Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
. : RDAY, AUGUST 9, 1910. New Britain Herald.‘\",i,\"‘""‘,‘U"fl}',i_fif,"];”,fi,‘“,f”j‘t‘ B e e THE GREAT AMERICAN HOME | tion and may g o o 7 It will ever be thus.. As syeraEe age ofdour Leoldicy | blind sentiment can masquerdde ; dead in France is 23 years. livery -~ | reasoning, and as long as a hypnofs Issued dally (Sunday excepted) at 4:15 | and coffec were served without it and [ war is a boys' war. This was no ex- = | worship of fhp past can Pns'{,f‘: i TN AR s st e e, [y | RS SO et | WONDER WHATS ThE | Junt shat long witl there be an MR $2.00 Three Months. may be, here, within a week or so TS0 & Son b A laboring man is one who works BIG DEA ~ IN HER. | ized rage at every departure, frofi 1L is stated now that the Mayor has | cight or ten hours a day R SHE. “sacred principles” in a world that :t tared e The £ oo Sroe At Hes Siltallywith nim samples of suppiies in meats | keeping woman who works 12 or 13 OTHER LETTTR changing every minute v as Second Class Mall Matter. } ; it 3 - and groceries which he will exhibit at | hours a day isn't called a laborer SAID SHE WOULDN'T BE TELEPHONE CALLS Louisville Courier-Journal Business Office ............ 25 | the special meeting of the Common e E_'TH-I. N WEEK, = MORGANTHAU ])ENIES Bditorlal Raoma ....0.....neeoe 926 | Council next Tuesday eveming, Wilh | \yhile fhe allied and associated | "Dm‘m' " GIVE A Fl ELLow . POCTOM STATEMINE The only profitable advertising medlum In [ the idea that it may see fit to order | powers are discussing who won the the city. Circulation books and press | (o oc 1o ooods. Evidently he was | War, Germany is trying to find out . ANY NOT(CE room always open to advertisers. who lost the war.—Utica Observer. HERALD PUBLISHING COMPANY, and there were few families that had e f Proorietor: it on the table, rich or poor. Tea unwilling to take the responsibility of 5 2 » American Investigation Member of the Assoclated Prems. T The Associated Pross 1y exclusively entitied | OTdering it himself. We hope that it | phe lowa farmer who went from b to the use for republication of all news | \ill not he too late, after the council | Omaha with $7,000 in his pocket for o credited to it or mot otherwise credited : ¢ sup- | which he had exchanged 159 head [ In this paper and alss local acws | dccides, to get some of the other sup- exchanged 159 head of / Polish Telegraph Agency. i fenteine el : uld | hoss will not complain if present con- e plies. \Wc believe that the city wo E ; e ditions last t1ll he can come to ma e e | Dyom1e (it tnrough the 1mportation of I azain.—Omaha Bee. THE PRESIDENTS APPEAL part of the Army surplus. Washington Aug 9.—len Morgenthau, head of the American S | < { mission investigating conditions i B 2 = ON GROWING OLD. o] Poland, has cabled to the State ‘d resident Wilson, in his appearance g B b before the Housge vesterday, made an THE HOUSING CORPORATION able plea for better living conditions and a reduced scale of living for all partmen rom Warsaw a denial @ Be with me, Beauty, for the fire is | : ! dying, | a statement credited to him by the e o I arc old, too old for 4 i Polish Telegraph agency on July 28 s et u < : &N 2 s » had beea Loun Corporation, which is starting roving: bt b 3 v that “in the short time he had be Incorporation papers for the Civ s . o . | »oland h ad convinced himsell Of us. He covered the ideal remedies | pysiness with a capital stock of | Man, whose young passion sets the in Boland ‘he had convi i f ; t F o-called pogroms o for the situa . spend Ry = ! that all the so-called T I the situation very thoroughly. He | §300,000 and has an authorized capi- | pendthrift fying, = ; 7 : AL L g told us all what we should do in our | L conttoolne ok op R 0GRt ol d (4577 SE 3 ¢ ' tal of a million dollars, werc filad . 8 3 e T s s ks for loving 7 1 ! vesterday with the Secretary of State.! ] take the book and gather to the 7 7 ; e American mission had no o;_. 1 ir { hegun estigat of pogroms. Th New Britain s ured that the | fire, {/ - gun investigation pogrom . anv. which was described several| TUIMIng old yellow leaves. Minute g L, 4 mission, he added, had devoted mos! little hope that the authorities would company, g 2 by minute. 