, e as rea y 3 ' Mhoi : i sives are capa > to turn J out o flest possible moment, before the | of the heart which lies underncath, it | The aspirant has not even now de- M 1‘“ anean : ”\“1\“. vh. '\\‘l"v|(‘\1d;\. Submarines, Their Mechanism and FICTION iv . Sxs capable to turn them out of Stick has gained momentum, M. | ,1oc the sun to bring forth & smiling clared himself a republican. Without | even to commi he ‘.«vv zing blunder Operation, by F. A. Talbot. . power. sevelt Wwill not accept the Bull | cyeorion S ! much argument beyond the flourish- | of ':\wv\w»; ’j:"‘zln‘l’”i"“iv'l”:;‘y"l"”y“fl“(’ “A popular exposition of the prin- | gapette, by F. B. Smith. = ’ B it Thee o e ey ing of the big stick, the party which | by dolng so he otould ron AT the | cipals of design, construction, opera- | PPN The Chicago Platform. X . As to crops, and farmers, condi-; jost the election because toosevelt | ¢¢€ n of his ¢ AT )Y > | tion and possibilities of this craft in | g, ger Legion, by Zane Grey. S oy are inclined to disagree With | tiong are not what they seem. It ap- | bolted it four years ago is asked to | time the enemy has heat our fleet | ;o0 technical language.” Rtk e (Waterbfiny: american), \dea, knowing T. R, but the | perg that rains during the month of | mike him its supreme dictator now. :nunm‘\"i he ;ll\-wzigxm:i il !;w an::)]\‘, g e There is a good deal more popular ke 4 ) 5 o 2] O TS (s ey e s is | way, “they w s no harm this o interest in the framing of the plat- e is the report. Om the OWMET| ;ing micht benefit the crops. e | P the 1anguage of the street this is [ WaY i A - . = | Children of Hope, by S. F. Whitman. P 7 | S e e s b 2epub- | Year- Walks About Washington, by F. E.| e Feapiiyyine B the Bull Moose think that if | : : - ome demand pringfield Repub. . Yol dl form at Chicago than we recall in have a farmer’s word for it however, | jjcan, If Nelson himself did not know that Leupp. P 5 ly is chosen first Justice Hughes | there was ‘“nothing in sea power’ ap- “The writer has a fund of interest- many years. Platforms are usually t the potatoes are rotting in the Hidden Spring, by C. B. Kelland. refuse to accept the nomination | _. : : plied in this manner, ought we not to [ing anecdotes and historical remini- | pretty perfunctory. They contain sround, lacking a little hea oy ‘he s e . s jent in passing judgment s » Srsen he regulars. It would mot be| o e & v“‘_l“ tembt| = The sum of General C arranza’s long | be lenient in passing judgment on Sir | scences.” A. L. A. Booklist. | o ow many planks which are Intended to h the sprouts. A late start will | bill of grievances against the United | David Beatty? *wow R Granso| Cases of Mason iBrantiby: Noi| nlsgse this for: thet sroup ot voterk rising, judging by the recent at- be the result for most produce, and a | States is not an ultimatum but a re- War and Christianity, ‘by V. 8 M. Hopkins. and they do not usually express poli- ® of Mr. Hughes, if the DrosTes- | 1,10 gtart means o late finish with | QUESt that this government “frankly “ngland’s Great War Leader. Solov’ev. | + e | cies which are to be taken very lit- were right. The entry of Roose- | . * o oo (HEH 5 #1808 NI | explain its true purposes toward Mex- Fe “Three deeply speculative but light- | Window in the Fence, by Harriet | erally when it comes to legislation. linto the: contest on a third ticket s 0! 1€ | jco.” If General Carranza hopes to 7 3 S ly handled conversations between five | Brunkhurst Thi it is different. Ameri- fall crops. Warm weather soon is|serve political ends at home by such | The great Kitchener is gone, If death | Ryssians of different ideals and prac- “A quiet, pleasant book. The artists | canism and preparedness have been k defeat for the republican nom- i : e e . P imperative to the farmer unless he is | rigmaroles as that now at hand, it |loves in this war a shining mark it|tice who argue out the spiritual im- | wife, tells how they found the simple | made by the European w r para,; i willing to lost a year's labor, must must be that his situation is des- | has not found a brighter one. No | port and benefits of war.” A, L. A.