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NEW, BRITAIN DAILY HERALD., TUESDAY, AUGUST 8, 1016. BRITAIN HERALD| ALD PUBLISHING COMPANY, Proprietor: daily (Sunday excepted) at 4:15 p. m., t Herald Building, A7 Church St. ed at the Post Office at MNew Britalm Becond Class Mail Matter. ered by carriec to any part of the ofty | or 16 Cents a Week, 66 Cents a Month. riptions for paper to pe sent by mail, Payabie in advance, 60 Cents a Month, 7.00 & Year. only profitabla advertistng modum in e city. Circulation books and press oom always open to advertisers. !H.“m. Will be found on sale at Hota- Dg’s New Stand, 42nd St. and Broad- &y, New York City; Roard Walk, at- antic City, and Hartford Depot TELEPHON. e Oy B CaLLs 1al Rooms NAVAL RECRUITING HERE. ere cuold never be a more agree- time for consideration of life on privy deep than the present. With he heat and mugginess of these ular days the United States Navy well in setting up a temporary re- ing office in New Britain. On fdays and Thursdays of the present th young boys who hold in their a love for adventure may visit postotfice building and there find ed men ready and willing to tell bout life in Uncle Sam’s service. station will be open on the abowe foned days between noon and four ok. the mere sight of a saflor on v like this does the heart good. garb is so different from that of Ir men it at once brings to the f white capped billows, plunging k and high winds. The sailor is a individual, mentally and physical- In his natty uniform,—the thin the open neck blouse, the trim rousers,—he 1s the pioture of | aredness,—for the heat. No bet- dvertisement need be sent out by e Sam than one of these clean- dashing individuals in blue; un- t be a sallor in his white Summer brm, which at this time of the would be such an incentive that married men might Gesert thelr lies and homes to enlist in the Probably the naval officials | that in mind when they send out in Winter untforms who look and refreshing In the midst of er. there be an a travel and see the sights of the | , one who has no other means | jis d the United States | offers wonderful advantages, ding he is the right sort. There | been mistaken ideas about the | American boy who posal, , especially in inland towns. In pnks are to be found some of the specimens of manhood in the na- | those who and | ng to brothers did at are capable the perform th M same service In| Javy today are some who served Tanilla Bay. Dewey, mer better who were then boys. are men for having es- i a life on the ocean deep. New hin has already sent ering of boys to help Uncle Sam his fleet. There are others who join the ranks after considering hdvantages offered. AMERICAN CITIZENSHIP. vhen I say I am an American cit- I ought to eay the proudest thing | any man can say in this world.” om speech of Charles Evans es in Detroit last night. lhen Mr. Hughes says he is an rican citizen he does the dest thing a man can say in this a. rican say When any man says he is an he man can s citizen hing a v But when Hughes gives the impression that r American citizens cannot have pride, cannot try, unless Charles Evans Hughss ted to take the place of Wood- conveyed a false e w ignoble there is hought. son r. Hughes has started on a long, journey Yesterday marked a the he the Wilson administration All open is campaign day fired his shot at .8 he kept directi and he would t terrible Mr. Hughes’ for what th k iis guns trained falled to point done through- £ so long hat n period of the past two remarks will v wort The ent he oversteps his three salient are n | ing when a halt will have to be called | a goodly | says the proud- | have that love of | Washington to Lincoln to Wilson has this been true. The coming of Wood- row Wilson into the White House did Ameri the not place a different value on citizenship. Nor arrival of Mr. Hughes there make any change. One man, no annot sell out our can would material matter who he is, rights over night; one man cannot turn us back from a republic to a monarchy. Some thought the intrepid | Colonel might accomplish this end; but even he failed to get a permanent} Executive Mansion. is no fear, Hughes holds, that under the present adminis- lease on the | There as Mr. | tration American citizenship that may be- come a dishonorable thing; that it may become something which is not worthy of protection this wide world It will never become a cheap or dishonorable thing, nor will it fail | to be protected this wide world over | s0 may be- come a cheap thing; it over. long as there are brave hear and strong hands to uphold its sacred- While there are 21,000,000 men of military age in this country no one ness. need fear about American citizenship ralling into disrepute. Nor would we depend solely on this number. There are others, over | | and under the C(m-I who would ventlonal