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emo “We are i need, and we @ p determination. in freedom common 1 believe of eech I never have all’ with the idea time of war you mocracy worle without proper freedom of the organs of demo- | cratic expression | “I believe in frcedom of criti- cism, but every one who criticises | should apply to this criticism the acid of whether it helps to the orous prosecution of the war or retards it. “1f it embarrass then we want none of it. and the Ameri- can people won't stand it.” —CHARLES EVANS HUGHES. sympathized at that even in could make de- test vi s, T IS DECREED. As it was with a certain old philos- bher so it seems to be with Charles ans Hughes, as judged from the ex- sition of patriotic thought given at o head of this column. “Let all your lecepts be succint and clear.” There s been mo more terse summing up be exercised by tizens this hour of the aforementioned and bregoing brief. If there is anyone doubt of just what to do so far as| let him look direction of.the to the right erican in r then ech concerned 3l e first nded. “This is no time for partisan- ip of any kind.” here.are Hmitations, expressed and plied, upon the Particularly is this so when the is engaged in war. Freedom speech? Rather would we say mperance of speech. For, speech this time should be temperate. And, is considered, is the sentence will guide the right in above. rights of every h.n. tion en the war speech 1d be tempered cause there is a Demwocratic admin- ration at Washington no reason through Repub- Jd with patriotism. is looking at thin NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1918; ong¥as it must be sub- bng ashuman must be and from criti- word. Not is low foreign diplomats $15 a week for living expenses, and some of them may be worth no more, but misusing diplomats is not the best way to win diplomatic recognition. — Springfield Republican , Mistakes | GOTMANY now knows that this na- 3 °R s too proud not to fight—Los 0 prevent 4ncoics Times, mistakes | ith the| President Wilson's statement of war | e who | 31mMs is g00d enough for anybody—sSt. v what ure th the the h- Until his ' magni- the target e disgruntled. ere the kind which crowned reat Hmancipator, BIY the guiding star of hen, even in the South- s looked upon as the best man ever had. Coln wa¥ assailed and battered vithin his own political party as per- haps no other President was abused. His way was not always thought the Phen proved his ceurse instance the proper one. of with him over the questions of the in almost every The men his cabinet wrangled and fought moment, and some never came around to his way of thinking. It is now con- ceded that the battle of Bull Run would never bave been lost to the Union troops had the military geniuses who planned and executed that en- gagement followed the advice of the Manassas would not have been the scene of such bloody rout amd con- fusion. Nor would the historic flight have taken place over the Long Bridge that crossed the Potomac into Washington. With these tHoughts in civil the great war understanding anniversary of President, worth not as a dreamer and a mythi- cal somebody, but man of red blood and iron nerve, a man who in every instance accomplished what he set out to do and who was never fully appreciated until the cold hand of death touched his troubled brow. his sterling as a Havimg suspended the closing order in eight states of the Union, fue] ad- ministration officials in Washington last night were of the belief that this be the be observed may last heatless Monday to the Rast. The good weather of the past few days with the consequent improvement in rail- road traffic conditions are given as the reasons for the hoped for change. in Ln spectacles, nor through glasses| If the order is suspended there ap- bund in a Democratic laboratory. | Pears to be no reason now that 1 we don't win this war it will| Will Bot be stricken off the books for hke very little difference whether a hn calls himself a Democrat If we may recall of some or a the ago t bpublican.” twenty years hims frnacular might hd. - harles Pvans Hughes has the right a, He expres the sentiment in estion before a recent meeting of the bckefeller Bible Class in New York. d he the doctrine ined his not be worth well call just as ed not lived up to words would paper they are printed on; but | has been a all the way fough, and this despite the fact that a Republican today than patriot is no less some fifteen months ago when with all his might for the against Woodrow Wilson. it American before he is a be party, wa nning esidency, the credit of Mr. d he is publican lowed by every every man of the Democratic party, Tt will be, Hughes he an His example should man of his man of any party. ordeal is over. every this Those not now see the light must ho do ced in upon their befuddled of 1 imprisonment eech. There need be no muzzles ad- ted in order that wild-eved ora- s be brought into subjection. all time. Transportation facilities