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EW BRITAIN HERALD HERALD Summer And long this is her liberation, the the she beach. ht girl, all continue a cavalier from to parade her ri S0 as PUBLISHING COMPANY, Proprietora. here to Alaska. will arise in from Nome, there is Hed daily (Sunday excepted) there to et Herald Bu 67 Ch :15 p. m., n St Mexico, The men in this country tered at the Post % Second Ofce at New Britaln Mail Matter. necessary, and exter- the might, if | e Class |t r i the critics of The reformers shall not banish minate ltverea by carrte. for 15 C pseription. Payable in ad $7.00 a Year e only protania the city. C 9 room always to anv part of the city 2 Week. Cents a Month. aper to be sent by mall | 80 Cents a Month, | maid m our Summer to v aimpled knees Y Let them dimple The This show places r heart's content more tum 1n | the rress | gimples tising me books and to advertisers. be found on sal~ at ota- ling’s Stang, 42nd St, and Broad- way, New York City; Board Walk, at- lantic City, and Hartford Devox TELEPHONI] CaLLS. dness Office ... ot torta)l T sad En the merri is a old world at best ry little dimple Herald wil G to so much more sun- just whether put helps shine in it the dimples on chin or knee. So dimple on, dimpled knees nor let human crus- ceans in the form of If there must reformers dim DO vour dimples. is to be NOT FORGET. the W have Summer omorrow day for the B raaids and dimpled knees. ot of tobacco to the hoys at Int. At noon the packages will he ppped, sealed and delivery mails. T tons, started consign- the COLLEGE MEN ON THE FARM. into its own. uropean 1 Parming is coming iy rer wrming i g i s bhecause of the war to the s ; : de- and hic! has created suc: a great one! tor: eachlcompany, ich has created such a gre on way after | mand for American foodstuffs their shortly All those the shoved prices N noon hour. who have hich he Iso up contributec who wish commestibles. 't long ago and their f the soil was placed in either in the are to bring send tment the Herald y morning hours, sometime before n. n urged or of two classes. He was a gentleman plebian who had to work Now it to office farmer or a at the sweat of his brow. is if every- ! somewhat different. Farming is rap- left receive next Monday morning b soes Britain their aright, the boys who idly becoming recognized busine: a number of capi- and put last month wi York state a got together acres cutivation, In New enough little friends to n at home recently king tobacco put 11,000 life on the Mexican border. The | forming the first bi talists a jo¥ | some under mvestment farm packages are scheduled to arrive The Fogales, In the cool the eastern charge of this enter- were of This led to an investigation by known in country Ariz., before noon on Mon- of evening, finished work for the men placed in that prise mostly graduates n the boys have [ day, and s away around the be enabled to enjoy a cool smoke think of the friends at home joy it- when they while Interestenl ! the hworls sions held at the College of New | committee old tents, they | .nq ¢ se York, a Agriculture in Ithaca | report was read which went to show assert ot will the of giving To know not forgotten ber & comforting thought. By boys at the front that a college education is a bar we are to successful farming. s Statistics gathered by this commit- bering the in fashion they will never forget the So do tee give encouragement to the men . who hav e through at home. not forget the jeco fund. courses of study is shown that “the his acres pay twice as well as the man school graduate makes high DIMPLED K a time, and when NEES, within Atlantic who never went beyond grammar the City pere was ary of hailed as dise Earth the glorious, There W { school, while the college man makes man, : This | three times as much is in the nearest approach to complete contradiction of the the | i on Atlantic City, | the wonderful time view of the case that a man must | me. | be born of the soil, that he must hs \s no Summer re- | b born of the soil, that he must have the | been raised on a farm in order to make | |a so popular, na other <oa waves so hilarious. But that | @ successtul job of handling one. The the present reform wave. |'committee was not explicit in statin befare i thing: re somber bt ed are beginning to take on [ Just what is meant by the term sad, inane | lege man,” whether this means a grad- been | edict | | hue, a soft, order has uate of an agricultural college an elite, and For the h%on Dy the the academic institution. In the case of the been formulated promul- | high school graduates, however, it is that Summer maids with | known that these, while pursuing their led knees must stop parading