New Britain Herald Newspaper, June 20, 1916, Page 6

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> NEW, BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, JUNE 20, 191 6. w BRH.AAN fitRALD | he pretends to DPos ars the | FACTS AND FANCI: ] The Democratic Platform., | BLAME IT ALL ON WOODROW. - | border and northern part of his do- | = (New Haven Journal-Courier.) | = e 2 i A A witty young woman remarked agq | Weather of Miss Mock June Hela dqulS naians re a flashy girl loaded down with Jewels| Against Man in White Housc. 4 dally (Sunday cxcopted) at | States 15 golow into ks s — | passed her on the promenade deck | SR - t Herald Bufiding, 87 Ghireh § st el | You can make o hit with & woman | of a ship at sea: “If diamonds don't | (New York Sun.) x. ert e rl ivers ed_at the P . | the purpose of cleaning it out. This| by calling her a vision. But You can’t | make a loidy, what does?” It may| Does Woodrow Wilson think for a 1 2 a Becond Class Ao Sattene” PT8IR | tagk may take some years to accom- | call her a sight and get away With | be said of the democratic platform, moment that he will be chosen presi- ~ plish; but it can be done eventually | it.—Cincinnati Enquirer if length does not make a party plat- | 4 5 Fip f o 5 form, what does? | dont by the electorate on which he is | waghington, D. C., June 20.—No In- | verse when he commanded Afty The democratic platform is as| inflicting the weather that now op- | dians in the southwest have carned a | Spanish cavalrymen and 4,000 Indiag long as the moral law. It is slow | bresses us, and has oppressed us since | greater respect for their fighting abl- | allies. reading in these days of headline | he got his hands well on Old Probs? | 1Y than the Yaquis, who were report- “One of the most sanguinary revolts literature, but it must be admitted | "o o . hed season: | ¢4 Fecently as threatening the line of | of the Yaquis was that which occurred thathitins sieBtiaioti e aphint it e G2 BELDERNES IR StChedie * | communications of one of the Ameri- | in 1825 when they were lod by thee re- i e . it is true that it was supervised, | the winter of 1915-16 was of so dia- | can forces operating along the Mex- | markable chief known as Banderas, Bteralal o Lo ionaa oheala ot Hotar Ltof intervene & in EMexico. 5 Senator y written or ordered by Mr. Wilson, the | bolical character that all the old liars | ica border in pursuit of bandits. Con- | because of banner which was said ng's Now Stanc, end St and Broad- | Ollie James in his spéech before the | It is said that the du Donrs pro- | one conclusion is that he is immensely | (10" e qooicioroaty oo Foy | cerning this warlike tribe the National | to be a reli the Montezuma em- eV EeT Xone Clo mrcawalE st (democratiolan tonal l oonventio Mlavt | DCEa ol iRt el nowipe sEnla R el inon d o tiene xccard WGl miisRipaxty: | vl e B8 g B e el G eogranicisocletys has {esued) thelrolti ipize ST and a resourceful or- E . and Hartford Den i re plants after > war. Tha Eh - e & e hard season! heir childhood R, 5 S eeltat Stitouisldeorealour vostton|L0to lme‘ plants mc‘x‘ the rl’t : mt urder his management and he is nnt\. lowing bulletin from lts headquarters | ganizer : as a capable fighte TELEPHOND CALLS. hetl ffett, this Sibaur should help to make us independent | too proud to go before the people | Wwere permanently alienated from the | in Washington: He manufactured his own gunpowder fhan i LIRS ]" *"'“" ‘f” "‘“r‘ » this country | of Europe.—Buffalo Express. &nd do battle for it. In this respect| support of Wilson; not a baseball “A distinguished ethnologist has |and made treaties with neighborini seeks n e C oreig orri- is a aggressiv C: P - : & R " N rial Ranme % g ee not one foot of foreign terri; o ) it is an aggressive »flm ument Poli fan, a tennis player, a golfer, a young | said of the Yaquis that they are the | tribes. He also recognized the advan- E—— = tory and, by the éternal God, it will Mr, Bryan will maintain without a llh(‘fll purists will gasp with horror| .. longing to escort the only girl v Indians on the continent who, |tage of ‘preparcdness’ and engaged NO SLACKERS HERE not relinquish one foot of territory | law his record ot pm:x_}-l r;g:‘vg”(“y'\\lj\‘:t‘ 1”;:\:::;5:9:;‘"5950‘:4:1\“‘(‘;]_“: l'i:‘ :‘;\: through Lover's Lane, will vote for | v whites, from the be- |several white soldiers to darill his o to any other nation. We are mot hent | his stumping tour will have to wWalt | 0 a1 oce, but oniy those who | (N® Creature who is Tesponsible for | EINRINg of their history, have ever | tribesmen in the science of war. Al 'w Britain v day experi el on his hautaugua gage. fe] | st £ ) £ o : g ree: - Aduc. i o Foe vears ho b sen S0 ..Os(erl\, P\r‘exlbenc. da on aggression. These assurances have | gpitefield Republican. havel bocriidyine tolbelltooloal lave!