New Britain Herald Newspaper, March 17, 1915, Page 6

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. There flover the t jonor dana ow. « He a Briton ixteenth b captivity ok him | cattle on uch from | rs later | e island. | hrist :md] most be- be- ¢h, which birth of | ith great jme of the parades the y. he country fed orators ‘the land itain has more mod- i dance in the extent uged to be o led in fissed away t take the their par- Bt. Mary's h were the Bt. Mary's long since [time now | | St. Patricic It does not het to cause | bit quicker | hey all Ibit of green ance of the keep alive always omen re- so who 8till love its | flesterday he- hance at the ed by State fwhich ve no jtax to meet P was no op- B, while Mr. | ommissioner it. ligatory on | relief makes levy tax ns previously | khould provision deficit in the [The object of | ht towns from pro- board ; a be ex- be d making no ,go custom &eit “it amounts lat a special made for the New Brit- ith this form the a few jmeet the nec- the figures g of the year, drawn by the the deficiency. il the amount the banks paid. In B practised elicve that Ny every old sys- years de- the the the omi man- mberlain 'm of manage- be ‘selectmen to f covers all the wiil he attorney i men i of 1 interested | to say N W BRITAIN DAILY HERALD. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 17, 1915. BUre and the fact that there ition to it that of the towns interested BNt thoroughly ks to Pusiness suggests different in understand abuse correct- thers their correct an in that neceds S VICTORIOUS. | ftorney General Gregory has made to the counsel for the New York “Printing and Publishing on the ‘latter's complaint Binst the Associated Press that in ecting its mnefvs anda aistributing it -is violating the anti-trust act and general says that there is no ground for any such complaint. Everyone who has looked this case has expected this ending to the complaint he no in it mercantile or asso- in into because there would Justice the or business engaged professional work could not do legally what ' the Associated Press is doing. it of number men representing in law in any is composed a certain as many news- distributes and then sells the papers. papers who collect news, it among themselves to all care to There cannot possibly be anything un- 1t affect agency that the others hut that engaged it it who buy lawful in that. does not other better than the have made it so. Those who compose Press do not regard making enterprise, but rather a means by which they improve their own in- dividual newspapers by gathering to- gether a certain product and then selling it. If there is a riot in the southern part of the country and the people living in the north part in it the A. P. ascertains the facts, the same as does the New York Sun or any of the other news distributing agencies, and it is absurd that it vialates the anti-trust act in doing so. The Sun has been fighting the A. P. for a long time, but it will probably cease now or try an- any news except it is is because men in the Associated it as a money are | ‘other tack, but there isn't any likeli hood that it will have any better { luck than in the case which has just closed. It was a foolish effort the first place. ACHUSETTS STILL FOR NUAL ELECTIONS, The Boston Post happy over the probate defeat of the consti- tutional amendment introduced in the | Massachusetts providing for biennial sessions of the legisla- ture, election of state officers and the executive council. The Post says that these provisions keep the government nearer the peeople and it makes no in MA! AN is very legislature | bones over its joy at the prospect of the defeat of the changes suggested. They have annual elections in Mas- people arc usually engaged campaign or are preparing for one, It there are any good results obtainable in annual elections they are not apparent to the casual observer. In the first place they are productive of a heavy ex- that the sachusetts so in a | pense and in the next place they keep the people on edge with nervous ex- citement, while biennial élections | would serve every good feature just | the same and would greatly lessen the public burden which has grown so heavy in so many states, Massachusetts still clings to the old custom, and the Post argues it from the standpoint of the people, that is | that annual elections keeps the gov- ernment closer to the voters so that if any one goes wrong only a short time can before h successor will be That, not sound as a very sirong argument in favor o} a system that is associated The number betray their are rule, elapse chosen, however, does with so much expense. of public officials who trust is very small, in fact they the general while the aim nowadays is to admin- the strictest with effi- would exception to the ister public affairs with ecenomy commensurate cient service. Massachusetts undoubtedly be able to give as good administration with officers elect- biennially as annually, and wita an ed much less cost, FACTS AND FANCIES. That repcrt from Meriden about an mate of a tuberculosis sanitarium having a revolver in his pu; sion and shooting a nurse, and then turning the weapon