New Britain Herald Newspaper, October 19, 1916, Page 6

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1916. in order that oA e ) ooy Longest and Narrowest of no t other issues besides S S : A ¥ : - T The Kind Y Have Always Bought. Vi e » s A 11 Cauflt’fies in il? e Agvorld I ‘ HIS is flm':auciou ::ed to the public flnnouncyvmnnt of (‘,:mgia that | in this puait i no time for such | 8 | has been manufactured under the supervision of Chas. H. Fletcher for over 80 years—the genuine Castoria. We respectfully call the attention of fathers and mothers when purchasing Castoria to see that the wrapper bears his signature in black. When the wrapper is removed the same signature ap- pears on both sides of the bottle in red. Parents who have used Castoria for * their little ones in the past years need no warning against counterfeits and imitations, but our present duty is to call the attention of the younger gener- i mine contiik ; ’ % Bhinie ke el Sraith ation to the great danger of introducing into their families spurious medicines, iae etey r » ) v nizations bl inecontributing 1o munitions fac- | MIch : ghasht) he con 1t i8 to be regretted that there are people who are now engaged in the e : | He e ories its millions of tons of this non- | NIty of the great valley which eX- | pefarious business of putting up and selling all sorts of substitutes, or what ¢ { t ] metallic mineral, an essential ingredi- | (€Nds from north to south. Santiago | should more properly be termed counterfeits, for medicinal preparations not Be Ficrnis o - mt_ttorn o X ent of high explosives. The nitrate ; 1S Situated at the northern end, and | only for adults, but worse yet, for children’s medicines. It therefore devolves on the mother to scrutinize closely what she gives her child, Adults can do e S LA e or: ¢ hospital : fields of the South Amercain republic | flourishing cities are located at each | X il o exclisive | Ve an avea of loss than 50 square | fvorable point en the railway that | that for themselves, but the child has to rely on na uve | PO exclusive 1 e Nl i I Bl < i however, and they are located | ¢onnects the capital with Puerto | the mother’s watchfulness. M{ . o T T 5 hose who fat a pericct man should |\ rrom 50 to 100 miles from the coast inj Mon Gienuine Castoria always bears the signature of # Ve > rom home e hicago New desolate, region. The real “The climate as we go from north to lden @ Washington, D. C., Oct. 16.—So ob- | of Californ which is the seat of the sessed has the world become with | Chilean people. Many rivers rising in hes told an audience S | {houghts of war ang its weapons that | (1€ Andes descend to it and meander \merica necded another e 1l some remote rensons : more or less directly westward through i . reader is prone to think of Chile | (he coast range of the Pacific; but the MR ET i 3 nothing more than a vast nitrate | intervening divides are nowhere of | v just who conid They have non | 5 hile, the Chiie of the Chileans and | South hecomes even more humid, and | o g ot the mini resion controlled by | We pass from the irrigated lands about | ot along without (i no more cheap restau- | British nitrate companies, is de- | Santlago to the densc forest swamps of Cone Slosoial A i ¢ may Dbe less expensive | ceribed by isailey Willis in a com- | the southern portion of the district o S T e e but t all—Brooklyn | munication to the National Geo- | While much of the land has been i i | graphic society, a part of which has | has been cleared or is in the process of becn issued as the following geography | ¢learing, in a state which reminds one A1 e T 55 o i || DRI of our own Pacific coast thirty years “Chile is the longest and narrowest | 280, other areas remain impenetrable forests, still unexplored after nearly This must be in its present rcach to heights anew i ring back ilucrta or make | 1t what hour of the day or ination popular in this coun- | of all the countrics of the world. It unbulance might be called | St Louis b ispatch. | stretches 2,700 miles, from Cape Horn | 400 years of occupation of: the coun- | . a5 TG 4 to the deserts of Atacama, within the | trv- ; the ! oSSl There is some ¢ that Washing- | tropics. Its width is rarely more than “The third section of Chile, extenc e Y erve humanity s {ton's advice may not always be fol- | 125 miles from the ocean to the An- |ing southwara from Puerto Montt to v than for the vich and the.