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NEW, BRITAIN DAILY HERALD. TUESDAY, AUGUST 1, (916. , banner, your unaltergble and abid- wer circles of the allies, the big mes< T | ing Americanism, your high personal | of the entente powers who are in con-g character and well known capacit trol of events so far as they can be and who 1 1 w BR[IAIN H LD with Mexico as “weak and vacillating,” | suggestions to the tonsorial artists on A HOT TOWN. although the i ay : HUEHES phrase is becoming | this score, it might he advocated, and = \ It Is All Right in Guaymas in Win- ter, But Not Now. all these have fixed you in the Amer- | controlled from one side, Proprietor th : 5 t hese things ar g st 7 the wee o roper B pkit 185 are being said it would | the week but Monday is the proper : O ey ofl el ¥ (Sunday excepted) at 4:15 p. m. | scem the praper thing for critics to|time for a half day off. On the face Washington, D. C., Aug. 1.—Guay- | }IRE []N MEX] publican principles and the wisest | lation at their fingers' ends, are fg- HBRALD PUBLISHING COMPANY. somewhat threadbare. But while | with just claim, that any other day in &t Herald Build 67 Church St ; : cepe of a reported exploit leader to restore American prestige uring on a formal cessation of hop- | and efficient government. tilities in the spring of 1917. On pre- ! 1 5 “We v ¢ . cisely what circumstances, conditions the choir-leader of the critics, does|forenoon is spent in work. Sunday |releasing the steamer Sonora recently, We bring you now the commission | ©/86'¥ What circ ki condidions | to that leadership. We bring it in | T nts they predicate this bellef Mvered by carrle: to an: g Tor 15 Centa a Woelr, 35 Cents Month, | "0t do this. The Mexican polici he | &ives any man ecnoush respite from |is described in today's National Geo- ttac g i e e, o, LD, W e i Bl S R e it o p gladly acclaim the republican resto- 4‘ no great doubt that they entertain - b'::’;;l’;";\" f;;r“dp'wvr to pe sent b)’MmN':. offers is one of “firmness and con-, labor. If his surc from the sor- | #raphic Society bulletin as the port of vance, §0 Cents a Month, 3 a0 | are i CaTenia s §2.00 o Yepr { sistency.” Whether that means inter- | Fows of Saturday night have not been | second importance on the Mexican PUllCleS fl[ Home afld Al)l‘()fld ration under your trusted leadership. flndhug‘ ‘making calculations on ‘som We brifg it in the highest aprecia- | SUC asis, —— vention, war, or diplomatic dealings is | accomplished by am entire Sunday | wesg coast. | : A i 4 tion of that peace of right and ius It may be that they have figured "gmy profitabla advertisine mcdam In | W i & i % . T i the city. Circulaion booxs and prews | NOL KIVen an anxious populace to |spent in idleness, he might as well go As the chief outlet @f the wealthy tiee - which your unwavering Amér- | out the effects of attrition upon the S¥8: open CLYERtiser | known. Firm and consistent;” | to a sanitarium and spend his reclin- | state of Sonora, Guaymas is a scaport New York, A 1.—Charles Bvans | joanism will hold secure, rather than| Central powers as operating to com- advance something as good or better|of things, taking Mondgy as a half- [ mas, the tered at the Post OMe New Britata | {hs - Wils ffor Hetes 1a: L 4 1 = 5 S . R BT o an Mr. Wilson offers. Mr, Hughes, | holiday is foolish, cspecially when the | of the American cruiser Cleveland in - S e W (1‘- vast posibilities,” says the bulletin, H}{g}x{-x. republican nominee for | enganger. We bring it W the stgony | Pel the Teutons to seek peace at the Haga New' Stend (nd b ind Bread. | “weak and vacllating.” Anyway, | Sunday, then, v projons the rest- | foF it has a naturally fine harbor, |n>«s)xfm‘ received formal notificatiof | helfe that American material - good | CXPiration’ of another nine or ‘ten Ay, New York Ciry: Boara Walk. at | o A i b ) S 0 : : o | affording anchorage in its present lit- | O his momination and made” h® | ¢itune, under republican industrial | Months; that they have means of lantic City, and Hartford Deoot. phri mear nothing. Actions | ing period over into Monday There | {J¢ jmproved condition for vessels Sbeech of acceptance last night be- preparedress, will be the glad reflex | Fnowing that beyond sucHWga period count. are other¥ood afternoons in any weelk dgawing from 14 to 20 feet of water. }9!