New Britain Herald Newspaper, February 8, 1915, Page 6

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DMPANY, at 4:15 p. m. hurch at New Britain 1 Matter. part of the city I8 Cents a Month. 6 be sent by. mail 60 Cents a 'a year. jertising medium in books and press v advertisers. ind on sale at Hota- Ind St. and Broad- lity; Board Walk, Hartford depot. ‘B CALLS. aene . ..928 .928 UR WATER LY. no new develop- ed new improve- gton water supply es not mean that g at all. There portant features connection with e of them Iis shall be laid vn as “Galloping a tunnel shall be jtain, the latter plt will save the he route is ‘much doption would of expending ecessities which the ‘“round the decided is in the hands pinissioners, the er. The matter ation for a dam on. ler is under con- to be plans have not ussed for those will be done. ing given to the ‘with property jvileges, some of jeen acquired. Poir at Whigville ter Tunning over | pth of twenty jh of thirty feet. leakage in the pre has been so 'he water, through except rtain elevation. now. It is be- always be seep- t will very precaution t its increasing pthing more will to prevent it. s to the stability 80 there s hat line. There waste of water nusual in work nd cannot be es. The water plan in view by be turned into fin the end there len the Burling- ed and a larger s is under con- n will be amply ; i i used for how- be im- NCIAL CONDI- the present rate y of New York pankruptey, its fhan that of the its great source made up prin- eal estate, has ; at the present income will be a ld tend to drive Ith as is mov- increase in the out of the ques- pfore has been ps must be les- ase of forward tey court. transacting its e scale that the 8 not been very til recently and reached when horities cannot st cut down its iding so many hasn’t realized Hertaking it has it found itself not easy to get a certain ex- es not seem as ound, but when e next year and th it and the it is easy to un- 11 be ps- suggest that seriously con- least they have th a view to the s that there are pw and there is r that purpose. the plans call trouble olis. This ought to be done in event. The city is large enough manage itself and the country leg lator should be compelled to keep nis hands off. any to GRAVEDIGGER A SUICIDE, There is no cnthusiasm in the task of gravedigging, although men have been heard to sing while engaged in it. Shakespeare’s gravediggers in Ham- let sing while at work, discuss the stability of various occupations and one remarks to the other that his houses last untll doomsday. Busi- ness in this line is poor in Allentown, Pa., and Francis D, Baer, who had been the official gravedigger for years, had been worrying over the lack of work and yesterday he took gas and when his wife and daugnter returned from church they found dead. Business the gravedigging line to be good Allentown and Baer was ‘making a snug sum of money on it, but of late the health of the community had so improved that few were sick and those who became afflicted were speedily nursed back to health by the physicians. Baer no- ticed this and while no one ever heard him say that his business was on the blink or heard him complain, his in- that he was worrying. him in used in timates knew Deaths in for several months at last they finally ceased altogether. It then that the old gravedigger cluded to take gas and he did. There is no record of a gravedigger having ever committed suicide before, not that they have not had their ups as other folks, were decreasing number and was con- and downs the same' but because they have been so closely associated ‘with the unsentimental part of the mortality business that they have gradually become hardened and they stow away a body in the ground in much the same manner as they would stow away refresh- ments during the progress of their work. They evidently have their troubles and under stress can shuffle them off with even as little compunc- can | tion or perhaps less than other mem- bers of the human family. DRUG OCRAZE IN BRIDGEPORT. A most peculiar situation has de- veloped in Bridgeport according to the of that city, of disappearance of a dope agent Telegram all because the who had been supplying drug with heroin, opium and morphine. The Telegram says that least fif- teen persons are half cr fering who have had their supply so suddenly cut off. Two young women have been lacked up because of their insane actions in trying to secure the drug and who were subsequently found after having collapsed the street. It appears that a stranger had been making a business of supplying a num- ber of people with the drug but through fear of being caught and prosecuted he disappeared, leaving his customers with a well developed ap- petite and with no meang to satisfy it. It is well known that¥rug fiends suffer tortures when they to obtain any of the stuff to them up. It related that case in the New Britain a victim of the drug habit lay down on the floor and cried for the drug. Attention is being directed to a fed- eral law which goes into effect March 1 that all dispensers of cocaine, opium, heroin and other narcotics must res- ister in the internal