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NEW, BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, JULY 5, 1916. NEw BRITAIN hERALD that took place at Columbus and Ca | the men who set up this glorious Relief for Soldier Dependens. those who had penetrated the line on rizal. These things will not be for- | couniry. (Hartford Post.) WHAT OTHERS SAY the right realized the situation and Mc Mll i brought a Lewis gun to bear on the HERALD PUBLISHING COMPANY. gotten.| But the ‘vast majority of || The cclol ! isht at Walnut | The city of New Britain is to be - | enemy’s line of resistance, completely NEW BRITAIN'S BUSY BIG STORE, Provrietors. America sople have felt towards the i 8 a coadit e commended in that its court of com- 4 American people have felt towards the | Hill was a ciedit to all concerned,— oo has alen pr(»vnp(tgitr?n Views on all sides of timely || enfilading him and thus enabling the TARWAxE to devise some manner of securing questions as discussed in ex- | left company to reach its goal. tion a spirit of pity rather than spite. | the idea, to the citizens who gathered | yelief for soldiere’ dependents. The changes that come to tho “ Terribly (‘t’l(:cn‘\'ehlsulthle Lewis t“V:”'I Entered at the Post Office at New Brit The intelligent populace on this side | T e i i B e o raliar bege - 5 - Herald Oflice. evidently. It weighs little more than %8 Becond Class Mail Matter. I [eRpanticing sreat gathering | need for such Il\: 1:: .ul‘rh;“n”"} minuto the infantryman’s rifle, and is ‘fool et O the front | proof” against jamming by an ex- | Pass the Child Labor Bill. cited gunner, or in the dark. After Xssued dally (Sunday cxcepted) at 4:15 p. m., | Mexican people and the Mexican na- | to the city, to the men wha fostered at Herald uilding. 67 Church St of the Rio Grande knows full well that | of humanity that went forth to see | the wages of "¥ered by earries to any part of the city stopped. | for 15 Cents a Week, 65 Cents a Month. The action of the New Britain in B itbacriptions for Paper to e sont by mall | from the illiterate peons and bandits | presence to lend fervor to the occa- | council in urging the governor to call (Norwich Bulletin.) [fpuchfagiest acitogboenpmade LN b St A IR, D S S Mexico L Derely f the Sitiationtall ke : - 5 . - | rope, the War Department is plain- 0 a Year. | ot Mexico. ¥, @ @ gion came away filled with a newa special session of the legislaturc to | While the committees in congress |1y justified in providing it to supple- frhe only proftabin mATiitieine medtum m | Alons has been this: Mexico has been | gpirit of patriotism. At the same | consider the matierle n line wvith the | are gradually pushing along certain |, .t the meagre equipment of the the ety Clrowazon hooks and press | much like a hoarding house whercin | time they came away harboring no ";’-““TT“‘“‘.“ "'( "f“"“““fl:’j“r" “‘"1"_"}“, 'f:”j‘_ “'""f"‘ ans ““"I""‘ them, when- |, 50hfne gun arm. The explanation ays open Ldvertise | the boarders have been on a ram- | griet because of reckless abandon on | SECUld act to protect the families of | ever they can get the time for eon- |y ofrered that our regulation service | ¢ i | gri E Kless abs On | the men it has called into service. But | sideration of matters which are not oReri A : ho Herald will be found on eate at Hota |,y The head of the family has | the part of those il : 5 e ! not | pattern, the Vickers-Maxim, cannot IR B e e | : the part of those in control. he [ New Britain has not merely urged :he | directly connected with the question | 1,0 ghtained, as the factories are busy | lwunnc\(‘;?\ \0'1‘( ;;m B wlrd ‘:’l!k. 4t | heen trying to keep them quict. Yct| police regulations were enforced to | State to act. That city’s council has “]1 national defense and preparedness, | ,.oqucing these guns for the Allies. un]xhr.; ed \m( pos mm{‘?u to =t :“';}‘:m_:(i .!“lvllli(.\hnl;‘lflx\l.lix n’:‘m“?:\’:)o‘r‘::({ [ Roth &, pes dre tndoublenly desitable TELEPHONI? CALL e neienboret Sh Jone asihe trouble = | relief from city’s funds. here is, o asures ave 3 ged | ) S 3 A Bustness Office ..............ns the neighbors. Solong as the trouble | the officers'in charge of the affair|l course, no legall warrant for such ae: | from committes, or upen which need: | ;'e"wl:”gs;"'\;:i:;ml‘o for ‘t:;’g;‘(;“ B0 torial Roama : S is confincd to the boarding house there | must go a share of praise for the | tion if the hair-splitters want to caise | @ action has not been taken. i 0o o g 15 no reason for outsiders going in and | work accomplished articularly to | the question, but when humanity calls Some of these may well be delayed A Traitor’s Plea. while more important bills are up for g G X DOVBLE PROTECTION. shooting up the place. When the Siame s S it is no time to split hairs. Bven . 