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8 BRITAIN HERALD NEW, BRITAIN DAILY HERALD. FRIDAY, AUGUST 4, 1916. | McMILLAN’S | Britain’s Busy Big Store— | 4 “Always Reliable.” S WOMEN'S SUMMER DRESSES We have not era sur- the nation is in the offing. come to that yet. There is an when the United States must mount every obstacle and place WHAT OTHERS SAY Views on all sides of timely questions as discussed In ex- changes that come to tho Hernld Oflic New THE TIME TO BUY FURNITURE IS NOW, AT OUR GREAT AUGUST FURNITURE SALE and Lalance of world business in our fa Once this throne is ascended it will be a difficult task for any nation to take the laurcl wreath. The building now There —_— vor. d datly (Sunday excepted) at 4:15 p. M., it Herald Bullding, 67 O h St d_at the Post Ofice at New Britata away Second Cluss Mail Matter. deliver later in the While the savings are so pronounced. If desired we will hold your purchase Fall, thus giving you the opportunity to buy for future needs at August Sale prices. WISE, SMITH & ©O. NINETEEN CENTS FOR NEWEST 1 9c going on. today. plenty clothes. necessaries of life within of fat pocketbooks. is Timely Admonishment. Nearly (New ®aven The| When | turns for up process ered Dy carrles to any part of the cluy for 15 Cents a Week, 65 Cents a Month. Tiptions for paper to pe sent by mail yable In advance. 60 C a Month, $0 a Year. hungry men Journal-Courier). writer of romantic riction easy | the moment from his well- jog | Cultivated ficld to the realm of un- Luxuri Tl adorned ract, he either gets the laugh are enjoyed by people who never in- | on himself or merits a wide and con- dulged In such things. Call it any- | siderate hearing. Writing for the thing you will, it is great to live in | CUrrent Atlantic Monthly on “The Sac- such a paradise. are no everyone has a are —— reach only profitable advertising mclmm In he oity. Circulation books and press 00m always open to advertisers. Herald will be found on sale at Hota- Ing's New Stand, 42nd St. and Broad- 4y, New York City; Board Walk, at- antic City, and Hartford Depot. ond-Rate Man in Politics,” Meredith Nicholson well merits the hearing. In politics there is no fiction, of the adorned literary variety. There are, to be sure, fictions which astute rius- ters of politics too often dole out to the electorate and which too often that deluded body swallows bootheels and eartips. In the game of politics as in the more single-minded business of individually voting for one’s repre- | | sentatives in" government, there are | facts to be faced. It is one of these | facts that Meredith Nicholson has | GTouped for Saturday's selling in two | placed under the microscope. In so Bargain Lots doing he has offered timely warning | 98 and $3.98 ca NECKWEAR Worth Double and More All new fine summer neckwear, worth EVEN THIS IS FUTILE. Senator Gallinger of New Giving you choice of Swiss callars, collar and cuff sets and vestees. up to 50c. Saturday all at 19c. TELEPHOND CALLZ ess OfMice . prial Rooms Hamp- shire has been elected to carry out the Hughes plan of placing the democrats in a hole by a bogus attempt to holst woman suffrage on the nation through | a federal amendment. He will essay | to promote a resolution to that effect, whether he hopes to see it carried out | or not. All this is part of the scheme | EXTRA SPECIAL — MEN'S AND STIFF CUFF SHIRTS WOMEN’S FASHIONABLE BATHING SUITS 39, $1.98 and $2.98 50 BON-TON CORSETS AT $2.55 saving. DRESS FOR THE TROPICS. p the Summer when it's hot the plem is to keep cool. In the Win- vhen it's cold the task is to keep jn. The weather is ever a source Special at $1. ATURDAY—$ Also many other equally good money Corset special for Saturday. WOMEN'S UNDERWEAR WORTH UP TO $1.25— SATURDAY AT 88c. In a great variety of colors Saturday. Also Specifal for Saturday—Men's 25c Black Lisle Tfose, slightly irregular, at 3 pairs for 50c, pair 17c. ch. Men’s 50c Onieta Knit Balbriggan Underwear, at iscomfiture to poor man. Because e states forming the New group have never been subjected luch pranks of the thermometer as year brings, many folks are hand- down advice on the matter. Keep- cool is becoming the main topic ponversation. In the home, it is sable that everything suggestive uxuriousness be packed away in attio, or in the cellar, or some- pre out of sight. Take down all heavy portieres, the large mount- pictures, and throw them with the F into the discard. Strip the par- for Bummer. In the dining room, same cool effect can be obtained even dispensing with the heavily ched tablecloth at meals, and ex- ng the polished wood surface, ing at each plate a simple little d-worked dolly. These are the gestions going the rounds. House- jpers can take them for what they worth. For keeping