revenue office and A a fiends at zed with suf- in are unable brace in 1s one police court pay a license fee of ane dollar. penalty of five years fine of $2,000 or both will be imposed for a violation of this law. necticut legislature has it providing the of penalty for stealing phy pre- scriptions for the purchase of drugs. This has been done and as a result people have been able to obtain drugs because druggists have imposed upon by the ‘fake prescriptions. The drug habit has destroyed the health of number of people other communities and the seem to be better. in prison or The Con- a bill before for infliction a icians’ been a in this and conditions of growing worse instead ND FANCIES. The new Swiss minister to Italy says that his country will go to war if food imports are held up by the activi- ties of belligerent nations. Almost anybody would be willing to fight for his meals if kept waiting long enough. —Waterbury Republican Anyone who wants to write to a friend in Germany must now use a five-cent stamp. The two-cent rate was possible only under an agree. ment that there should be direct sea connection; between the United States and Germany, now stopped by Eng- land Here is a chance for an anti- neutrality campaign, as postage to England is still two cents.—Water- bury American. It is not surprising that the leader of the general assembly find diffi culty in changing the civil service law, They are confronted with three distinct forces, all pulling in different directions First there arec the civil service reformers pure an: simple who demand that the princi- of the hand | the business of } of the metrop- ple embodied in the law be retainad to the Iimit. Next there are civil service reformers who believe in a moderate application, and this force st of the without believers victors Post. department pay. Lastly in the doc. belong the includes boards there { trine spoils, me serving are (he to. the —Bridgeport spoilsmen, They are of youth are filled The Roraback boys are but they are not gloomy. like Eva Tanguay, the spirit bubbles in them. They with the joy of living. When they kick a hole in the drum, it is not from malice, but from animal spirits, and when they dig into the marma- lade, it is not to be disobedient, but because they love sweels much.— Bridgeport Farmer S0 about 500 votes have heen New Haven county repre- sentatives in their attempt to elect some one man county commissioner and to keep three others from be- ing elected. Just how many votes will be necessary to decide which is the hest man in the bunch, the rep- resentatives themselves are no long- er capable of determining. It might take 999 and it might ' take 1,001. The attitude of some of the representatives was probably ex- pressed with accuracy when, upon being told there was to be another ballot. one of their number replied: I'm going to lunch; you go to '—Hartford Times. In all, taken by Deadly Gossip. (New York Review.) It takes but an idle word, some- times thoughtlessly spoken, to de that most precions of all things woman, her reputation. People connected with the theatri- cal business should be very careful of their gossip. The intrimate relations necessarily a part of the actor's life often give opportunity for people to in- dulge in evil gossip about them. The majority of people are much too fres to give credit to such chatter, cspe- cially if it involves a little andal, and the suffering and wrong that such talk often wor is nothing short of tragedy innocent persons in- volved. There should be more care and chivalry in discussing the personal af- fairs of actors and actresses. The rep- utation of every woman on the stage should be a sacred matter to all who work with her. The actor who dis- seminates scurillous gossip about any co-worker is a cad, no matter whether there is a basis for it or not. For the good of the stage it is well that an impenetrable veil be drawn dividing the region behind the scenes from the public eve. Even for business purposes it is better that it should be so. The public likes to invest the lives of the actor and the actress with a halo of romance and mystery, at least it used to be that way, and it probably would do so today if given a chance. The il- lusion ought to be conserved, because it is a good drawing asset at the box- office. However, in these days members of the profession have grown careless and it.is their fault if the illusion has been destroved. Tt would be well if it was restored and one of the best wr to help this to be brought about is for actors to stop gossiping about each other and above all to guard the repu- tation of every actress, as they would that of their own sister. to ¢ to the The “Santa Fe Style."” (New York Evening Post.) An architect’s axiom is that real movement toward building dis- tinction or improvement must be. not one-man deep, but 10.000-men deep. The attempt of New Mexicans to perpetuate a native style of archi- tecture has almost reached these pro- portion and success is the more probable in that it is proved that en- vironmental adaptation and construc- tional economy unite with historical propriety to commend “the