fighting age, forth to defend the nation were | citizenship ever in need of protection. | There are women as well as men who g0 its would sacrifice their lives on the na- tlon’s altar. We have but to look back to the Clvil War to find out what can be dome by the boys of the nation. The spirit is ever here. The call will never come that fails to catch an It is the joy American citizen that no one has a monopoly on it. The man in the ditch has as much right of protection that score as the candidate for presi dential henors, as the man who oc- cuples the White House. No, we need not grow uneasy about the value of our citizenship whether it be in the hands of a Democratic President a Republican President; whether Woodrow Wilson is the man or Charles Eivans Hughes. The nation bas grown to such a stage that no one man, how- be, nor party, however wonderful it professes to be, And so firm and answer. of being an on or c ever great he may any one can wreck this government. long as the government is strong just long will American citizenship command a high so mark in the world. TAKING AWAY THE JOY. Troops at El Paso will be deprived of the pleasure of eating watermelon have lucious com- h¢ because experts decreed that the rind of thi mestible cannot be disposed of in san- army itary manner, that it is an attraction for flies. And so the soldiers who are { sweltering in the heat of almost must go an When life was nearest Friends you had were singing praise of you, "here yet was one who, you dearest Of all the living knew; that was one whose with worry, Who the gods vou in their drome, boy whose hand was never hurry To write a home. unbearable climate without one of the greatest joys of the season, a watermelon feast. There should enough of afsposing of the rind of a watermelon | be means x without perpetrating this crueity upon the soldiers. In the | 3 instance sanitary expert this R R The zone just a step too far. time is com- | upon some of the men who set up the | rules for living or there will be none | ot the old time jovs existing in the Since time immemorable held in It most precious heritages of man. has been the subject of | story. It has figured in romance, life, in fiction. And it | from the army because after the wa- | rind cannot be ef- the the the It and world. watermelon has sway southern country. is one of song in | now must go ;lerme!on feast the | | fectively disposed of, cannot be burned | | - or properly buried beneath the surface of the earth. And we had thought the men who wear the khaki capable of doing almost anything in To say they cannot were | | the line of duty. take their shovels and s a resting place for the rind admits of greater incapacity than pades and dig watermelon | their staunchest critics had ever hoped | to hear. There is not a colored boy in the sunny south who, after having | stolen a good sized watermelon, can- | not completely destroy all evidences,-— Why then men be Juice, pnlp, seeds and rind should the United States army plensure of eating watermelon when 1 1 are to be learned from such a humble There except the deprived of the skons of disposa source? is no reason to satisfy whims 04 some medical ever willing lfe. | who someone is the joy out of Soon we shall have ments in the United States army. | expert, to take fewer enlist- You And Are pale | reached - ACTS AND FANCIES. Canada is 000,000.—p, going to send us $400,- siladelphia Inquirer A diplomatist is one who never does With a club what he can do with a hairpin.—1Lif It is has hi not man are possibly true that every pric ut many of them worth it.—Atchison Giokc A for commercial advantage makes “dollar diplomacy” seem very benevolent.—Washington Star, vear The allies, best to dev Free Pre: anvhow, lop are doing their team play.—Detroit Having lunch on the kitchen floor a fair substitute for a picnic.— ille Courier-Journal The further the allies advance, the more pronounced becomes the peace taik in Berlin and other German ciiies, —Witmington, Del, Every Evening. Carranza keeps on printing money, in the belief that he can fool all the people all of the time.—Atlanta Con- stitution. Having talken Mecca from the Turk probably the grand sheriff will go ahead now and appoint some deputy sheriffs.—Dallas News. The first intimation that Americans had of the Kaiser's dislike of them was when he sent to this country a con- signment of German carp.—New Or- leans State. And now England has ordered a cell on the Island of St. Helena swept out and fumigated for the Kaiser. o Herald. Why verlook Von Tirpitz?—Washington Rupert Hughes in the Broadway megazine prints a picture of a com- pany of coast artillery turning out for service practice with only twenty-eight per cent. others were represented by blocks of wood. 13, of the necessary men. The But wait! Wait! This was Nov. 1907. T. R. was president. The ountry was safe.