New Britain Herald Newspaper, August 24, 1916, Page 6

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

NEW, BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, AUGUST 24, 1018: PRIT A \i 1] RALD recently cast aside was supposed to | task. Men like Secretary of the In- - = == — DRIIALN HEX have covered a superman. Standing | terior Lane, Judge George Gray of BOOK REVIEWS \ Y] ’ & A HERALD PUBLISHING COMPANY. in the terrible limelight of publicity | Delaware, and Dr. John R. Matt, \ flluebeard s Castle IS Provrietors Charles Evans Hughes is not the awe- | known internationally as a great re-|upp (o0 WHAT OTHERS SAY knc Ertetonees o Now : } Views on nall sides of timely d datly (Sunday cxecpted) at 4:18 p. m. | inspiring spectacle he once was. In- | ligious worker, give added assurances ! Thought,” by forty-nine writers. - 5 | questions as discussed in ex- | e Heala Bu o ATACIErS HERE | stead, he is a mere politician out after t out of chaos may come order. Published by the Elizaheth Towne n anls esl n le.s | changes that coms to th? ored S o At Tew Brias | the votes, as he himself terms it, a | They have the good will of the Ameri- poompany, Holyoke, Mass. i Herald Office. econd Clacs Mail Matter. There is nothing new under the sun = ! one s - cent. candidate, a | can pec far as these pi . > e SHLf e e ne hundred per cent didati a | can peaple, insofar as the: v people do There is nothing new about New Wakhington, D. C!, Aug.’ 24—Con-' lon failure| of doing so islto/pay & Ane Tor a5 oSrtiec to ang part of the €Y | man who has adopted the slogan, | not represent those who wish all sorts | Thought except the mame. It is the e e el 250! potindst arl tebincoll Peraons R 5 Centa v onth. b . 2 : £ 2 pe b > | cerning the early i " 5 25 s cco. S roriptions 't fo ne sent by mGM. | “Anything to Beat Wilson” Tor | cf evil to Mexico merely to embarass | now-old theory of mind over matter E 5 T o T B e e e in advance, £0 Cents a Montn, = i SRR n et A | oalE about-to-be- ssi 3 8 a1e $7.20 a Year | every railroad tie he crossed from New | the present administration. It these | PIUS super-faith. The’ “Experience o ““‘ to-be-possessionis, = the ;.4 goryice every Sunday afternoon It certainly takes some of the joy L 3 anis| V es ies ¢ a ac o e B 1 H ), se v oty pronta Tavortisne mezam m | YOrk to San Francisco the candidate | commissioners are met half way by |is rather a. disappointment. Almost | o0 = West Indies, the National at the same place, under the same | out of the lives of those who try 19 the city Circalstton booke and Pre | josi just so much esteem. It is a | the representatives of the de facto|&Ny one of them is open to dispute | Ge0Sraphic socicty issues the follow- penalty. think sanely on economic subjeots B EonE bl and the mental and physical cures | ing bulletin from Washington: As to armament the order was: | (on the art of making a living) and Pt : P enumerated might, in many cases, be | “Of the three small islands on the _FOT the defence and good of the coun- | hope to influence others to think in a w oura on e at Mora- | it have been for the Republicans to | standings may be cleared up and| gisposed of with a sinale vt con try every householder shall keep in |the same way to have a government | ¢ BhoE A SIngle northeastern edgoe of the Caribbean, his house for himself and every man | official of so bigh a rank as Mr. Bd- ling's Now TSt and Broad- ; way, N : cara’ Walk, - | have another candidate rather tham, Mexico put upon a fair Toad to hetter | incidence. The book is not convine- | o faan e e SR 5 ing unless & reader 1s in a state of | 5% for which the United States ex- in his service, a sword with helt, and | ward N. Hurloy of the foderal trade mind susceptible, for the moment, to | PectS to pay Denmark $25,000,000, St. & E"“l“‘th ~‘11 1}:'0"“1“'“*“‘v }dm} ball; | commission declare. as he is reported religious hysteria Thomas and St. John, both smaller 200 2150 each householder shall have | to have done to the Illinols Manufac- — - but with a kindliness that breathes| New Thought is an exclusive cult. | and less densol o Smaller two pounds of powder, or more if he | turers Cost Association at Chicage . 