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W BRITAIN HERALD| HERALD PUBLISHING COMPANY, Proprietors, ed daily (Sunday cxcepted) at 4:15 p. m., 8t Herald Building, 67 Church St. Ted at the Post Office at New Britalm A8 Becond Class Mail Matter. for 15 Cents a Week, 65 Cents a Month. oriptions fo Payable in advance, $7.00 a Year. only profitabla navertistng modam the city. Clrculation books and pre room always oben to advertsers Herald will be found on sale at Hota- ling's New Stand, 42nd St. and Broad- way, New York City; Board Walk. at- lantic City, and Hartford Depot. 10NT) ltverea oy carrte« to any part of the cfey l | | to pe sent by msil 80 Cents a Month, TELEF nesy Office CavLLE DOG DAYS AND DOGS. D a not far off city a little five year girl ind ipital, the tim of t Her rec . | lies torn mutilated in a | vi wo vicious bull angs in the balance. | she she life all disfigured | bec the owners these knowing the viciousness | s at this particular | took no precaution | ives of their neigh- treet there oc- p | bull dogs, | two attention of | Joys and men The | and for the grip of the | one a the in- | s attempted to pry To the end s this the ings with news bers and still the animals aciously the n pass stuck tc one to demc A | best other. the ish the by resorted to bwn t he being jated beasts. his in time remedy and dc fight. did not without the risk ittack of the in- | tance serv of bull dogs, s to prove that in | | the year and es- ially with vicious temp- should not be allowed to prowl at pdom about the city' danger that child, streets. ere is ever the le Eht this some girl, attacked by these animals. | that some helpless a boy or a be does not mean to There say dogs are brutal. Es, just as there are some members | the are human family, at that cannot be | sted large. Th the of the little owners of such ani it that to roam refore protection ones, | als should see there is chance for this city. Tt one child be sacrificed | One city no an balling accident is | pugh that Summer. in furnishe: pugh sacrifice for an entire nation. | | are | no matter of what species, to be trusted in “dog da DANG penator ROUS TACTICS James Hamilton Lewis, he | of fire as democratic whip of the sen- There Jim he pink whiskers, has lost none ion was never an occ: could On attack en “Ham' not give bet- | than he took. Saturday when | replied to the made by Charles E ghes in the now famous speech of ion upon | ans | administra eptance, the gallant Illinoi; | He lifted all the | masse and effort Republican | states- n was at his best. arraignments ghes en ew them th one mighty k where they belong lictures upon the administration’s xican policy the genlal Senator de- nced as treasonable. He t the clause of the Republican plat- m ‘repudiating interfercfice in the | of Mexico re- | bnsible for the massacre of troops Mexico. There he struck the the head. When politicians for itical reasons throw all the charged lernal affairs was nail aside pa btism President of Ur hour of trial, | matter to what party that President | at- countries. and criticise | ited States in an ongs, they their k rr the Fni must know is taken up in forc \any played a the President = in ite tes with material by the President’s Me politica m this xico has e same ne th fiTere -apnel is the way Senator Lewi fire into the camp of th parti s who criticise the President’s Mex- national of the od 1t ptair the | Epublican nt c ide have been no incentive h puld pxican bandits to act had . they not through Washington e their repre- in hat this | divided. They were led | no matter what they ds un sit- on | a body foreign diplomatic throu channels plitical enemies sneaked in him out ag up held and. The ‘He military and hi n they ied is weak a urce vaccillating.” The left to W st place, enough to make him hesi- on wer | this country, | advanced as Secretary of the Tr |in the event of Mr. |is one that tate before carrying on serious negoti- While waiting for this great neglect ations with any forelgn country. he was on the part of past administrations to he had the be patched up, aril; stay neces of for writing criticised off disaster He is when there It coming Wi of And all thi by notes. severely nothing else at that, was do. is great to shoot a man and No matter where Zoing. on stood he was ever in danger sniped by bullet while being enemy firing went he with foreign on was dealing nations and trying to uphold the dignity and honor | of the United States of America. For shame! The day is fast be with when safc hak off which politi- cians ar When President of the United States is of nation, to must shakles fast the binding it a in