New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 13, 1916, Page 6

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EW, BRITAIN DAILY- HERALD, THURSDAY, JULY 13, 1916. niost must American horse by experienced fishermen, who trolled | NEW BRITAIN HERALD |™cr, v reve been sovcrls con-trins e ac i aasn—ton ta sured. The excuse for such acts is the Thus WHAT OTHERS SAY the day following motorboats manned HERALD PUBLISHING COMPANY. old adage, An Ounce of Precaution Is Ereeders and farmers make ready to = Proprietor better than a Pound of Cure. Better 'fill in the gap. Already a million || yiews on all sides fssued dally (Surday excepted) at 4:15 p. m., | be careful than sorrowful Kcrses have been sent from this coun- at Herald {lding, 67 Church St o changes that come to tho to destroy any sharks that might be | e C d by th with quarters of sheep for bait and | eronne apture y e s i of timely had loaded rifles ready, patrolled the | ] o e | ; ‘ : - Duke of Wellington in 1815 | Herald Office. in the waters. This ple will be con- < N | tinued pending the completion of ‘ children. It comes like a thief in the | purchases abroad will be larger. | questions as discussed in ex- sea off Spring Lake beach in an effort e | Pelivered by carrie. to any part of the city | .\ ., s | : nore permanent safeguards. At that Washington, D. C., July 18.—Per- |aid the soverelgn against Rudolph, for 15 Cenes a Week, 85 Cents a Month, | Dight and no one sees its approach w, then, is the time to replenish the | A Party in the Sere and Yellow Leat, | heach. Ashury Park, Ocean Grove and ¢ i bjeotive of | duke of Burgundy Pubscriptions for paper to be sent by mell, | [, New York an average of ; 3 At i s A | onne, the first important objective of rgundsy BRPRnIa 1 aaven e, G0 Conts) & Monthl| LY AW Yorkhanfayerage tofitwenty of horse needed in war and in | (New York Times.) cther resorts closc-meshed mets of [ © " i 3 e Peronne was the scene of another $7.00 a Y it e o 1 A i S eavy wire are being used to inclose | the French and English forces N act of treack 2 a French rult .00 a Year. | five deaths a day visited little childrer Heel With the EederallGoveriment (R InE (008 1 et e bitn st o £ S ' s E cachery against a French < — e e ot b s et Wil Suizes o omi- | 411 the bathing grounds, and the life | the allies’ “big push” was inausur- | er five hundreq years later when the 18,0017, profitabla advertising medtom 1a BRG Ve ! Jecause the IR RGN RUCHES: DA Lo el Bl s TOT BOVEINOr of | zuards have been ordered to enforce | ated, is described in today's war geo- | ‘bourgeols king', Louis XT, trusting B fiua s o booke ianea young and 1 ss are the x- | of great business for stock breeders | 5 S “*‘)j,‘ "l are Now Wy- | strictly the rule against swimming to the diplomac of gold, visited 1 e e Sordicoraqcent e Charles the Bold. Two days affar Re Herald will be found on sate at Hota: |, B o 3 presidential nomination. The Drohibi- | shark vietims met Thui bl b P e b & wE ng's New St 422 St. and Broad- | the 1 LR (@ 2 t _— tion party has now become a political ; ; Gt o Nav centertof & o L way, New York it ronrd W 2 Sl - . e A s al | nets are stretched from the sea hot- he important railway center of | sion of conciliation, there came the L Dlomead Al fat | impressed upon th s | There was never any doubt that edventurer; its state corresponds to 3 — and f: s th caution | United States government would de- Infantile paralysis stretches its| try to the battlefiolds of Hurops Entered at the Post Office at New Britala | dly i s direction of e it & Second Clase aan Matter. deadly hand in the direction of little | After the suspension of hostilities the | raphy bulletin of the National Geo- hevond the »pes, where both the 3 their fate. The | 'aphy society as follows: posed the dangers of wase | in the future L - : : tem to the high-water mark It is | Peronne, rich with historic associa- | news of a supposed massacre of the —— LML e (CrcnbicilatCiRD Ity | ncedless to add that there has been | iong of ancient and medieval France, | bishop and ducal governor of Liege. ustness Ofmcer ... 