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NEW, BRITAIN an amendment is introduced into Con- gress. No state t is now, against HERALD PUBLISHING 15 the ballot to women -muy be | Praprietors ity (aunau excapted) at 4:15 ald Bulldin'e. ,f’l Church At the Part Ofice at New Britaim Becond Class Mall Matter pol v i 1 by carriec to any part of the cfcy | 16 Cents a Wiek, 65 Cents a Month. Iptions for paper to pe sent by msil able in advarce, 60 Cents a Month. (0 & Yeer., | ment. COMPANTY, expected to sanction the action of the ra. | foderal Congress. Iirst, get the states; & | then the rest will be easy heartiest advocates of the it Some of the woman frage in ranks of men are against having come about through action of the national govern- They fear in | is already being centered in the Wash- that too much power inly profitable gdvertising - mehi ofty. Ciroulatton books and press |y ion government, that the individual Jom ahways onen oy | ['the matter. 136,000 to a be left with some last year g ——— states should in ‘W1l ba foura on saie at Hota- gw Stand. 42nd and Broad- jew Yorl City: Poard Walk. at- i1ty and Hartiord Depot. 1 . In w_Jersey for suffrage. An ad- killed tables voted of this endeavor. o verse: vote ),000_rmajority ofBLERIONT Next time the Roams By caLLe 038 | . 5..936 | may turn. e Mt | ) Patience in all things is a Mr. e fea- Republican commendable virtue. Even A SWIMMING | Hughes may live to regret that Hi Jston's fifty | came out for woman suffrage b3 amendment The this a pents for its action immediately the Civil War to neg tract 1d eral Mall in Chi- in heart and generation after party in § re in in eranting the suffrag Thi rime that will ever he held ove: ° san be roes by federal amendment s is one ¢ h tior the ad party in | 1y to the for spheres than our of the Republican € the South will never take ki: is a park more well and good to advouvate votes man, The there vofer “har colored sitdation would three roe 1 conditions. we had to such That is gy | South will ne¥ér kalfe kigdly to the | . fvere every whité cammu under than the ibljean party, which sends negroes delegatés to mational conven- tions and grants them high places over n ¢ complai | ainst the | white men® This ‘same old animosity s who went to Wal- be sti*red up in the South if the mornings | Republicans try to foist on the ‘\uil arly nation | g ral amendment Ic v | woman suffrage there We ‘mify expect | three and jour, colored women to every | oné’ asons i wttempted to sre. Young| Pecause in some lities white This is merely one of the | “the ntes | a mimicinal pata- ‘ should have‘something to say in lm,i this Summer and hen ma¥s some move | T individual hm f remi; There are others. takgMhe ot the B Rritat been sritHly endowell im@naturd this Yeaptitgl It“ would | o mors that fnan | ld do’all in power to improve d make attractive. A formeéd. basin with attractive bath | ks ofce ment a The 14 B discounted by the impro¥e- | UD to the close of the second year the ¢~ physical number All this time gsters who there were many foreignors of 1hoc & to fight for iming: There being In ordinary years the bureau of im- Hiig> beach rear New than Pest thing America, t9 ir placc u pool? New SR, N AFTER THE Whengjie way immigration to the Janid WAR. got United States back. than war h jugt Europeuan under syffered Its first serious set During the first year of the st an le 100,000 st cost | came through the portals of America. it more 1z81e nearby would be at abroad than Ainger: and utility. and moral,—in our was reduced. of | are now deprived going back chilc rveatest joys, their own countries. no nratural | Britain the | migration counted upon more natator- | one million new faces in is'to set up a Hi1 ideal and and children who The vears previous to the war saw approximately 2,400,000. Commissioner of Immigra- tion Caminetti now predicts that after WHY. the war the National Wo- | will be L —and, mut Park, or | men women | Park for | came from abroad. two ey make places an insti ition PNE REASON influx from unprecedented, even Europe members of greater who met in executive con- | than some prognosticators have | This, unless the vari- ous European countries place an em- Colorado Springs yesterday | already figured. ided to Wilson states oppose the