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NEW, BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, AUGUST 26, 1916. w BR"TAW .qc?“ LD against that t horde of specula- | the poll the coming elections. It | § N HLAA | tors that harassed other land grants | was so in 1912 on a larger scale. The | | T}! & WHAT OTHERS SAY Views on all sides of timely There is no substitute for plaving | | questions as discussed in ex- the game. High ideals are laudable i changes that come to thd | e Average Reader Seldom 4 — .15 p. m. | SHOW to the traveller from the Kast | thing should hold true on a smaller | 2 L Joke S e e e e e R Realizes Import of FPaper HERALD PUBLISHING COMPANY, L A Proprietor: \ journey into the far West will “ PLAY THE GAME. in the past [*»Mlt in the party put Woodrow Wil- | son in the White House. The same | | Half-Baked Theories, | || | A Mild Protest Against Idealists and | and gaod intent is essential to achieve- {1erald Oflice Pflds at the Post Oflice at New Britain . P hi e nt But neither high a 1s nor} ot the Post Office at T I e e e g g ood intent make for nsofniness unless | 1 . ! Washington, D. C., Aug. 26.—"Over | ial made from fibrous pulp, and some | Sco% !Btent make for usefuness unless ! their passessor has the practical coni- | How Not to Gei That Job, 1} £l | 5 i fabulously rich because of a start at | elements in the liepublican party in | S | of the United Stutes government. The | split as the law ailows, The first man- o £ ! ~thirds of the more ths sillion | investigators profess to have und ered by carriec to any part of the efty | (4 1 two-thirds of the more than billion | prof hay four b . 5 homesteaders have made money | ifestations will he on the governorship. | evidences that paper cxisted ir e A:l; 15 Cents a Week, 65 Cents a Month. i % &l pounds of wood pulp imported into | e sok ! it IRADEr eI SEe 1 iniith Ptions for paper to e sent by mail | off land given them for nothing and | Frank Healy and his followers are . Celestinl kingdom at least two centur- Payable in advance, £0 Cents a Month, | . = the United States during fiscal Ye€ar |jes pefore the Christinn era. Whether o Day s 7.00 @ Year. some of the land that was so secured | optimistic. $o are the men behind : ; : 5 : § Ll e TR o e come and gone and Labor Day loon | ending Junc 30, 1916, and used in the | these claims of centuries of priority ey ] A A n the horizor lot of good-as-new e . = 3 i rhaps o delusio is so common < = o * RaaliVe: s | manufacture of paper came from | will endure the light of further re- shiggns: B lusion! L e e tes o1 flecting more poly Frofitable advertlsing mclwm I qpound five and six hundred dollars | gers this morning gave out some very | Canada ording to a communica- | search, or whetl N be a asithat wnichiicreditsithe 1dealistafot lERusEe 858 o S e Be city. Circulazton books and press | Lo s SlEanie Chn Lo e s arghoon Whethon Facyi W be M S cach seneration, ‘and oficAch anochiin jlor ] oom always open to adverstaers. an acre. It takes time, of course, | optimistic statements. Governor Hol- | tion ie National Geographic so- | credited just as have heen same el conint by ith whatevep | 10 begin ciety from John Oliver La Goree and | tion’s claim to the invention of L £ SIS D A even e e e D¢ ho »d he s S i ; i progress is made in earh sencration | worth horrible exan | issued by the society as 4 bulietin in | mapiner's compass and sunpowder, | | comnection with the governments in- | the fact is fairly well established that Many and various things enter into the | but < :ady and willing to | quiry into the increase in the cost of | when the A defeated a raiding | | 110n sense to get down among men and (Collier’ Weekly.) play the game as men play it, striving : i : nad always to improve its character whilc Do R ST e o SNy ey st twenty vears ago is selling today up, bir. Blakesley. The campaign man neerf that they wi ha ey will have prove the Herala 11l be fourda on sate at Hot | ing's New Stand, 4tnd St and Broad- | Stase Where it is extremely desirabl 2y, New ork City; Roard Walk, at- | antic City. ani Hs | to cultivate land and bring it ! comb, with his usual modesty, re- | #nd each cpoch. There is no delusion | not to do it is afforded more persistent than that. Every in- | Sentence from & genuine application fuses to comment upon his chances, onc cubator of half-baked theories con-|for a real job in a living railroad soles ‘himself, as he seces them