Santa Fe style.” The renascence of an architectural art that has almost disappeared be- fore the wave of modernism that came in with the American occupa- tion is signalized hy a prize competi- tion that the Santa Fe chamber of commerce has just conducted, by the construction within two years of residences after old native designs, by the buildings of hotels, warehouses, stores and sanatoria to harmonize, and by the adoption of the style by the state for the building com- pleted at the Panama exposition. The models have bec caurches, houses and governors’' residences that date in some instances from before 1650, Their characteristics are well known and attractive, For variety and historical color the preservation of a distinctive sectional architecture, whether in California New Mexico, the south, or New Iing- land, is to be encouraged. any, now Bob and Billy. The “deadly parallel” has heen drawn with the purpose of showing that in some of his utterances “Billy" | Sunday has used language from Col. Robert G. Ingersoll. And now the Office Window of the New York Mail | draws the parallel on “RBilly” himself, by indicating how closely the noted evangelist resembles the famous ac nostic: Some one has been looking up the relics,of Col. Robert G. Ingersoll in this eity and reports that the man- sard roof house still standing at 400 Kifth avenue was the colonel's home for years. He also reports that when obert G. Ingersoil was three or four vears old he lived with his father, Rev. John Ingersoll, in the old house now occupied as a Chinese restaurant at 26 Mott street. Bt of these are interesting relics, but the most re- markable relic of Colonel Ingersoll now in existence is the Rev. Billy | Sunday. Rev. Billy is a rel of Tn- gersoll in the respect that he applies to the cause of reiigion the same zeal, the same extremc the same erraticism that plied to the cause of unbelicf kind of inverted Ingersoll. Robert Ingersoll born at Dresden, N but his who was a Con- ational preache& for some time that stood in Chatham Sqguave. Who b was ten vears old his father removed f{o Ilinois and it was the west which put He is | was father, minister, in a church gre qa i life, its stamp on the youth, as it has also put its stamp on the Rev. Billy Sun- day. WHAT OTHZRS 3AY Views on all sides of timely questions as discussed In changes that come to Herald ex- Facts About Ida M. Tarbell contributes to The Woman’s Home Companion an article entitled “What Women Are Really Doing’'-—an icle in which she swers with facts and figures somc questions as to the status of in the United States. Miss Tarbell has made a careful study of the thirteenth census to get at the truth in regard to marriage, divorce and other sub- Jects. After proving that more wom- en marry now than did former she takes up the subject of divorce as follows: “There has been an increase in di- YVorce, In the thirty million mar ried women whom the census takers of 1910 reported they found 18 065 who had been divorced. Con- sidering the difficulties of married the number does not appall, It rather gives one a greater for human beings to see that they can handle such a complicated relation- ship with such a small percentage of disaster. There is no other human relation that can show anything like large a statistical proof of suc- cess. The number of divorces found in 1910 greater proportionately than the census takers unecarthed in 1900, still larger than found in 1890. 1In each of these ten-vear periods there has been N incr of one-tenth of one per cent. It doubtful if this be due 1 faith in marrviage. A proportion Divorce. ar s0 is they ase is of of to it is due to a higher ideal of marriage, | relation | or | to see the dissolute, an unwillingness prostituted by a unfaithful partner, “A percentage is due, which too, {0 the greater carelessne: with which marriages are made under changing practices, We have removed largely from boys and girls the pro- tective social devices by which we once guided tiaei relations and choices. They go and and, as might be expected, with less sense of the seriousness their undertaking.” eruel social come marry of The Master's Servant. (New York Sun.) So recently that not the most sen- sitive young woman can no longer call herself a bud need blush to re- call it as a personal recollection was the automobile a wheezing, halting, ungovernable engine of the populace and the profanity of its operator. It set forth in the glad morning with never an assurance of concern of re- turn before the midnight hour struck; it preformed inexplicable feats of disintegration; it exploded for pure pleasure, balked as a regular and ex- pected incident of its daily career, spun wonderfully, charged without ex- cuse, slid mysteriously the rear the side, crabwise; it did all that was not wanted, and only occasionally fulfilled the hope of its venturesome owner which he scarcely dared to form into a prophecy. How marvelously a few years and the unstinted application of brains and capital have transformed those ancient arks! Today no of man’s use and pleasure more dependable, more responsive, more surely adapted to his needs. To line