| the season now forced upon us. been fully subdued. In spite nf. the | the end of three years he had been rst thrill in military activities baanBziven Ho Genorall Cavtanza by & € cver been fooled by the disingenu- This man, if he is a man, Wilson numerous defeats which they have | successful that he was able to effect the volunteer recruiting that |y .. qoo \wiison. It is time their sig- When you reflect that putting. the | cus plank in the Baltimore conven- | ‘Al about Americanism, and then | Sustained at the hands of Spaniards |an advantageous peace with the Mey;: AU b L clock ahead for more daylight means | tion. The master hand that slipped withholds from us American weather. | @and Mexicans dating back to the first [ ican government, one of the conditions I he warmm Tors of the | that plank Into the platform four | The stut he is working off today, and | Balf of the sixteenth century, they are | being that he be made a salaried gen- has now received his answer, an evening and getting up when it is|years ago was occupied during the | worked off vesterday, and for un- |today a brave, stalwart, athletic race. | eral of the regular army. A few years answer that the American people will | coolest to slecp, it does not seem so | convention this vear in reporting the ) counted days ‘mfi){e that, is hyphe- | admired for their industry as well | later Banderas led a second revolt stand willing to back to the last, word, | attractive.—Pittsburgh Dispateh. doings of it for a metropolitan news- | Nated weather. Tt is not good Ameri- | @8 their courage. Most of the Yaquis | but this time he suffered disastrous de- to the ls vilable. This answer, fmqi_' e paper. can, or good German, or good French, | are to be found in the southern part | feat, was captured and shot in the D e e As a promoter of effective federall- { Aside from the bold advocacy of| Or good Austrian weather; it is an [0f Sonora, one of Mexico's border | Presencé of his soldiers. = 5 fled by the regular army of the United | &8 % W0 " A yerican State militia | democratic principles as Mr. Wilson | indescribable mess of rejected weather | States, to the south of Arizona. Here “The Yaquis take their name from enlisted, the spirit of patriotism | q.veq ang by the national guard | undey the new Army Reorganization | personifies them, the planks devoted | &athered from all parts of this un- | they raise corn, cotton and the mescal- | the Rlo Yaqui (Chief River), which vent in the great gatherings | .o’ = o qesired effect unless| Act. Carranza is proving to the al-|to the social uplift Will not escape | civilized world, and imposed upon us | Producing maguey. The women are | flows for 500 miles through the moun- Mr. Carranza has entirely lost his | Most invaluable.—New York World. the interest of political fishermen \j'ho in the name of a false neutrality. | eXpert weavers, while the men are | tain gorges of Sonora, and finally the atreetsiand talked over | o S iinte S S T e — know that the seas are full of political Charles E. Hughes would never give | 2lways in demand as miners, sailors, | emptying into the Gulf of California: e R e The rate at which the advancing | fish without a destination as yet. The | us such weather. Colonel Roosevelt | farm laborers and as expert pearl di- | Along this river the Indians maka & v e i brought matters where they are. To ans are capturing prisoners | progressives of the country will find; would change it in a moment. They do | Vers. Most of their trading is done [ their homes of reed and adobe, with i of men already members of the | 1o 5 showing before his own people | arouses the suspicion that there are | there the various issues, or most of | not deal in psychology in the weather. | 8t the port of Guaymas, on the Guif | roofs of grass and mud, The war- It would not be surprising to at many officers and men in the [ them, which they bore to Armageddon | They believe in straight, out and out, | ©f California, where one of their | riors are a well-proportioned race, enemy armies quite willing to “hail | four years ago and to the achieve-| undiluted American weather of the | chief articles of barter is the salt gath- | but they are prone to overindulgence the dawn of peace” so far as they are | ment of which they dedicated them- | kind we had before the democrats | ered on the adjoining coaswe in the native drink, mescal. Family even gone to the extent of insulting | concerned.