|lowed with respect to forei alliances | dean cr If we were to place it upon | Cape Horn, is like our southern Ala takes in old awe and child- | just as the politicians disregard his | @ similar stretch of coast in North | ka coast—a stretch of islands, of sl o there. | THle—Let your discourse with —men | America, it would cover Lower peninsulas broken by intricate chan- | 4 5 g {be short and comprehensive.—Mil- | fornia, Oregon, Washington and Brit- | rels and profound fiords that pene- fore something that is of equal in- | \iukee News | ish Columbia to the St. Klias district | trate far into the land. Tumultous 1o terest to all good citizens. To those of Alaska. rivers descend from the Andes and de- | . i B : ; “Chile is divided into three sections | bouch into the fiords in swampy | % . who cannot afford to pay their wi S e . n E s v i oS e e e L \ new occupation has been dis- | py the natural features of the Pacific | deltas which are covered with dense ok 1 wi Jorcils as s i pathetl cRaRwe © a8 fcovered in New York, where a man | siape of the Andes. The northern is | forests. \ G +1a | 0 those who upon their arrival might | who was arrested for non-support de- | that of the semi-ardi and desert re- “Santiago is the chief city of Chile, | oA, ! Yring with them enough money | red 1_-" (_" 4"--] a professional h“'m'lm | on, which reaches from Peru south- | but not in the same degree as Buenos | REL T . igger for fish bait. Wonder what he | ward to Valparal el < ot 5 o fl e - Sicknes: . o dparaiso. Tt is an utter | Aires is of the Argentine Republic. hat of the | found a new ward. icknc does in winter.——Meriden Journal ! | 4 r N | desert in the north and becomes less | Buenos Aires has become almost the pain recognize no favorite lgas — inhospitable towarq the south. It is | republic itself, in the sense that Paris | who devote their lives to the care of | louse cleaning is a great leveler, | traversed from the Andes to the coast | is France; but Santiago is only the | it mignt | the stricken administer alike to all, ‘[“'x‘y“‘ ‘l‘”“ ;f:jj:l‘ f:":.’:‘::‘: i\‘j -:»”-‘}1 nr!‘(::: | by short, deep valleys, separated by | capital of the country, which h:_\s_uthor; T the vear was some- | That is what the New Britain General | t1.a5 3¢ s 1o [twm{"“ o Derslan xuse | high spurs of the mountains, and com- | citles that may compare With it In lo- | 5 L i T o that e e Sl a similar office | munication from north to south has | cal importance, Santlago contrasts | hat un Beemrn (]| OB S EETE, R Sy upon body brussels or even ingrain | always been exceedingly difficult. | with Beunos Aires as.the conservative Bine lof busine's lindNow IEnelnnai|iserye the consideration and help of | o' es.—Ohio State Journal | Nevertheless the Chilean engineers | capital of a small country with the fertaxed the facilities of he com. | €Very member of the community. — | have found a route through which to | metropolis of the continent. You feel At Keshena, Wis., is the only In- | €Xtend the state railway which will | in the Chilean capital the conservative hny and of many manuiacturers and = dian post of the G. A. R. Indian wom. | link Santiago with the territories con- | character of the people; in Buenos erchants.” In a word, too much ! REMNIDMBER LINCOLN en there form a‘part of the Woman's | duered from Peru. Afres the liberal spirit of the world rosperity At a political meeting last night in | Brelief Corps auxiliary of the Grand “The central section, extending from | cit All £ the railvoads are 5 . oo |Army of the Republic. In Keshena | VaPparaiso to the ind of Chiloe, a [Chefmod arniolilleansianeidescendy Ib 2 this city the orator of the Dhour S0 fii 4156 (o be found tiie only camp of | Jistance of 600 miles, is the heart of | ants of waring Spanish invaders min- \rticuls ing at this time | givagely attacked the President of the | Indian Sons of Veterans i e Uniteq | Chile, the only portion of the country | gled with a warlike Indian race, the Veterans in the United ; beause 1 cont railroad legis- | Urnited States that one of his auditors, | States.