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ew qtam Herald.[ . c o : sroup of men by paying an excess 3 of those behin e New TN oan HBRALD PUBLISHING COMPANY, profit on our food. Je.are willing to m“h‘“h:“:‘r'(“l'snlnvm- capacity of the roprietors. % SAoH do 3 Proprietors. pay for an automabile or a new cane ! As to 0!")‘01'\\1::7v|-n\ for public good ed dally (Sunday excepted) at 4:15 { and mnot ask wl e profit to the not a day passes without some meas 4 erald Building, 67 Church St. g EAE (N . paegda i ses wvr‘ hlm me mea $8°00 s Year maker or dealer is But we are not ure : ring itsc Numerous ex- ¥ M . amples could be founc »f such effort "1? Zhgfsnulomm goinz to purchase food at a high \ mm‘" el vl‘)r "’l((g* s \ = price, and a high price is one which Wz £ S X er influences exerted of ntered at the Post Office at New Britain £ . : =) £ are other influen xerted of w as Second Class Mall Matter. allows too great a margin of profit y = AP 7 the public is never aware. Mar £ . the great man, basking in the light of public approval for a ice well rendered, who obtaifed 3 T B Ol TS to the various handlers who pass it fustness Office ....... - 925 lon to us, the consume ditorial Rooms ...... . 926 e Congressional action in conducting e i idea from some of those ‘rej e only profitable advertising medlum In the city. Circulation books and press room always open to advertisers s appreciated in dull times when a school of debate, a circus of oratory, e ol e acterized them when he tried 0 : something over’ which wo Member of the Associated Press here is nothing else to worry about. f % J /) il bearsthe |ioht Jriie Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news credited to it or not otherwise credited | fics of those we voted for, we wildly / In this paper and also local news . ) N4 i AEAt A s published hereln argue politics, for or then. / y the power behind the throne' 3 oo e | Thex are our own little men and we ) / 4 throne of that thought which plans like to see them perform. But we do | g s il 7 for public welfare, not for personal 7] aggrandizement, b olely as a citi We are amuscd at the oratorical an- KA 7/ ; G ~ It might well he said of mse journalist, especially thoss who TARDEN COMING TO THE UNITED . expect action in times of national STATES? : ! o zen desiring general =ood emergency, and immediate action. ) 0 ' X That Mr. Mellen many ¥ Maximilian Harden, editor of Die { i /3 ' Profitecring has assumed the propor- in that legislative atmosphene so long § Zinkuff of Berlin, is mentioried from e S et rt 3 tions of a national emergeney and now assoclated with rallroad effort, can Copenhagen as a possible ambassador ‘ ‘1 (R pay this tribute to the fourth 5 is the time for Congress to take the /, e ficant it togthe United States. We are sure of e € - ooy i 5 7 is significant of itself packers to task. The packers are pre- B y Mr. Melien has some other con- 1t an interesting individuality to lead the 4 ¢ ¥ : sumably breaking anti-trust laws. | X \ 4 s clusions worthy of consideration Qérman delegation if ihis irrepressible | X 41, Y = vou want wealth he a banker he e fhaiv Combines are common in the realm of : 2 ;i alt? a hanker, dividual is chosen to act as the rep- | | 7SS 1C \ s W . s > R e e e i E the slanghtered cow, the railroad ths [ ‘s > anse Sl o fentative of German interests in & 8 ra I hat RN : g . > / No doubt about it Mr. Mellen think hauls her and the grain-grower that N e ) R s et eteovern his Da- kRington. & . 7 : : cds her. Let us Jook o 3 4 e ment will take it over. Did Harden's fame, during the war, 5y it uh GG IO OVE, 7 W Bt hiaand Herald « S Let Congress cexpose the pockethool 4 ksotafexpelencelll et SN BRSO Oy ’ Blread rapidly, despite the strict cen- - S by ” 275 st sion? Most of us would sa) “ADn B350 which isolatcd Germany. 1o | Of the packer to the N-Ray of finance § the chosen antagonist of Prus-| E 2 rels and ministers of ace defend u and determine what he deserves and 222 £ 2 7 o hossiBiiities differ 100 B RRA R . But if you want veal contentment what he is getting. If the two which, as we know. from the most gnism and faced all sorts of odds in Rxpressing his opinions. Anti-Kaiser | Widely, there are numerous methods D and anti-war throughout the hostili- { of adjustment. If they do not, noth- XAl / by ail means hecome a farmer ¥s means ties, the cditor exposed many a weak- | ing has been lost. So, turn loose the f 4 Mr. Mellen struction o 5 i B / ellen adopts the belief of a | eorge ness of militarism