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On g the “city Cire m always opeid Herala Ping's New ay, New lantic City, will_be founa Stana, York City; TELEPHONT A WISE bstponing the of bols in New itair ent wave bring joy penir Sep the 1 Inot h 11 jnunity becau it g safeg ritie who return mmi tatives poli : else t in the presc ent. Glanei e House major Demo down annc 1in book: n iy advertioers. 42na St n and press at Hots- and Broad- Roard Walk, at- and Hartford Devot carvre MOVE use f | proven public of the ralys many ph upon 1 | ever | | law | within 1d the day ember 5. ard later fixes taken s of 1Ith pupi of the zives the health ich from mmittees to i are Sou 1, and fec th, observe third ability. made ntati section be so this There bigger prov n In more on in petty is than J t or Ablicilio bickering | at NEW, BRITAIN DAILY H of the tions this hat men in the Sunuy | It is suspected that Roumania is anxiously waiting for a Russian invi- tation to appear at the hargain coun- | terv.—Buffalo Courier, patriotic and P as those who these This parts, or on country is briar | and | French pipe smok put America New Yorl | | A serious shorts | threatens the pes Rut all first will Sun, of oday; the Blue Telted Blue. into Red, ! North the andidates who There is no smoke carncobs Futh. of Europe, while | , has a gloomy satis- | faction in noting how sick all his roy- | al Dbrethren are—Syracuse Post- Standard. I The Sick Man BREAKING PAROTM, | sicker than eve a result of offic parole-breaking on part of connected with German auxiliary cruisers in- terned at Norfolk, Virginia, the State | 1y, Hughes thinks that recognition of the murderer Huert would have brought © peace in Mexico. What panacea after a century of revolution. Utica Observer. Department at Washington refuses to iss more of these privileges & the has t ate no dou of The its the Department facts in next the Wooden shoes may be the thing here, in consequence of shortage of imported leather. This will put the country quite fn novel | war footing.—Hudson Repubiican claims and the German nssador admits that violated the of some of men who their back words their 1 | have | lan attempts honor to gone The ex tive German ~ Embassy to use* these by what aquaplaning is membets and club of Coney ports day and skill | A chance to sce like will be offered to the : e Bra: Yacht its annual water ur- | ¢cn Saturday. Harold Townsend Loy Whitwarth will exhibit their a1 the sport.—Topeka Capital, saying that the commandc | | vessels in question failed to sufficiently | instruct their officers and crews re- | i garding the significance of the as; anc gi them. Seccretary | .ansing offsets this attempt to *‘cove by if = up” asking it can be assumed ! A ognizant of the | jong snc to kill i l:tboring it discovery Cape Girardeau motorist saw a e by the roadside and stopped | fter getting a club and be- right viciously he made | that what he took for a | anly section rubber | (Mo.) Lead- these officers are not nciples of international law. When an auxiliary cruiser of any | a rent nation seeks shelter in ok a ‘ass County snake | tugey tire international | er. neutral for any wha of reason under the rules it must again seek the high seas R allotted pewod, usually | some entente Professor Muensterberg needed | courage to prophesy a future | of Germany, England and the | Unitea States, vet history shows that | hips interned | . \pjjkely things have happened. | Norfolk consented to remain in this | mhe present alignment cannot persist | the protection of Springfield Republican, the offic ight hours, or it must undergo in nment until the end of the war. The comm s of the country, under its | farever. laws. After this formality. ERALD, THURSDAY, AUGUST VETERANS IN CONGRESS. The Dwindling Number and fhe G of ay. the Blue (Philadelphia Press) In Senator Tillman’s recent speech in the senate leading up to the an- nouncement that he had come slowly in the conclusion that “it was best for all concerned that the south defeated In the Civil war,”” the South Carolina senatar observed, “half a « tury since Appomattox there is a man in this chamber still who wore the Confederate gray and one who wore the blue.” For a considerable war the military n- a period after the element, men with a record of service in the civil war, werce a dominant frrce in congres Th managing politiclans always preferred a candidate for president with an hon- orable Civil war Tecor McKinley was the last to mect this requirement