New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 29, 1916, Page 6

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EW BRITAIN HERALD| HERALD PUBLISHING COMPANTY, Proprietors. answered with question: “What would you have done?” In the second place the nation will want him to ex- a even to the butler on the Then there in with door. can be no ill feeling, and the cook wlil remain In this family. midnight the day of lunchrooms and cabarets the cook She is rapidly losing her power. Is it he gets huffed, at while plain his reasons for knawing that this prosperity is only “temporary.” If so, when will it end; when Wilson leaves the White House? No, Mr. sailing in his imposed task of the Wilson administration tedly the man in the White House the of the He things upon him the criticism of peoples, but there is hardly of his that will be His party’s legisla- ed.datly (Sunday excepted) at 4:15 p. m. is not appreciated &t Herald Buliding. 67 Church St. any wonder then ths packs her trunk Ted at the Post OfMce at New Britalm A& Becond Class Mall Matter. 2 Hughes will not have eas ind leaves a mo- ment's notice, the metimes of Ivered by carries to any part of the cfty for 15 Cents a Week, 85 Cents a Month. bscriptions for paper to pe sent by mall, Payable in advance, 60 Cents a Month, $7.00 a Year. ® only profitabla advertising mcdeum the oity. Circulation books and press | room always open ro advertisers. ' sailing meal not. She is on the stove course, Admit- the until attention she we does not get And has should she does, will better positions, hes have. n end ¢ trouble the The big problem has been pr done many that have brought have no in rlous | American family. solution to a ® Herald will be found on male at Hota- CRG Seel s g ling's New Stand. 42nd St. and Broad- wey, New York City; Board Walk. At- lantic City, and Hartford Devot. ot condemned by | henceforth there is no reason why the entire not nation American housewives should et with their cooks. Maids, t the along too, cord stands almost unimpeach- Where once the casily denounced as a party tive abl. party was i S detrimental to financial institutions, its TEMPORARY"” PROSPERITY. federal reserve act covers a multitude & | ot There no talking of exports to during 5 made that *Nor President’s dealings Furo- | | They're training dogs for scout duty on the border. “Treated like dog now take on a new significanc York Telegram TELEPHONE CaLLSE. should same treatment, Ofce .. Rooms .. SIness Democratic B itorial FACTS AND FANCIES. Berlin evidently mind that it isn’t annex anything. has made going to be Rochester up its able to Herald. A sins. can be American Russia issue. will with { point on fig- ! 5" i the to . pean powers give No matter Mr. ughes turns on this score he is tread- And he has “undiluted from AT ® past year have jumped es. of i aof startling € the fir ey reached a total value 0,000. For the ar they were 1significant proportions any leeway for ar- ose dimensions. Dur- | gument. which way st three months of this year | o 28,- Boverssy No once can doubt that Germany would not like to sell Belgium for $10,- 000,000,000. But therc e'nt going to be bids.—Boston Journal. of § ing on dangerous ground. announced his doctrine of The preparedness the cannot last These of same period $1,000,000. the Americanism.” a R rorared b bureau any issue, and all recent popular ago Au 1tum bear is tearing —Buffalo Courier o and domestic commerce, reign and dor claimed or | | Twoy Mr, ful in the cold. | Russian empire. movements be clutched triz sent her fate- 1. Today the the Austrian the erity which " me idea of pros s one and sa left Tt will be more than interesting to sce | past year places | y,\ ho handles a situation that at its " Tn Mexico City Attacking | 6300 in Mexican money, but even that price we shouldn’t like to go into the flour business in Mexico City.—Al- bany Journal. by an 14 1 ey mian) ultin to Serbi pited today enjoving dcial summary of the vast amount of | States is Hughes is there out L barrel of flour costs trade for the e figures for merchandise exports at double the | reign hest pleasant task. Woodrow Wilson and sticking to fa is no a about tc done the Merchandise 198,000,000, 4,000,000, just jnount of business year be- | j5 some job. imports or six- s Aked’s peace Dr. racterization Ford’s party : ymposed 1zy cranks and dr is neith Christian polite. Possibly ac- curate.