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NEW, BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, JULY 25, 1916 — e m— s ————_ P —— : e - - = BRIIA[N HERALD ness for his employer, he usually does | of campaign . expenditures. v JUSTIFTCATION *BY FAITH. R - iy o B things well. If not he is made feel the | York Sun. | e landed {rom a German submarine on | . | Or, 1t Given ¥mough Rope Pociry of | tho Irih coast. Legally speaking, ome arks Harmless as i { School Will Hang Xtself. there never was a clearer case of _Provrietara. coro s : > ; : : 2 the Old Scl g 2 G though now the negro in the South|tion will realize that if it were as | s e R e e o g » P tSunday excepted) at 4:15 p. m., | works for tages there are’ many |polite and accommodating before (@eng vera Bty We have admired the course of the ! - th rs i Wowze g e L instances where his’ status Has not | competition appeared as it is after-| Joseph Dean, a poor but young man | British government in not executing | OI)eS, e » fifPed at the Post OMce at New Britals | (haneed materially since slave days. ward, competition might hot appear. | living on Long Island, had lltef*ax:‘»' Gen. Christian De Wet, after his un- £ 3 Beoond Class Mgil Matter. | S e i : —Indianapolis News { ambitions. Against the wishes of his | cuccessful rebellion in South Africa, 5 e . B vy thls e no he el e = : | friends he wrote poetry which he $old | rather than the course of the same | Washington, D. C,, July 25.—The | ma¥eater of the present day; judgisl Blie 15 Cenid & Weele, 55 Gonts s Month, | Writer of the arficle in The New Re- | "They have heen inseparable for'go | in irregular lengths to the principal) government in putting so mdny Irish | tragic depredations of man-eating | iBg from the cor atihdisize of thal DHIORs £gx puper to be sent by mall | ;e would want for the negro. He | Mmany years that if the tariff is taken | magazines. Once a week he graded | yebels to death -after the revolt in 5 ; g Professor sde thought - thi é; ‘,‘&‘,”" SRR o~ tdigenis aRMoRth outh of politics' what in the worlduwillll his output: by subjects land an®agent | Dudiiin: hut neither in theSons case | -lorhsialone the Atlantics seaboarc i seventy or v feot: 1oM k 4 0 become of politics?—New Orfedns | of the Poetry Perennial took his| nor the other Sihercl eobaiuaasont] 1 an especially timely interest to a-m ve been ¢ Y i oo .mo%mn advertisine modtam tn -0 shakipgdfhe dust of thejSouth | states. verses on serious themes; the rost|for any official action by.the Wash- | cOmmunication from Dr. Hugh 3| “Many j wegian bighs Lo sity. SEirewincion proks ‘and press | £y his fectAnd coming up to New = © | were disposed of in mixed fots. Ouly 2 3 < Y e fagventacts: natd \wm in the factorics and | Wetty Green resembled Russell | once had the youth had to hold a 'an"'m will be found on sale at Hota- | = the: pl: Py m the indystrial | S28¢€ We trust that her son ‘and | public auction of his unsold poems Ry frent, dand St andiBrosd- . ¥ v will in the management of his| ‘And vet, in spite of a growing lantic City, .n.unngimi”‘.;eu“‘ ' world filled by the man from Italy | noyw millions resemble Mrs. Sai | £ame and a fair income, §oseph: Dean | iaie Aepartment has already forwiba. or Austria or some forelgn country. | Syracuse Post-Standard. was dissatisfied. i 2 ey > 5 “When giant fishes a mentioned | Was the baskir kK (Cétorhind TEGEPHONT CaLLe - 2 | | # : K ed through Ambassador Page the pri- s § 3 sm B SR (I TR O S =i He belleved with the ardor of | yate petition of Sir Regers sister for | MO8t Peoplé.will at once think of the | maximus) known a s the clephantd L shark, among which, indeed are fqund | or bon <, which is an ‘nbgbitants B He X Nev. 1 with 1; he may:fool cer : re of his ar 5 it Rty % T e B T G ever fool with a foo he may/foo 4ron\mr“‘hm‘(h(\ future of hig art 1a¥ | .jemency, and. it cannot do more, as g 1 . ot A : M8 | you—Milwaulkee Journal. in the direction of free versa, or vers | qo o7 et : the larsest fish now existing,” wites |Pf the polar scas, ¢ occndlonaliye S own, according to thi¥ way of Jdoking Renaioni S ainly | said, without | zre grien “«Of the mahy ‘spllgies of | Strays as far south Virginia an a8 inviting a tebuke fr he Britis = lisren 3 R s Calif i g & om the British {0r- | sharks noteworthy on account d their | California, and in former yers was 8 o e cord I — | libre as'he preferred to call |# N at the situation It will be interesting It takes as long to say an ‘unkind Jennie 'Doane, whom he w 2 Fice. mouncement that the Health De- | to see the manner.in which the’whole | word' as a pleasant one; pleasant | marry, scouted this theory “g;,'“:si;fi:] i aonat an Sedtte size thers are about a half dozen ‘l‘m'r‘ in the United States gnd hr}u tment hgs started a crusade against | agrair works out. There car be little | WOIdS bring good results, unkind ones | At length she said that if her lover Slay bolies with lh; ‘sm\ip‘;‘;‘:mr which are pre-eminent. These differ | coasts. The species has the Hhabi P opnon i v o B e | e one e O i | pasEnolid v aenass aehen sWB- G ol toRn ke e tna oSy T chosst I R e e e (e o L e noh kGt dlepostion ipom aRpe e e iGioRiol caliscting HEH SOV SIS BECIRS thoir bromises i l B e | use of wasting time on them?