on himself, would call to mind the fact whether or not inmates of other state institutions are armed. If they are, nurses and attendants ghould ceortainly be given the same privilege as matter of protection. \What a consumptive wants of a loaded gun is one of the ‘mysteries of in- stitution management. — Middletown Penny Pr The time is fast approaching when more of the village and thickly settled communiti if not the towns as a whole, going to show a greater interest in fire protection. That it is perfectly feasable and possible of cx- cellent results to posse: apparatus which will do effective work and cover much territory in a short space of time cannot be questioned. The are lat there shall ficit at the end demonstration of its advisability is being furnished almost every day by the calls which are being made upon city fire departmentg by the country villages threatened with destruction.— Norwich Bulletin, of The lesson Watarbury's treat- especially, but every year—is the need of selecting the right men and keep- ing them. If Waterbury were repre- sented ar after vear by the same men, with o gift for slative service, the city might casily lead. in both house awnd senate. and have that in- { luence which only experience, joined with character and ability, can com- mand. As it we don’t amount to anything, because we send men who don’t amount to anything in the first place, or who don't stay long enough to amount to anyvthing in the end.— Waterbury American. le is, This spring has been an dry one and because of rain ferest fires have been numer- ous. The trees and underbrush in the weoded sections are excelient material for flames at the present ttme and if extra precaution is not taken by per- sons who have occasion to journey into the woods more fires that will cause much damage will pe started. The carel dropping of tighted match, cigar or cigarette n he act that will start conilagration. The public should co-operate with the fire wardens and do everything pos- sible to prevent a needless expense | unusually of the absence 58 an weil as loss of property.-—Hartford Consuniption be cured if it is in time. In fact practically always can detected and fought it s said that nearly ali human lungs wiil show somewhere on them the lesions of consumption, proving that the disease had a foot- Fold at some time or other, put wibed out by the patient's own sical resources without his aware of it. The Connecticut State Tuberculosis commission has just issued a folder which being spread broadcast through the state and which should accomplish a great work in public education on the proper treat- | ment of consumption. “Good food, fresh air and rest are the best cures.” | says the commission’s booklet: “Keep out in the fresh air and in the sun- light as much as possibie.”"—Bridge- port Telegram, was) phy being COMMUNICATED. Mooshie Writes Clergyman of Per: Tiflis, Editor to Local a. Russia, wuary 18, 1915. Rev, Elisha Adams I write to tell you of the conditiong here and the great misfortunc that has befallen our poor nation, as may not hear from Urumia for a time, since all communication been cut off. Our little nation in the way of prosperity and peac when suddenly the Russian soldiers (the protection of the place) were called away from the province of Adarbagan. This was a bitter and | terrible day for all the Christians, for the time for escape (from the oncom- ing Turks) was very short and only a few were able to get horses. We would gladly have paid $30 for a donkey and $200 for a falteon (car- riage) to take us to Julfa (a Russian town), which Jjust ane hundred miles from Urumia. Every woman was looking for a chance to leave, for they surely knew that to stay would mean death or worse at the hands of the Turks and Kurds, who were looking for just such oppor- tunity. We saw. persons fleeing to- ward Russia and leaving their fam- ilies in the care of the American mis sion, Thousands of families that had no means of escape and far from the city remained behind. Most of the fugitives were from the district of Nazloo and walked all tne way to Julfa. We were ten days on the way, without food or money. The Assyvrians and Armenians from various places, Salamas Targomar, Margomar, with their children and blankets over them fled in the free ing winter cold. As far as the eye could reach was a regular strecam of men, women and children. Some- times the road was blocked. You would have been amazed to see from 100 to 200 carts drawn bullocks on the paths running over the moun- tain or hill and waiting to ahead. It wa indeed pitiful to see women and children and old men freezing and dying of cold and hun- ger. The Russian Bishop Sorgis v busy burying the dead, the soldie digging the graves In the mars ground near the district of Kay many carts were sunk so deep in the mud you could hard see the whee and women and children were left there all night suffering and weeping. Chil- dren lost their parents and some were crushed under the anima feet. Hun- dreds were killed by Mohammedans, their mutilated bodies lying by the T ide, People who left Urumia later saw the Christian part of the city with all the churches burned, nd