25 | st e taken suard the 3lth | clave the German submiersible Deut-|\v: oo o o0 8 (Ib o [ evcat dimin 1 in surf bathing | 5ac a town of less than 5,000 people | The rumor was false, b Charigy ial Raama 938 | of their youngster At the firet sisn | schland a merchant ship. There | e 1‘ Dot h{mm‘?-'m‘ since such precautions have beco#e | at the outbreak of the war, and it nad | Suspecting Louis of double-deallng, - E a a E . ere ks to hide behind and “barrels” to | necessary i igni hrew the I nd kept him | d rccessary. little industrial or commercial signi- | threw the king in prison and 7 { fed, — i 1 nt C be called. Ther I v | T R : e ficance, but for nearly three hundred | in a cell until he consented to sitn cian should bo called. There should | the enemies of Germany are trying to | he prohibition party was a What Is Patriotism? vears it bore an honored nom de |the ‘Treaty of Peronme, insuring Ml | | { of undue symptons the family phy: | was no evidence to the contrary. Now irettes, es and tobac- 5 Ui o et A be no delay. Nipped in the bud, any | get this gavernment to prevent a re- :‘“j\ ‘l\‘m’,“;fl‘}‘]-‘o:«‘v;"lpfi:‘é; b m‘v tlr;“\\t;"'v (Christian Herald.) guerre, La Pucelle, (The Impregna- | Flanders freedom from the ~-i‘“0\- i ke s ic s s be curtaile A ve 3 L E ver to trouble the = : = 5 = el raris. sickness. may be curtailed. Allowed | turn shipment of nickle on board the |'dreams of the republican lc'\der; St What is patriotism? Love of coun- | ble), this distinction having been ac- | tion of the parlement in x”arx_“g The is to on without medical attention in | S 5 aders. St.) 0" I it good or bad? Tolstoy said | corded it in 1536 when the eourageous | treaty was the most humiliating epl. > 20' 0! al a Deutschland hey claim this metal | John's spirited canvass in 1884. st |53 Isitg ads Ay 7 for the people of i . e | i cne of the th o it is bad. These are his word “In | woman, Marie Foure, also known as | sode in Louis’ life, for the peop gt R e e iboushdin (Caba s hundenian marcen| BN RH IS pas thatdetoatodi Rlaine : : is | Cathrine de Poix, successfully defend- | Picardy taught their tame jays and il e ey | 3 : Tolviar il the e our day the feeling of patriotism i h : ) bacco, , fine wcco, coage cut | Will eventually exact a heavy deb# | ment that it would,not be given over | Alstithe tepuplican ing an unmatural, irrational amd harmful | €@ it against the imperial forces of | magples to cry ‘Peronne’ and ‘Pep- | commanded by the count | ette’ in derision of the sveretgn; | edium cigars; but no bad cigars. riar pipes, clay pipes, T. D’s, and deens. Chewing tobacco, smoking ¥ . | found the prohibitionists a rock e this is the way with. infantile | to the Germans. This too must fail| their path. In 1888, led b: feeling and a cause of a great part of | Charles V, ¥ | 519t Y of Nassau. The title ‘impregnabl Thoroughly mortified, Louis J ar kills or £ s fo a N States gover: o = ‘lintor s & the ills - ic' mankind is suf- It either kills or maims for | as the United States government has | Clinton B, T and even in J:\ .ul‘ Tr?ylf“)l;:‘r\!\i::l‘hn:‘ul‘dmnl:::l],,q(‘u;::r was dropped by the city in 1815, how- | mined to find a scapegoat and vated, but should be suppressed and | €ver, for in that year it was captured | al 1 Balue was the unha v”\ ] e eranlcs(calpyianilimeenst avatiahlaBiol By i0e Daksiof e D Eiob et Mol B s et B e : f Gl dnanty Maneenfoveak o b liraitea TR en iToTs oyilie i ed ol RiAAE 0 BRES OnE S S SROE R e R R e nal salds | with some portion of its body para- | It is up to them, not the United States | Inck of vofes hehind candidates sup- | 1°¢] thus because he has been all his | B€e 10 tTe frango-Berme: BRER G |20 Fete com O even years while lyzed. As dreadful as such thoughts [ government, to keep the faith, - .