the with midst important dealings a foreign especially when period of such negotiations are fraught vith such dire possibilities Wilson hampered and petty politics at Patriotism should overshadow 1 Whether dent be Republican or Democrat that he as through which passed, hould not be tied on all sides by home. then party lines. this should be true. From the way things were running a stranger to this coun- | belief that camps, the two try might easily form we are divided into | Republicans and Democrats, and that these arties representative of two of North and the South. We all. great parties are the This is There are two and each two sectians country, the not so. are brothers political has | its manner and means of working out will form on.a if all If they ightly broader b government. sis tepublicans will not believe that Democrats are imps of hell, and Democrats will realize that all the good Republicans then the nation need never be afraid of itself in moments of vital Then will all hands stand by the guns, and ward re not dead, importance. off foreign blow: WHY NOT At this date the choosing of any of Charles Evans Hughes' cabinet is premature. too obvious to mention. member The reasons are Yet the sug- | gestion offered by a politician in this | city Saturday that the name of Fred- erick Stanley Chamberlain should be sury Hughes' election lends itself admirably to | | the realm of happy thought. Were in the if could a hand is doubtful Britain have z of appropriate be than Mr. Secretary of the Treasury New to placir a cabinet it selection Chamberlain Hi: tire life training fits him for the po: tion. He an expert “Money and Banking” and therefore qualified to assume the larger burdens attend- ent upon the Secretary who disperses | a more made as en- is in the money for Uncle Sam. As city state treasurer, Chamberlain has carved a for himself that may national attention 1 the of the United States decree there be a change administrations. If come Mr. Hughes litical advisors could do no better than Mr. reputation and attract shou people in this should about, and his po- give him the place in the cabinet now { occupied by William Gibbs McAdoo. Not only New Britain but every city in the state of share equally in the honor of having Connecticut would a “native son” grace the board around which sits the President’ And Mr. Chamberlain this with no ‘Without wishir ent occupant of the main office of the trust that, elected, s official fam- could do ability. ily. small degree of any harm to the pres- Treasury Building we should Hughes be this pres- ent day suggestion will not be lost is the manner in Watterso: in the Louisville Courier-Jour- which the Col. Henr: sizes situa- tion nal: Charles E. Hughes was strongest as up im. nomination He morning than spirant for the Presidency after an mediately his was weaker vesterday he the He is weaker was yesterday he was nominated. than he was on aay this morning ning. IPANCIE mo the lendid privileged to boasts of its Iver) days on climate 0 We are glad t the westc ies are ning it would not Deutschland the he all W front, t see the navy in Free rn case us to British Burlingtox the rag home. Press. As Verdun months, accordi writers, an due.—Albany to be taken within g to German mil- explanation will be Journal. The designs of half dollars and quarters have been changed, but their the same.—Provi was itars soon remains - purpose dence Journal boundary h of dispute be- Hampsh There tween New will military en Journal-Cour! and “You can't erder me around,” clured the new salesman. “I take orders from nobody.”” “You demon- strated that on your last trip,” said de- to | the | that Presi- the boss, coming in at this juncture. —Louisville Courier-Journal. former commis- { Dr. Aked now refers to h | associates on the Ford peace sion as “a crowd of crazy cranks and dreamers.” Hardly the language one would expect from a peace promoter. Springfield Union re to save $25 k Tom Ellis” geus Roger Casemen® empire a blow Sometimes little | | | | | A barge captain’ robably 1ster. $ for giving ! and feel n Blac dis- wamed caused the A barbe British years I Sir the for it must ! much money.—. for World. hot York o a ew | That garment New York is a | Mexican situation work strike in zo0od deal 1 the When you begin feel that it is all settled and is goinz to run along smoothly. it goes and flares out a ome other place.