- Haven Journal-Courier. are unmistakable that Mr, Hughe. getting ready to prove that he is the bench and truly a man of the people when he sa to a hand- shaker: “You bet your life.” Will the former justice of the United States supreme court be called ““Charlie” on his stumping tour, as Mr. Wilson four Yvears ago was hailed as “Woody"” ?— Springfield Republican IO A, fr T PROPER CARE OF A COOK. ch <:§ ¢ bus record. Since immemorable house- mers] of in retaining cooks and house- The and time nor New With these figures in mind it 1is America have ther difficult to guments against wives experienced lay any weight on | trouble American prosper- | maids. problem has grown b The signs leaps bounds until toc one of the salient y. Experts do not figure such pros- Hughes arges, because the figures cover an and the outlook for o rity as “temporar as Mr features of domestic worry. Almost everything ingenious minds can think ot has been advanced the subject ht an- fher eal re year Books have tell year of the same prosperity is |on been | written purporting to of ways to many | cover the difficultic lady of the one long road of happiness ahead “How keep your cook’” is of among those who attempts to the year previous to this | cord the figures overshadow confronting the This business having been be lost so The Repub- clatm have of house who would When the Cows Come Home. { (Agnes E. Mitchell.) With klingle, klangle, klingle, I'ar down the dusty dingle, The cows are coming home; e and clear, now faint and ow The airy tinklings come and go, Like chimings the tower, Or patterings of an Ap That makes the Koling, ko-lang, golinslelingle, Far down the darkening dingle, he cows come slowly home. st years. ce developed will not asily any imagine. her. to a arty, that the sole guardian of lay clalm to no such rec- the as . L piece advice alwavs welcomed a party have made unsuc- | And yet rject has never been exhausted. comes Mis! Snow to What Miss Mary to Miss Phoebe of the road of Antra- Miss solution being pros- rity, d cessful do so. Now can Democrats | the st that made their three and pwer. “Temporary” this lay be, but its life up to the present joment than y wave of prosperity ever enjoyed de; administration. jch facts will go a long way g the present Administration on the by ; years more in ow Mary tho | e prosperity | Fescue: relation T il shower daisies grow; not known. But expert cite, is Mary of rica is exceedingly longer tho | and | soon be hon- this great unfolds possesses an . e servant in Ame: fore roble a Republican X = ther her name wiil in keep- S B housewife in friends, and She G e JArul old-time twilight plays, And starry nights and sunny da. Come trooping up the misty ways When the cows come With jingle jangle, Jingle, Soft tones that etly mingle— The cows are coming home, and glorious land her if that is what it may be called, Chicago TLeague. Her theor men in the domestic arts system, to the Woman's TUnion home. NEXT MONDAY NIGHT. is that when wo- B 1 and sciences £ York ent of night at Carnegie hall there will take place importance in the political | Then and there Mr. Cha Hughes will be officially selec the Chicago con- pntion Repub- zan party for the presidency of the | This e occasion of the formal opening of e campaign. His speech of accept- ce on that night ig expected to con- in outline of his main plan of tack President Wilson, If he is bt in the heralc mood necessary for fch a task he will be alded and| etted by that assailants, heodore Roosevelt. the has tention frain from politics, that B is out of the game for good, word bmes from Oyvster Bay that the 1 be on the firing line when t shot splits the afr. There are those who feel that the of Roosevelt are needed In the of | ng the Wilsen administration. ot that Mr. Hughes is incapable of | indling the situation; but the task tearing apart the policies of Wilson Tt requires the win the same positions of with social equai- their employers they hold in office servent problem will be solved for all Th - an Malvine, DeKamp, Red Schell Queen Bess gled Sue, cross the clan her ac With gle, The cows come s and Pearl, and Florimel and ity Rose brid Jeg | Stenography or other work the b notified and Sylph and Span- his 2 by time. because women are more interested i domes sconomi ar er e Rt oo interested in domestic economics. hear her Such a condition in the hom And would And silver rar < bell; goiinglelir soundis t make labor come willing Treel of there is