5 5 i ’ ) i e Y‘H‘u traffic squad, the men who super- though New Britain may search in | consideration, and a number are de- (New York Tribune.) Reports from Nogales, Arizona, that | boarders get so unruly that ¥ 80 vised the parking of the nuUMerous | ain for jegal authorization for what | SeTVing of adverse reports or defeat, | Sir Roger Casement’s eloquent ap- ss whatever misdeeds were done came | the pyrotechnic display and by thelr they make a lot of noise and disturb | the letter, as should he the case. To pne member of Connecticut’s National | over into other premises then the sit- | motor cars and kindred vehicles, must | she does the action can casily be made | there are nevertheless those which | peal to “a larger court” is described | juard is suffering from smallpex | uation changes. there be extended congratulations on | legal by securing a validating act ?h"“k‘ilvd ]‘“"‘ ‘,“‘:‘I'“ oD a]{“‘ 1};{‘55? a(‘]“‘ | by one ‘]";‘“955 "“‘ “T“’”‘Bl‘“sl the ‘{“’\5‘ eed ol e fo e e IS0 o as ihed Mexicaps confineds (bl R R R R i from the legislature. Sloien = teilamiliar bl fopcho | (Iemartable ispecol loverg delivered by : d RO JuolceEal fon Sa L mesmotye ol R s [RECodRari el idon ALEInRall Bt e b wommittee in lay- | federal regulation of child labor, re- | a prisoner from the dock.” As a rhe- Blue Linon Dresses mong families of the men who have |their warlike and barbax es | \vas a glorious Fourtt ing the matter before Govermor Hel. | 88Tding which so much has been said | torical effort it was doubtless impres- il o RS T e L comb put Stress on_ the fact that the | and Which the failure of states to act | sive, but in the light of reason it 490 each (Size 3 to 6.) partment of the United States army [United States viewed the situation Naval construction autharized dur- | stisma of charity should not attach | (O “‘:f“'l‘;"i(;rv‘: _:f 1*“1‘0';'hj::‘”("l:<:'{?i:‘i;;'L‘“n:g‘g":ner"":fln"f:flm‘if’f;"' tl!:n s m;:101’;vlsttfivlPx')o‘afl)"lm’:nx‘(\'lu»ly:s“vrlllr::x"lvm,::; | with some ¢ ing Woodrow Wilson's first two years | (0 families of men who fight Tor el | respond and put an end to conditions | wrong he had done was against Eng- | front e ('" remove that stiema | WDich ousht not to have been toler- | land alone, and that now his life was | ig the disease from spreading to [In that country were: clamoring fOr| thorized during the same period of | from any private fund. hence it is | 213 85 long as they have and which | forfeit only “for an exercise of his White Middy D bthers in the same command. 'fhe |War. It was for the Columbus out- | yg0sevelt’s administration. So far the | sross injustice to leave the matter to ;‘:02}‘1 ‘;Z“f}::"};i"‘:i;gi“z‘ént;f":hgrbO?,: el ::k]“"‘fuzle’“"g“io g‘smo;:;; ite Middy Dresses rage that this government saw fit 0| {sa] naval authorization under Wilson | Private adjustment. The nation should | ft of tF e e 98¢ each (Size 3 to 6.) step in and take a hand in Mexlean | cquals that under the sixteen vears of | 2CL along the line proposed some da¥s | Suoh legislation would not mater- | The plea might be falr enough if [ With Pink and blue borders ago and the states should he alert 1o jaqy affect many states for they have | anything approaching unanimity ex- | CfS: - o : offer proper relief promptly if the na- | o ’ e i conal ; 4 ; B ooy |makeEoud his promizesthadihere willl iR Iy I LR ST O | GESE RTRRET e goen the Wisdom of improving condl; fifsted iniTreland. . But Blr Roger Case; k ¢ tions themselves and enacted logisla- | ment knows well that he has the sup- 5 B be no further repetition of these out o o il s . 1 ent knows we hat he has the sup p ar- | afflicult to swallow some of the| And every city or town would do | tion to moeet the meeds, but thora are | nect of eniy & vors smalt sronorien | Gingham Bloomer Dresses & e “"“»‘“” San “_m " | Colonel's outpourings. ::dl ‘f“,",fc"“::.];\lvo :f“;rnt::::l?