dis- | president’s oflice, as reported by one ptoved ane by one, that he has contri- [ of the technical journals: huted to the general, if not the spe-| A competent and dqualified sten- cific, progress of the race. Every un- | ographer, experienced in charting cempromising champfon of an ideal- | statistics, possessed of the taciturnity wceept the nomination if his party | newsbaper. army of Celestials before the gates | “The pulp importatic for 1916- | of Samarkand, in the middle of the 1916 have been 180 million pounds | cighth century, they captured a party BRI Raceas valuable. ~ And that is what will | draft him and takes in his place Frank | joss than for the previous twelve | of Chinamen who were skilled paper where | Healy, there will be trouble ahead. |months, yet the amouut shipped 1o |makers. It was from this city of Rus- | the railroads are now in poor shape, | Also, if Healy is not nominated there | us from Canada during the past year | sian Turkistan, once the capital of a 4 T stic principle flatter: s is!a seretic .cessary o associa- was 130 million pounds in excess of | that most ruthless of Mongol princes, | Lith principle flatters himself he is;and discy necesss associa i A Her 101 4=19158 shipm erts: merlane, that the art of these cap- 1IN his environment to a higher ! tion with executives broadly read of back over a placed on a par with the great roads | of the road. And Blakeslee, heaven “During the year just closed nearly|fiivesep e thioushoutiAsia Ninoy nad plane though he totally lacks proofs | matters germane to railroad opera- £ | > e 5 e < S i < " slear s oa of and compure | of the country. The area west and | be praised, he is the William Jennings | 70 per cent of our 1,135,000,000 | Northern Africa, into Moosish Spain ©f It. and excuses his obstinacy by | tion, a student of unity and clearnes: calling it firmness, | in composition, with an acquisition of New P . . ty | south of Little Rock, opening into the | Bryan of Connecticut. This is his | pounds of pulp came from our neigh- | and finally into Ttaly, where the first Khn i) 2 5 l bor to the north. while most of the | extensive factories were establishoy in _All human progress js the product | that uncommon knowledge of English | of compromise. Hec that shoots 00| __including the study of word diffe remaining 30 per cent. came from | 1276 at Fabriano, still a center of high comes no nearer the target than | entations—essentiul to the highest Norway and Sweden. the paper industry in Southern Eu- | "&h 2 i | after all, the fights and ructions and| “The enormous volume and import- | rope. Lol ';“;'SHD};"S too low. It is neces- | grade stenographic work, an omniv- sary that there be compromise with | orous though active reader with a vo- attle-royals and other things that |ance of the paper manufacturing in-| “The Arabs and their Persian as. #1 Aty dustry in the United States is seldom | sista » supposed to have used cy & ‘1' f’hern car be compromise in | capylary sufficiently large to meet the realized hv the chiaf hencficiary, the land cotton in the manufacture of Methods by which “evil is resisted, | o uirements of both your vocative compromise between the goal sa high average reader. According to {he[their first paper, and subsequentiy {oTPromise reached and the goal so low ‘1t s inop worth reaching. Thel|f1Licd tolE1ve such serylce as would by world has a definite name for him | who, because he cannot win to the milepost of his desires, declines to go half the way, but sits simply at the roint of origin and damns his neigh- bors as dull clods who will not 1li ?lnl”‘ by freight whenever the president their eves ta the stars went on a trip. Moral: However it There can be no comparison be- |1s in college, if you want something tween the uncompromising idealist |in business, don’t talk yourself out who withdraws from the game | of it czuse he dislikes the rules and the | practical] men of good intent | German Catholics nd Mexico. takes the world as he finds it, plays | (New York World.) he game as cleanly as he can, and | persistently strives to promote human | advancement. There is nothing in | common between these two types, ex- cept each hopes for race betterment The one either grows hitter through | fatile beatine of wings against the | cage of convention or quits the fight | 1o withdraw to his circumseribed cel] and thank God he s not as other men. The other accepts defeat only as a spur to redoubled