‘0 an audience whieh in the swel- o6 our own peace and the world’s | it Will not be possible for Germany Wiy, TR R S s S | e S etk (it em e sl ‘The Southern Racific Raifway of |tering heat filled Carnegic hall from | peace’and be held permanent under | and Austria to continue the war. 0r4 | Mexico, running ‘throuzh~ the stale | orchestra pit to fopmost gallery. { républican protection. they may not know that %their own = powers to make successfd war will ‘W "be exhausted by that time and that there may be an understanding that next spring, the entente will move for peace on the best terms obtainable. | So that there seems to be cause for the almost universal belief:that the war will never see the third anniver- sary of its beginning. And with or without cause it has come to be 80 strong a general belief as to be termed a conviction. Yet all the expectations of the en- raerely a halancing phrase against | ing days in easc Having enjoyed TELEPHONR A e e Ll ftorial Roc i s | - 5 A 2. s { teresting reading to thosé partisans|We all know that Saturday is thefr S : o | | , = capital, Ifermosilla, connects Guaymas is speech itgelf was a critical re- s . s on SR who can see but one side of any |busy day; but there is Tuesday, and | ith the 2an bord e i telnasiaionticel re We bring it in firm conviction that j, T ! v b o . 1 the American border city ot No- | view of the Wilson policies, in parti- | you Sir. will hold that platform prom- AT CALSAR! question. Broadminded Democrats | Wednesday, and Thursday, and Hri- | gal 30 iiles to the northt This | cular his treatment of the Mexican ! jgod constitute a sacred party covenant admitted that duMng | day all nicely sandwiched in between |road's extension along the coast to the | situation ang the record made by the | o119 the exp,-élséd will of the people 3 south has been reta zreatly by | Wilson & i s el = ool ‘mm:”‘lc.:m;.ttt‘"x‘rdged' A,i(.dt‘li z) “ll,}on administration in its relation ¢ the polls must find response in cap- political conditions, ‘and accord- to the warring powers in Burope. Tt | ap)o and efficlent administration o ing to the company’s report the losses | was at times scathing in its eriticism |~ wavo gir we bring it believing you 4 carpulent individual clad in|e¥actly ta their liking. But the cir-|Pand of unshaven Monday afternoon- | on account of interruptions to trailic jand again Mr. [ughes' utterances | wii aqa to onr self-respect, confidance ers have > benef. your decision. | from’ the heginning of the Madero | were wugh satire, w S S i ¢ | ers have the benefit of your decision. | f he Peginning of the Madero | were fraught with satire, which the | and good fortune at home and to that revolution to June 30, 1913, amount- | audience applauded heartily. it i 1 i broad led to $3,000,000 (gold) = respect and good opinion abroad “Guavmas is not s pleasant place in | o colonel Theodore Roosevelt, who | which meets our higher American as- e fuaymas Ot a pleas: ace in | pecupied on f the rer tier s, | pirations ing day of New Britain barber shops. | which to live at this time of the your, | shared. hen ""“‘_fh"“’ff’(' 'f’( m:’wr;:‘{,; Dizations. lled up to the elbows. ———— for from July to September. (the rainy | nominee as a center of interest and Chocmlslor Hishes tente statesmen and soldlers, all the B h e s nvhod, inthe world What Is Home Without a Mother? :gu-\nm, q!;\ atmo phere iz o ehARE e e s i b R )ip, Hughes yad warmly apmaum-‘d profound confidence of the neutral & S i it % nfuges "he winter climate is very |je -t | y as he arose and took Senator Hard- |'world, that the war is rapidly waning ESeTVern =vmpatbhy onlathot d- jeriod since o e o By Septimus Winner Alice Haw- a {lent part. .Colonel Roosevelt was : : g w3 DS 5 o deserves sympathy on a hot day | period since the Civil war. The | BS ptig piinners ¢ agreeable, however. The town stands | cheered for from three fo four min. | PE'S Place at the reader's desk, pre- | toward its end, may prove to be 1y is a fat man. There is no reason | ‘airminded voter will take that into ol : s T an a peninsula, back of Which | utes when he ohtered his bow, short. | PATatory to delivering his address of | based. There fs no doubt that tha | X 3 2#%s home without a mo L7 se hil 50 ( vhich: serve : oL [ ac anc The audienc arose. e Teu { consideration when weighing in the | !\\\"thfi . ”,IH“L:H‘ s 155 ’”““11' “ U o G i h serve jy after 8 o'clock, and was forced to | & S llh‘« audience ,arose. ) struggle is going badly for the Teu- 3 are d > Joys et, as giant heat reflectors. To overcome | yise again s olonel Roosevelt in his box applaud- | tons; there seems to be small reason* Biedl tol ol up his Sleeven Dalance the e e B sttt uidiiion rise again and again to acknowledge : se 0 be small rea i o up hi ves and !e wce the arguments for and against | When the loving smile no lonzer this, many of the houses have extraor- | the ovation. From many parts of the | €4 Warmly. The band played The | to anticipate any improvement in their appear in company without his | the Wilson administration. The man ot Ot Goni