to his readers. He | silver-tongued orators of the people Mr. Mell dop ief Georg 3 ¢ 2 . philosopher who concluded that to | his denun Buceeded in publishing but a little of | and allow them to enla their cere- ? make two bindes of grass grow where | unq sair he time. Most of the time he was| bral capacities by a little jussling " one mrew before was a greater ac- ! cnoulg i A [ - 5 N an the | 3 4% funder a sentence of suspended action | with figures; let them aid whom they \ i complishment for one man than the | jjaved that Ayvith his paper and a part of the time { are supposed to aid—the public. loings of the whole r ¥ s f poli combined. He adds that {o mak he was actually in jail. It mattered | yfter <the adjustment we will be fhose two blades grow may not ap- | little jud | gun. wo dittle to him. With a fidelity that sa-! pleased to have them “resume the peal to many. but in the end it Will | {15,y vors of the deeds of the liquor adict| .ouna of ———e i bring the true measure of content- | T. H. Kcho i the strikers w politics and discussion that ment. waiting for their discharge. And And after all, most of us with war | o0 " biiiman b @ want that adjustmenta rider before him. He has under con- | The neighbor is more read for a fthere are still many others remaining | 8arden experience can ftestify to the | yaq cpused the hé liberated another printed broad- o T sidesation .numerous arguments for | CAMPAIEN Now than in 1914 and 1915. in the service, while thousands have | delight which came as those green | nq glde that was apt enough to gain offi- N and against the repeal of Daylight Montreal Gazette. i been discharged. | 1eaves pushed their tips above the | ciarted the clal recognition and he “’ “in? THII VACATION HOUSE e X —_— ! Not all of this large total enlisted | brown earth, and how tenderly one | p.., nit ‘ saving. A commission is to be appointed by | directly in the British army. Some | would watch the ripening, of one fo- e Adavews the peace conference to consider the went in by way 2 v a single head of lettuce. all . g N . 2 2 s ) ay of Canada and some | mato. or a singie hea f < strike is affecting The wonder of the situation is th#t! Herald was requested by authorities The blockade against Germany has | claims of Norway to Spitzbergen. That ' even in the Australian service. The 1 bhecause our own hands fashioned the he was allowed 1o publish his paper at | at the City Mission to raise, if we | been raised and the markets of that| -\rctic island had given little concern navy. too, invited enlistments, planting and attended to the water- all, but the strength of his utterances | fous# #' possible, the sum of two | land arc now open to United States| L. ‘!h" Eaa e ast It hav- | While the total is but a small yer | ing and cultivating. ¢ Dol : d d > o e : 5 e ®S 1 ing disposed of the German commer- | cent. of the soven millions Great Brit- In conclusion Mr. Mellen says o fmuit have been so great that there| hundreq dollars in ovder that what| goods. Also the United States is open | cial intercsts there, though that it ain {hrew infe the srent fght. Eg(‘:\ | farming: "It does not offer the great- g@s little gainsaying their truthfulness | is known as the “Vacation House" | to German manufactures. *Made in| might be as well to anncx the whole : which would have meant in propor- | est returns. but it does offer content was no SO & e able to T = fhe was no sooner “out” ang, a their constituencies demand—but tural bill with the daylight saving| instance would be a dangerous thing print his expressions of opinion, than lazain, Several days ago the cditor of the | east If the their strike pathetic il vould never ( Officer English is confined : home by iliness more | iand with its coal fields and poten- ! tion for the United States an army of | ment. happiness and knowiedge ah Y Mite: &lCorbinis | | | | R Government hesitated to! might Montinue in existence another | than it did hefore the war though, It | 1} ITeN mines. Bul evei a no man's i 15,000,000, yet there is no denving that | duty well done and descrving ihe } began running ten hours a da | | | | it is probable that the Imperial{ now being conducted by the Mission | Germany” means a great deal & land may have its claimants, and Nor- | these crusaders, filled with the Amer- | good will of all.” W. H. Cadwell laid out all the lot yr of him, fearing the ef-| month or so. Preliminary canvasses 5 L so. ary canvass is by no means a guarantee onest- | wi b 1 : . e of honest- | way has s plausible a case as any.