endeavor, bears dis- Abpointment as mersly one of inewity | We Jook in valn for refevence to able vicissitudes of the ploncer, and | “Infamy and crime against the Catho- takes renewed ourage from every | li¢ church and her ey AN else- auestion, Primarily, railroading has TELEPHOND a lot to do with making farm land | will draft him. If his party does not DBRITAIN, but where they must of necessity be | will be many hard rocks to kick out ! oday great oil fields of Oklahoma, demands | third ,time out, and if he does not | ©| zood railroading facilities. It will | win, his followers will be peeved. So, who may | have them in course of time. Here | vears from | then is the chance for those ambi- | T events to | tious souls of the East who would | V. | foliow the advice once laid down by | and will be going on, in the Republi- 1 bave been going on and are going on, nd avocative correspondence, I am | can party in this state, are not 80 Very | most recent figures of United States | rags were extensively utilized. Cotton | encowraging. They do not place a @if- | Departnent of Commerce (1911) the ' and linen rags are still the hasis of value of the annual production Of | the best grades of paper, but the ar- e el e aiin | the paper mills of this courmry ex- | ticle used by the newspapers is made I THE STRIKE IS AVERTED. United we stand; divided we fall™ | * 4 "ga20000,000. Over $50,000,000 | exclusively of wood pulp. In the That > phrase means just What | or this sum is represented in news- | United Sfifes spruce, hemlock, aspen : g = it says. The Repullicans here are | paper—1,313,284 tons, or enough to {and popiar arc the most widely used versy are now ready for a strike. The | 2 % e e e e S s i et : : | Qivided. And if the Demoerats of | Print ten and a half billion fourtcens | woods, while in Burope the Scoteh fir rotherhoods, after accepting Presi-| e page, eight-column papers. The book | supplants the hemloclk. dent Wilson’s proposal for a settle-| Comnecticut get together this time and § ;1 ot (plain, coated and cover) out-| “England manufactures much of do the right thing they can easily | put was valued at $73,000,000 in 1914, [ her paper from esparto or Spanish Horace Greely, “Go West, young man, demunded by one in your capacity Our polysyllabic friend did not get the place. Probably the railroad people were afraid that his “‘sufficient- ly large” vocabulary would have to be Srow up with the country.” ——— == = ferent meaning on the old time slogan Both sides in the railroad cont bring about the fall of the Republi- |an increasc of 34 per cent. over 1909. [ grass, which has heen quite exten- The weight of this class of paper was | sively imported by that country from 1,869,958,000 pounds—enough to | North Africa during the last 50 years. on to make haste in determining their | print 83 standard-size magazines of | Germany and France use quantities-of | action, have drafted their proposal| In 1912 the Hon. Theodore Roose- | 120 pages each for every man. woman | rve, wheat, oat and barley straw in S ndas . 5 - . i e and child in the United States. the paper-making industry. The wide- el nd are turning it in to the President | velt made a prediction. He said “The s e e er | e T o omeT chicay | ment, are growing impatient over the delayed answer of the railraads. The 5 hotics cans. It is due. | | | yresidents of the raiireads, spurred | In the official printed copy of Presi- dent Frey’s report to the German Catholic Central-Verein, meeti | New York, occur these words ‘Our neighbor publie, infortu~ nate Mexico, canno nd quietude. Owing to the swaying attitude of our government, the perpetrators of in- shments of the TUnited Siates with the caustic| Republican party is not coming back.” | calendered paper two essential in.)fom England, Germany, France, Bel- remark that if the brotherhoods do | IIc is a far-sighted man, the Colonel. | gredients—casein and kaolin—are ex- | gium and Italy. Its name is a mis- i tensively imported. TFor the nine ! nomer and was given to a soft quality tions of Chambe f Com- e months ending March 31st, 1916. our | of Chinese paper introduced into Eng- Be What inc Uhteome will be mojil o U= GoRsldes RreRihereforel| FACTS AND FANCIES, receipts of casein from abroad reached | land in the eighteenth century but, | ready to fly at each other’s necks. One | e the enormous total of 7,185,794 pounds : like many other commodities brought B the interest thet is taken by | WOT@ from the leaders of the brother- With one voice the hotel stewards |Valued at $598,979, much of which, of | from the Far Fast during that per- those who are commected with | 2045 and the entire railroad system | of the country, in convention in New | ‘f':h;‘»fit.