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8 . - NEW, BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, JULY 31, 1016 — ooz — s - w BRiTA[N KERALD HOMEWARD BOU AND FANCIES, Der Tag. 9 i\ ; (New York Times). Newspapers employing special cor- e y < H = S ) : United States District Attorney Mar- When the Reichstag meets, we are h i ocrate i c HERALD PUBLISHING COMPANTY respondents on the Mexican border { ghal] ought not to have put himself in | told, the Chancellor will be asked why | l; t pflace 0 1 5 | DoiBtors with the various units of the Nu- [the attitude of seeming contempt of [ “‘inspiring speeches by the emperor at “‘-\‘ w Britain's Busy Big Stor :Gfigr &su;a-‘-‘y” xcepted) at 4:18 B ™ | tional Guard and who have in- |congress. He should cultivate the|the front are withheld from general | 66 a fe ” “Always Reliable.” ral uflding, 67 Church 8t & ore P o = i a o, ” ’ re inspi - it structed these correspondents to “dig | Beneral attitude toward the national | publication.” They are inspiring, no ‘1 he fiather 0 ‘Medlczne | Dy s de ity Al to the Wilson | 12Wmaking body, that of amused tol- | doubt, but they no longer inspire the A& Becond Class Mall Matter. D stociesl detrinientalitortie ML erance.—Rochester ['ost-EXpress. troops to fight for the same pur- - 2 administration are now in a fair way poses as formerly. That was an in- - tvere < AN 3 e e oo to amy paut of Ohe SNF U ath the error v of. thelr wagm spiring speech which the emperor | Washington, D. C., July 1 : - t Of all the countries in the world, | delivered in August, 1914, while his | issa, an important city in Thessaly, | Saly established by the Romans in 197 | - Pecriptions for paper to e sent by mall | here . = | oe re has been much untruth sent e s et Payable in advance, 60 Cents a Month, Italy alone shows 'a prospective in:armies were swooping on Parisl and|limentioned as King Constantine's place | = Co,after the famousibattle lof,: S B l G R E M N A N L 2k % ’ % hitherto $7.00 a s border hy 5 Rt e t g ks ou¢ fromy the toorder by Sthose WVOUNE |/erCarelin | heriwhbat ‘cropyd (THe Ttall | 11aE7al) wask tol belalimatiortotloeer of refuge following disturbances in the | 05CéPhalae, ‘in which the = b = unconquerable = Macedonian phalanx 31-—Lar- | ment for the commonwealth of Thes- F —_— rriters who wished to comply with e e ightl L 3 St e o) DAt only profitabia dvertising mctmm tn | WFiters W o neR e L) DN GO sl GRS |00 B0 saeri wiem i) piten o T (e Gt 15 6 e o et || eeCRaie e, leion mensured their the olty. Circulation books and press | the commands of managing editors. | too; but their women and their | generals for a repetition of 1870 wore | way jotiines fo the norinwest of Ath. | and the Ron e L CL E ARA N C E Toom always open to advertisers youngsters know how to work in the | being swiftly and terribly carried out. |ens. ~Concerning this city’s import- | Srength in open battle for ”"t G g i fields.— Brooklyn Kagle. s inspiring them then to attack, [ ance both commercially and histori- | M€ In history. Some ‘,”‘m“";" = 22 JEeald W be found on sate at Hoca- | MON! has ordered an investigation of s now he is inspiring them to de- | cally the National Geographic society | 54¥ that ”"] Romant st e e 8's Nen L, nd N e » 3 r = . i = i 0 S « ctius Flamininus, employ oth Une's Now Stand, (ind 8¢ and Broad: | conditions, the starics sent out from P fense; he was inspiring them then to | has issued the following war geogra- | SUnctins Flamininus, emploved both SALE lantic City. and Hartford Depot. the border have been placed before | ~The Kaiser is quoted as saving that | conquest, as now he is inspiring them | phy bullctin from its headauarters in | R Philip V' e . : “the world war is separating the | to resistance. “We shall R e iroug > ranks o & ) &n examining board, and, where an. b shall not relent, ashine el L 4 EfeTes e tness OELLSPHONE CaLLs. A e B .ny_ wheat from the chaft.” For the final | he said, “and we shall get to the| “As the capital of a province of | &My of "‘-‘;”‘” men buignnateyen by G T oo G FaieESiToREC SL L vinnowin ello perationys cnough Bit inuvillenemyleinide SEVVal Shal 1in St 1hs il | iholsame narae iariaalsin e vor s e i e o wednesday Mommg correspondents will be forthwith | be necessary to wait for revolution.