brought back will insure the prevention of a further ‘‘famine”, The crippled railroads were respon- sible for the coal shortage in the first place. While no official figures are | given out by the government for the past year’s coal operations, it known by the trade that 1917 saw some 50,000,000 tons of coal produced over and above the amount produced in 1916. The gain was 40,000,000 tons of bituminous and 10,000,000 tons of To counteract this in a measure to normal anthracite. creasa was, consumption industries. there course, increased the tion by Yet produc- hetd the upper hand over «con- 35,000,000 | So it is easily seen that the real various sumption by some tons. ause of the famine was in the breaking down of transportation. NCIES. FACTS AND F No doubt the Russian bear tried to Tet some of the perfervid patriots | imagine that the Kaiser is trying to hide in the snow on the sidewalks.— Pittsburgh Iost Mr, Hoover says that by fixing sugar prices he has saved comsumers irting the edges of treason and sedi- m, however, a pastime that is w out of order. And no man, no itter what his position, has the ght to utter charges against the pvernment or against any e Government unless he sure of his assertions. K might well unsaid le things he has a mind ety first rule hys than one. ar-do these things imply that the branch of absolute- en then some of to in leave a say. is a good more 1$200.000,000. They could save them- | selves two hundred million more by | spending two hundred million | Galveston News. | The Leviathan, exX-Vaderland now sail three knots an hour | Wall Street Journal less.— can ter, in | had | men, | best way, what though fature events | man in the White House. In fact, | the battle would never have been fought when it was fought, and mind we can celebrate tomorrow the is | in- | of | walk like a man, but to act like one | was too much for it.—Atlanta Con- | stitution. Louis Republic, seems biggest, geographi- v. when the railroads are giving | poor service.—Toledo Blade. Pershing’s army is now | Bress. [Every state in the Union has | full representation.—Texarkanian. | | The nerve of Trotzky! He's raving | | now because | is | Review. he imagines somebody Not a word has beem heard of the | British tanks since the famous Cam- | brai drive. Was it their swan song? { —Portland Press Germans fn interment camps in this | country are playing soccer football. At least that gives them a chance to | kick each other in the shins.—De- | oit Free Press. | { | | | When the electric Kights failed they | figured that the town could worry | 1a.lon,t: with candles for a few hours, ! and then, horror stricken, they re- | called that the state was bone dry ; Jmm there were no bottles to stick | {’em in.—Emporia Gazette. i A LOVER'S FAREWETL. = | My love, my chosen, but not mine, I send My whole heart to you in these words I write; So let the blotted lines my soul’s &ole friend, Tie in thy heart, and there be blest at night! | Irene, I have loved you, as men love Light music, odor, beauty, love self: | Whatever is apart from, and above Those daily needs which deal with dust and pelf. it~ { And I had been content, thought Our guardian angels blushed to know. So to have lived and died. demanding naught, Save living, dving to have loved you so. without one could have I will not cant that commonplace of friends Which never vet hath dried one mourner’s tears, Nor say that grief's makes amends slow wisdom For broken hearts and desolated | years, But T would say, O pure and perfect pearl, Which T have dived so deep in life to find, TLocked in my heart thou liest—The wave may curl, like Con- | double-crossing him!—Spokesman | i —_— | | The wind may wail above ns. Wave and wind. What are their storm and strife to me H and you? No strife can mar the pure heart's inmost calm. This life of ours, what is it? A very few Soon ended ye: nd then the ! ceascless psalm. | And the eternal Sabbath of the soul! Hush! . while T write, from the dim Carmine The midnight angelus begins to roll, And float athwart the darkness up | to me. Man cannot make, but mmray ennoble fate By nobly hearing it. So let us trust Not to ourselves. but God, and ealmly wait Love's orient, out of darkness and of dust. Farewell, and yet agatn farewell, and vet Never farewell—if farewell means to fare Klone and disunited. Love hath set Our days in music to the self-same air; | And I shall feel, wherever we may be, Ev’'n though in absence and an alien clime The shadow of the sunniness of thee Hovering in patience, through a clouded time. Farewell! The dawn is rising, and the Tight Is making in the east a faint en- deavor To illuminate the Good night! Thine own, and only thine, my love, forever. —OWE: in the Has His Civil War Mittens., (Boston Post) | When the #Sth Massachuctts regi- | ment went to war in 1862, Mrs. Mary mountain peaks. MEREDITH Golden Books. | B. Chase, then Miss Cook, a well- known Newburyport woman, knitted for Leroy S. Currier of that city ,a | member of A