ntfh(cm‘;h;;]‘(s are | inarily thick walls, like many of ihe | hall rose the ery famtliar from the | Star Spangled Banner. —Then there | condition or thelr prospects in the im- he d ]: seem long, E homes in the hot countries of the | days in Chicago immediately precod. | W8S Some more applause and cheer- | mediately future, The tide seems to pruren Ll near east. [ing tho republican national conven- | ing. | have turned and continued aitied vic- sadisne tolls/elordvions “There is excellent fishing for the |tion: “We want Teddy! | The candidate got his first rise out | tories to be the probability. But it 2 Visitori tolGiayiasithe bi= i Coaloxato 2 1 | of the audience early in the speech | must he borne in mind that Germany bman of equal proportio v | Wilson did not do. ill also wa asures, Rk : The appearance of Mr. Hughes on | O 3 Jie K o rual proportions may | n did not do. He will also want e v‘:,“»::-“cvmne gentle care g | ¥iver salmon being especially plenti- lthe platform about ffteen minutes | WheD dealing with Americanism, he | is still on foreign soil on both her [dabout in a low neck short-sleeved | to know what Mr. Hughes would not L TEEEL iy i ful, while lobster-spearing is one Of |jater was the S 0 B e O | defined this as a love of country and | fronts and that even if she is driven irt waist and thin white skirt? No | do in the instances where the Pre E0RS the popular sports. It is not a safe | stration which, both in length and | & Patriotic fervor which permits of | therefrom there ls the possibility tha bathing resort, however, on account of | intensity, equalled, .but did not sur- | 20 division of allegiance, no rivals in | an entirely new phase of the war must i the sharks which infest the waters. e ” 7 | affection, and which’ strive: for | be fought out, that of the defense=< it is about time somecone started | not told those details, as vet. He may Hearts we love to pass away; 2 pass, that bestowed upon the Colonel, | ? : 3 L Gt e b 3} g ; e e feoon e bino i childhood Mazatlan, some 400 miles to the |1t was Colonel Roosevelt’s first ap- | ‘‘merica first and America efficient.” | of her own territory reform in the dress of men—es- | lofer on. Or, he may follow the|And how sgon e'en | et southeast of Guaymas, is gradually | pearamce at & republican gatherimg | N dealing with the forelgn policy | If Germany Is beaten back to her We ":‘J“;Jm““ e :::t,, s siow; | {OTEINE ahead of the latter city, due |since nhis voluntary exile from the |Of the Wilson —administration Mr. ! frontiers, with the manifest impossi- ghly starched collars, long sleeved | merely criticise the President oy arin i * | largely to the fact that it is much | party, following the Chicago conven- | f1ughes brought jeers from the au- | bility of regaining the enemy ground G Sl Her joys of earth are past; Pia £ & dience when he described what he | she has held heretofore, she may b e i ] - arer to the American ports of the | i irts, whistcoats and a heavy bad to act. Words and deeds are sometimes, ere we learn to know | 1o0rer tion of four years ago. ; % d heavy coat | And sometimes, ere W O e e R o st Steamers loading at Carnegie hall was swathed in Amer- | Characterized as the weakness and ready for a peace; but she may at the 5 inexperience of the state department same time be wholly unready for a d trousers are worse than an as- | different things. In all the dealinzs | her. Mazatlan save the long voyage up the |jcan fla They were festooned on personnel. He emphasized the with- | peace dictated by the commercial in- stos crematory. Just from their | hetween the United States and fareign | She hath breathed, "“"”‘ RrCe el s Chlitarnl Acoordin el ol ine | thatrar e s s ol pearances on hot days men make | nations it is for President Wilson ‘o | ol Berthinerlast: atest available figures of MexXico's | Jories and they covered completely | (raWal of Myron T. Herrick as Am- | terests of England. She may continue | foreign commerce, Guaymas showed a | tne walls benind the stase. A - largs | Passador to France while the war was | the war with her back to the walls decrease of half a million dollars in | American flag, fanned imto a flutten | in Progress, and characterized it as|of her own cities, in a grim deter- imports compared with the precedingZ | and brought out in striking relief | 2% inexcusable yielding of national in- | mination to get better terms th an of- vear, while Mazatlan’s loss was only | through the white rays of a search. | terest to partisan expediency. | fered to her, perhaps for an indefnite half as much, whereas in exporis | Jnt, oocupied the midale back.