4 — - L of its time in Warsaw to obtaming days ago in the Herald, is to be The clock ticks to my heart; a with- 4 S Z V. general impressions of existing di% accomplished fact, and the workers cred wire. %) Z % ferences regarding economic hoycolts of the city will have cause for re- Moves a thin ghost of music in the and genepal economic condition touched upon, the sale of government i spines. 2 5 3 “We believe,” he said hat we have heard less than one-third of the joicing in the promise of lowered | rents through the building that will | I cannot sail your seas, T cannot wan- testimony that we intend to listen to he furnished by this corporation in- | des ‘ before submitting it all to the Pol e You: mountains, nor” vour down- 4 & government for their answer and y | lands, nor your valley =7 shall not begin to form an opinisn Iiver azain, nor share the battle yon- 7 = & : intilthe Pollshleovernment has il . o is o ar money on second mort- ! 3 NS F: o i answe ¢ 3 but we doubt it.' War-time restric- | 5 (o loan g i de an opportunity to answer I'hé gages to those who wish to build a| Where your young knight the N = General Jadwin, Homer Johnson ang broken squadron rallies; Only stay quiet, while my mind re- cannot last forever and the situation i members tained before arriving at final con- | difficulty and accounted for some of the reasons that the difficulty was here. But, after ail, he held out very be able to remedy matters Prosecution of the packers was supplies was cxplained, the reign of strikes was deplored. The only threat : made was the implication that war- time restrictions on food would be i . = e As we stated before, the company again adopted. This may be fruitful e tions were all right during the war, f ; o niat obts o myself will calmly sit as long as it they may be all right now, but they | NOMe and who first obtain their first necessary and weigh the facts ab- mortgage at banks. There are to be will be just as bad as at present when | "® Profits to the promoters, but the | The beauty of fire from the beauty of i they are raised unless it it done very | 'eturn will further the welfare of the embers. 3 | gradually. city in general. Money will be loaned | WANT DAYLIGHT LAW. Beauty, have pily; for the young have There is nothing to do with our |2t & low price and to cover a i power. e Yoo Profitcers, 25,000,000 Persous Urge Presidudl troubles but grin and bear them, | Valuation of houses and lots. Tk The rich their wealth, the beauti- 5 ! Ach eI es I3 ] 9 (New Haven Journal-Courier.) Wilson to Save Law. Y i s cle of strilkes . re | the individual will be able to build | arace, . The ab he depar 9 The vicious circle of strikes for more | the individu e B G S e of ottt i ots lana 1S The ability of the departments of | 9 g : Washington Aug Protest; wages, and the boost of price by the [ With no preliminary capital and with | fowenr, Jjustice in and out of the state, to dis- | from 25.000,000 persons have been « : el s producer is going to continue, we |a minimum of upkeep:expense. Spring time of man all April in a SAYS “HANK LONG cover the means of prosecuting peo- | sent to President Wilson urging the fear, until something gives. Then we A purely philanthropic proposition face. ple who will see a tumble that will sweep | from the start, the.ideals of the com. | QTN & In the jostling in the Strand, AND THEN RAMBLES FROM THE SUBJECT the law appears to correspond to the Where the mol thrusts or loiters s away many of our instilutions. Pos- | any. should meel with the hcarty | or is loud —AS USUAL pe Sohiedemands Giniithevisnall i » prosecute. e take it that the fed- sibly we r face . Sy || e o £ e . it The beggar with the saucer in his s Iy We now face the “something” | support of all. " Needless to'say, most | The l‘]_mdv c ce eral department of justice did not see which must give in thé railroad |of it will from those whé wish (o | aan Sekalo v E i pennyRtroms thepo brinzs o mind the enormity of the | its way a fortnight ago to prosecute | strike. Our time of reckoning may be [ borrow money for building purpo: ey Bl tan 7 crime. At once one sees the utter fol- | the meat packers for the want of | o0 i iarel & ) S RULE | ing crowd. 