instituted rstem tive bargaining between the mistresses ling, go faint <le min- nited States. will aiso mark | is her way putting it unle of coll owly home. on one side and the maids and cooks othe And mother-songs of long-gone years, And baby childish fears, And youthful and youthful tears, | When the end | With ringle, By twos and The cows are an = on the or a recognition of the | joys and situation by the mistresses themselves, hopes the home will be decadent in the near future. The in sight unless some change occurs. Her bellef in household economics should be al- | | Through cows come home rangle, ringle, thr and single coming home, Miss Snow says so. prince of Desplte the fact | announced his i e persons emploved at Colonel air we see the town, a-sliding down hazel glade path longer violet And the summer And the maple in th Throws down shade, the hills are growing brown; To-ring, to-rang, toringleringle, By threes and fours and single, The cows come slowly home. to r lowed to come in the morning and go sun home at night. the a There son why the maid and the cook should was never a legitimate rea- And not be social equals of the mistress of house After all, the the house. Probs rents it. Why then herself aloof from to the mistress bly should Colonel only owns he eatly work Uit she of wordl hold whom the place she culinary department? the all The same round | psalm, The sweet the sons of | the the per: sam June-day rest calm, same sweet baim, n the cows tinkle, she employs take care more to el Degiganly The smell of buds and attend No one hires to no work for one. brvices of a few full kpecially those who have with politics for the past four ears. The entlre natton awaits the kughes' speech of acceptance and the might go with to arguments come home tankle, tinkle, rern and periwinkle, come slowly home. Wh Throush The c reason in grown men, i the world. On contrary tress should make life one sweet Yoon in the mis- | | do in her power to = uch dream for The spoon the | cook | A-loitering in the checkered stream, cook, and for the maid. : 4 un-rays glance and gleam, nole [par gihe R . Peachbloom and Phoebe | hand. She controls the destiny of the | Phillis family. One carefully Stand knee-deep in the creamy lilles narcotic and forthwith dream; i So the -lank, tolinklelinkle. with buttercups courted remarke that goope 1 be interesting in n the handled, and what subjects are Mexico will see all administered In a drov To-link, t Qler of the must potion cook’s all of called. be doctor he S winkle, d upon. Natural he e the good graces should if the mistress should have afternoon to good cook her is perfectly of way. That is ane of | | time. he cows slowl home. e easlest targets. The others are not Even hushand the arc coming be scored upon so readily. ol tnioven L able to | | HERotoER e v ery for thel ,1q up through memory's deep ravine Comes the old song and its old-time sheen, And the cresent of the silver When the cows come home. With klingle, klangle, klingle, With 100-00, and moo-00 and Jin- zle The cows its career be held | in the history party cannot or once of e Democratic i p to ridicule as the party apposed to | be cook and her loved one journey hrook's through the countryside. queen, weight right should be no the who rosperity. There might a few |can command more than sndom shots at the present prosperit hich Mr. Hughes will brand as “‘tem- orary,” but such talk does not carry | with the | ot | pares delightful commestibles for the | the cook wants in town. | Tiss Sn in gold Tiss Snow all ‘'she There in 1y's. between lady social barrier coming home. owns the house and the one who pre- are who in whether stopped at reight people are pridst over there on Merlin Hill, the plaintive cry of the whip- poorwill, And the dewdrops lic gled vines. And over the And over the silent K g lang, cows come And Sounds of the fun beir Suppose the inner | to the fa. “temporary asts all night or i ; e best show Pre- roke of twelve eople are not g ckets,—as many as r with the term i £ | she might be a police- poplars yus shines an | S poplar ] 1 about it | Mar rosperity is prosperity and that h neighborhood. Supnose nill of | the | | i hot nation knows brand atcher c Tt entire until | she a party to some no | Towly it is fends. irn over to her votes | parlor, the house. Move ou Mexico | Parlor, tt & two big[in the all mmrnG- Suppose the cook would like to invite 4| the girls around for afternoon