—Troy Times. sclves. They may now fall back upon | hecame protectionists, “The Yaquis are not a numerous |ties are more or less negative among the President. If he has,been bluff- — the suspicion which s oftentimes| Wilson's golf game is very bad: | tribe, the highest estimate of thelr |the men, the custom of exchanging there are but elght-siX | ;. pjs piuft is now called. The cards | In one of his wi moments John | aroused )n\" the _J-]'!:x‘n;rhh.'nfv_Gmelts he is probably glad to keep off the [ DUmber being 57,000 in 1849. Tt is | wives being a popular practice of a th companies. Bach must e b the table and, i skin said: “Tell me what you like | lcaded with gifts, but they will have | jinks, and have more time to think | Probable that at the present time there | not distant past. They are closely res st ah el oD don Sl nal, tell you what you ure,” Tt's | some difficulty in denying that but| . Sl R = s 4 2 T 2 15 S S Jre £ : 2 about how many strokes he intends to | are not more than 20,000, about twen- | lated to the Mayvos who from time to a short while, we shall see who holds a solemn thought (but not so | cne chance is offered them to push . eian (At Ghetes 2 2 G 8 ut not heir mrinciples nearer home. Aban. | {2k off his card the next time he goes | t¥ Per cent. of whom were transport- [ time have been forced into an un- e e tialorithe thegwinningrhand: choctlesn ”‘h'\’,{ tHe i seyoral 1’1‘“”‘": flmwd‘ el el e 1y | out. But not evervbody likes to play | ®d by the Mexican government to Yu- | willing alliance with their more bel- ause the organized militia of 3 5 vacationists will be proving this nr >d, e Ol d, eVery | ihe g jay. S an N spec e ic cins; and down our United States sl sum- | show of warm hospitality, a lodging. Ih:'\ ;..fun:jl.‘rhvat Way. Some men not | catan and Tehuantepec a few years |licose kinsmen. L R e S el e S i ST e ess familiar with the niblick than 280 as the surest means of quelling “A noteworthy characteristic of the mer long. s K1y, Woodrow is are willing to take their | the Uprisings which continued to oc- | Yaquis is their fondness and talent for e v = 2 P 5 chances in the bunkers. None of them | Cur periodically. As far back as 1609 | music. They have retained many of as some would have it, peeved over FROM THE GOTDEN BOOKS. American Atoncment for FEurope's| will vote for him next fall. They will | the Yaquis were a dreaded foe, Cap- | their primitive dances, but the cus- SR s e i Y e War, vote for Hughes. When Hughes was | tain Hurdaide in that vear sustaining | tom of tattooing th~ chin and arms be manager of President Wilson's (William Croswell Doane). (New York World.) governor we had good weather in New | three successive defeats at their hands, | no longer practised to any general ex- campaign. While in the first instance | We aro to stupid about death. We| Maximilian Harden, the German Y::; i‘;ffl"m?:; Sl;fwsr what kj"d Rt e e res | et O: ) V' Mr. ughes is. And each and every member of the party will not learn publicist, continues to talk of what - p e % “ - = »» | New Jersey had abominable weather 3 o R P How it is wages paid to those who { he would do If I Were Wilsan.” A & eather Under the Constitution of the | i this state might have harbored in Gy o o while Wilson was governor over PUT AWAY THE HYPHE spoken repudiation of the hyphenated b States the national guard his heart wishes for Homer Cummings | grow it is the gift for which on earth | Let Europe’s war debt become a | tPere. If that does not prove the = support which has so recently been - to be the man behind the gun, there S e, fund of atomement. Let the loanm|C?Se asainst him, what will? Even |A Republican Warning to Republi- |thrust upon him. is no disapproval now that Mr. Cnm- | To be set free from hondage to the [ coupons in all the Furopean states| L2fh Strive as he did, could not over- cans. et A Sty i s t receiv 3 flesh; ich have participated in the war | COme the malevolent powers of Wood- el L 24 mings has not received the honor. e : ! ;. ) oKL : t GRiabisie e O bt el ; tis. | HOW it is turning seed-corn into | be valid maney guaranteed by all the | 'OW to cloud the skies and turn the by the present congress, the appointment to a degree, yes; d ization process goes on auto- lly when the President of the States touches his pen to the Now for an epidemic of babies FERALD pU. N N 2 c a ust assemblage of £ ! 3 f LD PUBLISHING COMPANY, main of that v 1ssembla | named Charles.