7 5 : el ; many of them are from the Middle at hand. We hope that it is. Like a | High as costs are, rents are higher; | 2 ) R e el x“nw T (;r £oidogdiic tidence ot (\Od«*.\ 19 I"G“Ffd*‘ L fi and Far West, which are supposed by ; IS : o ing, especially when one takes into | all the circumstance of confidence. . ¢ sore tooth, our ubles w so corporation is a timely sche rom this slittering world with ] : & : . | some to be opposed to the daylight : troubles will get | the corporation is a timely scheme. o, fr o s slitte ‘ A idcale i Con e L e So far as the knowledge of the gen- | sovine worse, we might as well haye them e [ bt o b or wen it sit o G ) that by so doing making sugar man- | eral public goes there is more evi- | Tuipey i R = e 2 ' . : nfacturers paupers. dence of a deliberate attempt to ex- | e O DRI UATI O Lot mo have isdom Wheauly, wisdom PR tort money from ice consumers in the 5% -.-,.i . P e é % I have just traced the origin of | State of Connecticut than there is evi- | s z i . 7 5 dence of a like disposition on the part | too pessimistic about the matier, even | the strike of workers in the railway read to the soul, rain, where the | : sugar. It wes In the garden of | e the meat trut Hvers one “bes though the above sounds as if we were | SHOPS more than we have heretofore summers parch. | : Eden, when (TS o S e pl (HEOT G Eve arising on the first | lieves” that the beef crowd is a on the verge of despair. Humanity | & 8re, nevertheless, assured that the| GIVe 708 Pui TO8C ¢ s i morning of her life and absently | crowd of greedy profileers, but the in- Even the night will blossom as the . reaching for a hair pin, and natural- | vestigation of the ice business by a and that conditions will bhe normal| e 53 ; : ; ; Iy not finding it said, “Sugar!” After j competent investigating committee I S £ R (R e TR e T JOHN MASEFIELD, : il B | that day. Adam was kept pretly busy. | appointed by Mayor FitzGerald show- veto of the daylight law repeal. Thig statement was made yesterday by William A. Ferguson, secretary of the National Daylight Saving asso ciation. ““The most significant part of these protests,” said Mr. Ferguson is that are regarded as violators of Mhroughout the East practicaily every chamber of commerce has rege istered similar protests. These pro- tests far outweigh those forwarded by opponents of daylight saving, bul there should be many more forward- ed “The women, who realize the bene- fits of daylight saving perhaps mera than any one else, should forward in dividual and club protests to the ed that the icc crowd is a crowd of | \wpite House and their representa- profiteer: The federal department of justice is impressed by the find- present trouble. The shopmen have g ; i . tion is becoming a menace to the | ings of the local committee, but finds REBEL i : FORUES DEFEATED. them are in lar worse condition than g 3 3 ¥ o re as wi as v pr eding. The state fre e Sleaes DR e 25 YEARS ) i f | community at large as well as to|no way of proceeding. A % o see be asleep and the local pros- ' . G iEe s e o those who ought {o be chained up. |Seems to I Government Troops Victorious At Congress and the President must | CT€48€ In pay, and it is this which is| | (orom {he Herald of that Date) ; ¢ I'll telt you what T mean. I have a | ccuting agent finds himself embar Guateseorra realize, though, that we will have fo | (e OC€casion for today's tie-up in traf- over as we would have the tooth out. ‘We all have to suffer, let us do so. In"the final analysis’.we &re not Though we today feel the effects of has survived many troubles, we will | ShOPMen are going back to their work survive this one, and be sthe better off for it. It was the natural after- | 28¢ o it % g . tlement of the wage issue which is in Atlantic Monthly. s G p RN s math of the war, it is being under- S £ 5 s being 2 : : : Seriously, though, the sugar ques- said to be the principal reason for the | iy 4 3 eriously ugar que tives in congress.” gone in other countries. Somec of : s WA | sisicr. She loves to, can. She gots | rassed by town lines of jurisdiction g fic. The present question should not \uzust 9, 1891. ot : 5 up in her sleep to can. It is no un- | But the beef combination, which is San Salvador, Aug. 9.