—Wich- | be treated only dn .free verse she | ° 7 el 2o iPll- | as harmless as doves and Tothers the |surface and busking 11 the sun wit €ep their premises In sani- |ty the negro to leave the South and |ita, Kas., Beacoti:- would admit that he was Fght and | 065 in our foreign relations, if it is | incarnation of feroecity. s back partly out “of water. condition should be hailed with | come to the North, Some- of them e would give him her hand. The test | iNfluenced by such a“ motive. The |~ “The sleeper shark (Sommiosus mif- | reaches a maximum length of ’ Many a male individual, who is al- | of the matter was to consist in the | United States govérnment has enough | crocephalus), whose scientific mame feet and is excceded in size by onlyEs ways longing to bear someone else’s acccptance of the bit of vers libre by difficulties to encounter in its rela- | fits it so admirably, appears to have | three or four animals extant. Provides | burden, accumulates a grouch if he | the Roctry Perennial, which custom- | U008 with the belligerents of Europe | developed its body at the expense of |ed with small teeth, it feeds on fishe§h roughout the country are’|answered, Wifl the negra like the |.has to. tote home a package for his | arily. nsed only serious poems or |ID defending=American rights and in- | its brain, for it 'is a sluggishj4stupid | and floating crusticeans, and is nog Pt epiacihios of various kinds | North as well as'he does the,South3favife—Oklahoma City Oklahoman. poems of grim, sardonic humor. terests, without attempting to exer-| glutton, about si¥. times as long as an , of a ferocious disposition. It ds dans @iseast gopms are lurking in every | SoRillhe samecial e i |hat’ 4 Doy Joseph Dean’s falth in the futur "“e"‘”"‘““ Influence in a matter | average man. _At home iff the Arctic gerous only fgZvirtue of its great’ bullé i i it %L eornelius Vanderbilt is a ¢olonel 1h | of free verse whs so great that he em- | Which the British government, like | regions, \jt-sometimes makes visits as 'and when attacked ité power taill have existed in:the South for fifty |ne New York National Guard, and is | hraced these conditions, including | @0Y other government in a similar | far south' as Cape Cod, the British |demolishes hoats. In former year! BSE be“taken to 1rd the health of | years be enggndered in the Worth with | mobilizing for service at -the Rio | Jennie Dosvne Jovfully. case, must necessarily. regard as pure- | Isles, and Oregon. Tt is mostioffen the basking shark was hunted for s community New Britain, blessed | the coming of the colored man? The | Grande. In this case it is not be- Strolling fown the street that very Iy a matter of domestic concern. observed lylng quietly on the surfate, | 0il on the coast of Norway and Irgl far with good health, cannot: at 4 Itevefl that there are dependent rel- | afternoon hé noticed that th: Long apparently dozing and eadlly ap- |land; it was also harpooned on thEus B ooy leave ilself open to_at- atives to be’ cared for while the ! Island ratlroad had painted gorgeous The OId Man and Jim. proached, but at times, when hungry, ;shore of Massachusetts .in the nqr]\r_v j 2 ! —— — | breadwinier is - awdy.—Galveston | stripes around the pole which guard- (Jdmes Whitcomb Riley). It ;youses itself and flercely attacks part of the last céfitury, and as manyig BPegause of careless tenants or | - [FHE SPIRIT OF PLATTSBURG. Newsy = + 3 cd a-nearby grade °.crossing, He | Old man never had much to say- whales, biting huge pleces put of thelr as twelve barrels of oil were sometimefii§ jd ‘owiers. College boys to the number of 2,500 s — ** | converged with the gateman fof a few *Ceptir’ to Jim,- - sides and tails, and when feeding on'| obtained from the liver of one sharlgf There are some people with whom [are now in training at Plattsburg. They In ‘the vemy early days of the war | minutes and then hastened BA®k to | And gim’was