New Britain Herald Newspaper, August 30, 1916, Page 6

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b w BREI‘AIN HERALD‘ than ecither of the contending forces, wit defenses Congress is properly ex T | ” ’ must be taken into consideration. And pending moncy (hat will some day re- - Bt e Mc MILLAN S HERALD PUBLISHING COMPANY, the American public which has suf- dound to the public weal. Lf that : : Proprietors. fered so much in silence is going to can be called cxtravagance & now o = ——— } New Britain’s DBusy Big Store— ued dally (Sunday excepted) at 4:15 p. m., | raise its voice this time. It is going name is en preparedness and the S 3 et Herald Buflding. 67 Church St A : S “Always Reliable.” : to demand that the men in Washing- | Republicans indeed have an issue. > Z ptered at the Post Office at New Britaia B e moat O e e ton who represent the American peo- Othery extravagance as a cam- ple act and act quickly in their inter- paign cry must be buried along with livered by carriec to any part of the efcy A 5 for 15 Cenen a Weele a5 Cents a Month. | est. Otherwise the nation might as | the other spectres of night that have Becriptions for paper to pe sent by matl | L .o > the fatre. hisons e . : Subtions for paper to ve sent by mew | well give up all hope for the future. | risen in the political grave-yard and L] $7.60 a Year Public opinion is now forming. The | which were dispelled promptly and LWy 77 . A Flnai he oniy prontabie advertisire mctmm m | railroad brotherhoods, the 'railroad | cfficaciously by the broad day light of / =7, N7 = { 3 Y’ 3 A e ess will be tried by the final deci- ; Stand, 4%nd St and Broad. | sion of that opinion. The wisdom and -P'resident Willlam H. Taft, in : g ‘ : \ NN o vy Poard Walk. 4t | justice of President Wilson will be | Chicago to attend the American Bar %Y/ 3 7 < 4 4 RN S R . § 0 '\\ A : tried. He has studied the situation | Association’s convention, walked four g /7\ NSRS Y ¥ : NG HCIN N N earance 2 el at close range and his message to | blocks through downtown streets and T\ 5 L ; ) ; Sae o Congress yesterday tersely sums up | No one recognized him. And he wore the whole S Thellogislationy heilinowihiskersitofidecaiyofcy A DOMINANT AMERICAN. recommends is as impartial as the | oGl T e o] S SR £ : : e SR : . St. John Gaffney, who was for- | Mind of man can make it. He repre- | % el ) 3 ‘R B o N, 2 eriy United States Consul General at | Sents neither the brotherhoods Or | . .o 0’ 0 the re-election of g x (2 ; s Il unich, arrived in New York yester- | the Dresidents. He pleads for the | o o =0 0, ¥ to begin a tirade of abuse against | American people. It is now. up to O e esident Wilson. T. St. John was | Congress to act. The time is short; FACTS AND FANCIES. rced out of office some months ago ‘ but if that body of law make e e g Ry & g 7 N ause of his —— ; cides to do the right thing and is on And when Mr. Hughes gets to t Wi ¢ cause of his unneutral attitude. He < Rocky Mountain National Park, what i) 7 4 q; ) of completing legislation R Il therefore be good material for | the verse will he find wrong with that?——Omaha arles Evans Hughes, who is espous- | that will prevent this nation-wide | ywor1d-Herald. & the cause of all those who had to | Strike, the railroad men must allow e e way to Deserving Democrats. He | this to be done or : . 5 sharks, no threats of strikes and no g RIEIESNER : 1 . 8614 be especially popular in Ameri- | hands of public opinion, the e B e e f il : Urnln n circles since some of his fellow | enemy a man or an organization can |\ seay | 2 ssengers on the boat that brought | ever hope to make. This nation has | NS [ e Ono.s &fl n 4 : i > poi vhere the rights | It has just about gotten so in this | : 7 . m over declare he said, “I wish to | reached the point where & J B LB i country that everybody is demanding | ON ALL SUMMER bd I had been the man who fired | Of its people must be respected, re- : ept escaped convicts B 2 | recognition exc scape So— e torpedo into the Lusitania.” gardless of whose quarrel s on. DRESSES @ | Dallas News L T. St. John Gaffney is a thorough- | O 0 i Y led American. He was not born in | ANOTHER SPECTRE DISPELLED. Old Franz Josef has had another | ! ElHlEe c() g ¥ WASH SKIRTS % i A s have noticed that is country, but he is a loyal soul. So Issues in the present campaign for | chill, but the Allic SEPARATE COATS | clse suffer at the | After all, the backyard has 1o | | S = } : i i | ordinary chills don’t give the old gen- : 3 al, in fact, that other utterances at- | the presidency have a pleasant way | 4 s S ! 