—Hondurar be confused with the threat of other| The bad condition of West Main R common sight for me to sec her at l*';’"""j‘ll to "'; guilty, s to haled | rebel forces have been defeated by - 5 AT . street in fr . A. Nivens' se ¥ g it . ours of the night wandering aim- | before the grand jury e are sorry | government troops at uarascorra, branches of the railway men’s union | Street in front of D. A, Nivens' house | Ul hours o 5 ks sestigating c Salvad ontier, ge i Tint Wi o l is said to be due to the fault of the lessly around with a big brass kettle | the local ice ‘“‘0‘*“~"f}}‘1"~ ommittee | near the Salvadoran frontier, a tosdutt g higher wages or lower| o) ers and not to the carelessnes in one hand, and someties a boot | Went further than to “beileve.” Be- to a dispatch received her cost of living were forthcoming,| of the water department. CHANK LONG. or a poker in the other. Last week, | cause it “knew” something definite st y ‘ ' though it appears to us as if one was Best grade coal at $5.85 ton. SO e I was awakened by an awful commo- | it roEzen s blm,wuvl‘ We lo;;k o . Ihl(‘ )r‘l;r‘l‘ i el (i S ET e TaiAGLds g he et & casion the other day to reca he | lost heavily in killed and wounde 4 TR G R GERETEIER G R G Mrs. B. C. Porter is in Richfields : i tion in the kitchen. I arose and By st ? d it may wring from the other units. Tt e % : (’ " e (‘O('h : ¢ of | Springs, N. Y. ! (Contriluted.) donned my evening clothes, for I never | fact that the department of justice DhemEoyenimant fonceslcrpticed B 1 that someont. proforabl, | Bediitinotibeen for i ¢ statement o s e il e et Aanmes am e s | ermere i aiie. erisee. oo (-cn\pnllo‘(lltl\f; A\i'w H,[._u-n] mr;lm.m”“o mv'v:‘]r mmv‘ y material l . 7 > engi re ie 4 e of e ttarcal - L ey . - eha 'S eve . scramble its New England organ- The routed troops took up a Dost individual higher up, put his foot | N SP&inee EieRsbelieve Sithatitie |foi iyl were iegistercallatiine SGand, |Eas il s Sl L S Gl clothes, unless it's evening. 1 de “'VV‘NX‘““”‘C‘ Sl nng el olitedl Ligops ook (UL shopmen would have remained satis-| Union hotel in New York yesterday. scended o the Wichan, snapred oni| uiion thoueh It Had 1o cuso BEIRR | tiol on Saivaderel torition fied, for the time being, at least Mrs. George Corbin and family are the eleciric, and was horrorfied to | it that would have stood in a cour Lo Soyernu envtroons welp Guiciy I I i e T y ; enjoving a three weeks' outing at | my wife awakens me in (h' sma’ wee | see my sister with a big carving knife | of law. The railroad took the pau- | Iy reorgnniz @ and marched upon tf ) g men w < (] Lot S i = ) . 5 . . . N T 'S O cked 4 v s 108itic i [} op el 10 leeeb the |y sthrooke. hours »* th' mornin’, axking me why | and our “Pills” (that's our Boston | per's cath and ducked a trial | revolutionists' position in (i hope of Mrs. J. B. Talcott andl children have [ it is there is no sugar. ‘‘Susa 1 | Bull's name) on the table, while my What nohsense dnistall ds. "‘” Wwe | capturing i diately, to their jobs, they have done| gone to Guilford for an outing. CERCTIT GIL Sl G o S, St dear sister—she who is so kind and | have taken occasion to say »e(or:flt a great deal of harm to our transpor-| This afternoon Officers Lee, Hell-| > 5 i b i gentle and good and loving and | the state has prosec uted ’"‘fl”! '\( “;‘“‘L COLORS ON TOP OF MT. 11OOD. ; tation systems. The cquipment was| Pers. Johnson and Nelson made a vaid | 1 calmly sit this afternoon with my | motherly and the Lord knows what- ‘Oo:hwe]f‘-m h\, “‘(:“‘hpl“:q;“‘h“'\ “‘r e Portland, e. Aug. 9 crgeant now is the time to do it. Sor Shape. due toltebeavy on Emil Hagist’s saloon on Cherry | dear fypewriter before me (God bless | not. There she stood fast asleep, and | outset less evic L roreq. | 1% L. Todd of the T D R e it eebut nofliguors iwere found® i il who! Inventea b my. | making as though she was about to | vestigating committee has offered e self Yes, why not miore sugar?e | decapitate our Pills, only she had | There is law enough to proceed. All| STILL WE TALK SUGAR. the attention of the repair men was National Happenings, Hang shoes and clothes! To the | the dog’s tail in her hand instead of | that is wanted is action. face (he issue squarely. Half-way measures are uscless. Theory, happily