houses plundered of their furniture. About seventy-five of the prominent men were hanged, amongst whom were Bighop 1lia, Dr. Sor; Mr, Bahoo, | a lawyer; Mr. Germar; ind many others who could not fle A com- pany 300 young men acting with a company of Russian soldiers as patrol in Urumia was wiped out the Turks. Fifty thousand perso fled into Russia to Julfa and Tifl and 25,000 Chridtians remained Urumia under protection of the American mission. But the mission, | of which Dr. H. H. Shedd is the head, | is in immines danger. All are in greatest need of food Here in Tiflis we have a relief committee which is doing much as it can to for these refugees, but it absolutely | impossible to care for them all unle: we have aid from America, We ery 1o you for help. Please to read this letter to our voung men and urge them to help these Arving et have sent feleggams to Seerctary Bryan and Roberi Speer, head of the Presbyterian Mission you lon has was by move S of a by in as care send We nment by the legislature—not this year | | club WHAT OTHZIERS 3AY Views oun all sides of timely questions as discussed in ex- changes that come to Herald oftice. The Orgy of Death. (B. Ashmead-Rartlet in New York Times.) It very is & surprising fact that real of one number have of the magnitude the further In the country notice small any comprehension the gets from war, especially London. the ignorance of the in In London you difference, You enter change! Here ence, Most of =till there, but less silk hats and their patent leather boot are dressed alike in colorleess All have joined something, and thc who can't get in the new army or who can't go back to the old become No one knows €x- special constable is. of 0dd jobs——guard works, works, and seums, patrol the street at nieht early dawn, watehing the old haunts they formerly at those hours, They are *“some” warriors these soldiers of clubland. The hall porter cannot hecome rec- onciled to the change. He gazes with silent amazement on the earl as he saunters in his dirty uniform covered with mud from lying out all night in field training his yYeomanr: 50 he surpri the war do What a do see a differ- old friends are dre their spot- clubland. vou vour where All hak cial conktables.” what do all actly They water and frequented a i says, though very likely he fell off his n | His boots make once spotless car- at mess dawn on the horse awful pet and leave great nail marks in the linoleum His former air of lassi- tude and fatigue at being up at 11 a. m. is gone, The clubland of England has been transformed. It is now the Shakes pearean KEngland of Falstaff and Prince Hal, When the war started, every onc thought it right to stop all amusements and That spirit has happily passed away. The first casualty list was dreaded. No one wished to pick up the papers to see who was gone. Now the cas- nalties among our officers have be come so enormous that there is hardly a well-known family which not in mourning. We have become accli- matized to death, so to speak. ple pick up the papers and say: “Who's for it today? Many refuse to wear mourning for their friends and relatives, T.ondon at night, except for the fact that for childish reason lights are turned down, is quite gay. There are hundreds of wounded cers now recovering who wish to for- get their sufferings with a few hours of well pleasure. The res taurants are full, especially the Carl- ton andl the Savoy. Some of the night clubs have reopened their doors. Here you may dance all night and have supper. At the famous 400 you e gatherings which unigue in England, All the beauty of the theatrical and Bohemian world some deserved .embles there, and cven society la- | dies sometimes look in The men are nearly all in khaki, There are many slightly wounded who have just returned; others, not wounded, o1 leave: others who are summons to the front: newly joined officers who are appearing in uniform for the first time. Here the sorrows and horrors of the war are forgotten. The motto of all is “L.et us eat and drink, for tomorrow we stand a good chance of dying. You never know when the sum- mons will come. The. departure of units and reinforcements ig kept ab- solutely secret. You say to a friend “When are you off?” don't know, but 1 may go at any min- ute: I have been told to hold myself in readiness.” You see him at dinner {hat night and very likely dancing at the 400 afterward. Then you see him no more and temporarily forget about his existence, Two or three days afterward vou pick up the paper and the list of casualties. You name among the dead. s come like a thief in the night. The orgy of death is just six hours by rail and steamer away the darkened lights of London. Many ve been killed in the recent thin twenty hours of leaving That is the uncanny war—the closenc glance see his summons 1 officers h fighting v for the front. part about this of it Coming Out For Suffrage. (New York Times.) s a male person you feel obli for woman suffrage, it is best not to balance reasons. That is to pretend yvou are also a judicial- minded person or that you have ar- rived at your opinion by a process of thought. Though you may hope to de- vourself, yvou