2 cult. | g ss densely populate P st ace Srrci e | STWILIGHT ZONERS.” brotherly love. Kill hier bandits when | The writer can hardly imagine it be- | oo % Y " pulated than 5t . pleases. ~ Bvery person noglecting | inat 90 per cent. of the businesd ing a religion of a busy people, such u'u(')xfix' l.!i\c‘heon' the scenes of many this d:n,\' shall pay 100 pounds of t0- | fajjureg in the United States last yesr i Ceiin e, || CoO D i nemia, wimaaen, || G o (2 sodes. Here white colo- o | resulted from cut-throat competition REsany SHngssropuiace M. examination of the soul to the ex- oth: = mi"{)’ ’}F;“""S followed each Lae D,;,?" f”'; fc‘d 200 ";t’{“ T8N | prices,” for such a statement is purs | some day Mexico will come out of the | tent required by New Thought, is ok :‘hv Lbewt dering perplexity dur- &1?:5- o :i\eurw b‘a‘“r fi) ‘150;"“‘3;"2 dogmatism and unwarranted oy the hardly practicable. For people of éc‘ffiuflsese enteenth and eighteenth when ea ;u:‘ s‘f:‘f'r:e(tl’e; mso e | facts. i e leisure who are agreeable to taking ;. canse : i " | A far more authoritative exponent e . hhve not taken . out raliza 2 “M : s . :ar Any e | QeI S e e t o ut naturalization TRy up any fad as an oscape from the | ¢y Yor® than a hundred years atter | rade ground fully armed. Any per. | pavers in Great Britain. They are, g ennui of life it might afford a diver- discovery of St. Thomas by |son absent, in favorable weather shall | "fl "“l‘:" m ‘ffrr_a than Mr. LI{:;!’?e(_\: (;»: 5 5 s 2 — Colum 1 3 sla vas | £ rery e 2 s to Bl ces I 1 9D & therefors, neither English or Ameri- | Perhaps if Mr. Hughes would come | slon. But it would hardly be per- who“y"“‘fm;"mflge‘é' ‘!:]*’”m“»”l:’h“fl“s wes xlfl:f:‘ o L‘:‘:O 2 r"’:i:“:‘ lh‘if end | Hurley) is Bradstreet's Journal, she can citizens, aithough they may claim ! back, that would lower the tempera- | manent. cellent harbor had been a port of | of the year for the benefit of those who | Mouthpiece of a company that hae | ture .some.—New York World. Theoreticallw, New Thought 1s an | yopy a0’ go 000 S L | made a business of studying succes: ideal. Tt is soul socialism. In prac- o Duieb Do faee | dilee el feen il ‘ing the | and failure and the causes therefor ay, they stand noither In da¥-| Germany is a vital reminder that | tice it will probably never become un- | L20Y decades. When a handful of | ‘““The shortage of labor during the | 27d ta’lure Ll GOy B nor night-dark. They are twi- 2 s b el sl Veraal il il il hecome com French colonists, survivors of a mas- | first year or two of Danish occupation 8 great many years. In an &3 By iy s e ) e creal and Jow i ardlyy L o | Sacre on Crab island perpetrated by | was overcome by the importation of | ticle on Jan. 29, 1916, PBradstroet's hntere Until the present war | attribute when exercised in the wrong | mon. Many of the “Experiences” g yon3 p gpanjards from Porto Rico, | many slaves from the Gold Coast of | Said that it is worth noting that in B Rl ph direction.—Baltimore Star. ref,ml much :_nm t:: tnmmzv‘?}» o man- | reqohed its shores In a dugout In 1647 | Africa. The laws Soverning these | 1913, as in 1914, all extrancous causes 3 4 e e coiaion| Now, howeves e . practurerioisoaienimedicines - | they found evidences of an earlier s human chattels were extremely se- | Of failure—those over which the n- the - s o 7 “How long,” asks a writer in the fout doubt, Elizabeth Towne, easterh | tlement, hut no clues as to the na- | vere. ‘Drum dances’ and feasts were | dividual himself had lcast contro! In iency demands that all | New York Journal of Commerce, “‘be- | priestess of Lho_cun_, is sincere but tionality of their predecessors or of | forbidden and all slaves were required | the conduct of his business—had mora fighting men, between the | fore the government will have to reg- | the general public will hardly accebt | tpej; fate. These French wanderers | to be at home by sunset on Sundays. | influence than in some other vears: of eighteen and forty-five, pre- | Ulate labor as it now does capital?”’