tea. See that everything-ds in rea;d'l'neas,,l much for Hughes’ life. So Mr. the train and ng in this d Prasperity, ha ration. Whatever he o _the former will be promptly Let down the bars; let in Of long-gone songs and flowers, rain; ) For dear old times come back again, When the: cows:come=home, country it s over. rges against the Wilson says in regar | ain's iretchen | { hefore | surance It is a strange characteristic of the average man that he will object strenuously to paying his personal tax and although he knows that it has got to be | and payment will be forced by law, yet he invar waits until the last minute before doing it. And it is only $ It has been noticed in the past that the ma- jority of those who wait until last minute are not men who be- cause of poverty are prevented from paying sconer. In fact the men who can least afford to pay are oftimes the first to do so. The personal tax is a tax of recent years taking the place of the old poll and commuta- tion tax. It applies to all males be- tween the ages of 21 and 60 years who are not excused by law, such as registered students, active firemen, army or militiamen or veterans, ecte. The money turned into the ecit treasury and goes towards defraying the city's share of the state taxes. The cities and towns are required hy tute to pay 85 per cent. of the of maintaining the National Guard and most of the personal tax noney goes to this account. Men will object to paying this tax, when in time of need how glad they are to take advantage of the protection of- fered by this same National | that their Tittle §$2 townrds sup- | porting. If the personal taxes are | cost vet not paid promptiy the collector is to hegin prosecutions when every de- linquent will have to“pay not only the $2 but the costs 0f court as well. S the con. it of he = Without matter stated that business men are not all in sympathy movement to procure fund forts for the soldiers at Seme think it an admirable thing, while others think it foolish and un- necess: Those the latter class { point out that the busines man has been called upon during the past two vears to donate to countless causes. | Tn reference to the present call, they argue that the hoys at the front have no canse for complaint at present and are not grumbiing. They get their army pay, their food and clothes and should he as able to look out for themselves (the campaign not to ald their dependants) well as the regulars who get the same pay. If there was a war, if the boys were in danger of heing killed or wounded were sufferne then they would gladly rally to their financial support hut under the present conditions it is argued that they are no worse off {than they are at their annual en- campment. only it is more protracted. Their friends arve able to keep them | supplied with tobacco and things of a like nature, so this time rush into a teria? merits might of the c with the and com- the border. going into pro or it of as and at why eedless hy The city of Hartford is well pleased with having secured its delivery of motor driven fire apparatus before New Britain, even though New Brit- order was placed first. When man Babcock of the safety visited Hartford during the weelk the chief of the depart- ment there did overloo chance to slip a “Tell Chief bad fires he horsc-drawn apparatus he can to Hartford and we will have Britain’s motor trucks’ out there he get through talking.” are often spoke in jest and this is an instance and one should make the roperty feel safe and the companies more generous. The Fiartford fire department mo- tor apparatus is equipped with a number of special hose couplings that are kept a speclal rack. Bach coupling plainly marked with name of the nearhy town or where it will fit the hydrants. New is included. Thus, if a bad conflagration should occur here the Hartford fire department could, and would, send out some apparatus which could get here within a half hour after the call came. With the special couplings it could he quickly to the local water mains thus render efficient service. This fire protection co-overation 1 good thing and a thing that has *ady been noticed the fire in- surance underwriters and given their official sanction. Tt is to he hoped that eventually New Britain will be able to secure a series of coupiings that could he other nearby towns and therehy a in the of need, in saving property in near communities. Chai hoard past not the 1id any his iibie