the wildest boy he had, }hf‘ ";"Ca‘s"‘f a whale which has been | There are many recor 1s of baskingh e slogan “Out of Sizht. Out of Mind” " | Mr. DByid Tioyd George, who was|his study, filled With entMBastic| And the old man jes' wrapped up in | L@ Py hunters it is o ‘voraclous sharks twenty-five to thirty-cight feck oF _ : e T eanar | DurEEe: Rt at it permits spears and knives to |long from the coast of New Yor pstitutes the first law of life. Be- | tary instructors, lessons,in® prepared- | oyprostad the opinion that the issue | There he wrote his first composition | Never heerd him speak but once be thrust into it without seeming to |'Massachusetts and Maine, i biti: SN use the back yard is out of Sisht 0 | ness that wlil stand them in gb3ft stead | of the’conflict would be decided by | in vers libre. To be absolutely falr | Er twice in my life—and first time | (ke aNY notice. rs"‘”'“ nas not been compeMSEENE bse who pass the front of the house |in the event they are eyer called upon | silver bullets, which was another way | he also wrote a poem on precisely the was One of the most prodigious and | wdters in recent years ) > : - g s perhaps the most formidable of sharks | “The largest of all fishes, the largli must tiecessarily be out of mind, ac- 3 i Jors. Aside | Of saving that the country With the | same subject in the old style, with|When the army broke out, and Jim | RC\PAPS 21 3 5 tollatenaienoinationalicolors ieios ! longest purse would eventually be | rhymes, scansion and caesurae. Then | he went, Js the ‘man-eatér’ (Carcharodon car- |est of all cold-blooded animals and i | N £ chin eyt ikt This |-fromn . that ~they arc keeDing victorious.—Philadelphia Inquirer. he submitted both to the Poctry |The old man backin' him, fer three | Chaiia®). It reems through all tem- largest of all existing animals, withi eh must Dbe remembered: Back |podies:in,‘sood shape for the coming = | Perennial, which accepted the vers Montha) perate and tropical seds .ang every- | the exception of & few specles g rds of uncleanly nature are not out | scholastic sessions wherheit “minds | Some misgivings are’ sald to have | libre without the slightest hesitation. | And all 'at 1 heerd the old man say | e ]ige:nn:hJiQ“lf::v(jrerMi P e iale cherh O iSight to those numerous germ-car- | must be kegn and alert. fhe @ld ad- | arisen in Washington over Gen. Car- Bearing fhefrcjected poem, Josephijiwas,jes as’ wel turned | tol Sstartil footrs are F‘El{;‘-eesinché‘c fifip 1\\'11;': ;“unl})UI!n‘.)v"l\uvl!mxt::i i\m‘,-\‘\‘»\”r):\;nnl" : 9 ranza’s delay in accepting various | Dean went to Jennie Doane’s housc away,— B s e e \_,“”' R e n ; ; proposed modifications of his plan to | and told her that she had lost her bet. “Well, good-by, Jim ki S e B et b il s ey has lost qotie of its vigor§singe first | settle his troubles with the United | As soon as the next issue of the | Take keer of yourse'f!” e o e e T d ears which sense every germ with- |'spplied’ byithe Romamy. THe vomth of | States by means of a joint commis- | Poetry Perennial came out Jor ; ae Srecent piagcilcn) thereysmall (socchmelhging nas Besn STSS. e i |2 4 o - ] € s R have undoubtedly been many cases | on the Florida coast agfew years an unlimited sphere. The distance | toqay mu¥t kngw a= did themsoldiers of iston glo sttt ‘”h‘rt:q pere ""“1“‘”‘" | read the vers libre, which ran as fol- | 'Peared like he was more satisfled | where sharks simply swallowed pep- | This shark has a veryibroad and @ Pm the front vard to the back ¥ard | the Caesarsf#hag ‘to be fit. for the | ";"”’)2; ‘h“::m‘l“ t'; 2 """(‘:m’:;"‘]f‘o““n’"; lows: Mo i JlNH]rjO}m];' at Jlllm ; i ple who nad fallen overboard, just as | tuse snout™and an excBedingly - #idy R : Az i | ss the: HE JES And likin’ him a to hisse’f-like, | {hey wor e % oy A 5 megsured in the metric systei™df | eiash the hz(s ST e liint Kmpon | e e B e e e they wonld swallow apy ofher foof., mouth armed.with nunserous minm ; D PUBLISHING COMPANY. stern rebuke of the master. For even | e b hoenn o R aometcorparay ses batter times ahead. He sees the ingtofi administration. ir Roger | Smith, the foremost American.author- ! in (" learned papgr brought to thg {and he has no claim whatever upon | ) g 4 A cal E ke “wliicn he aF 2 al Geographic socicty #ind released to- | tempted to ust.havelbesmi the United States for protection. The ik SIS (S : 1ust, haveNoeenkthl X day as a bulletin. great fish' that swallowed Jenah, This vast majority of New Brit- have already made the:mbove. ‘THis Ata time when vari- | gquestion, however, remains to be ivenient corner ‘extreme precaution next fifty years may see great changes. are receiving, under compttent mili- | g flies and other insects that aside | age of a sane mind in’a/fieng pody pm: Their flying ability have eyes | 4 ‘““Ha, ha!” cried the gateman at the see?