- ported by David Lamar, hohind the | life face to face with perverted forms | B0 \B° 1 L (TR D00 0P Nd only | Harancourt was confined In an iren candidacy of a self-confessed corrup- capitulated because the civil popula. age, like a wild beast, for thirteen ppacco, all f tobacco. fe the nondescript selections i e SR Once it gets a secure grip on a | entered into no such agreement. | hen General John Bidwell was its 3 by F | canaiaate, it was force to s from enns it means death or it means that [ Such an agreement might exist be- Bime. When the hour of noon sound. | the little one must go through life ptween private busin enterprises. the package was securely icked away in the cartons destined r Companies E and I of the First of patriotism. Hec had scen so much are it is better to ponder them now e battioham cahad gseengaopmug bad patriotism that he refused at last | | > i o 5 S Ty 1 vho was not ev member of | % it : § e land act cautiously than to dismiss all FACTS AND FANCIES. ) en a member of | e s e tlon was being decimated by an cpi- | vears. : i r party, and at ! ol £y A oD elloveRthatipatriotismcanieye sib el fHiee TS smallpox The history of Peronne goes back seduce a millionaire into furnishing it | “The French maintained Peronne |to the days of the Frankish with a bogus appearance af strensth. | as a small military stronghold until | Clovis II, who owned a villa here and What has caused the downfall of | ten vears ago when its fortifications | who gave it to his mayor of the pal | | | egime Connecticut National good In this the great Russian s mis- | taken. He assumed that if man is patriotic he must believe s own thoughts of danger and become reck- king 1f.B. R. keeps on with his war brig- ; V. ; adegifea, he'll ind himself all dressed | of Health. Take caggfof the children’s | up and no place to go—but out—— | health. New York Call. | ard. On Monday the allotment wil rive in camp. Then there shall be | 1685 Follow the adyjge of the Board eat rejoicing and smoking. IThis is the first consignment of to- the prohibition party? The success of . were razed, but up to the time of the | ace, Erchinoaldus, founder of rle prohibition. As prohibition has added | COUNtry is superlor to all others, and | ;40,4 gweep of the Germans tow- | monastery of St. Fursy in the seventh victory to victory. the prohibition | If the citizens of every state think |,.q paris in the summer of 1914 the | century. It received its charter frog hix of their own state, then all 1ive in | g5y _towered castle was still standing | the French crown in 1209 nothingness and from respectability | & 8ross and harmful delusion. But| ;3 \ictors were shown the cell in “The town is situated on the to disgrace, until now it is a political | t/S is reading into patriotism some- | \pjch iy the tenth century, the un- | river, ninety-four miles by rail north [Fhorec hos Hoit come of ita slory | Uncls it uidine. b e b bond. All the importance it now | :“mg wplchidossmogibelons ire: ‘TO happy French king, Charles the Sim- | of Paris, and thirty-five miles east of pnt. The generosity of the com- | - o it den e Baitetia as is for trading purposes, like the | Pe Patriotic it is not necessary to be-| ple posthumous son of Louis the [ Amiens. Tt is twenty miles by rak | Were it not for the great Furopean s . Trving Hall democracy of this city for | lieve that one’s own country is super- | Stammerer, was starved to death. | east of Fricourt, one of the first Wik vears before it died a miser- | ior to all others, nor is it necessary to | Charles was kept a prisoner here by | lages taken by the British in their of- able death. Every new victory for | Wish his country to get the greatest | (nhe treacherous Herbert, count cf | fensive which began on the first day prohibition drives another nail in the | #dvantages and power at the expense | Yermandols, who had promised to & coffin of the prohibition party. Young | Of the advantages and power of other ‘ Sibvelioon o iarrreny o) meni nollonger) jomiits ranics inadithe | beoplssl o= fates SIa ot el cozmifot F 0, however, there has been awakened | froquent only warm waters. It be. | €14 men keep it up, some of them | Patriotism, however, exceedingly com- e e e s i hin county now interet in e comes moro 'and more’ evident | 1 mere foree of Bkt mme of mOM IS tepeoves weio e en x| | 000D ARRAY OF NEW BOOKS NAMED er conditions not as conducive to % 2 e horse. With our own troops lining up | the only safe shark is the dead shark. I _ | | oyment as »se here lew Bri- | by Ui “hauta P iroyuit e here = S 5 % S y | o | cco sent to our boys at the front It has taken Santo Domingo some he readers of the Herald responded WANTED: MORE HORSES, time to recognize what is best for it, but if the people of that republic are In this age of the automobile the | convinced of the