the | re ar courses of study, are not in- costumes | troduced to subjects pertaining to the those after the garb af in aquatic lonea milady of | tilling of the soil this gathered | So from the inves- | committee " horus. tigation conducted by is to be for all contemplating nmer maids with dimpled knee: there encourage There at must Atla How i ment students a description. those who are shown g one strok ore of these life on the farm, yodness acious! either as directing managers or as o ble! At all the joy of | dinary farmers. A new road has been ing at such a place is taken | gpened to the college graduate. And No more the great | T trol-{ ing should elysian | pt s of men life. there is no reason why his book learn- motor or hinder his success. to No fram nearby cities the k be NEW member: th de the sea more will H THE and | REVENUE of BILL, Baltimore, ety York send their |y 00 ghts | Lights | ;. and nd N o the F ington, jdelpt orty the b W the Democratic majority City pled barred entat of passing the ominibus revensc s iin knees and | 4y 0uoh the | This emphatic House of Representatives ow from g 5 vote, prosu warthy bill s a hot sands between the tide why ing e reception whither it fic dar of the in the Senate walk and the incomi ld ties for It if Tow. I on now goes. Its many modi- hen their business | B % men € itions, adopted since the original to the sea- aft by the ways an would Atlantic City all Sl mittee will all thc to hands deserted the place| 1 crnment many this pravide revenue for ov- apled knees maids there i T % e to accom- | 1 iniinent as th *ommi anythir g thesc i which it are to wicked | n sent boons no mortal mar e ol St than guess. Is there anything poTe thi of any one fmpled knee > 101 | 1o litical investizgating . in association v Summer of vers of n have heen nay! She the most The charming & | made extremc if it works ble all womankind BT and the accordi f once all | realm of r girl in her furs, ver: o will be removed from Spring exquisite. palitics. An the Sum | vision in the bill will protect word to rs from unfair after this American produc com- And What if uniforr r ju what if her knees | oo the Hutor springing pean All ! Bill, while it h | cf the most representati smile | : Ml | ver framed in the House up all < some mpled ? when she dons fathing war. in revenue and parades the A e a parasol overhead, the galder a parasol ¢ 1d, th len ve measures her dimples X lacks It has the £ the i e e of ship. temptress? ey | @approval of held partisan be banished as a e P iblad hnoeetoje B representatives in the lawer branch of Cc By this token it with people’s e and scorn by some octo- | 18T ess, amendments, Senate. ans who have nothing else to do | some abeut for innocent prey upon Iy s the to { n protect vent puritanical obsessions? the maid and formed Frei cording Summer Th A msterc being in ht mpled knees from such as these. insatlantic er fear dimpled knees and S immer maids who Atlantic Cit These scattered own them |eliable news despatches, and b hat go from or any place s of ere coasts for just | the month of Ausust is over onc of like order. little | 4 s schednled to fly into Zeppelins Eden arc here | York carryir dvestuffs, along the Atiantic The name such recrea- for this journey of <hip cd Z-Deutschland promi s the Summer girl demands. n prerogative that parade | glready the beach in her grl| Jine the coming of e. After a winter pent up in| with passenge na fashions of other ‘cut the | it b in her cries for freedom. And | mother of invention, view what she in the submari Zeppelin 1 happened chorus a wden na cargo will tle wonder. ity is always the Summer | dimple | oy | col- | prescribed | old- | stuff bill | ion | “anti-dumping” | favor- | to | fore | of | cause | FACTS AND | 'ANCIES, Why are there no pacifist parades? The walking is good.—Toledo Blade. need —Indi- What the country appears to is more American American | anapolis News. Our idea of nothing to discuss in this presidential campaign George Sylvester Viereck.—Baltimore Sun. is | The worst suggestion we have heard is that Mr. Roosevelt should take M, | Hughes' the supreme bench. —Chicago Post i It might good idea, also, for | the numerous candidates to enlist. —Atlanta Journal. be a | Sister Sus | pation of —Baltimore e can resume her occu- ewing shirts for soldiers. American. | Uncle Sam has things to consider | more important than even a presi- | dential campaign.—Washington Star. wheel horse always drives lines.—Louisville Cour- | The old | well to party | ier-Journal. | | Will the German-American Alliance | just to be consistent, now set up a shout against the shipment by the Deutschland of munitions and war supplies>—New York Herald. | | “Know-it-alls” who Mexican job would have been easier had it been started a few years ago forget that war is weakening instend of strengthening the Mexicans.