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NEw BE{‘[A}N HERALD a hazy recollection that both the features that must be considered out- 9, Democrats and the Republicans did | side of the supposed fact that the Mc MELLAN S BRRATY Toh e oA ANT touch on this all important question ' country is normally Republican. Th“»‘(‘ BUSY BIG STORE LiKe the Following Await You at the Tssued daily (Sunday excepted) at 4:15 p. m., | ventions assembled. Also there is a | cussion. The one point n\'c‘r-!onkml Rntered at the Post Ofce at New Britalm | 1.oniises. to compare the De v 2 s e L Lyt P say = 3 a8 Becond Class Mall Matter. 13 mises, to compare the Democra i the fact that the Progressives as a Wednesd: This Week. B . plank with the Republican plank. The | party cannot and will not be handed s Ted by carrles to any part of the oity £ for 15 Cents a Week, 6 onts a Month. | COmparison rather than being odious | over to Hughes body and soul by ” Bubscriptions for ] . : ; : 2 And We Propose to 2 ? at Herald Building, 67 Church St 2 X ; . disposition, upon remembering the |in the whole business, however, is | Glerk’s Summer Half Holiday Begins per to be sent by mell, | js jpterestin The plank in the Colonel Roosevelt. There were those Payable In ndvance, 50 Cents a onth, - : do a whole day’s $7.00 a Year. { Democratic platform gets at the ques- | who firmly believed that as soon as The only proftame advertising medtum in [ tion in this fashion: the warrior of Oyster Bay came out business in Three ¢ ¥ : 2 SIE ing‘t‘wwv u\m‘xm .;‘ presw | We favor th exten 1 of the | in favor of the Republican candidate and a half hours and s Wlse, Smlth & 0., Hartf()fd g it franchise to the women of the country, | all would be well. They felt that offer for @ 2 [ he erald will be for on sale a = % N i NS S SUTTS. lngs Kowllghe found on sate at Hote™ |state by state, on the same terms as | when the Colonel said the word the / WOMEN’'S SPORT SUITS. : x . Stylish gport model of genuine Palm Beach cloth, made with patch E.;}.ifi\fi:}\, Torls o Board the men. Progressives would jump. Therein 5 Al Balted n itY i i TELEP: N CALLS 5 < ol < i i £ R o Corre N | straight-forward. It merely outlines grmsh-cs have not jumped, and many i et RO AV (950 Tt es oy e s g $6.98 all the former promises of President | of t} ever intend to j at the § : i B O sgpekn WROGIECE (F Gl o Tnaa e (el (o iy o R . ‘ WOMEN’S GABERDINE WASH SKIRTS. Wilson. Every time the women of the | whip of the ring-master. At that same Ol nfllg y % White satin finish gaberdine wash skirts with two patch pockets and country beseiged and beseeched the | meeting of the New York Progressives ; wide separate belt. Wide flare model, very much in 50 vogue, regular $2.98 value. At the Inventory Sale . 1. SILVERBLOOM SPORT COAT DRESS 8% Jatest German exploit, the sending A rakish sailor model, this new material made In a striped skirt with plain sailor coat effect, trimmed with sailor bow knot, tie k the super-submersible Deutschland | the constitution so as to grant the | the erstwhile leader. These things ; : ; bom Bremerhaven to Baltimore, The | franchise to women in every state the | and others do not look promising for l hree Hundl‘ed | : l’“‘; }:’;‘leb““' resulaciprice SYLIL0SA Bt ne RInven $8 98 bming of this ship had been foretold | Fresident told them the individual | a reunited party, even if it is desired WOMEN’S ORGANDIE AFTERNOON DRESSES Juch swith world | States must take care of the question. |as an agency of national progress. . 2 SILK LISLE STOCK- ol Qi o r S S AT as A D Laar A e e T N T ot 7 ._ | State by state is the method he pro- | But there is consolation in the thought e INGS others with wide flaring skirt. Two of these models are mad i i e ack only. g ‘ > 5 & S ; o SIIBOEEEl, S e S, (o e oty e R E GO Gy el e i A zb{“;l"ujl’lfv good iege, S G ity ! G SO T s (9 (Y ol assle lar price $8.98. At the Inventory Sale ... O e feat lay the doubting Thomases | te'Ms as the men, is the manner in | capable to carry on national progress. ] at the In‘entorv 1 ow th at azainst the Brit- | Which the platform committee of the ————— Sale, pair .. 