|house in the country, made them-|mount issues before the people. Are le American public, with the g perate. He is needlessly affronting a | Single blow which has been struck at | Booklist. selves a real home, and found all their | we ready to)stand up for the rights b in view, may expect action powerful and well-disposed neighbor [ the Entente Allies ”»‘; Germany _‘-‘Nf* oo dreams come true.” A. L. A. Book-[of our citizens? Are we ready to loanto o b e g which is able to make him or break | Pecn so stunning as this. et it is | War Thoughts of An Optimist, by B. |list. protect women and children on the i;hih:esh(g;rm‘( S ‘mefn THE BATTLE RING. him as oceasion may demand—New | Stunning mv!ypxlnl =fssndmenta oy s S (couia ; ) *a. seas? Are we ready to assume tho ‘ S8t i T e Burone 1s bul. | York World. 1t Kitchener had been killed at any The writer is a prominent Ameri-| . . responsibility of preparing for every be most'interesting to watch de- | & in Europe is bul T S time during the first year of the war | can resident in Canada. A. L. A.|Wiser Folly, by Leslie Moore. possible eventualities that may mean fments. We venture to assert | 8In€ and giving way. The vast circle | | it would have occasioned a loss ir- | Booklist. ‘A romantic story in a delightful- | = b0 o non"our own country? Is B el b o | enclosing the Central Powers giv- | ‘H»:.-‘ mails hlnl‘aj Vln\‘::\s(vtr:»t:(p!:u\fimlt reparable and immeasurable, but | P ly unusual way, and lhe'l:e is 1_-sr:)mve the republican party ready, speaking e N o 5 S| D35 TR €55 (0 B £t Rty st | PRy (e i ol B ol now ]\:”v»n:; be_overcome. . THE HOUSE | ood character drawing.” Publisher's | o whot or America it represents, to or -another will be chosen is a |Smeller at another. At Verdun the|band can hardly be consecrated by | cotintey. for. newasapers miotessedls | o iselows, Camps and - Mouptain|note. offendithe yaions Nyphenated group anc s : an hardly secrz Y | country for newspapers professedly that, for one reason or another, on, but the G. O. P. can hardly | Germans tell of successes in captur- | postage stamp Even first class | friondly to the cause of the Entente i through sympathies with special bel- se the candidate of the party | In& Fort Vaux, one of the defenses of | POStage may cover criminal communi- [ Allles, and therefore to the cause of Impertinence. “.. York As Grain Port. ligerents, wish to modify Americanism defeated it four years ago. | the city. In Galicia the Russians ;;I.ly["""xj. Trl“‘li],“.'m“‘““m‘ 29 Zalas donlicivil "“nnzmfi,fi:\‘:v“;f,"‘s e (New London Day.) (Troy Times.) and check preparedness? In short, and become subject to | onymous— Getting contraband into | Great Britain in this war. The news- | e have it from Lucien Bonheur, | One of the interesting develop- the ranks as a buffer candidate | the Austrians are falling back before | blockaded countries by way of neu- ive leader of Long Island and bld to go to it for his party’s | the heavy artillery fire and charges of | tral ports or putting express or [ heen reflecting the spirit of the North- Te SR fofIeodorey Rooeav It T G 0 (e e, freight matter into stamped packages | cliffe newspapers, that have done | that unless Justice Hughes, at the de- R Such has been the history of the |°F CPvelopes, has the appearance of [ more to sow discord and discourage- | mand of this lieutenant of the rough | mendous : : evasion of international law rather | ment in Bngland and France and |rider, shall say certain things that|grain shipments abroad and is now war since its early days. An enormot the rough rider, through this lieuten- e ant, stands ready to put into his will the republican party, assembled 5 y s _ in convention at Chicago give us a ments of “war times” is seen in the | platrorm that all good Ame fact that Now York has made tre- |stand on and feel th ly a favorite son will be taken | 2T€ carryng on a vigorous offense and | serutin progre close f loing so have papers that have been ricans can at that great par- advance in the matter of |ty speaks for Americanism and for preparedness without modification or circumlocution ? | far in the lead of all other American | It we are to trust the anticipatory than strict compliance with it, and | more to assist the aims and aspi men, representing the | its detection may require some de- | tions of the Central Teutonic Powers > Unitea | mouth, then Mr. Hughes stands con- IT'S A SAD WORLD. ports. There was a time when a |gossip of the correspondents in Chi I time to time, scientists and | meutonic allies would conc ite | Parture from strict rules.