and since his time our presidents and presidential candidates have been of a generation too young for participa- tion In the clivil war. After recon- structlon had proceeded so far as to return southern democrat 0 congress, both branches flooded with “southern brigadicrs,” as they were called, or men who had held a com- mission in the Confederate army. That indicated an public men from the announcement that in werc nearly the south and the one is left passage of ti from public of men war. north did no men so exclusively caste as did the south Confederate brigadiers Washington they found good many men who against them action They Blair, Keifer, only the senato 1e and the dis- life of that ful, public- rart in the marks the appearance large body rited civil The able, fore who had a choose her public »m the military but when the a mbled in in congress a formerly were on field of met there Gar- field, L.ogan Schurz, Banks, Butler, Cox, Farnsworth, Mc. Kinley, Bayne, Shanks, Dodge, Hayes, Schenc slocum, Negley, Hawley and otners who haa served with credit and distinction as officers in the Union army in the war between the state: The lone Confederate whom Senator Tillman s in the senate of the Unitec Sta “more than fifty yvears arraye militar the s The loard intrusted under the farm | which | 1¢qit law with planning the land | vessels | banks will begin its inquirie; Au- gnsta, Me., August Tsn't cate thus to refute the standr gathered to re the M | farmer that this is a do-nothing ministration? The hoard might least wait until after election.— | York World. and men were granted parole, meant they could leave their in indeli- | at spell- | inc | | ad- | :n,} ew | | and go ashore, provided they returned to their posts within an allotted period | These | binders them on of me. privileges were granted their words of honor That e break officers of them th disadvanta and gentlemen.” fit ven will react to | me have scen to words 1S gi se of other officers who | My Dog. my dog looks outer meltin’ wags his tail hand; don’t k the o at ver friendly pretty eves, tries ter protection American | When efore the war is over. | An’ he an’ lick | ver T care an’ I don't care wat ver been, good enough for me-—yer under- | | stand ? i second, | Sometimes a hur bein' judges by | yer fancy coat, | ey and Then wot vou look like AN Yer It United will not before the navy 1 ot the powers | actually first, amor ¥ if ¥ oves shoes is new world. Three years at most The means ¥ the whole: when he daesn’t notice little things; o A dog—a dog he judges by ver soul! an’ looks at witness this evolution But a dog, i ‘.Q)‘v‘ | program which | hip building activity ccepted friendly like ver smile, lovin’, campaign for more ‘men at When a dog looks to a ver he wants Jumps upon call; it home 'y H hist national use means that f the vy of this [ SC when will be once in country an ided. The ver like a bur adequate navy prov Ta ve yer was alone without administrati get full credit friend, littie navy mer A b oo hing at n b polishe r table part; wher h dog a heart! he look the top he juc v dog benen veneer A —Christian [lerald Not (Bridgeport When Mr. York he £ deserving that e 1A Reform. verything o a Compicte record time. Soon the Farmer) i i 1 Sontamuiated Finghes was governor of | replaced the usual democrats, by Now he seems ement of republi- democrats as of the cam- num- de- will he A ther o repub) ai. dese chi The for building “ommence keels of ing pla the by authorized the ¢ laid mar ns ir ssues « 1rm among the paign pro- | Let us ! Mr. It | convert is that the | ¢ both ! 11y t5elf blame him for the past. not have hecome that it wicked hire another, un- entire not hes may to the idea one man and which ¥ bill finaily - is vote was en of ceently. favor of a ke a complete mal ongzht is thinks administ the duties ant, he rties in there he to D m to any. a with :h of them e evi £ he it wrong to tors Huehes rent when influence of the 1 n | place f | beter omes that the Every man in the nation, with the are ought ohj of that. small to tion exception paratively have the to the displac president crisis, by | cxperience railia th problems If it sador coterie or prociaimed s ent of an exp in suhstantially whao rienced time of without is not fa- possessin of t nation, a is the way A e and the one p conditons h 1 position 1 impe el vexine W national e navy cqual ' any other earth to was displace Ambas- Herrick wrong 1t lengths of coast-linc duties were how stupiad i ve: president nominal to deli merely ni the mercy « e, unless whose and diffienlt beyvond - pla force ever re 1 c hand 1s been - Roos¢ A Maticr of Degree. (New York Post.) Somebody with nothing better to do has been looking college de- grees bestowed upon the two cand dates for the presidency. Eram this point of view the contest is by no rieans one-sided, Mr. Wilson hds £ Ph. D.. one Litt, D., Tut D's. Tn the mean- who was never pres particular, has LI.D.’s. Their neck and My Mar- with five LL. only four, day. Com- s position little | of Svening then , after a long con- in the Congress the navy seems When the the be on ir to redemption. finished United hered only onc nine LI Huehes Mr in where i 3 the list of navies of 1t either second time ir anvthing collected mates are At is a_ note Mr, ' Fairbanks may get another down to the managers, Mr. Will- D.. while Mr. McCor- cantent with a per in 11 almost fdent anietly 1unning One fro supreme effort In mis t rank. the nec present writing ehall D but people of an adequate navy T any e cox has one LL. mick had to be g functory M. A. SiX men with 300 LL. The negotiations going on | T's between them! Al of which House proves what many independents have maintained from the first- the differ- ences between parties this yvear are a lm‘m.«:r of degree. i | | a time the bor v upheld is in | these days. the White in regards to the | out the truth of Labor is well taken care of, | flroad strike ar his. [} | in | rec | | | com- | after the war'” is John H. Bankhead of Alahama, who servea four years the Confederate army, as his bio- graphleal sketch tells us. The “man the blue” referred to is not 50 certainly traced. Knute Nelson of Minnesota, born in Norway, served in our Civil war as private and noncom- missioned officer in a Wisconsin regi ment. Nathan Goff of West Virginia served in the Union army in the Civil war as private, lieutenant ard major in a Virginia regiment. Warren of Wyoming served in a Massachusetts regiment in the Civil war. The ard Heniy Algeron Pont soldier and offi cupi the congres- m of the men senate were who wore is war av -0 tor a ory nited for page in Most dire t late now ir s horr war service Meals, Journal) Lunch: and (Meride interested passengers traveling down the Connecticut River e often noticed the as L sign on oine Meals and the ca h cen that ve cents hat lunch might lecide was entitled to meal. Or again thc the hlishment pelled t upon o patrons of stablis be com- hefore tho n tables. However nelined to think that the 1 1 Massachusetts a st ind that the manager has for breakfast, for dinner m) and for sup- per and patrons who came in at other have to take lunch ble to think tha decides that of the who takes lad, entrec and cream and of roast counter, toeratic mealers wo cert (ne mehe so comfor this wise restaurante: guest house roast, mecal soup, s desse followed beef or- order | aerea it b merely lunching. We should like much to just where this man draws ind how xplains his sign an was know the linc he Sharp Cuts. T Blade.) Yesterday,"” s Let him. We would r and have everybody “T am say PR to ather be pleased see us v oic in hot instance, To exertion weather one mu fare. impossible. For Tana the conductor one's Th have Wwhosc notion that love is blind may ith the the other originate girl married voungster fellow has told us should he will tell n men's coat sleeves. why the proud us why After somehody yit of | put but mort per th tailors ons | There's a simpler explanation wh: | X 1 than the one given psychologist because soldier; liers Baff. wrk College. It are men | is Villa's ashes Thougzh mated hi emains marching on were cre hot weather to belicve we should com the who Were t ati | indefinite to | witn continn he person a One taking the she didn proving woman State Journal becavse tke pavagrap Thus 1graphs are read. quit | was | sign, | 17, 1916. T OTHERS SAY Views on all sides of timely questions as discussed In ex- changes that com¢ to tho Hernld Office. Putting the Pig to School. Weekly). school-teacher in North Caro- that a farm paper was offer- pure-bred pig as premium for certain number of newa subscriber She got the necessary ' subscriptions among the parents of her sixty pupils, had the children build a mod- crn pen on the school and, and gave the porker a large public reception: with an illustrated talk on pigs. The school went to work clearing land, plantipg grain and grass plots for for- raising cabbage plants to sell for other feed; and .the