\in'(l(‘(;\"\‘: others which persistently refuse to | of Irishmen. A moderate estimate 98¢ each (Size 3 to 6.) B ricor war when hundreds of ssl. | % Simple manmer. Without forsettine ind malke provision for any want that | provide the protection and rellef t0 | of the number of his countrymen who : ] Lo e the terrible occurences already re- | ~ . may exist, seeking legal justification | which the children are entitled, and it | gave their services to the army and Made with separate bloomers fers were Kkilled off because of im- e e fa e COMMUNICATED. later through a validating legislation | is the influence exerted by these, | navy in the present war is 150,000, | Putton on the underwaist. corded, ithe - Americans Peor e R if such justification is needed. New | which is responsible for the delayved i and this does not include the many willing, with the national guard on the | «Uncle Sam and John Barleycorn Too | Pritain deserves credit for being the | action. In the last congress the bill | frgymin SO0t o0 HIMNCR, K€, TERY 5 border, to give the Mexicans another |\ et | first town in the state fo give official | was pigeonholed but nothing of the | and serving in English and Scottish Smart Gingham Dresses chance. Carranza has backed down, | : recognition to the needs of the situa- | kind should be permitted this Year. | yegiments, nor does It take into ac-| Made of fine French Gingham § . T e Tty RO o GorTE || LISDRANORIRSIENSNLE SUR 0 s an (LH Rl ome s ongoghesfectedRand B eI o TRrREHe ot olinurberalinRFneN Coltl iy 150 > 82 it and with this things should be ez Dear Sir: Saturday evening's Her- | Holcomh will readily sec that the [action of the senate is now awaited. | oric) arrien o ? '414 )31'”8 to $2.98 each (Sizes rightec ald containec ~ditoria R e s S e o armies. ) st lagement with Spain, the sommis- |Fishted. 1 Scontained fanieditorial i ion Efalc) tasia diy which 1t canfiot | Bvety possjule sffort should b= mane |0 (651 aion hee neves bosn appliedl] coiiare and cuffs soms lnce (il Drunkards Need Apply Permit me | evade. by that body to meet the situation |y ‘yreoiy™ 27 NE8 PUER A€S SO0 20 lieralaad cunassome lnce U pland, . | med, hand em hers plain and col: ored gingham collars, cuffs and belts, priat department has been placed on to disagree simply on one sentence. — — and meet it right, and not wait until that these men were forced into the “Uncle Sam and John Barleycorn are . the rush of the closing days for 2| . yices,against their will. Sir Roger {itrman with benrl or sroches i arl ¢ § tons, | to their own soil, the people of the frill not lose much time recautionary hods and prevent- |although the men with large holdings { in office is more than double that ay- oldier in question was discovered in ue time and ail the rest of the men ave been inoculated a affairs. If the First Chief can now | peKinley, Roosevelt, and Taft com- | pssons have been learned in this ction since the days of the Spanis erfect facilities to safeguard health. In the same way that the medical brps of the United States army has leen brought up to high standard | om the lessons learned in the en- high level and the men who stand NOT ALL GOING WRONG g s B iccts of doins duby on the! bors Although Francis J. Heney has Been | not friends. You intended to say @ Silow o0 KrEe convenient excuse for overlooking Or | casement, being an Irishman himself, progressive ranks | that Uncle Sam and the products of (Brooklyn Eagle.) killing it. will hardly agree with the Vierecks. br need have no fear of shortzge of | long a leader in the e oo L 4 5 ¢ g S B Galifonnis s announcement that i 90hn Barleycorn are not friends. For The heralding of the appointmen C'ohalans a ir like i is L pod. The war department at Wash- in California hi e "\f,, to | Uncle Sam is the best friend Joln | «f Major Douglas MacArthur as mili- Will Our Soldiers Stay South? n-i-mx\"]l?oq ’:—:‘e(\i'e‘rh(:«}:r\l\‘;l: "t‘oth;:hf‘\:‘xt‘o Dainty Colored Voil bgton has issued orders that a plenti- | he will support Woodrow Wilson o | piiieveorn has in the country. in. 5 : ¥ ainty Color oile Dresses ; i be pro- | the last ditch is not causing an over!cle Sam lcgalizes, pr il tary aid to the secretary or war as the (Bridgeport Standard.) the basest motives to Irishmen who 1 supply of substantial food be pro- | the last di . SNSNSS e ‘hf ”‘;" ‘?P-*i protects and fos- | have joined with France and England | $1.98, $2.98, $3.98 each. (Sizes 6 td red for our bovs. Major-General | enthusiasm in the ranks of democracy. | fers the salc of alcoholic liquors