— | jcan spirit. and volunteering to fight A philosophical conclusion trom the [ o =1 CH o G cemetery yestsd d upan his follow- | for funds and furniture, conducted in | Iy manufactured goods or good faith | —Springfield Republican for a great cAuse, were of immense | mind of one of America’s once mighty Victions. which | the churches principally, have re- | back of the sale - inspiration to their comrades. men of business. Mr. Mellen led a Few The payroll of the st dey ment for t t we Rt from those | sulted in the outfitting of a place S RIS S WARM WEATHER WISHE: It would be interesting reading for | full life before his retirement N them. More- | where children and women from New | F = 3 | Oh, T would dearly love to be Americans if some individual would | men excelled him. Finance. 1a h popularly . . 5 FACTS AND FANCIES. e e e wrile the story of these vouths, who, | roads and politics held his attention arly | Britain may spend a quiet day or so o ! ish that swimmet > sea; oLt an Y calll o hanno ae | reliven s On el cotldiinot rt of his carcer Edward She possibly | 1" dqge 2 Workers and United States \ bird that flieth in the air % that p These are sad davs for autocracy.| And findeth cooling breezes there; sire for adventure, or the fecling that | recognize in that por vervwhere beer s losing its authore| A walris on a cake of loe— a great crisis demanded sacrifice, went | everything to apy 3 cidents 8 . B - or ro ~omfe anc e say that he lived largely incidents | jpuplicity in an endeavor to obtain | ity.—Toronto Globe Al e e e o! | [onthronicomfort aniifufuncien ol mypthanegl e Rl A lan, and ) ; 5 in the country. Now, there is a de- on shauld | gire that we usc our resources for| g o1 1 in the bus- e fail- - e = ments, to battle in the bloody trenches, | iness creed of his times and hi George Landers ELCELLL S T - . for a flas which was not their own. | ure was due to the growing con- - for one or fwo move months. The| NOW there's n chance for the hook-| And yet, if 1 could have my wish, - eeper to et o s high stc and put doubt if oulc e a fis Herald realizes that the pockeis of Dper tojeet offinis hishistooliand putiill fdoubtilf Tinvolld gt ish, | in his vacation working in a Kansas | For be the weather what it may D. the city have been severely taxed | wheat field, But rom his | known that these men went to | sciousness of his countrymen tha John T every British front. and that included | such & policy continued much longer |, 1 o e an LS no less than eleven flelds, not to speak | would lead only to destruction : ! ‘ ot maybe, he couldn’t | Iish must drink water every dav; ST We fancy this would be Mr. Mel- during the past few years, a limb back on the s at the en ¢ -etract - word s 3 . X e plac in 0 1 e; A Kh haggon he stool a ->‘ end of | And I retract my former word Surely a brave host, well deserving | len's own conclusion. Now he T e National Happenings fitcer, | SAMe time it is anxious to bring the | the vacation.—St. Louis Post-Dis- | That I should like to be a bird, of the thanks of the country they first | all that Dbehind him Ambition \‘1‘ matter before the public and do what | Pateh | For though it would be fine to fly, served, and of their own country, too, | wrecked him, and in the sunset of 700 he 1 S o et s wl i 3 -eflects amid the bheau- | der arres it can toward aiding what it feels ‘ It would be work—and that is why whose cause was really linked in .the | life he calmly reflects amid the qr Sl e hmis- | S By way to make the party livelier And though indeed it would be nice | great conflict from the start. altho {itul Berkshire Hills a philosophy | Strikerst evefand A o |ls @ good cause. some of the senators have it in mind | To sit upon a cake of ice, only a few Americans could then s which is companion to the cry of | JOUL i o6 arole nayor ning maze Train wreckers at § nento un- The Vacation Iouse is simply a | to ask a few riddles when President Yet how much nicer it would be 1 Wolsey. for “just a little carth upon - farm-house located on the road to| Wilson cones to visit them.