—Buffalo Times. which can support a sufficient popula- | Araucanians. They are without ques- B tjon by Congress which is Deing | qrinking in the spirit of the occasion, i tion to constltute a nation. The area | tion the most independent, the bold- | i A i - , | is not large (about as extensive as the | est, the most aggressive of South verely criticized icians ‘not | g50d up in his place and heaped fur- The German government charges state of Colorado), and much of it is | American peoples. The people of Ar- cord with the present administ ther villifying phrasds upon the heaa | that the Rumanian soldiers commit- [ occupied by mountain ranges of great | gentina are the most enterprising, as on. The ilroad companies the | o the chief executive, The word | xo hendish atrocities in invaded | heights and ruggedness. But hetewen | they are the most cosmopolitan and B * o : " " | Austrian territory. Perhaps the | the Andes and the coast there extends | progressive, of the Spanish-Ameri- we Wl“ place on sa‘e to the hlghest bld' picture drawn by this unofficial speak- | charges are true, but as the battles | in this section a valley similar to that | cans.” er was such a beautiful one that the | o on on all fronts it becomes harder ) \ rainmen op fairminded men in the audience arose | 2nd harder to distinguished between | = ders’ a number of used cars. The list com- The Inter- 4 B 5 atrocities and ordinary war = T i neir ght, g¢ s temporane- | j. 5 2 o IHghb EsoLssho o omporad I'rancisco Bulletin. SREn Rl b BT o CREREIRCS B I el 6 O] s CO0D ARRAY OF NEW BOOKS NAMED { prises late models. All in good condition. ports ¢ from railroads repre- | jeck and hurled him bodily into the cent. of the mile- | gyeet. Rvidently, he was not wanted Kansas wants President Wilson to J VST R? P s WT : o ; o e & proclaim Thankseiving A ‘ IN INSTITUT E S LIST THIS W E?K : Mr. Fred Winkle will have charge of the nd over declared it would require 60,000,000 to meet the demands of e one week out the in- | 4 tine t 1= | at the meeting. O e s e y of this Ail this took place at a political |lieve that with a little effort the Sun- | X s earn over and v wl For sue was | flower © might restrain its - | Charles E. Hughes, the states: s ' el rally whe a foreign tongus was = £ & s vora £ S, e statesman, as ' cies. some $65,000,000. | «ooren. vt the mamn soit hat e | CIOUS fUTKey apnetite for the seven shown in. the opinions of the o ua auctioneering and the assortment of cars on 1 5 2 e man s £ days in question and avoid starting a | jurist, by W. L. Ranson. With the tin gods, by Mrs, Horace understood by those who speak Ing-|changed old-established customs.— | Flements of the great war: second An account of a journey in north iyl coulatls N L e vl Inl i phase, by Hilaire Relloc. ern Nigeria, made by an English hearer to jence able to translate the speak- — PR woman while accompanying her hus- This is a great opportunity to get a ser- expert com- jargon and diatribe into English, Returning Ghost. Irishwoman in China, by Mrs. De boand who was investigating tin d. o problem | ,jthough not very edifying English. When T was dead, my spirit turned Burgh Daly. Desinacld midhibpn crfend fepriaht i bl CHEAP T e e e S To seak the much-frequentea house; | “Story of her twenty years in | liness, thesc slimpses of native life | viceapie car . :000. | Seemingly, the man who was thrown | 1 pacced the door and saw i rinho. | China end customs have their vagc as en- e work. And now ; . it renstl aining tr g s columns may be country. It is not known whether he boushs; Making of modern Germany, by Fer- |4 Booklist € sale wi e held at rom Danville, Tlinois, | j,ossesses naturalization papers, but | FTOM hand to hand they pushed the dinand Schevill. Wrack of the storm, by Maurice Mae- v = terlincl i i wine, Tectures, delivered in 1915 for tha = he has grasped the spirit of America. The = : s R devas 3 f Belg as i ¢ 1 They sucked the pulp of plum and | University Lecture association, in co- Ihe deyustationios Belglumiiasiin. sasiern Hlinois Railroad, | 1o has learned that he can stand up peach; operation with the University of i SPired the patriot in Maeterlinck. This | i ’ i Instituted a higher | 4;,q call the President of the United | They sang, they jested and they | Chicago. The author belleves that 00K is a plea for the cause of Bel- k : men on the road | Sates anything ho wishes to call him | . liughea the Gorman system Is & more ad. £um and of humanity.”