—New York | than any other agency in the 4 ago, the platf 1 : s the world b o SR (0 (6 oo : - This at- | victed of being a candidate of the |large part of the grain trade ap- | ¢80 the platform to be adopted will diggers startle the world bY | on one side of the ring of steel and |°°Urnal of Commerce Kingdom now at lar This a 4 < % be so drawn as sharply to define the | s Eleci S a1l ored | German-American alliance. This is rifting away from New 5 S 2o heen centered peared to be drifting away from Nev ncing the unearthing of some | g, 1 make a . = tack upon England has beer ed | ¥ b away D o e b e ;| 0fc and meks an attempc at thet| mWhe ons distinclly wrome way to | upon Lord Kilchemer e has been | What Mr. Bonheur— who weas born Inf v o 5, the port has “coms back™ | Houlars ot i or mammal that once romped | particular sector, usually attended | treat the Carranza. ultimatum i S e e e e He hase| France, and so is, of course, a per-| "¢ BU P o > Houlan sroubalofivolersiand Insliting this green footstool playfully | with success in small measure. Mean- | aT8ue it. And that is the course | heen war diplomatist and generalis- | fectly neutral American—has to say: | The returns of the Produce Exchange anticipations are fulfilled, it will be a great thing for this country, com- pelling every voter to be for or ‘The question before the republi- | show that in 1915 New York received can convention is: Can the German- | 978 612000 bushels of grain, which and was | American alliance, in the interests of | wa5 twice the quantity received in g down forests, bowling over | while the enemy on the other side | Which the administration appears to {simo, as well as the directing force in be adopting. Nobody in the United | the war office. ain peaks and otherwise dis-| would smash at the outside of its 8 . States outside the White House and Fortunate indeed for Er = StV ATc ol Toss by e . he works i - T D) s il 1 Sl S o i t M | against America, unless by a miracle jgt by degfroding the portion of the ring and be attended | cabinet, at least, needs any counter- [ it that at the outbreak of the war a | & forelan power, serve notice that no | 911, The seven leading ports which | 41o democratic party is equally oute ure. It was not so long ag0 | with the same success. It is safe to | argument to Carranza's statements. | Political scheme to put some one els¢ | man who has incurred the displeasure | ;¢ jncluded in the compilation made | spoken at St. Louls i maliic R o D O ST the Chamber of Commerce of the Ihe fossil of a mastodon was|say that if the Central Powers were | No arsument, however rogical, would | in charge of the war office German-American alli to be nee, deeply imbedded in the mud of | able to meet thelr enemies one at a | Make an imbression on Carranza and | “chuck® ‘K. of X\ away to Beypt | To0 1 iqses Sy 5 ) oaidtnoy? The | State Of New York are New York, ||/ 0 0 = % . 4 his following. He st i was discovered and frustrated o 1 [ or : ; > | Boston, Philadelphia, Baltimore, New [ ‘croplanc Strong Arm of ro gton and still more recently | time a speedy conclusion of the war, s etoiaEbeRtol R i s | republican party must settle that g 2 o “ | the fewest and plainest words possible | chener was the rallying point of ail | 1% B o and that 15 what | Orleass, Galveston and San Francls- Armic: me of a dragon was brought to | via the victory route, would be at | what the United States purpeses to | England’s offensive preparations on | e e {co The total quantity of grain sent S deiant S land. With a handful of an army at posal he transferred to north- to these port 000 bushe h a cave in China. hand or would have already been |do and what it does not it has remained for the repub- | reached. do a in 1915 was 564,980,- | on April 24 Thus it appears that the din purpose to [ 1and. nd that he will be required to or- | his di acco “Mr. Hughes can keep silent about | many things, but when faced with @ patches, eisht aeroplanes belong e = e e ¢ S ern France and to the fighting Allies 2 New York receipts w 39. 