| The Mexican policy Mr. Hughes de- | period. At bay, no one yet knows Mazatlan gained more than a million | ground of the stage. clared faulty from beginning to end. | what the possibilities of the German ST e e e R A with Mr. ana | He insisted that Huerta was the only | empire might prove to be; it is futile tically_stationars. Guaymas received | yirs, Theodors Roosevelt, Ir., former | {2ctor in Mexioan affairs who had | to estimate how long the nation might | : - : a little more than one- o e || = o . any claim on recognition by the coun- continue to maintajn a state of wae eptance, got the Wilson adminis- | by the President he has noither timo| ‘VhAt 18 homeiwithonchwithontner i||\‘]v\fl‘:\r5 I(:lfu))‘T(\;']?r:lwl';oll’::t"i‘lgl‘fh]‘:)’l":‘“. ’:‘\"41‘ ":,f,':l:'i,,:','m',,”‘\" (1){{(.1‘; ,’:’,_ “?{\fl’,"“ Mrd | try, because he was in fact the head under such conditions of pure defen tlon up against the ropes and at- | nor inclination to tell what he would | ppered | is stigntiy surpassed by Mazatlan. Less | Stimson, occupiod Box 25 on the low. | Of the Provisional government in | siveness, with' shortened lines, with'» Wil io =coret Al inoci o by et e e S — than one-fifth of the export trade Js | or tier Afrs Hoosevelt did met at. | Mexico when the Wilson administra- | her national existence at stake unding away at its Mexican policy, | Anq i i : FACTS AND FANCTES. controlled by the more northerly port | tend the mecting, Box 1, mot far | tion got Into power. He assailed the | Our expectancy bf peace within tho' § an policy, | And if the American people are going et while Ma~2tlan enjoys nearly a fourth | 1 il D Wilson administration for vacillation | year may find justification in" the knew no matter how wildly he|to turn Woodrow Wilson out of the| Tven that universal peace-at-any- |of it. Thise years previously thoe | on e e e mominee, | in its dealing with Mexico, and de- | year's events. But it may not. ung he would not hit any outsiders. | \hite House and hand the keys of tho | Price-man, President Jordan, would | trade percentages of the two DOFtS | Are flushos, Mr. amd Mrs. Charles | clared this responsible for attacis on = = | nesitate before condemning the war | was reversed | B. Hughes, Jr., Dr. Colin S. Carter, | American life and property in ,\ln}i“y-n PHEASANTS PROVE UNSOCIABLE. o Fol e el Shos 2% lon the New Jersey coast sharks.— | “Consular offices are maintained m |who is Irother-in-taw of Mr. | during the present era of unrest. The el T m:.h] Fi“::”“' LUEL Bty S50 B B SOV @rsotinl e e Guaymas by nine forcign countrics — | Hughes and Mrs, Carter: Estabrook | Wilson administration, according to | Western Fanciors Report Tngratitudos suropean : what Wilson has dome. They do not the United Stat Great Britain, | carter and Howsrd Dickinson, two | Mr- Hughes, was less concerned with | Law- | Protecting the life and property of | | Americans in Mexico at the time of | the Vera Cruz incident than it was T i L O in deposing Huerta from power. Out Chicago way the coroner has| have before thi 2 Monday and Saturday. Think it over, Prted a dress reform for men. It|the present administration some things brothers, and let®a wild and ferocious s instituted after a very large| l'ave happened which were not glegee had been cjected from a | CUmstances under which the events of shionable dining room because of | the past two vears fook place were|1n thé end. everybody will be bene- s shocking appearance, He was | ¢Ntremely different from any other | tited by a change in the weekly clos- ]‘.w,y- visited upon this -country. Mr. | | mus a collar and his sleeves were Hughes describes this period himself @s ‘perhaps more critical than any the world why he should not be fllar. Why should he be coffined | With the ballot will want to know a heavy black coat and stiff bosom } what Mr. Hughes would have done in irt, with cu#is attached, when a | the Lusitania incident that President | ana oh, how few are childhood’s hson dent performed. But Mr. Hughes has | Things we prize are first to vanish; cially for the Summer season. | easiest route of a candidate yone around them feel a hundred | Perform the work. After that is done | Older hearts may have their sorrows, ees warmer. Somebody bring | Pis critics have the floor. Mr. Hughes, | Griefs that quickly die away; But a mother lost in childhood - Grieves e heart, art hy Woodrow Wilsen, is now in the | Litve (he i nt il mil oo e ition of chief cheer leader of his | e ot rosi 3 . s | We mi e rilling MR. HUGH SPEECH. | et : 2 | We miss her kind, her willing hand, ) | cwn forces, He is so busy creating a Her fond and earnest care; When Mr. Hughes, in his speech of | din and roar over what has been done | And oh, how dark is life around us! | an old Roman toga. as a candidate for the