3 f S . h | | tleman cold feet.—IHouston Post. ) l l ,“ ) b H d puted to him have to do with how | of intruding themselves upon the | i ol gems O cOfttis aiia ry are CLOTH SUITS, ETC would like to see the German flag | public gaze and then as suddenly | The war will last a good while f [ S, C. ating over the capitol bullding at | faling from sisht. They do not re. | lonser becuuse It Is obvlous that ho | I Wonderfully reproduced on Columbia Austrian 1 aster tha e Rus- pshington. He has denied this part [ main around long enough to get ac- | 8t &8 PR 0 0 Fe fls AT GREATLY REDUCED the story and states, “What I did | quainted. Thus, the latest battle-cry | S I : Records ‘Nith all the warm depth Of Senti_ v ] PRICES. was that I would like to help haul | which had all the ear-marks of an | The price of cotton has to slip back wn the Union Jack from there.” The ir issue has disappeared probably never . & few notches once in a while to get on nas the Hon. (ihey sometimes | o retun. It wan “Btravagancer | & runnine sort for e nest, nien | W) ment that makes their appeal universal. - § SALE BEGINS AT i 8:30 A. M. PROMPT. t that prefix in front of the names of | Républicans had hit upon that idea | I at men) Mr. Gaffney to thank for | as the most feasible of all, especially | It some one should write a sonz, | | Here ar e he spl 1 i 1 s information. Up to this time no | gince the Democrats had pledged in | “The End of a Perfect Vacation,” it g A e three from the P endid list in the e knew the Union Jack was floating | their party platform that this admin- "'i!:)h‘!vmnke at least a. seasonal: nit. y Columbia Record Catalogue: ot WATCH US C R THE RACKS bm the flagstaff of the capitol. istration would be conducted along | —Baltimore News. k AND SHELVES in a hurry Friday n a statement given to newspaper | lines of retrenchment. After the | mpo arop in the price of gasoline o A 5245 (ANNIE LAURIE. Alice Nielsen, Soprano, Morning. No goods carried over, porters Mr. Gaffney announces he is | action of Congress in appropriating . may be explained by the theory that | i 12-inch {KATHLEEN MAVOURNEEN. Alice Nielsen, = B | is our policy. king arrangements with the | some $800,000,000 for the defense of | they don’t nr(‘d' the money any more. | 7 $1.50 Soprano. ¢ i ghes managers to stump the coun- | the nation the Republicans could see | —Buffalo Enquirer. | | against President Wilson and in [ no signs of economy. Rather did they | A 1799 [YE BANKS AND BRAES O’ BONNIE DOON. - .-i i .}' | 22 SUMMER DRESSES One pleasant feature of the political i i ST interest of the 100 per cent candi- | liken this to an era of unprecedented , campaign, compared with that of 1912 LEAED Ty Burr, Tenor, . 5 i i 4 i o 65¢ | BONNIE WEE THING. Henry Burr, Tenor. T 5 | in Voile and Silk Poplins, values up e. This should be welcome news | extravagance in the conduct of our is that one doesn't have to.wonder | 57 > 5 5 n a E )t , values up She Hughes trenches where all | national government. $800,000,000, | Whether Wilson, if elected, will make K A 3 to $7.98. Friday A. M, Choice $8.40 ’ : 15 saevec: e : COMIN’ THRO’ THE RYE. Mary Garden, A , e bse who have suffered under the | Whew! A vast sum. And to be spent z'l‘fil‘: '{v“:‘:;’;‘[’l‘; @ CElR=ROn ; A 1190 Sesiy y 2 | o g each. lson regime are welcomed to the | by a Democratic administration os- | © Griide '223%“ JOHN ANDERSON, MY JO. Mary Garden, ¢ ! kg Mr. Gaffney is in every sense a | tensibly put in office to check the| “He who lives by the sword : Soprano, j § ; : f 18 WASH SKIRTS im of the Wilson administration. | mad expenditures of a rollicking Re- | die by the sword,” and the eclas : : was put out of office because he | publicanism. Surely this should prove | Which cares for no rights save ifs 3 In every class of music recorded on own will soon find the other cla s too n\h:ul\ an Amerjcan to S\ul‘un issue. And so the cry went up, | ORI Tl e S fe; Columbi‘d Doublc—stc RBCUrdS, there’s | psident Wilson. In fact Mr. Gaffney | “IExtravagance.” —New Otleans Times. 