and against Germany. He must know that 1450 Valus'ts sci00 to | This for the reason that Mr. Heney | oI “’I“[ '”‘“l »‘:7" ““!N't[-: Unalofsan i | they have not been tricked into ) VIR L as only a deaf ear. e refers yo do , i ey &' agains s A 3 b e to the providing of our troops and | Was at ane time a member of the|yo youy Gate” oity or town sovern. | What items of news may wisely be| and the Soldier Boy,” expresses the | ‘flghting IEngland's battles' against| At these prices you can choose samif b has under him one of ~the most | Democratic party and merely comes| ment. We l;mm however, that the | £iven to the press. That is something belief that the large number of sol- | the :nf}mf;;t 'intfir:sts of t}:ueu r” ple dresses from one of the foremos| . ol rack to his old stamping sround.|| day is coming ~when vour original | R0t to beliresented. " Noi Americaniidiexs from the northiand west soing IESOUDEEY ow, then, can he justify | manufacturers of children’s dressefl propetent quartermasters that ever | bac 5 e sentence - will stand undisputed | rewspaper wants to print anything [ down to the Mexican border and be- | his mad project as a service to his| exclusively. More than a hundrel} b1d forth in the United States army. | Rut what does please the Democrats 1 sl i Tt e hammer operations in | Ing shown, as a matter of course, the | c_mmm:_mn_ Are Bl but the fana- | dresses in this Iot. No two alike jhe department has given General | and please them mightily is the sequel | A. L. WOODRUFF Pessible war or give valuable infor- | attractions of the south-western f""i:nov’f Sinn Fein worthy of consider- 0od full power to purchase anything | to the Heney story purporting to show | Berlin, Conn., July 2, 1916 mation to an enemy. L O L WiV 1T e haios 51t Roger) Casement Children’s R = ' 3 E .- | j But the best advice that can be| be greatly attracted thereby, and | B es & ger Casem ldren’s Kompers > deems fit to buy without even |that many of this leader’s personal SR Fivem to W prosdent and to con. | will in very many instances bo per- | Will have all the glory of martyrdom. ;i aking requisition on the depar:- | following have decided to adopt h FACTS AND FANCIES, aress at this time is to go slow on | suaded to locate in one of those ‘ ""‘yhf“h:r:;l::‘\\?: :h‘g)t :‘?nv\r;‘ :yns?i):;: 9c each- ent, or without resorting to the us- | course. Among these men are Demo- | S e “censorship.” The feeling of the | States. ( of Du ad no t| Ginghams and chambrays = 3 . = ! e e e s He recalls the fact that after the | consolation. The thousands of young The Americans now left in Mexico | press, we think, is fairly expressed by ] £ > : must like the country.—Meriden R {he veteran Colonel Henry Wattersan, | st war with Mexico, when the army | Irishmen who have died in Flanders . ilitate service and the boys along | went over ta the Progressives in 1912.| 7 Setld b le i an 2 'l of Zachary Tavlor was disbanded, the | count for nothing. But Casement, White Rompers e border are doubly Insured against | They are for Wilson as against Hughes - e e ter and the censor are | State of Texas gave to every soldier a | their betrayer, is destined to be a S Sas . £ P P oas The first and fore- . . <z e . “Spanish league” of land in the terri- j hero and a martyr because his en- 49¢ and 98¢ each. ¢ ravages of disease. Go)d food | for many reasons. The first anad fore | Khaki is now a fashionable color | 1kely to disagree. But the reporter : botween the Nueces and the | terprise was mad, ill-timed and de: ary betw Nueces | < d @ s- 1 good medical supervision will go | most of these is that Hushes offersy for ~—men's = sarments—Rochester |18 At the merey of the censor, and. p;; G iande—and that “this was a |tined from the first to bring nothing > W, S nothing new, suggests nothing that| Democrat and Chronicle. where the censor Is o fool, as he a little less than three square | but misery and suffering upon his Boys’ Wash Suits virtual selectian of a “press censor’ is| Theodore H. Price, one of the edi- probably unjustified. MacArthur will | tors of Commerce and Finance, in work in deciding | an article headed “The Southwest onard Wood has been designated some seloctive pl methods of red tape. This will | crats of yore, also Republicans who tract Wilson has not done or cannot do. = usually is, the newspapers are no : arc.” wn countrymen. : T 5 ; S ".l T S / ¢ & eloar line| ©One test