3 i T AT R A i 3uffalo Express B B fancr OnCe ths lent. Otherwise he is the candidate nL o) Ay e B A 08 ; rom the four points of the| tillery against them is very great and tremendously helped to stay the Ger ""‘h;‘ e e lean allance proach (o this proportion was made | kish camp at Quatia, Egyr “Tho ks, to place on exhibition an |they are surrounded on all sides. By Berlin and by Berlin's apdeng | mans’ advance on Paris and greatly e e Y attimore whilghithol 18800 per |'shom ) siReranliavirs heiiTtieatr G sontributed to the German defeat af never before heard of—an | Holding off the enemy to the left and | sympathizers in this countr: tice Hughes' place, and even if we |¢ent The other ports figured as fol- [ bombs dropped, and from machine 1, < 3 ¢ bs le e Marne. Attacked o 3 ows: >hi a 2 - ce: . 1 ire. . " o disr | t without a spine. There it | attempting to deliver a smashing | World is informed that Great Britain's | [N battle "’f s ‘“ AL ”,\‘ acked on | oo ever so anxious to please Mr. |lows: Philadelphia, 12.6 per cent; |gun fire,” runs the dispatch here the G. O. P. eclephant, wob- | blow to the right seems to be im- | Mastery of the sea has been broien, | !l sides by jealous Journalists and | poppeur and his boss, we should not [ New Orleans, 102 per cent.; San|is no reason for doubting the truth The Kaiser is hailed a: Admiral of ians, he put into effect a rigor the Atlantic” The German navy s | °US mMilitary rule that was nece swan song | the experiences of the past year will | proclaimed ruler of the deep waters. ‘:: set about l*nu:‘i\m;\7;”!‘!\111;7“v e chine commensurate w. En greatness. Five million men armed, trained and in the fight, or ready to g0 into the fight, not countin tremendous losses story. know exactly what to say in compli- | Francisco 7.4 per cent.; Galveston, 6.6 | of the story because of the fact that ance with this demand. Tt is rather | per cent., and Boston, five per cent. | the engagement was of no gresat | puzzlingly formulated. Does Mr. Bon- [ About eighty-four per cent. of the | stratcgic importance. This is only heur desire that Mr. Hughes shall an- | grain on ocean steamers undoubtedly | one of the many reports which have nce of his nomination, | to foreign countries. The superior | been filtering in from the war show- n its death throes, ready to | po ible and it is saft to predict that ary | bwn and sob i jh its trunk. The X-ray of | be repeated until complete exhaustion | If thi opinion has shown this totter- | fc nt to be an invertebrate, in [is beyond the power of man to com- e boasts are well founded that one side or the other comes. It |fact will be presently disclesed. With Germany in command of the ea, and Britain deprived of her supremacy e class with the jellyfish a > ime to be allowed before | £ o with the jellyfish and | pute the tir e diiberorel e fumerintivlie o R ias om0 rm, despite its size. | the resources of men and sunzlies for | ante-bellum freedom. In the resump- situation is a sad commentary | either side will be gone. Men are | tion of interrupttd trading, not in fading glory of the Grand Old | falling in great number on the battle | lists of warships sunk and s nounce, in adv: }flm he sincerely hopes no Boche will | facilities for receiving and loading [ing how wonderfully the aeroplane is WO the | . te for him—that he will employ t gran on ocean steamers undoubtedly | developing as a fighting machine. s in battle tells the | |, \ers of the supreme court, if pos- | explain why the grain ships prefer | @ scouting device it has almost sup- bie. to have all such votes declared | to go there for cargoes planted all others. It did this from Though Tord Kitehener is dead, the | ;;atia> Or does he merely desire Ik b the beginning of the war. As & ots l,:)‘““_(’"‘;c“"”" wihch he created exists. | p.o,, AMr. Hughes, a declaration of means of attacking camp ply killed, will be the proof of the Ger dying devotion to the cause of the A Queer Presidential Year. stations, and even bodies of troops, it 7 nd 2 pledge to make war upon must be reckoned as a powerful factor tands in action, going into | . action and ready to continue the pres- | o Gone are its pep and dash. | fronts. More are growing up and rimmings or broadcloth lin- | ships of Britain and France. England | squarely on the head. an opposite corner sit the | will lay open to invasion, should the | The search of the Republican old Lo > man contention. Until it is accom- | sure S - a : (South Norwalk Sentinel). : pds1s its pristine terror. Smash- | filling their places. Tons of lead and | pljshed, the rulership of the ocean | and in soC. oStern front, in Egypt | Germany on the fifth day of March o s in future wars. Egypt is an open ; : 2 lis 5 s f oce: and in Salonics it SRk Lol Lo g or the first time in a generation = g ane yment power. On its knees it beas |stcel are being hurled across the | cannot be said to have shifted from |to bring ,"“,”\'”‘(“‘;, L ] pext and hang every Ame “"““‘“”f“ i s L : ]‘i c '““]““ ""d‘ SHCAD P enis | syl bY A . 