— | faith and trust in our good old God | lation of 18,000 has played an impor e 7 5 = shipped home. It is time such action > Herald. - up there. ~We are determined to | ant role in the history both of modern | “USIve that Bome becamne the master | —At 8:30 A M— 1E OTRCUS COMES TO TOW o, e i e Wi, and we must win” When he | Greece and ancient Thessaly, Tt was | oF Greece ; Y . . o ; spolke these words Paris seemed in his | the headquarters of Constantine (then | KnOWR world. | = 0 @ - 8 Taking one blacklist with another, | grasp, and all that remained was to | Crown prince) during the early stages = After Celline ing our July itics, are again on the job. A [when the investigation is completed. | Uncle Sam could make quite a stir by | turn from the prostrai body of van- | of the Greco-Turkish war of 1897 and ‘]“"‘l“l"“’ ";“ ‘l“‘“f yhf'_rf,;l’i;"‘t‘l::(f;‘,;"‘\‘“f | blo_f.:.,,l.l".rl‘:‘:‘m “l‘l.(‘\"",h:‘[;x'?;:.,,‘m.\ ot prt time ago Mayor George A.)If there is found to be nothing but | blacklisting Mr. J. Bull—Binghamton | quished France to choke slow-moving | it was at this place that panic seized ol e e propounder of | Remnants of all kinds of Wash goods igley announced he had purchased | truth in the many stories that have | Press. Russia before she could get on her | the Greek army in April of that Yoo, | the famous Hippocratic oath, to which | Silks, Dress Goods, ~ Towelings, land at old Rentschle park | come from the border the writers will SR Zeefiiand foros Drelnnd Wwith | fHerllithoRprinceld foxces fosing s contu oS utnat sl o (¥ G aa Vi ol cour 56 || Damasis i) Gottons, W TRtibbors) i Taces; ; . i “contemptible little army.” to ask for | Sion to Pharsala. This event marked | PAYE /28 SR Embrolian e ere circuses and other outdoor | be vindicated. If otherwise, thev ! Armenia has now been practically | peace. His exhortation foday inspires | the end of the first half of a war UYULF““v“kL ‘“i'l\]‘_'“;m"'i:,'mlL“N;“e b 2 nivals are wont to stage their at- [ will be deported. Charges of mis- | redeemed from Turkish rule. A |a different kind of effort: which ended disastrously for the | ©eW remA S Of B ATt e ot ctions. Shortly afterwards His | management, incompetence, and | Change in the map of Turkey-in-Asia “English diplomacy brought about | Greeks. kB ern city, which presents a somewhat ) o has been effected which Is sure to out- | the war, and now an English offensive Larissa took part in the triumph | eI > nor emphatically stated there | neglect have marked many suspicious 5 i 3 A = g < nes b e s during the | Oriental aspect, one of the relics of bi1a ve y 4 el | . ¢ e last the war. For, whatever other !{s intended to carry the operations to | ©f Greek arms over Turkey during 2 | Turkish occupancy being the twenty- no more shows to annoy the | accounts appearing in BEedi newsH| | =amt e i e e e LS ; e L ar ofl indcpendence however | for | Kis C ancy £ < E quered tercitory | German soil, into our towns and vil- s sl nadans sat 0 M ven lofty minarets that provide a ut | ey .ust () i ] ocality ter aper: i e rass- take ce, inconceivable | Jag S e M .| here was established the headquar- | S fidents in that locality. After a | papers. Aside from the embarrass- | may take place, it is inconcei le | lages, to the peril and undoing of our ””‘ ‘,“”*i Pasha of Tannini, who elect. | Picturesque skyline, while in the resi- jected | helpless women and children. Your | ter's of / & anni r-raising diatribe on circuses in [ ment the stories have caused to those|that Armenia will ever be resu i dential section are many houses with . S| 5 'kish yoke. The blo. I3 = o s Enelish offensiva: | €d to aid the patriots in thelr strug- al sec 2 W d d M peral ana those in particular which | working heart and soul in the in- | '0 the Turkish yoke —Tne blood of |duty is to break the English offenslve; | le against his master. But long be- | blank white walls facing the streot eanesaay lviorning .