2 /2c PRINTED RICE VOILES REAUTIFUL SEED STRIPED BLEACHED BED SHEE blockade is a reality. In the har- | Democratic national convention | jules Verne, in the language of the NTE: S i et Do imare e Deats ] recommended the issuc day,"Wwas some prognosticator, 200yds. new "printed rice voiles, B EIGUREDIVOIUE Hemmed ready for use, size 72x Aslto: the Republica: ool LR > i : in a large assortmefit of pretty 36-inch wide, newest patterns s : e X asein : oy B e s TN b O == S figures and colorings, regular ol e, MoenE mAED 90, regular price 48c. Limit 6 getting around the question, it stands i 12%c quality, at the 35c, at the Inven- to a customer. At the 390 s while busy hands a : 1e q s it s Connecticut’s Inheritance Tax Col- 8 19 noving from her hold a valuable i @ qlass by itself. Considering all | jectors are letting opportunity slip : Inventory Sale, yard [ tory Sale, vard.... (& Inventory Sale, each g0 that merchants in this country | the platforms ever adopted by nation- | away. In New Jersey the authorities AT . ng to prove Hetty Green once OSTRICH NECK RUFFS GLOVE BARGAINS BOYS’ SHIRTS Band and collar style, slightly imperfect, otherwise worth a ls and dyestuffs. 1as been no such gallant stroke of | gation: Here might show she spent a to 27 inches long’ with silk silk gloves, regular t is four thousand miles from Bal- | 8¢nius exhibited to a vote casting | summer at Savin Rock. tassels, fine. male Stock, black 75¢ quality, pair . 57c SICCRR AR 25C e ol the Dlace from wheralihe |publictasiithis, Stheplanic that out: and white and black, brown Women's 2-clasp silk gloves, the ‘I"v“'““”‘y Sale. 3 tschland began its epochal journey, | PIanks any other plank ever written: b it e e and white, pink and white, black or white, regu- 42 WOMEN’S BRONZE PUMPS : 5 S Al A Copenhagen blue and all lar 60c quality at, pr. C Imported bronze Kkid, hand AN JES UNDER THE SEA. § Conve ; the submarine from an ngine of war into a peaceful carrier | White House in quest of votes and | the name of Theodore Roosevelt was asked an endorsement from the Pres- | hissed when some old admirer es- Only merchandise is the salient feature of ident in favor of the plan to amend |sayed to gather in three cheers for ve waited t rst stages | @l conventions sinte the present form | are t the war,—750 tor costly chem- [©f government was instituted, there | lived in a Haboken flat. An investi B utitul flutty ontrichiboas Women’s 16-button length pure “The Republican Party, reaffirming white. Positively worth $2.50, turned soles, ktd covered or as a missionary submarine trad- | itS faith in government of the people, | The trouble witn Texas when it is $3.00 and $3.50. At the. BOYS’ TAN OVERALLS Louls heels, very smart foot- ship is a feat never before at- |PY the people and for the people, as ’IIH; in ‘Er)m :had!el" lsl(;.hfl[ there is no Inventory Sale, each.. $2 Nice quality khaki, trimmed wear, regular $4.00 valu shade.—Boston Herald. V] R e e e e R EACH o ol turiey ey AL thel e [, STL N b y erwater trade route. To make this | 24ult people of the country, favors the What's delaying the Kaiser in de- y . sizes 2 to 8 years. Very special WOMEN'S PORCH DR]‘,SSI S fince as a fighting submarine is | ©Xtension of suffrage to women; but | corating Carranza with the Iron |yarvg - . 8-inch wide, for hat and hair at the Iinventory For porch or street wear, it recognizes the right of each state | Cross?—Boston Transcript. R RLHIERUO TR ESLORSS 08 poss gresictionishaden il e o e e 906 chambray, vestee, collar and 4 3 g ; cluding pink, brown, cardinal, i ; - s hevcl I ofore Skirts will be displayed in our South = 5 : cuffs trimmed with embroid- gilnes have before done . better || &¢ - : . Hams are quoted at $60 each in | ..o = o p,y purple, green Royal white, BOYS' EXTRA GOOD WASH regular $1.00 value. At b this. The Deutschland was six- | There it is in one full swoop. It is | Berlin, The British blockade must be | Vind0W until 8:30 a. m. Wednesday etc, regular 39c quality, at SUITS Inventory Sale, the epic of the day. It is a sentence | accomplishing something.