cool on the et, walk on the shady side and clothing that 1s not black in pr and burdensome in weight. for the troplos. They are on jir way here. Eng- A FOOI’S PARADISE. rom a great sane nation thé Uniteq tes has been suddenly plunged into ftate of chaos. Tts inhabitants joerto living in a land of permanent hdy habits are now wandering aim- fly in a fool's paradise. They are in the prosperity of the moment, if they cannot realize what it all As suddenly as this thing e upon them it will be snuffed out | i tr night will fall over a erein there will be weeping | hing of teeth. When the war is over, the United States dark erica must once and for all fall | it Dbelongs, back In the t trench of despair, of panic. These the thoughts riding on top of the launched political campalgn, bking to take all the joy out af life. et us examine and see Jjust what g of a fool's paradise this is in hich we 1ltve. Industrial and com- Lroial conditions have been brought t of the slough where they rested many years. They are naw on a r way to be placed in a healthy con- jon once and for all. Because of a rency law which is a real check- | hte to panics the first stages of the hropean war were turned to the ad- ntage of the United States rather an to its disadvantage as would ve happened under the ald system. e nation steadied, continues to stand e shock of untold business con- fons until today it is in a position carry on the work In systematio der. All the forces of business have -ordinated. The abnormal con- tions at first set up by the war have Len made normal for the Teason that nations are not the s now engazing our attention. the wonderful opportunities bk where e belligerent hly eal on issed because America business men uld puth American that act not grant proper credits to the | nations all eves have rned in direction. The new here in into America rrern comes Ir > the the 15 L3 future, South i1l ¥ rgest aser from the | nited States, because the men of this | purct ion are out after that bustness and to get it. They now have e with which to nd it Is not fool's gald. Busin ever been in a like prosperous ith the here going re money perform. has such promise for future, is no unemployment. worked before are reaping the 1bor and instilled with the The great going on betwee A1l readjustment tal d in rocess now 1iz be a benefit to be re he future. The bigger and better fon and a more equitable ion. nd labor is result will a of produc- tribu- system Forsooth, this is na fool's par: At least the men who working and cumulating money ave not the ea They eem to be pretty wise fellows th hiads who are caonducting the business of the nation at the present moment. rertime -marks of fools. ate | Men who | to put Woodrow Wilson and his ad- | ministration on the defenstve. In the meantime Mr. Wilson is standing pat ing the suffrage to women is the gift of the state and not the nation. The nation confers citizenship, makes voters. Most of the republican senators will be opposed to such action by Gallinger for the simple reason they do not want to follow Mr. Hughes “‘personal” drift on this ques- | tlon. The southern senators will | never acquiesce even should the vast majority of men from the west and north try to frighten them. The so- | called woman’s perty, which has ap- | parently been the means of making | Mr. Hughes shift over from his own | party's stand on suffrage, is not asin- | fluencial as many would like to imag- tne it is. The dive of Hughes after the wom- | an's party vote is too apparent. It is | seen that he s out after the office of | prestdent tooth and nail and will do | almost anything to secure support. | In this he is rapidly losing some of the | dignity that surrounded him as a | member of the United States supreme | court and taking on more of the | gaudy glamor of a ward politiclan. | Had he remained with his own party | on this score the fault would not bel so apparent. But Mr. Hughes has al- | ready kicked over the traces. Where the republican party expressed satis- | faction of granting the women the bal- lot by states, the candidate wants It extended by an act of congress. The on his original contentton that grant- | the state | | of flomination by machines and | inferior | make a first-rate servant | to those in whose hands should lie, if | 1t doesn’t, the power to choose the in- cumbents of political office. The argument against the rate man in politics is simpl modern demand for efficiency Has | placed a premium on being a first- | rate man. Such men the high places ! in industry and business are seeking. | “It 1s only in politics that the second- rate man finds the broadest fleld for | the exercise of his talents.” This is | an indictment agalnst the electorate which, if true, calls