wisdom of accepting party has fallen from importance to | omme bly to the request that the citizens home remember the boys at the nity has asserted itself. The move- : S ar with its thirsty demand for| ., ;44 featurc of the present shark cavalry mounts there might be even a at the heaches is that it should greater falling off in the breeding of | have come in a year when the water is almost unprecedentedly cold. “Man nt is young and as the warm davs tinue and serve as reminders of | k still warmer climate in Arizona | : | thoroughbreds, TIn the past month or bre will be more work along this g le. The boys are in camp. living lr. The regular routine of camp t Roger Casement, compares him to new propaganda startéd by the De- | 5 5 o the extinction of a party are thick ! The House of My Fathers. about the prohibition party. Tf it had | John Brown. Casement only violated | died twenty-five vears ago 1t would|ihe law of treason, Brown violated | Adventures in thrift, by A.'S. Rich- {the logs of the whalemen.'—A. L. that and the race instinct put in him ardson. Booklist. essitates many sacrifices from B 05 who but'a month ago were || Soriment of Sgrioultusel the business | (clarence Ousley, in Sea Power.) B fue carerree Hyos of civinane, | OF T91IRE hotses Blds ShiE to takeron | qg, 1 the Bouse of my Fathers Bove feund miaww saod mnd Hcne new life. This is the golden appor-| And I am my father’s son; men to maurn it. None will mourn | by his Creator, then violated the law PR A tunity for horsemen. In peace as well | As ye are to be who abide hetg, it now, and It cannot die too soon: for | Azainst murder. Casement does not | Efficient living; by Edward Earle Pur- | Sons and daughters, by Mrs. S. M. | in war the horse has his place. If so we be many in one. its purpose is gone, its moralit is e to be classed with a beast like ington. Gruenberg ¢ Wide are the portals 3 sious, o t e is y Dol 3row! Birmingham Ledger. “It is wri ; si ity “This book has to do with the & Rl ine el a RS o i (ide axe the portalslend open dubious, and there is no room in poli- | Brown irmi m Tt 15 written with sincerity and “This book ha d v - lacco. And if they are out on liber- | o all who come hither or go, tics for dereliate) It has! becoma! an —— energy, and is admirably complete.” | training of older children, boys amn it is not always financially possible | off the city streets and country roads | But the rule of the House I insist on, | unedifying old reprobate, and should m —Wisconsin Library Bulletin. girls of adolescent age. The author's t 2 M | for the time being, his departure will| And who disobeys is my foe. Pesone, | oS l LI attitude is wise and sane."—Book Re- them to purchase. Money a J In the footsteps of Napoleon, by |view Digest. 4y : +. - |be only temporary. The horse must - - ious problem in the life of a soldier. | My fArstineste e e e et e | C e ha is ps abors 1 1 B4s' shioa to remember thoss who | ©0MS back. His patient labors in the | “p ) o iine on Mountain and veldt, (New i e e e “The author travelel nearly 20,000 |Spell of the Holy Land, by Archie B To send re.|Past helped to fructify the earth. { Of) Saxonlandiolas e odliGontiie) > aven Journal Courier.) ' miles to the famous scenes in Napol- Bell. & i 1 | Tn no other country in the world L fli 4 eon’s life and along the line of his “A newspaper reporter’s account of | ey are not in the position to step T to a tobacconist's at free will and er their favorite brand of smoking r v ter. "ha 10w | His endeavors in the future wi Of Teuton and Latin and Celt Z AETE DA ETUE 80 el But though we be kin I disown vou would a government think for ome marches, and has written an unusual- | a recent pilgrimage, undertaken, he s S Tio ey Tf still ve vour mother prefer, moment of entrusting to a private in- ly human and dramatic biographical | says, with no religious motive, but What is wanted at the present | = 2°" T8 2O e b | dividual the task of raising an army | ing With i . Survey.'—=A\‘T; A, Booklist, for the joy of traveling, with a mind moment ceeme to be a txpe of Morse A hurden and Kindanes o her, |20 commanding it I no ower | Battling With British in France SRR S e suitable for work in the cavalry, country that we know of is there a | Lodges in the wilderne: by W. C. —A. L. A. Booklist P sent tobacco to the bo at the [ o eI na foveinn mouk frvelaneldered andiconalen andalfed s o0 mm{xv. 