— How easy it would Be for g o > sd % se pestife atures is i ! ey i e War € s 4 asy & man-ent- - teeth; the _ difrls-colored bhody s . of these pestiferous ecregturées | Prattsburg Bl be a bource of bring- | the misgtvings—New York World. A G G 6 Cause he was jes' wrapped up 1in | er to devour a person whole smay be |'marked with many " Sorgll grgater than the amount of wWing'ff¥e e vlh of America into the the Long Island Railroad in him! Jjudged from the finding of an entire | spots. / The spacies is stated to atfgl wergthat will carry them there. And | proper lin s A County Without a Railroad. Roncapequa, L. L., And over and over I mind the da¥ | hundred-pound sea-llon in the stom- |a length of seventy feet &nd is kngwi bt or these germ bearers have | ' Not long @ko, when thB tango craze (Philadelphis Record). < was a_good ‘un that little bar- | The: 0ld man come and stood around | ach of a thirty;foot shark on thé Cal- | toexceed ffty feet. Notyitl ber Domenico Salvaggioni got _ In the way j ifornia coast. A ¢ertain man-eater | its:Immense sizé however, It off this morning, While we was drillin’, a-watchin | thirty-six and one-half feet long had |less to man unless attacked, and féed Wasn't it, ch? Jim; jaws twenty inches wide, inside lon the small daréatutes for whichit 1 | tv that is touched by railroad— > - . ] 3 ide, : hose folk who do not wish the un- | try were on the verge of being carried | SiLnioneoc BRye il vailzoad What—ain't vou heard about And down at the deepot a-heerin’ him | measure, and teeth two and one-half | teeth ar n"t\tm] Tts Huge* BRI a very unusual state of affairs that | W . - ; A fenes aring i s G ) snico has st se is - say,—. o0 es v have J A akes i a us 2 'sa o W gant’ experience, of appearing. inlaway with:the glamor of ball room |is no doubt responsible for the fact | V' Cl Domenico has just set up hisrva-, : incties/long. Thle may havd begn thep ihakes it degusio St b n 2 0 s ) dow > p e “ “Well, good-by, Jim: ‘gres sh’ i re -narra 5 hat ¢ e is i Ous, Y ears B court to ansyer charges of uns | rignts, o thts-end ‘thelr, days were | that the population in this, mountain- zor shop down the stre \ od-hy great fish’ of the seripture narrative, | that a whale i d&ngerous, 'Year . Take kecr of 3 S { and it is possiblé that at that time | it was<ghponrtedydiag ih ; Akl 2 he - wa | possi it was¢ghpontedighng, thé Baniliness naq petter ifollow the ‘ad- | givenidver to making up 267 sleep lost | 0u8 district, lving on. the Maryland | , o WA= 0 | much larger man-eaters existed than:| fisiermen at the'j 1 border, hasslong been stationary or . declining. Recently a compsny wag | 2 S0me Up here and said he thou pr‘v'-w was nothin’ about the farm “|are now known, as shark teeth with [im-therTndiah‘oetan, | rhythm. If Plattsburg means any- | chartered to build a line from McCo = tald Al myigate pole < ..‘\,‘}IM 2 e cutting edges five Inches jdong s Hevoig potn, & wHAIRIpEarc X pending penalty Already a formid- | thing to these vou i ‘;; e ol he e Now {hat it was all str 1 over. | Neighbors ol ju 'vu \\nnfl(‘r why been found on the sea-bottom, and |stories are told .of a Harpooned fish, | thing to these young men it fhust show | X . T told him he'd better not; I needed it. The old man 'peared wrapped up in | these are believed ,by naturalists: to | ‘having hy a lightning-like dive ex-#%8 fle list of offenders has been pre- | them the foolishness of following: the | oudon, and now it is stated that Then him: ; have belonged to sharks not long | haustéd #he shpply of rope which had #% B3 and.in a’day or so warrants |gaudy and the unreal. Dancing hnr::::]n‘,::n:?w\ "n‘.‘}” :(\\,}'»';(1;‘"] Jor %1 He grins and says: ‘Oh, vesi I for- | But when Cap Biegler, it back | dead. The phosphate beds of South'|been accldentally fastencd to theg It \be issued. K There will be no'lan extent is all right. Over indulgence | automobile has h.-m.