place occupled | fpen he was finally winded, after | place ta Charles FEvans Hughes they - . & > and Back-biting as Actual stion, he had a different proposi- | know what Hughes would have done France, Germany, Belgium, Ttaly, Nor- | jephews e nominee, and 6 & 3 way, Honduras and Bolivia St e private IaRacLer tle n to handle When harping on; vnder the same circumstances, nor| The average man who boasts that — secretary, party. All ihe hoses were occupied by re- pubiicans and progressives of prom- t is all right to tell where | what he might do if present conditions | he smokes twenty strong cigars a day not a heavy smoker but a heavy vying to Snip the President. According to those who raise them, “The American fleet salled out of [ - SCOFTHE 0 £h08e e ience, accompanied by their wives and | TAmpico and left it to German and gfp"‘:xi;llyr;:"\"“ e “The question is often asked wheth- | other wormen relatives. On the stage | British warships to bring away Amer- | 3f & at and about t Y 9 other women relativ age | 3 z A5 .p | @mount of affection for his owner. | ex¥olirinoys ot Rthelfrontinayesbeent] st il /e meribec-iof ithe WNotin cationi| \canstwhose FllvesRwerem S tnRdansenidil ) E LE St oo il SR o o e | A West Virginia girl flagged a train | trapped there to prevent them from | eommi headed by Warren G.|Sald Mr. Hughes e w 1 0 e « ) sommittee, headed by Warren G. i le Rl g aver-seas policy looms up, how- | mediate = past . son, |has; : . ; o : . Ny : g some instances, at least, a profitable o policy looms up, how- | mediate ' past. Woecdrow Wilson, | 155t week and preventec wreck. 7or- | voting at the next presidential elec- | jfarding, United States senator from Plays Mostly on Mexico. e il W]‘. The it is not well to mention G ken all in all, will profit rather than | iunately she was an old-fashioned sirl | tion,” says the Hartford Courant, | Ohio, who, as chairman of the T Chojcandidatojdoyotedia larael DOL L e s oo ilal e i e e i and wore a red petticoat.—Topeka [ editorially, in its edition of last Wed- | publican national convention, was | tion of his speech to Mexico than to | o0 =, o 5 RO 7 any other single topic. He reverted i e op ne £ i | Edgar J. Wright, president of the State Journal nesday. T.et us take this matter fair- | nade head of the committee to noti- ; S A Wil A % 2 i v and squarely, and say the ve S Candianie [of Dretiientorunis || loftheNdiplomacylor Sehelwdison¥ads : : ¢ S sacrificed by telling what President | an experienced man at its head, and | — 1y ¥ snoieny fhon U owe a0l lge o fof Dresident of | ministration newly organized Western Washington | are not misinformed Governor Hol- | nomination. Members of the republi- T Chlerr ¢ dloloman | Pheasant Breeders’ | comh has full ower to cail a spe-|can national committee, prominent e cnlefs functlon otsdiplomacy, i [l e, Bl L e ¥ At 9 SR ; [ he said, “is prevention, but in thi . blicans fro: ent sections of 3 | a s or ar "k republicans from our policy falled, doubtless because|he has & silver pheasant_cock that of its impaired credit and the man- | eXhibits all the sweetness of a Kadiak ifest lack of disposition to back words | bear cub and an Ingratitude that ls el s sharper than the serpent’s taoth. - ‘ A. J. Park, wh wns one ~the legislative session to provide legal| Of the Mr. Hughes was applauded when he m_:pg PL\:L;, }_}Z;Q,qflrv:fi '):-\;\1 machinery so the mlitlamen could | hall itself, all but a thousand or so | declared that if ‘h‘e‘ d”;hmf:'f\ ';:‘l“he | Seattle, tells of one cock that delights vote. Why doesn’t the Courant use | were present by invitation. — The gm"%f;;’i:nh::edhfhzvfer; ‘.‘:‘mict wc. | to run up from behind him and bite its influence? Nobody would object | orowd was early and the hall was p::nmhl{h‘"" in one of his earlier | Nim in the leg, and the bite or peck to 2 expense, ody w otes filled when the arrival of Colonel e 2 f a angry sant Is not at a e e ] A » 0 the expense, nobody would protest. phicn jene . °L | otes to Germany, he meant just what | Of an anery pheasant at all, S 44 S ! Tolks usually gain a grist o’ knowl- | There are more Wilson votes in the | Roosevelt brought on the first an 1d, there weuld have been no | S00thing, says Mr. Park JFror one hour.a@d thirty minutes | Such a practice prevall. Usually, the | oqg0 by goin’ through th' mill o' ex- | National Guard ranks than there are | Practically only episode of the meot- | he sald there wo e e ghes| Notwithstanding these adverse re- . Hughes attacked the Wilson ad- | tonsorial shops keep their doors open | perience.