—Detroit | morning, when the sale begins.. If in- the Inventory Sale, 250 All the new desirable styles and sizes 38 to 44 59C destined to go down the ages as an ex- | Free Press. terested be on hand early, it will pay yard ..oeoeeiceeens colors are absolutely fast, all GIRLS' NORFOLK COATS brsed a distance of 12,000 miles | @mble of meeting and at the same time 3 SIEn .l you. In this lot you will find a splen- OUR REGULAR 25c RIBBONS sies 3 to 8 years, you couldn’t Pique, large collar, turnover sia " i j One by one they have filed out aid _ i buy the cloth alone for th cuffs, two ‘pockets and belt, to have remained out twenty |Side-stepping all the damands made. | Porfirio Diaz, Madero. Huerta and | 4id assortment of the wanted kinds of | AT 19c YARD. price. At the Inven- sizes 10 to 20 years Read it through once, twice, three | Villa—and Carranza is fecling shaky. | materfals in Summer Skirts, Awning | Including heavy Scotch plaids, tory sale ......... 55C At the Inventory Sale 69C times. Memorize it. Parse it. Take | —San Francisco Chronicle. Stripe Skirts, White P. K. Skirts, | moire taffetas, all widths and arylis - WOMEN’S APRONS it down and put it under the micro- | = Black and White Check Skirts, White | all colors, carefully selected MEN'S UNION SUIT! Bungalow aprons of percale, scope. Twist it around. View it fro An attempt is being made'to get a b e stock for sashes, hair bo“t. Oneita Knit Union Suits, short trimmed collar and cu 8 5 2o lew it from | new tune for the words of “America.” | Gaberdine Skirts, etc All lengths, all etc. regular 25c ribbons, sleeves, ankle length, regular pocket and belt, regular 39c front and back. Look at it side ways. | If it should succeed, somebody might | sizes waist bands and up to fit the the Inventory Sale, 19 $1.00 value, At the 69 kind. At the Inven- 29 Stand it on its head. It remains the | Write some new words for the new |gstout lady who takes . ol - R Ty tune.—Providence Journal. & an extra size | y GooanooEos Inventory Sale .... y R negotiate this entire journey under paratively nothing; for German to settle this question for itself.” days in transit. The U-boat that the Lusitania is said to have Certain it is that like vessels remained away from their base ore than two weeks and reports come of German submarines ing between the North Sea and | pardanelles. So that for the mere r of remaining under water all | Same. It cannot be changed It is waist band. B v Grmakine o - a perfect promise, of nothing. It : 5 T "Phone orders Our Restaurant me, or of making a journey of 3 | German officers in the west are R e e tho cruise of the Deutsch-| br: the best use of that little | said to be surrcndering men to save Charter 3050, for'a light lunol: ’ ° a cup of tea or does not overtop some of the | mark known as the semi-col For, :1;:‘; fi“;;'lfl':n:“\:cf\?“\:. eare lf\qfir;fe-‘hlé @ and Mail Orders substantial re S Gon PUEH S ¢ Ger- |after telling what it believes al : S a S 3 already dccomplishéd by Ger ves along | j 1o is on them.—New York World. i promptly filled. HARTFORD past. o s At - |the line of government outlined by T C AU ] geniu What it does do, how i ; D i oo e 9-3 OUR DAILY AUTOMOBILE DELIVERY INSURES PROMPT DELIVERY OF YOUR PURCHASES Abraham Lincoln it suddenly halts in A bright young man from the coun- 199-201-208 MAIN STREET. Daily Delivery in New Britain, Elmwood. Newington, Cedar Hill. Maple Hill and Cla front of the semi-colon and affixes | try, if he goes to the city and works B e pretty hard for ten or fifteen wears, | can sometimes make enough money to Changing the War Map, The Cleanest T 33 = -ching begins 4 gh hopes ¢ b iz el 2 the United States and Germany | marching l_\ :W and the high hopes | o, ang live in the country.—Don Mar- (New York World.) (Boston Post S pe resumed in this fashion. Ana |awakened fall ImI\. to }h(v same old | quis in New York Evening Sun. Since Bethmann-Hollweg said that The award ;‘ ”)r\ b : he ill feeling that has cr ,d | of the suffragists in New Haven Who will officer the rest of that > make peace must take ac- & | work done in ‘clean-up week” in e ill feeling that has croppec e st E : brigade after the' Roosevelt children | count of the war maps, the allies have New Hazland s made to the city of Malden. Last year the trophy went ptween the two countries may | County may be victorious; but not if | ;4 grand-children have all been | follow 7 g 5 ¥ | and grs = c E e owed the German example at Ver- | 1 over, because the it marches behind the plank in the |supplied with commissions?