—Har- risburg Patriot declare the Mr. as the Parker, who is flopping about tail of the late progressive | tiexcet, calling for a head. Have | seen chickens do the same thing aft- | er being decapitated, but it didn’t last | long.—Brooklyn Standard-Union. | A wonderful change has come over ! Gen. Carranza of late. He not only the Uhited States of impending by bandits, but he offers the fullest co-operation with Gen. Per- | shing’s forces, which only a little | while ago he was unceremoniously or- | dering out of the country. An attitude !u' kind six or eight weeks e prevented o great New Yor World. where they k ai | about cducation and farming too, rn‘omos word that college graduates | are the most successful farmers. Wa | | raids this is a deal ‘0 vould 1 of | trout From Tthaca, 0w have always believed in hrains as fer- | tilizer, but we cannot quite make out | from the Tthaca despatch whether the | college man manages to raise more than the high or gram- school graduate whether h success is due to command of | the art of marketing advantageously the product of his acres At any [ it takes the of brains to brawn into bullion.—New Yor] school mar or hetter rate | turn Sun. use Merely Haman (New York Sun.) The Connecticut a golf ball dis ved tho human curiosity. He wished to prove for himself whether w he had heard ahout the deadliness of the core was true. From the time manufac- | turers hegan making the present of ball they have warned people | ¢ gainst its danger, i€ A hoy begins his experiments when | ! against the admonitions of his par- | ents he burns | on a hot | plate. He he | takes his 1 the fornian youth who hit into a oughly fingers when to continues them <t watch g0 declared not possihly i to around Cali- that snake be fatal to | himself to | er- ik | that the | Many folk sea stories | | about the man eating proclivities of | | the shark. Before another yvear has will he those who will in- | than has just Jersey coast Missouri is the motto but of humanity. All Men undertake political, social and their in scien- big game hunts and dangerous that they ave failed. would not | pieces see W wheels A who could ~ently venom man, 1 he hitt pent scientists expert always permitted scovered it n by a newly declared in proving was right mistrusted passed there st furnished more proc on the ey i notto of state shown adventures in life, 1 experiment in v | | | i | business isk lives | tific | explorations inknown, they bhelieve where others otherwise they ands hecaus cceed aid man Mr. King's Column. (Bridgeport Farmer.) John T. King has arrived at a dig- | nity not accorded to former republican | | Jeaders of Bridgeport. He | umn or two in the Hartford from time to time, which has come to be known in this end of the state as column.” The views | frequently have a to which Mr. which he in- season 1as a col- Courant, “King's | therein expressed | striking likeness has expressed, or | tends to express in due On Information gained from “King column,” it would appear that -the distinguished republ boss ¢ontem- plates taking a hand | tion of the for | The | gressman those King | W | | an ihe in the nomir candidate next democratic congress. that Con- look in, saying that declares ha Courant Donovan vt nother of 1g hopes he hasn’t Courant correspondent showed | him some democratic newspaper clip- whereupon, “Quick as a flash ‘m not taking my poii- democratic e which is | Mr. Ki | The | pings | he replied, ties from Mr. Kings give his politic party, and the editor Co The democratic party little but the editor of The Courant falls like Did he it Chicago, his friend Henney and “for political reasons?” newspapers. pref s apparently the democratic of The int. 1s a coy to to | ipe one. not vote for against Mr. King. The (From Now London Amatear Farmeress, Punch.) Farmer. me see if vou can milk that Girl (by vocation barmaid the horns)—Which handle’'s for | the milk ana which for the cream? 