will fool hardly anyhody clse, least of all the woman, who is very apt to detect the emo- tional principle and scorn the arg ment. The New York World he that mistake. Tt accepts the without embracing it. *In the steads sweep of democracy ' it say “time will come when the present opposition to woman rage will short-sighted and sensele as the foymer opposition to “hood suffrage seem Therefore it is inevitable. T reason enough for accepting anything. But the World cepts suffrage for other reasons. One i that a few women, representing perhaps ten per cent. of the sex, al- ready have much power ove government without the sense of re- bility which it believes to inhere hallot. They “have main- times a reign of terror ative bodies in consequence half the country now some form or another ment,” and leg If & to come out ceive eem as man- now alona al- ac is most too #pONS in the “tained “over legi “of which “hodeviled by gov is £ harem Jators no better thun they ought to be | Board. With best wishes to you and yours. Respectfully yours, JOHN MOOSHIE, / are “forever making ridiculous con- essions to women agitators, qn the atheory that official sympathy — with “such moral yeurm{:gg is & shrewd only a | their beautiful clothes, | mu- | assume a sad mien. | Peo- | the | offi- | are | waiting their | He replies: *T | The | from | s made | thing | “the | nethod of diverting public suspi- ‘ pay five cents a quart for all skimmed | ion.” To advocate enfranchising all wo- men ir order to cscape the bedevil- ment of harem government imposed by ten per cent. of the sex upon male legislators anxious to divert suspicion from themseclves is to take a view of modern democracy that is novel and pessimistic. It involves such assump- tions, moreover, as that legislators would have less to fear from women if they could voteand that a very large jority of the sex would exercise the ht to vote in an unbedeviling man- | mer. That is to suppose, mno doubt, that a woman ceases to be contrary when she gets what she thinks she wants. Ala there is no certitude as to what she really does want, for the World's own canvass shows that most women fail on opportunity to oxpress themselves for or against suf- frage. and are, therefore, presumably not interested Most of the of won reasons urged i suffrage, are fantastic o in favor the World thinks, unrecal, at least much so those urged against it | Women are not purer or more noble than men_and if they were that would be no reason for giving them the bal- lot. An oligarchy of virtue would be only onc degree less oppressive than an obligarchy of vice. Women are not as wise as men in general and, if there is any difference, enter- tain lower political ideals. They will }nnt purify politics,. To enfranchise i them will perhaps at first confuse and disorganize government without re- forming it, and yet it will produce a more ‘“‘representative and responsible government.”” That is another reason, offered only to ho amended by the as- sertion that ‘‘votes for women will “not improve the quality of govern- “ment, but it will make women more “intelligent and more responsible. The inevitable in this matter espe- cially, ought to be more handsomely accepled. The World's support of the cause will doubtless be coldly recelved, as it deserves to be. (New York Sun.) by Professor Professor | Recent investigation | John C. Hemmeter and ! Ernest Zueblin of Baltimore, for which - we are indebted to the | “Archives of Internal Medicine,” Feb- | ruary, 1915, establishes the su- periority of some of the American springs over those of JGurope, and likewise the equality of the Huro- pean springs in the matter of radio- activity. This radioactivity is mnow accepted as the chief reason for the difference in curative value between waters used at the source and those | appliea at home. The highest radioactive springs in the world are those of Joachimsthal and Lacco Ameno, the Hot Springs | of Arkansas and the Virgina Hot Sprngs. The first three of these lose I much of their original radioactivity bafore reaching the bathtub because their temperature must be reduced to a bearable degree, while the Virginia Hot Sp be used just as they flow, @ from their sources. Wiesbaden, the most re- nowned and frequented resort in Eu- rope, furnishes mineral and radio- active water at 149 Fahrenheit and must, like the hot springs of Ar- Kar be reduced about fifty degrees hefore reaching the bather. The hot springs of Virginia and Arkansas may be reached by passing through a cov- ered corridor, while the government ! bath institutions of Wiesbaden are distant from the hotels. According to Professor ! report the waters of Virginia Springs exceeq in radioactivity those at Carlsbad, Marienbad, Nauheim, Gastein and others less renowned. When it is considered that 189.000 persons visited Wiesbaden in 1911 the opportunity of the Arkansas and Virginia Hot Springs and others less known in this country is excecdingly promising. { The Sun 1gs may short distance Zueblin's Hot has adverted to the need of more scientific knowledge of our waters ahd of the instruction of phy- sicians in their curative uses, hitherto prescribed in so haphazard a manner that patients have become sceptical as to their real value. A writer on the subject has well said that “it is more important to the doctor who sends his patients to a mineral spring to know the mental composition of the doctor to whom the paticnt goes than the chemical composition of the waters he pre- eribe: So Jong as this important branch of therapeutics is not taught in the medical colleges so long will | the prescription of our mineral and { thermal springs languish Commendable activity dence at many r sicians have long resided and applied | their respective wate such as Vir- ginia Hot Springs, Arkansas Hot Springs, White Sulphur and Saratoga | Springs, there. is the prospect of a large influx of health seekers who formerly visited Jurope. These may discover that, King our best ox- amples, there are no cold springs in FEurope possessing more valuable curative properties than those of Sarato where persons who have been in the habit of spending the summer at Kissingen, Vichy, Hom- | burg, Marienbad or Nauheim may find the carbonfc acid wuters of these | resorts. which aggregated 160,000 4 tients in 18 Nor is there any :ort in Burope in which thos make annwval pilgrimage to Ajs Bains, Aix-la-Chappell Wiesbaden {and other warm springs, in which they may not find. for r ms given | above, equal advantages in Arkans and California, and even superior ad- vantages at the Hot Springs of Vir- now in evi- Where phy- sorts, pa re- who -les- By | (Worcester Telegr Franklin county taken off hat to Worcester At cent meeting the federation for rural making his report, Sumner R. Park- er of Franklin county told of the actual achievements of one commun- and said that community was Hardwick, in Worcester county. That is the same town in which a Connec cut poultry expert recently claimed that sour milk is the best food for the feathered creatures, and that he could ] rdwick. am.) mple Given has county. re- New England progress, in its a as | affairs, | milk in lardwick and make money feeding it to hens and chickens. Oth- ers told the theory of such co-opera- tion as should make prosperity in farming communities, Mr. Parker told what has happened in fact in Hardwick. e that | in 19 representative the Am- | herst agricultural college went to | Hardwick and with its leading men talked over the advisability of a long- term program of accomplishments | along social, religio agricultural, | educational and civil lines. Organi- | zation followed, and the interest was lively from the start. In less than | three years the people of Hardwick have accomplished so much that they | are regarded as a brilliant example of | the desired possibilitics. Mr. Parker | says they have co-operated in raising | one variety of thoroughbred cattle, | are growing better poultry, are doing | more in milk production, have attend- | ed to their orchards, are buying their fertilizers co-operatively and, there- fore, more economically, have organ- | ized a farmers’ co-operative exchange, | have enriched the school curriculum publish & community paper, have secured the huilding of a4 town shed | for twenty teams, and have brought together ihe congregations of the | | Unitar society and First Calvinist | society so that they now have a min- ister officiating for both, the two in one. There is no mention of financial gains in doll and cents but the report leaves no doubt that Hardwick has largely improved since the people were aroused and began to work together. It is a good town any- way, as everybody knows, but it is a better town while doing teamwork, on the farms as well as in the schools and the churches There will be more people moving into Hardwick and less going away the citles. These two are the main issues which the New England prosperity federation is driving. The men who work hard for that almost drive people out of the cities, and would like to have laws to prevent anybody forsaking the coutry for the town, and they point to Hardwick to prove they are right. said 2 a of an o or at “My , (New York think Own uture.’ Press.) “1 have to future,” This Henry give up the post of city chamberluin. Whether the community will suffer because Mr. Bruere is quitting its ser- vice need not be considered. What you should think about is the reason he gives. “I have to think future” is not the which makes for good No man who own the community. Any day he may be called upon to make a decision be- tween is own future and that of the city. He shouid not hesitate; but if he should happen to think twice for the city’s and at least once for his own future he will be measuring up to fully the average of human nature. This is the one big reason you not get from your public servants the same sort of service a hig corpora- tion commands from its executive heads. They do not have to taink about their own futures. If they efficient men the corporations for the chance to look after for them. But efficiency does not give a big public servant a hold on his job. His activity: in the recent city elections, the fact that he has been “with the organization'—that he can swing the “hoozls” vote—these are the impor- tant factors in determining whether he ghall be kept on our public pay- roll or not. ‘int(-r(‘sr in his ability as a fire com- about my own is the explanation giyen by is about my ate of public service thinking about his own do are fight futures a missioner. We don't seem to care whether he has been an able and hon- est judge. We are not concerned with his ability in protecting our health or homes, At the end of one year four we stand around while some politician kicke the more lucrative fields of private life and fills his place 1 our public business machinery with a gifted and ourceful ward leader. Any big corporation the same lines would junk in the back yard of its com- petitors in less than no time, Ye we wonder why city government can- not be made a business City government Is a must be studied and cannot learn half of And it is hard to get the braing to master it is hard to get them the study of a decadc of another ten years' discounted district ity to deliver the vote Make it as difficalt sle and efficient city remove a federal will find a new type government-—and an kind of government or two or indifferent him conducted i much be so business. It learned, You it in a lifetime. men who have its principles— to do it when and the fruits work be | leader's abil- | may by a to remove official as it judge and of man in extremely an is to you city new MADDEN AND COOK TO BE TRIED FIRST Vach to Have a Separate Trinl—Un. | derstood Stegler Will Become Witness for Government. New York, March 17.—When case of Richard P. Stegler, Ricl Madden and Gustave (' charged with cons) against the United States in obtaining a false American passport, was called for trial yvester- day Federal Judge Cushman granted a motion of the government attor- ney that Madden be tried separately and first, It wa understood that would witness for ernment. As finally acc American born One of them was other Austrian, this country since youth. professed to be neutral. oy and Cook s Stegler become a the gov- epted the ¥ with two English exception born, the All '\\'M\ol the to | We apparently take no | | | | Bruere of his determination to | mind | future can conscientiously serve | The Charming New Spring Wash Fabrics More dainty than ever are the new creations for early spring and sum- mer We display complete. wear. invite you to see this Leautiful now while color range are novelties will be being difficult te Many exclusive shown that duplicate later are now on FANCY SATIN STRIPED VOILES * (Flowered and ured Effects,) FANCY STRIFPED ORGANDIES, SEED VOILF LENO LACE VOILE BORDERED VOILE FRENCH VOIL C. The above are a few of the fore- most wanted washable novelties rang- ing in price 12 1-2¢ to 69¢c yard 40 INCH EMBROIDER Special at I Guaranteed fast color: D Yard., NVOILY WASHABLE All ular CREVE Special DE CHINE, yard, Reg- colore. 39¢ 50c value WASHABLE TUB SILKS, 39¢ to 75¢ Yard, FIGURED N 5 AND Suitable for walists ALLOVERS, and vests. Single double and widths i8¢ to $1.75 Yard, NEW BOUDOIR CAPS, values at 59¢ of $1.00 Combinations each. laces, nets .and crepe de chines. Grand selection of new laces ' and the transparent effects, D. McMILLAN 199-201-203 Main Street. | embroideries. Come see new shadow and Roaring Brook. (By James Shepard.) PART 1, AS IT WAS Lofty land to Wolcott given Tells one of my humble birth, Baptised with e rains of heaven To begin my life of worth, Roaring oft in tones O'er the precipice to fall Passing swiftly then from under On Fair Haven, last I call. of Yhunder, When my falls shine forth the proud- est, 2 Eyes they When they Milldale meet from miles away; sing in tones the loudest, hears my distant lay Working down with less of boister, Soon from all work to be free, Then I pass the fattening oyster, Pay my tribute to the sea i i PART 11, A8 17 Forced from home and ones, Wolcott rocks 1 For the of many Croes Panthorn its dear left forlorn use the ones borne valle Chartered rights to Britair Former owners Leaving them no gave to take a sever right choice “widow ver mite Now my head at home s swelling Bursting o'er the dam with foam Whispers n my telling Of a chan home course to my are o new Sealed of metal d Roges red Mark in a ease henéath the ground en brakes and nettle miles my lengthy mound. away for Heaven plain, Thus T descended far from To the depths of Panthorn's But at last new hop given And behold § rose again w o Up the Shuttle Me | mary | Conneeticut . | yvesterday but both had been in} nation in this country Onee in onut tri Sproading my Dammed, my shed to cos Dammed Only With ater again, dammed waters of my intal be the to all over the Inke have n direct stand unitedly state of reached In fs o a4l worl tried Connecticut when demand it stubbornly nimity has will the people vociferously, And that vet fact the hefore pri- up and and una - not been n there position to cheme cut here see how clsewhere out An it Sentinel i onia SALARY OF Pittsburg Ma gheny Presbytery of the United Pros. byterian church at meeting heré ® adopted a resorution provid- ing that every pastor of that denomi- must be pald at provided $1.000 ho17 A YEAR. The Alle- least $1,000 a year with a parsonage. and be

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