for reform. is indeed the fact that through Our If it “‘or- of qualifications enter upon a of public service in the thin hope that his new responsibilities will of him, of easily surrendering prerogatives, the voter has thrown away his right to be properly governed and has seldom ganizations,’ course i raised so much as a finger to better conditions that elevate the second -rate man to power, we are in a deplorable state. A little reflection will make it clear to the voter of any political faith that second-rate statesmanship has | become too much of a fixture in this country. A national election, with state and are we going to do about our choice of the men to legislate and adminis- trate for us? Are we going to be content to delegate our rights of se- lection to others whose motives we have no reason to trust? We have come upon an era when clear thinking and the exercise of prerogatives to in- sure us the privileges we have a right to enjoy, are prime virtues “This nation,” says Nicholson, in | suggestion the way out of the present conditions, “was founded on ideals; and clearly in the ldeals of the fit, the earnest, the serious, lles its hope individual voters of the nation will not take kindly to this when it is seen that a great man is frightened away from his “firm and consistent” opinion | by a gathering of women, the same | athering that has failed to make the | “weak and vacillating”” Wilson change | | around a | to that | his “personal” or his party stand. It is announced today that Charles W. Fairbanks is to swing campaign circuit planned for Charles Evans Hughes. | A well with but- | termilk chaser, if you get what we mean, i similar iced cocktail a FACTS AND FANCIE! We do not need to arm to teeth but we must have efficiency on | land and sea. Repelling invasion is like fighting a fire in a city. The great thing is to be quick on the job.—New York Commercial. Trapping a burglar in a refrigera- tor shows that the hot weather has not dried up all sentiments of human- ity In the human breast.—Rochester Chronicle. How happy are the builders of railroads these days in Alaska! Have to wear furs while digging through the mountains.—Cincinnati Commer- cial. And now the humble bean gives promise of joining the high cost of living clique. The government is buying all the canned baked beans it can find.—Memphis News Scimitar. An Illinois soldier in Texas ha ceived information that he is father of newly arrived twins. rewards of patrlotism are very pro- nounced at ‘times.—Houston Post. re- the In Dresden there is a technical high school building heated by electricity taken from a power house, and po- tatoes planted on the roof of the schoolhouse have produced an excel- lent crop. That is one of the combin- ations of educational institution, in- | dustry and agriculture, by which the Germans claim they will be able to esist their enemies for years to come, | and never go really hungry.—Worces | ter Telegram. cept for a shortage in cold ther this summer is living up to | the predictions of the man who said it would be chilly straight through. Chicago News. | wes A noted scientist rises regretfully to assert that the human face is doomed to become eventually deaf, dumb and blind. Perfect neutrality on the part of a nation may then become a pcf sibility.—New York Sun. republican party is so hard for n fighting issue that it has had its scouts scouting along the bor- deg and in search of spmething to rafee a howd about. A pathetic plight, | | “The | Greater worlds to conquer lie ahead. [The real business prosperity of the indeed. No party ever entered a na- tional campaign, with so little am- munition,”—Dallas Journel, | sponsibility and | ference at The Hague, The | for the future. To eliminate the 1second-r;flp, to encourage the | rate man to undertake offices of re power—such must be immediate concern and the ur- gent business of all who love Amer- ica.” Ultimately we shall reach viewpoint. There never was a bet- ter time for rapid travel in that dirze- tion than now. he Sweep Out That Padded Cell! (New York Herald.) von Stengel, a professor in ty of Munich and a Ger- to the first peace con- nominateed for the Hall of Fame by the Globe. Once something of a pacifist, he has been writing to the Dutch Pacifist | 1eague. ~ Hear Raron von Stengel: Baron the Univers man delegate | “The whole course of the war up to | the’| the present has shown that we Ger- mans have been chosen by Previdence from among all the other people tions and lead them under our | tectlon for assured peace. | not only have the power and force | necessary for this mission, but we also possess all the spiritual gifts to the pro- | highest degree, and in all creation it | | 1s we who constitute the of civilization. | “It