—Publisher’s et L e B or each was loved of each. vanced type of social organization °t® T J e e || : than either that of the United States funtari iblish the eight-hour | o heing hurled through a window | I listencd to their honest chat: S (e R 1o A ot Fiction. y '\ I 'x) roun uses This, | should he be unfortunate enouzh to get mm;m one: “Tomcrrow we shall he hetiias Guriouscase forl Mavie® Dupont o | B ~ t en before the new law goes into ef- _ ; y od plod along fos e S esdesn O A e R upont RNy g etor 3 I intthe wrons pasty. Had ho beentin R e n?i"': featureless sands | Njghts in London, hy Thomas Burke. Adele Luehrman. | fet. Truly, the railroads of the coun- | giper company his remarks might so les and miles of | “Degcriptions of night life in Lon-| “Good mystery story, clever, en- | BN don among the lower middle class | iertaining, and not 4 | have been received with great acclaim. | Said one: “Before the turn of tide | ; gruesome.”’— mebo sympathy BV T e el oy o Wl will achic « ”‘;h"\ Nf(““;;\n;‘b‘” tide “\,::1 |hnn\:.]v‘rlm;:\r‘\w:(l"ly."::u.-d'i.\;:‘h .»n!l?'ri Publisher’s note. ‘ . rest of them ar tking mone - : > Said one: “Tomorrow she Bl d, presec g s an *xoxow orest pre making money. | great honors. Who knows? In the | M “:;““l‘\“n‘w»h.fl BeNlIceR o G el ith i Gn i e e s Rear 189 Maln Street. | ola country where this man spent his ! Lesivoct whole characterized by a personality “A well-written romance. . . “Jim" THE HOSPITAL boyhood he probably had to pussyfoot | “Tomorrow.” sald they, strons ity | A1 1S OWA—A. Ln A~ Boollist. is a cheerful, refreshing, and enliven- When the sun shines, the rain is. his way about, afraid even to men- hope X ,k i ing companion, and we part from him And awelt upon the pleasant way: | QUr Iastern question: America’s con- |\ ith the kindliest feelings glad to % “Tomorrow,” cried they, one anq all tact with the Orient and the | liave made his acquaintance.”— 4 — clear there isi little thought for fell on bended knec and bowed his While no one spoke of vestorday, trend of relations with China and | Times. America’s Great Gift. landl® When the horors of the was sig clouds. When good health | head. Coming to the land of the free | Their life stood at pleasant noon: Japan, by T. F. F. Millard. R vl Reglsterd cited as proof of the debasement of L only T, had passed away; _“The author has been for the last | Man proposes: or, The romance of | myenty-nine millons given by the [ mankind and the failure of religious "“""“r_"”y ""“‘ ‘“v"'\' ihes cried five ““’1\'_-‘ editor of the China Pre John Alden Shaw, by E. I1. Rob- | A merican people to mitigate the suf- teaching, this great gift should be S e I was of yesterday (Shanghal) I inson. \ ferings of the victims of the great war m&;nllton'g.d = the offset. Man may Sray aciNar o i in Hurope! That is no small charity [ Dot have llved up to his ideals, but excellent way, hy Cyrus Town- | ang it tells in forceful manner that |S0Me men at least try to do so and in send Brady. | the spirit of brotherhood exists in our | & measurs succeed. Philadelphia Telegram. s news greeted the ! (51a to his hearers, would not be | procedent in the matter el | B . oo ld e o e foais Do e i BoC Tremictt. 'l hand will positively be sold. the re r of the Fsotter When the sky is bright tion the king’s name aloud, unless he no one thinks of sickness,! e soon learned that on every strect : rosy and gay, death neyer corner in the cities the popular sport of human nature, | I'resident of the United States. And, [T shiverad comfortless, out cast | our military history, its facts and fal- | pore No chill across the tablecloth; lacies, by Leonard Wood. all forgotten, shivered, =aq i To stay and yet to part how loth: Penny Piper of Saranac, an cpisode in hrt there Y to mourn the There should be no great blame cast | y jyassed from the familiar room. Stevenson’s life, hy Stephen Chal- | Prudence says so, by Ethel Hueston. sensible attitude, | Why not? This is a free country, and the rush and hustle af the city | that is one way to assert freedom n who stood hefore a po- I. who from love had possed away mer “Sequel to “rudence of the arson- of hillside countryside, | Upon the m: i o = : a | Like tho remembrance of a guest * ox ge. ce « of selves | litical gathering Jast night and, in a | T4 ngs tak £ themselves Phatlaniiehh bt A sy Plays, by 1 Andrevey h the scheme of things there foreign tongue. heaped condemnation :}.