1 | circumstance | te | that time*h® German people will have se | Tor excellent | wen. NEW, BRITAIN DAILY HERALD. WEDNESDAY, JULY 12, 1016. WHAT OTHERS SAY questions as discussed In ex- changes that come to tho | ’ Views on all sides of timely i L‘ Herald Office. I Word (Rochester Artistry, Post-Express.) is the presi- the use of words. If rot always impartant, his thoughts re charmingly garbed, as when he told the New York Press club that the and virtue of a nation as of a do not come from the top, but from the raots in the obscure of the earth the power is derived which displays itself in blos- soms and fruit. He had precided over a university, he said, but necver deceived himself into supposing that by university processes were produced the ruling forces of the world or those ideals which have lifted men | slowly, oh, how slowly, up the arduous grades which have resisted progress since the world began. And again, he says that the United States is something bigger and greater and finer than any of us; that it was born in an ideal and that only by pursuing an ideal in the face of every adverse will it continue to de- serve the name we love and for which we are ready to die, that name, America. Almost incomparable dent's artistry in nower tree that passages Training a War Lord. (New York World.) Much sympathy should be the share of the little Hohenzollern Prince who on his tenth birthday was en- rolled in the army as a lieutenant of a guard regiment. As the grandson of the Kaiser, as the san of the Crown Prince, he is the victim of a system cherished by the rulers of Germany. He is in line for the throne, and be- fore he is old enough to realize what it means he has entered upon his training as War Lord. This is militarism, naked and un- cisguised. It is the perfect Prussian ideal, which, as Moltke said, makes war the national industry. It is the first theory in which the dvnasty that holds the destiny of the German 1pire in its hands breeds and edu- cittes the future rulers of the German | people, Before they are out of ieading-strings they must be conse- | crated to the holy cause of war and shaped for the carcer of a War Lord whom millions of Germans owe their obedience. Tt may be that the ten-year-old Prince Willlam, upon whom the title of licutenant has been thrust at a time | when his country is in the midst of a disastrous war, will live to emulate his dfather forty hence by leading Germany through similar | bloody experience. Or, it may be, by vears a taken cispensed of their control of their own aff with the glorious Hohenzollerns irs and services The_ Salesman’s Gospel, (New York World.) On Sunday, the day formal opening of the manship Congress in Detroit, many of the local pastors turned their pul- | pits over to delegates as lay preachers, with results that appear to have been minently satisfactory Sale man- S, tising representatives and ffic perts discussed our busi- 1ess ethics and made a favorable im- jression hoth for the quality of thelr and the manner of their Perhaps there is no occasion hat a gaod salesman make fair pulpit orator; inly the sermons contain an creed not only for salesman- for the every day relations preceding the World's Sales- | adve iency ex mons Aclivery surprise t should but cer ship but life. Among the precepts for success were these: That harmeny servi better dividends than enmity and con- tention: that reliability is the ke stone o fthe ethics of salesmanship; that courtesy, loyalty and co-ope tion are essentia that misleading advertising and deceit and fraud have no place in the world of industry. This is the very Golden Rule tiade, defined as clearly as a clergvman could define it. The salesmen-preachers may be congrati- jated on their ‘prentice work in| the pulpit Only respecting one statement is a word editorial cxegesis needed. This w the cof- fect that *“many people or the idea that every salesman is a crook and that he has called for sole purpose of unscropulously money.” That delusion persists, hut most recognize that sales part are more inclined to underr: than to overestimate the meri the goods they have to sell and e pay of s to a the taking no doubt | rational people now for the most 1en To Defeat Wilson, (New The Progress hails and hymns it: “In the minds of the republican leaders the paramount issue is the de- feat of Mr. Wilson—wherein we heartily agree with them In the chaster phrase er Flanagan of Flanagan's Mills: “What are we here for?” The paramount issue is to put Mr. Wilson out and put the in Simple, intelligible, sympathetic to reople who have been out in the cald for three years and more. As to this supreme issue of “beatin Wilton,” a quotation from Mr. Hughe acceptance decisive: “In every de- partment of government the highest cfficiency must be insisted on.” Hay- ing an efficient executive, the country is askked to substitute a green hand York Times.) ve Boston Journal of the Hon republicans Yighting for Prance., (New York He late Robert E. Inger: pecuniary Instead af in the Bible, used to he the ruler of the would make health instc contagions Something The 11, who spiritual that he disease fou profit were say universe a of of heen he sort hag France sinc the The spir this accomplishe | Allies is largel celf animated and patriatism that has entire nation has com- sacrifice the