subscription grunter soon became the nucleus of a demonstration farm. More land is.to be purchased and expert aid will-be brought'in to make permanent this stimulus to the lodal agriculture. The »use-that-Jack-built was only a pig- pen, but the effect will be to make life better f« that entire community. And the school tcacher did it! Some of the local officcholders down there must be reflecting with horror that when women have the vote it may be necessary for office-holders to just such jobs as this, won’t be so much time to loaf around the county courthouse and chew. If a pig can go to school, most anybody ought to learn. (Collier A lina ing one a saw age, sC come get busy on and then therc The Mechanical Minister. (B. G., in the Christia Wo have hearc au forth for the non-attendance ple at church; sometimes and again apologetically. But now we ct hints of reasons for the non-at- tendance at church of the minister himself; reasons, Indeed, for his non- existence. We are told that at Cal- vary cemetery, in New York, “funeral music by phonograph is being fur- nished for poor people who have heretofore been unable to afford fu- neral music at the burial of relatives.” The agraph, quoted literally, reads further, “P eafter will be ac- commodated by speclally selected hymns and appropriate orchestral music plaved on the talking-machine.” There are odd little suggestions in this news-item of hoth comedy and tragedy. Those of us who have had experience with the sorts and condi- tions of people who cannot really “af- ford funeral that often do have music, and fiowers, and all funeral deckings, whether they can afford them or not. Thi done from pride, heing making a good show hefore critical friends and neigh- cautiful ideal to a shrine of Register). 1 many es set of peo- defiantly, ople he P music’” know the the is partly desirous of and aricf offering loved and departed But when subject of that Aph furnished at a tur And, hors partly from a t the the izine and before wish Tay last one be- we pass to the economies; ic prosaic find usually can be lower ana the which modern its funeral we phonc mus much G than ca vocal music very likely humor, of this from suggestion strikes method novelty, comedy, of s we learn ces largely ng essentially mject from anytl onsin the method itself. this news-item, o “re phonoe and rrnished found satisfa W Counld they 1king-machine ? Yes. and t clorgy not he ‘remarlks Certai in found ould whe 3ible int talking-machi ! nto |t have a happil tore or even into type of ho pray it minister rather rare, a couple in surely marry window, or man tly clerical el marria balloon: such o furnish all the ment the usual These featur: the feal wo h Aistine when once stamped on tozether with the mus- already mentioned could 1 and the of tha Alspensed with, inist or choir. “records,” features used over nal corpo man could ke that of the org: The t though nning clo and incline to think that self. for good or ill, more on public attention. o again; al presence subje T a one, parailel al- to it will force i more and Getting Discipline, (Philadelphia Public Young men valiuntly country on the border rous simy Ledger) serving their or learning the cities of military life at ‘aining camps have diseq the things they thou most of all were superfluiijcs, know by this time that custom as well as tume in the army. They realize the forming pow f the ciothes, for have 1t fter th han muiti to khaki there is not m ctween che aristoerat ho arbiter of elegance and the honest toil who kept his oflice in his overalls. has been awalkening to many obey a without gainsay or Fack tall Their camp life has an education in the value of prompt- ind in human interdependence ompany or a, r ent, ke a 1 d. is »f a number of incon- icuous but fundamental constituents Fach 1x hi part and \ithdrawal or the fciency of veakens the mass. The whole ency of the training the roeruits 1 “efved s to dimin concelt. There may be sor v a month of artll cel that they know enough 1de non-commissioned ofilce majority should be sufflelontly Uiza that they present than prom om which officers made. No 18 mand whe cann¢ rule temy bls tongue, his 1, his disoledient body. : = many of ht the needed hey ini form” applies to ey seen a rom choose ¥ the of Tours Tt on an experi- command upon the e to nstant been ma Q 15t play the ten- mp who after 1 discipline (o ho But, sen- are nothing raw to at terfal f niay fittea himsell rebellious imo be man to the as of us and humor- as