‘\\':\sy.ufl";inllx\'.wr‘v‘Awl\;;: “.‘rt;:n:wi‘; :::‘r:}\.i‘m\?“v;-c-‘ny ‘;““n‘y‘;‘\’ y”l'v'\“! ll:y,(,; mnmm‘ s of ti it | cf the United States will be thrown | YOI city, speak for the bill-of-fare|as in Dbaber Mamu ATIATE. = -Ash Rl o e o is nature. Because of the | printed in English. A vindication of | the principal ingredient in cheese, and | city is due largely to the admixture o braination of facilities that have| !7'¢ Within an hour. A nation Will| cvery free citizen's right to name his|in its pure form is a white crumbling | mineral matter with the fibre. Tts face starvation. “-(,“,1' in the tongue under which he | acid substance. Most of our im-.thinness is due to special processes of It remains to be seen if the gnod | achieves his appetite—New York | Ported kaolin or china clay, which is | ‘heating. v used in the manufacture of porcelain “Up to the closing years of the | offices of President Wilson cannot as well as in paper-making, comes !eighteenth century all paper was made onference the 1 industrial : | Tot accept it, “they know what they | e P famy and crime against the Catholic Bt I knows. But it mani- church and her servants have taken hold of the government there.” inch of progress where, upon a scale so vast as to hold | Emerson has done infinitely mare | the harm than good by his oft-quoted ad- To the persecution of Catholic | : rice “hitch your w: o » | Croats and-Poles; to the suppression prevent this impending disaster. All from England, the shipments from | by hand, sheet by sheet, but in the Y.c¢ t6 “hiteh vour wegon fo a star.” | eS8 SO 0 B8 (8 O I8 Sie el P BT T - > rmie: s e a A e = 5 e ting | &2 rear that Napoleon fought the ), i e Gl e s 2 o i & fne ol reining hand | The forces | o) SHSrEVg hasibeen dizected oRthat! W T efanmicsfofiithe fAllics hayeRbcenjhat mr'm‘g:v‘n"n:? mhl"mr;mjxm: -1‘0 l']vrvnt(l’rx‘(o;lth‘r“' 1"\-1»-u.lmu Touis Robert, tAlks in platitudes and lectures his| for their desire of freedom; B > hay e ; | cnd for the past week or more. He| C@lled a steam roller, a sledge ham- |over 500,000, ROUDNY ERAEs Sls e e ) i = i1 1'elghbors on their shortcomings while To the plunder of the French Do- jnature have been overcome and 2 | e ol & R G Any one of [ 478.905. Our total imports of kaolin [a humble workman in the paper mill = LS ¢ NS T TS STV [ R G S et . 3 4 ot g o T poL e ¢ Paris, Dis wife takes in washing to feed her [ minican mission in Armenia by Turks, i those terms is all right enough, but|from all countries for the year cnd-:of Didot, at sones. south o ari; children It is the excuse of the ex- | the turning of its consecrated build- lem, one that is favorable to the| Jet's have one at a time and don’t let’s | ing June 30th, 1916, were valued at | invented a machine for making paper S e e e e e Mosiort b ool Lihiot wionge ) € ; v e T 1ave th crac v - ss the ipments from ' in an endless web. This invention was iz a | ings Mos s 3 ngs brotherhoods; but which the railroad | have the nut cracker deliver sledge-|$100,000 less than the shipments from ; jan endl i Tnzland by the two T hose elocution has at last been dis-|of the Sisters of the Presentation owners do not accept in entirety. On | Pammer blows, the steam roller form | England alone the year before developed “he lost a fortune in COVered to contain nothing of action. | there, the murder of two Catholic Ar- or entering wedge nor the sledgo ham- | “Flowever much we aenl "'“‘J‘W“p'i“”:’.“'n'( O T ea Tt is the plausible reason given by | menian Bishops, many priests - mer mow down the enemy any more. | stringency in raw material for the pa- | th sionee he 2 e o desiiir e et Pt vile and slander the President of the| — Roo s ' B i o ab y ol cever, are perpetuated in the pa- UESTRVEIQ Roescribesithefil B0 i thousandafiof S commyunlcan & Rochester Union. per market brought about by the ""’“9‘( DEL) 2 mountain of righteousness to which To German accusations again brought about already in this 1 world's attention er, it is permanently fitted for the ness of manufacturing, and this pite the fact that nature in no ter achievements are yet to take e. Another twenty years and| F Britain will be famous through- the world top of that, the