—Utica Observer. Sunhcams. (Baltimore had hin' wc Sun). AllL the rain fine dig we've made v fi has t fer ms. the refriger button in ine. One and the coat in day it's next day ! sit tor | up s vour e sur | i Dox't were i By once—thought they thing about brighten up our that's the fact t | one these cool spells | To And daily 1a 1e dreams, the tang lemon or—of ngue, peach Tt awful takes a lot of of his Severn river rockfish to live an work up to ‘e stories size. Diet the meals “Corn reduced several Reduce: pile by now. Yes, ears va've eight for have another fritter! the Come Label (Louisville Live Wires! Courier-Journal.) The death of Bishop Fveland, Pennsylvania, as a result fishing rod touching a high tension wire when he was passing under a railroad hridge, should sugeest the necessity for making the designation of the “live” wire compulso The rule “let the label tell” is a good one as it is applied to a hottle of tomato sauce which has a preser vative in it. or a pound of olecomar- garine, which but for the label law might parade as butter. 3ut the charged wire, which will kill instant- Iy any one who comes into contact with it, may be strung pretty nearly anywhere and is unrecognizable. Why shouldn’t live wires be so col- ored or marked that it would be pos- | sible for any one to recognize them on sight? | When a wire falls in safest course is to assume that it is live and treat it accordingly. But many persons fail to do so, and many of those who neglect to take abun- dant precaution pay for their ncau- | tious with their lives. Nobody can distinguish live wires from harm- less ones in the network of wires that every city permits to injure its ap- pearance and endanger the lives of its inhabitants. Why not force per- sons who are responsible for live wires to so designate them that ever one will know them? The “Stop! Look! Listen unguarded erade crossines adequate safety deviees, but they better than nothing. There the unwary a inst electrocuted in of his steel the street the hess at not e the rt char | to warn T of heing wire Tnion Label Spirit. Journal.) A local union of the metal pol- ishers and buffers has attracted won- dering attention by its consideration ot a plan to i working hours. The suggest the possibility of g up their 50-hour and returning to the old { hour week as a means of helping their | employers to compete with concerns which do not observe the union scale. {It is an unusual proposition, not so |m\xch in its spirit of union conces sion, -but in its circumstances; for there are few industries where non- union shops are so powerful as to gouge the trade of union shops. The spirit of the thing, indeed, is { wholly in harmony with the othics of | the union label, a de e which acts | to the benefit of the manufacturer | well as the protection of the em- | ploye. The union label principle is | built on a hasls of exchange—the support of union laBor is given to the { marketing of labeled goods pro- duced by manufacturers who have | met union demands. Organized labor | iz neither ahove nor helow co-op: | ation with capital where conditions | make co-operation possible. The metal polishers zre no halfws | expc of unionism. Their organ zation has shown its strength more [ than once. A sample of its strict in- terpretation of the unién code is r called in conneciion with a dispute over the rights of union musician It was contended by the musiclar that, although trade unions must not employ any but union musicians, the union musicians must be left free to purchase non-union label instru- ments, since the non-union product | might be superior in tone. The metal | polishers arose to the occasion with an argument that a union employing | a musician who non-union in- | strument is also g employment , & non-union metal polisher. The analogy seemed far-fetched, and people laughed they have la q {at other! extreme interpretations of unionism. But this was sincere. and it 2ood union law—law that has lacne to extend unionism. No wants to see the metal n 59 ishers hours (Boston a incres i members ving week 5 as ents is uses a ving as much one pol- ‘tu ninc to a wour week is old-fashioned Yet a willingness to make the sacrifice would be good to see. 1 | would help to convince a large num- ber of sceptics who fail to see any thing but greed in trade unionism. an | before | cantile Marine nothing | {and { bevona | tion | gooa | time WHAT OTHERS SAY Views on all sldes of timely questions as discussed in ex- changes that come to tho Herald Office. Personal Fortunes, (Wall Street Journal). It is something of a national habit of ours to exaggerate what is already large enough for wonder. This is the case with personal fortunes. Almost invariably they prove smaller than wild estimates made before the happy individual's death. This is the with the estate of J. P. Morga with a valuation of $78,149,52 and a net of nearly $10,000,000 less. Some of the sensational newspapors were in the habit of estimating Mr. Morgan's art collection alone at ore than this. Of the large fortunes left in vears, Anthony N. Brady $77,042,443. The estate of riman was appr $70,000,000, the gross recent a show L i sed at something un- and that Russell s valued at $3,000,000 les than this. John Jacob Astor madc howing than any of state of $87,21 Ohio state taxation who have brought the practice killing the goose that lays the to a fir and ed the wealth Sr., for Ohio round billion of course, was and anybody feller and will hope that the der these, with gross ,691 of golden art, of John taxation at purpo: lars. The es e sheer who knows ben it cours: ! nonsense, Mr. Rocie- activities time nature kes it necessary to publish the true figurc In the case of Mr. Morgan thers can be very little question that his securi- ties, to nothing the art jects, have enhanced value his death three Banizers are ways credited more money than they have, because it is their business to turn over to advantage other peoples’ money as frequently as possible. Mr. Morgan spent lavishly upon objects of art, although not without discrimination, for he could afford to employ the best expert tal- ent. Of the instances quoted, per- haps Russell Sage was the one per- son, next to Mrs. Hetty Green, who spent nothing on artistic superfluities. Sage, in fact, owed his wealth in a large measure to the wonderful way in which he alone had ready money when everybody else wanted it. * It will be noticed with amusement that Mr. Morgan’s estate contained exactly one share of United a Steel preferred and 500 shares of the common. Mr. Morgan once remarked in connection with International Mer- that he coucher and not a wet mailable Hen (Ansonia Without the sturdy of fancy pullets, one has to confess to a sort of sympathy with the suf- focated mailman, who wishes to have the post office department put a ban on ovarian product that has reached that stage of high artistic decay that attains perfection only in ripe ,lim- burge cheese or the Gorgonzola brand fully fruitified. The post office department has meekly submitted to the burden of dealing with parcels of strenuous garlie, than which there is no more far reaching smell on record, with the elevating, permeating onion, with cheese ranging from babyhood to full noxfous maturity, with all sorts d conditions pping packages that testify to their blue and huckl berry contents. It has wrestled bales of hay and barrels of flour, but it cannot and will not submit to the egg, when it Is running amuck, No one, who had a first hand acquaintance with these prehistoric products of the hen, will blame our mail men. There is distinctly a limit he rotten egg in the mails is far it. Postmaster General Bur- leson is justified in ordering any mail clerk in the United States to go to the mat with overripe hen fruit and cast it into outer darkness. It Iis bevond the pale. volent may be a long of m say of in ) ob- since vears a witt was an ac- nurse. het Frui Sentinel.) wishing to seem to o yard unjust and The Mexican Commission. (Springfield Republican.) The Mexican note announcing the appolntment of three commissioners to confer with three American com- missioners concerning border situa- states that delega- \ have been instructed “tn devote their attention preferably to the lution of the points mentioned in brevious note’ the Mexican ernment. The use of the word erably” indicates that the dele from Mexico would insist on « ing first the points but there is rejection Wilson’s suggestion that sions be ned matters of importance tries. Presumably the und nezotiatine broad yrrant “erence. may be hed by commission is problematic, Dut to be considered that it serve purpose in main the status stinguished by the United States troops in ico, where they afford protection to the whole western portion of the Am border. So long as the commis- is in existence, Gen. Cr be reconciled to the American soldiers in For some weeks tions in Mc have seemed quieter and be that the im provement is-due directly to the ican army, including the guard, on the border. M evidently recovered from tk irritation over invasion ble scemed e ith in the oss president’s the t realize ty prote to the Carranza tion s0- e gov- pref- of all et of the rred to, President broad to e to Gin both: com to ccompl i b the S ning for a s s chiefly of northern Mex- resence erica sion must the ritory. ranza presence of Mexican ter- now condi- co much it may Amer- nal v xicans 1 we ir extreme and to conquest, have more fr of the me time, them, clfish At un motive. necess ting T ficulty i