— [as final the “Experiences” of those | were not disposed to brave a similar | A slave transgressing such regulations | vet in 1915 only 25 per cent. of Dare Por oo . | Boston Herald. who claim New Thought has cured | myeterious end they sailed on. Was for the firse offense whipped, for | the actual business lures in thé vare for war in the trenches. This | them of threatened blindness, infury | s ons SRGs S0 they saled on. a8 A £ Eroet | A b na el i e | _ T L ; ndness,) HE ‘At about the time that Peter | the second his ears were cut off, and | United States were duc to causes othor ught about a s S af- | Captain Alexander Bang of the |to the spine, faclal ugliness. rupture, | Siuyvesant was establishing a repre- | for a third he was hanged and his | than the faults of those failing and fairs for the “twilight zoners.” More | Danish army saw only one mosquito |loss of smell and other physical ail- | sentative form of government on |head placed on a stake | this proportion w ien the highest in a visit to the Canal Zone. And now, | ments to which mortals are helr. | Manhattan island some of his fellow “In the neighboring island of St. |in a genecration the light of such | of course, there is none.—New York | Mentally, New Thought is a possible | countrymen were establishing the | John the slave laws were even more | testimony by Brad which 13 b OnSs e healer. Physically, its scope iS Im- | first recorded settlement on St. | drastic. Here are some of the penal- | based on specific reports, saying that New York World, have applied to the | lted. It might bring more sunshine | Thomas, These hardy colonists met | ties which brought about a b00dy | «0 per cont. of the failures resuited ; American state department for PADers | vya i will be recalled, appeared |INt0 the lives of those who are phy- | the same fate which overtook their | insurrection in 1733, costing the Uves | rrom cut-throat competition prices,” troley servi - ; to show they are American citizens. | from the dead as soon as Carranza | Sically ””'“P““‘:’:“;"‘ by nerrfllmdmz brother Hollanders of ‘New Amster- | of many white planters, 1h:h~ Wives | js mere assertion or support of ¢ And the state department has refused | began to talk about getting another | them™ to be content with their lot dam,’ for three vears after the town !and children: ‘The leader of rUNaway |:yjno that Mr. Hurley and his hear- lEreea L & on the Hudson became New York the | slaves shall be pinched three times g e L R I e | Losn from fhe Unlted Btates— Seastie | N0 T AL L : £ heaiine v be promoting. As a : | Bt intalligancar. = 22 b3 ai - Sin- | St. Thomas pioneers were forced to | with réd-hot iron, an °n hung. - of t Bradstreet's ales One of the salient cases in the entire | clair. Published by Tittle, Brown | surrender to the English also. The “‘Each other runaway slave sha {d~ Zompetiiion’ with only 57 | & Co.. Boston, $1.35 net. latter soon deserted the island and | lose one leg, or if his owner pardon i e i To those who llve in the crowded | turned to the more fertile lands of ' him, shall lose one ear and Treceive ,qqq t1,¢ (his proportion was sroator Tast there is a magnetic appeal, a | St. Martin’s and St. Eustatias, so that | 150 stripes than ary vear since 1900 -rw,fi the halo of romance, about the West, de- | in 1671, when th Danes, wishing to “‘A slave who runs away for elght | {45 40 Voar snc - n, r S e 5 v ! o =S ol ver of business men in lightfully interpreted by Mr. Sinclair | share in the colonial prosperity of jdays shail have 150 stripes, twelve | ;0 o B B 0 SPHORREEE TRA B his latest novel. It is i other Buropean nations, chartered the | weeks shall lose one leg, and six | (A7 BUF G0 (00 00 lod ,n y. dealing with big mountains, big | West India and Guinea company, St. | months shall forfeit his life, unless | o/ o0 FLn B : e ,’,’ a Bl lakes, big timber and a great “hiz” | Thamas, uninhabited again, was |the owner pardon him with the loss | | = (0 515 SPO% 00 FA00 B8re 5.4 man, big mentally and in heart as |awaiting the advent ot settlers who | of one leg. 3 . ST e e O B well as hody. By way of contrast, Mr. | were to establish Denmark’s rights in A slave who lifts his hand to | HEDer Who fa SSEARR oF com Sinclair mixes in a few characters of | the island. With two brief interru strike a white person or threaten him | B 0 B0 ,‘(:;"fr{_("n"([“’“ LRy CHiM o lesser proportion—but that 1s the | tions, this soverelgnty has been main- | with violence shall be pinched and | HEES 2 FoSTatic 90 per cent.! Tsnt 0se of scvering his soul from sev- | it refuses his : | way the Great Author did when the | taind from that day up to the present | hung, should the white person de- | % A ‘A¢H ";m_"”’:omnm‘nymn . 