company, a pair of army | mittens with thumb and one finger | such as many women are knitting for the boys “over there” today. Mr. Cur- Her has these mittens today and they | are in good shape and Mrs. Chase is still knitting for soldiers Red Cross, having knitted to four, | sweaters and many helmets, wristlets and date | and muffler | gt ! Tunncled Mine t { (San Franc A $1,000 schoolhouse buildinz Msammoth Cal., has been moved <ave it from falling into the Mammoth The company stopped digging o Schoomonse Door. o Bulletin) at to e mine | Winter could not have deait our only when so close that blasts shook | eastern tes a Ditterer blow if the the building. The schoolhouse was | weather prescrintion had been writ- | moved 100 vards. The miners hay. { ten in Berlin.—New York World. broken through to the surface. and It is kind of the Bolsheviki te al-* the former site of the schoolhouse is a hole in the ground. TODAYS TABLOD TALE | Preparedness, “Shh, Humbolt dear. don't talk so loud—people will h you!' cautioned Mrs. Lappe | l They were in a street car, on their way to the theater to sce Southern in the poetic || ama of tramp life, “The || Outburst of Roamin’ Candie,” | and Humbolt T.appet continued || in a loud voice. “Let ’em hear || me! Let 'em hear me! I want || people to hear me! 1'd like the | to know how un- over'ment something whole country prepared thi then = be be done about it! only a compar- is and | would || “Think of it ative handful of men over'n France when by this time we should have at least twelwe millions! Think of iti And the ones that are over there are still using old-fashioned Squck machine guns that can't kill more'n eighty Germans a minute! Think of it!” “Humbolt, shh- “I won't shhh! I'll be heard! T'm only a private citizen, but I know unpreparedness when 1 see it and T'l] speak out! TLook at the blankets the zover'ment is providing the men! Think of i Only ninety-eight tenth and the other two tenths ordinary cotton! Think of it! There’s preparedness for you! And rubber boots that don't come three inches above the hips, and ¥ou can hardly find a soldier wearing more than two shoes at a time! Preparedness! Oh yes! Preparednes: “Humbolt, what row are our seats on? i “I'll see.” Amd. still snorting with national indignation, he searched in all his pockets. Then suddenly he remembered. He had left them home on the sitting room mantel! (Copyrizht 1918 by George Matthew Adams) wool Pennsylvania’s Record Coal Output. (Philadelphia Inguirer) An unprecedented output of 268, 000,000 tons of coal is Pennsylvania’s contribution to the national welfare for 1917. The total would have been larger except for the low price for bi- tuminous fixed by the government au- thorities, which closed many mines which could not operate profitably at the ofiicial figures. The cold weather also acted as a deterrent in the last weeks of the year. The total will closety approach one- half of the total output of the coun- try and includes over 97,000,000 tons of anthracite, which is much above the record of any other vyear. It should be remembered in consulting statistics that in this state the lo ton is used, while most books give totals reduced to short toms. Alto- gether a third of a million persons were employed in and about the mines, but not all of them worked continuously. It is probable that in a year the average is about 1,000 tons per man working constantly. In the year before the Civil War, when Pennsylvania already had a reputation for industrial and mineral development, the total amount of coal mined was only 18,000,000 tons, or less than is now produced every month. Tt is a matter of regret on high national grounds that Secretary Lane's original a. ngement with the bituminous coal operators was not al- lowed to stand. In that case there would be more coal for industries and for export and the quality delivered would be much better than at present. One of the great complaints of the it is difficult present is not only that to get coal but that the quality is poor when it is secured. More slate and culm have been sold in the last few weeks than ever before and the re- cipient knows better than to com- plain. We are really paying the high- est prices for coal in history, taking into consideration heat producing power. (Toronto Mail and Empire). The reduction in freight rates on manure from Toronto to the Hssex peninsula raises the question of whether Ontario agriculture could not be assisted by a government system of fertilizer distribwtion. The scar- city of labor, its high cost and the need of cars for even more essentiat purposes are difficulties, but the need of enlarged output of foodstuffs is pressing and adequate fertilizing is an assured method of increasing yields. Toronto and other of the larger cities accumulate a considerable surplus of manure in the crop season, and some central agency ought to be at work =athering this up and shipping areas where it can it to agricultural c o profitably used Tn connection with this