—New York World. YOUR MOTHER. ot should have known that she, above all others, Would grieve because to fields afar; should have known love like your mother’s, Nor loves so constant, where they are! you forgot the childhood, You rambled off see you roam, you strayed ou there’s no care not Jut teachings of your where she’d not You travelled knee-deep in the tangled wildwood, And there were times thought of home. vou never gay and rosy, and the absent, things she ever hair gray had bound 'The in a letter to that mother And now you're back, and tired of all roaming,— of life, your The lights the false, heside gloaming,— The changing to the waltz. You've searched for peace and there you find it ever, Just where you left it, honey i comb; The sweetness and the will never Be found outside a mother's heart and home. the fickle and the glory of the from the quick-step the blessings that How foolish. boy, your mother While she is living, living you. What better love could you hope from some othes, Some heart that never v so true? to wander from all for so tried, You should have known; alas, you are | but human, And no one yet has lived beneath the dome Heaven who the woman, only one, home. 73 has fully The the mother back JOHN J. DALY. “Economic Pressure.” (Boston Post.) The London Times seems to have the conclusion that the great cannot be won for the alii through starvation of the of war, - | | [ | and keep 1t | drea { ordinances have been enacted and aro | loved | | He held | i Devlin of the Munster Fusiliers. Both at | and WHAT OTHERS SAY Views on all sides of timely questions as discussed in ex- changes that come to tho Hernld Office. Fight the Ragweed. (Philadelphia North American.) It is an insignificant sort of a plant, possibly you've never noticed it, but it drives thousands of persons to the New England mountains cvery fall. Many of these involuntary excur- s10n don’t know what it is that sends them flying to the mountains. All they know is that along about Au- gust 1 they start to snecze and wheeze until they escape to a s is higher altitude. The ragweed Simuitaneous fever, the pl pollen, which is the guilty party. | with the onset of hay | nt starts to distribute its measured the hun- ! millions. There are several va- ties of the ragweed, but this spe- cies, known as the wormwood weed, is responsible for per cent. of the suffering In the citles of the rag- cighty-three United States being enforced compelling owners to cut all weeds and their land, so that the r be prevented from pollen: property grass on gweed may distributing its A Card Index for Mr. Hughes. (New World). His fine work, under President Wil- son, as ambassador in Parls in t! early months of the war made Myr T. Herrick one of the pr of republicanism. Almost anywheroe i safe to name him with a flour- and pull the tremolo stop to ask wh-y-y the president didn’'t ke-e-e-p him in office two years longer— against his desire. But not in Ohio! He lives ther Rather rusty in politics, Mr. Hughes felt safe in naming Mr. Herrick, alone of all the diplomatic “martyrs,” in his speech of acceptance. He reck- oned without Ohio. Its people know Mr. Herrick as an ex-governor and a Hanna disciple whose Paris berth was a reward for political services. That might make no difference, to an Ohioan. But he Is also a candidate for the senate, and his opponent, Mr. Daugherty, who is at least no more of a Hanna graduate and no less of a bait for progressive votes, is mak ing the dog-days more sultry with re- marks upon this ald to his rival by the candldate of his party, a chorus of indignant friends aiding him. What Mr. Hughes needs most 1s an issue. He needs a card index almost much. TUntil he gets it, might | be safer to confine himself upon his western trip to pralsing the climate and abusing the administration. York as it “More Wine. (Washington The late Richard Harding was once persuaded to dine “new rich” millionaive in a colored palace on Fifth Avenue. millionaire told how much had cost-—how much his Ming had cost, much his elin estries had cost, the price of hi Se furniture and so forth. After | dinner the man produced, with the cigars, a bottle of 125-year-old brandy. told how much this had course. Mr. Davis sipped brandy from the enormous glass which old brandy is always served. “Yes, sir,” said the millionaire, “that stuff cost me just “Excuse me, id Mr. Davis, holding out his glass but it's so very good would vou mind letting me have about $4.75 worth more of it, please?” Star). Davis with a cream- The hing everyt how Go tap- Lonis ze cost, the of old in Two Irishmen. (New York Times.) Private Patrick Moran of the Con- naught Rangers and Private Willlam were prisoners in the hands of the Germans. Both were among the Irish- men whom Roger Casement tempted to gain their