'ffh” would thirk for a moment Efifllll‘e Heaqu Bombal‘flmem Scully. o acecribed chemuolyee dn e L e afl b or i s i oF o o e ey beon ) 00 P Tine bimselt fop euch @ tack 4 o “We do not recall any volume that Fiction. hely fas be lonehcherisheal| Rna STl SRSl VS i SOaT 19V | e sit in the Seats of My Children The unique position Colonel Roosevelt Seaay brings out quite so vividly the power | Bars of iron, by K. M. Dell | 2re prane to admit that the thorough-| = ;4 nceds of my favor may win. holds among us is, we are told, likely of the desert. Mr. Scully has “That Miss Dell is an artist in the el cnoss Drodlines thelbestt tyna of R i to fm']t‘ ]u.f gevermment ol scoant Jn; itish Haedquarters, France, .]In\‘,\' caught and reproduced the very spirit | construction of a romantic novel there s i se arel To potentate, power or thr and raise him to the grade o; -American citizens have seen hot- | of that arid waste.”—Nation is no question.”—RBoston Transcript. line and Jer and Tom- | “’“‘ ‘;” L ”""'Y”)‘ "“‘”‘""1 g Thr‘( s (,‘,r“,.‘",' \“V,,M' D f,,’i,‘t,h",?”.: D 801 general ter fighting in the last two weeks than e imab : S ’ on this end are brothers all. In | ‘B¢ horses with warm blood surging S e S The more or less general acceptance | any American since the Appomatox | Maki . w E. E. Rex E | Dol forest i by ETuR I WalnD il enn o O BRI e o, i S S e | e . of the iden seems to spring from the | campaign. They have endured as | el o ‘?,‘,f Huextond | Datk forest L instances coy young lassies con- | ou swore unto me—me alone. e e e R paien Sndu Another of those half story books, | one he his book he dual consisnments to | S{SP» fine ‘coats, ‘and wide open e e | heavy shell fire as the German guns | in which the author describes the de- | feels certain, at least, of knowing % I nostrils. This is the horse used prin- | Let grief for the sorrows of kindred g ompanies which | ever directed at the British front and | velopment of a small plot of ground |some Russians and one tiny phase of adlotmen T ISR ) . g e R 06 were accepted by the government, and | xnow what it was to charge into the | in the country.”—A. L. A. Booklist the war."—London Times. sked for in the original cpally in the hunting flelds of) o 0 D0 4 Toving and erieving | ihat the idea of raising an army 15| German trenches with hayonet and e . ox £ it will work no harm. Any man | England before the war brake out. . e e e e & but the same prineiple raised to the | )omp in pouring rain through the | My Japanese year, by T. H. Sanders. Masoud the Bedouin, by Alfreda Post . | Treland, too, has given its share i e ey tenth power. Gen. Joseph I. Hawley | ;4 in the small hours of the morn- | “Gossipy, readable, attractively il- Carhart desirable half-breds, horses of size | R o e on ‘(f] 'ff”"“’"\»‘ BuLod f"'““l‘[ }“» .‘:']Ll";’:|i-‘: | ing. . lustrated descriptions of life and cus- | “Sixteen Syrian sketches founded . and bone. But now the cry is the Oath of A man is his honor— | coo W ¢ ¢ ollce of e aa'rtford | There are more Americans seattered | toms in a part of Japan little modi- | upon personal contact with the people fellows in uniform. The next lot g Tl ever his race is run. S and raised a command which |,y ong Canadian battalions than most | fied by western ways of living, the |as a missionary. Though presented Bocs. however, must be sent to | ATerica to produce the horses of the | ::‘1’“‘ l”'l‘i\“ ;»;;n ”‘“:1 ")':; 1';;f;“::"’l"“] | peovle realize. Somie of these were [work of an English teacher, three |as fiction almost all the incidents the Dboys without discrimination. | "OFld, and if America is keen to its| 8o this is the word—I command tt— |RiCh he afterwards heeame colonel i living in Canada when the war began; '\Boc;‘mtl‘rp_smcm in Japan."—A. L. A y:nrgr:(:]l(]:g“\rumflx ccurred.”