3 el | °s his appeal along with all | The thermometer at the Plattsburg | world was created. time. {EmEng il 9f net o doee hignlens haad TEGTED 8BS 0n AT nESe misguided thoughts that have | the rest. Where this man made his | camp Saturday registered 110 degrees. | The story Is woven around the| “The legend that St, Thomas wasat | “In the terrible insurrection one of | Ur" rather than the major one? | The boys down in Texas may feel more | struggles of Jack Fyfe and Stella Ben- | one time the headquarters of the | the victims was a Judge Soctman, who | The factis Mr. Furley is exploiting .o | contented when they hear about that. [ ton. his lovemaking, comparable in | ruthless buccaneers who terrorized | murdered and decapitated fin the |8 doctrine, end cultivating a doctrina B . e e his | __providence Journal. iftness and intensity to the forest | the Spanish Main for so many vears | presence of his beautiful 12,~_{)]qr,r.»|; e o ,,linf"f'<" ,.“m{]? i 2 York . Ainerican citizenship. If it is worth fire which wiped out his tract of tim- | is perpetuated in the names given to | daughter, and while a council was : k ental equilibriuvm His on the r of July 31 er | anything it is surely worth upholding. How is it that Candidate Hughes | ber; their opposite emotions when the | two towers still standing on the | being held to determine what should thesis was that when men know what exercise 1 Tughes mi have | “The twilight zoners” of England and | 13 not yet attacked the administra- | honeymoon became silvery and cold: | heights back of the seaport of Char- | be done with her the child, over- |it costs to do business they will 1ot 5ORC #2% tion’s policy in the Isand of Guam? |the fork in the road, and the final | lotte Amalie. On one hill is ‘Blue- | whelmed with grief, entreated them to | cut prices, which is as far from the Perhaps he aving that for a grand | discovery on Stella’s part that her | beard’s Castle,’ while on an adjacent | take her life also, to which plea they | mark as his argument in sunport of in the United | climax.—Albany Argus hushand was the bizgest part of the | height rises ‘Blackbeard’s Castle! | gleefully acceded, laying her wman- it The fact is, and we are now [Hotel and declared himself ready | States who willing!y expatiiate them- | Bie ocant: History does not substantiate the ro- | gled body across that of her father. | writing to grain dealers, that suc- ) e “The heauty of Mr. Sinclair's story | mantic tradition, and it is extremely “Tho insurrection was put down | cess in business depends on skill in Is the fact fhat it i of interest to | doubtful if the buccaneers were ever | only after aid from the Trench in | the art of merchandising, supplement- 3 am weak and you are strong, ot sexes it not o 's hook: it | in possession here. Martinique had been invoked. Three | eq by all those talents. congenital and is western trip. The arest | zenship they may need in emergency. Why then, why POSD SoEn SNk el Inan s boo “Whe he Danes arrived they | hundreq slaves were surroundeed and | painfuly acquired that go to makse - V. 3 , why then e ot Somansitocle it aha oris Vhen the an arrive the a ! D! juired that go to make up pproached to doing. this a!In the olden days when the diplo-|TO You the braver deeds belons; sk el e were under very strict orders as to | when they realized that escape Was |the efficient man. And so again 3 religious observances and with respect | impossible they held a great feast of If yvou have gifts and I have none, e - = to a ‘preparedness’ program against lflnmh, Tradition says that they S e It is- | plunged over a cliff, but the historlan Host savs that they shot one another, (Price Current Grain Reporter). pity