liberty by joining Ms expedition. Both refused, and both were shot. The explanation given by the German authorities was that they were shot for other offenses; but when the American Ambassador tried to investigate he was not permitted to interrogate witnesses except in the bresence of German officers, and the authorities tried to prevent him from undertaking it at all, ',\”m. Benedic Arnold joined the British he was asked to visit Ameri- can prisoners and offer them their lih- erty if they would join the English They refused, with opprobrious lan- guage, and it has alwavs been courg d to them for couraze and self-sacrifice Patrick Moran and William Devlin | were true to their oaths, to their duty:, and to the best i Ireland. Their kind of her SO ex- travagantly pre other kinds of Trish Moran Devlin and their not for for future. terests of not ism is ised as so heroism: their Ireland’s ! ind give lives past but her Speaking (Waterbury of Camels, Democrat.) The recent act the party in selecting the camel cial blem, has incited newspaper humorists. The of prohibition s its offi- wit of Philadel- the | of LONG MAY THEY TW An Old-fashioned Gentleman Comes to the Defense of Exposed Ankles, (By the Commentator in The New London Day.) It duty the on 1 But because he is just a bit old-fashioned &nd finds it itogether is of the more obvious cu the province, not to say this writer to comment ent topics. difficult at times to escapo of a a the influences time from training begun now some since, while at any e perhaps the he has baliced a good pression af interest in most obvious of them all. But, like a voliceman, a fireman or a soldisr, there rests wpon the Commentator an ethical obligation to ignare ali per- sonal considerations when duty calls; &nd yesterday he was hailed by a friendly citizen and asked why he aid | not say something upon the particu- larly obvious subject—Ilegs; feminine legs, Thus challenged there is nothing for the Commentatar to do but to co: ment; albeit with blushes born of the aforesaid early training, when it was | ot just nice even to use the word; | when legs were limbs and even such must be referred to with ings and wrigglings and deprecatory coughs and stammerings, and when it was an outrageous breach of etiquette, cven more or less highly immortal, to recognize said 1imbs as heing a portion of the female anatomy. This is the age of emancipation, and nowhere has emancipation come with such startling suddenness and such wholesale effect as to the legs af the female of the species. A couple of years ago, even, were contraband on land, though it is true that for some time previously they had secured in large measure the free- dom of the seas, That is to say that the legs that were untrammeled and disported jovausly in the surf or on the bathing beaches were still under the ban ashore. She who permitted the exhibition of an inch of her legs on the street was regarded with keen interest by men and with dark suspi- cion by her sex. But now all s changed. Wonderfully—may be pardoned for saying delightfully— changed. Legs have been emancipat- cd; they are no longer absolute con- traband; I am beginning to wonder if they are even conditional contraband. As Mexican revolutionists add to their manual resources by liberating the prisoners in the jails, so America has added to its artistic and esthetic re- sources by liberating the legs of its women. Or perhaps it {ruer to say that the legs themselves have increased the sum of American heauty by breaking jail. 1 have a wee suspicion my friend practically dared me to make some rema in this column about legs he did so in the expectation that I would remonstrate at them; that T would take the position of one who Is shocked; that I would rally, as it were, to the support of the tradi- tions of the days of limbs and would pose as the champion of those con- ventions which used to demand that legs take their place with murder and the majority of family trees as some- thing to be kept from public knowl- If he did he fooled th- | | legs is that when of being condemned 'rid by certain of my clder reader and of being execrated by those masculine hypocrites who Jpretend to a prudish horror at the ex- hibitian of so much feminine pulchr 1vde above the ankle joints, now that 1 have tackled the subject T shall an- nounce herewith, boldly and uncom- promisingly, that I am for legs, dry weather or wet, afloat or ashore, win- ter or summer, without equivacation, ion or false pretense. And why not? Nowhere has Na- ture created sweeter lines than those in which she has molded tne feminine ankle; nowhere has she exerted her artistry with more delicate care than in the curves of legs. I have sonie- times wondered if, in the infinite pains she took to create beauty in legs, that every busy artist did not make the legs first and in