5 s ) /. h ) { i ks 4 each. 4 man after the new natiows| In nmormal times “Extravagance” | i a uniformity of excellence that shows the 2 i . —_— rt. He is a dominant American. | might have made a good issue. In an | Vive La $ advantage of looking for the “music- Ay ? § 5 S b man must be a dominant Ameri- | ordinary presidential election year it | (Charlotte Holmes Crawford in Serib- & g " 44 7 iz 28 WASH SKIRTS ner's Magazine.) Ba’| note” trade-mark of Columbia Records. who says, “I wish to God I had | might have worked to the overthrow | p . FOUs JREAZRES | - n the man who fired the torpedo | of the party thus accused. But this. And her heart would dance though | i You'll fil’ld a Columbia dcalcr near ) o ¥ N 78 | s2.5 Fri M., Choice $1 5,5. b the Lusitania.” is no ordinary election year. Rather she knelt to pray, $ S 0 \ i 3 | For her man Michel had holiday, 3 you——v151t his store l‘wfz!_y. A7 2 N\ | : st SR & , > 4 £ r Fighting for France. 1 N\ H 'WE HAVE COME TO THIS. very extraordinar one. And lni‘le.xd A New Columbia Records on sale the 20tk of every month. G )\ IER SUITS Phen the President of the United | Of extravagance making a good issue She offered her prayer by the cradle- Columbia Records in all Foreign Languages. ‘ es stood yesterday before a joint | it has made a bad issue, or no issue ide, This advertisement was dictated to the Diclaphone. B . it and the Nenate | Bt all. For, all the extravesanee in- | And ;wn f‘;r;‘- palms folded in hers 3 : G she cried: outlined to the national legisla- | dulged in by the present administra- I had but one‘prayer, dear, cru- ¥ g )\ r ' 98 per suit. k2 method whereby the great rail- | tion is the direct result of an insistent eifiea i ; 3 d strike might legally be averted.| demand of the people for the nation’s Christ—s France! 4 e atinti "welfare Al ) expenses con- ) 4 &) § g £ K . | ar 0 Q2 power to do this is in the hands e o e | PR 2 el e G, Gy et i g <8 : i 27 0DD « TS Congress. The representatives of | templated by Congress for the nation- | al defense have in back of them the Carry in Pique and Bedford Cords, value 98. Friday A. M., .Choice $1.50 including Extra sizes, values up ta it is an extraordinary one,—a very, Columbia Gra Price $200 rted colors, br sizes, values up to $10.00. Friday M., Choice Values up to $5.00. Friday A. M., sice $1.00 each, great American people can enact me safe to the meeting place, slation that will put a stop to all | sanction of the people. Congress was | Let me look once again on my dear | urged to make these expenditures, love's face, | | Save him for France | petty squabbling and fussing that been going on for years between | - In | 80 Strong at: one time that letters | she crooned to her boy: “Oh, how glad | 4 1 § 2y y “LI ON SA T STIT poured into the House and Senate of- he'll be, / TN PEL e T TR . ; Frsvs ! ) TAMENT, XD FLOOR. fice buildings from every little village | ldttle three-months old, to set eyes on e cOLUMBIA GRAPIOPHONE 9 intSeNT g T T and hamlet in the country. Beonomy? | oo vptii (o COMPLETE STOCK ¢ ONO \ND BECOTD o SALE X I - it to the four winds. That Siote he 2 1 CHEST Y 2] . INRY MORANS. 321 MAIN ST W a m 10 = Friday morning. The movement for preparedness was Jroad employers and employes. /instance the quarrel has grown to | proportions that the entire safety | the nation rests on the outcome. ous to his appearance at the | Throw tol, President Wilson had done all | Was the cry of the nation. And the ‘A son to France.’ being representative of the . ro | Congress, - jemaoval power to bring the two i the people demanded. | ‘COMe now, be good, little stray sau- | flicting forces together. It was a | People, did DeOD & 2 = terelle, beless task. Neither side would | No reduction of the governmental eX- | For we're zoing by-by to thy papa [ (o loglcal euggestions for the | Penses vies Bos . l,(,um?l o 3 “ : m[ | But L;f);c(ln say where for fear thou ' : i ‘ fEg | plo reason they would not give | ditton. The yol::y @ reuex: n:\‘en i S @ | - - — . g : !“9 ! a ig H o each other. There was no law | Was sent into oblivion for the time Little pigeon of France! b AT 1SV o TR lmake them do it. Both are out | being. Preparedness was in the air, : 5 | . ¥ . “Six days’ leave and a y il Linng A0 br more power and even before they | and the cost was not taken into con- | “Six days' leave and a vear hetween! gfi.”