candidac Presideng in the twelve | bargo on emigration have reckoned in the ordinary scheme of things They may succeed | it | of America is but natural for numbers of there will be The orphaned large states. ilson in e BEuropeans to the shores After seek and be the war th noval eir action will rumental from the Housc « more cause for this many pite in chil- They will to this end seek relatives and | this men to great widowed women and way them t frage the ensibly secure F to T assurances | dren must needs be supported. mendment granting all Congress women of states | friends in country. The able | fon will get by bodied extent, will Even in come thus decided T act here in search of work. those geance. They have who own large estates Europe | Wilson ng held out for pinst i h Ll1 like to make the change to this | the high ) 1 i would individual state that repre- | Burope taxes to of he country because of decide this matter. Granted be imposed. In the upbuilding se women do-succeed, every this country will necessarily tative of T faall Congres: mocracy in both Houses | have its hands in more s will turn on this pet hob- | than one. and get | favor squash any attempt to e Anthony amendm o e South has.never : onon frage, for vari-| Now that the pitched battle between s S | Rep- | Democrats and Republicans over 1 The Senators and the | is both | of | Tittman-Durand scttle { de- | sides and arduously before | ture. votcpmflff. this measure. [ out conteMblated doing so, | their firmiy against’it be- | should those states south CAES should careful in the fu- Mr. lambs more Hughes line will when he started the Democrats 1l mite to on appointments to Fede office have been a wee more Secretary of Commerce call could have exercised Iy the Mr. worst these women have | circumspeet. Redfield when he essaved to the | clamor the right vote, | candidate to ta f to long the for it is proven he'was wrong, patience. run first met one fa ould ongre: ot the of en- he and candidate when he should s fage” to | pliea “hin® with false there are Su(‘*‘f‘}n\ S Dr. Tittman, a Re- m.».g%qu . Hughes undoing. The d of the Coast and Geodetic % as he t cannot be= a of His sup- charges not bhe wrong. They facts, if “the | | backer: blamz, fourths the by co wventions in Y th b and wree-four her M | for Sury ropose bmendrr proposed that voluntarily re- of in | signed fromt health. was Census ongre both | & oy 1em- pysition: beganse of Myr. Durand, at- ondime head .of the My Hughes My gn. ouse i1l In. A of hiss- th Fwho er Benee ok Bureau, had his he Mr. Durand But successor not only | facts straight. to sa. every | was asked T ed “an excellerit stock brieder when attacked the he s Tittman & 1 ma v fault the the 1 the M Legster of fyengence at, Jones who Géodetie stock took up worl the la ‘stfdied nke a h Survey Vir B he owner A lar farm in inia work. of nd ang jthan Hughe medicine him merely [ ffrage | for b rgendment better than cattle breeding [Woodrow Wilson, who sticks, to 'his | His other educational marks were ac- and advocates suffrage by state?] quirgd at Princeton University and the -un this is the [ at that great.German seat of learna it will have to work out, even ifj] Ing Heidelberg. So, after all, he out for sake of aiding dffers nothing supervising guns p.ction. In way Tong, | Flughes [ the Fm one party and then by the other, | the | the makes | of Dr. | facts were again | in *his | should for possess some qualificati holding public office even if he is a Democrat. It Mr. the resigna- Is extremely doubtful if will attribute his leaving Supreme Court to a “forced tion.” L FACTS AND, ANCIES. Republicdns must never: e turned out of oflice, is th® new campaign issue raised by “Charles Evans IHughes. Philadelphia R ‘. cord & i “Is matrimony a job?" aske thg.edi- tor of the New York,Sun, In Ssome ves; a put-up job, .at that.—= Waterbury Republican. : cases, To hell with Carson, Lansdowne, Balfour and the foqls, of Downing street, along with the' Hohenzollerns and . Hapsburgs!