of nationai self-control only deprived of their rights, but the | Mies sauare” T o el ¥ 49c, 69c and 98c Suit. CARRANZA BACKS DOW nile 1t s early to get a clear line| 4 gae and sanc Fourth in the midst | public, which pays the bills, is| Texas has no such land to sive t Chief Carranza in his answer | cn the situation it may be reasonably | of a presidential campaign and for- | robhed and cheated under the specious | “¥7a¥ 1ow, bat ghe “WHL o0 some Translating Moral Forces. FOR VACATION TIME ctary Lansing’s note of July 19 | supposed that there are many of this | ¢ign war—Buffalo Enquirer. pica of military necessity. * * * Con-| 1h 0 Go t6 the charm of the Lone Star (Manchester Herald.) s seen fit to back down, to take the | mind. If Hughes were heading a ro-| 1 g oo == ress will enact the proposed censors | seate” And Oklahoma, “the Penn- | President Wilson made a speech Boys’ Khaki Pants . N " SRR S e Mo i s reported that Carranza has | ship at its peril SRRl o It] sylvania of the Southwest,” speaks |before the New York Press club last sition that he is not monarch of all | Juvenated Republican party things| collected 17,000,000 rounds of ut with ignominy. And if the presi- 5 4 e : ’ K e i B S QU T IV I RN Ol Y e for herself, with her oil wells, her | night, which he said he had not had 50c pair. (Sizes 6 to 18.) surveys. In his latest literary con- | might be different. But he js not.| munition, which should provide every | dent wishes to insure his own defeat, | piineral aeposits, and her voung and | time to prepare. It was a good bution to the diplomatic correspond- | He is at the head of a party that i f"\\“é;n general with a cartridge.— ! Ict him press it.” booming centers of population where | speech nevertheless and couched in “ 3 3rooklyn Eaglc These are vigorous \\4:]!_‘;|<4 charac-| 4 young man has only to get a foot- | English which could not have been Children’s Overalls. : — teristic of Watterson. Hey iaoiia (ev e R et e e | 3 ! e e the famous split 1012 The same E 1 : hold, an = ¥ improved by wecks of revision.. The Special 200 pait. Spnars e 6 en isgsolLgin The same | A shortage of blankets for the | trific further, perhaps, than most| ‘ountry” to certaln independence. | purden of nis talk was the wrosedre Special 29¢ pair. Py seon the light, of knowing that | old gank Is at the helm. Bolse Pen- | army is reported. Well, if this westh- | newspaper edliors would care to HO.| Doubtless some of Our smert YOuns | which has Been brought to bear upon previous attitude was one not [ rose, Recd Smoot, and Murray Crane | er only keeps up, the army can have | But they formulate and illustrate aimen in the ranks of the federalized | him from all parts of the country to Boys’ Blouses ours.—Providence Journal. sentiment that will be almost univer- | national guard will see these chances, | pyoid war with Moxies. The mreciient p—— | against interference with the |, T . ; ; @ Mexico. il a and taking them, will find the way to | 4iq not say what his own respon long way in preserving health. Al ce between this country and Mexico, | no different in 1916 than it was before Indoned by President Wilson and his j are guiding its destinies and this is sl | 25¢, 50c each. 98¢, $1.25, $1.75 and $1.98 each . has harped upon every move of | Progressive party, such as Mr. Heney, country. In his every act and | who, before enzaging Mr. Hughes as s written in the way of diplomatic | Tc them the case is nothing if not the | iting was set up for home con- | cuse of Boisc Penrose Reed Smoot » b Trunks, Bags and bn anything he has done since oc- | take kindly to the case. The jury of By nsing, while welcoming the broad | dent who has done so much for the yver and done with the Mexican sit- | return of Heney they are elated over chance of getting out alive.” So Capt. but at ruinous cost. Tt s possible sometimes to get news ahead sent base of operations. Military | te the flag of the so-called Old Guard| John Varias. a Grock and a_ boss | c¢ the Associated Press. The rarity, of B i T R s e Roo0 b Ok e el e i enining | inailoh veicn i non St e SLS A ELe : Z shortcomings for which the militia | soldiers has been in since the Spani el vt s oy (\n‘,l l’?l‘v“»_'r‘””tjm {H“‘],‘]"l”“r‘ 1‘);3» 1<:!41 :N:n.nnlln“u?y o Amerieans by hav- ((ultation of jts rivals when they do it. :;:‘::;TQ(LO:;]A@'“\p‘;:r:‘:\y:‘(: it was offered | jiself is responsible, the public should | war