—Harrieburg Patriot. republican votes, probably. Certainly | ing. As goon as he was seen a storm I‘““:‘“d“ame oo that resolutions in | POTts on the manners of pheasants, & nistration. Any: other administra- | longer on this day than on any other the democrats would not object. , |Of applause and cheers broke and vyhnn | Scrongeiflng bt tioan tien sbrosd pheasant farmers in western Wash- AR eir ety e e The question which the Courant |the band plaved Auld Lang Syne. The ) Fi : 5 4 declared | Ington seem fairly numerous. Mr. [ onlaebane phalleniSlon g S before | 3 . K . reports as “of asked” - colonel smiled blissfully at the dem- | would have led to war, and decla Wright says that at least thirty per- der such fire. Yo, during all that|After an Interval between Saturday | o far mo substitute for gasoline nas | FePOT(s as “often asked” is only re- | (BSR, B T0 J B O B 40 L | that the “weakness and indectsion” of | TES LA BIRS L A (O B S 3 s T been discovered cheaper than shoe by political snipers who are | O0Sration anag sce. Lty 2 i was the thing that | 8¢ Lartiy ving i e, the Republican nominee ad-|Dight and Monday morning, mere man | Sl e Pred cheal «:‘,.,,.g e e U\n‘nzhc YO 2% | he arose again and again and howed the vadmh;q\s:ira‘:ir:sjflh? o wums;y 2¢| for marketing in Eastern states Inced no thought that has not been | needs the gentle administrations of | 7 : ter how inane, to the disadvantage of | iP 1iS somewhat jerky fashion in re- at U]mle»=\ *f h{;m;m A considerable shipment of Wash- 1 e lte Iaiont e e Ly lhadyantase onsc to the welcome. the brink of hos £ on pheasants was sent last year isted before the American public on | his favorite Knight of the Razor. If T }I];‘ni president of the Unted States. ol ;Wl”l('p‘l‘;v'e,i “ror & while, and | One incident that set the audience ":’;rnmf"ulu wéom ol ean Y ’ ¥ occasion. With the|he is away from home he maturally | oo0" Jar SR TNt make | men as Ohomes hon Tepeated by such | o B members of the notification | cheering occurred while Mr. EWEHes )| i, g horgier and finer birds than the ! ssible exception of his definition of | needs a shave, sometimes a shampoo | vy, committee, followed by the nominee. | Was discussing prepa Hemees of the |island has ever seen before Other ! made their appearance. This was a | clared ‘q‘”“ ”‘: ‘“‘:"On the Mexican | Pirds have been sold in Pennsylvania signal for the applause to be rencwed. | United »m’e»“h = r"‘}-‘t % shocking ob- | And only a few days ago members of Chairman Willcox of the repubiicar | border had brought a shocking ob | o \Western Washington Assoclation | national committee gripped the hand |Jject 1(‘=snnh o H( e woe e T o bR T | of the candidate in welcome Mr. | He laid the Dblax pheasants wanted in Psnnsylvania. or other serious curreney e el ' wear. | the Wilson administration. o . Hughes was attired in black, wes S ¢ Courant stoop to mnews- n Englist : e 3 a year and ; B9 z ifornia_and back again | noron , sniping and cheap political in- :1”‘ )f‘;"l'fy‘;l.!m' ;‘:“r‘}:“jfl'](:mffl“ “,(;,}3 said Mr. Hughes, “we were told that An Editor’s Work. MR TU e R LS Speaking of the freedon nuendo just hecanse it Is shy on frank | (he cereros o=t e notitea | theauestioniiof prepaxedn ses WA SAI OF (Oakley, Kan., Graphic.) Native New Britainers may not have | SPe& Z0& of the om i and fair jesues? the ceremony e “”' n ‘hien | & pressing one; that the country had 7 i o .. |1t appears to be exemplified in tion speech of Senator Harding, which | 2 e S e, el i) occasion to complain at the practice | coatumes that ma Pl e o e, e been misinformed; Ereh O e at. | game. Just in the midst of an obit- speech last night. This despite the | Of the barbers in closing their shops | wear.—Chicago News Modorn Baseball, e ent e nhea wt"‘“:""" "f};“ e S2.0 uary of a dear friend and when hot - 18 4 ) 2l 2 i v 2 : - itude was changed prks , ) ) on Monday afternoon at the unbecom- o e : ’ (New York Evenine Post.) speaker. i u mf Ifughes, as he uttered this, sent | tears threaten to flnv\;l zlv‘\;n and blet o 7L never nave areally grent ns- FADer boitles in piaco or . Senator Harding. o Hdsions mance in the direction of | out t!m} \,n)')rfis],\nu"‘x te, there breaks g ieal composer until some chap sets to [ ball grounds arc the 1 : T el atlon itiered betprinc:s (|eald sIonEREIaEEE IR By e S aat | throughl theldoor ithelradiaiit! fhce lof are hundreds of travelling men, yea, SRR SRS arc the latest items in The conventi i ci- | 6 ox accupled by . ! i . e e e of chilled beer {he campaisn for America’s mell )t a confident, determined, re- | WS POR 8%NG onoe” caught on as if | the daddy of & b hm,' Tears and cven thousa spigot and the clink of ice coddlification Out in Toledn an o Taliea republican | 0T i. " There was an outbreak | Joy mingle In the same breath, and the giving and taking away of life i ihe Bon are recorded