New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 18, 1916, Page 6

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] ; NEW, BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, JULY 18, 1916 w BR“?AIN HERALD later decides to inject a few construc- worship yvou. We will follow you If | =™ tive policiesMinto his arguments, which | vou lead us toward Heaven, but 1(’ is doubtful. Pointing out the mistakes | You turn the other way, then we will | form of destruction that would kill | WHAT OTHERS SAY || o e mor, ana 1 oo mvece | Lost Mines of Mexico HERALD PUBLISHING COMPANTY, - : i i = H the inventor of some formula for ren- Provrietors. of Woodrow Wilson will in the end | say to you, You can go there but \\c“ Views on all sides of timely R e i A | | | wed daily (Sunday excepted) at 4:15 p. m., | &t Herald Building. 67 Church St his place would have made mis- | ling, he might have recited: get nowhere. Any other man in | will stay here’” Paraphrasing Kip- questions as discussed In ex- ifling the entire Prusslan army by | 't f F e i | wazit roriune [1unters tered at the Post Office at New Britalm | fakes Herald Office. Forty-five years 2go a quiet man in- ‘ 4 cost Omce R ereste srature, Japanese Wit a8 Second Class Malil Matter. L e A kh or | —crossing poor, ds d s terested in literature, What the country is thankful for to- | Double-crossing poor, damned soul: the life of the 18th century, expressed | washington, D. C. July 17.—“If | widow of a Spaniard, de Rodriques liverea by carric.. to any part of the oty | qav is ¢ Wilson did not make the | And we'll have to vote in Hell for oMy A ee i 3 & e i . R e s 2 g ey e (s il DL R U | 3 Menof ‘Military Agc. this wish. It then seemed vislonary. | porica's National Guard sees foreign | labored for years saving nuggets of bscriptions for paper to be sent by mail. | mistake of setting the United States | Gunga Dhin. e ey The acroplane is now no more won- gold until she had a ireasure which cagle and the vulture | required a caravan of forty mules tc payable in advance, £0 Cents a Month, . . et . derful than the ! mixed up in Kuropean affairs, of draw- The bures 5 conRus estimeaten t : 5 % $7.00 o Year nixed uj The bureau of the census estimates | mpg aj) has heen made unbreathable | Northern Sonora border the boys in | convey the f ur tons of precious metal g us into the war. an in tt A JANC that thero are twenty-one e y Aol et e | BT REHTROHNG R bt Ba G A NDIEAN Gl . ik million |,y German chemists, Khaki will be in a Mexican wte | to Mexico City was a long and ar- crtistne o male Americans of “military age’ k : { > ¥ where fact and fable are fascinatin the city Circula books and press [ \White House who would follow a dif- SRR that i bet ight f ‘ The man who always gets what he W LI Bl Gloke) Something Lacking. ly interwoven in the accounts of its | constantly in fear of heing robbed ad| probuably very serfous ones. | “He'll be squatting on the coals, service in its patrol duty along the ducs journey, and the widow was room always ope advertisers. P conTser ro) : Vilso ur- q event course from that Wilson pur-| o ' o)1y makes o nofse like a | five. That is a maximum estimate of (ot TR vast mineral wealth.” says toda) Vhen Blie inallyireached the capital S war geography bulletin issued 7/rom | she would not rest content until the Washington by the National Geo- | fortune hid been placed in the safe- graphic society. | keeping of the spani iceroy. A few Even the name Sonora is said by | days later the widow herself disap-< some historians to be derived from a | peared and the vast store of gold was peculiarly ~ musical, and ‘sonorous’ | appropriated by he government o Floraid win ve touna on eate at Hota: | sucd with Germany would undoubtedly | | ol —Hartfora Post the resources in men for the national | way, New York Cicy: Board Walk, at- | have brought on calamity. In pre- i defonce. The Republican party s the con- Iantic City. and Hartford Depor. venting war, and at the same time A woman has no trouble about Not even theoretically would such ‘Tv""\'m\w By of America. "l:vm;lv— —_— T s herie .. | & hos 0 ilable - “hi ican” and “Democratic” as pa a- TELEPHONT CaLls making Germany hold her place, Wil- | killlng time if she has her own houge- (f\.._h o .h,‘, avallsblerthoush ) Whiloll oo m'c' :mn\ o Ll:i.-xu;mp.\,‘pl’\ e Beiness Omce work to do.—Topeka Journal. v male not younger than eighteen ¢ 3 RS OTov e son undertook a task, the stupendous- nor older than forty-four would he | Pressive. Tt is too bad, but it is true, ness of which cannot he recognized When the meek inherit the ecarth | liable to duty in time of need, heavy | that a party label, liko & man's name, | )ity ossessed by certain marbles | treasury and that treasury's custodian, at this short distance. It will take | we hope that they won’t make the | #llowances would have to he made for | 1S something that cannot be changed. . | a.1fed in the state. | An equally pathetic story is told | rest of us get off.