that this is so; far better would | gavernment many of the misunder- lantic C: 3 arifora Depot TELEPHONT: and who has lost so much. Mexico is not with the whip anq spur, nean Ofice England there is a class of in-{ necessary; but spare her poar half be. | habitants known as the “twilight ned spirit of the Connecticut com- | “0ners.” These people are usually ex- ) AR patriated Americans, although they | e unc . way or another. the London- they were never embarrassed with | than two hundred of them, according to the London correspondent of the ritain | nt was a agement [UCH TO is that of a man who was born in ‘, Those who say the Democratic. par- g country ¢ naturalized Dutch | ty never does the right thing owe@ that e Charks © ; ’ arents. A¢ the age of six years he | PATtY an apalogy. It has retired “Cy- e beart S RS £ § Jiin e | clone” Davis and “Alfalfa Bill” Mur- R e London where he has| .,y Kansag City Journal. ¢ L f since residea. He had never thought | cool aft £ this request until the mili- Would you have supposed that one Eac the Tru : 'y authorities of England notifieq | POlitical party could contain both Mr. bose of n e e i1 | Bryan and a $650,000,000 naval pro- i i must male ready to go to the | grammer— Charlestown News and question i Y matri- | front. The State Department evident- | Courier. fial sensc however but for the | ly views him as an English citizen for harbor ) 1d for the mists as did his compatriots, was three weeks or so, or, since his | in not keeping a fi hold on ed over to t « £ the di- | other countries e usually made up pps or checked in at the River- | of wealthy persons bor divorce from some of the illu- | :(lves while at (1 ng Responsibility. that have been following him hold on to whatever s s of citi- | 1f T : festation of tiresomeness. matic service of this country was not ng to the dispatches the can in its present state of perfection such | ; ,{ I have shade and you have sun, he Hitching Post. rival colonis The fi order protested vigorously at the stren- | tactics worked. Now, however, the l Tis yours with frecer hand to give, Post Standardd sued by the governor was: ‘Every per- Horses and Morals, ! : acuse el (New York Su ‘Tis yours with truer grace to live, 2 son who speaks Danish is bound to at- | and that when they were found at o Ty n.) sunless, stand, We hear much nowadays about the | tenq service every Sunday in Chris- | Brim’s Bay they were lving in a cir- No more childish fancy based on the dream of a world as it isn’t guides the acts of living men than the idea program which his campaign | law specifically states that an A 1 d Than 1 who giftle e o n who lives abroad for any length | ywiiy barren life and hand. destructive influence of the automo- | tian’s fort when the drum beats, and | cle. he the last part of his present | of time must, to retain his citizenship bile upon American country life— - He is assured of a lighter pro- | visit the nearest American consulate not agk he little brook how it i doing away with the stm i i e B B ecen ol it el on his trip East. and register there at least once i To turn tig whee R e ‘hx( = ‘1 all justico to him, Mr. Hughos | every five years, That is stmplo enousn | U0 e IAri&r stream we look; | COOD ARRAY OF NEW BOOKS NAMED have a lighter program on his se who priz izenship ir N : - o o fiu for a long perio But Lt d pros : to those who prize citizenship i do not ask from sillken band isolation and rusticity. I\ I‘\IS T o Q HIS “ n “‘K Wnn:(”:& w” »tnl : 1‘ b a _But ! p-coming. The visit to the West | United States. Otherwise, t * heart of oak from wiliow wand; | The vacation tripper who secks to L 1 I‘I [41 E s l Iul l S 2/ 2N ral 8 d8Fobsnuctverand exe | cites the hatred or disdain of sur- otebeen oter-productive of good | should openly adopt some other do not ask the wren to go escape the whirl of city life for a | leme S — = | vivors. Th man 1 fond ts. as the thermometers | try. . to the heights the eagles know; | prief period each summer is forced to | Nor yet expect the lark >ar note | go farther and farther into the wil- g | e From out the dove's dumb throat. derness. Once secluded spots are now in all) those places he visited in |y oo BATATMORE TO BERLI accessible to the thousands who used brnia. The row that he stirred i “ | mis wisdom’s law, the perfect code— |t travel only by rail; the country | Among the ruins by Gomez Carrillo. After a twenty-two day trip across By love ins:mwl - ; : . landlord has been quick to learn the “A neutral Latin view of-the French | TR Al be easily | the ocean the super-submersible | Of him on whom much is bestowe wiles of his ecity brethren, offers hot | cause.”