—Hudson Rupublican. Proprietors. bandits and brigands the United ered by carris to any part of the city for 15 Cents a Week, 65 Gents a Month, | and now is the time to start, unless privtione for paper to be sent by mell, [ ourranza wishes the wo 1o: EabTe I aaomer o e ent Y tn: | Carranza wishes thelworl tol be done 7.00 & Year. by his own department of military. If General Drusiioff, the new Rus- sian star, continues to shine as bril- liantly as he has so far, Hindenburg only profitamia advertising mcdlum 1mn ere is no desire on the part of | i going to lose some of his reputa- e clity. Circulation books 1 press oom always n ro advertisers. United States to wage war. upon | tion.—Rochester Union. place previous: to the Spanish | .y a5 dawned upon the First Chief, The recruiting statio open TS hgment the numbers of the two banies of state militia situated in ity did a thriving business from standpoints. Aside from the men crowded the places, in the men ituation and in the renewed de- he has attempted to defy the great government of the United States, has mpanies T and E of the First Tn- y, Connecticut National Guard, filled to their full war strength. to sixty-five before leav- hs states will be placed immedi- CUMMINGS, THE MAN in the Federal service, ranking g Democrats of Connecticut are not, me as the Volunteers who fought cle Sam’s several wars, there is y interest in joining the militia me. Yesterday marked the first n history where the state mili- mediately came under such a Pt from duty outside of the con- f this countr Under the new this cour (Manchester Herald.) Rebellious Progressives.. grain, debtors. He who holds us for nothing | #ind in the wrong direction. asteas tom s amerlanlom Iibet ClmeEotk simes) sention, no! Nor doas Mr. Cummings | How it is winning heaven’s eternal | hut hucksterers without ideals and A patient people has stood a great | triotism that is Bincie o mmp‘:{e The Bull Moose bellows and kicks, feel slighted. He has not been put gain, without reverence for mnoble things|deal from Wilson. Its good temper is | Whether native or naturalized. of | ~oc, 000FS of the Hughes corral stand How it means freedom evermore from | fashioned by the brain and hand can- | exhausted. This mock June of his has | whatever race or creed, we have but | te worcn in invitation, but a lot of pain, not doubt that we of North ang |settled Wilson's hash. (0, T Bl 0 (U G0t b || L BT GRS (T R ordering out the militia for na- : : Fiow It ub nglen every moral mest | { Soutn Ariories would for ihe make ot Ty s Coinotiion & lin i Ondern foriwilegn At the mosts There need be no indi- | all the good things he wishes can- |'yVe are so selfish about death. We | custom and the market, if nothing —— el 3 ing of the progressive county com- not come true. However much Coun- count our grief eise, take the new paper money in ; he flnff PIfmk. O Stelare Candtdats FusNor words llm!mm_ :h|c ‘; n.:( lmasphofixm- myr‘! necticut democrats and members of | Far more than we consider their re- | payment.” o (ie]‘" ‘O:k L) talEeh frombhiali Sssar eloriaccopaneo | i sone et Bt I the setbe ol thiy e g L ie Tt is President Wilsan who is sup- aving taken the greed and graft[as printed in yesterday's Herald: ther political parties in this stAe | wyon the creat Reaper gathers In the | posed to say this. He wants to prove | Ot of the tariff, the democratic party | They are eloquent words and wisely might ‘wenit "a, native 'son honored, sheaf, to Burope after the war that the|in its platform naturally omits the |spoken, but they must be followed by there is the inevitable truth staring | No more to know the season’s con- | United States is not a nation of huck- | fierce denunciation of custom-house | others more definite, more distinct | us in the face that this is indeed a stant change: sterers. He wants to show “reverence | faxation for the enrichment of pri- | and with a sharper edge. And we forget that it means only | for noble things,” and so he would | Vate interests which long character- Before the convention the men op- life, provide that the holders of Ger-|ized its utterances on this subject.|posed to the nomination of M. be is no telling what may be with all joy, peace, rest and glory | many's vast war loans, among others, | Some people will miss also the pro- [ Hughes did not hesitate to say that present call to | Conmmecticut. As it is the prerogative rife, Thall not present their interest | Position that congress, has no con- | he was maintaining his prolonged si- of a presid-ntial candidate to choose | The victory won, and ended all the | coupons to the German government S:;;‘“?::‘rr;?