« 2 00 many victims o rkis ru- | to prove once more that Germany js | 81€ a8 8 ¢ s R poy the dear people in the south- | terest of Uncle Sam, the relatives and | (a1ity and fanaticism would cry out im_l‘””im e e -m’(‘ A ARt ot e e \\rn’h (n.tralcn\(, \\\;t(:l rTim’n! P(;v‘h\ : g a fana T u c a 2 e to desps - Sy v reacherously stabbed | 8raceful arcades. Many urks emi- | 4 e rices > By ftern section of the city the Mavyor | friends of the guardsmen have been | against such a betrayal of humanity. relentless enemies of our country, so dh\; :P»-": \“\-\ '1‘”;1}““\“\ 1 ‘»"‘M‘*lfl e e o A A ‘\11' real hlnr;.;nin pm(.? to mlrnt ‘«3::‘: : - o . s F: is head cut off while he was < E " | quick, so be here on time and get ) ? ¢ ups one w as a | New York Tribune. P v will s or peace Bijfandyhisahcadigcu WHe 4 Wwhat? He rented the grounds to | mentally upset. Anyone who has a o that they will sue for pe ol tor s | e | 1 e arnival that will play here during |son, a brother, or a friend in the onoraliefan dfpro 0t oo e A e ot anllas e et “Larissa is situated in the midst of | Inspiring words. Buf they no longer |4, S C0 o i vative of the Porte: This | & fertile plain, on the banks of the fa- | Tt mamonn and o o e e e tap || The fact that James Whitcomb Ti- | inspire hls hearers {0 “get to the | i1 ic end of Ali Pasha was in keeping | mous Salamria river (The Peneus of that business and politics do not | all is well with the men at the front. | ey left an estate estimated at $200.- | enemy’s hide.” They inspire his “};‘{"3“ h‘“,“f Sha Cf?n er. In his boy- | the ancients), which flows into the | . But, then, anything goes, and | If not, they want those responsible | 000, practically all of it the proceeds | hearers to keep the enemy from got- ]‘\“m:i h": e rimandage by | Gult of Salonika, twenty miles to the rything is forgotten, when the cir- | for any negligence punished; whether | 0f his poetry, tells a story of appre- | ting to his hide. The object now is his strong-vwilled mother and schooled | nerth, after passing between Mount S l f W ) S ]e _ clation of his verse even more culo- |to prove that Germany cannot be 0 X ¢ rovense | Olympus and Mount Ossa. Between | QL€ O! omen s dam < comes to town. these men be high in the chancel- | e to nurse a consuming spirit of revenge T 3 : ¥ B} o gistic than the friendly words to be | crushed, so that the enemy, “reduced these two summits, immortalized in e As a consequence, the War Depart- unk and Bluff, the goldustwins of | correspondents and all concerned {s= | : : : against the murderers of his father. : o . ; lories of the nation or non-commis- | roung in nearly all American news. |to despair,” will it up. “Wo | 17 the eourse of 80 active years he rose | mythology, the Salambria cuts the fa- Umon Sl“ts at 39C each. AKIN IN- sloned officers in the militia. Again, | papers. No recent poet in America | shall not relent,” he said in 1914, S hE Rt he | mous Vale of Tempe, noted for its G MONDAY FUN-DAY. to a pesition of such power that 1 i if the facts have been distorted the | Was more popular than Rile and | “The relentless enemies of our coun- | ¢y ,qatened the throne of the sultan | scenic charm and grande: e 5 oy - itizens at home want those who mis- | the appreciation took a substantial |try,” he save in 1916. The DPOWCT ' jimselr, and ruled with barbarous “The chief products of Larissa are | On ’"l'-“;d":\‘l‘” -“:“”1 & ","Rk“l SenEent 2 monetary form.—New York World. of relenting or not relenting has | jorermess aver Thessaly. Albamia amd | Turkish leather, tobaceo, silk and cot- | 8. m.—To these we will add all broken represented the situation sent e changed hands. The shoe is on the | Macedonia during the first quarter of | ton goods. Although th{:{\::\u;s. ;:n:;z qr::‘:("r»\'[]“t:;‘(-:.i‘:l 3 n\.',”‘“ (‘;‘iljl\ll:\‘::; Sromitne ecene ToRth il end, Hey on Y B o thatis mabbosNean baltomall 1ol [otreriroot MGonqueriwasthol watch=| fa i incteontn aantury! ) by ”"“,h‘;(_'““f Sl e ke e e i e Sl honest newspaper in the country Will | o 0 1o 0y o cost of $1.25 a pound. | WOord of 1914, resist is the watchword “The history of ancient Larissa was [ north, it is not a hea 3 Yy y ise it is dif- - 5 : - atic f the plains by | Wednesday Morning. (None sold t ally turns out otherwise it is dif. rejoice when writers of false stories | With synthetic beef, synthetic cop- |©Of 1916. Has the light penetrated the | cjosely associated swithy that of the | frequent inundation of the plain: by iesday Mornin (None sold to , 2 Seii % general German mind? Some of it | famous Aleuadac family, founded by | the waters of It to get back in the harness. tne Salambria causes | peddlers.) S Vi d. ber, synthetic zinc and all the other o . g | eclally in these times when the | *T° DOMeWard boun Sinthetie articles the war has tauznt | as penetrated the kaiser's. He seeks | slouas Pyrrhos (Red-Head.)Through- LSt the Turlaas ; ; desperately to revive the old hate of | out the fifth and sixth centuries be- The city is kn s as 18 not over kindly to a people who e e Germany to