the making work herself out a bit, so that by the time she came to the creation of collar bones she was a trifle fagged and so slighted the job; for she seems to ¥ e come something of a flivver there, since you must always take your choice of too obvious collar hHones or a trifle too much plumpness else- where. And if a thing is useful and inno- cent and replete with beauty, why in the name of goodness hide it? Why make a secret of legs any more than arms, of ankles any more than I pause, the spellbinders for an answer. arising from kippy high- legs, curving delightfully shocs legs = < as hopelessly h ev. say, Legs. laced hoots; above ncatly slad in of fitting summer 1k lisle, or comfor hohbles prove 1t plump, silly legs that vmmetry that them, hav f 1 = by odd ntions, their s t by a out Am and ing dragged out nygienie tor ment sin of her retirement her the ne her out, in their turn from beneath street- horrid long amazing fre: dragged sweeping W skirts by one those fashion now now and then—aud seem to be inspi- wonderful sanity. let us have, fore of this emancipation of the and and rations are Surely then 1ation only contin | a | de: 1 even| would be| Lad Galicia n Town of Brody Features in War News | \ | Washington, D. C., Aug. 8.—Brody, one of the Galician gateways through which the troops of the czar presscd their advance upon Lemberg, is the subject of the following war geo- graphy bulletin issued today in Wash- ington by the National Geographic society | “Only about twa miles bevond the Russian border. the Galician town of Brody is a point of great strategic im- portance on the eastern war front be- cause it controls an important ratlway line leading from Dubna, thirty-five miles to the northeast, to Lembers, which is only sixty-two miles to the routhwest. ““At the beginning of the war Brody was a thriving commercial center with a population approaching 20,000 more than two-thirds of whom iwere Jews. Its prosperity was checked to some oxtent ahout forty years aga, when, after having enjoved the privileges af & free commercial city for exactly 190 ycars, its charter was withdrawn ‘“Less than half a centu before Brody was created a town in the sev- enteenth century it was the scene of important battle in which the Poles manded by their famous Grand tman, Stanislaus Ponieckpolski, cated a Tartar army. This was the cor lusl battle of Ponfeckolski’s distin- guished career. I iarter of a entury he was at war with Turks and Swedes, hie initiation into military science being somewhat disastrous, for he was captured by Turks in hig first important engagement and was held in close confinement for three vears in Constantinople. Upon his release in 1622 he was placed command of the Polish republic's forces and with a force ,000 feated 60,000 Tatars at achievement® against an army af tavus Adolphus were no less notewor- by than his long series of victories whereby he succeeded in keeping the Ukraine under Polish rule. “Brody twice suffered the in de-, of His 7 Marts now, from disas- trous conflagrations during the nine- teenth century. The first, occurring in 1801, destrayeqd 1, the fire of 1839 reduced 1,000 homes and business establishments to ashes. “The upper waters of the Styr river forms an irregular arc extending from the southwest to the north of Brody, Leing ten miles distant at its nearest point toward the northwest, Five miles trom the city, just beyond the bor- der on the Dubno-Lemberg railway, is the Russian town of Radziwilow, with a population of about 8,000." more or less time at hathing beaches —and I am not blind And I know that there are thou- sands upon thousands of legs that, he- witching under a skirt nine Inches re- moved from the ground, would be- come—well, to put it mildly, let us say anticlimatic—through a 13-inch exposure. We need not dwell apon the subject of knees. You and the man over the way have been to hath- ing beaches, too. Also, my feminine friends, beware, in yvour campaign for the emancipa- | tion of your legs, how vou arouse the insurgent ire of your unblessed sisters. In proportion as they are short on| curves they are extremely liable to be long on political influence—and 1t vou push them too far they may bring triumph crashing down in di er by getting laws passed which will legally penalize legs. Be wize ! In your freedom and do not seek to | convert it into license. | Again, since I have to provide | | neither the rainbow gossamers for | their covering, nor the $7 shoes that | are required for the proper settings, | I am for the freedom of legs. Long may they—twinkle. Erzingan, (New York Sun.) Half a century hence, in Russia, when Seventy Years recites to admi ing Seven the story of the Great War, what a chapter wili be that in which | the summer of '16 is toid i “In '15, little one, we had been’ learning. In ’16, our own lessons