is therefore superflous to con- tinue to discuss pacifist plans of what- ever nature. The nations, and espe- clally the neutral nations, have only one means of leading a profitable ex- istence. It fs to submit to our guid- | ance, which is superior from every | point of view. | “No people is more penetrated with sentiments and ldeals than are Germans, ana when one is under our protection one need #0t worry about | national rights.” | Recent utter dicate a growing doubt of the wisdom of Providence. The Almighty has be- | come “inscrutabie.” Therefore incom- | prehensible—for things are not going | as they should. Break-up of that fa- | mous partnership is at hand, | not come. When the full | comes, will there be enough padded cells to go around? crown Reincarnation. I am dodging touring cars te get across the street, And bounding, leaping here and there upon elastic feet, It often has occurred to it has to you, That in the other life I was a jump- ing kangaroo. | | When | me, perhaps When traveling around the state in i Prohibition towns, Where e’en the soda fountain wink is met with frigid frowns, When for a whole week at a stretch a thirst I must endure, I feel that i the other life I was a camel sure. swing tail, if pres- 1 sometimes think I used to from trees d wear a chatter language simian, ent signs don't fail, There are some indications that cling fast, 'tis plain to see, It's still quite possible to make monkey out of me. (Brooklyn Hagle)s s s And a ond- | letting the man of | municipal elections, approaches. What | first- | this | to | march at the head of civilized na- | For we | w o 1 nces of the kalser in- | Values up to $10.00. Materials are Voiles, lins, Sport Stripes, etc. WHITE DRESSES, Embroidered and lace trimmed, Or- gandies and Voiles. (Women's and Misses’ sizes.) $5.98, $7.98 to $12.98 each. CHILDREN’S WASH DRESSES 98¢, $1.49, $1.98 to $3.98 each. French Ginghams, Chambrays, Lawns and Votles; also several dainty ‘White Dress BATHING SUITS. Jerseys and Bloomers. Bathing Shoes 25¢ and 49¢ a pair | Bathing Cap: : and 49c each Boys’ W‘ash Suits 49c and 98c Suit. LONG CREPE KIMONOS 98c to $4.98 each. LONG SILK KIMONOS $1.98 to $4.98 each. DAINTY CORSET COVERS 25c¢ and 49c¢ each. SILK CORSET COVERS 98¢ each. Chine and Linons, Pop- Crepe de ‘Washable Satins. Hosiery and Underwear NFANTS' WHITH HOSE Special 17¢ pair.. American Silk. BOYS’” UNION SUITS 25c each. Porous Weave and Balbriggan. WOMEN'S UNION TS at 38c, value 50 to 59c. Lace trimmed, tight knee sleeveless. MEN'S CHENEY SILK TIES 50c value, 3 for $1.00. ‘Large Variety of Gloves styles, Silks and Chamoisettes. 50c to $1.25 pair. $1.00 LONG SILK GLOVES ‘White and Colors 79¢ pair. 22-INCH WHITE SILK GLOVES Special 69c pair; value 89c. JEWELRY NOVELTIES Something new in Summer Jewel- ry at 25c¢ and 49¢. Parasols Marked Down COLORED SILK UMBRELLAS Smart new short handles, i $2.98 to $5.48 each. 32-INCH DRESS GINGHAMS Special 12%c yard, value 17¢. TIFFANY SILK PONGEE 36 Inches wide 39c yard, value 50c. All colors, ideal for smocks. TRUNKS, BAGS AND SUIT CASES Some exceptional values to be had now, D. McMILLAN 199-201-203 MAIN STREET. DON'T GIVE UP. s Always a Chance to Reform— Even Some of Our Greatest Idols Have ¥ ~d (The Commentator in New London Day.) I read yesterday g pretty c phrased article onm a career of James which I had never ferred to in print. Very tactfully the I writer of that article let it be known probably to thousands of persons who never before knew it, that the well be- loved Hoosier poet had not always been animated by quite the high prin- ciples and lofty ideals that made his | later vears of such usefulness to his fellows and stch an enduring monu- ment to himself and to his memory. To do this without gratuitously dam- aging the effect of Riley's teaching: or of harming the credit the dead poet was a delicate task, yet the wri er of that story succeeded in dolng so. And it has occurred to me that it might be a good thing if there were more fr about such things generally it were less common to canonize entire lives of men who, had much in their ecarlicr histories to deplore, yet who finally superior to their own ltves to blossom beautifully out of the weediest of beginnings. refully phase of the Whitcomb Riley before scen re- of nkness and if the matter of as a fact, rose 1 You know there is a passage in the Night bodies, s, Gowns, nicely trimmed, but Combinations, Chemise and fancy no two alike and not a great bargain at 88c. 35¢ each. all New arrival in Men's Summer 4-in-Iands, 48c. IRRESISTABLE VALUES DEPT. SATURDAY AT SUIT $10.98 SITLK JERSEY SPORT COATS i Belted and trimmed useful W OM and stylish. With plain MADE SUITS, FOR FINAL CLEARANCE Not more than one or two of any ing models in