—Milwaukee Jour- | l‘(“"nvll")‘l’“ es and physical incapac- _"1“: ‘;"'r‘l‘;;‘i"3‘0x“‘“‘K;‘gs'c;“::m_‘\"‘;‘l““’; ";""‘A ‘Within a decade after Cortez land- | of the Planchas de Plata (Silver e :‘ér. pom\norhx';\rx‘\:y:‘:x:(‘ r:f‘lsj-‘nlys that ten | o8 8 O rtics And & elean-eut | 90 On Mexical soll and conquered the | Plates) mine which, according l: R e i 3 5 & A K e pulation, men, tivisi ¢ tha ol ialince <t followers of Montezuma the Spaniards | Jesuit accounts, was discovered with pitfalls, the wonder is that Wood- The greatest danger for the little | Women and children, could be em- ;d1Vision of that nature is lacking at | n,q jaunched expeditions by sea and | Yaqui Indian during the first half ot rd it would take in the neighbor- 1, \wijon has not committed some | victims of the prevailing epidemic of | Ploved in active service, including all | PTesent. o started exploration parties over the | the eighteenth cenfiry rom a ceep poa of fitteen hundred dollars to fit | 5 Lo Cherehy the whole na- | infantile paralysis is meddlesome the- | NON-combatant corps, Th tholl ant On the whole, {he Progressive | n,untains to find that region which | canyon the Jesuits are said to have b a suitable lunch room for pupils in “M\ would have been thrown in s, state | T@Peutics—New Tork Herald. nals of war even that proportion has ";"i"':H"_"“‘”““"‘“m‘(’l'"":i\m"“ ‘\‘:;":i‘:’\““"‘\:;g two centuries before, according (o | tuken great globules of silver ore, il ¢ ety rarely been drawn in. Historically, | ¢ Party, wh : servatives | tradition, had supplied the Astecs | welghing from twenty o fifty pounds. E 3 of disorder. But he has not, and those | What the Latin-American Ambassa- | ONly once have a nation’s resources | A'® entrenched in the G. O. P. €T~ | with great stores of gold and silver | One mammoth nugget of pure silver, afrman of the finance committee | L) oo coing out to defeat him have | dors need to do is to acquire a knowl- | in fishting men been entirely exhaust- | 1APS this distinction will become 50 | \wpon they passed through the land in | weighing a quarter of a ton, was dis is amount will not be readily forth- |,y iopey job on their hands. | edge of the American tongue and get | ¢d. Parazuay, at the close of her ":”f"'l;" lodgediingheppublicaniady bo | their tribal migration to the vale of | covered and proved the undoing of ming. Yet, the special committee | oy ST e mounts (he ros. | 0Ut and mix with the Amerlcan peo- . War with Brail, Urugnay and Argen- | {1¢ COUIse of ]:'J\"‘-'\‘}n-‘h;?\' ‘r((un\:.:\\xlzn:‘ janshisc by Ibi0 AlmindeziChislnas ibosistheipntestaian Lithe, Tnflang T'hw" bpointed some time ago to i : : & it d ple. It would do them a lot of good. | tina, half a century ago, had hardly i A e many Derenns | had proceeded up the coast as far us | ireasurc rock was with great difti- rum in Detroit three weeks from | __Rochester Herald. a man left. o s now, a great many persons | the mouth of the Yaqui river, and he [ culty loaded between two pack mules of progressive tendencies are floun- | woo ¢qllowed by de Vaca who brought | and taken to the capital where it was dGring Farotindifor e fipanty o irepre il praiiased Saut a0 SR (06 | fe e tme A7 bt Rt oo wn A ftar v enral ol sent them, simply because they are ' .,;jq be plucked from the ground in | litigation the authorities decided that? suided by part ylabers, and not by | yppelievable quantities. One of de | not only this nugget but all other ore A HIGH SCHOOL REFECTORY, the stretch of years to measure its Accarding to rough estimates pre- Disregarding the ten per cent. Owing to dyestuff difficulties, Secre- | method of rough reckoning, it is in- tary of State Hugo has to change the | teresting to reflect that the propor- 3 3 I ! 5 scarlet tint of ballots for the Sulzer | tion of men of military age in th : igh School will be taken over by the | s who would take the helm of nm[A\:"‘flfii’m‘n"mf“, m.mmrié\. to terra- | United State larger "m:: in mn: Dhtyirecoris, | Vaca’s followers was Sebastian, a | from the canyon Dbelonged to the y in August and thrown open 1o |ghjp of state. They will not be en- | cotta. Sulzer will paint politics red, | countries of the first rank. That is Malk o ) | mulatto who had remarkable gifts of | state. Whereupon Jesuits acd Tns bpils at the beginning of the next|lichtened by further criticism of | just the same.