—New | qun in altering trench lines which eXlC‘all oun a; y lne [lioRsantensd s Conn yand jthepinal al E E < | |lotment depends upon further it is set up a mockery at the h blockade and give hope that be- | “but.” From then on the-counter- o moothed n people will know that the | Republican platform as approved at| York American. e : tests— peor elsewhere remain almost unchanged ltho thrco times winner holding the . States is willing and ready | Chicago. . . . £ . ” : o - - e = s Jesse James ar . S ¢ | for months. Disregz ssic . . : cup.’ o B lotover nation that SR The Jesse James artillery, including hs. Disregarding the Russlan | Washington,’ D. C., July 10.—That yzona, with a population of 9,000. It | . 3 oWl R L OL LRI s the pistol with which he was shot and | attack for the t. how d o . i i falden has fairly won it this year “#} % i 5 z Sy . attack > moment, how do re- | part of the United States-Mexico | is situated in the Mule mountains, ten |y 5 o rry its goods here and take our NOT THE ONLY PEBBLE the weapon with which he shot oth- - ; v a co-operation of municipal and in- - ; CatE ey e gl e oo axhitition at Colambus, | Cent changes in the western war map | boundary line extending from EI | Miles from the border. Tombstone, | dividual effort. The city took care pdities away in exchange. harles Evans Hughes' one great | ers, r 3 fon > nhUS. | compare ? 5 E . | which is twenty miles northwest of | ;¢ (1o proader o A i Sk pectec , azents | desire is for a reunited party They did not create half the excite- N b iner _ s S Eaco/Te to the Pacific coast is | Bighe o . & i € e broader conditions, such as ay be expected that the agents | dc £ I party e e done thirty |, NeWspaper maps are drawn arbi- | ! 1sbeeiliwasionce Yone ROl the W reath| ciun ol (Mo il wal Are iprecentions Givi e i - rer v wonld have > thirty S " - 5 in | described in the fellowing war geog- TR O G e £ heet fandificchpreventio c B¢ Britain and other cnemies | essential agency of national progress.” | Joc L oY WO A eurnal | trarily from point to point named in e owing war geog- | mining camps of the world. 5 were formed in the public » will forthwith start in |This is natural at the outset. He is | il despatches. They differ somewhat and | raphy bulletin of the National Geo- In a valley to the west of the Ba- |4 s; the boy scouts took a hand many W art s s 1 : 5 ; boquivari mountains, also called the | x¢ oW acegfinted for. P Protest against the docking of | not the only member of the old line The most liberal provision —ever Pozo Verde mountains, 200 miles cast | aepa v, 2650unted for, 5730 bach @tschland as a merchant ship. | Republicans who desires a reunited | heard of under simlar circumstances of the Colorado river, the traveler | J25dS have be raned up, 11 park i {5 the provision in the bill passed by = S = 3 and playgréiiitds have been renovat- this is meant a co- | > /% 4 L sometimes is so unfortunate as to en- | ¢4 10 objectionable “damps: hay, e Bnsnucses DolssRRIosIdingiishola counter a sand-storm which in sever- | [0l o O SRS N IPS S JBVe ity rivals the torrid tempests of the ol s 3 As a result, immediately recogniz Sahara desert. In their report to the | j11o" (b (10 hilaan nosr oy ‘i United States government the inter- | :' G 5F I ment, ithis X S | is indeed gratifying. As it looks to national (Mexican) boundary com- R > 'Y COM° | the future, and an example well mission, which made the final survey | 5 S AU S0 e of the line and erected the monu- | zucl C/PNRE SRR R distin ments which now mark the border, Z = descrtbed such a storm, saying: ‘In this valley on July 3rd, encoun- tered a sand storm of frightful vio- lence. About 4 o'clock in the aft- | Amherst's stand by the humanities ernoon a dense, dark-brown cloud was | in no way means that she is wanting scen rising in the south, which pre- |in educational initiative; a step has sented a singularly threatening ap- |just been taken toward making stud pearance. The sun, which until then | infarmal and ‘“alive.” Next year had been shining brightly, was soon | fifteen