this assortment, however, as are sixty-five styles, no one can fail to be suited. with a deep contrasting silk collar and silk cuffs, these swagger coats are most S $15.98 STRIPED SHAN TUNG PONGEE SPORT DRESSES pongee blues trimmed with pongee collar and cuffs and striped pongee skirts. These smart dresses are very attractive. WOMEN’S $17.98 $18.98 and $20.00 TATLOR ' OMEN’S $22.50, MADE SUITS CLEAR! Quality fine wool poplin, them are many values. $7.98 AND $8.98 NOW S Dainty Dresses wear of fine qual voiles and batiste. $9.98 sui $7.98 striped $8.00 of the tempt- there Jatest touches of dressy models in O .. .o in a broken as that are suitable for ND $1v.98 SUMMER DRESSES, NOW Attractive Summer Dresses that nave $24.98 and $27 FOR FINAL .50 TATLOR- . $10.00 ortment, including fine serges and gaberdine, among conservative models, wonderful $4.75 afternoon striped, $5.75 all the fashion in a number of cool and white and colors. SUMMER DRESSES lity such materials, $11.98 and $12.98 SUMMER DRESSES Now 36'[5 Handsome frocks including some of the most attractive dresses shown this season CO. , fine quality materials 'Phone orders Charter 8050, and Meail Orders promptly filled. including both stripes and plain colors. WISE, SMITH & HARTFORD teachings of the Nazarene which says there is more joy in heaven over one sinner that repents than over a hun- dred just men who need no repenting. And it might be further said that there is more of hope inspiring ex- ample, for the chap who Is in wrong, | lie like the old Nick or els in the career of one individual who, | having made more or less of a mess of things at the start, succeeds in switching himself over onto the right track and travels straight and hon- orably for the rest of his life, than in many consistently spotless lives. All this has no especial reference to persons who have done criminally bad things or even who have come obvious croppers like the fellows who 2o to pieces through booze, gambling or the like. Generally these either go all the way to the bottom or they get shaken out of their habits by a deuce of a jolt, and change their outlook on their mode of existence through very fear of the consequences of persistence. I mean more partic- ular men and women who, having sur- rendered to cyniclsm or recklessnesss, permit themselves to fall into ways of living and thinking or fall into the adoption of a code of morality that is below the standards which their own better natures recognize as essential to crdinary wcrthiness. wrote things and did ere rather unworthy of And and Jim Riley things that w the kind of man he really was. hundreds of thousands of men women are forever doing and sa) and writing things that utterly to do justice to their true natures, to the ldeais which would govern them were they not deliberately suppressed or cynically swept aside because in- terfering with the line of least resist- ance. 1T s many people thus do viol true instincts, of the unworthy c¢ nabit their should he very much fact, 1 suspect there who have felded to ence to their course becoming the lives at last, we surprised. In few of 1 fixed ot no the influence of environ- ent example, or of our own lack of sturdinc in this way, blush- ing in secret the while. or just Now, what I am driving at, in all this, is that the average mortal, hav ing very often, indeed, and especially in early life, lapsed from his own ethi standards, done no by hiding the fact that this or that conspicuous exemplary character ex- perfenced, in its time, similar lapses. Because the tendc of this sort of deception is to deprive the average human of concrete examples of how certainly It is possible for one to break away from his mistakes and assume the moral position that is his by inheritance or by nature ‘Oh, what's the use?” “T have got this rotten and there's no ¢ kind of a man I'd like to be people who live right at the yowll notice never lived any w right all the way through Which isn't at all true, in I don't know how is says k in beir one; me the Those end, stre wance of my spect that 1£ we knew how | good | | known of the truth folks | | their own impulses, | were not so much deception and | ticle. | and many | sometimes to the extent | at some time or other, | v but | it is made to blographers seem either ft pedal the foibles or errors of their subjects out of all recognition. Vide the ridi- culous fairy tales which were taught to the children of this country for generations concerning the unearthly saintliness of George Washington. Thousands and thousands of per- sons who have come to be deservedlx respected and highly honored by communities and nations have had to “come back” from dangerous ground before they made good. If more were in their cases infinitely more