b & ular troopers do come back to this | publican par Refal Whe Shosr of the LRJimen in | But in Sthellone irun it s RHolmiost | SRS MEGTHS MERIEE BRI o not forget that this call to duty has | In tragic extremity, those men in 3 ack th publican party. Co. I, Tenfh Regiment, polished free | efficient news gatherer in the world. olone! saac N. Lewls found a|come at the very moment when the | khaki were true to the American tra- BR it nirdat they wwill bo kept of charge. Modern Greek art is true | No one can compete with it or get | 0Te cordial reception in Burope, and | wnole system is changing, when the | dition. It was not that they fougl B i calling distanc N O T to ancient Athenian traditions. along without it except by taking a :E:‘1!::"‘_0:"1‘5}19'*:?]"1“6');:51 ';xe‘m';'okg:;‘? | state troops are disappearing and | bravely—any rage can do that, ey . . serv allies, taking their place as a federalized | Mexicans. But they fought with srooklyn Fagle, econdary S v gai \ second place. The Sun now gains e = \ o this essential means of power by ac-|2Pd In the air. It was originally de- | mjlitia. The very federal oath the | smiles on their lips, and burst intol rd now on its way to the border. | July Celebration such as held forth in While American soldiers are hunt- | Guiring the franchise of the Press, si]znmi forrz t‘hf“ h";‘:““;“:"é ‘flf M;“T; troops are asked to take marks a rev- | song while the lead sprayed around ese men will be placed along the good old days. Nevertheless it |ing bandits in Mexico or hurrying to | With which Mr. Munsey combines the f:;‘;‘f‘i"vm‘l‘t;‘e 1§.§h? ;‘nemer':}“i‘;“»:‘hé olution, and it is entirely creditable | them from the Mexican machine guns. 00 miles of frontier to do patrol | was a safe and sane method of honor- | the border, Spanish troops are fight- | Sun R e S ;]0 'hfll National G"a_l_r\d that so few |and enormously superior enemy ing orocco. “Neutrality” is ¢ Few re S0 des = 5 ave dropped out hey did not en- | fore arg 3 f protectel the de facto government proves|ncrning after there is no cause for|are mot all at peace—thongh the | identity. They would like to have | ¢ Lewls O e o :"‘;#’:’”"{;‘“ they had no idea when they entered | American refuses to take danger se- yond a doubt ti i able of | corrow. Gone are the days when the | United States is still nominally so.— | another’s power or wealth, but not to | (i o L e el ttlas | the service that they would find | riously. He may be glum enough over Indling the situation, is determine ker and the pistol shot split | SPringfield Republican he him. They would rather be them- wm;(e." '\vm\ thl“‘Rri\ifl\ :nldio‘rs m‘hm;mo‘,lves in ;ho ])msnlm\ of being | trifles, but when real tragedy comes selves poor, than rich and able in | n2ke” Bhis S It | drafted—not of voluntcering—as an | he sheds it as a duck sheds water, S6me other! Dersonality We woulq | 15 the “‘hose of death”—it can flfl'n;‘ | annex of the regular army for a per- | and he faces death with a grin rather be the Sun shining for all, anq | SiX hundred shots a minute, from &l- | jod of six vears, or of leaving the ser- These men were negroes, too. In 3 struggling for existence, than Frank most any qnqle. In the first report | vice under the suspicion that they | fact, nearly all the American troops nd in this country for cEwith Wearry @eath and tarsible oy arranged to march in the parade, and Munsey's paper with all his resources, made by Sir Douglas Haig, after »ho were shirking active dutp. Now that | that have been mixed up in serious ; ) ry death and terrible injury to in- | they received word from O, B. 2 2 2 S | assumed chief command of the armles | thig law has passed, there will be no | fighting in Mexico so far have been ppico. There has, of course, always | nocent by-standers. There is not the | Knight. chairman of the cxecutive i Pt in Flanders and France, there is an | more haphazard enlisting in the | negroes. And from the reports. . of en a feeling that revenge should be | i1 anq ket of the old Fourth of | Committee in charge of arrange- Another rumor: Reported that a | express mention of this gun, and of no | Guard, since at any moment the | their behavior, nobody would Sver ments, that flw(_\; \wfinld{ ml\'w a Nflsfit‘\ \v:\x.~h||xr will be constructed from | other artillery. ‘‘An attacking rf)%\ilind- president at Washington can transfer | think of raising the color question. 