special classes are to be or- overcast, and in a few moments after | ganized among the seniors, each to the cloud was first noticed the storm [ consist of not over ten members and burst in all its fury, filling the at- |each to pursue its study swith cm- mosphere to a height of several hun- | phasis upon individual research. The dred feet with the loose soil of the | extent to which treadmill methods are valley. In ten or fifteen minutes aft- | qeparted from is indicated in the fact er the storm burst it became black as | that two or more professors will in midnight, respiration was almost im- [ some cases join in conducting these ‘as the are only approximate. Taking the | graphic society, issued from Washing- average of several estimates, the al- | ton: lies up to Monday night had taken “After leaving the Rio Grande, the forty-five squarc miles. natural boundary, and striking due The Germans in the first three days | west from EI Paso for 100 miles, the at Verdun drove to the Forg international line hetwe Tnited i b Selieis s i) 2 a en the United that vessel in these waters. |1 2 comen A ’ ! | Mogneux-Maucourt line of efght miles | States and Mexico changes direction 1 i ; charge with the Republicans. Therefore, | dent on the recruit for suppor < S 3 e ges ecti lis doubtful if any charges can t Rey an e to an extreme depth of more than two | five times before reaching the Pa- fnmed up against her. She | what is most heartily desired is a unit- DYDY 5 miles and an average depth of some- | cific coast. As If it had struck an here in the guise of a mer- |ing of the two parties. The Colonel now has a military see- | WHat less: in all, possibly fifteen | Insurmountable obstacle in the Big e It the aforementioned is the | retary ‘and many recculfing offcers,|Sdusre miles. On the 136th day they | Hatchet mountains, it turns at right so far as is h e ot b At s o hoi an | BeveRcrcnnicdit00NSinaTe miles: angles, and extends to the south for start for the horder to take charge in | At the rate of three days' gain at | thirty miles, then strikes west again hter traveling under sea is |Is the same desire deep rooted in the | 3o ii0™ T war is not at once de- | Feronne it would take the allies near- | for a distance of more than 160 miles g aifference between her and |hearts of the Prosressive That i) e o e e h; four vears to push the Germans out | to a point beyond Nogales. Forming erous Ttalian. French and |a fair question and deserves an | again be humiliated and he will have | 7 France and Belgium. At the rate | an obtuse angle, the line now runs in | L . " : R to find relief in stumping for Hushes { of the Verdun three-day advance it | a northwesterly direction for its Jong- hips that have plied betwecn |answer On the seventh day of this He is prepared to whip Mexico single- | Would take more than a century to | est ‘leg,’ more than 230 mil until hn and European ports since { month the New York county Pro-|janded, prepared to run the govern- | OVerrun ance. Justly might Beth- | it rcaches the Colorado river, which began. Unless it is proven | gressive committee met and with only | ment, prepared to run the Hughes | Mann-ITollweg retort that smashing | forms the boundary for twenty miles X : d s reso. | campaign, prepared to write, talk or |the enemy counts, not taking terr! from southwest te northeast. . 2 warship the Deutchland is | two dissenting votes adopted a reso ;rzi;‘u“nm'x‘u-«l.;rr R m”h‘“:;’ G b i i ot | Laie i s m}a‘ to the same protection within | lution repudiating the action of the | 207" B2 PFEIEFEC BF LoV © B8 | S e river with the Colorado, the line takes national committee which pledged the | New York World It must be abandoned; it 1is un- | its final change of direction, toward B vesscll A conforming | support of = £ = sound. Maps do not make victory but | the west, terminating in the Pacl One of the Toilers, are made by it; victory rests upon | 140 miles distant b 5 1L be e vans Hughes the republican nominee 0 ustom laws SHEE will be T Evans.Hu i the war power of the opponents on This boundary is marked hy 5 5 S ¥ T (New Haven Union.) o leave the POFt of Baltimore | who so ardently desires “a reunited and and sea, and the ability of