—Louisville Courier- Journal. - Sgnatgr Overman’s declaration ‘that ¢hild labor cuts down, eringe is not inm- pressive. Th(_rfi is also little crime commiitted by Yhe Inmdtes of pr —Springfle l(tflw\uhlh":yn Thegemporors and kings ;ml princes adross tie waler stiek tight *to the “spdety first” slogan. The war has been raging for,two vears, and scarcely 'a princeing or a ruler of any degreadhas mon'sryuuhqz;_"_rnv, Times. may he it is reportec the Pax to mention the that the siides ditch hehav- that swhile constant nee there is no in Keeping ahead of Observer, It fact down in ing nicely, and dredging is still troui whatever the game. Utic fangerous ima arc sary who described himself as rum hound” has been de- in the United States The rum-hound, i ing or stationary, has had his ¢ Soon he will Join the alcoholic ibe musonms of Arid America York Sun. A person “a roaming nied enlistmerht marine scrvice. m- in calamity conducted We aigns have had many in this countr; cam- rst t in which all out of but thik is positively 1he 1 calamity referred somewlhere around the corner, y off in the dim future. It will be interesting to observe what effect this malicious animal magnetism has upon a great people who never before were 50 prosperois.—New York World. to is A Vanished Idol. A gentleman even in poise— Who let not his temper judicial Be swayed by the popular noise. His facts he would marshal In manner impartial, And clear 'his decisions would But where is the Hughes, the minded Hughes, The Hughes that we used to know? Whatever his inward emotions He wouldn’t be blinded to fact. He bowed not to personal notlons; By truth his decisions were backed. To prejudice silly His manner was chilly He ordered it not to come nes 3ut where is the Hnughes,- the minded Hughes, The Hughes of the yester-year? fair- Whenever he gave an opinion He didn’t misstate ejther side. quibble could win no dominion When he was the judge, steady-eved. He spolke, in its rareness The gospel of fairness The torch of the truth Kept aglow-— But where is the Hughes, the fair- Hughes, minded The Hughes that we used A to know? The course that was straight as an row Has suffered The vision on It ar- a terrible twist. e hroad is so narroz sees not the truths that e x His eves, grown strabismal, Find everything dismal; fis thoushts have gone badly astra Oh, wher the Hughes, the fair minded Hughes, The Hughes of another day? JOHN O’'KEEFE, In the New York World. i About Dogs. Journal.) noticed of Dogs, out- Poctizing (Minneapolis several it wa 1p- -they are that: Also one rabies. T them. dogs Wo late poems have on dogs. were going erm-carriers and all 10,000 gets the persons can't abide indicate that all, ather popular—not only of high degrce or of approved erotesqueness, collies or dachshunds, also any of pup, purp, mon- whelp that has a grateful tail to | wag, a whimsical to cock, a panionable bark, These fugitive verses we have lately ccen have the same note that was | struck by Matthew Arnold in his fa- | mous poem, “Geist's Grave,” that was counded in that tale by the Hdin- burgh doctor, “Rab and His Friends,” nd by poor Ouida in *“The Dog of anders.” Those little masterpieces ring tears, and these recent verses I reaghe ‘g tender grief, The trouble ahout dogs is that they | Their span of life is| to ours. .So that in fu ides, y But verses after dogs ut <ort erel, | | o too g6 short compared every friendship a man has with a ,dog_1s bound to end in bereavement all too quickly. And the loss of a be- joved dog®is almost as bad as that of a human being. If one likes dogs so well that one hag a S\\f‘t‘(‘%h‘o]\( the last dog may bo as'™car as the first; but there will be a last .one, bécause the grief of Josing such friends'is too to' Bk borne, cannot be again invited, ‘Bi | miarck, standing over his dogs not be comiforted. ,And man, loging a mere’cur, he has. parted with aie soon | | | | | | great { graves could many a poor has felt that only friend . Strange that L) {= to insult him! that jnen who loves the dog should use s heap opprebrium: .on my! Ourselves, we zhad “rather ve the soul of that Bejg&au dn),, of' Ouida’s story, his faith/ loy= al¥y, than the soul of onel of Bel- jum’s OPDPressors. 