—A. 1 | PR 3y o both ways,—it helps the giver | TUrther civilization. | those who receive. Mac's gang, ang, or any of the gangs he heart he boys in khaki h, Dick, and r that end of ing a box of cigars or a package igarettes will have to share with some crossed the border and enlisted Ge B Bl Gaid B SR i Wi fne @ B o b drasng : 5 The sons of this Fatherland be. L EIAREY e | some felt it a duty to strike a blow | Not by bread alone, by Harvey W. |Night cometh, by Paul Bourget. ot s s bt Lord and Masto thzongh Behedominating Sentnuslasmile o ereiay e Wiley. “The characters are admirably and Tennessee, have started already to | One eountee, ome '”{f}.,‘;‘ e 2 iihiducl were duienl “"””“m} Tt a man took the oath and put on i it handled and the tangled human rela- ountry, ag and ¢ under their control. This is not Colo- Gt Slinegoathys otey ; . = | rawn wi sure s answer the world call. AN SOBLEY a uniform a Canadian recruiting agent | Notes on religion, by John Jay Chap- | tions drawn with the sure skill of a man. master. It is French fletion In its i nel Roosevelt's proposal. He wants Horsemen who have studied the in-| And they shall be alien and hated this army to be his own army, officered | 4id not ordinarily bother, if he were &40 0 highest estate."—Boston Transcript | i Who fail of its weal or its fame. s he may dic 5 e T a sound man, which side of the bor- as he may dictate hy men drawn from | 2 i mammalen Ao t © PO | Real story of the whaler, by A. H. P = the ranks of the regular army itself | @€ : L ERRIGU e e Verrill, Psmith, journalist, by P. G. Wode- and by others from private life whom | Cruit sometimes had a had memory on any case of infantile paralysis. | and Germany are the three countries | Capt. Take and Submarines. ) t score himself. “W iThelauthor mritos iy tthionthuslasm, ) SUENou. apt. Lake 7 E b L imself hat part of ; : —w e : of t nce and the perils and We recommend the hook cordially Canada are you from?” a British offi- ftheiromance 4o L all @ | owever es no! an E at paid ore atte 0 1a any | dgeport Telegr 1 stec e i o < v o | i i 1sh fi how 3 ¢ mcan that | that paid more attention than any (Bridgeport Telegram.) trusted, he himself to rank with the | € ; : e st o itime | o R e e e Britain is immune from attack | cthers to the vital necessity of breed-| No man in America could have re- | highest in command with the single | cer asked a Canadian private. whale hunter's life. Many of the ad- | of unqualified amusement.”—Lopdon = | | | cpportunity it will get a jump on| Nor Teuton nor Saxon be ve, sessed at the time officers of experi- every other nation in this twork, | But all who abide in this Household |ence 5 | Some of our states, notably )\r‘nfu(‘kv; y are our boys and what is given tq all, share and share alike. | t now on the next donation of cco. i OARE OF 1HE CHILDREN || /ationall phase of the question| ew Britain, fortunately, is free | claim that FErance, Austria-Hungary — judges to he competent to be his dread discase. At the pres- | g horses containing various f\mmvms% celved the news of the arrival of the s <|Hl~!1lufr the ('nmmnnh\r—m-fl:;r“f, '\"\‘;:w\\;e:(} -l:j-“" ) ventures are narrated directly from | Athenacum. 5 S St e e .+ to| German submarine Deutschland with | the president of the United States. The What part of the west?” time, when the entire country is|of thoroughbred blood. In order o eatec thilll than o Bridpenort citio|i0en 18 ant binzine one but lem The Far West, sir.” 7 g zen—Captain Simon Take. barrassing to dismiss What part, 1 asked. Haven't vou | that country have sent warnings to] Mr. Braunstein, who is well built, plane the aforementioned govern- The arrival of this ocean-going 1 » elt has had no such 1 learned vet to g 1 definite answer | Americans not to make further ship- | more than six feet tall, and about out getting unduly excited to ex- [ ments granted subsidies to racing in- | under-sea boat after a trip across the | CXPericnce or success as a solc as to [ a0 an officer’s question?” ments. i fifty years old, sald he was weary off e e e D S S e SR T e “Spokane, sir.” ccording to the information re- | wandering from one country to fulness of hostile fleets which had | Of any such army. The twenty thou-| ‘“Where is that Manitoba 7" ceived herc by Hugh Clark, a lead- | cther in Burope and being asked con men he is said to be ready to| “In that neighborhood, sir.” ing New York philatelist, new censor- | tinually, why he did not go to war. regulations have been put Into| “I told the peopls led up over