—Brooklyn Eagle. | because of heavy immigration, the | “IAKing Onions Into Strawberrles. | imagination. Among the places he | dians conspired successfully to ‘lose’ bulk of It voung men. But, before (Norwich Record.) ‘saw’ were the Seven Cities of Cibola, | tha mine. 5 3 Scarcity of beef on the border | calculating the possibility of an ex- A Parkville, Mo., news item leads | ruled by King Tatarax, whose wonder- “Just thirty-nine miles south of G#ng dining facilities for those at-|naugnt else in the air for some time. | g 500G not amaze the soldiers when | haustion of men in the nations now | one to believe that the day is at hand = ful, bejeweled robes dazzled the eye | the Arizona line and midway between ding should be set up. One lunch | what the American people will want | they reflect that most of the ranches | at war, the arbltrary ten per cent. | When the Irish potato and the straw- | As he worshipped each morning in his | the border towns of Nogales and Naco, om would accommodate the tWo In- | o know, and what they have a right | use condensed milk in their coffee. [t | should be taken as only the mini- 1 Derry Will he cqually esteemed as magnificent palace before a goiden |is Cananea, the center of one of the | i | is another case of the cobbler’s chil- | mum. frult; when the cherry and the cab- | Cross. Mermaids also figured in Se- | richest copper regions in the world, bvn pupils attending the Voc e v | dren lacking shoes.—Chicago News. Germany, for instance, actually had [ bage will lie side by side in the pre- | Pastian's narrative as alluring mar- | while to the south is Magdalena sta- s 2 ing prove on the present incumbent in at the onutset nearly eleven milllon | Serve kettle; when the artichoke, the | Vels of the Sonora coast. tlon, east of which is the Santo Do- igh School and they should be con- | mece. They know what Wilson has Haven't seen as vet the names of | men of military age, though by the | “uince, the persimmon and the pars- | ‘Among the Sonora mines ahout | mingo canvon with its placer gold de- ered. done and what he has not done.|any gentlemen who are howling for | arbitrary rule fewer than seven mil- | NP Will vie with one another in lus- | Which romance and reality are| posits. which are sald to have g If the niggardly sum of fifteen hun- | ;ruohes is the unknown quantity, so | War and intervention in Mexico at-|lion Russian had twenty-eight mil- ‘Atfu.;ngts and food-value, and will be *\‘I’l:‘"‘f}f“‘ ');’\L‘;‘L]‘il;;;l”{;\ !lj‘{!}‘(‘“g“ ‘:;_m;r‘ ‘r\if)‘v:"llllzmv‘li\ for many of Spain’'s ed dollars is all that stands in the | pe must tell the ... |tached to subscription lists for the re- | Hon, Great Britain more than seven | disPlayed without invidious distinc- a e O 5 SR 14 and =1g e must tell them just what course he | % 0 7 C0 5 L0 O o ldren of | million, and France more than six |{ion in the stall of the dealer in fancy Said to have celebrated the marrlage | “In addition to copper, gold and « ¥ of a lunch room for the pupils at | would take if the German question | guardsmen who are at the front.— | million, tho British and French |fruits as well as in the bins of the Of his favorite daughter by paneling | ver, the mines of Sonora produce lend, e High school the finance committee | vore at its height. if the British block- | Brooklyn Standard-Union Colonies providing four million more. | ETESN-Erocer. And in that day, fur- | the bridal chamber with plates of sil-| coxl, antimony, mercury, lrom, ngy foula be able and ready to remove | jqe threatens to upset plans, if the — must be horne in mind that mors | thermore, the desert — will blossom Yer and L \.l’n» x’-.;,\mh:n:.n” o f.,\n!”‘.n:: 1'1:HIV||:1(H|‘|V‘ ‘r]lm &r i(]f]”yi‘;: ;1;‘; . S S e | p If Germany were able to dispatch a me to military age every year than |like & rose, the waste places of the ' home to the church with bars c Lo [FRURITSHO 0SS RET RRL LSl BRI e difficulty. For twenty years now, |jfexican menace breaks out afresh L remmens shlolditna e e e s hnl s s Rt reclonsmtal! finest in the world, producing an even since the High School building was| je must say whether he would fol- | Trniteq States, sho could | !“l‘rr‘h:v.