4 : his call man Strango to a to a rw‘_( com- | DAILY HERALD. Town Topics Politics its own cussion once more coming into as a subject for general dis- among the masculine x. The Mexi¥an situation, that held the public attention for several weeks, ‘had, npw become but a memory and | the ;* of the politicak jenthusiast is ‘turnifigs to the fall campaign in ‘whivh’%A agree, republicans and democr®®allke, "that it will be “some mpaign#’ Of first importance jin s clity is'the -election of Ernest N. mphrey-as chairman of the repub- lican town committes succeed Clayton ¢iondwin, who held that office as R. R. Healey successor during the spring cawpalgn. = Inasmuch as Mayor Quigley is the-leader of the republican party In New *Britain it is presumed that the chairmanship of M Humphrey will be far mote con- genlal to his honor than:was that of Mr. Goodwin: The lafter was an avowed opponent of the®mayor, while Mr, Humphrey, if got a dose personal friend, to' almost “the ‘U’UQ(‘ is said b the republicang. that | iTumphrey’s election’ pya the tawn committee was éntirely unsolicited on his part and ungrimous on the part of the commigtec. They know their lead- { er to be a Stagnch republican, a- hard | worker and Zood mixer and they have configence in abilitys big things for the republican p: New Britain this fal Hur is by mo means a n in tics for Las taken in m hot campaign and battle 28 famous political hout for mayoralty nomination six or geven vears ago when Orson F. Curtls, he of the “duello” aspirations during the past campaign. defeated him at the republican cauecnus But Mr. Hum- phrey the man lead the O. P. here and hardly bet- ter choice could have been made. On September 9 Scnator Harding, Senator Bfandegee and Senator Me- the latter ndjdate re- election, as well as the_state nominecs, will attend the Third Republi- can club outing at Compounce. | With such an arr of politi raties present, this should only one of the higg campaizn here, but republican lovefeast though Justice TTugh | s | But withal,. it his ) do in rhrey poli- Wy a most the ty Mr. ew comer part was is no douht to (c} a Lean, a ¢ for Ward Lake R al celeb- not of the the biggest held Al- m do some- umping throughout the ecast it is not believed by the shrewd politicians that he will bother much with Connecticut and certainly not with New Britain. P On August 24 the republican party will hold primaries for the nomina- tion of delegates to the state conven- tion at New Haven on September 4 and 5 when state officers will be nom- inated. New Britain has six dele- gates and although by the primar system " anvone is eligible, the old mechine is still in good working or- der and already the slate has been named by the powers that be. They are said to be E. N. Humphrey, Ar- thur N. Rutherford, John A. Ander- son, M. Irving Jester, Edwjn W. Schultz and Richarl Covert. These are undoubtedly the men who will named unless there is a con- the pollin will be open at headguarters from 4 untll 8 o’clock and the primary will be a mere for- mality. In case there should be con- tests for the position of delegate, then the primaries will have to in the ward Indications are, however, that there will be no contests and the men who go to New llaven will be hand picked With the democrats doing as yet. The state central com- | mittee will meet shortly to make | plans for the state and county con- ventions and then it will that tivity will begin at home. *oaox prove st events also | vet be and test. plarce there is nothing be ac- An article was | relating to the v local dry goods thieving on the Since the guilty | prehended and thelr departure, the rounds of embarrasment clerk who was printed presence last week of sleuths in detect part of employe ones have been ap- the sleuths have taken a good story is going the stores much to the of a fair young lady % the innocent victim. d clerk is most accommodating and when an interested customer in duired about a certair of lingeri 1d the quality thercof, she remarked, With action to snit words, “See, its just like mine.” Aay or so later | when it hecame noised about the store | that the inquisitive fomer was | male detective in the reason { for the unfortunate blushes be readily imagined the woods store to picce | the A a can .