on the same page. town down as a freak along the route | hizhball on an Augnst noon rire recently had to he removed from | party 1 hest | ¢ eheering which lasted for a minute R e N I St s e York American. ihe field to a hospital an account of | respe i gs e > best | more, and while it lasted many e i ance notice of the whole argt door, put away the brush and lather : o = photeous! cntelin spectator. At tvpl ! . i |lucrons inRne Budiencefmurnediaboit Seforspyou eve fniehedithe oblis vance noti whole argument T, I 3 | Getting Some 12 Done. once pacifist Bre "N, now manas. | People’s desires, Senator Hard- | 7" (4 at the colonel, who, how- | uary the breezy advance man for a the | and go for an afternoon in the country | (Collier’s Weekly). ing the Toledo Americans, ruled that | ing. ever, gave no indication that he un- | comedy show pops in and asks you Yereafter papler-mache container “It is fitting “x:}r I should spe “ the | ¢ rstood the demonstration as being | to write a scream for his Forty Fat congratulations of this committee on Wilscn has erred and to| continue and he is in the White House. | '1 . i aa iar.—Fremont G en Unio! on the names of those he should | And there is little or no reason for be- | (New Haven Union.) brought into subjcction.— | hcving that the next few years will —— ferta, Villa, Carranza, et al. When | present milder problems than the im- T, ny, or England, or Kaiser Wilhelm, | lose in a set-to with Mr. Hughes. At/ King George. Too many votes may | this particular time the nation needs lson should have done in certain of | Woodrow Wilson has been TRTOUEN | [ ho [0 o Association, which Se instances. A sideswipe may be ( the mill been used for grape julce >—Philadel- | ¢ial session of the legislature. 11 4 correctly informed, and we think we | the state, Governor Whitman, a dozen o en by mentioning the name of a| I phia Ledger. i are, the Hartford Courant has inside | United States senators, and a score of | BARBERS, ATTENTION, e influence enough with the governor |republican congressmen occupied | to cause the calling of such a special | seats on the platform. 3,000 persons or more in the ip sent down by Germany and heing the blame for the outrage on B President. Mr. Hughes carefully Those who conduct barber shops in Considering its price, why blame the )\va Britain are given over to the |man who cries over spilled milk? oids doing ~ any damage where|* Cincinnati Tribune. incin 3 . mage might be done. There is mo | Custom of closing. their doors at one h thing as a Mexican-American | 0'clock Monday afternoon. In prob- e ably no other city in the country doe! Hopkins Clark is not the de facto president of MexX- | even a clever nholifins i and a massage. If fortune places him | jeco.—Toledo Blade Wilsor L,J-TNL.';:.‘f”,‘.,’,‘,‘, ?x»r;fz\nr_ «\ll‘v in New Britain on that day he gets - SNGhEfionscise una Sonming: cae woman suffrage, there is|neither of these treatments from a Probably nothing e so saddens | tions of g ass age, the practical politician’s heart as the n the Hughes' speech, |regulation barber, unless there is bominant Americanism,” and a newhat radical Republican ad- of this type acts only as a boom- c s erang for those who give o | thought of Tenry Ford’s money 1¥ing | paper spacc ive them neys blican - politician from | SCusht out a snop somewRere Off the |{alein this epochall campaizn. 01" Must main thoroughfare or one violating |State Journal Do word what golng to say days and This newspaper business is a great beks before uttered a syllable of et that it was not given out one day | advance. Every word, every sen-|ing hour of one o'clock. But there | ce, evers paragraph had heen gone | | er and polish ce the Chicago nvention. Indeed, i doubtful if en he, a irm opened remonic hicago twa months | While customers pound in vain for.ad- The king of the hard-rock men in | mittance to the shop. Men have been | this country is said to he Pat O'Neil tire product. It is the old Repub- | known to stand outside barber shops|of Seattle, whose gang has driven a | 2in on Monday afternoon | Tallroad tunnel through Alaskan would be the only variety allowed intended efther wholly or in part for | Frolicsome Fairjes and how fealous i He should have valiantly decreed that | your most extraordinary nomiation. | . they are. Before you have done with Srsm e New B only tmpires with he tougher than | It has no parallel in the history 0f " qp . geclaration of Mr. Hughes in [ the kind words about your departed an policy of “Blow a Man Down,” |in Nev granite at the rate of a foot an hour | 1455 Were to be employed. Thus the the republi party. As the whole | . 