4 L x abou 1e desirable ene | orman name ring eek af- [ “presidential year” brings no ‘busi- ! peculiarly vulnerable to attack fro bt Theodore” Roosevelt, “Teddy | fields of Europe. How long will the | the Island Kingdom to the Central ThisVereat 'soldler’s. Ereatest %l exmangnaeRourins stholy L ? , i a < Stom i3 3 % Powers—New York Sun = 2 e E g5 vork) ness prostration We have become | the air; but the sea is open, too, ana fic,” whom it had threatened | supply last, and which side will give | Power w York Sun n the war was long since done. “As a matter of t this demand 1 3 d the warship is as approachable as any e i . o o i 8 r { accustomed to regarding “bad times” | s 2 Jh as flat as the brim of his|out first? Peace is in sight say some. Bryan Hits Tv Rigl ==Y =t “,m; all other demands that Justice j = b1 a camp can possibly be. The troops on . ryan Hits ight. e C e < where ; 38 inseperable from our qua ba fronts in Europe am Rider's hat. | Then the fighting powers, one or all, s i - g Husthes “come out and tell us where 199D, quadrennial | the hattle fronts in Europe are dug te th icture -complete we | are beginning to feel the L Mon (Hartford Post.) e Boston Limit, he siands,” on any public question | elections. There is a deeply rooted | in and sheltered in trenches. Ex- ake pic D e ce ) 2 e G e S shtin Al Bridgeport Standard). whatever, are impertinent, offensive, | theory that business of necessity | Plosives dropped from the air ms L < he scree seconc ood, or ar - s acking. S s > The K 3 e ArTante i . \ a § )t as effective as yse fir psh on the screen the sec 20C 0L nunitlon N ACKing. | yonnings Bryan when he declares that The Kansas City Journal, »“x‘x]»in:J”““" ranted, and indecent. Mr. Ju marks time while the national issues | 1Ot De as effective as those fired from picting the wakehouse of a | Which country is it that feels the | (he password of the republican na- | Of Billy Suncay's coming operations in | tice Hughes is one of the biggest me | = G " | cannon; but the airship can penetrate pas he r g 1 : ming a s t 5 Syl are being fought out and > repr 5 3 i . ephant. The scenario has ed of bellicose necessities? { tional convention assembled at Chi- | Boston, thinks that a reform of his |in this country. He is hig uv(\x;{h to | ; : ” e represen- | the lines at will unless stopped by | - . yeabulary wil s | 1o entirely superior to personal con- |tatives of one or another s f prin- »r airships, > e Litten by this same Roosevelt| Germany assures us that the mas- | cago is Hungry. Stand pat politi- | YOCBDUIATY will he needful if he cx- | he entirely superior 3 M o | set of prin- | other airships, while the troops in : | g o 1 cians, special interests and cven the | DECts {0 Dersuade the Bostonians to | Siderations in the conduct of the na- | ciples are elected. And actual facts | the rear of the fighting line are out rights are reserved. In one |tery of the seas is hers. e mavi SRR R R e i s e R ffairs if he shall be called to | ypset the theory. Our bankers, man. | 0f range of the hostile guns. Eight Dt the room lies the elephant | then well expect that German gun- | P 87PR0nEs B0 B0 IASHE ©OCtares | iy o, | its presidency. He is not asking any- | ufacturers, merchants and transpor- | aeroplanes destroyed this Turkish ap pine coffin. There are no | boats will sweep from the waters the | Bryan appears to have hit the nail It puts the case thus: “Billy Sun- |thing of the republican party m‘”flf tation managers are going ahead with | camp. Suppose they had numbered day’s next engasement is at Boston. | the country. On the contrary 1€ | their business just as if a presidential | 80, or 800, or 8,000, or 