a government system of cupplying artificial fertilizers at cost all over the provinee ought to be in effect. At present, of course, the cost of nitrates, phosphates and potash is prohibitive. and the latter is sca ly obtainable for agricultu pur- Y But the need of food produc- poses. tion, even at high cost, is now so pressing that economies of former days scem imsignificant compared with present value of large produc- tion. The province could well af- ford to lose money for the ttme in a venture assuring fullest possible sup- ply of fertilizers in districts sreatly needing it. Germanv's remarkable production of cereals and potatoes is owing chiefly to the skilful use of artificial fertilizer. The difference in rosults obtained by German methods is astonishing: —PBushels Per Aere Bar- Pota- Wht. Rve ley Oats toes 5 30.4 40.9 61 235 10.1 1432 16, 23.6 121 22.3593.2 7 148 B e izt 125 20.5 16.4 142 : 21 10.2 165 o Sk 16.6 16.8 109.5 Experiments in the 1 States have own that by proper of fertilizer. natural and cd from artificial, vields can be enla 20 to 70 per cent, : | for the bug powder e FACTS -ABOUT THE | BY LIEUT. FITZHU " AMERICAN NAVY GH GREEN, U. S. 0il Soak it in oil! cash your penny ban I''n craz Take vour savings, insurance, rob the baby’s and sofise it into oil! Listen: don’t know how many automo- biles there are, but if Zeus looked down on the world just now he'd yell We don’t know actly how Many aeroplanes we have. hut we do know we are about tc spend a billion dollars on more. And we are only the U. S—news to some people, but its so. W are not the World by several million motor cars and aeros. All of which burn sas, meaning OIL. Turn for a moment to the waving ‘wheat. So carefully is it sown, grown, harvested, dried and threshed. Laby- rinthine ar the processes from grain to flour, and almost art is the bak- ing thereof into bread. Long and costly is the way from furrowed field to flap-jack: yet Man will have no other. Lo the fat Elephant. the Navy in a minute.) majesty he enters the wheat and feeds. He shuts his little eyes and gorges—milkweed too, and grass, and vines. Todder is that which fills his capicious belly. Were he fastidious he would starve. Our Navy is elephantine. The myriad motor vehicles of the world, (' get to In ponderous autos, aeros, and interurban jugger- nauts, like their finickv owners must have the small costly distillations of a vast harvest; gasoline and kero- sene. The hulking Man-of-War, iron- bellied and with yards—even miles— of steel intestines, feeds on unpicked fodder, the original crop of raw and unrefined crude oil. Yet the oil supply is Timited. Some experts predict that our generation shall see its end. Little wonder then | when by the present program the Navy will require in a single vear, 6,- | 721,000 barrels of fuel oil, and three | times that in war! A1l mew ships 200,000,000 Foes. (Wall Street Journal) { One of a group of business men, | “It seems wonderful that Germany, | with a population of but 68,000,000, should be able to fight the rest of the world as she has donme.” Al agreed that it was wonderful Had they studied the matter with care, | the situation would not have looked wonderful, but menacing. When Berlin directed Amstria-Hun- gary to begin operations July 28, 1914, it had not 68,000,000, but at t 146,500,000 population behind it. The lowest offictal estimate of the Teutonic AlRance is as follows: Fermany ...... —coenn -- 68,000,000 Austria-Hungary .. ...« 52,000,000 Bulgaria .- 5,500,000 Turkey 21,000,000 146,600,000 When the Potsdam conference was | held in July, 1914, for deciding on the date of opening hostilities, Tur- key and Bulgaria were as much a part of the Pan-Germanic Bmpire as they are today. They entered the war presumably on the days assigned and ordered by Berlin. Thanks to years of the first rush of the German mili- | tary machine carried it far into enemy terrifory. Fnemy populations were promptly enslaved. Little na- tions were overrun, and their peopie driven into the slave gangs and put to work. Here is a sample of the means taken to secure labor. 1t is taken from an Austro-German proc- lamation in Italy but a few weeks ago: “Every citizen must obey our lahor regniation; all workmen and children over fifteen vears of age must work in the fields every day, Sunday in- cluded. from 4 o’clock in the morn- ing until 8 o’clock in the evening. “Lazy workmen will be accom- preparation panied in the work and watched by Germans. After the harvest they will he imprisoned for six months and every third day will be given nothing but bread and water. Lazy | women will be obliged to work and | after the harvest will receive six | months imprisonment. Lazy children | will be punished by beating. The | commandant reserves the right to | punish lazy workmen with twenty | Jashes daily.” | Without counting Armenians and Svrians, over 43,000.000 people have been enslaved and made to work for | the conquerors hevond the Himits of | human endurance. Thus untold