we read ire runs on musie Anq | ciety neither remarks We | B of COOD ARRAY OF NEW BOOKS NAMED IN INSTITUTE'S LIST THIS WEEK Flac- I ays on Rodin, Maeterlinck | Artists and thinkers, by L. W. wick Sayers. cus. . “Thes and Wagner are real intellectual por- S The Farm. traits, type-figures relieved against background rich vividly typical a cnlture and his phers | ‘A concise | of the i various the | Rooklist and | family. treatise important included allusion. phil in No less | : and facts A are the most in chosen fields “His | literary the collestion promise of ments. work is fresh and original manner distinguished, Marketing ducts, by D. H. Weld. “A simple, untechnical | of the whole fleld an expert | ably the best book on | Covers direct marketing | marketing, | dleman, of essays an auspicious | of farm px notable future achieve- | ation. | PP | Between St. Dennis and St. George, a sketch of three civilizations F. M. Hueffer. “He has really glven us the impres- sions of one highly civilized person | COSts, ete. as the war has plaved on his mind, | with illustrative anecdotes sometimes | Foultry serfous. at other times whimsical. H Eleney style carries the reader along like a cork on a current; he has many good stories to tell.”’—Athenaeum. P Alfred Russel Wallace, reminiscences, by chant. “He has made a selection from eral thousands of letters, and has bound these together with a sympa- | | thetic and well-written biographical | commenta "—Nature . by the subje co-ope retailing, —A. L. A, Booklist. PR culture, and h by K . sanitation \upr Poultry husbandr, Brown i “Scholar ana | carefully p Mar- | Pert, in breeding of poultry conditions vet popllar epared by an 16 e~ ide S ia letters = 5 James who had and and here studyi is conver: j . A g a ent sev- J wry 0ld Glory, by S. Andrews. effor the man down, . . Snaith. finest novel Pall Mall Gaz o ox by by | Mrs, Humphrey | Blow | . War book written in answer to can correspondent'’s “Has England done all she Particularly inspiring is her story of | what the women are doing, their | cheerfulness, courage and devotion. | Mrs. Ward, with her daughter, visited | munition plants, the fleet in the ! Thirteenth commandment, by north, Red Cross hospitals at home ! Hughes and in France, and other places where | “ngland is showing her spirit."— | Zeppelin nights, a London Athenaeum. ent Violet Hunt ! Hueffer. T h sailor, by C “Biggest and written.”" an question: could?” | vet he A Ross by Martin Some Trish Somerville and vesterdays T and F. by - e the scheme ol the ingeniously While vivid primartly f eld Industrial preparedness, is Knoeppel. E as the ingl Decameron,’ work s original and well written. imagination, it is thoughtful reader.”—Sprir publican. P Marrying of Ann Lette, a comed) four acts, by Granville Barker. PR w Samuel Coleridge-Taylor, musician; his life and letters, by W. C. Ber- | Farm economy; a cyclopedia of agri- for the practical farmer compilation the exposition prob 1tivae the problem of the mid- transportation, Edward treatment, ex- experience branches with Booklist.” Holman Day has OE, Rupert entertain- M B‘OOK RE\YIE-\V; Die Hilfe's v ot propos St now bhe task to milit to higher intellectual level obedience still rules Orders carried out behind stands inexorable The of the drill serg 00 much w Often startl pily delineate “clean man’ must | ”’ ] strained physica Harold Bell Wright. His [ ettneam ; are more than mere automatons, who | intellectua smile and frown at the the penman. They are actually living | der. It ¢ and who surround the reader with the | ., | | nis spt =l i ise T a are “When a Man’s a Man,” by Harold because | Bell Wright, Book Supply Co., $1.35 | DOWOL 2| nt i barrack of way Contemporary literature has vet to | us. a a bit room lieval le in me to dis min transfigured, produce an author who can more hap- than be a ad us over ipline to characters and y the must h command of | millions toward must be inward law a the bridge, the 1d, old pre: that is to anger is the mighty; and he that t than ) t taketh a cit But how it to appeal to This i who breathe from | i i coniEn, i st || @ a Man,” Mr. Wright that bids | drill sergeant fair to enlarge his ever-growing circle | P4T!"E ¢ { | of charmed readers. While it may not |, T2 be as strong of his past works it is a wholesome, entertaining | glimpse of a real for whom ad- versity has terrors. The scene is laid on the where “Honorabl it was by this title he ferred to be called, chose to emerge the shell