——Wash- | To have that cake of ice in me! — - which to find rest.” the - . ington Star Canton from Unionville near Cherry : . e T el el e aticl oen = = <0, bird, Il scek the shade, | (A. G. Gardiner in the London Daily | Only Airships Have Been Stormbound. AL 5 Slaen pen Intimation that Great Britain wi And there I'll have a cold drink ews.) (New York Times) country about it and it is located | postpone action on the projected An- | i T S RS Do (6 s For o many weeks, now, have re between two brooks of clean, fresh | 816Ciranco-American alliance until it \nq. like the fish, .I'll soak it in American liberalism, in the name of { S see hat the U ec States « ™ 1 0} < 1 " 1 ser T .k The house has been rented 'J eIl Wt e Winded] Sk will do = 71l it pervades my very skin, English liberalism, not o desert the | dixplays traditional British caution—! \1d in that drink shall clink and President. The struggle between the | tion to the journevs | Jies trate despit ped the Wilson and Clemencean. — % Congress appropriates $150,000,000 of $20,000 ers of the papers been considering he | mosphereic conditions chiefly in rela- of airplanes and ha rniture placed therein. Plans | p, : ale : Ao ke ren x PiMttsburgh Dispatch. S president and the premier (Clemen- | dirigible balloons that ther use arc not extremely am- L e reanion grounds i1 : 1A chunk of ice to cool my throat ceau) is not over. It has only begun. | heen created a widespread i pesiol he program limiting itself to You know of course, what is meant | y | The victory is not going to be decided | that all through these weeks, on th day excursions of women;| BY “the packers.” They are the fel-| myan bird and fish and walrus are! | DV @ score of men in Paris: it is go- | North Atlantic co at least. this | FORMER AVIATOR P oy s lows who got up the cost of hving. —Cleveland Plain Dealer, | Ing 1o be decided by events, by the | vear's weath has been n \m w‘v WEDS NEW XOR}\F‘R Detroit News. operaiion of forces much greater | and stormy. As a matter : there has been un- | Carl Munk Takes Miss Nettic Madier I shall be more happy. far o - = : han the will of this man or the cun- [ even in Newfoundland 5 . i Once War, Now Peace stries, | than ; i Mr. Burleson savs there is no foun- | Now Peace Industries. | {0 56" that, by the collective sense | nothing at al remarkable about it, un been both tion for reports that he has re- | (New Yo un of the common people in all countries. | less it be that storms hav both As His Bride—Was Pioneer ed. But isn't the fact that he| (Congress hearings have begun on | mhat force is (!\lfl‘wn!v to mobilize. It | less numerous and less severe to resign some foundation tariff questions which should be set- | js jnarticulate and unorganized. Tt is | usual Flicr. field Republican. tled straightway. While the war was | slow to think and slow to act. It is Ships that sail o steam the surface = L on hundreds of millions of American | tricked for a time, and is the easy vic- | of the sea have gone guictly and suc- Carl Munk o hia physicians are said to be | capital went into the manufacture of | {im of the charlatan, the adventurer, | cessfully about {heir businesses, and | afjs Nettie Madic a new malady.” In less' dyestuffs hecause this country was|and a squalid press. Bui in the end | only the fragile craft of the air have | New York, were m s the physicians are still | destitute of them and could not ob- | it thinks justly and acts with irresist- [ watched the skies with anxiety (s gme of the old ones. tain them in any other way. Hun- | ible power. And il is this force of | been obliged to postpone thein ftar. Areds of millions likewise went into | public opinion that will ultimately de- | ures through many weary davs o Mr. Munk is employved = potash, nitrate, manganese and mag- | cide whether the treaty is to live or | waiting. Even they, inc identally, have | Gepartment of the Corbin Sc forgyman was in the| nesite products. These at the time | the covenant is to live, whether the | shown fear of the weather only Whem | poratio When the Unite rmon when a Laby be. | were war industries pure and simple. | world is to have the president's new | vovages prolonged fo f “ " Nmit | qeclared war ag jerma hoped—possibility were 11 morning at depa e was among the first men ir its mother rosa and | Some of them were as essential {o our { order or the pramier's old order, | of known—o jis the door. “Stop,” | victory abroad and to our safety at | whether humanity is to he organized | in contemplation | to enlist. Later r, “the bahy's not! home as shells from the munition | for peace or for war | The war taught the operators of | formally announce plants and ships from the shipbuilding | This 15 not the time to despair. This { sirplanes that they had little to fe hegRvagpnonoraly od towards the pul- | plants. ic the time for all the forces of good | when flights of a few h, ‘e 2in't. e? But unlike | Will in the world to make a phalanx | question, frem any except the most Mr. Munk has th tinction ts, and from fog&f. | heing one of the ours were in | gy 4 : 3ut, with the war over of 'Im."