make, the only thing now : . " istin- make their living trypthe sweat b= T L needed is synthetle seldiors.Syia. | England, he signs again the Hassge- | fore the Christian cra the Aleuadac \"l“;'fé‘efi;m(fi: L:;;‘s:a) e S P ; £ ! B sang: enjoyed the privilege of naming the | guis ;150 i Henry Lane Wilson, who will never | cuse Post-Standard. Sl s S e Sl g [ e O ety Ting of the Thessa. | Crannon, which lies fourteen miles heir brows is it a severe task to s thwest, the scene of Anti- | be forgotten for his record as Amer- e vears before the war the combination | lonian forces in all military exped ;f;t:jes :“’é‘mn, e an¥endealthe Tam: LOOK the store OVer 'his business of getting started to 'k on Monday morning is one of salient problems of modern life. er the preceding day of rest which & up on the morning after Sun- Philosophers and others who | 18D Ambassador to Mexico, yesterday Mrs. Henry Smith’s Son. of countries which at a given signal | tions. rar in 822 B. C.” tal merry way ws or = S c s S s 08 “Larissa became the seat of govern- | ian war e f 0 L e given thought to the subject | ® rted on its merry way a newspaper (New York World.) fell upon us, attacked us, the most Larissa i £ or ots edne ay. b - peaceful and peace-desiring people in - iooncluded that man was nover [#eriel thatwill be run In various nows- | Mre. Honry Smith of Winamac, Ind., | fiie world.» 5 th life sweeter, happiness War Alds Briar Pipes. : 1 rilsc oY d o | wor more, sw 5 SS | G ) e o || PO BTG (e e o || 0 R e vtk | B S oo i, e e o | NOAEL gy TS pucitn SOREREE] L W e e e m'Mormng at Clean - Up mor to start again on his long | PUrPOSe Of discrediting the adminis- | SOMPlaining of the hardships her 08 | per Tag is'at hand, Is actually nere. | EISSCS™ | SUUtsMOR | 090 Jiietate | tne brisr pipe menutacture, which as . E T was compelled to undergo as a mem- [ Byt how different is its coming from | OX® ST = ha et Fnaland P kly stretch after 1dling away his | tration of Woodrow Wilson. Although | poF SOWPeled 0 undergo as a mem- Bucihow dierent ls ita coming iom ianalnealth) better mafoguarded: . a commercial s ?”q o asland rices. b on Sunday. Were it not for fool- | N@mesakes, that s as near as Henry | Texas. The president, in his reply ol LAl TR A0 CaR It has given the ambitious, indus- | had its inception in 9, s 3 v O i o . °PI¥: | tain’s mess, in the banquet hall. #at | (i, self-supporting young man | age on the continent antedated that ff8em and nis erring ways 1n the [Lane Wilaon comes to approaching |has explained to her that the Nation- | toasting the officers, ome and all” It | Lo B e o Tate | i e e save “The San fien of Eden nothing of the sort | Woodrow Wilson. These Memoirs | &l Guard is at the border “not for the | wag to be the day when ‘“‘we shall not | reneerment than 15 offered In any | weamcisco Argonaut’ The French | and Letters are deserving of a high | PU'Pose of drill but for the pur-|yelent, and we shall get to the en- | (yieiily white heath, whose roots furnished | 1d have to be considered. Vs Ere tojcloargup thany e undor T e nadonal Guard would wish 1 | quty is to break the English offen- | fuge. Our doors still swing open, and | terranean and grows to a height of standings on the Mexican question and | bé excused from it, or would lose 2 the fide of immigration is toward us. | thirty-eight to forty-five inches. particularly of the part the former heart 'hacansc of the disc_om’f;orts and Yet, with all our blessings, the en- | Around Florence, Ttaly, it is the cus- 199-201-203 MAIN STREET. Ambassador played in the history of a | Conyenience of the service. A Case for vious demagogue continues to preach tom to cut the long, -tough, young | ST, : R e BRI SR B 3 York Times.) | the gospel of Unreason, continues to | shoots each year, bind them together ion of a waiting multitude the festion of making Monday’s grind n easy. A kindly old grandfather, ue gentieman, a lover of his fel- man, has spent the greater por- ""V"I“_““""“‘]‘f““ R L wrman e wouldinotibe fwritinziito Mr. John M. Parker of New Or-|ta) the people why they should be |and sell them for use in sweeping = of his life in seeking to make closely they will surely serve to meas- the president lw_omnhng Hw: tri % | leans, the surviving name on the na- unhappy nd continues to denounce | streets in cities and towns. Outside | day less difficult for those who | U the dlstance between the two Wil- hnrds[lnp.s to which her son is obliscd | tional progressive ticket, is expressinf capital, which creates the opportunity | or this, the plant is allowed to grow | = . Ronebons the Prestdentlor thel Dniteal| cororoniCiesRagmemberfior Sihe sentiments in the highest degree pain- | ¢, japor. | for three or four years, when the t perforce perform some task on PR ps S out g | tlomal Guard. She would be down [ful to instructed and docile progres- el monen Fra- ter M tram |l e SRR R e e # ) £ , he other a iploma ou o o anki 10¢ at the S8 ori ar . 