0 0" ¢ woman suffrage, which oc- | friend, the joy over the new baby and b matter how the job is dane. To|and swear vengeance on every man, g "o in o oocateh This is his | ANV roughness and native bullseye | people have approvingly witnessed, | L") hic choech was drawing to | finished the showman's ad a fellow is end the Hughes specch recks with | woman and child in the town. Murder | explanation as to what the seholarg | (21Nt 0f young America would have|You have been chosen for leadership | ") co “called forth as much applanse | sneaks in to ask you to suppress the ! has been prevented on numerous oc- | call methodology: heen fostered. On top of Bresnahan's| by a convention which co "‘-\\"“'_‘ "® 1 as anv other part of his address story of the fight that he was mixed I'm an American and T've worked i 3 Atenuion, Grouped on the stage iwith Mr. |up in. Then, after putting all the in hard rock most all over Amerirq, | COMmemorate the great “Matty” with | and dcepest consecration of & Brealy pp . p,.. \vere the members of the|lace and trimmings on the bride's 5 IS0 far as this making a record at tha | & Marble statue at the Polo Grounds, jand histoxic party, when You Were BE | notification committee, Including two | wedding gown, dressing the groom in { officers of the law. For, when a man | jgea) rock to work In. The men wore | 10 the name of the L’f'“(;"‘m"‘h s jon -‘V':]':””v 8. SRl e OWTASES negroes, Henry Johmson of South | the conventional black and starting [1s disappointea in his Monday after- | working six-hour shifts: that wao one | I0ichered to make an office boy A neimaing. | wour molding | Carolina and Dr. J. R. Levy of|them off with congratulations ana barber shop, crime | thing made it go fast. They got good | hOllday, shall we Jve fo sse our batl [ o0 N s O erence. and . par. | Georsla, who occupled prominent | hest wishes, you turn agatn to the pay: $S and $9 a day and a bonus | P10 0 St Lt ‘ Ll 1 seats directly behind the nominee, and | tear side of life and write. “But the exics about 200 men who will play a part | statdly ship moves on, to the haven ! v 5 ticipation, that unfailing understand- for everything over 350 feet. The - ing which directs popular sentiment |2 : in the campaign. under the hill; and, oh! for the touch S e of a vanished hand, and the sound of appointments suffered by out- | i do with i AL bonus had a lot to do with it In two vears and a half the Penn- | to highest victory called you to the Will War See Tts Third Anniversary? | o voice that is still.” fhere Mr. Hughes tells what should : great disa 4 jiotstown: folic oncnis plaiiiimeium o1y Pat has left himself out of the pic- | o\ 0 io” Curoaq has carrled 453, | service of the party and the nation (New London Day) Then comes a lull and the old type- writer is content to record the come suggest that the barbers get together [ture, but the rest's all there. 962,298 passengers without a fatality | Your record of public service, monplace facts, knowing that just 0. There is a familiar strain in th uperation and contempt. He totally ! craven action comes the proposal to| best thought, the highe Vilson policies, stamps | casions only by the suave persuasions pstroys th s of evil. Does he buila | of kindly tempered and good natured em as thir b where he tears down? Does he bnstruct where he destroys? A ¥eful reading of the speech fails to | noon visit to the fow a simg definate instance of |1 liable to be committed. After the we been done and how it should Cib”;l‘ l'lp”!'\"’vw(‘” ta keep poundin iin sympathetic council and ferret out R due to a train wresk. Safety, in fact, | well known and courageous views on i Whee | another day upon which to enfoy thetr ¥ Mermeid f"“'”‘f‘r;"- g has heen made such a_commonplace | public questions ®hen in executive po- | We are at the close of the second half-holiday during the week. (Pittsburgh Gazette-Time: of cperation in this efficiently man- | sition, your abi®ng devotion to re-|year of the war. There are very few » ST . | “Mermaids Like Their Legs Bare”|aged road that even this striking cx- | publicanism, your possession of a con- | indeed who antleipate that the con- | around the corner and each awaiting , WithoutiatternbUnEs ofoRerstepihe Didn’t know before [ emplification of it excites little re- | fidence which has united all believers | flict will run through another year.|his turn stand Joy, Grief, Sorrow, lmarl\.fr\'cw York World. | in republican policies under our parly | There is reason to believe that the in- 1 Mirth, Sarcasm, Wit and Laughter. way on the Mexican situation. ben are without an issue they clutch anything. It may be well and good L brand President. Wilson's dealings bounds of reads a headline. common courtesy in making | that mermaids were bifurcated.