.flica, l (14 aAeIr {,Afiy ¢ : 5 ] X - | But what wouid you have? 1In six ! it to the White House the rail- | sideration. The spectacle of the un ey telzany 1 One of the most intercsiing mines is | 1 ; : il prevarednations i of BERIShS ena v i i 4 4 7 g || that of Ronascel which contains g | dalt to the German-Americans, soci d presidents had made up their | Prepare Heaven was made,” said Franceline - K ;8 h contains a Ite o insf e o S = 5 & | ll oF t F great subterranca It lake having | iSts and non-socialfsts, than has been bds not to yleld one point. The cnoush to instill a patriotism in Heaven and France. | Oi S&;a;ls n 0 i uflgary Ly lm(\vm - !vn aiellTinving {11318 S0 BOnsCons e Fond brotherhoods had done the | hearts of the American people that | L % (:_ warranted and demanded action by | | the Congress. As a result of these | crystal walls glitter as if studied with 3 countless iridescent jewels as they re 188 20L SOERMA LY STHESE | flect the rays of the clectrie 1 “Hunting for bear and lynx on the | M&n-American’ busybodies who have wooded slopes of the (arpathions in | Peen boasting of thelr purpose to vote . s town of Mara- | the vicinity of Maramaros-Sziget is a | {h¢ German-Americars en masse for | - , onica a > passiOE the. i , With a pop. k S ¢ sen who are destitute of eve r- | popular manifestations of the peo- B oo, onica and tho pass of the same nanic, | Sy h & Pobulation of 21,- | favorite pastime of the Hungar R oo DO | 5 S i F i to F e S )0. This be the first orte Prtconodt 5 Py s attribute, such as loyalty an | ple, the Democratic administration | And she held high her boy like n | “WNICh the Russians are said to nave | jpiiiie of the Russismy froboT Sooiacemnonetions or eportemon ars [ 005, L chee ot auty) and devotion - fla occup constitute S oE BbE x tus s after ti not as satisfactory as i he | 52 ) € iuty & voti Dledged to spend some $890,000,000 mpexnrhn_xe, s pled, constitute one of the ‘no ross the Carpathian, SR N he ]c LS D Che s e e s ennobled German urning for Fra . At e L E SRR ay o gh Ta 10wever.” g for France. important gateways through the high | Jablonica I and begin their descent e i character. Carpathian mountains from Gali j upon the plains of Hungary E The more the professional hyphen- 3 Awakening The Wrong Passenger. | ate. like the professional politician, i (New Haven Journal-Courfer.) studled, the clearer become the mo- Iza River with the Theiss. . To i1y | It Was a mistake to prod Victor L. | tives which move hoth in thefr politi- | east tower the well-wooded, —snem, | BETESF @ native of Germany, a citizen | cal capacities. The question of the ed Carpathians In tI ~ jof this country and the editor of a |Tacial origin of a voter .is never in Defove thelwar il | newspaper in Milwaukee devoted to |Volved in the study an intelligent voter socialism. Those who thought they |g&ives a stated candidacy. This country he came to the town of the nameless | v name, | Washington, D. C., Aug. o 13 o flourishing To the marching troops in the street | | he thing. It was a meeting of | p irresistable forces. e fight between capital and labor L been going on since the first dis- bution of wealth. It will continue | ] long as one man holds the purse | to build up a great national defense s forced to earn | and to pay pensions. Fresh from the trenches and gray | i X 2 1 1t of his brow. Loudest of all in crying for these with grime, Bukowina into Hungary, 2 ] Maramaros-Sziget i antly situated &t the juncture of the Silent they march like a pantomime; | day’s war geography hullet “But w need of music? My heart | National Geographic socioty railroad beats time— from its Washington headquarte & to get the upper | insistence of the other people of the Vive la France!” ! eThe xle of life In ' expenditures were certain tepubli- em. | cans. At their request as well as the Carpathians in this vi this town B ¢ tho railroad manasers who, | nation thisivast sum' of money will tower to a height of 7,500 B buall s of many na- R s T R _publi- | His regiment comes. Oh, then where | slope gradus 3 ) | tions were busily St Barn, are making a supreme ef- | be spent next year. If the Republi EoEims [ ]ln[( 5;&(,;\“111_\ down to- t1 i e cneagl d)m an Xteh- | \ere waking up a hyphenate, found |delights in the varlous racial celebra- = o : = through the county of Marmar " handling the Y, + 5 g s whic 11y he hy citiz- to destroy the ever growing pow- | can