« Because season, in 1s an exceptionally | fungus or the toadstool room variety. The real, edible mushroom does until the latter part and early September, and fields ave now varieties. There poisonous and of the unusually and heavy damp flelds growth of and mush tasty and not appear this month but the woods thick with are all kinds, some some noi but owing the fact that a great people particularly foreigners galher ing all kinds of the for the table it would not- be ng if the season showed a number | of toadstool poisonings. Already case been reported, hut for fatal. ' There Hvu\lnmnn be deadly poison, in fact it to equal the hite 1 rattle- snake in its deadliness gnd has much the same cffect on thevictim I | treme caution should . be taken gathering mushrooms and the sons engaged shoukd oughly just what kind edible and what kind other to many are fungi one has {unately it one variety < said said as not of white is that to is of in in per- thor- hrooms polson- 50 1 mus | arn of are ous o e city couple of a he of the Berlin prohibitive price Inlt ll)(in)w the money {and ‘the people in the south end are still without a park. Why not get busy and look elsewhere for a parlk, or try and expend the money for the a nurchase part In Voted treasury, of park $20,000 for the south- 1s ago in the The propoda of Mill owne put it vears site o city south most ne- of who on has is so near t6 it that it amounts MY there | some othe playground? one is surely needed, right be procurred. Ons is Cedar Hjll, which, i be purchased public ne . Temporary Meat Witte ha submitt the health board, has ingpected - twenty erings And qut of tl condemne~two carca diseasod Weats He the. slaugher ,of one was in the bob veal which shows that the spector is doing good worth somehing, to meat fronf human appears, -too, thit able to render the he the city just as efci would be' possible by zested erecfion of slaughter “house. If system continues to and . theve bu Mt will, 1t s hardly Tikgly er house ‘will ‘he built, . th wig w Duyring the Hast we remarked with n\vn\hg of, out of biles that haye .pas city. Cars from and southern -stafes miliar ang not : been mnoed™ from Illinois and Ohio this sudden influx {hat Ie present 2l Touring “Nat ists all over the coun touring. Ifere in Ne right in Connecticut most heautiful scenery wish to see and reali have headed in this d numbers. This “National brought to ight taken car Chamber of Comn visiting tourists have trians on some of streets and asked “H New Britain? “F to IEHY. i foolish, hut no means of tinent. Many other city line on all tating the name of for which it is hest stance, approaching tourist is greeted w stating “Meriden, the industries” with fome tion about the place not be a good plan sign hoards at the Rerlin road., on the and the Plafnville the visiting “tourist at the same time ain, the Tlardware the se h few Geo T of Tour attention be or New to the st ci n t1 t f:5) it . B On Thursday the m theater fined in ing an ordinarce tha wanton distribution literature on the first prosecution unde in a long time. Previ were daily lit vertising sheets and j out hy ind th ide by the readers. nee and the ordina to abate it and it h 1t was only through cal laws that the th came a violater. The regarding advertisin circulars door so as litter up the inance and heautiful. t almost hovss | | | | | | | must be not to treet. b ¢ helps oo rule to get Traffic deavoring will make Main street” from West Ma South church corner. mean that traffic take the strcet on park and south go on the west bad idea. T zo0i the hour side. »w . be men hould During the court te Tt few is to such policemen public er in ced hoved on the T pl tified t t under t It should S e that he there ot tak will ek duy i and not to th he i the thou liceman, from <honld that . n ition, manner the il to when m foll he conrteous to foolis control 1 duty would may he should fanity while tolerated. Tt order official by seem ne ol e the as onc swearing vexed t they arc son wust stop. immer has Britain in " that ular series yof number N Cew ) e a manufaecturers that w a night Chamber of " ye: generot luring August band concert Had it not b expended ebration possible. enjoyed from ple: mo the iven They nd, s realization of what the by not having a musicales. £y would & t ved to serl New shape, would bear v whole not in bad some that [ street is now prog of laying concrete has street, however, Is in ar ' although repairs the erialize, A Are ) If a park Inspector has consumption. wofk city’ considerable. mongy. curiofity tWé&~ nearer T knowing, known. town road, streets. lef ators <1y to ked what of Commerce appreciated pring they have ¥ " seoms uncgfortable, This is now one of the [ but it'is ag eady'to pnjoy!