the onslaught of thi \‘H:u( this breeding on a scientific | ble le in New York, it is well e every precaution recommended | terests. They paid enormous sums lhe Boar 1th. The welfare | for stallions that had proved their| j..n warned of her coming, isa com- |Sand he community is in the hands of [ mettle on the race course. The one | plete vindication of Captain Take’s | Offer to the government in case of war After a man has heen wounded the | Ship ," he continued would without question perform a | truth is move likely to come out. Af- | ¢ffect under which no more stamps | “that I did not believe in war because larger function under the command of | ter an exa fon of a bad jaw frac. | may be sent out from England eX- | it hurts business. On account of m trained officers than they could pos- | ture the surgeon said to one wounded | cept through iisensed BEBEiEE |[elig @ rimanian by ibirthfend - wife a German it was difficult for me men who devote their lives to | Lig instance of this method was the | most enthusiastic prophecies for the of medicine. Outside of | purchase by the Prussian government | future of the submarine | | Just as Captain Take was the first i cf Ard Patrick, the English Derby | iin 0 SN0 000 trate the ad- | SIDIY Derform under him. His display | Americ deale - a1l the physicians in | winner, at a price of $125,000. The | vantage of an even-keel submarine, so | ©f Patriotism we do not care to ques- “You've a had smash, but we shall Amerlecan philatelists have not been | {, got g passport to go anywhere be- sted in the h | main purpose of this purchase was to | he was also the first to point out that [ Uon It is genuine. The spirit of his | pull you through and fix you up as |informed what constitutes a ; “1‘ cause the officials of varfous coun usetiiness of the submarine both | ofter 15, however, hysterical, The of- | zood as new.” consed” stamp dealer In - ENgland. | trjes, noth belligerent ana neutral [fer of Band Master Sousa to enlist Bt o Herstofpre stamp _dealers in = that) e excited about eples. In Germ is nearer the normal country mu'e] not "f"wp" f‘f”‘y'v‘“y*“m" the authorities treated my fe order to trade in the postage 'abeS8. | pjgny put looked askance ~ It 1s not belleved here that the | = ¥ gokec asiance atfms in 2 ally we arrived in Barcelona, where T ol A . | - new censorship has anything to do (% g zen is mind- | service fee as five dollars, Thus dld | opening ¢ whic riaehy(XEs SRERESIISon omel months in my, war, it can dive under cnemy's flec N Jer tr 1 B iR XL S (ol O with the antipathy which the British n i (e o e e Sagsondsugilan slanm) nos aonead [Renenio st ot endatellines philatelic trade and the British public R e i e e e e s e looking for a scrap | enerally have had against trading tn | 'n%! K suy e E: B vo bathers were killed by | frankly admit they have had it. No tamps of countries enemy to the En- ica and make my home in land where all men are free and equal.’ Another passenger on the Buenos Aires was Captain Americ Piatgiavich of the Serbian army, who comes on g connected with the nurses affiliated | improve the general horse product of | the - in war and in peace is not confined to ! | its power as a carrier of torpedoes the spread | stallion was bred to cold ' blooded | Tn peace it can patrol the bottom giving it to me strai he fecble question = i , you can depend on it." in the final in- | mares exclusively and at such a low | the seas, charting unknown ledge HowEthcEshanleD: Its Vietim. “Well, if that's the dope and no up new treasure fields, (Springfield Republican.) kidding, I wish yvouwd write to my s are likewise | Graditz. For years this wonderful 1y Germany and her allies reap the bene- l‘U:!IWIM‘ 1<"~ commission merchant until I decided to come ove: T v | fiv of scientific management in stock me over to Am record all hands | treeding. It was this and other like | leaguered ports | S s sk > Philadeipht re questions how i ( : ‘ 1 i A e ietures fpon suh | K t week. The Philadeiphia | one questions how they stood up to it | tente Allics. There has been no of- | cxperiments that enabled Austria- ars ¢ ! ! authority for the statement | along with their Canadian comrades. | fojal ban against importing German, marines, Captaln Lake nointed out to | that previous statistics show but Nor arc they all privates. Three spirit of w Austrian and Turkish stamps into | Lzainst { Hungary to horse the German cavalry j England American audiences that there is. vk attacks along the north Atlantic | officers who were killed in the retak- . ; limit to the size which submarines | coast within 100 years. The horrible | ing of Observatory Hill were Amerl- special mission and will return to Sal- as well under way the dual mon-| may attain. and that the greater their | character of such a death is told by | cans. onica in a week or s0. He wore the archy had more horses in the stud | fucl-carrving capacity, the greater | Dr. Schauffler, surgeon-general of the — THIS IS TOUGH French Legion of Honor with the than perhaps any other nation in the | their radius of cruising. Just as the | state national guard and a member of | 1 military cross and was : 1 Germans were the first to see the ad- | Gov. Fielder's staff, who was called in STAIP GQLLECTORS HIT world. France too, was well taken = r 1 Iprin g ; i : vantage of the cven-keel tvpe of sub- | the case at Spring Lake. Fle knows 5 French government a different malady running | care of in this regard marine, they were the first among na- [ of no other possible way in which a Guillermo Patterso Ir bant. One vear it is grippe But now the situation has changed. | tions to foresee the possibilities of | man could be so terribly mutiliated, | Britain Places Ban on Imports and German Wife, Arrives in New York | Cuban secretary of q::"'n':\'h,t"]n. ”f‘ . large submarines operating over aland the facts related go to show A P li g chancallorlor thelcartnlate Al cular season infantile paralysis | are calling upon the United States and | cessful raids upon the warships and | point about halfway between the | Cricved at Receiving Information. New York, Jily 13.—After wander- :””t“‘m" '1” taltelhlsinew; post es attention. Whether the epi- | Argentina for aid. Every hunter in| commerce fleets of the enemy. The knce and ankle. The flesh was torn | New York, July 13.—The European | ing over Burope for neatly twa vears, | S L comman- | second result we now have before us |near the knee. The left leg was sev- ) war has struck the postage stamp g in the presence of the Deutschland in | ered at the ankle. The bone was [trade in the United States another i 5 Baltimore harbor, after a trip across | stripped of flesh for some distance | severe blow, one which will cost eause for alarm. The toll inlarmy and the call for more has gone| tha Atlantic. What the final result |above the end. There was a deep | American philatelic dealers thousands | man born wife, arrived yesterday on places visited by the disease is | forth to its colonies and to this| will be, we cannot tell: hut unless |circular gash above the left knee and | of dollar: as learned here today. | the Spanish liner, Buenos Afres from Fngland can devise a method to com- | extending down to the bone, and on In Fngland stamps were on July 1 | Barcelona. to settle down at Sheeps- | hat the freight carrying submarines, | the right side of the abdomen there | placed under t 1 as a luxury if | head Bay. He was accompanied b: | the blockade of Germany will be|was a piece of flesh gouged out. imported from foreign countries, and | his wife and their two children,Henry raised both in theory and practice. l A happening like that invites un- | purchasers of the labels who iive mlu, and Marjory, 10' years old. kness. as well as her own. Before the war epidemics in this that each and every one of seven have its own particu- Serbian soldiers decorated scare. Surely each year the Englishman, Bom in Rumania, With | er malaria another typhoid | A1l these nations are rapidly depleting at Bar Aires on as vi > §s overrated is a question. Facts | the British Isles has heen Bernardo Braunstein, a naturalized figures tend to show that there is | decered for serviee in Great Britain's e G ble. The communities that have | country. Thus is the opportunit p every precaution even to plac- | knocking at America’s door. Esti- uarantine around visitors from | mates place the life of a horse on the | { e e U T G P

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