rallroad managers re- SOUTHWESTERN CHANCE. TUnited States nanc! rgans i Furopean war, it should be for- | per-making machines of the present nited ites. Financial organs in Curopean war, it should not be for- | per-m m e e T T R o Lo PR S e lew dwellers in the so called effete | yya)) Street do the s ; 1 otten that to the beneficent results | day. i | all Strect do the same. They clalm| . Kelly Pool has been nominated | og u nattle fouaht nearly 12 centuries | The first American paper mill was | had they consented to ride in his|inable and so false that German Cath- know anything about Arkansas | Favon rorki fl . . sn ything | he Is favoring the workingmen and | by the Democratic party far Secretary ago can be traced the introduction of ! established hy William Rittenhouse in | “a80M. ’ olics have indignantly refuted them; than that it has become the butt | asking too much from capital. In all| of State in Missourl.—Chicago Herald. | {he art of paper making to the west- | Roxhorouzh, near Philadelphia, just There is no substitute for plaving |, the murder of many such priests; a1l those drummers’ yarns that | this the railroad managers forget that| _Colonel Tobe Hert, who is in charge | o, world. China is credited with | 82 yvears after the first permanent ‘}x.h game. Down among men is the of \ihemEiz WD rivel of sthelRepublican (e s Sl s S E i Tneglish settlement in the United | Place for the champi~n of an idea he party on the Western front, has had | conceived the idea of a writing mater- } States at Jamestown.” | would impress upon the world. If he ous by Opie Read. That was the | templated strike would have been in| ro military experience, but his finan- | < oo oo - i RN . | stands aloof, bemoaning the mediocri- ansas of another day and the trav- | force long ago. He held it off when | cial experience is all that could be de- g B | :“ of his generation, he leaves it as through that ;lace today would | he permitted the controversy to be| SiFed:—Iloulsville Couriere-Journal. TGS £ CEmLInE, e, are snidiarious SBIhe NetatoPienan g ioe found b sliEIe hopeeitunediiio | s ment has prescribed the regulations : Dead Sea ashes, all his ambitions for i o erens place from fhat which | brousht dlrect ol bim, | This was | 0 e R 21 Common Words Which Are Often | which govern the consuls and’ has 800d thwarted and destroyed as tmagining might conjecture. There. | done after the railroad managers o9 Cerman authoritios Wliave Written Incorrectly. printed them in a handbook which is | though they had never existed.—Salt to the wanton destruction of the great Catholic University of Louvain and shelling of Rheims Cathedral To von Bissing’s revenge on Car- dinal Mercier for deploring in his fa- mous pastoral “the imprisonment of the (Catholic Belgian) nation on its own soil,” even though the Pope wrote to the cardinal that he “shared ered about a slow train made | were it not for the President the con- some wonderful spots in Arkansas, [ themselves failed In settling the dif- | to remit the fine of $230,000 tmposed | e bt 2 Cordal e . | his sorrow and his anguish’—to such dert . y sed| Here are 21 common words fre- [ o o S8 B L e parasranhe ki o his sorTow a he wonderful scenery, lots of good | ferences hetween the workers and the | on Brussels, the capit i FSLAD RS I oM ol oL ACE0 DAtRETRDAS r V - oppression and atrocity i d the) on Brussels, the capital of Belgium, | (uently misspelled. Get some one to | apply to all consuls, and all of them BOY BABIES INCRFASING. ar ABEIEtOn U arity tecause that city celebrated the na- | J planned Germar assault tional fete day on July 21. The city | | | | Lad pluck enaugh to protest against Ithy climate, and an abundance | railroads, and after a board of media- \”’ ught better of it and have decided divided into some three thousand par- Lake Herald-Republican B e | | hills and dells. Nor a.c all the | tion had labored six months on the| dictate the following paragraph to yvou ' apply to some consu When a cor 2 = = |uas By 2 _ sul blunders or is ignorant, or negli- | Naturc Already Redressing the Bal- | upon the liberties of Iiurope, whereint el Anaas el e aal e gent, the state department corrects | ance in the Countries at War. eral head of “hill-billies.”” All of | President of the United States has| Germans recognize the point as well o him, teaches him, or reprimands him. | (New Y. ¢ g e o : | toko: T : o oy Sometimes it recalls him, for there are ch is merely a prelude to saying | Jaid aside all other business of the| token. At all events the Germans a e i ety 4 | o % polansare The privilege of separating ninety ! ,,,,¢ temptations in a consul's path, t there have been opened up in | nation while he attempts to straighten J‘j:\“'“ ; to losc m;flmh by showing a | iccellaneous callendars, arranged in | .4 occasionally one stumble i L 50000 aue g 3 sttle leniency.—Troy Times, | Gl SiE el ! [ anc asionall > stumbles and t state almost 160,000 acres of | ont this momentous tangle. While he two parallel lines, was agamst the ;. mhe correspondence with the of the superintendent, so and see how many of them you can ple in Arkansas classed under a | same question to no avall. Now the Coruoleais s annon e ey | scribable, are President Frey and those ork Times Sunday Magazine.) | who applaud him blind Are they As far as the next generation is |deaf? Are they callo: concerned, the question of the balance | “Unfortunate ilexico,” indeed It of the sexes, is expected to find its | has suffered under the g of t solution in an extraordinary phe- | pure and noble Huerta and under nomecnon, first announced from Buda- | other hanner But before German pest, then from Vienna, later from | Catholics waste more breath about of- German cities, and now receiving a (fenses which have been committed on smm]_r]c!]n_. n‘x the sy oy of drainage | certain confirmation in Paris. This Is | Catholics in Mexico, let us B At ot i60lac e L ,m,‘,l,,,‘,{ The Judge—*“Drunk again, ch? Five | *hich might have brought on a dis >‘l‘{\“|‘if‘ I_(?"{“:”‘“‘\_"‘ b “V"“[“”““':;::D o 'h@‘ fact lflf_ ']j“l great ercess ‘*;v"'y”lfr' hear from them one word ) i) ptie onll be | simcn fhore it aemt e fni) T vour benoy T have only peosCcme WUl meceeshng for Ber 00 Tee L0 o ad aue Amerieanin | e i S b o R ey il TG . The, initial expenses would be | g sreat strikes that| collars!™ “Then’ there's nothing | ceive her instrnction in grammar. SaTE oS ahee : Lrocpel ans lature ; rely the transportation and reg caused disruption to the nation’s busi- ! for you but the workhouse, If vou '!1 {(.nv V‘t\u; e ”!”m”“\(rk Eoillorompe remed ”f:':.‘ the i 1 ‘”:] o | = suls to protect them, acting er the | of men in warfare, a »arent | tion fees, and there is room for | ness. And neither one of these Presi- had not got drunk with yonr money VIng (i StatiiD e ent Does! o e e R O S e you would have had enough to pay = : - ; have recently Hhe One S, Bay The average man knows little about The managem of the diplomatiz | medical authorities have recently i P meias omesteaders seeking plots of farm | in preventing those strikes. set- | the state department, but his ignor- |Service is not so varled a task as the | presented scemingly adeauate scien- at Feders iff e after . —_— 3 anagement 1 e e e o ific explanations. d in Arkansas from the Federal | tled all the differences after the strikes ‘e is not so reprehensible if we look | management of the consuls, for there | tific exp : | Central-Verein mean also the 1 ance is not so reprehensible if we look | "0 ihout two hundred American | In the Baudelocque wood of ! sroinum 2 ditis e ernment have but to live up to | had been in vogue for some months IN THE COUNTRY. at the matter from his point of view. qiplomats, and are concentrated | great Maternite hospital in Paris th United States government should have children. Of these 21 were males spell carrectly, says the American fn land which may be had for the | is engaged in the wark of preventing : i 1r§‘vm"i_n1°> . % consuls arge in volume and varied .\:r)n‘m'\:Tl": ;m ‘r;nl,\' thing that is | his nicce, not to ““»‘f‘(?‘f’l‘"m b‘:“im in character. It embraces every sub- wasted ot of enthusiasm is strewed | Yernment or cause it to lose e mimnabl ons = liflcatlons are v 5 5 e - : j aginable, from:a pt. The qualifica lons are within | brickbats and stones by those who, araund by folks who haven't any idea | removed the principal calendars and ¢ reach of almost any person who | should help rather than hinder. { how to use it.