—Independent. | By oeabes vl Do b eadly : Is much required. [ and cold running water instead of a S o | Their true faith and allegiance by | American civilization: the negro by Prisoner of war by Andre \ . | imagines he will make men tremblo C. V. Roman. PR ot his posthumous power succeeds L Serbia in light and darkness: with | only in becoming an Ject of ridicule preface by Archbishop of Canter- | A will recently filed in Pennsyl- Bl v oy N Vel oyl vania forbids “farever” the pasturing cf “circus or show” horses on the es- it is, ihe received a chilly recep- b ‘that state between Republicans PR e : | tate. TUnless this was a mere fre cccentricity it could only vl P 1 bar’l at the general 1l - & prejudice against ircuses, ingly; the cracker bar’l a geners lantic monthly. . B iha el S CToat D ieT it ey lssrushine suca il wheel must | store has given way to the gReoling * xa “A discussion of the German-|and express disapproval even of tho LONe barrel. with a brilllant red sign quot- | g h oo of bei { American problem.” P R Gt 4 G ol tomneueal stecl ita s treneth o ; S Business of being a friend by Bertha 2 e great moral show” if he found it Lhe rf:",;'_ Bl eel its strength | ing the standard (ofl) price for that Conde. | Under three flags: with the Red | ohjectionable. Bt w SR "Dt given it sommodily 220 Cross in Belgium, France and | forses done that he should diserimi- [ ARSI N, SEtial Uiy G There are still a few places un- |y ... . y 1 S r S Clair Livings i o - - 5 e 5 e AoTe 2 r 1 | Inter arms, being essays written 1 Serbia, by St air Livingston | nate against them? LY Ban 12l 0 RMEGEG WES g W M Wi ielkRy Ghdio touched by the automobile’s unchari tivie OF war ,Mmum{‘\é‘ou'c“ and Ingeborg Steen-Flansen Even the severest of Puritans coul remarkable voyage for the Deutsch- Carlotta Perry. table wheels. One of these is Dan- S £ty i FERER TP E Ty T G s T Ty bury. Conn. One of its citize T RYS (R S T Sl s Fiction. ally responsible for the cholce of an ficient cause for many Progres- i . : ' St D et T 7 . ATCTIcnl @ Things. inz to his home paper, the Danbury : ) sily ‘sesponsivie for the cholca ot 11 = D L s e ( Cews int o bow. Conscript mother by Robert Herrick. < £ ly th o gt o o D e | i 560 work assigned to him, refrains from {ay| TG URO en B HOR Rl T e deploves the lack of hitching posts | Efting, kicking or balking, he !s a | this country until the day of her de- One need not, at this late day, within the city limits. e points to utline of industri e Souls on Fifth by Granvilla Barker. sy Sl S ) - eem el ¢ e 3 s An o trial history with good” horse. We doubt If the mos - ; clude the American girl among the | the fact that while Danbury boasts a special reference to prob] ! bRt Aolent t would refuse + ings, which is more to the point. | good things of the continent. She | ganeral hitomi s specialjEsrorence problems of |y o o .nd & mother by Gilbert | yiolent pacifie ould refuse to g [StneSDentschlanafvasSthelsubjectRonl il teray S Sl or So e i e 1S S S LCTIT EED Sess = HERDREE day by E. Cressy. | o gons ¢ : ture an old warharse ok nARjcoLiaIn % VS i the | care to go there and leave some of R | Cannan T e et S e | British vigil. Outside the three mile | past, and in euyv.case she is a subject | {heir ey e o e ! & : ; ! limit of American territorial waters | by herself. But therc is the Amer- | others. with DTt of b oine somo || Eoyertyandisacialiprogress b M aur | un s on Kanla L Eaikel by | Somucl FEopS Ut E1soRHORtree o SepentaE Snd | Hm £ et B oty with prospelt of having e ice Parmelee. speak: y S P- | provision is made for reformed eq ers and torpedo-boat destroyers| ican air, which eve had of them