‘;:zeloah‘;gm:fi ta;lffs“e‘)h lence so as to avoid a statement on ] i -ampaien manager, s i trif £ ayment in cash but shall pass| € ‘enue, e familiar | international issues which would al- . However,/ it is. certain gthat | his own campaicn manager, 80 It 18| 4y poaven no longer far away or | them along o America as legal | WOTdS “a tarlff for revenue only” are |jenate the German-American vote. fatq; troops. will gofy Einto | also hisright tol go into any state in strange. tender in payment of foodstuffs and | not used, though the sentimeéw® is | These men will not hesitate to make of ™ e Aty ands e | BHe DGR TGE Uhe Tnan, becalise Lo = material for the rebuilding of the |there in general terms. the same assertion now that Mr. war-ruined German Empire Tariff planks in both parties vary | Hughes is the candidate of the re- | 5 = Herr Harden seems to think he is|greatly from time to time. High- | pyplican party unless he himself | (New York Tribune). thus converting the immense and | tariff republicans have mnot always | forestalls such an attack. In times They will hav : trouble with such a statement | ruinous war loans inta “a fund of | Proclaimed and glorified extortion as|jjke these no candidate, however as those who | for high honors, some of which have | as Mr. Hugzhes made pledging him- | gtonement.,” He ls mistaken. They |in the days of Hanna and McKinley, | jarge his backing, however strong his ome to him and others which | Self to “out-and-out” Americanism are already a fund of atonement and| Only on a few occasions have low- | past record, can afford to let the | come later. And Homer Cum- |11€S in the fact that it is precisely | still expanding. What he is trying to | tariff democrats accepted without| charge of playing politics go unan- | the sort of statement that has been | g is enift the sufferance of penalty | Gualification the radical theory that [ swered. o 5 coming from German-American | in expiation for the guilt of this| because protection was likely to be The statement quoted above might fret because he is not chosen for a | sources from the very beginning of | wicked war fram those who are re.|Abused the principle must be de- | pe enough to answer this charge | Lohe PULIC is a good deal to much post which any number of men in | tho European war. The German- | sponsible for it to those who are not | nounced and abandoned. The fact 18 | were it not for the fact that no SOON- | iy the came of their tld enormios b - L that democrats as well as republicans | or was Mr. Hughes chosen by the | 10 »(-‘m_r ?): . heir old enemlos bo- when in power have always recogniz- | republican convention than the hy- | Saus® thelr chief and hero has no cd the propriety of safeguarding | phen press of the nation hezan to | SOmACh for minoritics, ot cvere- American enterprise and industry. | print lauditory editorials about him | LCO¥ has the mental clasticity and the What makes this vear's democratle | pleqging their support. Many an |LCIEIVINE disposition required fow tariff plank noteworthy Is its candid | smerican has grown to love Theo- ln"[n h,\‘”,‘ o the rmqm:mmn« o recognition, by indorsement of & non- | qore Roosevelt for the ememies he | 1912 the “crooks” of 1912, to Mr. partisa riff commissfon, of the | has made since the Lusitania went | SO0t and Mr. Crane and Mr. Pen- legitimate business aspects of tariff | down and mény an American will | 103 @nd the rest of the accursed taxation as applied to foreign compe- | grow doubtful of Mr. Hughes if he | C0¢8 Who' tstole™ the republican T 3 . i tition in manufactures and trade. Giv- | Jonger tolerates the friendship of | COnVention HF ‘1. 12, who are closé to Politics on a High Plane. ing congress accurate information and | (hose whe coneider that act of whole. | Ui¢ business and bosom of the rep - tory It believes that when Afr. | aRa 912! S S| N Hughes says he stands for an ‘un. (Hartford Post). expert advice, such a body should | sl murder justifiable. lican candidate of 1912! Saul sparel. T {the whole tribe of Amalekites and bt the state must display the | man has his alloted place in the world | qjjuted Americanism” he means that Charles T. Treadway, of Bristol, | prove as discoyraging to the extrem- | ™ «myo Fatnerland” says that— € of politics, just as various characters [ his policy on the hyphen question 1t wieAmea INDuraiicuston ok I < rorine (D B fotN0 st cel Fngn o s i il ODISS Rilal o s e ne B0 have their places in society. | Tha | our policy. 