ross an that if he has handle with a Dame cannot phone can Truths cver, that owners more in is | Britain Hached nd inter-city i a al by used in ist ime e The coming haseball the Hartford New PBritain department is an item of interest already the oldtime rivalry i ing up hetween the two departments. A number of years ago. when G. M Ton derstwoe mavor bihe looall cors had a baseball team and his honor furnished them with uniforms and equipment. Although they had lots of fun they were never able to de- feat the Hartford police. Better this time me between ind ind luck e e One been 1 civie improvement that eeded for many years no being made, and that is the widening of the corners at the intersection of iim and Church streets. When Church street was originally laid out it extended only to Elm street. Later, as the city grew, the street ex tended but not along lines such as a is was the two ends did not hitch Since then this corner dangerous one as owing to the buildings on every side traflic proaching from every direction is hid- den and the curve a narrow one. Ry taking off several feet from the north- northeast and southeast corners curve has Dbeen considerably and will doubtless o A for together. has bheen a higt ap- wes { widened malke travel th I\]rlv‘«r more clearanc corner at Elm also he widened * Dy o The streets and estnut will P With the approach of August and the blossoming forth of golden rod and other flowering herbs of a-simi- | other the | city | has | civil engineer would lay out. In short, | NEW, BRITAIN DAILY HERALD. SATURDAY, JULY 29, 1916. ably ! the | | tele- | recommend such a thing. Guard | | turn how- | police | !—Tripofi of ?)’arbary, a Land of Little Promise people are be- to pass sleepless nights be- cause of attacks of hay fever. They never dare venture forth without a trusty handkerchief. It is a most distressing affliction, affecting fully 2 per cent. of the entire population of | | the United States, according to re- || ports from the United States Public || Health service. The. government is e now starting an active campaign to | 35 relieve this malady and will attempt ; Ported recent successes fo have the state legislatures and cit- | over the Italians focuses izens co-operate in suppressing vege- | news searchlight table growth known to spread and | A eoeiien of Nosibeon intensify hay fever. With the many e victims here, New Britain residents P L will certainly take kindly ‘to this In a war geography | 7 + e National Geographic measure and their co-operation IS as- | o iieiv rom Washington today suzed. “Tripolitania occupies the land along the Mediterranean sea from the | Tunisian frontier to the Gulf of Si dra. From the coast southward, with an average width of forty miles, runs | no doubt that Tripoli a plain called Jefara. At its southern | days, although the accour | border rises with a steep ascent a |of the ancient writers seem | chain of mountains commonly called | aggerated. The causes of the Jebel, of which the most famous are manifold and from Jebel Gharian. These mountains form | decline commenced Rom a sort of tableland which zan to | slightly southward till it reaches the desert Hamada-el-Homra, a flat, rocky pla- by force, teau of about 40,000 square miles, cov- | Romo's weakness ered with little red stones, absolutely | bonnd the dry and arld. In the south of the | Hamada is the land of Fezzan, a col- | lection of oases in a country of dunes and desert. Fezzan forms a wedge of | sparsely inhabited land into- the great Sahara utilities “The of Tripoli, which the unning | tends over a length of 1,100 miles, the “dinky” | fers a few natural harbors. The har Bristol and Hartford [ hor of Tripoli itself is dangerous, be- far reaching henefits | cause of the many which lie that at first supposed. Previous- | the entrance. It is only on the easte 1y when the train reached Bristol the | coast of Cyrenaica, which is some- engine was attached to the other end | times called the Marmarica, that and away it went. Not wishing to | find two harbors of the very best qual install turntable the railroad offi- | ity: Bomba and Tobruk; but as neith- clals are said to have worked out a | er has a hinterland, their value is new scheme. They have huilt a loop | more strategical than commercial. To- | beha Terryville where dinky trains will | bruk is less than a hundred miles dis- around for the return trip. This | tant from the Egvptian frontier. cxtend