\l‘ probahly not being seriously reduced Ie el wlhg In 0 vindermess . TUe tteRd concenimg the Pahe pbetier prade then fhe Satious mingg st opened, there has been talk of | 15y the many suggestions of Theodore | contraband from us as freely as do | by the easualties. ’ the cuggr heet snd the papaw 112718 mine ls hat its owns G 02, Ol AERE htting in this necessary fixture. At|goosevelt in rogard to Belgium, or | Bngland and France. This is but| The resources of men possessed by | Shall lie down together. And all this \ caying that the advantages the Al-|the Allios are vastly In excess of those ::o"y;“":‘; ’1‘ by {P";"“*X““' ”lu‘x"--"‘l‘ law of 1913 an obstacle to the carry- |ate circumstances, dependent upon an RO SN TSR e R lies have enjoyed in the matter of | of the Teutonic Powers, of course— » @ teacher of chemistry at Park ' jng out of thei pldn to make a clean |income of $95 a month, reyealed the hose homes are too far away for|and a hundred other things await tho trade In munitions have been | fifty-two million as against twenty- | C0llé8e, Who has made a revolution- f\\'LlpPp e EaE i A Their | fact that in a week the three children sy access and who must bring their | explanation from Mr. Hughes and | German¥'s misfortune and not our | three million, of military age, and |2FV Speech before the Missouri Valley | 1an was to remove the obstacle by |spent $1.95 for moving picture shows nches with them or purchase such 100,000,000 people are anxious to | fault—Syracuse Herald. thirty-three million as against four- | /1orticultural society. The professor repealing the statute of 1913. That|and ice cream cones. The youngest, teen or fifteen, by the ten per cent. proclaims fivl»'-v by feeding certain 1an was embodied in a bill, which |of the three children is but five years bia wintry months a suitable r00m | ive, views. The dead past is dead. _Richmond’s historic military com- f rule. But it is not to he helicved that :":::]‘L".:"‘(!‘f:"'_'l"‘_":"‘\‘;I“‘-\W‘y‘v" ”‘y:‘v\; '\':‘v”(‘l“‘ was drafted and prepared for the con- |old. Figuring that the same amount e _ | pany, the Blues, technically the Rich- [ the war will be decided by the ox- | ™ levelor and starch. | sideration of the general assembly. [is spent each week for a year, the ula be proyided far such luncheons. | The living future lies just ahead. | mond light infantry, have trans- | haustion of the Teutons In men, | (1S Investigations show that plants | mhe effect of the proposed repeal |total would be $101.40 If that the High School authorities can find s e | formed themselves into cavalry. There | though they may ha overpowered. | anufacture compounds that are not | would be to legislate out of office the |amount were saved for the smallest they WARGIN GION D, was need for mounted troops from | Germany has admitted some three ““’i’””" to them. Ie has already suc- three gentlemen who constituted the|child until it was ready for higher NG & Virginia, and so the command that | million casualtioes. ut, cven if the |¢ceded in reducing the starch of | commission who were in charge of | education, the sum would far exceed Great Britain, in deciding to publish | fought on the Confederate side in the | whole number were dead or prisoners, | Potato to sugar by chemical treat- | the administration of the law of 1913, | the amount usually spent for the civil war and was well ropresented in | that would be a long way from ex. |Ment. And chemists are searching iand who were too sympathetic - with | college education of the boy or girl ungsters will find a way. In some : - the Spanish war determined to take | hanstion the leaves of plants in an effort to jts principle to suit the plans of the |of moderate habits g ter rooms have | 1S domiciled in the United SIates | o gne course that would get them | Rhode Tsland is creditea hy the | 1Nd the agent’ which converts —the politicians. The bill was drastic but| “If a child is taught that the money with which residents of the United | to the horder for duty in the Mexi- | Census Bureau with 129,131 men of | C4'Pon dioxide in the air and the it was effective. In republican cir- | given to it must he kept for a useful molsture into plant products. These cles it was declared a perfect bill and | purpose, it will soon learn to be a chemists may be frembling on the | its unopposed enaciment was conf- | judicious spender.’” verge of the great discovery. The ! dently predicted. But unfortunately | ico. Arizona, Utah or Nevada can | NVeStigator —asserts that when the | for the soundness of the ""““‘"‘““”i sl secret is found the finder will possess and the accuracy of the prediction, it Pointed Paragraphs. : | sevesity or elehty, will And their namoes | . It i proposed to-approptiste §523,. - o an unlimited source of energy. Man | had to meet the approval of the chief . . o e a notable instance of the success of | St A 000,000 to pay the cost of maintain- e o N can convert the sun's power to his | executive hefore it attained its full (romAtheRChicagor Doned on, the statutory list, known in the | ;0" (0 hew army and $700,000,000 : ) n(lfll In Silver, own uses Plants n be grown so developrent as a law. It failed to sc- commercial world as the “trading with | for defense, and this country is