3 > S % 5 A | 3 T N L a- Analhora s biolag capesilistated g i ! on .}:m kne ankineyGodgthatitn el iveseiialith i ot shanpiirebilcal| RS Ee B0 E e ST R TN permit cutting them, enough of [] matter, simple and to the point: work. In any comparisons Woodrow [ president is exerting every honorable | from the Commander of the Faithful ocutrun him. Then prosperity will | {he plant being left to permit cut- B away from yourself on Sunday; | Wison will not suffer. effort to bring about a peaceful soli- | at Oyster Bay. Of many pestilential once more resume its commanding | tings every three years. The roots { 3 3 2 f tion of the difficulties with Mexico, | errors, as they must seem to a con- place | most in demand for pipe making, a fmune with nature; go out in the . - T e and that her boy is not already mn_, verted progressive, uttered by Mr. ;(‘PM:\ln aroma and brightness of wood Eet—— /i mperor Francis Joseph Austria | on the firing line with the boys of | Parker in a speech at the Crystal Sound Lines and the Railroads. being the test, are those obtained try and forget there was ever i i j e ‘ining as 5 city. Ostomsibry, | 18 TeDOrted In today’s news Qispatchos 4(\1\[‘w\‘»v. jother American mothors. Springs Chautauqua on “Political Re- (Springfield Republican.) from the Tuscan Maremme in the Re[[’eflflflp TeU[OHS Kep[ U[]der physician who advances this |2 having experienced a violent chill ey hardshipsigio Bwhichiithe form,” it is more than enough to Authority granted the Central Ver- | neighborhood of TFolionica, Cecina ] ! tional Guard is subjected on the Texas K £ robation these: tair Cew L G i y 2 L a1l i = while inspecting his troops. After | ooy, FUare 12 . & mark for reprobat; se: mont railroad to retain its New Lon- | and Grosseto. They are preferred by G t Dl [ hell 1o o mhopnas Bdiasnosed (T LRI RSl SR D CRERIRE I frontler are about equal to the hard- | A party is an instrument for the | gon.New York steamer line, follow- | manufacturers to those from any | UON[INOUS ellge 01 diels S s ships of an ordinarily strenuous vaca- | purpose of carrying into effect a gov- | jn o by one day a decision that the | other part of Ttaly or from Algeria | men he can hardly be blamed. t\rmdh\ Im: Maine or vlh‘ M‘H\n;»flota liSenmant i nrincintolill Partics aralli- d SURSEE S SRR Sl R DR e R e N T Wwoods; but war s serlous business. | man-made. Governmental principles ; e Take Winni- | i fars i | nt of the country gentleman. i £ N AR : E ade. G v operate its steamers on Take the Tuscan Maremme growing these On the Picardy front in France 5 P ot What Might Have Been. When Mrs. Henry Smith thinks about | eternal. The party Is a means, | jecaykee, creates a presumption that | roots is owned by French and m»mu,i : el her that or he believes the man the petty inconveniences to which her | put governmental principles are the | (i< interstate commerce commission | concerns, who maintain warehoises | son is subjected, let her think also of | eng, When the party abandons the | (|} eventually allow the New Haven | anq workshops on or near their lands, | Shell by the Germans measure the gun e on e b 5 Europe who | principles for which It was created, | ¢, yeep its lines in Long Island sound. | where the roots are washed, boiled | fire on this part of the front, as ob- are in the trenches and who are dving | citizenship owes no further alleglance | myege lines are operated as integral | and roughly shaped, after which the e e ing and starting to work on the fave us understand; Sl it 2 § s ! c So he does not recommend | SO the cradle’s but a relif of the form- | 48V bY the thousand in the midst of | to the party, but owes allegiance {0 | paite of the New Haven system, and | are sorted by size, color and qualite er foolish da; the rustic dwellers of our land | when mothers reared their children rate to the great expanses of in unscientific ways halt and dwelling houses