couched though it may be, will be sneered at by a populace, each unit of which, labor, capital and individual, is out to garner all the cold cash that am heing down and took active measures, either harried from pillow (o post. Ai night to stop the striking or prombit the rgising of prices, we do not care which. y v " > - equipment in repair do return, imme- If President Wilson does it he will gain the thanks of*the United States, labor included. It has to be done, and nited States m rin has finished a climb of 11 feet up Mount Ho v here, and noiled the colors of the marine Mayor Quigley’s return brings us | needed. It has been suspended, Destitution in Korea—Ifforts being | nethermost pit o' hell with food and | Nis head. Now. if you know any e A building that crowns the summi It the lack of cars during the war, and | axk i ¢ for a day or a e made to rclieve the starving—Chris- | 43) ¢lse it fakes to keep life and wite | thing whatever about dogs—especi: Worship of the Past. took the sergeant just seven hours to iciesenliphtenmention WicBuzant| oonion i devion zo: endive BB et o e e et R Dol e R s R Tl ot R ine il (BridpeportiPost) | make his way through a blizzard to of flour provided {rarsportation can [ican well get along without grandma, | With little "“;'*}"if‘f””‘ o "_’l"”“’\ oht| The New Haven Journal-Courler | the hishest peak in Oregon. The flag here a duy or so ago, it is probable PEEETeE erandtahen Finedosiichicken Bl R0 R I e it s mecticud aiabanite bis niss: that he Knows nothing more about it, | MUCh time has been lost that might| Cashier skips—Bank and soc goat, for sugar docs mot enlor into | have been a liftle shrivelled —with nmn:m L .| have been put into working on the| Scandal at Altoona, Penn.—Harry Hieths RELCY o s Tt o || TG OF BRGNS J0 it Bl 10 el 2o S el e SRl BEe e Gardner takes a large sum of money | you touch us on the sugar question | MEhed up and as I reached for the hibition ame Lonenes fect: fact that two carloads were on their and a4 woman away with him—En- | o naturally e dog I heard my sister mumble, “Can, | icut will refuse to ratify “iheredia way to New Britain; that is all workers involved that the cifects are| joved the implicit confidence of the i can, can, what I can 1 can, what I, suffrage amendment; thinks _the bound to be greal. community. ES can't can, I can’t can and damn if | League of Nations idea is a holy ter- If the poor equipment does not hold Sicily shaken by terrific carthquake My wife suggests that [ write some- 1| can can, can, can.” All this time ror, lm]\(-w“;vl)\(“\v'n‘k\'r]‘ f'or )‘vh(‘k?lm‘i T st L R G O s b 0 persons killed and scores injured | thing on ihis subject, © says she, | she kopt tapping the floor with her | tection of France ought to he kille : surp ke out, if the lack of cars for a few days Snormots damage done to Proper- | «tank. hown crcation cam I ean | bare fool. It was awful! I awakened | and finally urges us all to go back to | press comment upon what is called causes many breaks in it, we will feel | y__hree towns totally destroyed. o ler and when she saw the dog, and | the “voices in the air’ that guided | Henry Ford's ignorance, revealed in local merchants had suppliod. Mayop | € €ffect just as much as we would if | = Chinese wgain beaten hy Japanese | I e ol o1al Wi T She BwasBryins ol (e ifoundersfofitheRimerloanfconstic his (‘)x.:x:\\!)‘n ‘m“l‘ as a court v\‘\\tnrv'~ o o aac supp e WO | the workers again went out, and the | —500 killed—War feeling at Tokio at | (21 L A0 un those peavss WAL I, “che went right off in hysterics, | tution. But the test might have been rover Quisley s did SnothinglibutiiactSas || o en e et o e fever heat—Japs hold important posi- | |horcy s name, sha & LM and before we could bring her to,| As for (he telephonc, the telegraph, | With equally interesting results. w tracer for the cars. We have no | Coecors W ) Delabicenas) fioiss those black and red curranls? What} [0 60 had to o and buy her a ! the cable, the ocean liner, the flying | Mr. Stevenson questioned Mr. Ford oS e acd il ere fcaniibefitile shall we do without THIE HART-| ;00 00 ting. Yes sir. This has | machine and the steam railroad, our | upon historical cvents; upon charac- sympathy with it | Cider and Prohibition