thou- sands of men, were released from in- v for military service. Many aved men are even being forced into the ranks. From the first Ger- many’s man power has been not §8,- 600,000, but close to 200,000,000, with a possibility of 25,000,000 men for the field. Pan-Germany, smiled, has been unmasked the | war as a hideous reality. Uncom- pleted, yet its strength is sufficient to | shake the world to its foundations. Close our eyves a little longer and it will dominate the world with a rod of iron at which we by once New Rules for Lent. (New York Sun.) The pope's announcement that Catholics may eat fish and meat at the same meal in Lent sets aside a rule which was established by Bene- diet X1V. in 1745. This prohibition applied to Sundays as well as week s, and no relaxation of it was permitted. even in the United States. The important change may be caused the realization that now. when meat arce and dear, a nreal may be eked out with a fish course. The substitution of Saturday for Wednesday as a day of abstinence will bring together the church’'s two meatless dayvs. To the abstinence of Fridays there are no exceptions, inless in the case of persons seriou ill. but in the United States work ingmen and their families have been permitted since 1895 or before, to eat hy is s | This rule is slightly [ which included a judge, recently said. | (no ertent thae e Gy mredified to re oil-burners. Submarines must be. How unselfish we are—or foolish. | Other powers with whom we are fighting or competing realize the | superiority of oil burning ships. | Blindly we seek only the dollar and | for it barter the coat of mail God as given Our annual yield is | 265,000,000 rrels, two-thirds of the world’s supply of oil. At this rate students of the subject set 22 years as the limit So serious was the prospect in 1913 that the N: Department halted its policy until | us. of building oil-burners the Department of the Interior could | canvass the national resources. The | only assurance forthcoming was that 0il could be relied upon for the life of battleships constructed within the decade—twenty vears perhaps. | We are not dependent upon our export trade in oil. Tt is a source of | Juxury rather than of living. Were | we to hold what we have for our own | supply would last times as long or | long, or more than 500 years. Naval | specialists the world over grant lim- | itless superiority to oil fuel ships. Greater speed, efficiency, strength, and tactical value are but a few of their | overwhelming advantages. And we | are content to sell our safety for pieces of silver! The government is doing its best. On September 27, 1909, the president withdrew large areas of public land in order to create a national reserve. | Already there are Naval Petroleum | Reserves, Nos. 1, 2 and 3 in Califor- | nia and Wyoming. By the president's order of April, 1915, “these areas | shall be held for the exclusive use | or benefit of the United States Navy.” Going—Going—. Not only the oil, | but the price is going—higher. Re- | member the hungry elephant. But when you try to corner the market of his fodder don’t forget the other wild animals. The Bears for in- stance. . . . meat once a day on all abstinence days except Fridays, Ash Wednesday, | Holy Saturdays and Christmas eve. | | the extent that the fast of Holy Sat- | urday will end at noon. American Catholics will also ob- serve the nation’s meatless day, but that dges not exclude fowl. The Cath- ofic workingman, who is permitted by the church to eat meat on Saturday, is asked by the president to make that a porkless day. The permfession granted to soldiers and sailors to eat meat on all days of the year except Ash Wednesday, the last two days of Lent and Christ- was to be expected, for this exemption has been applied for many vears to the army in peace times, and not only to the navy but to sailors in the merchant marines. the Appeal. (Bridgeport Telegram-) If there is one thing in Connecti- cut court procedure more than an- other which invites criticism it i=z in the relations of the city and town courts with the common pleas court, criminal side. Appeals are taken from the minor tribunals to this county court. They are encour- aged alike by lawyers hungry for every case which goes up. No matter how regular the preced- ure, no matter how just the sentence, no matter how frivolous the ground of appeal, up goes the case if it in- volves a violation of the liquor, gambling or disorderly house laws. The purpose of this appeal is not to secure justice, but in nine cases out of ten to thwart justice. Such thwarting is not always successful but it is in some cases, because wit- nesses have a of disappearing and prosecutors are not watchful of the public welfare as in the lower is way courts, after thinking over the case for a month. Now the way to deal with these cases is to make the punishment much heavier in the upper court . when it is found that there is no honest ground for appeal. The situation is not a pleasant one to