«‘n”yi» i e At Jim was the bravest hoy we had ’ Carolina yield very large fossil teeth |boat,dived deeper still, and so pulledfiy got a i of a shark which was related to the |a pirogue and crew to the bottom'.” mency. , This is the time to clean|in this form of exercise, like anything | beauties of Fuiton County beiter ) jMicterit strength to make several | wag at its height, the boys from the | Fulton County, as many persens Hd-tripd'a ds high schools and colleges BEéhe coun: | KROW: is the only Pennsylvania cotun- e given ‘by Dr. Reeks, superin: | i #he’ glorious riights of music and dent of ith, who warns of the That von ot closetenaves oo In the whole dern rigiment, white er » 5 z ! i ha they f - “Ha, ha!” laughed the gateman at the black, —— i L el b else, leads into the dark and perilous f]:‘”““W‘ ::fi :”;l n“'r"lm"\r“(‘;'* and Nissequogue avenue crossing of | And his fightin’ good his farmin’ ’ = pathways. After a good long stretch | (1¢ NEW IO aXeilt Suthon ac e NEGRO COMING NORTH : cessible. The southern road across Ak S S ey of work in the open flelds, undér the | the state runs through Fulton and is fpose folk who have since the | hot sun, the nights at latts] o now largely used by motorists. These pseiaf the war between the states |'may be given over to i have probably stirred its people up to the Long Tsland Rgilroad in bad, Doncapequa. L. T., At he had led, with a bullet clean “I thought that was a pretty good | Bored through his thigh, and carried giin 8 the flag f Tont & s T When Jennle had read th she | Through the bloodiest battle you ever | o 11 doabishshund lyzes it, the feet st undered s, proil soted-time, money and energy to |means a real surcease of labor. B R S (feam Rt i ee Toveriwti e ey finkner scen,— grotesqueness, collfes, 8t dachshunds, | alyzes it, et must, undergs s pro{8 ! 3 but also any sort of puph. purh, mon- | cess of reshdping, in,order to sustaini he eg I race se i a v suc zhts, o slogs vos, s 3 i The old man wound up a letter to him > » i @plift of the negro race see in|a few such nights, with the slogan o o hm-\l1':”:;wasp.hxlwy1\“f};::h::;x ”71;(: mo(‘n" af woundy Die dottor K“';cn grel, whelp that has a'grékeful tail to | the body on the ufinitubal foeing-outd Bedevilling the National Guard. the subject was one which could have Jim e \1‘1)”7: '-(kfl TS Lk Ill’r\j\rl‘dt‘»‘v‘x::nl f.’lm i a J;L‘hu;:f ’l":n? & d (New York World) been dealt with adequately only in Good-by; P“};‘fi"fifi’f i?"w- = i Ha vn|~b;|'vrdl\ B ravorable. o Sy el 4] jstence in the South they foresee the | the great centets®of education pre- et Sl e 1| free verse. There could be no areat- And take keer of hisse'fl’ se fug erses we have lately E proveh s 1 . i seen have the same note that ias positively harm e gro migrating to the North where | pared to take up thé work prescribed | griovances of the National Guard e iibiite o its wortnithan that ® Bl e > oLl i = struck by Matthew Arnold in his fa- — will live in plenty, set up new |in any curriculum.and get away with | the border being engineered at home | f2ith had been justified. So they be- | Jim come home jes' long enough mous poem, “Gelst’s Grave,” that was | Settling a Dispute. “ame 2 - i er | To take the whim 3 for republican party purposes? came engaged and lived happily ever | To sounded in that tals Bv the Wdin- (New York Sun.) . 5 | 5 At he'd like to go back in the cal- ‘ Not a word of complaint is heard | after. L..‘,,. Sk burgh doctor, “Rab and Hjs Feienis.” Professor William Lyon Phelps. off | from the men of the regular army, e ” 3 AR . B o in | and by poor Ouida in “Thé'Dog of | yale told the following &tor = | nor is a word of sympathy for them Checkmating Rorabackism. L] 1”.":,"“1 mansjest wrapped up nij o ol e ,msu,,.],,r,.”“}‘ A {,h,’mr’r ”f ‘\‘;“:“‘f,rk( : ery negro now in the North there | rived from a vacation under the aus- | anywhere printed. But in many (Hartford Post.) i ‘!(']\]\ljvi R s | bring tears and these recent vevses| «yiterary disputes ave Intorestigg i e nine in the South. AH this | pices of Uncle Sam. It is this: A | places there is an attempt to malke it Whethie: by et Woadtow wWisen A iR breathe a tender grief.' I'properly conducted. Too m{]m—f i be changed, Is being changed |kfhallng of the <pirit of patriotism, | @PPear that the state troobs are seri- | iy cary Gonnecticut and whether | Guessed he'd tackle her three vears | The trouble ahout dogs Is that they |them, however, are suggestive of $he 0 bl L & 5 oo ) i toolio ir o 5 g s Tin this véry moment/ and thére will:| The men «-mtm» st e (e | S bl G Toehs IOl el g il Rl R e i e o die too soon. Their spam of Wf Shakespearian dispute in Tin Cén in 10,000 gets the® rahies. Besides, | in isapt to be subjected to reprimand, i fussy persons can't -abide them. icule, at how’ mnd at sghook “kd the verses indicaigd that#dogss the “AMINEAL ut is culed after all, rather fi'mlar»not “omly | tivated until it-beconfefit Hfixed halftis dogs of high degt® or of “approved | But, as 1his medical, ‘authority an-gf _fgeea great change for the [early to bed, the men who follow the fer. Instead of a. long drawn out [ course therd will be fit to return [portunities for himself and those {this work in no mean fashion. These o come after and add a new era |are the salient benefits of Plattsburg the history of his people. s For| There Is anothér benefit to be de- Lefx ¢ | duty along the Rio Grande and to ex- T Cheh 1t s, So*that “Pr - Bill Bill . , - 2 ributi ] r the ez at Plattsbur; e | i P its state ticket are for the future to [ And the old man gave him a colt he'q | 80 short compared to ours. £ it | Professor Bill Billus of the. Tind almote eayal distribution 'of { under the cf 3 2 Slacisbure ate| ofi entimient amone o mmilssendifao L T A Anot every Iriondibip a mun ias Wwith & Gan Dancing Academy deliveredsi il pre pdople. The North and the |meewing and living with representa- | friends of the men in favor of their | harey can abolish Rorhbackism in And e ved him over to Camp |08 is hound to end In bereaveméntjecture in the TLone Hand Saloon, and uth will +be equalized in negro | tive citizens of the nation. ' They are | immediate return home. Connecticut even for two years is a EBen Wade © | all too quickly. And the.loss.of a be- |in the course of his argument fe- Only a few days ago these re: e . g it 4rs. bad as that 1o 3oy Stood . Bur & robler @ i ray In w Tpuc S e loved dog is almos ba E cited “The Boy Stood on the Burm- ments clamoring for the priv- ¥ n, but there is a way in which | yWatchin'® Jim on dress-parade | o natt /g blood of the republic, With young men | jloge of S to be sent | Rorabackism, if it cannot be de-| Ang laid around fer a week er so. of a human heing. ne Deck' a gem, he declared, from - throned can be checkmated. That |, ) Ry If one likes dogs so well that one | Shakespeare’s ‘Othello.’ TR X S e o f and every state i Thie Stk . & X a checkms . e ] finally he rid away, & { fThe New Hepublic is the first ‘to | from each and every state in the Un- | south. Today the national guardsmen | way lies 5 the demoorats securing o ol \was the old man |has a succession, the.last dog may be | “But an interrupter. arose ar her the thought and in an article [ion. This gathering of men from the | &re represented by persons Gl o | Sl o by o e e D e as dear as the fpsth but there will |gtrode forward. a recent number attributes the | various states, from the ‘great sections [ P2Pers profossing to be the sole|the house of representatives. WIith [ yycil wood-hy, Jim; he a last one, because the grief of | I am a Bostomgent, saidithe ius ok s e guardlans of the truth as being al S S e v & ¥, B ysing such friends is too great 4o be | terr “ rtity ‘ ing €hange to the present war in | of the country, must naturally awaken | [ oqv ek of soldiering and harboring | O0C ouse of the legislature against Take keer. of vourse'!” losing such friend L And, SErUDICR ‘andl £ SBhrigy - AGINioNy Y e ns rrancts ot or T o | ok g ! 2 BN £ | him the republican boss’ hands Will [ mu) the papers, the old man did borne. cannot he again invited. Tis- | Shakespeare never wrote that plecet rope.- It seems a Luni way to m!' {p the breasts of all those who attend | a bitter grievance because they can- | e tieq. s : y g SRt marck, standing over his dogs “‘Friend,’ sald?! Professor . Billu§js thelel e ITisiy\ sentiz o SO R it no (oLt R gRtn eiTfornRo caane There are 35 senatorial districts In | pyijy beliovin® he'd make his marl graves. could not he comforted. And|gently, ‘I!can convince you ‘that HE ¥ the state. In the election of 1912 the Some way—jes’ wrapped up in him! | Many a poor man, losing a mere “,”j‘- done so. : 3 democrats controlled the UPPEr | And many a time the word 'ud come | h8s felt that he has parted with his| Convinge away’ said the Boss house. Tn 1914 they lost control, : : only friend. tonian sceptically Prd electing but five members of the up- Strange that to call a man a’ des o Profedkor Billus led off withi ! per house. Elther party to control| s¢ pe is to insult him! Strange that-d | his right foot and followed up the to otHer studénts, the spirit ofiPlatts- | hard campgiening, and no one bad!the senate mr elect 18 A man who loves the dog.should use its | argument with a brass euspidor, fall® s bha e St R e spirit of self-sacrifice. And 1 a‘:u.\ dror,\erm to ,"h“n.[:\jxfe“ they “(n:. name to heap .op)"»rrjbiul‘n- on «an |ing, in»:\ subsequent f'hm'):. on top. 5 i i R o s for | ored the national service that they | to do so is by no means a superhuman 3 enemy! Ourselves, we had rather “Who writ that piece?’ he shouted next Summer when the time comes for | were to cnjoy all the comforts and | unac king if the democratic party 1 g“‘]‘ S e Y . have the soul of “that Belgian dos he pummelled his opponent stéad- | conveniences of home. ‘After a few | will nomfnate inteliigently and con- |13 Socked i to the boys In| ©" ulda's story, his faith, h Toy-{fly. - ;dnvs of excitement during mobilization ( quet its nphign intelligently Cligotedl fer titaber and on |altyv. thap soul of one of Bel- “ ‘Shakespeare,’ the Bostonian an-$2 | and entrainine they have had to sot- Two of Hartford’s three districts N o ™ | ejum’s oppressors. swered in nothered tones from '§ | | | pulation. , @his according to, the | hob-nobbing each dag with the young | an answer, but the logic pursued & . ] the writer of this article entitled, lin the country, of pride in its great- No one who gave a moment’s seri : = gL ous thought to the matter anticipated & Negro Migration,” is almost ify | ness, of love for its democracy. When | 11,54 ‘the guardsmen were out for a Benell, »Torsciy, it js this: When | these bovs go back to th: colleges | frolic in Texas. No one believed that Ltney ‘will -carry with them, o impart | they were seasoned troops ready for ’At stirred him up like the tap of a i drum Stria found. the Serbian reply in- missable the American negro got'f tersburg, fe: stunce,- wherc * o members | gy yiq right into their cannons there, | or the democtatic party fo attempt|jng tuk ‘em, and plinted ’em tother | hike his way in the industrial world merica. The war in furope which | another encampment there will be hickly followed the Serbian reply | more young men ready to go and take etically put an end ff impigration | up a course of military training under | fle‘ down to steady work and striet | are normally demoeratic, one of Wa- g tfenant—and "one| arm —_— underneath. military routine, as most of them no | terbury’s and three of New Haven's. ol TR i i | Toeing-Out. “‘Are you sure? asked the Pro-{ M;mvrwmed' r [itnoasi distiien Sl diveihefdomo, | words in his mind (Erorinence Toumat) fessor. st n the circumstances, any effort to | crats one-third of the votes they | 400 : : i : & i thesd pure® waa the Teply. ssation 'of Immizration the supphy T 1 ) . : CUmen : ead * sur as the reply. +I s ) L S e 1 Al Baltimore, the birthplace of our| .. ,, gigatisfaction among the men {need to checkmate Rorabackism el I It \x(‘ l‘ri\(flx :1?t‘: :‘.‘,T srnlhiiers]snn labor/wids .cut. down eTe Was.a | pational anthem, having decided that! of the sfate regiments amounts to | There are plenty of other districts in - Fe Ly E0nc E - ey 5 :ns‘p’c""‘“ sty eat searcity ang, as the demand fér |\, gicians, performers, or other per- ipering with the discipline of the | the state which will elect democrats a ¢ FoinghagRioanE oun 2t anslc 1o Ratber T, AbataS eed o b han ol sorvi 4 ' 4 : Thited States army. Tt is a for S e T G i ot e F hirty grees as a - bor exceeded the supply. the service | gong shall stand while playing, sing-| - n‘i‘ngn :f"“‘ “r[“h‘v, "“ 1 m({m ’r‘;w‘)’: if demo ‘T r,",“,'u‘; (‘ h' ““, the | Thin private, naw, perhaps, tion of military men, to show thaf (Boston Tost.) Y AR LN My S il se. at ~ politicians an siv | nominated, regardless of how e n vate, . » ; the neggo, usyally looked upon £S14ng, or rendering ‘“The Star Spangled newspaner agepts mav think it safe to | state as a whole goes. It should be We'll say like Jim, they know more than the Lord. .| ‘Wien Colonel Coniey and Lieutendi q s state as @ g L AU lniiialoan BB = 5 Fery likely i s pass f - > o Batper,” or be fined $100, other| practise, but if the United States army, | the business of the state central com- | At's clumb clean up to the shoulder \]‘_"‘»‘ "“,t'; "‘a:a fi‘;"‘m‘“" (;”‘ ”é apt-Colonel Phelan of the Sixty-ninth g w more valuable: Those of thed (jtjes are expected to follow suit.|so far as it is made np of the orzan- | mittee to see that the party exercises v fashio er favored | Now York, ¢s who were usually to e found | | 1zed militia of the states, is to be | intelligence in these semi-local nomi- And the old man jes’ wrapped up [practice of the parade ground. A ifing on street corivis in the little | | utilized by -epublican campalgn man- | nations. in him! | _"“;.i writer in the Journal of the American Think of ki ¥ M cal ass 1 s " tha K 0 { agers f - the purpose of making votos Think of him—with the g¥a; luny' | Medical association declaresthat for place. | for 4y ir candidate the mooner it is through, ks soldiers, as other men, the toeing-out hey Sir Roger Casement. Anc he glorious Vhite-: - sition is ically