EQRDEEQ TS Tl <ort of distracted her attention from : New Haven contemporary cannot see | ters, like Benedict Arnold, that every —_—— | (Providence Journa!) gl canning, but I'll bet within another | where these or other modern inven- | schoolboy knows about and forzets on ot = oodemvhich il tnotibelbes | A supreme court decision may be | 1 looked my wife severely in (he eve | week shelll be at the old game again | tions have in any way affected the sit- | examination day; upon “mobile fore next fall at any rate. ¢ | FACTS AND FANCIES { required on ecider, when the time | and said: “Lib, if T never sce another ah, that is if, sugar takes a drop, ! vation. A plague on such “shallow | mies” and other war J»(\‘v‘ v“‘fl on the Mayor's part is to blame for — " | comes for the enforcement of nation- | HARTFORD COURANT, I shall o land I for one hope the goodness it | reasoning,” it = NN ;‘);:v v(tyzly(yi‘lnldzn\“”ih”“!‘v‘:m'{“hl.:'\' S Senator Borah is reported as say. | &1 Prohibition. At present the law on | und ‘can’ myself.” Scriously thoush, |won't. Why, the whole house is sticky There is something pathetic about | his pac Lo st i ] gYr S i e Sl a6 intoxicants appears to have no bear- | I do not like THIE HARTIFORD and my sister is frightfully neat in | the piclure of poor old Rip Van | shone in answering i :::’TM‘: ](L\;;)‘:ll:‘l:\\:;\‘\i‘—“I’V‘l‘\(ljlf'lx(]'("" Co Nat | e on fermented apple juice; It pro- | COURANT, set there have been times { her housckeeping. I went o the ! Winkle, waking up in a changed not many business men and »M’;»u‘r ‘\v‘ ier. ’ ’ YT | fibits the manufacture and sale of | when I though it a wonderfully goBd | Bible today to look up a silver plated = world and rubbing his aching eves ;,;m lly\vn;r*“t‘nm‘\‘\ who wo 12 road strike under way it becomes a PRI S distilled liquors, of heer, ale, wine and | sheet. This, when they published my | text, and do yvou know I found John And somchow or other, Vhr‘v(*. is a 'vinv'.‘m v.\ ad ey e e I b1c trustion whether we will other intoxicating mall or vinous li- ' siorics, but now that ihey keep hoth ! stuck to St. Matthew, while St. Peter striking |’t‘>o|\:|"l:|!vv\r\_ H‘x]:h\f reapect | ’I\I\’:m,‘f\'mhq“\‘f L modiquestion. One of the great services which | quor. Cider is not distilied: it is not | staraps and stories, and 1'sce the edi- ! was stuck on a Liberty Bond my between Rip Van Winkle and th v v LIE e B s airman Hays is rendering his coun- | Malt or vinous, and apparently it es- | tor smoking fifteen cent cigars, why I |sister must have heen hiding from | New Haven Journal-Courier | ohms and amperes Enition epatis by\ the association. It appears that in this trying hour is to be there | caped ‘he attention of the lawmakers. | naturally hecome suspicious. Nof, { her husband. 1 suppose the dear girl The Tories of Washington's time | and injectors, vacuums and lubrl ..’,‘“ that may be side-tracked and the | to be wriiten letters to.—Ohio State | In this connection the acquittal of a | mind, you. that editors have not the ) must have become tired perhaps one | used exactly the same atgunionts (u-vul:n«."a.m‘\ \h(mrmfl eiinlus QUi as town will be entirely out of the com- | Journal farmer on a charge of selling cider of | right to smoke—they will some day | day while canning—discouraged per- | against-modern innovators. Washing- | sign differences of combustion eng oS 2 his own make, which contained seven | —bul, my postage stamps is another | haps, thinking possibly that there | ton was a revolutionary who over- | for road work, farm {ractors ver cent. of alcohol, is interesting; a | thinx. I sce I am as usual rambling, | would he no canning in Heaven and | turned the cstablished = order. And | lumber-hauling. If the lawyer runs The railroad strike, however, is the On looking New York over, the| Massichusetts jury refused to curtail [ but you will excuse me for during the | to verify this had gone to the Bible | every fine old-fogy mind of Washing- | his own automabile he might manage fault of no man excepting of the | venerable ex-bo: Richard Croker, | the right of the owner cf an orchard | last twenty-five years I've been unable | to find out forgetting poor. dear. in-, ton's day and generation shrieked in | for a while, but he would soon begin will find many changes. But he will ; to grind and press apples and dispose | to stay in one place long on account | nocent soul that she wa uncon- | agony at Washington's departure from | to flounder in the depths of an inno find Tammany, as usual, facinga bat- | of a beverage which is highly intox- | of the pol—I mean my health sciously maKing Siamese Twins of the | the “sacred principles of the past,” | cent ignorance tle which is expected to put it out of | jcating. National prohibition, with Sugar, as vou know, is obtained | Apostles just as the J.