ity of the one nursed | along in the hope that conditions will continue to improve and the commis- sion will afford time for the ameliorat- ing process. The Carranza govern- fuil | with | ‘ e Invention of Interest . To Western Womankind shington, D. C Peronne, Aug St. Quentin sh taken by the French an be one of th the line of important advance. Tl subject of the following phy bulletin issued by t ters in Washington “Twenty nd about the St. Quentin, Cambrai, population approachi the war, is one of ing towns in northern Ire ed on the right bank ¢ Scheldt at its juncture Quentin canal, the niiles W city soap worls factorics, 1§ however, count and tex France nosw rather than “The which of its al strategzic connected commended it to event here, in fine linen from of T SUppo nvention tury, of the ts name i the A pti The ave made the in the muslin “One of the ances of the which was e name of the beginning The memhe Julius TI, the Emperor the kings 13 These four major powe: gether through the vope, of the great republic of who first camb: 1 most lale ffected ba m age here the of sixtee the leag 1 of France ¥ hac victors spoils and exist. “Cambrai is famous where two royval women began t to change of views resultin des Dames (Ladies’ P brought an end destructive war between southeast ame distance north had @ the most with with . 7.—If, after ould da be Englis re- h in objectives 1is town, miles by rail northwest of Paris, is war geo he of hich 1: the rgra Nationa Geographic society from its headqu of A to Charles quarrel single-handed. negotiated the their ficrce offensive, Cambrai would | Louise of Savoy, devoted mother of the en W Wk Franci a mea hich as ho French king, and wh nephew, ¥ o been the the futur had had of ns challenged settling their The two wom- treaty were Maraget of Austri guardian e emperor of y Gl her uring his youth, and whose long regency of the firmness and justice. up of etherlands w whom he h Tadame after as It d conferre ascen distinguished ding by was to Louise, 1 the title the throne, that Francis wrote his famous | letter following his defeat ‘Of all things,’ 30,000 before | at Pavia in Italy inte nce. )t the I the enjoyed sugar Cs re Situat- viver St. | con- siderable commercial prosperity on ac- mills nbrai womankind throughout the western world was the | fully | Austria, but it was not so happy the fifteenth bric town ste Cc sed to is perpetuat Eie under League of Cambrai at t1 centuy nth e were Maximili and brought to- | diplomacy of the as their object the humbling Venice. over P as the g in the eace) temporarily, Francis nt eased cen- which said, ‘nothing remains but honor », which is | derived the Tife | teenth centur: the Spaniards and importance | part of the Flemish possessions of the t sentiment- | southern { by “‘In | dred its o Nimegt esisted the besieging forces s famili honor. the closing kingdom years, until sion to ance to the am- | in 1815, ne have the ! Pope an I, pain, The avowed end having been achieved, the quarrel league soon the to city | of masculine | force joined in a great diplomatic ex- Paix | which the 1 of France, and the Emperor Charles V. This treaty, signed in 1529, caused an abandonment of the plans for a duel th lic i 1 wi €0 | er; ge | i i | i “AT istory ambrai the th me the vice: | mastery. | picture, tas the virtual nt, “Miss mone the gr which ar scholarly a1 for vior descri a weazel's fz intelligence, perfidy, ambition it is to Dubois are those flatter: Despite this gave longed-for era of peace which have been fraught with even greater benefits had it not been for John Law's sippi Bubble’ which burst, cipitating the nation over the brink of financial ruin ' From thi ar ‘All is years of for Louis Duke at e associa of two 14 exenipl men, bed by as in a ace a man avarice, his nearly XIV of a lost the a ted ary ‘a flaxen brightened in whom all we and capture he nd have save six- “ambrai was captured it remained a hun- secured rance by the treaty of In 1793 the town success- of in its of Wellington names in French with churchmen Arch- formidable alli- | bishop Feneion, whose ‘Treatise on the that | Education of Girls' cussion of the problem education’ nal Duboi: contemporary historian pitiful, wizened man was a pioneer dis- ‘higher and the Cardi- vitriolic little wig, by debauch- “Enguecrrano de Monstrelet, chronicles of mel hall of dieval fame."” r—fought for the disagreeable be remembered that ruler of France while serving as private secretary to the re- country a would pre- whose France begin where Froissart's end, also belongs in Cambrai’ of the autumn, misch it se positic vindicated t of the T vho joined in much