-—Boston | chrapnel. bayonets and torpedoes, | about the president and to fight for | violent of tempe m the league of nations. which made flight useles The diri- } , aeroplane flig A b RS eibles, too, have been tested in bad | prijadel | until their commanders think f 4o, and they still are indispensable to our na- tional security and to our national flowing bowl 10| yuifare. Whether by war of arms MellcoRitaflcation s enther B vils of risin ° Mot spell, but | 5, \cap of trade or by whatever (Bridgeport Post.) oniyabout ithefpelilo oan cis no coal o > to e New York World | landimg in high winds. Once alo ) o co R BT, T ety (o AT, Writing to the New York World | lands E howl to keep 000 people in forty-cight State group- EhENGL SOl B N o G e « g5, some of them bigger. richer anc . Sojrow: o MR ARt Tt S LR E Wil some reflecions on life and its ob-| In the era of ac ! heree Bitts, more populous than kingdoms and re- sectus o be approaching, meteorolo publics of the Old World, must never again he caught unprepared to supply L | corporatio A former President Charles §. Mellen | they do not mind gales, if only they | home of Walter of the New Haven railrond makes [ blow in the rizht direction Terrace, this week erial navigation that marriage jects, well worth a study k Curiously enough, Afr. Mellen finds | will be studied as never hefore, cve Penuy Wisc journalism the best profession to | in the days of sailing ships. The steam adopt if one is ambitious and wants | ships have caused thiz importay political preferment. And despite the | ence to he neglected. for to them oft repeated refusal of many eminent | weather is of small account except as editors, and others in newspaper ffects coal vork, to be candidates for office, or | dizestive operat union of itself out of its vast resources with 2 e for higher l'asic needs of industries and basic n papers is U of fond as imperatively required form of national life as the water we hear of nk and the air we hreathe. Tf, with our tariff laws and With | aven to accept appointments. there is | time the aviato ver other action may he neces- | yoason to believe Mr. Mellen is cor- [ as much about ¢ | Sary. we do noi preserve forever the | roer in this view atory hirds, for industries which we did not possess In reaching this conclusion MMr. | fast under the co flering them- o the war but which we do now | Mellen pays a tribute to the prof pumished in- in almost full perfection. it | sion, and modesty will nol pres SET 17T that there ap- | ot be merely political ingrati- | repetition here. He says. after the Paris, July Stematic “after | tude; it will he national lunacy. ahove observation about going into | cian once de re is (0 be con- — politics by way of journalism: “In|could he el fo music, “even a n of the self-ap- A Growing Army no other way can he exert so great | paper article nay be most of (Bridgeport Post) an influence and do so much good to | has just been ¢ the mixup.—Can- | It is really astounding how largze is | his fellowmen or deserve hetter of | Paris by the fi parforma ngle tvpe of a pry the size of the army of Americans who | the community in which he lives.” “Apotheose,” a Iyrical - i under the itish flag befor There is a larze measure of truth | twe hundred singe h chalieneing his v into the war with Germ lin Mr. Mellen's conclusion, and few | chorus) Tke n vernment, Villa s k ! baen variously esti- | men are better qualified to testify to | Francis Casades to aggravate the 1 enty 1o f ousand. { it than he whose hand guided the | Paul Deschanel. liie presider v. According to an | But there are many wwho believe that | great New England railroad system, | chamber of deputies. M t resident in Mexico, | when the final count is taken the total f he did. throuzh the machina- | libretto is, in fact, one of m as the Butcher has | will come nearer one hundred thou- | tions of many, finally land it on the | speeches hich Casad ging of ail Americans | rand rocks. Mr. Mellen never failed to | lvrical that he was in<pi outlaw fo:ces e-| A this very time there are nearly | keep in fouch with public opinion | et it to mus: T'he work q v v and prder even in a single ! twenty thousand men in Britain alone | through the pres He also knew how | successful production. poor economy as walk Some confirmation 8iv to his dictum in | % 100,00( | |