“ws&d séh as & wanted; and suitable land L site suggested t is said, might worst streets in the wity. Another mystery in the street question is why | Park street, one of the busiest in the{ city and one over which there is as | much heavy traffic as any other, has not been paved. . od, a2 v .. | | | jegal aftention has dem- that all of the city ordin- | ances are not entirely above sound | criticisin. Attorney P. I \l<‘(7mmufl,h* questioned the legality of a heaith | ordinance that' provided ‘“‘secure’ | protection gains flies, dust and dlrf,‘ !The lawyer said was impossibie | and unreasonable. Judge Meskill upx | held him and the ordinance wasde- | clared invalid. The ordinance will be | changed shortly. When one of - the trafiic. policemen arrested a man for failing to give the proper traflic_signal a giligent search of the ordinances by Prosecutor “Klett failed to show an | local law that makes ‘it ngtessary for & tignal to be glven, although the | traffic grdihances are most completo | in other matters. A staté law, how- evér, makes it complsory to give a “irnMc signal o the offender - wa pro:ccuted under.this statlite.s » ornR “,\\'EN,\("[N'G 4 n[mRTQJ Recently onstrated a . his first report howjiag that he -eight slaught- 1t number has | sses because of also stopped calf because it class. All of slaughter in- for it is surel keep dlsea«c( alth board zmfi ent service as the - first ‘sug- an expensive the inspection | out weéll, | .dpub’ tha ¥ | that a slauglt- thus-saving the | it ¢ inspector e L0 ¢k people have | the umnusual | Hp\\ State’ automo- through the | eastern | ave become fa- | machines have refa, Michigan, he reason for | automobiles is ek has been ek” and motor try have been England and some of the ¢ that one could ng this, tourlsts irection in large “American \f'lnulu(‘(ur(‘i‘s and a Péople Have Heen Helped, Not Those ~u4prronm~ ‘Mr. Hughes who are dgawing dreadful pn‘tum; of impending Industrial ruin her&, to be- caused by a deluge of imports from | Europe after thfswar, also are shocked and filled with aldrm bedause our im- ports now are 14rge and growing. In | his letter of acceptance’ Mr. Hughes did not speak of these with gisap- | proval, although he ‘gave Bing ‘ing Week” has | about the coming ‘‘severe, npeti- fact that | tion” of an ‘“energized” (sSmivould | of by the | Say enfeebled) Europe; but thefe sup- rerce. Several | Porters whom we have i m#if¥ see in opped pedes. | the steady advance of imports from the principal | $155,000,000 in November. to $245,- e is it to | 000,000 in June something that means o ruin for our manufacturing industries. may sound | They would have us believe that it ranger who has | foreshadows and is leading up to @ it is very per- | coming flood of goods frgm .abroad ties have at the | Which will stop the maghinery‘in all roads, big signs | our factories, and from Rvhich,wejean he clty and that | be saved by a new protective | Bor in. || tarift. - o Meriden the Let us see what this growth of im- ith a big sign, | Ports really means. Imposts in the home of skilled | fiscal vear that ended with~ June, other informa- | $2,197,984,000, exceeded those of the Why would it | Year immediately precedimg by $HEoRe | erect similar | 764,000, and those of 1914 by §303,2 line on the | §15.000. While $523,000,000 was ad Hartford road | ed to our imports, however,” the if- introducing | crease of exports was three times as fhe city and | much, or $1,565,055,000.. And this.in- ving New Brit- | crease of our sales to forelgn hu,\-ersi v, a hoost? was, In part, made possible by the | | growth of our purchases from abread. | of alocal | We Wwere buying more and more raw | material to be used in manufacturing | the goods which we wgre sending | of advertising [|acrossi the ocean. This is the | This accounts for more than $360,- | * this ordinance | 000,000 of the additional $528,000,000. ously the streets | In twelve months the fncrease of im- tered with ad. | ported ‘“crude materials- for use in | Jamphlets, given | Manufacturing” was $368,000,000. And | Yown carelessly | $120,000,000 more measurés the in- Tt a nui- | crease of what may be' called semi- nce was drafted | raw material, classified as ‘“manu- as