-C. is shrieking today _The fact is. of course, that Mr. anything which we may suffer in the | business.—Washington Star. [ cider not included, would be a partial | fr sugar canc. The cane being} 1 was very much interested in “Mr Every northern Copperhead during | Ford has a vast fund of useful knowl. next few weeks. e o failure, for the most seaSoned toper | pressed between heavy rollers, after | Coldslaw’s” letter as to why he can't { the Civil war felt the same way to- | edge, lrst-hand, accurate and on tagh 1d o T et 5 N s o B o el i, which the juice is boiied. The com- { obtain sugar, but 1 am sure that as | ward the Fourteenth amendment of | All men are ignorant somewhere o ge Mew (BrltUn gl o It oughtn’t to be hard to find the | T, O 0" ard cider under pro- | mon walking cane is no good for su- | soon as the sugar magnates see this | the U. S. Constitution, as the New | even the learned Dr. Johnson misde- the situation that it now finds cxist- | profiteers. Every ultimate consumer Nibtllon Sinee il determined [ gar purposes. The manufacture of |article in the Herald, they'll try to | Haven Journal-Courier feels toward | fined a horse's “pastern’ in his die- cun very definitely start the sleuths, | 0 sunreme court ruling on the | sugar is one Of the simplest opera- | inveisle me with a $100.00 bill not | the prohibition and equal suffrage ; tionary, and gave “ignorance, madam; @ sufficiency of sugar, though not :"{;\'1"2"‘(‘1';(“ ;)'ro";l;n ,lff:l‘_m_‘r‘n::‘e the | ord intoxicating. Any drink that is | tions imaginable. So simple that when | to write any more bout sugar. Do gx\?endmen".‘m U’\'jl‘;crl(;u no word on | pure ‘“\?m}“"}'”Mr‘}éfé'!fm{iffi'}‘oflfé T o S SR e R i ! intoxicating, even if it is not specifi- | one, takes in comparison (he price | you suppose I'd take it Do you ! this subject that the editor of the | cuse. Most o TRHETTE i e cally named in the law, is likely to be | now charged for it. one quickly says, { suppose I'd be so mean, and base as | New Haven paper can say today that | easily be tangied up themselves in an If there is a nation, big or little, | added to the forbidden list, according | “Wiy'n hcll don't I raise my own su- | NOT to take it, when our country is | has not been previously said, and bet- | examination directed by skilled eoun- no two ways about it. However, We | gld or new, that has not protested | to the interpretation of the statute by | gar, instead of raising cain?’ This is | so much in need of sugar? ter said, by the Copperheads who did | sel along lines remote from their will get along without it if we have | something it must be one that didn’t | the advocates of dry times. { & very natural question, until one —HANK LONG. their hest to cripole the administra- | daily experiencs { question, beyond his telegram received | [e€l the strike for some time to come. Breakdowns will he more common, so he carried was a four by ften foot standard, and his ‘pack was loaded down with 2 hammer, nails, a blanket and provisions for the journe Henry Ford's Ignorance His search in New York devcloped the rolling stock, and there are so many It should be bornein mind that the (New York World) sugar referred (o in the telegram was not government stuff hut was some which the individual enterprise of the those peaches? How in the world prospect of getting any of the gov- ernment supply until the next allot- sugar was obtainable, Bristol got but we acted too late. With the rail- kven get the stuff that was. ordeyed modity in a very short time. unjons who inspired it and we cannot blame other than their leaders for in iven during the war there was sugar famine at present, there are