7 3 of horror in the first division.—St. | parts of the Charter Oak tree.— | on the left, at the first attempt, failed | it to the regular army fo: indef! | > 5 n life and property such as those o Bl s P oo 8 . ! L y for an indefin- | They acted just as we should ha | more reasonablo way of doing hanor | Joseph, Mo., Press. | Torrington News. | to reach the German trenches, but | ite term. expected white Americans to act. ors. > promises give s | not good medicine for honest republi- = e i : ckers. If the prom :v given in this | da : e for honest republi When Bonaparte said to Tally- | freedom of the press in this countr fortune where it had seemed that the | ;¢ anueal would be, but he glor Blue chambray, khaki Twills, whitadh te are made good, if words are |cans to swallow. | rand, “Wnat is all this about non-in- | azainst an attempt of the “war col- | only outlook was for fame—and not [ g = SPRPS WOVS G A ER S 0TI | T etriped mad ith cols g i el : ; s and declared | 2 lored striped madras w ¥ cked up with acts, there need be no | Mr. Hughes, at his summer stop- | tervention liyrand replicd: “Sire, | icge” to imitate the absurdities of | overmuch at that. e T e e e o e e R e s e ;eol : , . S e : it means about the same as interven- | rcws suppression in Fngland and on & 2 2 £ O : 20 O ouses to wear sepd 3 £ further trouble between the | ping place in New York, is busily i - g sti RIS ar: C rs. b I I % : ¥ €N tion.”"—Collier's Weekly. the continent, at which the world forces that produced lasting results. arate collars. 0 countries. raged on a brief which he as a lawyer o S e o e One Thing They Forget. We think the president is right in . IThe first and foremost fault with | will submit befare the court of public Western railroad managers say | finate number of cruelties have sprung (Boston Post.) his ““"‘”““l‘”"_‘ ”‘]"" ‘('f"v”rlm; mAlas s Long Crepe Kimonos .. Carranza has been that he has | opinion. He will represent the Re- | {hey can move from 50,000 to 100,000 | cut of the hiding of facts from the| It is amusing to note the species of :"m”f“‘:;“’(" 0\\-‘;t‘\f‘»nh“”\(I’ovin"-‘m\'r;:: 4 thelUnited! States| tol further his [publicantiparty in whatine calis fumne (lo0 S 1eXe e davaianiie Mexicanibordeny) cxes Sof WitheiSmonld sBRc villzati ol erndeing approval that sometotiithell fe o tis nil ol oro i vet one o Pla . : i h without disturbing regular traflic— | “Coensorship” is a most unpopular | anti-administration people are giving | \1.C 3 NG L Plain colors and fancy figured bn political aspirations. To make | Case of the Pcople Against Woodrow | Buffalo Times. word in America. the president for ordering troops to the front are praying that their task | crepes Just the thing for hot aself solid with the Mexican people, | Wilson.” There are men of the late | - the Mexican line. One critic, for in- | &Y be a short ono. We all hope | yeather. Sirame e o o e LI W stance, declares that “the instant suc- | that the show of force Will sober the | BATHING SUITS, $1.98 to $7.98 Europe hasn’t stopped for an instant o eyt i cess of one display of manliness | MeXican leaders an ”““[“_ LG BATHING CAPS, 25¢ and 49¢ each, P R s o | because of our troubles with Mexico. (Waterbury American.) shows the criminal folly of three | !ISten io reason. For 2 ““{“‘ as a BATHING SHOES and SLIPPERS, erance he has a despicab dency | & ey SwouldivantathetitleR ot this | invi1siiqnac not e ol There will be no satisfaction 1In |years of epicene diplomacy. Mr. Wil- | hation has nothing “““"‘lr rom the | 250 and 49c pair. play to the galleries. Whatever he | case stated in more explicit terms. | In it, however—Buffalo Commercial. | pewspaper circles to have Frank Mun- | Son’s watchful walting stands con- | United States. The trouble is that — T e b B e | Gemnen Ailke In the.crisis intg which | Mexico has not national units. Tts| FOR VACATION TRAVEL at chap who had his will tatooed | S0V &€ o © SUD. 4 3¢ fructified and in the solution which | Fulers are those self-constituted lead- - on his back could hardly have the |That distinguished daily has retained | one week of action at least fore. | €S Who may for the moment be able | See our line of Imption. Whatever he has spoken | Joe Cannon, et al, against Woodrow | original document probated in six | its unique quality in a surprising de- | enadow: | to keep them in power. With no | Suit Cases. s been for the edification of rabid | Wilson. And so long as this is true, | months. While the document must | Erec against the leveling tendencies | “One week” is rich. These gentle- | Scnse of moral obligation they en- a ribald politiclans In his own land. | ro long as special interests ana Wan | P¢_enuine we wonder just how he | of the age. It may now be expected | men and others forget a certain thing, | Fich themselves by nrhl};nr,\ 11m\p: j ag ool sentleman has suffered a| Streot are alizned side by &lae. in signed the thing.