Spring, Summer and Fall In Three Months on Border i Washington, July 12—“Ono of the greatest problems facing the officers of our National Guard now on the Mexican border is how to keep their men and horses supplied with water,” today's war geography bulletin issued st Washington by the National Geographic society. “While the water question is a seri- ous throughout a wide zone on both banks of the 1,100 mile Rio Grande boundary, it vastly more important along the 700 mile line ex- tending from Bl Paso to the Pacific. Throughout the latter section the av- crage rainfall does not exceed eight inches a vear, while in some parts of the Yuma desert there have been droughts when the aggregate rainfall for twelve months has been less than three-fourths of an inch. “Throughout this region there are two so-called ‘rainy seasons,’ the more | important being that which extends from the first of July to the middle of September. “For the next two months our bor- der soldiers will witness a remarkable growth of vegetation, the molsture and the intense hoat combining to | cause grass, graln, frults and flowers to spring to life and maturity as if auickened by somo magic of the wiz- ard’s wand. All growing things of the soll will experfence spring, summer and autumn in the space of three months. Then leaves and grass, shrubs and vines will shrivel as the clouds disappear and a brazen sky once more canoples a region of ‘si- lence, solitude and sunshine.’ “Between the Rio Grande and the | Pacific coast the international boun- dary line crosses only flve running streams, the first of these In the west- ward journey being in the San Ber- nardino valley, 192 miles from Fl Paso, where thousands of cattle find | excellent pasturage. Just south of | the line, along the Bernardino creek, a tributary of the Yaqui river, are the ruins of an adobe fort, a relic of an extensi settlement in the days of | Spanish dominion In the new world “Even where running water Iis | found along this frontfer it is not al- | ways conveniently available for irrl- | gation purposes. For example, the San Pedro river, which crosses the | boundary midway between Douglas and Nogales, Arizona, has cut so deep- ly into the soil ‘that the bed of the | fifteen-foot stream is now far below | the surrounding land, making gravity | ation impossibl “Beyond the Santa Cruz the boun- | dary line crosses a desert region where the intelligent, peace-loving Papagos | Indians lead a strange existence, con- centrating all their agricultural activi- | in the three or fouf rainy-season months when land becomes an inten- | sive-culture garden of great fertility. With the clouds of June the na- tives rush to their ‘temporales,’ small | l says one ties tracts of land in the vicintty of nat- ural or artificial water holes, where { shallow irrigation ditches are dug and where quickly-maturing beans, pump- kins, melons and Indian corn are planted. One of the chief articles of food in this region is the fruit of a | giant cactus, which ripens in June and July. It is eaten fresh, is dried for winter, boiled and preserved, and made into a syrup, while a consider- able portion of the annual yield is converted into a much prized intoxi- cating beverage. After the summer harvest the Papagos migrate to the mountains where they gather acorns for food. In lean years they subsist largely on mesquite beans and certain varleties of grass seed. ‘‘These Indians are constantly. sus- tained in their hard battle forexist- ence by the belief that their Messiah, whom they call ‘Mocte- zuma,’ will come some day to correct all abuses and make the desert his garden of paradise. The entrance to their adobe huts face the cast so that the great benefactor will find all doors open when he comes with the rising sun. “The heat In the desert regtons during the summer months is over- powering Government surveying parties have had to endurs 115 de- grees, Fahrenheit, in the shade, while the gradations of the ordinary ther- mometer are not sufficlently high to record the terrific heat in the sun, which has been known to reach 150 degrees. “On the eastern slope of the Sierra de Tinajas Altas, three miles north of the boundary line, there is an exten- sive eemi-circular ampitheater in the | midst of which is a serfes of curious reservoirs. Here seven great natural tanks have been carved from the rocks in the course of centuries by water tumbling down a narrow gorge dur- ing the rainy season. These tanks have a capacity of from 15,000 to 20,- 1 000 gallons and the water which they catch each summer is protected from evaporation by overhanging cliffs. Some of these tanks can be reach- ed only after a difficult climb, and the imaginative traveler