and for- | When they jounced them and they Bt o e bounced them, those poor dwarfs i of long ago— munities. These folk are better | iy washingtons and Jeffersons and | Medical assistance which cannot vhere they are. Adamses, you know. “"I‘““» 5 S ny . the progressive rm;“i\{ by (;1'<1;\r1 Oft_\’fi to open to admit them to the qan | speedily corrected; so quickly indeed, i : 6 er think o e milllons of | creator, abandoned the principles for iver line hoat train at the South | that it may be said the mistake was | e cly man wholomd etart Thiey mars s thatithe bary Till poot | Boval IndBirope wholafter fihiathwss | vnichiitins Sercit oG anal appea R inl| ket et nrecateins || nir e s Tt e R dowinate the Germans' guns jrork bright and snappy on Mon- Rl aaleakbrain s over will be crippled for life or Mr. Hughes and “the crooks” of gict that the Fall River line vir- | substitute breeks for Kkilts in the fleld | here, and they owe it largely to the our philosopher recommends an |y¢ we dandle him or rock him—we | Vith health shattered doomed to eke | 1912, every good progresstve owed no | qualy hegins at Boston, not Fall | uniform of the Scottish Canadian |airmen. The German gunners must re Sunday spent in the country. must carefully refrain; out a wretched existence as hopeless | further allegiance to those principles, | river. O e e et :m;im- maps, 1;.~»;.v’,m':m French sl : 1t ne positi sorlnyeldy but owed allegiance to Mr. Roosevelt is the same with the freight ser- | before any great harm was done, and | hold command o he alr ostile God’s land. It is the great open | He :‘;,‘::,Bde&,:;‘ :m,erp;)“.u:;’ s Let her think of the millions of |and the republican party. ‘,ii; The Providence line is not |the rising resentment in the Domin- | fieroplanes began appearing in con- ple of the universe. There, on| 4 =0 e to grow to greatness | Mothers who are not worrying because | One more unseemly remark by this maintained by Providence ‘business |fon has subsided into a little grumb- | slderable numbers Friday and Satur- leaf, on every blade of grass, will be blasted while he’s young, | thelr boys have to eat army rations, | Pelican sinner against the Mght: alone. Much of the freight that [ling at the stupidity of the Sassen- | day. Machine gun fire heard from re- be found a sermon as masterful | Ah! to think how they were ruined | Pt Who are worried day and night | No FEuropean monarch rules more | ghipped from that city to New York | achs In the war office who were cap- | Mote heights told of aerial encoun- B e by their mothers long ago— lest they will never see their boys | despotically than many of our po-!ju poat goes first by railroad from |able of entertaining such an idea. | ters: his! pact of the'battle i The Franklins and the Putnams and | again alive. litical bosses, and millions of think- | mitchburg, Worcester, the Blackstone | General San Tughes, minister of | Fighting in this p: Silea et the Hamiltons you know. Let her try to visuallze the hourly | ing Americans do not propose to be | ajley and the industrial section | militia, has just announced the re- | front is in the open and the combat- ound the true friends; the real 3 terrors of a war in which 8,000,000 or | blindly dictated to by these same | ound Providence. Much of the | scinding of the silly order of two | ants are not now Vl’milym:‘> |:(]:\‘n;‘h\;=|{ ds; the gentle-folk; the open |Then we must feed the, baby by the | 10.000,000 men have already been | hosses New Haven line’s freight is trans- | weeks ago, saying that the kit Is re- | ff:{“" "'“,‘[’_:’f"f'j”‘y"‘ e o Sl lted. There is bohemia in all its schedule that is made, killed or wounded—most of them Flat mutiny and treason. Mr. | farred at the New Haven wharf—or | garded at the front as preferable m=:‘ ‘fff e T Tat e e o And the food that he is given must | Povs like her boy. Roosevelt has hunted with Mr. Par- | .jock,” as they insist on calling it in | trousers hecause it “keeps dry longer” | IN& 1y dug ditches ana shallow pits T TG G G e, Then let her remember that except | ker in happier days among the Louls- | xow Haven—after being received | and one kilt will outwear four 1,,“,-5} ]L|\“1"} ‘: l,kwnm ks ate b in the country on Sunday, men | gy, ooy oiow to inform us that he | for the statesmanship of Woodrow |iana canebrakes. Now it is his mel- from Springfield, Hartford, Merlden, | of trousers || et "pj S = to sell something to their