—Meriden Journal. | to conform to the standard battern, |and that is that in March, 1911, or | UPOn Droperty -n\\nnr‘. They do no i i 5 e i P - = littie by little if not at once, and | more than five years ago, President | Want an orderly constitutional govern- h B nge of heart, his new akitude will | battle array for the one obfect the| Two hours and forty minutes is | therehy make money enough to Sup- | Tafe ordered 20,000 soldiers fo the | ment such as the United States would | [} & more kindly received in this country | rank and file of progressives cannot | the longest telephone conversation on | port itself. Some of the men who | porder, where they have been ever | like to see; it would interfere with | 199-201-208 MAIN STREET. record at Columbia, Mo. avs the | have given it distinctiveness are ta|since. There must have been some- | thelr graft i 5 “ : joston Globe. The woman on our | be retained and if they are unfettered i i | 1f Carranza and his adherents jing the seat at the head of the | American people . rd ¢ 8 v are thing the matter with Mr. Taft's “epi- arrs prine Bk 2 © | American people will find it rather | party line beats that regularly every | the Sun may continue to be the Sun.|cene diplomacy” if martial shn{"vg‘reall)' want good government they “Joking” ot Carrisal facto government difficult to decide against the man in | morning.—Detroit Free Press. ut the experience of Mr. Munsey’s | were all that were necessary to stop | can bring it about more readily g ey [President Wilson and Secretary | the White House, against the Presi 5 — in Boston and Philadelphia | the Mexican problem. | through co-operation with their pow- (South Norwalk Sentinel.) | ”IuH if the p;.\n!u\‘vl shm\hl. dum{ < anxlety. | il eI e R O GUs e o s e e s a prove too proud to fight ang The W point of the Sun as a Th s G | The only war then would be com- ; ¥ % rit of conciliation contained in this | comn »eaple § e tace ot | 3 S S < o 5 S he Lewis Gun. | 3 2 . fought, joking amo: emselves Ml N commion pe in the face of so much | Theodore should fail both of being | husiness enterprise was its lack of an (ErErlenen demameiy) {mon war against banditry—a war OXAE nEChemsnives ) est epistle from Mexico, will not be | vile and invidious opposition. So i) L dent and of being major general | Acsociated Press Franchise. Tt hos . | which would be comparatively short | the While, even when they realized j too hastily into the belief that all | Democrats are not overjoyed in the| 1S Wrth at this incompetent ad- | rought that institution hard, has tried |, 1ne War Department has placed 2 [ 354 ploodles { We had been trapped and had litge ministration wonld bo inexpressible | (o break Into it In vain. and has | Tush order” for two hundred and even in biblical anathema.—New Ha- | cqllected g i Ty ¢ | fifty Lewis machine-guns, and this The Pers sxpedition ; \ ed news for itself with gres 3 g s . tion. The Pershing expedition may | the praspect that all men once known | ven Register. ability Sreat| i< of special interest. The gun is the Meaning of Federalized Militia, Morey described the conduct of his — invention of a retired officer of the (New York Evening Post.) troopers at Carrizal, in the most se- United States Artillery, but our ord-| 1 j¢ appears that there are some | rlous predicament that any Americ nance experts were not favorably im- withdrawn gradually from its | as progressives are not going to rally o me thing applies to the national might not have been a Fourth of | y. Nor will they be withdrawn un- the nation’s birthday and on the e and for all to put top to the air with their racuous #®ounds erations of marauders and bandits ione are the days when little hoys| At a meeting of the Columbus liere has never been any real de- witnicannonkendl IiERtirtineslthat |oras o MRS SE A1 RAT e Sra Kted out for the ravages on Ameri- l July celebrations. There is instead a ’ - -~ s