38 St ), Press las to the gluitona of monopoly Who | means the salvation of the republi. | U the black tents of the sons of Esau, But unfortunately this view will no¢ | CORCETning the Republican Natlonal | would turn them into robbers’ roosts. | can party. It is a triumph of gen. | 5¢€ks ta incorporate the faithful into be sufficiently widely held. Mr. Hughes | Convention, which the Hartford Cour- uine Americanism over nativism.” thestrive of fuahelibvers Rerl, has made no declaration on the matrer | ant, whose editor was a fellow dele- When the War is Over. Tn the German Herald we read— | i L lldy L “Unless all signs fail Justice Hughes | ilson -n”fi‘,,, )e more congenial to { progressives than reactionary repub- - into the discard. Any big minded man knows that duty. re-enlisting from the militia to meeting that if Colonel Roosevelt should not accept the progressive nomination the National Progre party should nominate candidates af its own faith for the offices of presi- dent and vice president;” such is the spirit of disobedience, of rebellion, among the progressives. Until June £6, when the Progressive National committee meets at Chicago, Mr, | Hughes is on probation, so to speak; but there can be no daubt of the re¥ sult. Among Mr, Roosevelt’s virtues —and they are many, and may he dis- play them, in the soundest of health and the best of spirits, for long years te come!-—Cato’s leaning to the vam- hed cause is not inclnded. Ho |loves campany. He needs the kindling ardor of crowds. Ty most ecager followers have more {cf the martyr spirlt. They would follow him gladly on a forlorn hope, but it is a good deal to much m’s forces as in the old da: ne oath of allegiance to tion makes each militiaman as soldier of Uncle Sam as the Ir who has enlisted for the full of years in the standing army. | DI country. There are forty-seven other states in this union, outside of | 1po itcome of the Should there be fighting on the enance o show ! their [lert Gumminesiis¥a SConnectcliutiman Hush oo T e the guidance of reg- |8ives him no particular right to any position. His ability has marked him The manj ars under the and, in the event of a good there will be glory enough to | Mings is no man to rail and rant and ound. The days ahead are t with great possibilities. From Arhetica . A f the Uni State might occupy | ricans who cf red the sinking o is known of plans formulated | the United State might occup; e e fhf'ewl the sinking of | responsible. Homer Cumminzs belongs to a dif- | oo i 375 thl equal eagerness So “noble” a conception as X o L hemselves loyal er- S 9 ferent branch of his party than does | icans and dengumy. 3 Amer- | must indeed command our adm 2 T = : ounced the lack of pa- | tion. But there is one serious objec- Vance McCormick. The former Yale | triotism of the women and children | tion to unloading upon America the 1::]‘:,,;:,‘-;‘.\‘3” the way of the German | money-cost atonement far this b T bloodiest of wars. Europe might | This newspaper is not try - : : 2 . . : S not trying e || et e at co ive. Cummings is known among the | harass Mr. Hughes. It \\,m‘ > ‘10. ‘1: iever stop fighting If that could be 2 0 see | Gone. clect as a conservative,—not as the | him elected. It is anxious to do ajl term is known in republican circles, | that it can to contribute to 'War Department about sevent; g pr cent. of each state's militia used on the berder for such eyl bo deemed necessary| footballl starfandisometimesMayorsor er, this should bring out some | Harrisburg, Pa., is rated as a progres officers and men of the orga ilitia of the United States for prvice. If Connecticu. is to hold e o e nTe, G S a reactionary. Each type of of patriotism that marked is | writes a letter to the Bristol Press, nd men of '98, the lads who Bt e oo avenge the | coming campaign demands more pro- | g up of the battleship Maine in rreseiveness than. Mr. Cummings by b harbor |l PAna it Connecticnt very nature is willing to give. | of Americanism that Mr. Wilsen has ¢ | There are for him other things in ['not made a score of times. Ta fact, | vong s : will be the next president of the , Mr. Wilson’s utterances have been far | Lcotion at Chicago, describes as “In Paris is said to be planning for a | ynited States. Jlcanism Besides, a higher loyal more specific and definite than 1My, | leresting.”” Among other things Mr. | great industrial boom to begin when The Cincinnati Volksblatt is of the Hughes' and have carned him opposi- | TTeadway says: | the war is over. The idea is to make | opinion that— disobey him