and contour the refining influence of practical art has been successfully ap- plied; the body fitly frames the mar- velous mechanism of the engine, to the completion and correction of which high inventive genius has been devoted. In detail of tae whole complicated device are revealed the laborious efforts of uncounted experimenters, innovators, the men with that superior curlosity that ever inspires dissatisfa minaton to improve until the benefi- ciary of these co-ordinated and col- lected strivings for perfection would cry “It is done!” did not experience warn him that it is not done, Questioned condemned a vesterday, today the motor car ports war, sustains commerce,. caters to all human needs and pleasures. It has made a new world for all men; the houndary lines of the attainabie have been pushed back by th rub- ber mounted, gas sustained, distance destroying servant. It is the mag carpet of the fairy story, and bette: for where there was only one magic carpet, the motor car counts its scores of thousand by ingenuity, persistence, enterprise and skill laid out for all to make their choice and transport themslves where they will. asos ..Csx efip emfwy mfwpy to is every sup- The “Team” and Its Captain, Republi of the party by the pres Hith- crises sup- de- (Springfield an.) This is a severe test discipline insisted upon dent ag “captain of the team.” erto he has weathered similar by securing enough republican port to make up for democratic fections. There were democratic sen ators who vigorously obstructed the passage of the federal reserve act, the supplementary trust legislation and the Panama tolls repenl law en Speaker Clark and Mr. (nderwood in the house violently antagoni: democratic captain in the stru over the canal tolls, Mor a ‘time was thought that Mr, Wilson had dis- rupted his party and his leader ship, but enou republicans in th senate came forward to save him from defeat, A review of the present ad- ministration’s record shows clearly that absolutely support of it by demc and rep resentatives in all cases has not heen the rule, for even in the of the tariff hill the Louisiana tion joined the opposition. Mr. Wilson came into the pre dency wedded to the English idea parliamentary leadership, and he ®onsistently acted upon it in the role of a premicr directing a islative program and unifying a p liamentary majority. it the only system of leadership that can lost undeviating ratic senators case dele i- of has log- is bring quickly legislative results in harmony with party policies. ' Mr. Wilson has | of an- | women | respect | freely | | for instrument | tion and that deter- | | of the tov, [ all known Jonec | nuger, |t a playving | { While T | tended virtually demonstrated this fact al- | ready by his surprising record of lez- islative achievement, There no leadership possible in our ¢ all comparable in unifyir driving force with the I president can furnish surer in the future than that when legislative results are desired the kind | leadership Mr. Wilson stands for | ill be the kind of leadership his suc- | in the presidency will emhody in order to identify their administr: tions with great public measures But the shipping bill experience already revealed one tinc dangers to which the modified appli- cation the premier idea in Ameri- can legislation is exposed A real premier whose position depends tirely on a constant majority port in a parliamentary will carefu] to make sure majority support before he his admi istration and his ofiice on a partic piece of legislation. It would ficult to Mr, As ing a hi the house of commons ment m ire’ unie viously effected a hard hination of members Occasionally, prem culations upset, but down they their majority is suddenly turned into a minority. They pay the inexorable penalty of failure by ning from office immediately. There are indications security in office for American president Wilson overconfident s party is onzres power and hip a nothing is ader and w cessors has of peculiar of sup- hody be of a stalke e auith contentious bill th ne b nd com- upport of it. find their ¢ in re that ver four yea had made careless Mr or con in the ca the « senator cerning h majority of the shipping hill the conservative southern implicity upon pline of a party caucus without ing sure of their support hy quate personal canvass of preference The official aloofne of position, which is more A King than that constitutional monarchy, vented Mr. Wilson keeping in close touch with the legi lative situation. It certainly evi- that in the present the White House legi dership h: been suddenly mn issue which should not in volve the prestige of an administra- tion. The situation illustrates vivid- ly the difficulties that may arise be- cause our presidential system lacks the complete flexibility required for the execution of Mr. Wilson's of a leader's power and responsibility. Whatever success the president may have in extricating himself from hi present troubl the chief les of the episode pert s is the of making a vital party measure which has never article of party faith and irritate beyond endurance certain sip- porters ordinarily necessary to