—DBennington Banner thus relieved her uncle of a strain ing from the United States govern- | = strike he 1Is being pounded with consul’s per- h get away from the pressure of city | in the @leveland and Roosevelt re- liscipline is its bouast and whose Kul- tur is the last word in ordered effi- cienoy. Andl when the misdeeds of bost a thousand settlers. dents, great as they were, band - re ascribed ernment,” does the German Catholic followi terms They must| and the country was aflame. TIn i stindayin thiopen, S e GERE > departmer 1t the « i) K g 3 3 e T He never deals with the department t the B lics from the consequences of imperial bw they jefore have exer- | present instance President Wilson i L £ et cor, R e o ties are not so diver of S theory = L amii in th’ felds self, and, S 1 k ed the homestead right, that they | acting on the theary that an ounce of | o' rustlin’ hay, | port where there is direct foreign in- ' CO portance. I i not already own 160 acres of land, | prevention Is worth, in this more | Fills th* heart chuck'd full o’ hopin’, | tercourse, he sees nothing to remind | Sreater imporfance. In nermal times interests abroad - 2 fo agents am S on the state department is always of | the same day, in an adjoinir German frightfuiness, . | of the same hospital. 17 children were Bk born, 16 being male: Thot Alecholl Habit: “If this phenomenon should prove = R to be general,” says M. Urkain Gohier, the famous TFrench editor, in Paris Journal, “it will be the 1 : t who will be scarce and who will [ In8 in Great Britain has resulted in be at a premium between the years of | & Violent conflict with the a t 1940 and 1950." of absolute prohibition. These »n them, and, as conscquence, ot et s diplomat or consul w although at they arc willing to reside | than all the cure the raflmoads can| Cause there ain't no earthly chores, | him of American An a feller doesn’t have to worpk | takes the executive governmer that da; Washington for granted and does nog | COUTse, rving them, as it al T AL T ches ihe @ that they are lon and cultivate for a period of | transport over their lines. It would | \. This | be much easier for him to let the| Restrictior gulation of the sale of liquors 1 intoxic concern himseli with the que v of | brotherhoeds and the railroad man-| Nothin then to do but dreamin’ | how it operates. Yet the regular {=EHCONoM 5y 5 ; t out regard to ir feelings ee years the land given th ; Bmerely to preciude the invasion and it criticises them homesteads, In | agers go to it hammer and tongs and | From th’ mornin’ to th’ night, ness of the state department o 5 . ; .| fight it out in the regulation way. In th' calm an’ peace an’ sweet- | tensive and important. I make no el e i ness of it all; apology for telling what a few of the ding an e sure no syndi- | There is no law against a strike, and | when tneyes no sich Arkansas JEEaiots jro i n wait for blunders, and pounces up- thing as | duties arc o has not =ot a The Care of Strects, trol designed restrict consumption {he President has no power to prevent | schemin’, It manages the consular service, and | grievance against his home ! Pall Mall Gazette.) of alcohol the wres for the first six to go one | cne ment is a rarity Our diplomaiic Sotekas : g months of 1916 show an increased g . cervice is not as excellent as our ~on- ather than that which comes | Where there ain’t ne wrong——jus the map of the world is dotted with irst alderman—Here's a fine-look Jposes that the | from the role of mediator. If in this| N right,— American consuls. The service num. Service Is 1ot ag e2ee et Seonal Yj‘!f:f\fr‘r EnE ELG K- | expenditure over those of the half h 3 And a human soul must bers more than twelve hundred peo- Sular service. Secretaries of embassy | Ing stre ttto—You" ght. What's | Year preceding homesteads shall do | instance he does prevent a strike, ta | iy A0 el s wo hundred and elghty-ning And legation are appointed, as. the S 4‘hndlhr:”YW ;“ (i”u‘:;;hr{:” hat's R R T e 2 500,000 daily for intoxi- Al Lers have it dug up for a sewer. | Pending §2,800000 daily “Of course; I thought you woula | 000.000.” understand that. Then, after it {s | Parison with the total cost of the w paved and a drain put in, we'll have [and it is made to confirm the de- | it repavea mand that prohibition shall be m “All in readiness to be dug up [total in order to reach practical re- again for the gaspipe I see you un- [ sults. derstand the principles of municipal But there must be something wrong economy. And after we have had it |in the manner of carrying out a repaved for the second time, then |sche of regulation which has what seemed rcusonable. No such difficulty 111 cultivate the land for | him must go all the credit, for he| prindipal officers, three times as many they | as been helped not at all by the rail- | Oh, it's great U spend a Sund: ice-consuls and consular | In God's Garden out-o'-town, wut they cannot.expect promotion in it, and 1o this : 3 sides clerks, consular assistants, ir When th' flow an', trees preters, and’student interpreters. The things are all a-bloom. st Zuarantee not to absent the road presidents and precious little talent does nof seek ad ion + it d not seek admission to This figures largely in com ves for any material length of time | by the brotherhoods,—both of whom : career i"h offers poor prospec: ives for material length of tim ¥ e e e reer whish offers poor prospects thout first notifying the Land Office | #re ready and willing to go on the| Why, it even makes a.Monday il =il and second fo nons Efancement. T ix not strange Washi 0. ey 2 war path. The people of the nation| Seem a little farther down in efficiency. Before the reform fore: fhat some of the young men who will have President Wilson to thanlk | G i Sl v g ar (NG measures of 1906 put it upon a perma- ; 10 £eek it are of the class who ac- dlled frith e loon nent merit basis it was an inferior C°Pt Edmond About's definition of service,. Therc were a few men of a ; diPlomacy and think it is “the art of high order of ability in it, but the av- | {YINg one's cravat.”—Galllard Hunt in erage was low, for the consuls were | [IAfPer’s Magazine for September appointed at the instance of politicians, | and politicians chose théir friends | A Rensonable Supposttion “Well, then it will be ready for | has been found in Russia, nor yet in * and henchmen. The state department ONto Rt T widening. There's notning T admire [ France. where similar restrictions are used to try to train them, but they | o : s0 much as system in the care and im- | enforced. The readfest explanation | were dismissed before they were | e suppose any achievement af this . .... Not MatelalG, v G |is that the ul#a prohibitionists are some of them were not | Weak and vacillating Administration | provement of our roadways.” S e e e b th’ open trainable. Happily, these conditions ‘\‘_‘hu'l:] A\I;»‘ ]Hnalhrm- doesn’t mention, | o IpLheiRch { s G Etop IEefthedhiederaly iicgonye) systom for Not Material e = z od’s Garden out-0'-to B s o o 5 Newspaper and hillboard advertising In (,“\( 1 ‘x‘t‘ : \\H‘v\ . | are selected . for the consular m\mnrt'. {\ !m!(I_\ foolish and not (Bittaraiin ooy s :”lull e ”h]-‘v\\wy“\ : the gov- | of the pubiic weal with offices in Ioghignsrss \fter they have passed a severe e actualig criminel T, | arly 5,000,00 Tk | i i Sl Don’t you think it rather foolish to | ©f nearly 100 recruits and bil i 1 new Bment. s is probably the most | Hartford are prone to spill a little | For, it cets th’ heart to hopin’ ination: the tenure of office is reason mortgage a home to buy an antomo- | lions of monc This is no reflection \bly certain, and promotions come it If the Mexican Commission is to | hije2" m British patriotism. It is a little fowed the settlers. and no one else if a strike is averted. | of fourteen months any settler | If it is not, the blame lies elsewhere. | It's not so hard returnin’ | Through th' city’s narrow door | When your heart is thrilled and filled with life a“new: wi E qualifications he | Looking upon the ruction of Con-| An’ your brain don’t have that burnin’ exceedin low | necticut Republicanism as a sooth- | That you kind o felt hefore Just the day before the country called to you in fee ¢ and | Jiminary “warming up” which wil trained. and nce jho ha Itiv his land wishes to | DIVIDED, THEY FALL. from the govern- After that the | ing tonic for the nerves, as a as he . So | eventually end in a love feast, is the Spendin’ Sunday in - have passed; now active yvoung men ings attached | height 6f optimism. Those guardians Lrtile land government has | philosophy of their own invention Ana it chases ev'ry frown, ) 4 "Till you almost b'lieve sometimes | the record is good. It is not an easy | meet at a coastal place Dias Creek or| “Oh, T dor’t know. When vou have | object lessan in appliea psychology. < 2 8 g Z " that dreams come true. thing to he a good consul. The re- | Ria Grande in southern New Jersey|an automobile you don’t care whether | 1t bavs to advertise.—Springficld Rew d for this reason it is playing safe | within the party point to success at | WY LADD. sponsibilities are heavy and the duties might be suggested.—New York Sun. | you have a home or not.” publican, ] rown open to homesteaders in years. | on the subject. All the bitter fights