the suburban service to “What is the population now and Pequabuck, it would | habiting Tripolitania, that immense | tion, | area of 400,000 square miles (more | dunes { than half the size of the republic of | ture. Me No exact census exists, but |around the all observers agree that it ! sand dunes rising to a hardly That means | seventy feet about two fifty mile. The settled population inhab- | served, with its an area of 19,000 square miles— ! diose names the about one-twenty-first part of the| Africa’ and the ‘Queen o whole land | Today these glories are “In Tripoli every native calls him- | Once Tripoli was the great emporium self with pride an Arab. a matter | of the trans-Saharan trade No.t far of fact a certain number of Arabs|from BEurope, and by its situation In came into the country with the Mo- | the Syrt nearer to the heart of Afri- hammedan conquest of North Africa |ca, it was the gateway of the trade and converted its population to their | with Central Africa Large caravans religion. A few of the conquerors|arrived laden with the g remained in the country and these are | Sudan and the Niger countrie still fairly pure representatives of ostrich feathers, ivor their race; they live as nomads, or |skins, minerals and slaves. 'The Bedouins, in tents, and move with the | slave trafiic was the remunera- from one camping ground to | tive article of that trade another. Their number is difficult The decline of the trans-Saharan estimate, but it is about 50,000. The | trade began when the representatives rest of the population, the settled part, | of the European powers protested are Berbers; their blood is mixed with | against slave trade that of Arabs and also of negroes, The | *But more important than all these negro element, which we find every- | causes just mentioned was the ad- where in Tripoli, has its origin in the | vent of European control of the Niger slave trafic of former days, which | countries and Hausaland. Shipping, brought thousands of Sudanese to the | was started on the great rivers Niger coast of the Mediterranean. and Binue, and the communications Agriculture and cattle with the west coast of Africa the chief resources of Tripnli. greatly improved. The route flourish only in small patches; fertile | ship and rail is'safer, cheaper, e is really safe and ' jan3 we find on a narrow strip along | er than that of nearly 2,000 e ution cannot be let | ghe coast, in the region of Jebel Ghari- | across the S wher i lonst an and in Cyrenaica. The product is | scarce and abund Adown .o = = insanitary. I conditions lar nature scores of ginning The re- | barley which in Turks | wheat, vines. Farle shipped mainly tc | England, but the crops are subject tg | great variations, owing to the uncer: talnty of ralnfall “Much has ben Italian political grandiose prospects & | on fow years has olives, figs an 1gton, D. C., July 29 f the rseded the of Africa war- on Tripoli Bar- bary, which promise’ tin issued by the writers at press by out th of the country mainly d up- supposition that Tripolitania the o re, A of flourishin ¥ enormous wealth. There of said in | | | | | hese prospects are ba the PR = under A local woman has appealed to a o well known attorney asking advice on what she claims is an Imposition worked on her through an advertise- ing medium. The woman Is afflicted with obesity and a beauty expert ad- vises her and other stout persons to down a hill a cure.” Just at the top and roll down. She “Do not count nor tax the hrain. Just roll like the animals.” With aM due respect to the im- posed upon woman and fo heauty ex- perts, the question arises as to how much ‘counting it would take to tax the brain ‘of a woman who would ro down hill, or an expert who would riculture n be better somé to be dec The povg tribes hich kept took antage of ) the e elab- n could only securi- | province | and [ once when “roll stgrt advises: a as slopes | er wealken wild 1 or heer | down re of colon system when there When peace red, the agric in his work “A second count point the climatic There is assertion in the midst { the beltef that the belief that for orate irrigatio was a W ilturist ysolute longer as- hindered a no was ot = of decline the e ause which is, controversy o st order commission backward of service hetween will have more An of the e forbidding engines on public coast of is a change of the truth Every man who he of the desert, the A this condition re is probably