ministration’s successful mainten unless careful provision 1 made for reserves drawn from parties, Mr. Wilson has been a ptain in the present nce team” collapses because he failed to have substitutes the line-up. he n reiied too the disc mak- president arly that of premier in @ has also pr of a apparently rom ative le imperiled neces on arily idea unwisdom of been an which may isste in¢ been n s other poor hi had ins if ready for The Joneses and Poetry. (Rochester, N. Y. Herald.) be something in critic who by Henr, that, nsons and Cowpe bheen a Jone There must nanie dramatic play pointed Arthur whil a dis: recently Jones has there have been “Thi lors and Crabbes and poetry, there has never “There is something about s, “so staid, grav responsible, that essor but craftsman, a a ut serious, it to conservat stantial, even a selfish p mien of a strong moralist, a steady of robust common We had never thought of but it would appear that is right. Who - heard Jones who was a real we mean? Great has o many Joneses men, but none of ther is a poet is Sir Alfred Jones, a fine of the commercial man, 1 Sir Henry Jones, the Tegelian ablest philosophical writers our time, and an admirabie profes- sor at the University of Glasgow, b the name of Jones does not lend it- There h: heen there Alexar Smith, for example——and. there have poetical Robinsons, for ha Ariington Robinson, whom not regard as America’s greatest poet, but one must hi sadly hen trying Jor But es who wer condemns affect the onse t hefor the criti of a poet—a yoet, Britain credit, splendid There specimen i to her one of self to poetry poetical Smiths was been 1l W Edwin a few living head poctical to then some in cvery wa might have written quite equal to the “Mr. Wilkinson's Spade.” 12 2 poerns one Alban (Exchange.) Plans for Mission Thwarie | the wat Board of w zre: When American Iorcign Missions reopening and institutions in rickson, the Iready in Switzer field. ilis entr was impos: for a heen impracticahl from him gives I oc he terruption writes ok . he for Commissioner on tly Albania head of the point enlarging it R LR the wns mid on hi (o) ] Lania he has icisson from Rome \ fow days ago T mot ha 1 h Caleutta 5] his brother hon whe heen friend husiness ruined charge while concentration Our E is he left vacation Ahm camp at 1zlish nurse 1 be head of our trainin s nurses in Alhania, writes family's business is completely being exclusively many and A ri a typical family futher, German two marrie and called was in Geneva M. C. A by English, German French They knelt t together and wept tc commended each hool fo that Here i Mother, of three to German all three h tola crned v daughters are and one Belgian shands have been the Y thery | ther, other and prayed shook hands, sof spirit | has declared more fearle MILLAN'S Three Day ale On | Union Suits FOR MONDAY, TUESDAY oot AND WEDNESDAY ONLY,, All Women's and Child. dren’s Union Suits marked down fof to God's koeping and went out to fight | each other with bullets and bayonets. “At a quiet retreat up in the Car- | pathian mountain lose to the boundary lines of Germany, Austria and Ruesia, I attended a student con- ference during the sccond week of August. One young ma on of a Jewish infide father, morning me In't return me home ening, at invited to to dedic: ion work people | to he for- | together. of a v era the nd I’rotestant Austriz y and | mother and ing until | with vent the into the out from ind ¢ he « That of the 1 1 evenin hen 1 close room any v themsc Nine of responded Ives to irn mis the oung \ never gotten hour we spent saw visi for tudent life istian lifec Albanian stant 1 be Prote days b worked fe formally adopted Al ission field, to with our American their joint! be hoard an direction and con- ruits hl- it tro e were the 1cher nd rec ready Teache offering then pre kindergartn outfit on pres nurses, work completa T for a itself ter g men in the g1 strong that aggressive night every ona oup and of twenty-seven mi T'wo weeks | 1lmost our Men's, of the yo the altogether, w to t large, called this three-day sale sacrifice . » War® in- Lisles, Cottons, Fleeced and Wool ere to themselves hi i0d of stead.” Suits, summer weightj medium welghy and winter weight suits, all included if The Prison Report. sal Have this (New Journal-Courier.) governor of the “ONYX" HOSIERY . Connecti- For Men and Women. i Wethersfield dif- Women's Medium Weight “Onyx® repe that it | Hose pecial ut 25¢ pair. mity more complete- | Made with 1 garter confidence. There has | solutely blac tendency to withhold | The fact that one has shown { the prison to the direc- The directors and penitentiary at fers from takes the Iy into their never been a this information until report to th airden of the cut previous ris in omm ivender tops, abs fast MEN'S “ONYX" Special at wants now, navy, gray SILK HOSE, recent ye no interest work « s0 it tors to into I'his ir the comprehensive the in did the Supply your n sizes not occur biack, white and tan detail ‘ 4 m}‘ i v report gives a of the the warden, domi very viewpoint the the spir- ORIENTAL Special 15¢ Y | White ana eight inches LACE EDGINGS, rd, Values to 