their | monuments, more than 200 of which ime her commander so de- | party as the essential agency of na-| - . v < [ i 5 a letter received from F. R. Williams possible, and it was only by breath- | «mall classes ThelSpringhc Republican prints | oivj] population to hear the strain, | are of cast iron weighing 800 pounds . i 3 g T e Nevon sCsshy pett labor and anguish of conflict. They are six feet tall, and set in ot ntil she is outside of the three | tional progres Another resolution | o¢ yyest Haven, who represents him- conerete. The expense of their erec. | ing throush a handkerchief held in | President Meiklejohn and Professor then adopted inviting a Democrat, | self to be one of the “toilers.” It is - tion, borne jointly by Mexico and the | front of the mouth that suffocation | modq will “collaborate” in a course bn * the | an .1‘x\\v4'»|-(»:xm‘u‘).J;\|‘<I\m.:!>.\(mf\‘\‘4\0“»' e Fointad Farazeaphs) Wbl S Bt Cil0) e, was avoided. In nhnmI uil‘r an‘]\n]\n: Poderniprobloms ot Bhllcsory nns ill of the man who brought | Progressive primaries as a candidate | lieve it is true. However, w e (Chi News) “With the exception of Bishee, San- | the wind began to subside and the |y ofessors, one in English and one in ¢ ‘ ey | 2esparzonfconceR RO RN (REOLL hicago New ta Cruz, Yuma and San Diego, there | darkness to diminish, and finally, in | pistory, will give a course on ideas eastully throush one of the | for governor of the state of New ZOTK. | org” is to mean in the election of | A firm name sometimes indicates | are few settlements of any size withe |2 little over two hours after the.storm [ o political and religious freedom fn trips ever recorded for a sub- | Such actions as these Which have been | November. It will not mean the men | business infirmity. e e e ad [ooamence TR s e S STion ol b IR e oro i o i e hant marine. I place in other states outside |in the *“full dinner pail” ranks alone. —_— of the boundary, embracing an area | f2intly through the particles of dust | Among the other courses are one on Tt will include men of all classes who 4,000 square miles, i experts are already at work |party. And by to find some method of de- |hesion of those forces that split in | onth for the support of the recruit’s of the P’rogressives | family, in case that family is depen- an and se colors. The novelty of |prevalent desire of the Republicans i false color The novelty of | T I Humanities in Amherst, (New York Evening Post.) ers that is accorded to any the Progressives to Chtarles Bit she will not be under her |wa 3 her future lies Judge Samuel Seabuiry to enter After ¢ ¢ merc b¥d it is a good wager tha . York must tend to throw which still filled the air.’ rocial control af industrial activity, 0 s o S e DD e e The more checks a spendthrift has | °f 5 e lschland arrives safe and sound low of doubt over the minds of | »Ob< 3 ‘“ R 1“ '“‘ 2| the faster he travel Although the boundary was chos : g one on significant motives and ten- parasites. will include all men who en arbitrarily, when the work of su Little Boy Blue's Daily Peril. dencies In modern literature, and one ter Brer r 1 1 h ohorts. To date | are not of the type f: voring special S R s vl sying began it was found that the (Philadelphia Ledger.) cn the development of political theor r with h ervice- yut thirty-two out of the | privilege for the few or the followers t's a man’s weakness that finally |, ° " 00 5 = = - iy 5 . = o arrying v ¥ vi t 3 2 S e line between the Colorado and the The! chaout 1 L +v | Conducted on the seminar plan, their ! : ; e e Howeven to | overpowers his strength, A Golop o e chauffeur doesn't care very . erman army and members of the National Com- | © 3 o Grande followed almost exactly s i S i cncouragement to free and many- g i z get back to Mr. Williams, he says in o5Ey the summit of! the dlvide separatine| Sacit wnenihe idrives Mintol angtherili g tyraion iand to zeal in study mittee of the Progressive Party who The curiosity of others enables | (18 SURINE OF The CVICH SOPATAtHE | car, because the boss foots the bill e el tudy b - = 3 ® | Nor does the boss worry deeply about, | 2USht to commenc em to other in- part 4 e have come out in the open and de I am a republican, but I am for |Some men to make a good living Tnited States from those flowing stitutions. it, since he simply passes the buck VEW HAVEN COUNTY. themselves for the new lead Wilson to the core, as I realize that TETPIE a south into Mexico. 