some in roc at was ruin change enacted that the bad Apart from sometimes we ome migt pow yonsible such 4 traged s been A local tradition of the om gi rain the droughts, which are of five, seven and even ten years' dura- we find In the Invading sand another great eemy of agricul-' Quite near to the palm rden city Tripoli see ight of | | he | says ior women a ing will in- Terryville scem. . . e an 1bout of one « Rawlings has re- | to all produce rag peddlars oceasion to setentorian Chief of Police cently issued an edict peddlars, fish peddiar and others who have bawl out their wares in tones advising them to be a little more diplomatic and modest in their verbal autbursts Numerous com- plaints have come at headquarter: about the annoyving habits of many peddlars howling their wares about the strects. Of course it is impossible for peddlars or fish mongers to sell their wares without shouting what they have to sell, but they can use diseretion in the way they shout and can do it in a way that will not be too offensive. A vear or two ago an ordinance was | 1 tending to pro- hibit this wanton hawlng of the peddlars and since that time they have been very mild in their ways TLately, however, they have heen over cnergetic and the chief's edict was necessary to keep them within the hounds of reason - competent h exceeds 800,000 inhabitants to the square | » Tripoli de= t, the gran- Ke o Central the Sahara.’, of the years ag “Some a certain rigt of past oods of the These goods we mc season + last got a case According to the case is a was not con- Thus it ew RBritain has at of infantile paraly the health department snoradic one, one that tracted from another. raising are wers but they new by quick miles® water a ig > ap no one the robbers cation season, the silly | the secluded streets ecned porches can he obh: and maidens sitting in They are watchin watching for the mother of the The same is where 1 people two This is the cason ged a youth to act a him for shorc the young W get in nice big be disgustingly In every reported instance were such that the locality ideal breeding place for kinds. Energetic work of the heaith hoard such as it has been coupled with the apparent co-opera tion of the police court, will go far | don't deserve o rd obli a g S ev! he satisfaction have | toward obliterating this evil r weeks' | CE o sandy beach | One nuisance that should - choice is a |is on Church street where quantities great medium for tried and worn out | of dirty water from the factory and love stories and monumental | vard of the Union Manufacturing der the influence of the gentie | company are permitted to flow of the silvery moon a youth |the sidewalk and into the daily tolls over an office desk at | Further down Church street is a catch “bucks” per week will whisper | basin but as the water would have to late parties, a house in | tlow past a garage entrance a dirt trip to Europe in the ear ' dike is often used, backing the water department store clerk who up in the gutter and making an un- the daughter of a tidy looking street. The factory vard There is something about | is equipped with a drain but frequent- mnakes liar | Iy this drain is not capable of carrving Rut for | off the surplus water from the hard downrightdoublestlverplate Ivine it | ening and tempering shop and from | has nothing on the slgns that we see | other sources about the vard. The ench day in our flourishing city read- | overflow is oily and greasy and shonld | ing ‘“no riding on the runnifig|not be permitted. hoards,” till the car | . moki rear seats ‘walking tr law.” v shown to \long a time on erved the The man ca ) pay he w nothing a: ple vouths was an 100onlight are usually of the in each ea the shore Fritain young hied themselves for “rest.”” Sitting on the with the girl of your d that “Didn’t iding ar did else e ot advis there und You him doing, as much asure T pproach my ar as 1 anything the « e esorts \any Sl - i tru resor any hauffeur got New a Fenry’s Place Secure. (New Haven Union) be abated “0 things. T have called nerves to a gutter. lies. 1 Lo light who three automohiles tcwn and a of a Posing magnate. a moon and a givl ont of the hest of pas: has a. him “Ana s ternly a | as stee v the r that a m men hushand the peac universit ; Ten vas at with all the w but she o o rld never Henry a per- New VY or mes, The latest development In the move 5 Pl ‘vht :V . the High fschool prineipalyswho i G oo ber © 0 8 e