in which eless so- | OWS nor reay Disgust | casters and their fads well pain at the | shattering of his heart's dream sent | him to the land where a man must be a man to survive where weaklings perish. How he ltved and came respected among the cowpunchers, | despite his eastern dress and conver- sation, makes a highly interesting | emergen story. No book would not be com- |individual v plete without the eternal feminine and Mr. Wright introduces us to several A supermilitarism to | women whom he weaves into his plot | pioher freecdom at the and who play important roles in the | voiq i but a ehimera anabasis of “Honorable Patches”” Tt | eiect the te is rather disconcerting that, through |y, oo " 05 CH force of circumstances, his seed of | oy “Statc love is planted on sterile ground and | s Ury ey 5l o S the story could have a happier ending | o o o0 10w that without weakening its popularity. | dividual existence has The same vigor and homely honesty | o1 €1, ETHER0E 1 that have charscterized most of Mr. | 00 It 18 the fdeal of miltar Wright's pen people are Instilled into | (270 Hhe worth of individual the blood of thoss Who step from the | ol inapie onty in the hysterd covers of “When a Man’s a Man. war, but more fully devel the system, the more tends press individual will the | ishing point. That nat | the beast; there can more ¢ Friedrich Berlin | le but its nature Hilfe |same, in Prussia as : | Krim-Tartary, and as ous question: “Where is the war lead- | i ng us? To militarism or to Hberal- | v 11 oo kitten, jsm? To Potsdam or to Manchester? | catamount, To the summit of human development, a stranger when ) to that amount. When the c the tent rest of the came nature When a Man’s is it likely has given us a book whose 1sines annon fodder? al pure militarism level,” gold wha yn Ru qu intellectu to n some from ful ideal | Bien i 1t sweeping ‘”' : o | not its man Pt s rck onee e the r be treated e | because mans scho th onsequences treatment. The [is “Dlind obedience fron G of resenting essence of . | for the time-w " lana foibles as | power:” take that aw : | whole as tem It not ref g | stroyed the will of few that a free make precisel militaris: people in that surrender but if it | | be the er; may to meet when th t hievc back The more a systern socialism,” to ‘be a worth sunk of militarism the of to i the — — | it to ¢ toward is t be is in The Nature of the Beast. e (Springfleld Republican) t always Sparta grows it In iumann's weekly Die is ralsed this curi- o comes but a come The up or to where an abyss vawns?" imel the chester of course stands for the abyss gets its nose 5 says summit proverb, t follows. A of the beast. and Potsdam for the 1 | of human development, yet | too, is the enough. | high of the German summit is not writer is proud army. but he hints that militarism needs to Those who do not close¢ it Satisfactory. | be reformed. (Kansas City | their he sa is the factor which we have to reckon with whether we will or no. “It is| today the school for millions and will | S0 Lomorrow. | 3ut is it a good school? Die Hilfe, which is by no means antimilitarist goes surprisingly far in the way of critlcism, “We will not condone its | weakness, We are not vet satisfled Too much dross hides the gold, It is yot in accordance with the spirit the age, It shall now be our task raise militarism to a higher level.” } This appeal to ''the spirit of the age" | may seem curfous to those | regarded the spirit of the age as tu ing away from militariem, but spirit, as Faust discovered, has many | W gulses and may not be what it s | Cedar | fancied, Ts it pointing the way to a | supermilitariam ? What have the drill masters to say ys, must see that Doc! “Hey, Grudge to a professional - | called a citizen stranger who was passing the Come In and see if you can fix He's ur fit be brother-in-law having a something surgeon’" “Aw, that's | hear me say n-law? | all that right! this Didn't | not or to COAL SCHOONER Y. two-masted schooner AGROUND, 17 Emma who have rn- the Babylon, N. Aug The sma Island late last leaking badly. She probably will a total loss. Coast guards from Island rescued the crew. night and she t1 .. conceived m ther spir There that Discipline or- militaris of &t more scaf- chment better ruleth n “inexorable the a inexorable 3 term in- zero. exist- 18y of hous I ped van- of r wn under appearing my “But, my dear sir, I am a veterinary you s my ‘brother- 11 Overtor with a cargo of coal, ran aground off is o Oak Blind *