since last Villa’s wanton the extreme north strengthened its and greater and have lement atists Wilson diplor dent to it One of the strongest r of the governn zil, Argentina Chili and American states. Mr. ignored that important situation in his atta can policy of the admini operation Cause ot (New London I There used to be a ver: pression that to newspapers, that the p did th up wars because such while bad for everybody good for the publishing many intelligent people view but neit realize for the collectively Without in income of the It has TS i nowadays, how newspaper any way publisher: few extra copies at the the disturbance, any wa readers are interested, they naturally demand kept Informed, is the paper. put to extraordinary expenditure for the correspondence. If it must contribute to th an o8 agency through which world news. Big or charges are greater for a peace- ture repaid The prese course; and pict by increased addition the variou ices, the he in more for v he sca tion ! v Not onl I famine mills t n throughout America e Jlems of a s the ng paper and meet At i » adopt every has to hem ide wit] The 1 11 stri conservation. They m r of paper than they pense money. They the of their i many casc 1es the put up publiea they res than they can pound smaller new been r must reduce wast malke th ang every furth conditions worse in the next | ialy as they bave in the n row extending especially bad individually and cost of maintaining the a little, o world must and price of their must of M aside ief-making ems to n mate: he ment has now been in active control part exico in have rially independ- i | ne i newspaper growing thinner down to twelve, haps to four. Readers who, few month teen page papers will have to come the twelve page one from | to eight and the elght page issue per- find the 1tin-Ameriean | day, like a patient suffering with F recogr boints in of other Hughes 1ents phase of the | on the Mexi- tration. Day.) v genera been cha r hest tc catastro else, business 101d any her do wars save per a t very of e adadit it oper: ny income. nt war is no exception, havir news of pre incre to 1S Iy reity of to ared o becoming ishers tc ar e pri upp 1 ilabic for J n newsp s conten nt cut in a 1c e stand he min of pape before. spapers 1 Tuced to the nc the sizc thei politan rever continue vear as past Presi- nition the to Bra- Latin- has Newspaper Thinness. 1im= wars were of advantage arged ) stir phes, were Not such many are adding to the rhaps in the trifling matter of the sale of a beginning of in which its na on that the occasion which be of - n largely added expense to every news- If the paper be a big one it is large special it be a small one ional oeiation or obtains its ating real new: paper, in time of war, than in time of and in no way is the expendi- of to and bduc- g ased. print the ut of ) ob- Iving their prices ob- yrint aper ding supnly. rs easures ing- ever were of ex- down good )SSE r 8o | wasting surprised | tir ng disease The T i to be a | newspaper shops. president’s policy has been his care to | retain in every important step he has taken, beginning with the refusal recognize Huerta, the sympathetic co- | | | | K Yuan China’ ai, (New first pr who accord rio Among = need »aper matte the ork Sun.) esident ing to TUnd in the course favorite ir da from not bee greatly famine o ments died in the palace of the | ch of bil | at ca | at e! Orf hi 1 letters declared Orth dead { continued | his {known as “John Orth,” | | betore, | for Buenos Ayres, authoritative him it was assumed that he was lost a senator that - Orth was hipwreck and: that he was living in heart of a South A French author, George 1aco the archduke the t. said the us hi buried, Harassed by financial worri up foreign h Wi ity surrounding was that ace attendant the ses delight, On u se; | asserted p th orado, declared Boc and was b s ancestors, according s power an land. may this len sto his was an of at to he hand These circur up which case: th wh in ly a few est mcle, Archd Orth had had a. But fo of reportes that he ¥ ampa was in that from him. to belie »ks have another years | Joseph Ferdinand filed at Vienna an application to uried in is neither to popul d stole d an ry is th death. O poisoned other, a nstances of world the he ere ago ahii uke sailed and been of nd d as livin they that political | The attendants in the death chamber | were few and the obsequies were sim- | ple. [te build all those (3 ) the is in of the v by a get- the ing. Yuan Sh\- official state- Man- tombs dead nor ar T report. s he gave away e ne m; he to a air of proba- ystery rumor by a pal- died assassin. t seems improbable