stolen.”” Moreover, he knows kins Adames. Sinnersill The fensmi- 'of loirouses’ his ; ! without the larger part of the ities, and espocially in New York, s | for i 5 e i PP : awaited her. But the wily old (‘:xp-&r' Sunn 12 s for a fact that Danbury merchants i Ch ah more evdn lewte AuA | | i indea b Deutschland arrived safe at the mouth . : . : i out, if, Indeed, It can be 2 2 The tuneful throat is bid to sing, pitcher and basin, and charges accord- | Atiantic classics: os Gustdve Ohlinger. af- | of the Weser yesterday. Despatches | The oak must reign the forest’s kind; from Berlin report a safe journey, all ys fr h = thed over at all. The ‘whole 3 rom the At 8 a pretty mess. The mere fact firam Johnson, the very formid- | members of the crew being in good periences. | e ! condition after their wonderful ex- | ves in that quarter, ‘[ he was invited to meet the Re- of California and (he’ i can candidate, refused to do so, Jand, the return from Baltimoge to party The candidate and mor did not even exchange parture through the Virginia Capes, being the case, Hughes will a sorry time of it carrying the en State. It cannot possibly be ow . Principles of health control by . Seliers When Pan pipes by Mary Taylor| o {rust he will be found to have ; a marvellous exhilaration; and there | Jost two important sales last wee | tain of the good ship was ever on!js the spiritval atmosphere of youth hey had no hitching pos the alert and succeeded in escaping. | and iden vhich—as an imm in front of their shops. — thought we're inclined to suggest that In this he had the best wishes of all [ 8rant from castern liurope said to Mr. Fortunate Danbury! Tife still goes the best punishment would be to let Alfred Zimmern—malkes you feel asfon its placid way in Connecticut, Forns of the Bufralo, ] sout of “frmness.” It tells Mr. | no horse so fine as a well-cared-for if you had grown wings. There Within T 50-mile radius of & Tow V. A H ches a i 0 » big tent o v that wise for a submarine that somewhat | tny American welcome, which Is at | cuse, on the shores of one of the Takes S e ;\f\r‘i':flv!;c::?ri‘rh!(fld) RS 1 ot plainly, and make it clear that he ressive vote. As Hiram John- ontrols just that portion of it, because t Thornton. none in law. Though on second les Evans Hughes has indeed d a bet mericans who could not hope other- | | Republican | ifted the blight carried by those that | least as exhilarating as the air, al- | of which central New Yorkers ought The Buffalo Demokrat, a German- sitania and other mer- | though Mpr. Stephen G m (who | to be proud, but which they are in the | language journal, has na howels of | differs materially from Mr. Roosevelt adores a contrasted form of societv) | habhit of iznoring because it is direct- | ompassion. Tt oukht to be tisfieq | ON the war questions and the duty of Canads Whiskey avers that it ricted to the vis- | Iy under their noses, is a hotel which the Uniteq States to the belligerents, w otk the Deutschland is safe | ;. fortunate v to carry the | still attempts to carry on the business 4 h if he hopes to win the masses of the t as well | and delicate tiptoeing of ezgshells that | people.” Large consignments of whiskey | ool by Mr. Hughes' expressive silences (Montreal Gazetvs) sound in its own harbor and the | right kind of introductions. Tt is at | of affording lodging for he | eyes of the world have seen a remark- | any r 1 Rupert Brooke found out | as man. Over the long rambling | there is nothing offensively American | Very soon and very plainly. The | have for many vears been arriving in for himsel?, thongh he did not think | stable weather-beaten sign: in his shy ana veiled “Americanism,” | Water must be spilled from one shoul- | Canada from the United Kingdom, der or the other. It needs no import- | and the coming of the gin boats from to reckon with the things worthy of | Fitehing, 5 . e Fa e A particular mention—about the beat of | With hay, | ana that if, in speculative theory or. . .