still (G neinnatitimes fotar) that they will taste exactly as the cure that and the present law is the | & domestic broil the enemy Act blacklist? Practically | at peace with all the world The price of silver is higher now |grower desires them to taste—pota- compromise. Sometimes the price of liberty is the red pupils and each article on the : | More than half a million dollars | than at any time since 1893. By the |toes may acquirc the flavor of can- | The statue of 1915 is somewhat | fee of a smart lawyer. % every other country in the world has | 4 bl kit costs less than three cents, in some | ) | has been spent in moving the troops | Mere processes of supply and demand | taloupes. and carrots will he approxi- | troublesome to the politicians, but Mo e e te the possibility of installing now ' the nation will give ear to his 3 | mplete refectory is heartily in every utterance. The people will want | the plan, Since the Vocational | ¢, know what manner of man this = holastic year some method of pro- | pp sident Wilson, for there has been fitutions. There will be many out-of-} t5 know, is how Hughes would im- e noon hour there arc nany pupils {aqhere to the plan of Wilson. These bmestibles near the school. In the | gat his constructive, not his destruc- 2 other way out of the problem ould turn the entire matter over to e athletic association and these | {a list of American firms and individ- the large cities sen provided for such purposes, the | LoTan Kingdom are forbidden to trade, re- can frouble.—Springfield Republican. &m N fpiany e S L New Hampshire, Verront, Detaware, High Cost of Peace. Montana, Tdaho, Wyoming, New Mex- hletic association runs the lunch sorts to the last trench in the war om and adds a few dollars each year ilie . exchequer. The McKinley (New Haven Times-Leader). in business on American soil, some | of hate. For the first time firms m».l aining School in Washington, D. C. | | | BEiian. There w0 Better a dinner without meat than rved every noon to some fifteen hun- { been represented on this list since the | ;1 .. qv on the border or on, the way, | it his come to bear a ratio of 27 to mate pomegranates. And it will be ! that's all. Tt has cnabled them to Sy The average charge for transport- | 10 80ld. The war caused the hoard- | possible to fill the desert of Sanara | re-establish the spoils system in the | ; : ) ing of gold, and sliver therefore has | with plant life, so that the nations of | service of the state and they :‘H'!" fom home the dining room is at his| 08 8 L in | the border is ostimated at $50, one | Deen in great demand for coining pur- | the earth will he able to get a menu | sutisfied. The American s right fisposal just as much as if he pur- WP e enemy ach i ® 7| horse or mule $12 and cach trans- | ’0Ses among the belligerent nations. | from soup to nuts and a bottle of when it intimates that the present| Be g0ood to everybody and every=t ased provisions-shere. the SUnitediStatesfofEamerlcafbavineiit o v & oot neld! picoat iz Meanwhile, the output in Mexico | wine thrown in, at less than the cost | law wil! become objectionable to the | body will try to make a doormat of their head offices in Germany, con- On this basis to move a fleld ar- | has decreased. Silver has benefited | of a ham The millennium publicans only when the Gemo- | Y¥ou. more by war than it ever did Dy |js coming s i t least for the far crats are in power. If, as seems Anywa an ounce stances only a penny. TIn the event whole public opinion in herself y pupil desires to bring a lunch o i er ¢ 's wife buys hir By this extension of the trading | ing a guardsman from Connecticut to | 5 0 P n. ey hizg tie his vanity gets it in the neck. Before the summer wanes it s trolled by German capital, or Ger-| tillery regiment it costs $69,181: n\“‘ - of prevention Clleavalnyt i AL x‘ oin’s ~‘!";§ jous :H"mmw\‘ or by Mr. [ sighted investigators who are getting | now likely, the democrats will be in | costs much less than a pound of cure = el S & irvan's perfervid eloquence, o CramclinMner cahars Sontrollon 1 et Eovernrient toril 5 ] . regiment of infantry $94,145 options on acreage in the Sahara control of the state government for Bashrul = try, will be effected. Hitherto they My Ons oo e RO REREEE L i Bashful men a Women 5 3 = M | v nty years have passed since WO years Irst week i To meet these new and enormous | Lt two years from the first week in | ari*thon: by rishe nal cnd quest oped that some suitable measures ill be adopted by the schaol hoard to | man tirms incorporated in this coun- | Tegiment hsure this comfort to the pupils who | . Mo b - ) s A have been dealt with solely on their | axpenses it is on 0 he nation was in an uproar over the e e B g BN iora ihe High Schaol in the|have ibee ¥ on their | axpenses it is proposed to raise $500,- | ¢ I W e K Ford . ros Wilson January, 1917, we may expect the A S R ! e cause of silver. We passed throtgh . T {Bebth el Solictada bt 5 merits, because, in the language of | 000,000 a year in new taxes, and the 5 2 republicans, in their solicitude for | % f1l. The matter has been pending so et i . o | Wavs and Means GCommittee of the | ® Period of evasion before the jssue (New Faven Union.) the official heads of these who have t I how gmart a woman - he trade, they delivered the goods. E E Means Cc 3 ras joined i 896, & o o - h R BEEs ol < an p 1 'y B O e e e s notise proboses T o it Dniwaye ehiGh NSRS salinalang _«“‘;1 then one of) Henry Ford of Detroit, says: “Our | benefited by the 1915 “amendment,” an think she thinks he sken. Otherwise the century might 5 e “* | have been fully indicated in advance. | [1C MOSE excliing = anc . ':n"f"‘);“ IUC [ hats off to the president who has | to come forward with a preposition B vy and the Fizh School still bey Licyanuexeisitherfassisteaitheienemiesilinn e M income itaxi 151 tol be \ donpled) f’_:”” o ";I“;‘\'v"“{“'y::’ -;n‘“ \Mliw_ h"; kept us out of war. I would not con- ' to furnish the original law of 1913 People who travel on the down- of Great Britain by loans, propoganda, | There is to be an inheritance tax, in | oo. o . = “ G ‘.' I; ]‘ = i sent to run for president against Mr. with a fresh set of teeth. It will | ward path seldom provide themselves orin rezard to contraband. Tt 1s|| aqdition tol state inheritance taxes:| Joic® i behalffof silver. Dnhonored |iwilson. He s ontol the interests and!|\be amusing tol sco = the republican [with a return ticket. unnecessary delay because of per T e e s T o [ endunsune B e verthel_sshi RN L i G El e s (A Eola 11l (al o lin e ol diaalenomite BRfrien dllinterent I T ART R REr IR mal clashes on any of the commit- lm“”m»;;“) : “1.| n‘lv\ ” ; : va (\“h B oWpovtalinet i ne Dl broasl | LEE R 90 And he has maintained peace.” | in the principle of (he test system 1n | tested will Is the only notority {\e(a?"; zens e blacklistec ess they ) e >roside on's firmness [ the civil service he state gl v es, as is hinted, the pupils will be | 2" ™! 5 . i PLO profits TN President Wilson's firmness in re- | the civil service of the stat brings to some men. i ¢+ selfien | AT® connected with firms of the afore- | Tt is proposed to make accumulated e s sisting the speculators with big in- | Tor o ’ BINe {$o mifter because of selfish ; i g ake a ated | B - e Shsspianern) W . or a man to make a woman happy This, In th 1 light !.monlmnml type, or are sole agents for | wealth pay the costs of preparedness ( ald). vestmen selow the Rio Grande, the Why a ‘“Change. during courtship is much easier th ves. s, in cool lig o it ; NG ; o jingoes, a is oc e, (e 2 £ s s asier than ottves. e g | . A fact which may lessen cansider- [ When the Germans first employed a | Jingoes, and misguided persons, try (Boston Tost.) it is for him to make good after mar- : | German firms in territory controlled | 2 2 s leason, is not just and it is hoped ably the demand of the very rich that | deadly gas against their foes there | ing to force upon him a policy of in- tervention and war, appeals to all ; by the enemies of Great Britain. [ : s Bare fe mo warrant in ‘the cha 2 sns el il " | the preparation for war be as com- | was an outery from all civilized na- ] the past it was the policy of the; plete as money can make it tionsMENon= thelataterent ithathaide 5| \nSon eiw bokeop ithelrieyesiand itheln W 2 7 o i iy hesldeclare thit ) .| RBritish Government in forbidding its Militarism costs enormonsl ce | stroving gas is at times used by the | minds open. The ranch owners like . e antalallchangel What VICTIMS ENGAGED TO WED. velfare will welcame prompt action | | 3 : < 7 - Hearst and oll and ore concession , DO country wants s ange. | subjects to trade with enemy concerns | shall all realize that fact very British excites little comment. The |+ 6aT8% ARC ct © SOMCESION . cvidence is there of any such desire? | (v _ £ s lnstance to apply the act only to those resident | If W do not realize it fully now. worldiislaccustoriedito horrors. 8 iithe lioWn ars iRl Btres: have not puiled The country wants a change only |\ Oman Killed in Plainfield Was Miss ki — slaughter of thousands is no more “‘|‘I’l “‘Jf{‘ ‘“‘“1" Mr, “"\"f”' s eyes. He | . ihir are in a bad way Tolis Anna Cushing. 3 o T oy ral o renas havol willEn ot ReolEo WA T T ces B RIS D= e St s 3 (New York World) cor 7 £ al wa 3 S I - that things couldn’t be worse and - e ork A T n this unprecedented period he ! ‘8. FUAE Lo by the change. How rat Monday in November falls on the | In this instance the placing of these | ty's calamity mm»ml: \r\'“ loshkpar In the reign of Louis XV. a French | 1las kept us out of the great catas . ut it today? when an engine struck the automobile E ill not fail to trophe of war with Germany, which “Upp "0 h it never was more pros- | i Which she and Arthur E. Parks of eventh of the month. That is the | firms 3ritish blacklist wi | fasten on the democratic stra R S n : S =i firms on the British blacklist will not | ratic administra- [veas threatenin Republicans dare . ¢ and contented than it is now. | F&ll River were riding, was Miss E | inus a modern refectory. If there The geltlemen who are now begin- | riage. ning to busy themselves with the job . he pupils and all interested in their DI ) 5 on enemy sofl. Those in friendly WVIELEL HE CAMPAIGN IS ON. countries were not placed under the e = This year first Tuesday after the | pan until this present edict. | killed at a grade crossing yesterday, chemist named Dupre invented a fire o0 rapid and consuming that it could ay on which American voters will | work any great havoc with the in- | tion is )“‘“ appearance of man-eaters | ;o4 pe ovaded or quenched. Fxperi- in northern waters. A 711 Whether this irruption is due to hotce between Wilson and Hughes. | try. Since the war began the German | the low tarift or to the president’s in. | W25 could hurn a fleet or destroy a town | | without successful resistance, T.ouis A~ | forbade that the Invention should be s campais i sDeac : not say; but certainly it is some = | for pen his campaizn by a specch {culariysanxionsRioRdoREnine=stwithill il SRR TR ARG S S | i mieite He was then at war Petroit veen it v the traders of the United Kingdom. |1t with alarm with England; it was portant that | ingland's fleet should he destroved not say they would have gone to WAL ¢ poreign velations have been made | Anna Cushing, 2 26 Grove street, ments amply proved this When g | With the Kaiser, they dare not sa¥ | o jsractory by the vigorous diplomacy | Providence, R. I. Aliss Cushing had Seon that with this fire a man | 1hey would have attacked weak and | 08'n (4 wileon, The Mexican |boarded at that address with Mrm | distracted Mexico. They simply stand o 10m seems on the way to sensi- | George J. Willlams about five years and sncer at the president, misrepre- | 11 %y 0 oopte and peacefnl cettlo- | 8nd Mrs. Willlams stated last nighty | sent him, and think they are using o 0o = ; she was engaged to Parks and their brains. Tustead they are fol- What is this “change” that | they had intended to be married this Jowing Dlndly the lead of the men | o % e \Canted? What has Mr, | month. . o B who have in hand the “anvthing to | jr o066 to offer that the country does | . The couple left Providence Satur- pugust and the seventh of Nov And, they can have no redress against | Let us remember, however, that in ; . iy heat Wilson™ campaign and lack is- | " 1o qy possess? day to visit friends in New England the good old days of standpatism the “"‘l‘v”"y'"“'"f‘“l‘"y““"h"‘""_‘:‘ "k:”“'"y;n""’", cues or opportunity for constructive S y and were on their way back when the sharks were all on land, and most of| ' clton and thoug L e B Sl . accldent occurred. Miss Cus ; i ¥ § them enjoyed an immunity which no- | INferests it should he suppressed. | 50 Fol g coos Wilson's strong fight | How the Movies Are Breaking the | ., married, it was stated h\’w:\: had Jpust be crowded. After the start at | control the trade relations of its sub- | hadv now extonds to the seaxming wan | Pupre died. carrving the Rl A e e e TS i Sl 8 was : s SRR RS i Yot Touis NXV. was by no ASERLZCNa N0 angne divorced. She went to Providence: war, and is not letting republican | 40 pamg Money Depart- | from. Middleboro, where she leaves & 2 =5 el | : means an ideal ruler and he is pil- L i . 5 ay across the continent delivering | hiacklisted wish to evade the edict is- —— for his gross immorality and | Politiclans wanting nothing so much | .