worked well. | factures for further use in mn af eater man be- | ducers—and the whole onlmn—v-n-wér@ o law at present is that all such t at a person's low about and Tt is a good or- keep the clty W is a ar Tow get his only a to | | anager ourt for violat- prohibits the | was terial, we do not head'that.any of our | manufacturers Wwere harmed by it. Mills in which certain kinds'of ma- terfal included in the list are made have been working at full capacity. A glance at some of the leading articles imported shows how utterly ahsurd and without warrant the complaints and warnings = we have way | mentioned. There was an Increase | to the | of the receipts of rubber from $87,- would | 000,000 to $159,000,000. Have we affy wonld omestic producers of rubber who cast side of the | were injured by thisgiflood?” This 1d traffic would | raw material was needed fog automo- Not entirely a | bile tires and it should be noted that | our exports of automobiles rose to | $97,000.000 from $60,000,000 in tho preceding year. The rubber was used also, of course, in #ars manu- rctured for home consumption. .Our | output is growing. More than 750,000 cars were made in the six months ended with June, and their coeded $450,000,000. Are the Ameri of a devastating de- procucts on. Aceapnt \ ¢ $72.000,000 in are now en are e passed that “one street Th north & nin ne | | are | but in pris was Wi Snene force, wear t loeal motor vor st the he rue, weelk t officer a alue ex- an swore patr 1 1se thi in danger a thing Whle People luge of foreign of the vear's gain imports of rubber? ruin indicated Dy the 2,000,000 for raw $22,000,000 ore dis- person or from have of e prestige Was industrial for tin, an addition of silk, and $43.000,- Our sugar grow grea which' wg fy’ an exceptioral England, Italy and needed for the old to the | 68 000 woear public - $17 worth of raw 41,000,000 000 more for hides ers were not ha ports of the rav refined herc to demand from France. Hides were millions of shoes we have s | helligerents. Of all the imports cont., or more than two-thir be surprising | \voro on ofir freé list. Ought we Shortly | annoy and restrain our manufacturers ' up has hinted | o Dyacing tariff dutles en rubber and blicemen “‘when | (o300 materials not produced | Attitude of any Ihere? The imports in | to our country and the American peo been | ple. It has been due mainly to re- barld concerts. | ceipts™ of raw materials for usc in back, local | making the finished goods included in contributed | tho extraordinary exports which least, | so much to the advantage of the Wednesda™ | ynited States To attack and de- that the | ;,ounce jt is virtually to confess that 1d some un- | tppse who do this are sorely in need the July 4 cel- | o4 ofrective political arguments and | asant concerts | jasioc | have becen im- ; | and | bring about ‘the’| | rule in A publigf has lost | probabhly sugar, 000, the swear A po- irb it b provoked. ture of his himself in a him a model e should to him questions temper. 10uld not bhe fibres, w for raw by the i product, ow per 2l to given raw this increase tinetly is that been di truth has ’ beneficial yeen unusual there has ars 151y W at 1ch cen are there Fnjoying the Summer. (Minneapolis Journal) THere 1sf less sickness hot weather than in cold lifor the reason that in the Britain. streets | every door, window, crack and crevice but there are |is open. ‘and the good outdoor air that pairing. Blm |1s so valuable to the health of the and work | body comes in. begun. Dwight | Babies flourdsh in summer he terrible shabe | their food is properly cared for were promised | elderly persons luxuriate in it. failed to'| terthg” seems to be es of outdoor s a summer sing at, if | and | “Swel- A, toRtuneiy ! what shortly | exposing Can | and bathe | ML peven benefited by the receipt'of this mML Pl | kpow | toa sage o, it. n“r’bxfied: er: rmr:cms in th bt suffer from vou as g the il tor ‘ai] ¥ BNt or of the once populAk SOnE) oood A Sumper Time,” Rd dederved” it onggters _try mnobly to de with®winter, but the metHe feot. s o Summer is p'\wlhg Néxt week it Wi} be August—sand then you know follows. - 'S#wme one In the family will.be pulling'off the last leaf on the calendar-on the, tvall and. the fateful vear : of. 1817, vou believe it? These things