now. If he is to have a political future, if the man of action that he is may ever hope to translate bis ideas into action, his fate rests upon the defeat of Mr. Hughes. In 1920 his chance may come. Vo doubt the thought is in the progres- sive mind. gate with Mr, Treadway to the con- (Indianapolis Star.) old its place in the ranks then it is up to New Britain (o | Store and the announcement that he to Mr. Roosevelt commands them to its quota of men to the two |15 Soon to seek the senatorial toza he from this state presages high hope tion and denunciation. _ “The character of its (the conven- | the French metropolis a great manu- “The nomination is a splendid one. R e T T Lt (e Many, many months ago this news- | U01'S) lcadership was better than | faeturing center. Many of the import- | This paner supported Hughes before paper said: that of any convention which I have | ant industries of France have hereto- | and will do it again. He is a man It would be hetter for the republi- | €VEr seen or attended befors, or even | fore heen carried on in the smaller [ of unquestioned Integrity and a pa- ket a fair test under the new can party to indorse Woodrow Wilson | Ver heard of, and I think none can | ijijes, some of them now in the war | triot without shouting It from the b of things. Enlist today. They are a credit to any party, to the | in 1916 than to permit the principle | 121l to grasp the importance in our (. n.'anq this has perhaps led to the | housetops.” te in which they live, and to the | to be established that to defend Amer- ‘\“f“"‘?f‘“ life of today of ieadershiv | ogcagtion that they be removed from All this may bhe very gratifying to ican interest is to commit political f""_’s‘l““““’“ In such men as Senator | , g.ngerous neighborhood. Mr. Hughes' campaign managers but suicide. farding, Henry Cabot Lodge and |" i ’hardly likely that these smeller | in reality this hyphenated approba- A Noteworthy Distinction, / The Tribune meant that on July 16, | Nicholas Murray Butler.” | cities, which will also be eager to re- | tion is a serious Indictment. It is (New York Herald.) it upon himself to run against Seni- | 1915, and it means it on June 14, | I Treadway expresses himself as| . ."their prosperity, will look kind- | Spectous praise of which any candi- | tor McLean, whose term epires March | 1916 Tt believes now as it belioved | P6COmES & good citizen. But when he | (% s 1 i1 paris scheme. The mere | date would be well rid. al of the entire country. Tnia ¢ .t vear he will receive many | then that if the German-American In- | Y0188 he votes for another kind of | 7 'y lover “inat it is serlously dis- | A stralghtforward declaration on beument the First Chief of the terests are identified with any canai- | POlitics: Perhaps he will kindly ex- | BC- 0% [ N0 0\ (nat great changes | the Lusitanla sinking, a refusal to |largest representative body af phy- votes from those outside his owit party. i ok Srive S Sotic . date, that candidate will be defeated | P!*M WhY the Connecticut section of | " W™ 5 110\ {he resumption of | consider the seizure of United States |sicians in this country, is Dr. Charles Even should he not prove: successful | be Americans without r ‘e, | & PaTty guided by such high-minded | | by A ans regard to partv. A0S gh-mi | . i -rid- | mails in the same category with the ' 1 - Dt e D R R (e ’“"”f;"‘ deliberatelyichooselto jginy 4(1::“1:‘:!‘1llll‘arlle-:cn;fn;;jg:‘t ':‘ffig&“}, A osittid srabai e ELMayo RoTERCehester AMInn I e e rashi > n-1 5 5 s - 3 ense i a a1 a Y e 2 s @ ! ity SS essing thg Washington govern { honors, he could take defeat knowing h:l (;;:]\\rn:,:m shall "T-fi this label a‘h() !r\‘:‘a&‘:\r:qnj:O:T:)al(hcaox;‘g(;::e‘?‘:: %o be turned into a smoky French | vigorous protest over the frightful | comes from a city of less than ten > I e America GRimi . | and only can prevent it. Sures 5 i £ tola that the American ! 4; (ol he added dignity to the cam- | Butler standard, as Judge Henney | | Pittsburgh it is not a transformation | Persecution of the Armentans; any | thousand inhabitants. Usually it is will not be ‘Withdrawn from | ;. merely by his presence in the K A does, and substitute therefore a prac . 