\ ;¢ of the July American magazine | Drother and sister, Caleb Cushing and as to get back to the pie counter, fill 5 mkiee o Mrs. Clara Wood. " loried dozen or more set speeches in the |sued against them they may get The First Of Anything. his heartless indifference towards his |/ e i arge cities of the West. By the time | around the act by selling their goods (Bridgeport Farmer) suffering people el et it eanty “Since the opening of the nickel i 3 Sk 3 ' { movies, the little banks which form- | | The first of anything is the won-| The Goneourt hrothers kepi a ct- publioangenty | ands M Eord BEnows L 650 e e el conttyT 6R sang o to the polls and manifest their | (crnal or external affairs of this coun- | pn the seventh day of August, next, | firms in this country for sentimental | eptitude and vacillation or to the gen- jhe Republican nominee will formally | or other reasons have not been par- | €ral cussedness of democracy, we can- here are exactly three months T R e e vhich “all the politics of four years|{he right, under its laws, to limit or Petroit Mr. Hughes will make his|jects. If the members of the firms | riety. INCREASE IN LINTERS, he makes his appearance in this sec- on of the country before election |would later transact busine: with | talking machine, the first player | lished in nine volumes. Jules died: | direct to those in this country who 2 | der. The first telephone, the first! rious journal which has been pub- | younger members of families have | Report Shows 68.098 B ; 2 ? £ .08 ales Used jay the Republican candidate for the | Jinglish firms. Any great amount | piano, steam engine, flvinz machine. | Edmond continued it This journal, | dwindled until they are a thing of Ui | of business done in this fashion would | The mind goes into the first one. | which will probahly survive the | the past. Sunday school teachers The second and millionth are mere [ novels, 1 aphical and yeinlogical The Hartford Courant still shows | ®ay that the movies have much to Washington, July 18.—Linter cot- products of the initiative faculty | works of the brothers, inclndes a curi- | sensitiveness about the work of the | do with decreases in Sunday school |ton used in the United States i pe deems worthy to call “The ( ries abroad are to carry hef : L = 2 tes In June ms w 13 al < countries abroad are carry on their | which is widely distributed. There is | ously personal an? anecdotical account | late legislature in “killing civil ser- | treasuries. aggregated 68,098 bales, compared f the People vs. Woodrow Wilson.” | war ainst trading with the enemy | no reason whatever in the way of a|of the siege of Paris. There is an | vice.” But we reassure it here The temptation to indulge the |with 53.903 last ycar, and for the dmittedly, he must make a wh and brine it to American soil, firms | fleet of elght underwater submarines | entry in which an aged non-combat- | won't be any trouble unless the demo- | child when it asks for a nickel is f0o | eleven months ending with June, 2 i i rom Germs yorts. is | ar onging to serve is country ats ge The! shall 1ve | gres r s arents. oney | 847,539 bales, comparec t 5> 085 B ineiin to accomplish his high | here will Rave o resort to subterrisa, | 22iing from German port ant, longing ve h intry in [ crats get in. Then we sh have | great for some parents. The m s, compared with 362,983 a mere extension of the one that some manner. expressed his helpless- | the Courant’s help in getting the law |is given freely—hence the child |last year, the census bureau today hopes. There is no other way out here, and this is a mere modification | ness. “One feels somehow as if one | supplied with teeth again.—Water- | comes to regard a nickel of small [ announced. From the plans already disclosed | e of craft already developed for battle. | must escape from the human shell | bury American. | consequence. All of the money Linters on hand June 30 in con- Mr. Hughes will start in Detroit on a One of the New Jersey Progressives| We may be sure, if the war lasts | and. soaring into unknown places, in The American exposes the attitude } which the child earns, or which is}suming establishments aggregated ¥ B % r vo longer, that the under- | vent something or other to Anfound | of the republican politicians towards | given to it. is spent for shows, fre- {107,361 bales, compared with 199,855 felous criticism of the man in the [ vop, is opinian in this ma [ aayenc orgly q v 3 . | A , 4 voiced his opl manner: will be used and the | the enemy. One longs fc & some | the civil service law. “When the re-|quently without the parents’ know- |last year, and in public storage and® W z se. 1 o re ca g o - r . water route hite House. His entire campalgn | «We should say to our leader, ‘We | tio will be so common as to surprise | means of flying, in order to £¥k out | pubicans resumed control of the state (ledge. A careful watch on three chil- | at compresses 166,953 bales, compared ¢ \ttitude Exposed. bation’s highest honors will have | (Hartford Times.) nth, probably exhausted his brief on what | natur be detected. but if the Al be therefore negative unless he | ggmire you, Colonel, but we do not no one. and discover the foe; for som\ new | government in 1915 they found the | dren, members of a family in moder- d with 108,660 last year. - )

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