hysio- o s | disbanded the better it will be for the | ir Roger ™ And th ious old Red-White-and- | position is anatomically and physio gd, into the North for domestic $ACTS AND FANCIE | country. o (Springfield Republican.) B logicglly wrong and indefensible. ARiahags were gapnEted. dp e e ‘e mews dowr over Jim, | Walling or marching, it ‘makes for ¥ o1} f : & m - rer the case of Sir Roger | ! i | Zan hendi eey Gim e es o ey [eens Dniiens ment would favor'the protest and iday there is little slack labor | ~ Speaking of.fame, what was Molly Work For the Postmasters. goyerimontain 52 eon turnin’ away with tears| All tramps know that, of course, if 8 nd nuld » 2. ®) v et ill-a rised. : ' 1 v Gen 0 h, * the matket) jThese aré tHe | Pitcher’s ~husband’s name?—Boston (Boston Globe) Casement would be most fll-advised. | |\ (" 4 't Joaked fer years and years, | their style of walking is evidence. And | /Y, General Waod's -order for th#) "hatever one’s personal sympathies 2 . purpose of humiliating that soldier. o io | Evening Transcript. o “ S¢ tho v Whateverfione s Dokson YD the hand of the dvin’ hoy clung.to |most of us are familiar with tho |P! dier, “’“* 1 dueqgliely - Renublic 2 e rroiponmesiers ot comntey Wil may) bel whatever oncieiontuion may "ather's, the old voice in' his | characteristic toeing-in. or =traienr | The theory was excellent from thein'd " G soon be able to find something to do, ; 3ritis) A 5 8 fith th ”Wm°’§!% Lhe WEETO b The British government has de- | if all the plars are carried out. Thae | D° 25 .t the "‘““"“‘_”“"” T(‘,‘_":‘ ears,— foot, of the Amerlcan Indian, child | Point of View, _”:" it did not work oufS [ found to be a good it g ser-f.oided to take 7T pér cent. gf the ex- | postmaster-general has fust Instruct. | EOvernment ought to take, the Case- | .ywell, good-by, Jim: . ie ok avkwara by con- |11 the manner they desired. gés will- not be let go. 2 cess profits of SMpping. firms,. whigh | ed them to,collegt checks, when oalled | MeNt affair is one that does not ea Take keer of yourse'f!” trasi to the striding soldier, but he | The war department accepted Genti. m Qouth‘.‘he negro has been al- |15 & ship subsidy reversed.—New | wpon, for the nagional reserve banlks, for our government’s n\t(‘;]\n;y]n‘m; i . shuffles over the ground rapidly and | eral YWood's opinion and order as mg.. 6 8 s h 5 ® - Reger has been convicted of hig 4 i g s r In York World. | and the commisBionerd of immigrdy| SIr Reger has been conv Tie Poetizing “About Dogs. tirelessly. olutely gorrect, ard sustiiiied hin = | tion, urging co-operation of postmas- | freasen against the Brilishig sovenns e IRl Parents are largely responsible for | every dgspect. “Polifies first” was not i 3 N ¢ Iinneapqlis Journal). ; i i bpectd : < ] L the dining room, in the garden, in | Now it is Ford'for governor. The | ters with the labor department’s em- | ment and sentenced to death. Tf v ‘ e S perpetuating the fiction that toeing- | admittéd to. the gase. Some of ouk stable-yard, his equal is hard to | eminent pacifist is breaking all rec- | ployment bureau, says: “If each post- dom dictates that he be not executed, We have "10\1'{\'! of late fi\'mnfl out is “correct.” Was there ever a |contemporaries’ arg mfgknowledging" g o ords in the exciting sport of being | master vill co-cperate we will have a it may, there is still no possible | poe on dogs. Dogs, It'v SUD- | child that stood; or walked, that |this grudgingly;-othe¥s find it bettey & . 2 mentioned for office. He gets the | free employment hureau in every lt- | doubt that he openly conserted with | posed. were ing out—théy «re | way, natural The child that finds | to say nothing<at#l ™¥it tne '\"n(i % DYt “if he possessés any xond-‘nm without baving-to file statements | tie town and hamlet.” the enemies of the British govern- lgorm-«nn'r ers and all that. Also d§e In difficult to avoid thoughtless toeing- | reajizes and répacis decisjon. \ 2 pm Earppe to the Unfted States. It | the eolors. turally followed thMt with. the = > seen him do ft.' easy-going gond-for-nothing beifg; were barred from military service of the United States by (Genal &4 eral; Wood not long ago, on account & of physical disability, ‘and thereupon Sy strong protest was’ made by nqm:;i friends to the war department, the' anti-administration papers immediate- 4 % I¥ took it for granted that the depart Patriotism is fast becoming a lost art vhen a police regulation must take its lwns down Sou‘h were speedily put | work. Thu mnegro girls were im- s looked upon as a good servant. | d. He takes his time about doing