en- other thousands, wrong, persist in the face of simply because they mistakenly imagine that ever: thing depends on the start and that there isn't a chance unless you start right. They’d know better if there S0 many casesbut so, because there would be couragement for who, having started in continuing wrong much pure bunk handed out’ concern- ing the notables who do make good. That's why I like this Riley Riley never was a great sinner; he was merely one of those who didn’t fight it out, at the beginning, on the line of his own ideals; but he saw the light and cleaned his house and was a beacon and a blessing to man- kind afterward. And all that many other folks need, by way of encouragement to do the same thing, is to be given a better idea of how often it is successfully done, The Trade of Tetters. (New York World). Measured by the yardstick, the ac- cepted standard in nearly every sort of merchandise that is not welghed, the literary output of this country should be a source of pride to every true patriot. It is, moreover, a trade that gives employment to a vast num- ber of men and women who are with- out other means of support. In many cases the results lead to the suspicion | that the laws governing child labor have been successfully defied. Unfortunately for the profession of letters, which must not be confounded with the business of writing, our lit- erature is nearly all of the same brand—a fact indicated by the same- ness of the magazine covers that en- close it. Tts purpose is to please, or, in the lexicon of the trade, to ] the public what it wants.”” It floats contentedly on the surface of the sluggish current called public opinion, glancing with compassion at the fee- ble attempts of Truth to swim against the tide. The need of aggressive writing was never more imperative than now. He who writes consistently and wittily for the purpose of displeasing, instead of pleasing, and succeeds In giving the public a taste of what it does not want will acquire an infiuence and renown greater than anything the so-much-a { word philosophy of the literary trade heg ever dreamed of, ar- | in a number of Our Restaurant is an ideal place for a light lunch, a cup of tea or substantial re- past. Come On, Girls! (New Haven Out on the Island Philippine group Union) of the well Ticae in men driving a for water made themselves the butt of one of Mother Nature's little jokes for they got a geyser of soda water. Honest injun! All it needs is a dash of syrup to concert it into the pleas- ing beverage that attracts the girls e and boys to the drug store fountain like flles around a molasses barrel. In Ticae certain enterprising gen- tlemen were after fresh water and at | a depth of 405 feet their drills reached |it. It manifested its presence Wy rushing up the drill hole with such gassy force that it arose to a height | of 80 or more feet above the surface | The astonished well drivers, when [they had rallied from the unexpected | demonstration, noticed that the es cape of the powerful stream was ac- companted by a peculfar fizzing noise, |a noise that was pleasantly remin% ! cent. Not untf] they had finally su | dued the gusher and piped its flow, did they discover that the fizzing ligula” was simon-pure soda water! | It was water strongly charged with | carbonic acid gas. Quite likely it ] one of her little jokes. Its point, ho j ever, would be better appreciated ¥ the soda water dispensary had heen set up in a more accessible location. The fact that all that ment—or most of it running waste, glves the humor of the [ tion a tragic cast Occasionally we get a surp 2 ‘flh’\ universal mother that jolts from | us something that seems like appre- I clation. Take the ai of =old {in California, for instance. Considef the ores of the Lake Superior region Ithe ofl of Pennsylvania, the sfver of Nevada, the copper of Montana, 1he natural gas of West Virginia ANl * | these were Nature's surprises. Ana | now she has given us a new one. Tt 1s unique and has a touch of humor. | | flzzing refresh- is fov situa- S0 tro covery Timited Ambition. (Boston Globe.) Woman (to new you know how to ru Chauffeur—No, ma’am, T don’t. My eddikation has been limited to cars, biplanes and submarines Dc chauffeur)- a lawn mower? YACHTS OFF AGAIN, New Londan, Aug. 4—The start of the third leg of the annual chuise ofy the New York Yacht club was made from this port at 10 o’clock this morn- ing. There was a stiff southeast wind, The yachts shaped a course to the east hound for Fart Point Bay, off Mon- tauk Point. The racing course will conclude at the point, being a run of twenty-eight miles When the hot blast of a ‘“Ber. muda High” meets the damp saltiness of a Boston east wind, then comes *¢ New England dog-day.—Bostar 3 vertisen,