25« dths up wide 1 idea and hich of director general icy control the it generally as most likely give the prison The abolishment ten the practic tury ago well introduc all the to 5 SKIRT. ate cream in inmates, and the which has been to protect society inmate his cb of the silence abolition of the which a quarter were thought to be essential mi institution, and many merciful Sacques story humane | eac the Bootees, the « i inmates, adopted and 1ce BABY FLOUNCINGS INGS, 29¢ yard, wide, S} AND sy Special value 48c¢ various rts and ¥ of a in cen- | Dresses INFANTS and KNIT Sweaters, GOODS, 49c to $1.98 to a 15 the tell a of understanding there added 1th of the that the complaints made in of the the union, notably do not apply Con- pursuing in a con which has brought being th more and in the forc without over- for 1 m the rights socie have finally no essions in . of 25¢ and 49¢ Robes, 98¢ Bonnets, 25¢ 1o $2.98 each. Infants’ Long and Short Dresses Silks and Lawns, Embroidery and Lace trimmed, Christening Coats, e, D. McMILLAN 199-201-203 Main Street. Ivance eriminal. When ract the it is conch pair. is each. of e i generally some other 1e New Yo necticut by spirit policy well of more okir herq ervative a the prisoner ground ment of free irs to established pr D on which ha ountry hat pride. report attention which of ire « state thi peer in iree The f provoke ere Lturc a s which nd recom- of will the criticism will be mends a further ¢ the sentence law 'h th minimum vear with a maximum all ex first radical to senti- most tion that the ¢ just Alike the deliberate c the allie and on the publi e [ fighter in of | —he has ac ited a forward p the sanctit of orn on nvic ause of press he that xte in nsion in- determinate rec- v dought both & o8 ommendation it oa &gh h spheres United 8 and tence of nty nd mendatio the pri lisim. That purpose i ong twe year ept and in the poured not a oy It ceeks not with smug not it degrec the fut making nothing vel lity of regulation wh Color Roose the 1 stil irpose. | I8 : but a big large wi to 1d to the pro- | ¢laration the hand mer a chance me word t to | man his | utterance society one the pri rty without tection of on with are genius of to zive lib and he i ind we hope inter- gaini other hand, un doubt he wholly in. Hunt Up the (Allentown hment m hould remain, a living force politics long in national on the shadow rizht onn pre inflict = uni n the 1 hi The rec ith tt the Bootjack Democrat.) frec trial judge to in Allentown to- upon the criminal ny men us he th hoot We aven't seen doubt waether two or three ir that me the the the direct on, who h oner from”thc prison, that a tence which libe pr han o pris- the stock kind fleld worl the very 1 mers etill w nent one-ye enters ur minimus he prisonc 1 right i punish.ner nd upon prigon- him the | the restor 1« no health welfar neludes AT bher ots, f which ther . : sk ys a demang There 4 . time when a boots the v pair o expiration sho th ' in ch ardrobe ¢ gentlemar and those t hand of his n copardizing slightest ¢ however, tae bo faghion It i of the war a mena ma th the of a dde in a many years e been 1¢ ation 14z vithoui soeiot a sult phen come the theater beyond milllon men hoots Not vch Some need re s Bouquet For Col i i Heg | dozen | probably, « { not only ho i always ' but non-existent fresh cvi- | chandler nature. | the ener- | wa him- arri hoot They long out of the fashic pt at ship untr hat sho ores with time whose name v for some been heen familiar, exce the orsemen Time think his er boot- surprising hip dence o re and original puttee has displaced them unrivaliced dan not well ur portsman of when traveller who never allows o\ his to grow cai- | Aditions to our 1n his public irles: nce of lic trousers set ot companion makes military who substantial limited suppl that 8,000,000 ne be judg- | timated that ently af fs us boots in | men, say Jre of arm 1t ity of manifest « sar ipa the life ne has boot necded nd an ind 1 the ment which we eanne o rien United has e It friends SeaCume export, @s unpopular, he ed pri from hi sopular and ased no doubt kick- can be to mps n the | irdin nand b h he * | increasing the price uffer | | ather suitable for s ob- | rdinarily, this is reve be h it weeks in the trenches b twic his ound o ther thoug! | hoot seem longe Aftor made than sig peace tinuic he hte is declared veterans to wear be the m plucl persistence yots 1 preference timist of the immensc | 0 future | AMONR him to he | War t, mu ANy consequences we may have revival ¢ for namy as foolgea ener urpo more | 88 f V decree, of tolerance a fashion that es- Iy a t . truth, t to se- h world month nim te enti o Wwhose In the meantime hunt ehic the princip! cure Jack the few nd be apparent the me legislature th f they are listen the voice of their demands for the fin, ) & business werning of the outgo an early start must be Bulletin, it to hers of the to ent must m- ing to the of in insistent the practice bringing of the 1d the g income 1to . i \ csman 1 the judg- | basis ha the | by the has not concealed his | made.—Norwich which he formed on He ment world war

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