bnds (Al o Sei | said to he acting at the direction of | o400ty oy ucing indictment 1 One custom of some of our foreign | the superintendent of schools. i sloyfculsiamuningfindlotas citizens, a very few it is hoped, that |tempting to discharge Dr. Frank | 70 5 "5 w00 should be stopped immediately is their | yyick as football coach Is the resiz- i o 1 DFO g up to Walnut Hill Park on & |pation of the three faculty councll e rra Sunday affernoon and disport- | members and the principal's sfate- mg: ing themselves about the grass in their | ment that he will not appoint their s e n T occasions such | cyceessors, thereby permitting the | g aora ctissiigs noticed. is | councl to lapse and to legally pass handly ajpleasant sightiand fto of existence. Public feeling on tor in is one that casts is squabble has been aired before | upon and is proved by the names of some | 4 : of the citizens whose names appear w‘wwl” A on a petition for the retention of the | ¢ SroS Ko 0 1€ SLT S | conch and object to the interference | 0 ol Bl ey o Y S0 O | with the council It 1s sald that [h e niand end Judge G. W. Klett, president of the | {1° [BHIEEes (BEARIAT High School Athletic association on e his return from Maine next week mayv tol Mas | have some advice to glve the S alumni in this matter. Whatever the { outcome may he, there is considerahl= | epeculation as to what will become of | Before the coun- he had been offi- theless stops,” | .. “wait five the nicious influence on only,’ on or | by i course, we are cks forbidden o »dged wife 1d o the vould of the ated while ton afternoon mellow shade pleasant colon the world.” e = by this E in vacation of Queen’s C time—in the urt, her eace with this sot- 1 been a town the city. al e home—a ont all PR 1A4en with absorhing in safe- are Further improvements guarding trafic and pedestr being planned and Chairman Bahec o the hoard has worked out tentative which if adopted, will away with all from parking of automobiles Main He will shortly this scheme to the pullic will he the purchase number heavy standards [ e e used in roping off the aisles of safety. | o) was broken will made With | (ja1jv engaged. He has not yet heen aileayyibase andlwooden top) aol thatil Sk ot ihis terolces arat no 1y theyarefitipped T and strike | jonger required and even If he Is there CRERtesO e anvone they will not cause fnjury. By | o0 cto he no reason why he 2an- e ate sltuationsien the safety zone | .t compel payment of his contract b car Rtexminal "¢ | Should the coach care to go so far. it ) other safety zones Wil | ji"gaig that it might be possible for | . slzowhore It PO I 1im to compel the individual eouncil | 51T hoard will see to : ton members with whom he entered Into sueh district at in- ; tempt SHER GRS the contract, alg into their own | {*MEF ¢ Melin g8 nuroh pockets and pay his salary if an at- [ 7% 0 €U Walnut and :-}1:.<;w_m x:rnf‘lt‘s : e ij;;fi.m: \14 ] t the junction Tast L r As ¢ i) ore. e S [(Eadsionahe ground that the 20U~ | cuperh example of what ol |ESR Rl ASECRASC CRO ROS the short story tvpe thero St Mrs. Gerould ealls and climax. But { besides. much of which aful Princetonian critic seems totally nun- aware. There is the technique of the master—and art, s ans em he | safety plan do the work is According of harm and’ works the “perniclous” idea is a master of the ‘0. Henry did O. Henry In a suspen SLYS Gerould zood 5 . schools Henry's spread Henry She =ays short story panded anecdote un- An- of 0 z colleges that use fbig because this other move 0. story vrite the the ex that short wrote short climax. , In thi over these as f fact the and hed th usin posts distr 1t will roped off establi sible that have anothe tersection so he Gerould or contend ~limax interesting t husband, the of English, v that there no situa Municipal mater of would o it Prince- uld be is e prote: { the Arch, and Main, streots. o : t noth-¢ to : on. no Report” fact is an- s this in hat suspense n best are v other of by health situation board in police during the pant week have shown the absolute need of their clean-up campaign. Not only have yards been shown to be filthy and untidy, but stores-have also been made ourt Disclastres rounds Sy much our A good story is going the e about a well known and wealthy prop erty owner in town who recently pur- chased a new car. The story relates that said w. k. real estate owner en- pea \!

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