that lies on the border of the possible is accepted as truth. ended strange to Archduke death Sal enty s of vator, yea from London nothing heard from Argentina saved the Rio Negro. g in Ohio. Two old friends often recei from American for- ) in John Col- of red The Vienna Court but 1 that a ve h ny e liv people red een written to prove | that the Dauphin of France did not i the Revolt recame Naundorf. an ceording viv Do death, No has or v but sought AfT King of isle int AT ed nte rth n 4 rica sleep and the dwellers in mystery land are | undying nev er heen Mexico or the Rev nerican mini to the 1 the volley o .d to carry and taught Carolina. Jc reported long aft & 8 \sserted, did 1 ne flc Ch the Arthur Avalon beneath died joins a | company. The Ti¢ (Providenc retreat ition, but Netherl Eleazer ster, relief f the of school for Hhin as seen he Gordon not die at in ated arle Untersber: great Hllyhock. Journal Wilkes was away 1agne that and Will sentence - years Booth in shot it he mer- iams, Marshok Nev, many, soldiers out the sur- ap- of in Texas | in Tas Khartum, | to went H Yuan among the dead and famous ) the heart of | the to eroes that The hollyhock is in bloom in Rhode | Isla 1ave =i they to rap- one, wall c twe the flur air > W H the it g in It lifts its many a | hollyhock ords that Land mallow f of in oly a Am known its cheerfui Palestine. W tall head rleasant rets its dicate nd its v 1t its in India 1 banners Wherever orig membership | Appa to its above the garden name from N rent- | it the ! first I McMILLAN’S New Britain’s Busy Big Store— “Always Reliable.” Morning during Watch Special for our Wednesday Half-Holiday Sales this month Special Sale of Women's $ House Dresses at 49[} each On Sale Wednesday Morning, 8:30 Sale of Children’s Union Suits 290 ea. Wednesday Morning, 8:30 In this sale you will find:— BOY SUIT Porous weave and short sleeves and kn balbriggans, e lengths. CHILDREN’S WAIST UNION SUITS GIRLS’ lace SUT] Sleeveles trimmed and tight knee styles. AUGUST CLEARANCE OF WASH GOODS. ™M SEE OUR LINE OF TRUNKS, BAGS AND SUIT CASES. b. McMILLAN 199-201-208 MAIN STREET. acclimated in New England. We think of it as a characteristic New England flower. It decorates our Colonial hi tory, almost back to the days of Gov ernor Bradford and Willlams. It is forever peering out the of New England fiction and f There is no flower that more pletely embodies the spirit of eighteenth century romance Some of the old Colonial blossoms are and modest, but the hock the of its tions knows should, under a bushel or row. It is the provinc to display itself, not with a due sense of the the Roger of pages etry is com- our hy holly- has It and courage convic- as it hide it hedge- lovelin beauty mind beneath has no to vauntingly its worth stateliest of flower ires ut And our a hollyhock “old-fashioned’ asy un- abashed In two books tions” there is hollyhock falr share ford to he of no though of thus “popular reference the holly 1ce. But it ostracized quo to the To Beat the (Kansas City Thermometer. Times.) It much as it isn’t the weather that is hot wso 1s the way you live that ia hot. There are hot livers and cool Tt weather along iivers pretty much the year round you know the art af housekeeping vou can comfortably Do stances, the difference things just look cool? off the dining doesn’t look ¢ off and put a and see if it There is coolness ture, too. Put awa table and substitutc wicker how of the r hould got vou realize it m Take table ana ler. rreen kes when the clath the its summer the heavy somethi doesn’t ooler yet. in furni- library in light and see the temperature pholstered chairg light, hard sur. put in their place. RoN rugs, have ass matting but coolest. hanging ictures be estive This and sleeping on fortunate a plush plano plush album, om drops. T ga, too, and 1ced be up the straw a Window should that arc moved. stuffiness 1l that may them. Ana if you as to have anythir tool in the them first ones heavy Ffou can if you like, the all even uld polished draperies come down heavily framead Everythine hold manner bare floor is and nd re- € in- the shed cushions cludes of cats be found are o ur room of all fire 1e amazing thing about the 1d ritish government’s Erit- 1 vas that it ish bla published right own sh e The I nationals That i indi country been ques- extend ¢ citizens publish t those has never tioned v control, neutral would at ectly nd of British planati Brooklyn F he broadcast is blunders that all will one inexp the undo statesmansh e r the wor not How would yuh like | there is mo telling how soon the six- [ home was, it has become thoroughly | pump that pumps julepa?