80,0007 Would party and the country will be very He will not induce the Bostonians to fortunate if they get him to accept a campaign were not already under way | they not have been able to destroy ‘hit the trail’ of course, but if he will in proportion to the increased | and the great party conventions were | and kill . : 5 h : Guard for a presidential cand e is S - resic v | ) ourners, HI" Barnes, Boies | admiralty deem it wise to use the e ]w‘m;” . );_ e ‘n\‘«l refrom his vocabulary he may T nomination for the presidenc 4 It 15 | not imminent. numbers ? > reason appears why Penrose, Senator Lodge, Sen-|men for that purpose. But where is J \\‘!‘_ AT Huzh b ht | suade some of them to traverse the flagrantly “”T'("";N) p ""fl( '"]m';n]‘y What is the reason? Evidently, that | they should not. Suppose that Ger- % yowe Rooseve o ughes migl childis xpect hi “decla S ! AT f Tding, “Joe” Cannon and a |the German fleet.? Its whereabouts | be able to furnist | aisle leading to the vicinity of the | Childish to expe m to (eClare | the country’s business has grown so | many or the allies should suddenly place and powe | | Brs who knew the deceased in | is as much a mystery as heretofore. [ but Hughes is his own boss and | 2UPIL” 1:”“:\‘;1{ T::’»i:v(vvl]tws(fr"‘i::\\:x'n demanded | pig and strong that it feels able to | take the air with 100,000 aeroplanes? nd happie . i ' ; o Hoor el e e Boston has entertained some shout- | DY - e to |12Ke care of itself, and regards even | Would they not be able to disorganize g T T moments. Roos We have not heard of the seizure of g 1 3 nd contr ing evangelists before now and even He will, of course, continue 0 | a presidential election as only an in. | the lines of their antagonist so far ts all Who enter to pay their | supply ships, nor the bombardment | Nence the election of cither would | 3¢ jingual eccentricities of Billy Sun. | PAY no attention to them. They KNOW | cjdent. That election is expected, as | to the rear of the zone of gunfire as ects to the corpse and there | of an English town. What good is simply mean place and power for the | qay are not entirely without parallel | it and they are making these dm?\‘fl‘“f‘i a mattr of course, to have its effect | to make it possible for the infantry B of = twir i e e i o &, not 1‘;: the big leaders thereof. | in” per experience. But there has | ONlY as @ pes ":“‘;‘( which to hang | on industry and commerce But it | attacks to pass through and beyond e oot the a2 the mastery o i : Hui“ e ‘,”‘1,”’ ers want to e suro mm‘r‘.‘».,n a limit in Boston in the past, | their inevitable bolt. e is not expected to be a paramount | any line which they can now occupy? g 1pes | taken advantage of? If what e unger is satisfied, along With | \fany vears azo a well-known rum-.! | factor. The airship must become an arm acco. And above, Wrabped | Teyions claim is true we may daily | the PATGYS hence the search for safe | alist took occasion to abuse and de.| A white contesting delegate from Is business, then, higger than the | Without which in immense force no the chandelier, the wraith of | expect the report of some such an j M7 SUONE enough to win but amen- | fame certain local ministers of good | Alabama asserts that the registered | government? No. but business | 1y |army can win in the futare We he T E ble ‘to reason. The leaders would | repute and the audience would not | negroes in that state vote the demo- |largely independent of government. It | had just cight when the Mexican ex- lanna moans and groans. act as the mastery of the sea would ephant was a good fellow even prefer to see the party o hun- | stand for it. They st catic anyway. Those who would not, | follows its ow o 1 bring el 5 S 6 3 sta . v stopped the show, | cratic anywa » | follows Its own natural laws. Political | Pedition began and of these, six are U . e m; n; the victor. Will it be forth fl:-;r”;:\“n to see its hunger sated If | broke up the meeting and the police | it is presumed, are not allowed to | events, though important, don’t affect | noW reported as reduced to the con- ¢ he' B P, coming? could not be, turned out the gas, register.—Pittsburg- Dispatch, it so much as we used to-imagine, | dition of jupk! Is the army-efiicient?

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