contemplate It is a procedure which discredits the courts, and, like all such things, it should be cut out by vigorous action. Wants More Garfields. (Topcka Kan. State Journal.) What the country neceds for the speedy and successful promotion of the war is more men like Dr. Garfield, men who, when they recognize an ecmergency, meet it with firmness. The barrier to progress existing on account of the fuel situation could be removed only by cutting straight throught it The main business of the war, sending of men, munitions and plies to BEurope, has been halted by a ck of coal for the ships. In New ork harbor alone 118 vessels were idle unable to sail owing to of fuel. Of what avail is it to men, to continue to manufac ture war material and to accumulate supplies if they cannat transport- ed? Of what avail is it to construct more ships if we cannot move those we already have. Dr. Garfield’s the sup- Y lying death enlist be rder doubtless works many hardships upon employers and employes, but this is a time of sacri- fice When a country is engaged in war somebody must pay and some- baody must suffer. There is little time | for sclecting those best able to stand it. Tt is useless to say there was a bet- ter or an easier way. It is folly to go to war with gloves on he time had arrived when it was 1 erative that something be done to relieve the situa- tion confronting the country Dr. | (iarfield had the power to do that thing and he did it not heeding the protests of members of Congress or of those whose business interests are af- fected. In the course which he has pursued he has the backing of the president and he prabably will receive THE McMillan Store (Incorporated.) “Always Reliable.” STORE OPEN ALL DAY TUESDAY « To make this a busy day after being closed Monday we offer these: SPECIAL VALUES FOR TUESDAY ONLY Two Hundred Dozen Hand- kerchiefs v Including Men Women's and Children’s. ON SALE TUESDAY AT 9 A M PRICE 5c’ 8c and loc each Don’t Miss This Chance to Stock Up. Manufacturers’ Sample Lot of Gloves and Mittens ON SALE TUESDAY AT 9 A. M. 29c PAIR, VALUE 50c. (We Consider This Item an Excep- tional Opportunity.) 4 One Case of Turkish Towels Large size, extra heavy double thread Towels. (Only Forty Dozen in AlL) ON SALE TUESDAY AT 9 A. M. VALUE 50c. 39 c EACH. One Hundred Velvet Rugs (Size 27x54), Good $1.98 Value. ON SALE TUESDAY AT 9 A. M. PRICE $ 1 .49 EACH. Sample Pairs of Lace Curtains Only one pair of a kind. Sample Curtains taken from display racks. Slightly soiled. PRICE TUESDAY YOUR CHOICE PER PAIR 50c . our’ Replacing the Dunce’s Stool. (Waterbury Republican). An article in a recent number the Survey - discusses the the old-time dunce's was a time when was considered his per- punished verse and s was by public disgrace on the~ dunce's stool. backward d Now the or stupid child is recognized as the victim of soma cause other wilful He his grade than a disposi- tion against learnin lagging behind ill health, of sufficient nourishment, the language and may because residence, ignorance many, many other reasons. He may simply be slow in developing. He may be feebleminded. Whatever the cause of his inabilit to keep mp with his class, it rec- ognized that punishment is not the thing he needs. Failing to pass the backward child year after year is not considered good either for the child or for the quicker minded% children with whom he is placed Just what should be done the backward or feebleminded has not been settled yet. But educators and ial workers recognized the problem and are work- ing at it. There is a growing ten- dency to look into the meaning and® causes of the child's mental deficiency and to overcome the handicaps wher- be of in- of, han ay with child many S0 have ever possible. The child who has been retarded by health or environ- ment is given a better chance to de- velop normally and to catch up once more with his more fortunate school- mates. Those with an inherent de- fect of the brain are put in other classes where thev are given training as they can assimilatc use. There much can he helped need. There i search and doctors and ors and socicty problem can be of the imount of the amount he done is is much to be learnc to be done hefore the fully in the a big field of ful study ahead ially trained teach- in general before the solved. But in spite ca HDLLU remains to there is cause for rejoicing in the fact that a start been made to replace the dunce's stool with intelligent, sane and humane methods o and children ways they of is that vast ha Farly Food Conservation, (Life.) “What can you writing on the wall?"” say of the hand warning to cuut out from Hoover to “Tt was a z the feast busi- Belst T ne! Camouflage Cigars, (Boston Transcript.) “Do you think T'm tobacco heart, ‘“Not if this is the brand of cigars suffering from . doctor?” the ultimate approval of the entire country. vou smoke habitually,” replied the doctor, raising the window. These are < of passing of stool There the backward child disobedient or dulln %