be- ing mastered, we began to teach our teachers. It was a stern school in | which we studied: a still sterner one | in which we taught, they of tria and the children of the Turk have not yet forgot. “Our Grand Duke Nicholas been sent to the southern army. government, some said. mecant to buke him. We who feught for kn it was not so; knew, at least, that the future was in our hands, that | WG ruck straight at the heart. While, therefore oyr brothers gobbled Galicia and conquéted the Carpathians and the brave but misled men of Austrin and Hungary, we fought the Turks, “We stormed through the hosts of the Turks in the lana of the Armeni ans. Erzerum was ours, first; then Trebizond, Bitlis, Baiburt, Erzingan we took them, or by one, we cleared the 1and, and bronght joy to the can and to them at “So, base after As we went, we as had The re- him home. hase, we took them. grew stronger. The spirit of Russia rose invincible. What could stop us? I was then a young- steer counting not more than a score of vears; but the new strength of | Russia was in me, as it was in us all, as we swung on, steadily on toward Contantinople—" Half a century sia there will be! hence, what a Rus- Words. Post) “It is not words, but the and resolution behind the words that count,” says the republican candidate sententiously. Well, then, if words do,not count, his recent effort at Carnegie Hall cer- tainly aid not count, for it was words, with never a clean-cut \dling of the There not a single As to (Boston . strengtl s strength if words, words programme for the hs affairs of this nation words, %,000 of them constructive suggestion. Mr, Hughes is like a clares he has made a corre. nosis, but hasn’t any remec the patient. Gf what avail NAVAL HERO DEAD, were but doctor ding- t to offer is he? JAP | by | party’s Aus- | McCormick, two transports loaded with Japanese troops. H tion his later when ing part in Japan, when Russia's was destroyved. After received the title of vested with the grand Rising Sun and the first of the Golden Kite. redeemed his reputa- masses in Japan, and was further enhanced squadron took a lead- battle of the Sea of naval powert= this battle he Baron and in- cordon of the class order victory with the reputation his the RUSH NOTIFICATION T0 OPEN GAMPAIGN | Wilson May Receive Formal An- nouncement at Early Date Washington, Aug. 8.—On account of the delay by congress in the enact- ment of slation and the pressure that is being brought to bear on him democratic political leaders. Pres- ident Wilson may abandon his deter noti- leg mination not to receive formal of his renomination as the candidate fication for president until after congress adjourns. After a two hours' conference ye terday in which the presicgnt, Vance chairman, and Homer vice chairman, partici- pated Mr. McCormiock indicated that | the notification ceremonies probably would take place early in September, whether congress was in session or not Mr. McCormick and Mr. Cummings are evidently of the belief that the democratic national campaign should get under way without delay, and it is supposed that they urged the pres- ident not to postpone the notification ceremonies to a date after the first in September iined that when ident de that he would not the ‘grmal notification until adjournment of the congress that adjournment come about Aug Present prospects are that congress will not get away from the capital until Sept 10 at the earliest. It was gathered from was said following the conference that the notification cere- monies would held in Sep- tember, possibly as early as Sept. 2 It has been arranged that the notifi- cation ceremonies will held at Shadow Lawn, the Long Branch cot- tage which the president will occupy during the campaign Campaign to Open Soor Chairman sald to | Cummings, week It pre was cve the ted ifer the vas supposed would 20 what early he he cam- Mr the McCormick planned to have the democratic paign in full swing by told made Sept. 15 Cummings the president of speakers defl- president assigning Tt the progress in to the various states was nitely determir that the he and in the cam- Mr. Cun could not campaign rere Maine would not 1k in election probably other paign T 1, probably par in the Maine would make many speeches later had not yet been arrang him, Mr. Cummings said active campaign would by the demo in write lette part in Bryan ocours will 5 take ways Wil itinerary for An ried on be car- rats more Hikonoio Played Tmportant Role in War With Russia. | Admiral Hik- | Japanese | —Vice of Tokio. Aug. $ onojo Kamimura, na dead. the vear than ever before, the talk with would be republicans, they as- democratic organ tions strongholds were being states this two leaders said after their president. No gerted. The in republican the states conceded » 00 houses, while ¢ - 1t | decree is to be rigidly