being are, 1t behooves the sensible pefson and the 1)‘nln<opher to malte as much ag pos- sib1& of the passing e of 1916, and to bhe enjoying,the fleeiing yeag to the 'top of hig; Ability M i sumpier; as De Quindy ‘almighty ssummer.” The strea Jife are running bank full. * Get ok in them bafore, the mogns a skim af lce across their T higig™ ts cold as ghey ing shows surfaces. Ren:in: (Boston The death of former Thurston of Nebras! less than 70 years ‘ola more than a decade life, seems strangely a nearly forgotton of the leaders of the era of Mark Flanuas Thiustpn :bad heen chajr man of thé& ‘matiéndl conventioh - which first nominated, McKinley. Heo# served in the sentte ‘Wuring the Me- Kin'ev admin i\'\«llu' » . 300 for a lonzer ‘ime president «f the repul ican league. A native Vermonter, he s had- followed the coursa \pire going as a child to Wisconsin,, whe! he attended sehdol, and on makin a stargifor himself doing 30 ig<@mahay Sendgor, Thurston's most speecitiwas that in ‘hehalf” of ventlbih in Cu in which de- claredghimselfd@ling to head the, resulting war—to use hisy ¥'should coy a son, ag war cost e | Tt gt &'wr expreésiops reaciay the “high-water ‘marl hedrt- throbBing.orator “\ B reshomstble for ou with Spain, &8 seent rald.) Senator Joh while, s#fil and littio out of public reniinfceng AS He was it 4 past 8 famous #d inter- & %5 he me o sire he the wwas of ich Ar - g By the passing «f ibé chil@”lahor bill in the Uniteq~Stitiys Senate, yast numbers of the littie-foilers In the mills of the South .are set free, and humanity advances many steps in our country, The federal government cannot pros {#hibit the work-of children of tender age in any Staté] but it can stop in- terstaté commerce in E68de produceq” by such labor -or coming from fact- 4 & cries ‘where such labor i§ employed. 44 This it has done If the administration of President Wilson had no other progressive arnd. .. | humane legislation to its credit (h‘“'v4\ this bill, which the executive Persoms, ally urged to its passage,gthe count would not be small.” Buf there.ara j A & many others. ROOSEVELT NO¥ 10,55 ORPOS MAR:. “Hnyihing to Beat Wilson,” Still His Slogan Aug. 12.—“Anything te S0 thoroughly expressey . what is in ex-President ' Roosevelt'i mind these days and is'so Insisterii his guiding political principie th 3 is ready to give his ‘pledeos that ho won't a word. , againkt Gevernor Whitman as the gepublitsn’ sominge for re-election gs goVernor. aht he colonel does not. like Vs‘hlim% while Samuel ur Judge of t court of _app haemay bef. the emocratic motaiieée, had the colohtl's support in 1914 “%vhen he was a candi- date for his judicial position. ‘Bug Seabury, democratic gubernya o rominee, t he for \\'n— on for dent, Ro v positively v w for a candi Wilson ngd who will ba compelled by politiogtinics perience, or by honest convictiom, ‘ta dorsctand wphald Wison's pothetos, cnators William M. Bennett, to enter the republican ains has in ) ¥ - New Yor] beat Wilson, ex say ne pre necessarily and ho is for Tolonél ¢ say te 1 ho primaries nomination asked forg his | primary na to ho ry fight. It r Whitman, many organization re- Bennett littlo, byt it is pretly cof- president will ro gubernatori Whitman, velt's support but th tht colonel i t ter 1 nter a prim Bennott win tt should there arc puh:i«-um who love hate Whitman more, {ain that thc for Bennett “Hughes the is against Seabury Bennett” 1ld slagan in this state pected to take tha) republican pcandidates. Seabury personifies aboUf+every “liberal” principle the colonSlstood for in 1912, and up to the bursting ‘of the Furopean war cloud. BaBe o issues fill his Ad 1t Whitman is the and abury the democrati will keep profoundly = &ifens. ro= Arding Whitman rather than fisk the a single, vote for the head of national ticket. ’ The calonel opposed 4 1914, and the many unl sald about the governonih say with no_less fer Whitmdn tried to pa with the colonel right afte lican tional conventiq Upon returning fram Chicgh crnor let some of the cd that he would be the sagélof’ Oyst ates ator, but to accept thets proffer W 1pon Roosevall him as rank ingratituded chafes in silenee sgainst Whitman m iy of “enything to and W then be ¢olonel’s he might be stump for the c mird republicay na port ed this peace 1o look &