brothers ot coennl Wilson the body of her own son might | ancholy duty to hunt his_fellow- | Nay Britain and other places reached | This remarkable statement glves U””r‘gypurriwfl ofi the| 1hcessant shell profit. And after such a day|But he couldn't grow to greatness if | be Iving today in an unmarked grave [ huntsman. Political hosses! Mr. Par- | the New Haven’s railroad lines. At | some hint of the esoteric virtues of fire is to break up the new German pose of protecting the country,” and 5 jde Tt i e Tt t n 1 i flourishes in all 4 o lace in American literature. They e e ¢ | emy’s hide. t is the day, but no It has - given to the struggling | the pipe material, flourishe: a oday there is brought to the at- [P that he ‘cannot bolisve that the men (lfct ‘day; 1t s the day when ‘“vour!| oot cicr the, world placelofire: | countrlss hordering. upon!the Medi: [: LAN i ] case of the city dweller and p little or no attention to the com- : “The hand that rocks the cradle”— uly Two French shells to on Hves in the country finds no dif- e atts o h i ty in getting up early on Monday | It is bad to rock the baby, they would | the most ghastly warfare known to the principle only. really amount to no more than sev- i o pondent during a three day stay be- | human history. A party is a means of gratifyving | o, "gifferent routes into New York. th’\d the lines. The cannonade con- | Let her think of the hoys lving on | personal malice by “beating Taft” or | mye bhusiness of most, if not, indeed, Kilts not Breeks. tinues throughout the night, rising to the fleld with arms hlown off, or 1285 | trying to “beat Wilson.” The eternal | ot 411 of them, is largely dependent (New York Evening Sun.) blown off. or facesghlown off, perishing | principles of progressivism, terminat- | woon connections with the rallroad @ns of thel many ralsel stepsi mads!| In horrible agony for the lack of [ed, for all good progressives, with the | saivice. Anyone who has seen the | by British authority in the course of | reach | nomination of Mr. Hughes. When ! ccores of people waiting for the gate : the bewildering rush of war has been | €U direction of fire by the aerial observers French artillery commanders feel ! intensity during the long midsummer da when the sunlight enables tine glory. Nor are there trad- his wants were all supplied. in Flanders or France ker’s temerity is astounding. the same time, no one feels that the | the kilt little realized by the kiitless. | positions so as to keep the Teutons R o Beavesl i |EhimEimowSfoolish Fnursing Estinted Ars. Henry Smith, with true ma- e - U New Haven should be allowed 10| The jdea is easy to grasp, when You | constantly unprotected and cause as those poor weaklings. long ago— | ternal solicitude, naturally thinks it THE WORLD DOES MOVE. have such a monopoly of the water | think of it; keeps dry longer becausa | yron casualties among them as pos- y the depression caused by an im- [ The Shakespeares and the Luthers |is a great nuisance that her hoy — fronts of southern New TEngland’'s | it doesn't get into puddles In the | gpje Some eighty per cent. of the { should have to swelter in the heat of | Writer Finds Tabor Worth More, | (jqewater ports that the founding of | trenches while the wearer is standing | oasualties in this war are from shell a Texas summer and live off coarse Bducation Freer, Health Better. fndependent lines would be impos- | there, and it wears much longer be- | anq direct gun fire. Five hundred AT s 1 | We are given a great mission, we are | food, and so it is. but the troubles| In three hundred vears the value | sible. | cause there isn't much of it to wear [ ghells may only tear up a trench e e ¥ s Smisand here, today, on earth of her son are very small in compar- | of Manhattan Island has grown from The connection between the rall-|out. All the wear and wetting it gets [ work, where only one shell will kill pting for all his fellow workers. [ 7o hring forth a race of giants, and |ison with what they would be if the $23 to nearly $9,000.000,000. road and the boat lines has developed | js received when the wearer sits [ op wound twenty or thirty men re is truth in the assertion. to guard them from their hirth. United States had undertaken armed The world does move, and no part | to a point where it can fairly Dbe | qown, and it is plenty long enough to French guns are incessantly shell re is nothing like a little journey | T0 