can readily r ture the many Tantalus tragedies which occurred here during the great gold rushes of the ‘fiftles’ and the ‘sixtles’ Numerous crosses of stone in the vicinity mark the graves of those perishing prospectors who reached the great reservoirs but who | had not sufficlent reserve strength to scale the rocks and place their parched lips to the rim of these giant beakers of life-giving water. “The heat and dryness of the at- mosphere in this desert land induce such profuse perspiration that both men and horses require an abnormal quantity of water, the average for men being seven quarts a day and for mules and horses twenty gallons.” municated has itself to other peoples and proved a power in rousing a like spirit in the slow moving FEnglish That it has also helped to stir the courage af her allies is undeniable. To this spirit may be tra¢ed the enthusiasm for the French cause that animates the youth of this country and has led many of our roung men to enlist undex Ber colors. In the notice of the death of the gal- lant voung Victor Chapman the words “fighting for France” volced the pride of his family in the ser to which he had dedicated his life. The gal- lantry of voung Wendell, son of the Jate Jac Wendell, of the New Theatre Company, is a matter of equal pride to his kinsfolk in this country, for he, too, was fighting for the same cause under the British flag. The unity of purpose that marks the present offensive movement of the the fruit of the spirit | that has been fittingly likened to that of Joan of Arc and has made an in- delible impress on the whale civilized orld, undoubted a 80 To Those Who (Collier Would Write, Weekly.) An industrious feclingly writes us the road to editorial is a knack in =selling convinced [here must magic short cut somewhere. looking for that knack, that hypnotic road.. It if's a trick head or the hand or the heart, to master it and break into the big league of real writers.” A Southern correspondent declares: “I have heard that your magazine has become so firmly established that you are willing to publish articles and stories upon their own merits without regard to whether the writer be famous or un- known.” These friends deserve more than an individual response. Tt Is only a fallacy that editors are hostile to the unknown writer and so awed hy famous names that they discrim- irate unfairly against the beginner. The discovery of new writer is an oceasion for celebration, and within the last month we have rejected man- uscripts from the pens of some six of the writers in England and noted writers never jection. ‘“The of them in an element voung Westerner “What I need is tolerance. There stuff, I am likewise be a I% am short, of the I want a a best known America. These complain at a T literary game,” sald one our office recently, ‘“has of gamble in it, and a writer will do well to make up his mind to accept this fact.” We should like to have our voung contributors know that writers hecome famous by mastering the in- tricacles of a difficult and delicate art. There no other way—no ‘short, hypnotic road.” 18 Bulk and Brain, (Hartford Times.) s there are which are too ob- why the elephant | emblem to repre- party Natural | The elephant in bulk has member of Courant y reasons The food many to mention,” selected the republican supplies one. vious an cent histor proportion to his physical than any other ¢ss brain n TO ECONOMIZE ON GASOLINE. Many Ways by Which Driver of Auto- mobile May Effect a Saving of Fxpenses. (Exchange.) Don’t expect to get a record num- ber of miles per gallon of gasoline— If vour brakes are poorly adjusted and dragging (then they are absorb- ing and changing into heat power that should be propelling the wheels.) If you are continually seelng how fast you can get over the ground (the wind resistance on a car is appreota- able, and it increases as the square of the speed of the car, and at high speeds even more than that. If your carburetor is not adjusted right (an overrich or an overlean mix- ture in the cylinder will not have the power a good mixture will) If your valves are pitted and burned and leaking (they will let a large part of the power escape before doing its share of the work.) If your pistons and piston rings are worn and loose (lots of the power will get by them.) If you are trying to economize by using a “cheap” ofl (the very best you can get receives hard enough us- age, let alone trylng to use an oil that will burn and gum and cause carbon deposits.) If you do not keep the spark ad- justment set at the best place (an ex- plosion caused by a spark coming at the wrong time s always weaker than it ought to he.) Canned Art. (New York Tribune) The news that Grieg’s “Peer Gynt” suite and Lisat's “Hungarian Rhap- sody” are proving to be the best sel- lers of the talking machines, topping even the “End of a Perfect Day,” may not be an unqualified victory. Judging by the vagrant music that floats in to one’s pillow these oum- mer nights, the current melodies are still doing an excellent business. And rightly, we suggest. Current music, like current fiction and current news, is the small talk of lfe. It would be a rather solemn world if we fed our souls only on Beethoven, Shakespears and Plutarch’s Lives. The important point is that the better music is being bought and played on a large and increasing scale. In many ways mechanioal music s the most interesting aid de- mocracy has invented. Just as mod- ern printing presses made newspa- pers feasible an dthereby enabled a widespread natlon to think collective- 1y, the talking and playing machines are diffusing musical ideas upon an unprecedented scale. Tt will be nter- esting in the retrospect, a thousand years hence, to look back and see how science has made possible each step ahead in modern human progress. Movable types made the reforma- tion possible, it can be argued. And certainly without the telegraph, the rallways and the rotary printing presses, modern democracy would be a very different and probably a far less successful experiment. The democratic ideal of art has the animal kingdom. been slowest to win jts way. Walt McMiLLAN’S New Britain’s Busy Big Store— “Always Reliable.” PECIAL SALE AILOR MADE SUITS Misses’ Sizes Only 14, 15, 16, 17 Years. All at One Prrice $9.90 Each Values up to $20.00. On Sale Friday Morning At 8:30 A. M. July Clearance of Men’s Shirts” 50c Each Value 69c¢ to $1.00. Sizes 14 , to 17-inch neck band. FITRITE UNION SUITS Special Sale 39c each, 3 for $1 Women'’s sizes 5 to 9. Sleeveless, lace trimmed and tight knee styles. MEN’S BALBRIGGAN UNDERWEAR Full size double seated Drawers, long or short sleeve Shirts, ribbed tail. Special Value 25¢ garment. Sizes 82 to 16. U. MeMILLAN 199-201-203 MAIN STREET. Whitman portrayed it in cratic Vistas” ye ago saw a new literature, ture, a new music from the people—not the luxury of a vored class but the necessity of It was Whitman's greatest ment that he himself, in work, personified this ideal. eal descendants have been scarc | enough, and democratic art in Amer ica has little to hoast Perhaps it was a of this elusive quality which the “Spoon thology us as « Now by way art may his “Demo- He fore- new arck upspringing rs a 1 fa- all achieve- his own Yet lin- of. sense made * stir Riv eeply as it the question arises of musi the democracy not find fresh begi simply by reiterating This End of a Perfect Day, But music, much music, is at in every home. Simulated thing of special culture. rote from a fortunate few gained in this But real taste as the product of indi ear, learned by much listening peated blundering and many sons, lie exactly on this ready the returns from counter give favorable we are inclined to vidual observation view. It is one joy of true You do not tire of it; Perfect Day has {ts Inevitable when you feel impelled hurl accursed disk out the window have seen this happen. Enough artistic decisions driven home taste is surely around the corner. 1d whether of nin Not to be concede. the we any rate taste ag a learne cannot be dual way may a answer think that suppor indi- this that every Tnd art whereas to ts Wo .uch and Best. Post.) Big Ottles (Boston The Fourth of July and they Compared with 10 reports bring are about in a of good cheer statistics of even message the years the ago, figures of fatalities and accidents to- And arises to suggest that the day day are marvelously improved nobody Other has been spoiled attractions than mere noise have proven that they have a right to exist. gaining all along the One curfous fact that is that the larger safer and saner the York, for instance, was this year al- most entirely free from the bang of big explosives. Other large places make the same reports. It is in t small cities and towns that license terrorize and full swing by elsewhere f{llegal—ana there, as well—noises. The small city does not enforce its own ordi- nances. The police are too well ac- quainted with the citizens and wink at violations. The old crazy uproar is fulminated against in the local pa~ pers, but never stopped it easily could ba. But even in those towns, reason is gradually coming to her own. She does not demand a cessation of good, healthy and sensible noise. But frowns upon outrageous and danger- ¢ ous manifestations. Some day thes latter will all go by the board, Civilization line noticeal and the cities the Fourth. New is is to to distract sometimes as