\,NH,,:L Gerrrin Rt “The plays are preceded by a brief | Rising tide, by Margaret Deland We Have Just Received Some Bivvavs someone around to lend a| upen our President. He was but doing | Iographical sketcliland an cssay:on Iping hand. There is always some What he learned from example. The POINT PARAGRAPIIS. | the author’'s symbolic dramas by V. ? H ¢ Kcundabout, by J. 1. Buckrose. g T e T e R > \. Brusyanin, a literary critic and . X quict corners of the Doliticians of the land have glven the (Chicago News.) 11‘,_ St Triend ool which oo “The author writes always with fter the things that lesson time and time again. In. this After man came woman—and she is | essay the “mnique value of being an | Gltiet but penetrating humor of types n therc While the Pparticular campaig has been | stili in the race | suthoritative statement of Andreyef(’s | 2nd situations which in |.m\ sub- 3 i 1 " N stance are as umiliar to us i ner- nore of this sort of work than in any — own views'—A. L. A. Booklist g degol oy ; B Main street and PR ica as to our British cousins.”—Na- Some men drop a lot of money try- e ior other since the days of Abraham Lin- | . ing to pick up more sicenes and memorles, hy Lady Paget holds the attention +1 t co The the o] foix oner her e those who In Then, the il (Clorsegitean) e The author was a member of one TR ARV e for the household, came in for his abuse and while he { Hush money us speaks for | 0f the noblest families of Germany | Wind’s will, by Agnes and Iigerton \tter of sickness and Was resident, working night and day (both parties in the action. and the wife of the British Ambassa Castle po e e dor at many European courts.” e — 5 ! : An enemy knocks a man down, then | “The charm and dignity, the quiet . i ¢ 3 strects, not é destruction, was met on 4 rrjeng proceeds to kick him | pleasure and beauty and the serene by abuse and calumny. Is it = | fense of duty that belonged to the BOOK RI + any wonder that he was assassinated, | Some men invest in hair tonic as | fitties and sixties. . . have never heen Sl when the record is read? When a | 5000 fis they hegin to come out on top. | so clearly placed hefore the present » . 3 —_— generation as in the graceful, reticent In his recent book “The Sins of S t bi f D d s e e it Wikies | b e e s v st et T R s Bocks Ty ple G uitable for Draperies an couid made insane over fictitious | might not interfere in so many cases, | volume.”—Academy. a theme that is strikingly similar to ol Sl Ut ot ma et o et s PR the one around which he wrote, “The O L N . 5 el et Much of the experience that a man espeare’s Fngland: an account | Blindness of Virtue.” So similar is m an l !n pect from some who have recently e . acquires comes too Jate to benefit him of the life and manners of his | the thought in the two books that a Hos- | come through the portals ofithis coun= , age. 2 volumes. person having read the one, cannot . L and who have not yet absorbed e et s e Tostien “Phe finest tribute during this ter- | help but anticipate in a general way Ful‘nlture 3 the language or the spirit of Ameri- that eives birth to his love for | centenary to the memory of the dra- | that which is coming in the other. inpalires ; was recently decreed by the | Woman. mati It should prove one of the]in his last work, however, Mr. Ham upon the 3 e 4 PP Jost serviceable handbooks to the | ilton has made the leading character account of ¢hairman of the Republican Town | 1 214 anough for a man to love | serious student, furnishing a vast [ male and has interfected a villian of some Committee that all out-of-town orators | his friends without including his ene- | amount of velevant information. {of the most approved type. The book there) ip) yhosaddressfaudiencessio Sthis el tyilinics. end helping the public. n.‘ read the "v‘nlu‘ with lIn»vu*’l:lev of (.H'M"r and ’ should refrain from personal attack — works with understanding and sane | son and bring out strikingly —the ht after ] 2 | After a woman reaches the age of [ appreciation.”— Athanacum tragic results that may follow if tho are | on the President of the United States. | 30 y¢rs ympossible to convince her that “This hook is a splendid work of | paternal parent does not explain sex | .’ | . "——Spectator. (ln giene to his son. The story deals | | | the is a good ruling, especially in | the good all dic young. scholarly research . This e (his particular locality where good chiefly With an American family, al- | 310 PEARL ST HARTFORD CONN A mericanism shoulG be ever practiced | The greatest difficulty that some | Wilson and the issues, by G Creel though there is a touch of Knglish | X} y . | beople experience is in keeping ap- “Summing up of the president’s ! to it, wove in by the attendance ',fi xl‘flill’un(es up and cxpenses down. prersonality, achievements and poli- « the oldest son at Oxford. Hospital has at the greatest period of its his- @i breached by those who know what

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