enforeed so that | people is to say, said with the idea fight all along the i phia Record “If the ists knew more of natural h says: prohibition story — strengthened they putting up a e The mpaign be part and parcel of our has be- chattel s, Wilson, su the Let it herea ec age and | the central powers, That the legs watermelons | blockade, formidable and extensive as i s i [t AT shut out those cot ‘% | would not select the camel as { soldiers in camp We may expect whole- | It 15, has S0t Sac¢ OB Lhost COUNLIES |emblem or mascot. The camel is not leave-taking among the colored | from the resources of living. Ley fotallal ctain o ton ih=aon oy T g g ol |leantvet setifood Mnisumcient amountd| (8 5ee arinies The aimereea rere will be no Tenth Caval- | S an et ol a frec < e v T s for subsistence. “The economic pres- | (aaen the. onmel and the or those skinned the wonders who of the Jap- Kamimura, W o even Vice Admiral »ation of shimmer in con- beforc the eves of Let them he a testimonial to the sculptor skill Nature the infallibility of her aesthet But if the girls and their ish mammas be well ad let them beware of overdoing. Let them not to speak, go too far. From all that I have been saying there reservations hitherto unnamed. have s=aid applies to ankles vicinity thereof. dr extent upon conditions. It does not knees. Tt does not save dubiously and in fear and trembling, refer to the full turn of calves. For I, wicked man that I am, have in my day spent | as the s existence, come the emanc slave. Let lcgs ions innocence her, Mr 5 cannot be caten by « he tries 4 gets into deep sixty-seven years old, was one in the in selection of the democratic committee has been almost ipleted, Mr. McCormick announced personnel will be announced r. So, when to inject a prominent officers anese As chief of the second squadron he played an |and important part in the Russo-Jap- [within a few The chairman re anese war, and is belleved to have led | mained her late at night dis- in the naval assault with the Briish |cussing the makeup of the committee squadron against the German base at | with other democratic leaders. He saw Tsing-Tao, China, in 1914, | several California democrats to get in In August. 1906, the squadron of |touch with the situation in their stae Admiral Kamimura defeated the Rus- ' Plans for winning the women vot- sian warships Rurik, Gromoboi, and 'ers will he pushed actively. according Rossin off the east of Korea, |to Mr. McCormick, in of the s he Rurik and capturing the | announcement of Charles Hughes, other two, badiy damaged. Prior to!the republican nomince, that he ‘a this Kamimura had been unpopular |vors a Federal suffrage amendment because the Rurik, which with the; A women's burcau at the New York Gromoboi and Rossia composed the headquarters will be organized in the Vledivostok squadron, had destroyed | near future. America his sale a most he only 1 ism in campaign, himself e na commander of 1surps the | 1 n attern ot up | troop h 1 dark boys : s of and to its of to them sweet; “Poke-chops, but S leRthle: i 1) e SR ey T e the paiernelont iheRat e S fle the enemy 10| ;more than the former, hen { their knees in time T e | B e S o, B R ity; “but there is 1 enough e e e PR ol 1f 15 106 long a waill, and vers @oubt-| o * She samer 1= 5 Eood Tepresenta | ful, at that.” tive of the damp resident In dry ter- they vearn for all { It question of supremacy el gl D e { the field of war. “Military defeat alone | supply . bie ol lainaing | will about the collapse e el ; { contral powers and, with that col- | f e ; \pse, lasting peace.” The poor in the | that is only hecause he pRine 1 . Nunsryibut thatll sin with: e sot all Bk four storaacts which they lack goes to feed the fight- | full. The proper emblem for the total ers at the front. The gage of battle abstainers is the sheep. But then, the must decide; and perhaps this is the | thing he totally abstains from is wa- better way, after all. he an Amer- | Ty we ; hat latter drinks P rights in the r now a pTIng but that w until e of Theodore other feast. Hambone is Roosevelt A L no time; i would is divine; fine sing f toes. reads hicken dey any very there is one S0 years | thing, they or, is a upon held | the or are What I but | and to the he- | pendent in of ants that several that's “watermelon Nor | colorea troopers of Uncle Sam the only rican citizenship been time. alon bring @1 g I enite F Jest possession hanzing on de vine. are th i e 5 coast e the 1d. This by men who have the shackles of king rule. the prouc L : s indivia: king refer to shaken | got its There great ones who have a hankering for water- : o country in melon. From the lowliest recruit to wonderful as this, no place where | officers of the line there are in the men have the same chances. From | army lovers of this ellipsoidal fruiw world so I ter.” ‘