party could raise the ooy 6f ex- (| 4L Guse n oy oyes for T cane Bnca ot il i WLHIT of salt (a State raas | to their enlightenment they were wal- | tions which are annually held by citiz travagance and keep it before the pub- | not see— I 8 : g erioRciesBlinopoly)itaken trom the ool s ing up a patriotic American cltizen, | ens of foreign birth or extraction. This et £ ol |t pital of the province, Maramar- he minesfof three |~ 1.0 5ot onizest Bt ohs 'rovernsent | community delights: In| them, and convict itself and | Ts that my Michel to the right of thee, | iget, Is situated at e villages contiguous to the county ca H Sovernment = Soldier of France?” O Pl i 1e%Ccl R0LY Stal i mh el annual faite watict ¥ cab- | and one flag and that the government | When carried out upon a large scale, only 900 feet above the sea. e A SVETe Beld e n d i el o fithoRUnitedli States, decorate the homes and business | “Jablonica clings to the northeast- | qustpis S ::\“»‘»«“' Solathefing Mr. Berger quite understands, as |pPlaces in their honor. It is only when ern slope of the Carpathians, between | - . many more of us do, the natural and | it is proposed by the professional re- the headquarters of the Pruth and the | geapc e most . picturesque | creditable love one has for the country | Presentatives of any race in this coun- Golden Bistritza Rivers and is a sr S 2 die T babel of | from which his forbears sprang. -He | try that our national policies shall be mt to get what they go after re- | campaisn Dying for Brance: station on the mile railway line | o0sies 7 € cope of color | understands the emotions of the re- | dictated from abroad that Uncle Sam ,ple demand it, and 3 connecting Stanislan, now in the | ool presentatives of all nationalities and | straightens himself up to his full hands of the Russians, with Koros- | o/ tumaniag g \e tugging they feel at their hearts | height and says, “thus far shalt thou mezo, just beyvond the pass, to o Bl l riar ach {yvhen they consider the belligerents ) &0 and no farther.” of the unionized laborers. In the | t that has vn out of this tussle | lic it would but its followers of the meanest and low- This it h sides have forgotten all about | t vast gathering of people in the | est form of double-dealing. Then out of the ranks a comrade fell, kground, the American nation of | cannot afford to do. That is one rea- | «yesterday—'twas a splinter of shell— P,000,000 souls. The brotherhoods | son why extrav nce must fail as a | And he whispered thy name, did thy e | s Preparcdness is poor Michel, idless of cost to themselves or tly, but the p: ers. The railroad managers want people stand willing to pay the | The tread of the troops on the pave- E 2 > Democrs hrobbed b havh aois ot | freight. At that, the Democratic ment t . iy sfeeaninly Crii S 5 7 2 lBee that the brotherhoods do not | : e i tho BUI un ag | Like 8 woman's heart of its last joy .m!nm & Near Korosmezo are valu- | . < : 1 ged in this monstrous war, “but Jongress ¢ o J as able petroleum springs: ! uliar © 0wn nati ere they made thelr o 5 | ; S Rl ae o robbed, e SpEInES, 3 : ° Hhey Rave made thelr Homegy,the The railroad presidents again re- it mig nav er | A< che lifted her boy to the flag, and he important river Theis: lere their children have been he White House “angd+ Ceica, HUN TR e bbed: affluent of the Danube, and, next fo! ° salt mincs of the Maramaros . Here their future lies. Their | turned from the SRVt SADEL et Sl et o T Hrancat: the latter ) waterwE ol Szise o L sentimental bonds are | vesterday. How different from the e Hu P e e e many Americ - i than to any other land.” | good old days when railroad pr sed on a true incident, related by | aros county. Situated on the Theiss | ba s part ¢ ungary h Chen th TR e not so utte: dents returned from the White [House build the army and the navy and the Hollingsworth in a lecture. l“u: connected by rail with Korosmeza | Vis he deep eries whose rock- -~ fatuous, a fouler blow could not be | happy!—New York World. ceed, regardless of what happens. lus the strike must determine, ac- | high a ding to each side’s interpretation, | the pressure bt what will be the outcome. In | were applied in s ® Shey forget that the American | mapping out a formidable plan to up- blic, which is greater and blge‘l:r:

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