insist upon their freedom from the | intervention in Mexico Her own | of it moves faster than the United | called organic. The reasonableness o ’sil down on—almost as good as the | ing a five mile zone back of the Ger- hi S Sl rocking that was had troubles, too, are very small in com- | States. the connection is recognized by the | tafls of a frock coat. Besides all this, | man front lines, so as to harass the to the open country where no | .. our parents and their parents, [ parison with what they would he if | The American Republic, not a |interstate commerce commission in [t fg the natural garment of the Scot, | German communications and destroy is cramped for ailr, where there scrambling all the brains they ) she were watching the newspapers | century and a half old has become | the case of the Central Vermont, the | who would suffer keenly if he had to roads and bridges. Bits of the front B enough for all—for men, for Hed every day for the lists of dead and |the greatest of all the world powers, | New MHaven competitor at New | jmuffle up his knees and shins in the | are often selected for destruction, us- If they’d been fed by schedule | wounded in the fighting, the refuge of the persecuted and the ! I.ondon, and, potentially. at r']‘r»\"'lypg;u]flflhn swaddling clothes. Breeks | yally sallent interfering with the would they have been stunted There are millions of Mrs. Henry | home of a hundred milllon indepen- | dence. TIf the Central Vermont With | for Scots? Never was anything S0 | symmetry of the line Smiths In this country with bovs who | dent sovereigns, writes John A.|its small mileage In southern New | foolish; the dunderheaded blundering A characteristic incident was that never more [ of Wstrees, where the Germans on July ten houses. French attacks and left had hent back t in the proper place where the lonment in the city the next and the Bonapartes, you know. ming should find your city man en, for children, for trees, for ers, for birds, and fruit and fowl, e s members of all the kingdoms, | The Websters and the Lincolns and | would bhe subject to milltary duty ff | Sleicher, in “T.eslia's. Fngland, is allowed to operate Sound | of the war office was the country may be found those the Roosevelts, you know. the United States went to war. When In the growth of national wealth | steamers from two ports. it seems al- | clearly #hown. 24 held BISHOP DOANT. they are disposed to find fau Ith | every ono of its people has particl- | together probable that the New TIa- | 1n gome of the earlier engagements | on the right ey i the policies of the president, let them | pated. All have not shared alike, hut ven, which is thé railroad serving the | of the war, as was reported at the | the German support The French New York reports i dovofc a little praverful consideration | it is the law of nature for one star | entire territory. will he allowed to op- | time, the German nrisoners referred | shelled the group of houses for six s to perdition meet with that Wall Street 1s betting threa to | to the milllons of Mrs. Henry Smiths In | to differ from another in glory, as | crate boats from the ports where its | \.ith terrificd amazement to the kilt- [ hours, and It seemed impossible that ngers who have trod the straight | five that the Deutschland will make a | Furope whose boys are now only|men differ in stature, brain, brawn |ines are already cstablished. There | oq regiments which had come storm- | any one could have lived una the safo return vovage to Gormany, These | memories. But for President Wilkon | and ability, can be little doubt that the manufac- | ing at them as “the ladies from hell.” | fire. When the French infantry mov- odds would hardly encourage ono to | these Amerfcan mothers would be| The growth of the nation has|turing and commercial interests of [ It would have been a great pity to | ed forward, however, they found fif- wonderful lane that leads 0| 1o g plensure trip on the croft— | drinking the bitter dregs of that [ brought with it blessings that we are | fhis ferritory are in favor of per- | chamse tha appearance of these furi- | toen wounded survivors out of the e and contentment, Springfleld Republican, same oup. i too apt to forget, It has made labor | petuating the existing arrangement. | ous fighters. 160 men who had held the position, ps-roads of life where the wander- down the primrose AT narrow, and both then turn inte e e - — o