5 - | raid that professional me smal that will please the tourist world, but "é ”;e” f‘l‘cm Mr. H“fihes “‘;1“1“ aj‘““t w:}nq i T:;\;:?r(\:‘:\v:: :‘X(('w“’da(l . ;i U # e ] i the fawning paragraphs we have just | : oo J es - elther in six day®.six months, [ soie In any other state the ability Jimmy Up to Date. tlcal politician like John' T King) | /Suchian alteration Is not impossible e et | elnL their i taleniaand Vatsplay tnels 3 S s § 7| Jimmy, an office boy in a down. | Perhaps Mr. Treadway, who shows |@nd equal metamorphoses may be | dugted mto dlatrines of bitter hetved: | o/ 1ioc™ Many seem to have the town office, approached his boss one | such appreciation for high-minded | looked for in other olq word eities. | T8, “0 PO PCIES LA MHE T foeling that “gems of purest ray rewarded long ago. His native state | pyorning last week: leadership will explain why he per- “When the war Is over” many |0 C Sten OF; the Americans of Screne” comfined to small towns are as supposed to wield the balance | y,5 played him false; but simply be- “If you please, sir,” sonally voted against that kind of | changes will take place. There willbe | ' ==, 00 0 "0 0" Lo Ul ave | much hidden as those which ‘“the er- From now on it is uP t0| cayge it is a rock-ribbed republican | “Well, Jimmy?” leadership for Connectlcut and in (& reorganisation of industrial forces |, ' vos g dark unfathomed caves of ocean e “My grandmother, sir.” favor or leadership of the King type. | and activities all along the line jn the S entotl thedetooniot S This is, however, the second of * i . : “Aha, your grandmother: go on It is the usual political bunk—to | necessary and instinctive movement | o 01 (1) read with sympathetic ap- | the Mayo brothers to be chosen the B e WAr Or'|may see the light, and then shall| gympyy boast of dignity and virtue and then | for recuperation. It will be a new [ oc Wy o (FL RO STMESAIT ST president of the American Medical n hie '14.;;,,,, must vest the | fromer S. Cummings come into'his = “My grandmother and my | to knife dignity and virtue when it | Europe in fact; not in geography, for | conicm that knows mo ulterior pur- association, the blue ribbon of medi- action of this ntr, The { - s | mother—" really appears and to exal: ward poli- ; none of the belligerents will e |y 5g0 and will be quick to stand be- ' cine in this country. Ent of the United s “What? And your mother, too. instead. In view of his actions | “crushed,” but in the renewal of in- | hind any man who supports a poli- The overcrowding of the profes- : i Both Vervatil, ien ol and the actions of the delegation of | dustries of civil life and in the restor- | oy of “patriotiSm that a single and sions in the cities leads to many Getting back to the Dlg 1 “No, sir. My grandmoether and my | Which he was a part, Mr. Treadway , ation of the institutiors of civilization | complete,” but to the hyphenates abuses, so that this striking example question, is of interest to note ifiat nother are goin' to the baseball|wWould far better have refrained from , and peace. It will be'a fierce compe- [ these words mean only a better of appreciation of a little town's men le kindly offerings hostile the United States lost its position as Zame this afternoon and they want [ commenting on the calibre of Re- | titive struggle so far as the industrics | chance to make our chief executive worth while calling to public at- pns, has put down his foot on | Sccond world haval powek under me to stay home and mind my little | publican leadership. Actions, show |are concerned and will affect this |what Mr. Roosevelt has called “the tention. Success depends on the man % ltire Mexican situation. Lvmo“l = e brother.” plainer than words, the type of lead- | country. Readiness to meet it is one viceroy of a foreign government.” snd not on his environment The Inies of militia that have fs here. There shouid be no S {n this quarter if the militia | Mings are wanted in politics. Their | number unfortunately is too small CALLING HIS BLUFF tion that holds them as its own. Should the Stamford lawyer betake dent Wilson's strong note to 1 Carranza will meet with the The newly eclccted president of the American Medical association, the to government of Mexico is k for his insolent manner TS, or decades umless con-| ¢ pomer Cummings would Have been there are improved by the man 22 as to what must take plase. | repository. - Some day Connecticut ven the choice of i I long seige of watchful waiting in his patience at a people who B iy Sovers administration of Roosevelt. 2 \ Jimmy got the afternoon off—|ership the Roraback party in Connec- | form of the preparedness we should We shall expect the first campaign small tow may afford opportunities was tho Colonel's preparedness then? | Boston Traveler ticut prefers, undertake. speech of Mr. Hughes to be an out- | denied in the crush @f the big oity.

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