2 = .l R Sirib e he is waging the greatest and the Be sure you are right—but don’t be “The highest point on the line is at | 21008 to the insurance company. When e T e B » Tlew —aven co S i crandest battle for democracy as |too:sure everybody else is wrong. the summit of the San Luis range, a | @ Aautomobile owner buys a policy ) . wrought up over a pro It has been affirmed from time to |8 5 = = £ £ B 1sie) SR G0 Il LS el . t (New Yark World. 3 rronehbupioycreatos 2 i against plutocracy ever waged in this : < | part of the continental divide. The | ¢ 1 uring himself against the . o W) that the only hope of the Re- | country. T have no doubt of his tri- [ Humbugs are gilded coins of plausi- | ¢ vation is 6,600 feet, which is | CArelessness of hie own driver and| Great grief is expressed in republi- ffrage Association in quest publican party victory at the polls | umphant election, because his name | bility from the mint of deception nearly 3,000 feet above El Paso. It |the carelessness of all other drivers.|can circles over the unbelievable . The o ovember is to get back into the | and fame are on every lip, and victory K = ; A AR T Too bad that there Is no sort of | treachery of the democratic house in : il " st h tr onn e Einelverviain BTN employad fin busy ““1'1” is “vnvl who can’t find | oo of game are to be found, making policy which will protect Little Roy | including in the new revenue bill p fx, rememberine two r v n : : 2 a factory in New Haven, and the Wil- | time to meddle with things *hat don’t | j¢ one of the most interesting sections | Blue! tective duties on dvestuffs. This is a Conversely, it supposed that | ¢op strength among the workers is | concern him. of the line. Here antelope, deer, bear He faces death, swift and sure, | tariff principle to which the republi- the only hope Woodrow Wilson has |simply amazing. Men of all classes and wild turkeys are plentiful, and | eVery time his small feet touch a|cans are sworn, and they would B oo chat now i of succeeding himself in the White | and parties are rallying to his stan- the acorns from the evergreen oaks of | Street. rather see the rising dve industry sac- . By n | House o e moe Al | e The underlying sentiment | < 30 Aot & s enoush to | the picturesque valleys attract great Little Boy Blue’s hair stands on|[rificed and be able to make political trike. They *want the men 24 o b 1 among the toilers is that he has done | (o7 o 8 B0 0 flocks of wild pigeons. Many years [end when he hears about the rav-|capital in the coming campaign of . rties to live up to promises | Progressives to stay out in the rain. | ove tor the masses than any man in - Ra ago there were a few straggling set- | ages of wolves, bears and TIndians; | the democrats’ failure to save it from | but all the Indians, hears and wolves | destruction after the war. Any pre- contained in the | Actual figures, in ordinary years, | our history, and they are certainly ) tlements in this region, but they were would prove efther one of the propo- | With him with tremendous enthu- | If at the age of 2 years a child | abandoned during the raids of the | in the United States have not killed | text is good enough for partisan fault- % | eiasm. T write vou this to let you | doesn’t know whether it pays to cry | ruthless Apache chief, Geronimo. so many people in 10 years as auto- [ finding. The demacrats are to be Nutmeg state will be | er not it will never know enough to “One of the most considerable | mobiles have ain in Philadelphia | Gamned if they do something undgl startle the world, towns along the border is Bisbee, Ari- | during the last six months. damned if they do not. It ve by the Connecticut Wo- | time bnal political convent jhicago ana the other The average girl never turns up her n planks of both partie: There must sitions to a nicety; but this is no or ing. " i g know that the over the politicians have ! nary year. There are many other there with bells on.” B 4