¢e voice in Brie county to tell us | Holland has been somewhat of an he Bremen. No word has all_the goéd things which the United Hay and grain, 25c. as a tool of ratiocination, such an | that. Roosevelt and Hughes! Dyna- | annual event at the port of Mon- this ship for so long that | States, has. in store for the visitor |'A glance In the staple door tells the [ cbject as a “hyphen” may be supposed | mite and milk! Can they concord? |treal. Conditions in the matter of en- Does Mr. Hughes dare to speak out? [ livening beverages are about to % ) sation. the next b is the coming of m ti her lost. Stili from the @la W story. Not a horse in the stalls—for | to exist, it exists only as a bond of 5 3 the stalls have been torn out. And | . io petween ti As for Mr. Roosevelt, he must be [ reversed, however, for in duec tima < R ran e S any i vie — ior 3 n the republican candi- s 1 an apy ance at any time ; the floor is of cement. There @ e 0 E e »“ accumulating a wrath that will make | there will leave this port a shiploa \With Due Allowances. usually ffom 10 to 20 motor cars, date and the German vote. The im- !the Maine lakes boll. What will hap- | of whiskey made right In Canada, in (Kansas City Journal). standing insolently in the places once | Placable Buffalonian will not have it.pen to ‘“pussyfooting” when war- | Walkerville, in fact, in the hanner so, but charges straight against the footing begins? whiskey m,\n,;(flm,,mm\;j,-mqm\o_ On fear Beic 2oe: s, another such journey as R SR eutschland will serve to make the<e might just as well not have been | Peu ang hec B little ccupied by horses. The landlord sells S aios . Tor ¥ across the ocean part of It happened in a little town in Ohi). | occupied hy a e B. The closc litical prognos e o n s o |Sauer el Ty mherel 1 ino)||mute landishminking victim B oo o 1 made by him mwmon-place achievements of e | Bitening post inlalgnt If Mr. Hughes does nof very soon We may have to go to to escape from the mad rush of the weighs tons, took 200 cars to carry, and wo fill, it is calculated 2.600,000 bot (Birmingham Age-Herald.) This 1s somewhat of a\ start toward “So you have been called on to|returning past compliments. although it would take Canada a century or more to get anywhere near Britaln's record. The drinkers aéross the wa ter have something coming to them A _— tario. The consignmen Daanhury | disclose his views and, plans with re- A Real Grievance, © | gard to the great war and the position B betiof of all but : purple and gold. _ R of America as to war questions, what #By. George!” he exclaimed to an |au 2Rk | others who stand near and next to him lifornia, E at large. | ur. the sun go down in a splendor of | impa native louns Bcalnst ! have said on these questions must be | | I | | blican newspapers that can see ican affairs may be consider- } ne eye only t the candidate rightened as a rest £ 4 S sunse U BS one e ! 5 brightened as a result of the | post That's a gorgeous sunsef, Uncle Sam is holding up the cus- | considered. ~ So long as Mr. Hughes | “Yes, o himself. | | rs of the commissioners ap-! ‘ | | | 1l make some campaign speeches?” tha : | " replied the republican states- positively done injury lacan : { toms receipts of Santo Dumingo, till | himself intentionally keeps silent, we | man, re his journey westward he was | 1, by President Wilson to confor | native sianted his head a little | treaty matters are straightened out. [ are warranted in the assumption that “I dare say it won't be hard for you 84 by all, byeDemocrats and Re- | with the men jresenting Genera | @10 looked critically at the glowing | The power of the purse counts for | he approves the Roosevelt view of | to find fault with the party in power.” == AT B T R west _ | much even in a black-and-tan coun- | these questions and has accepted the “No, indeed. The very fact that it The world doesn’t change rmuch. feans, as a s F { Carranza. It is HetSebch (I S 1o bt bad | try. if firmly exercised.—Brooklyn | Rooscvelt war program is in power will be enough to keep my | The man who has the | upper hand of the Supreme Court which he | strong men will fail entirely in their | for a little place like Hoopville.” Bagle. | The Bufralo Demokrat is “frm,” the | tongue wagging until election day.” seldom arbitrates.—Berkshire Wagle, ) !

Other pages from this issue: