New Britain Herald Newspaper, November 5, 1917, Page 6

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‘Britain Herald am e o ¢ HERALD PUBLISHING COMPANY. ; Proprietors. ued daily (Sunday excepted) at 4:15 p. m., at Herald Building, 67 Church St. Bntered at the Post Office at New Britaln ag Second Class Mall Matter. Delivered by carrier to any part of the city - for 15 cents a week, 66 cents a month. ibscriptions for paper to be sent by mall, payable In advance, 60 cents a month, 37.00 a year. fhe only profitable advertising medium in "' the city. Circulation books and press room always open to advertisers. Mhe Herald will be found on sale at Hota- d St. and Broad- Board Walk, At- lantic City, and Hartford Depot. TELEPHO! . Business Ofiice ' Editorial Rooms Member of the Assoclated Press. The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and also the local news published herein. In nobler breeds we put our trust; The nation in whose sacred lore, “Ought” stands out above the “Must,” And Honor and war. ‘With these we hold in soul and ‘heart, . With these we choose our lot and part, 1 Liberty is safe on sea and . shore. HENRY | VAN DYKE. rules in peace ' TOMORROW. eyes are now turned on New where tomorrow comes the cli- . ta one of the meanest and most egrading political fights ever waged B this country. The people outside New York have an inferest in the mayoralty contest there since so /principles mear and dear to the can heart are at stake. There _the conflict between Americanism pan-Germanism. There is .the betwaeh Autocracy and Democ- There is the inevitable battle eeti ¥ice and virtue. There is the iting, against each other of every | al fnterest and every clean moral t kfiown to man. The four candi- Have waged a battle of heated erit in which invectives were png with reckless adandon. How the 'York people accept the chal- Bnge lald before them remains to be en. It is hoped, however, for the e of this eountry that they do not ke the view of -the pro-German- ekly, the Gaelic American, which es little to choose between Mitchel, lan and Bennett, because “they all enemies of Ireland.” Other- se the question might be asked, 0 are they voling for a mayor of blin, or a Mayor of New York? INOOK OUT GERMANY'S EYHES. Now comes the first really sad news nce America’s entrance into the On the third of this month, Sat- y, three Americans were killed in the ‘first skirmish with German sol- lers. Five Americans were wound- , and twelve were captured. Re- orts from the front state that these things happened as a result of a sur- se attack on an out-post party, Bhat the soldlers killed were detached rom the main fighting party. The death of three American sol- ‘the wounding of five others, and o capture of twelve, or even twelve ndred, will not mark the end of is war. What it will do, however, serve s @ jolting reminder to the merican people that the war 1s on in earnest, that America has entered the var, and that we are to remain in the lwar until it is finished. There can be lho turning back now. The sooner hat is realized the better it will be or all concerned. " This nation has not as yet struck ts stride. Before the year is out it 11 have gone forward a few more eps: but even then it will not have [gotten into the race with Its full power, with its complete might. There will be American soldiers killed on the battle-fronts of Europe. There will be cthers killed on their way to the fray. That is the inevitable toll lof war. All the nations a’ war have lost heavily, but not one of them is yet defeated,—not even Italy, nor ussia. Developments of the past week ve been rather discouraging to y people. Especially is this so in case of American mothers and es and sweethearts, som: of whom yw see dismal defeat staring us in e face. These folke have let their he run away with their heads. Ihe time has not come for mourning, Ibecausé there is as yet no funeral. here iwill be no demise 50 far as we coficerned if everybody in the na- adheres closely to the war pro- n mapped out and laid down by ' Washington authorities. This in- sacrifice on the part of all. T, B It | fore due for this seventh loan. NEW BRITAIN DAILY 'HERALD, MONDAY, one hand and the building up of a great national fighting force on the other. The women can take care of one side, the men can and will take care of the other. Experts now contend that the war will be won by the nation that can throw into the field of operations the greatest amount of men and muni- tions, with the accent on the muni- tions. The United States can do this. It is preparing now to ship abroad the necessary instruments with which to bring the war to a successful con- clusion. Germany is not yet defeat- ed. It is balked, after a fashion; but not in the degree it will be stopped later on. Time will tell what the might of the United States is, and every day that goes by adds to that might. This time next yéar America will have for its use in the war something llke 25,000 airplanes. These heavier- than-air machines will play an im- portant factor in the war game. They will have a hand in deciding the struggle which is now practically to be a great struggle on sea. The war will then be taken to the etherial regions, where modern warfare be- longs. Germany cannot build the airplanes this nation can, although Germany is now preparing to launch forth a mighty fleet of such craft be- fore the next Spring. With what ma- chines this nation can build and send into service interior Germany will feel the weight of a formidable air campaign. The aviators will go back of the lines and bring death and de- struction to the munition centers, the very heart of Germany. And, when this 18 done, the people of the United States will find that it is’ more ad- vantageous to strike at munition fac- torles than it is to battle against a line of men. Brigadier-General . Squier, the signal corps under which is placed the aviation sectlon of the United States Army, recently had this | to say:—*“An army in the air, regi- ments and brigades of winged cav- alry, mounted on gas driven flying horses, could blind the eyes of Ger- many until her gunners, absolutely ‘deprived of range finders, would be put out of business by the Allied ar- tillery—the magnificently obvious thing then is to knock out Germany’'s eyes by a thrust through the air. But my idea would be something vastly larger than a thrust. An inundation of airplanes would better express the idea in its magnitude. Sweep the Germans from the sky, blind the Prussian cannon, and the time would be ripe to release an enormous flock of fiying fighters to raid and destroy military camps,” ammunition depots, military establishments of all kinds. Once given an upper hand, the flying machines become frightful engines of destruction. The greater the air fleet the safer it becomes to the aviator connected with it, and the more deadly to the enemy against which it is sent.” That 1s the whole plan in a nut- shell. That is the plzn that must, and will, be carried out before this war is ended. The great aerial drive will be inaugurated next Spring, or the United States will have fallen down on the job. Men against men, battling on the land with machine guns and heavy artillery, have become as nothing in this war. This be- cause there has been no great advan- tage on either side. Germany with her forty years of preparation was over- taken by the Allles in three years of preparation. Now they are to all in- tents and purposes deadlocked. A re- treat here, an advance there, means nothing in the long run. At the pres- ent rate the war would not be over in twenty years, for it cannot stop until one side-or the other is wiped out.. And that cannot happen so long. as there are factories in back of the lines to make new instruments of death and destruction for the men at the front. The obvlou(d thing to do is to send a great fleet of afrplanes against the enemy and ‘“knock out Germany’'s eyes.” chief of ‘While Russia has just completed its second war loan Austria announces its seventh. The former country, torn into two separate and distinct camps, has rallled around to the Kerensky government to the tune of two billion rubles. The amount asked for was four billlon., A ruble is, or was, worth slightly more than fifty cents in Arherican money. At the present rate of exchange it is hardly worth thir- teen cents. Yet this does not detract one iota from the work of the Rus- sian people in subscribing to their second war loan. All things con- sidered Russia has done well to even float the loan. In Austria things are different. The people have Germany to thank for a repulse of the Italian invaders and this will go a long way in having an effect on tightened purse strings. From the beginning of the war, Austria has floated two loans a year,—in May and November. The time ls there- Were means the saving of foodstuffs on the deadlocked on land, which has ceased- it not, Germany could easily call at- tention to her work in stopping the Italians and on such a basis really de- mand more money. Up to this time, in her previous six loans, Austria has dumped $4,580,000,000 in the war | exchequer. The dual monarchy has advanced $6,200,000,000, and Ger- many, the master of the situation, has | given some eighteen billlons. All | these things considered the Kalser should have little, if any difficulty, | in securing a successful loan from Austria. FACTS AND FANCIES, It they have a few ‘“less’ days we won't have anything to eat.—Bridge- port Post. The Italian army seems to have | gone roaming too far from Rome.— Springfield Daily News, The high price of skunk fur is ac- counted. for by the growing scarcity of black cats.—Meriden Journal. A rallroad gang foreman at Atchi- son has sent In this report again: “The horse that No. 508 killed is a | mule, and s not dead yet.”—Kansas sas City Star. . “Serve your country by sifting your ashes,” I8 a pretty good slogan these days of coal shortage.—Nor- wich Record. Liberty bonds at $1 a week are to be the greatest teacher of system- atic saving that America has eve} known.—Chicago News. Mr. Roosevelt calls Hylan a figure- head, which leads us to suspect that our colonel has lately been neglect- ing his vocabulary.—New York Sun. It ‘the shortage of sugar forces you to cut down the amount that you like in your morning cup of coffee remember that sugar is very fatten- ing and cheer up.—Baltimore Star. The modern educated kid is much worried for fear his parents won't patriotically cut out their Christmas candy.—Paterson Press-Guardian. The sociallst candidate for mayor of New York has taken the trouble to explain that he will support the president of the United States con- ditionally, but in his advocacy of a German peace Mr. Hillquit does not qualify his support of the kaiser.— New York World. Somebody. (Eugene Thwing in N. Y, Times). Somebody’s boy is going to France; Somebody’s heart goes with him along. Somebody prays, “Oh, give him chance, Keep Him courageous, well-girded, and strong.” Is that Somebody you? Somebody’s boy finds cold and wet— The trenches are deep with death and mud. Somebody’s boy cries, “Don’t forget— 'Tis for Freedom, and you, I'm spilling my blood.” Is that Somebody you? ’ Somebody's home is safe and warm, Far from the fighting and snug from the cold, Somebody now {is sheltered from harm, Laying up income of silver gold. Is that Somebody vou? and Somebody hears the call for air, “Lend of your money for Liberty’'s need!” Somebody’s hand s strangely stayed; Somebody’s waiting, while brave men bleed. Is that Somebody you? Somebody leaps up, eager and true, ‘Working and lending and giving his best. Somebody’s loyalty, flaming anew, Is answering the summons—Iis meeting the test. Is that Somebody You? COMMUNICATED THE PRICE QUESTION. Many Farmers Making Great Mistake In Holding Potatoes For a Slender Market. To the Editor of the Herald:— It 18 & daring man, foolhardy, per- haps, who attempts to deal .with the price of farm products and yet, after all, the price question is the one big important question. Taking the price of potatoes may I be permitted to discuss the matter of the relation between the price of farm products to the farmer and the development of the agriculture of this section. Looking at the matter from the view- point of the consumer, $2 a bushel seems a big price to pay to the farmer for his potatoes. And yet if it really goes to the farmer it is not too much. The potatoes this year, as we all know, cost a great deal more than in previous years. The cost of seed po- tatoes being nearly three times the former price, the price of fertilizer much enhanced, and the cost of la- bor excessively high. On the other band, the yield in this sectlon has been xery uneven. A few farms have ylelded largely, but the average has been very unever. A few farms have cost, divided up as a charge against the individual bushel of potatoes, makes the cost higher than it would have been if the yleld had been large. ‘There are, without doubt, farmers whose potatoes this year have ac- tually cost them not more than 75 cents a bushel to grow, possibly, some even less. But it is also true at there are other men—good farmers, too—whose potatoes have cost them in the neighborhood of $2 a bushel and with all harvesting and market- ing expenses counted, even more. Under this head come the most de- lightful sub-topics. Snakes, for in- stance, ghosts, spooks, dead whales and Flying Dutchmen. No, nothing supernatural at all—just the opposite. Vigias are navigational dangers which a sailor thinks he sees; but which, shiver his timbers! ain’t there. Ocean surveys have \been going on for three centuries. Rhey are go- ing on right now, and more as- siduously than ever, Yet“even along our own coast there are constantly being discovered new reefs and rocks and occasionally whole islands, The Hydrographic Office welcomes any such information for its Notices to Mariners sent out regularly that oth- ers may be warned. Here’s where Vigias come in: Imag- ine yourself the Skipper of a ship. You've been out for weeks and weeks. All your thoughts have been thunk. All your stories have been told—to the Mate your only audience. Alone left you is the anticipation of a landfall, to make port at last after & prosperous voyage. But hope begets fear.. First thing You know you wonder whether your dead reckoning is O. K. Whether this course you're on is exaoctly the one you should be on. You eat supper in thoughtful silence. You 80 up on deck and find a storm is brewing. Your apprehensions grow more keen. ~ Suddenly comes a ory. ahead—Hard a’port!” —knew trouble was felt it all day long.’ Man!" you scream in the helms- man’s ear. And out of the corner of your eye you see a dark .looming bulk through the gloom of the night. The ship rounds to and olears. “A narrow squeak . .. Might have piled up dead,” and so on goes con- Versation for the rest of the cruise. When she dooks you beat it for the Local Hydrographic Office in breath- less haste to report a ‘‘high rocky ledge or island—yes sir, sticking stralght out of the sea—most rammed her dead on, sir.” And so forth. Next week all over the world sallor- men are reading a little bulletin: “An hitherto unreported island has been discovered in approximately latitude something north, and longitude some- ‘“‘Breakers You knew it coming—had “Hard over, DOING HIS BIT s J. T. DUDACK. J. T. Dudack, who is pictured above, enlisted June 28, 1917, in the Field Artillery of the regular army. At present he is stationed in Wisconsin. Dudack is the son of Mrs. A. Du- dack of 133 Beaver street. He re- ceived his education at St. Mary's Parochial school. Fraternally he is a member of the Moose and is affili- ated with the Cigarmakers’ union. At the time of enlistment he was em- ployed by Eugene A. Sheehan. farm. If you consider this year alto- gether by itself, and the potato crop independent of other problems of the farm, it seems that that price is too high, that the former is asking some- thing he has no right to ask for his potatoes. But, granting that there is in potatoes at $2 per bushel at the farm a clear profit of 50, or even 75 cents per bushel, what does that mean? It means that the back-coun- try farmer, for once In his life, is making a profit on one thing he is raising. It may possibly, mean for some men who have been able to grow potatoes at a low cost and mar- ket them advantageously at a big profit. For the average back-country farmer, however, it means that rare thing—an opportunity for once for real profit-making. But do not think that this means a spending-spree on the part of the back-country farmer. Rather, it means in many homes there wili be some added convenience. I have in mind just now a family of fine people who, probably, have never taken a bath in a bathtub. It may become possible now. I think of another fam- ily, splendid people, where a little profit of this kind may mean the in- stallation of a modern stove, and in another the installation of running water in the kitchen sink, which does 'not mean the great luxury of hot and .cold running water, but simply a supply of water from the well. I have no doubt that the life of many a wo- man in the country will be less filled with drudgery in consequence of the profit on potatoes this year, if there 18 a profit. 3ut that is not all. For many another farmer a good profit on his potatoees this year means that he The tendency on the part of most of *he Jarmers over the country at the present ‘ime is to hold their po- tatoes at $1.85 or $2 a bushel at the will be able to buy some of the mod- ern machinery that is growing more an@ more essential on a farm. He may be able to buy & gasoline en- FACTS ABOUT THE AMERICAN NAVY BY LIEUT. FITZHUGH GREEN, U. 8. N. Vigias | thing west; a great peril to vessels in those waters."” Thenceforth for years the legend lives. Sailing masters go a thousand miles out of their courses rather than risk hitting your island. Battleship captains spend weary nights watch- ing for the unlighted danger. Destroy- ers and submarines roaming across their wide patrols skirt warily the area warned against. Admirals of fleets and squadrons find their war zames blocked and tangled Ly the wretched doubt of undetermined risk. How many hours and days are wasted! How many tons of precious coal are burned! WNat nervous en- ergy of watchful navigators con- sumed! And the ice-berg you saw, or was it just a derelict, or a deaa whale, or only mass of & cachelot's spew, goes drifting on its silent slimy water-logged way. It wasn't land at all—not even a ledge of rocks. Yet who can say You Were wrong—for you thought you saw it. The Navy suffers most from such mistakes. Merchant lines cling to the lanes of trade. But the warship must police whole oceans. Scarcely a chart in use but has one or more of these viclous Vigias on it. Scarcely a coast but boasts its ‘islands of the night’ And, as for volcanic regions such as Alaskan and Japanese waters where frenzied mountain peaks really do pop out of the sea and sink again,—from the reports that come in one mix!it imagine a vast cauldron of seething land-hunks for all the world like so many potatoes in a kettle of boiling water. The Navy Department dare not use its disoretion. Surely Block Island only a hundred miles from Sandy Hook ought to be known like one's own back yard. Yet the U. 8. 8. Olympia grounded there last summer on an “hitherto uncharted reef.” 8o Mr, Skipper, when you're see- ing things, be sure you're not just seeing things—or after you'rs dead ten thousand hardy mariners may haunt you for the gray hairs of worry you hung on their old bull heads. And as the Scotchman said to his friend who espied six cheeéry moons in the sky, “Mon, hae ve allowt:for yir grog . . . maychance they be but fower!”" Maychance it crowns your vigil isn't land: Vigla gine which will multiply the results of his labor. Perhaps he may invest in a potato digger or a small auto truck. " I hear city people say, over and over, “Think how shiftless these far- mers are. Why doesn’t that man have an auto, instead of driving that team of horses? Why does that man use those antiquated farm imple- | ments?” Well, the answer is that he ihas never been able to get ahead enough to buy the devices that he needs, and he has been too cautious to mortgage his future by buying i them. He realizes the risks. If pota- ! toes this year had gone to 75 cents, many a man who invested hard- earned savings in potato growing would have lost heavily. Further- more the profit which - the farmer might possibly make this year, on his potatoes would mean that, if he were a keen and energetic man, his farm was really a paying enterprise this year. He could show it to be by a statement of his business for the year, and thus prove that for this year he had made a real success. That will enable him to borrow money and ex- tend his operations and to undertake larger operations next year, with ad- ditiohal equipment, and more seed and fertilizer. Not only that, but a profit on the farm will enable him, if he so desires, to borrow on the farm itself through a mortgage, and, possi- bly, buy additional land. This much it will mean to the indi- vidual farmer. What may it mean to agriculture, in general, in the coun- ty? It may mean that agriculture, being really profitable and not just a way to eke out an existence with long- er hours and harder work than any other business in the world, other men would see their way to go into farming, and the marginal farm might be brought inot use again. At present we do not see herds of peo- ple just falling over each other to i get out on to the farms perhaps to | work from 4:30 in the morning until 7 o’clock at night at hard manual labor and to put their money into one of the most risky businesses on earth. In other words the paying of a good price for potatoes this year to | the farmers of this section means the investment of that much, and a good | deal more in the agriculture of this country. In addition to this may I say that I believe many farmers are making & great mistake in holding their pota- toes for excessively high prices. Selfishness never pays in the run. long OTIS H. MOORE. { Hartford County League, No. 450 Asylum street, Hartford, October 30. B { REFORMATION NOT A FAILURE. { Rev. F. C. Wunder Takes Exception to The McMillan Store, In “Always Reliable” BLANKETS AND COMFORTABLE REASONABLY PRICED And why-we are in a position to supply Blankets and Comfortables of the prices right now. First of all, carefully studying country as to supply and demand dise, the condition of the Cotton and Wool market, t: ditions, what they were then, the country being forced into this world war. our patrons with wanted Kkinds at reasonabie conditions throughout the of the various kinds of merchan- abor con- possibility at that timc of this What this all would mean and the effect it would have upon our particular line of business. This was all carefully considcred by us fully nine months ago and decided to place last February our orders.for fortables with the best known Mills, therefore we have goods Blankets and Com- in stock and are offering them for sale at prices they would ask at the mills today. OOTTON BLANKETS—White and Grey, $1.89 ar’ $2.25 pair. ‘WooL ISHED BLANKETS—White, Grey “nids. Ex- tra value $2.98 pair, value today $8.50. ‘WOOL BLANKETS—In White, Grey and Plaid, $3.50, $4.50, $5 to $8.50 pair. BATH ROBE BLANKETS—With Girdle and Frogs complete, $8.50 and 88.08 each ORIB BLANKETS—Of the different kinds and sizes. TEDDY BEAR BLANKETS, 65c each. PLAXD CRIB BLANKETS, 50c each. OOTTON FLEECED BLANKETS—Crib size, 34x50 at $1.50 pr. PART WOOL BLANKETS—Crib size, 42x36 at $2.98 pair. FOR CHILDREN’S BEDS—We have these 50x72 size Cotton Blankets. Special, $1.29 pair. in a large assortment to choose or other Knit SEPARATE KNIT SCARFS, and mittens. Pastor Harriman’s Assertion. i To the Editor of the Herald:— In your issue of October 29th there appeared a heavy headline which read ‘‘Reformation a Failure.”” Be- neath it was an extended sermon re- ‘port from the pen of Pastor Harri- jman. It seems rather to have been an indication in the heading than a proof in the body of the article that the Reformation was a failure. The heading may have been due to news- paper editorial license rather than to any deeire on part of Pastor Harri- man to prove that the great religious and philosophical upheaval of the ! sixteenth century was such a failure. It is the purpose of the writer to cor- rect the false impression apart from any motive that occasioned its ap- pearance. SANITARY FILLED BED COMFORTABLES from. COTTON FILLED—Priced $2.25, $2.98, $3.50 to $6.98 each. ‘WOOL FILLED—Of special select wool, special $9.00 each. When in Need of Sweaters Goods look to this store. INFANTS' SWEATERS, $1.69 to $3.98. CHILDREN’S SWEATERS, $1.98 to $5.88. WOMEN'’S SWEATERS, $2.98 to $14.98. Men’s Sweaters, $2.98 to $7.98. SKATING SETS OF CAP AND SCARF, $1.25 set. $1.49 and $1.98 each. CHILDREN'S ANGORA SUITS, $4.08 each. Coat, leggins, cap —_— The very license for uttering and printing such an article is one of the finest proofs that the Reformation was a splendid success—freedom of speech and the press! Our very American- ism, truth-loving in essence, demand that we do not permit the present world disturbance to warp our his- torical perspective, or blind us to the blessings of other days, simply be- cause such blessings may have had their birth in what now happens to be an enemy country. To foster such prejudice is to destroy within our own lives those very principles of large-heartedness which we, in the present struggle are endeavoring to inculcate into the fiber of our enemy countries. The fact that John and Harry are fighting today does not in the least disprove that Harry pre- sented John with a juicy apple the day before. This applies to nations as well as to individuals. The Refor- mation was not a failure because it was a German product in its central force. The German settlers of Penn- sylvania formed the heart and back- bone of that brave loyal army of George Washington, even though their name, like that. of the pilgrims, did not find a place in the natiopal anthem. It was the Reformation love of freedom in the breast of that flery preacher of Woodstock, Virginia, Pet- or Muhlenberg, German in ancestry, which caused him to filng aside his clerical rebe and lead forth his par- ishioners against our tryannical mas- | ters of 1776. When the dust and roar of battle are over, there will be as many Amer- icans of Germanic decsent who have died for love of freedom of their America as of any other nation. Any- one who understands the German heart knows that it beats to its in- nate love of peace and freedom of expression. The love of free philo- sophical discussion in Central Europe during the past century is witness to that. True, by one of the most gigan- tic freaks of history, Germany, which of all countries was most responsible for the Reformation spirit of free- dom, has forgotten at least in its up- per strata of soclety, the very center of that principle, namely, the right of the Indtvidual conscience against au- thority, or, in other words, the demo- cratic spirit, which has as its religous oquvalent, the common priesthood of all believers. President Faunce of Brown University says that America today of all the nations on earth pos- sesses in largest degree that freedont which had its rise with the Reforma- tion of the sixteenth century. We are happy to know this. The present war is an endeavor to inculcate just that spirit into the governmental fiber of ~ all nations which have forgotten, or have not” yet learned their first love, freedom. The writer has testimony from the pens of such eminent Americans as Theodore Roosevelt, John Wana- maker, Dr. Preserved Smith of Union * Theological Seminary, perhaps ‘the leading church historian in America today, Robert Speer, David Starr Jor- dan, Willlam J. Bryan, and dozens more, all of whom testify to the wealth of blessing which the Refor- raation has brought to the world. It may suffice for the present discussior to refer merely to these: the open Bible, the restoration of the prineci- ple of justification by faith, the uni- versal priesthood of all believers, the right of private 'jndgment, the peo- ple’s part in public worship, universal education, the protestant parsonage, unmutilated sacraments, Christian hymn development, and what is par- ticularly applicable right here, civil and religious liberty! Can we Amer- icans who are fairly bathing in this new freedom for the individual say, with any measure of wisdom or truth, that *he Reformation was a fallure? REV. F. C. WUNDER, —Pastor of the Lutheran Church of the Reformation The Advantage of the Farm. (Utica Observer) There isn’t & thing in the way of stocks or bonds in which the bloated plutocrats of Wall Street deal that is not cheaper than it was last year, and there are no farm products, with the possible exception of potatoes, that are not higher than they were last year. In Kansas. (Kansas City Journal) “Something good. I think it will make a hit.” “What is it?” “A garage with one living-room at< tached.” In the Kaiser’s Class. (Baltimore American) With the price of milk soaring gl over the country, the Kalser is not the only one who wars on babies.

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