New Britain Herald Newspaper, January 3, 1918, Page 6

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th the Unite @ b0 postpone action in . pending against certain fig bus- will come even business cir- Whether ns of politics or not, some- b startea the rumors shortly after re-election Woodrow Wilson t this administration was *“against” that therc would be an over- practices All of this interests t s concerns there reater confidence throughout the country. in reas of kine: ow of certain established he realm of commerce. financial In the p: he adminis- ved havoc with the nation of the Wilson plain that there that all helped 211 parts of much harm The it nth or so righted has made n tion 10 antagonism to business; be These itimate enterprises will Ler than hindered things huld go a long way toward replac- any lost confidence. THIZ NEW ORDER. 11l along has been united. erein lies its great strength. Other- held out until and ierman; e it would not have g man, woman, child heen firmly Kaiser have Bvery the has and Social Empire in back of the Even Democrats, who not agreed with the Junkertum of their tcies the pan-German element, e put houlders to the wheel B helped it of war push along the jugger- These facts are self evi- pn the other hand n a spirit of close co-operation be- Allies there has not en the Entente Racial lousies have cropped out at every nt. IFrench troops have held a ain for British officers. English Inting dly to the by 1ation is well known men have not taken over- dea of being command- French officers 'he Russian And so it has blunders made of ne. There have been 1 re-made because these petty lings. the Entente Allies have como And this partly nter-Allied the ow, he- their senses. 1se of the recent Con- ence in Paris at which United tes of America was represented Colonel public its Pr r commission, headed by use, has just made re- rt, by authorization of sident 1sor From this report may be v new hope of the war A a s against German ited C ited arms by powers, to met ral domination rmany is be Entente the The Cen ited under of Ger- ny, are to fought the Allies fminated by no one nation, but rking in a new spirit of harmony, ordination and co-operation. The {he powers engaged in war against transformation in the relations rmany will be manifested in a clos- working order, whereby there will better = program of military, na- I, shipping and economic endeavor resources all,— and the The arrange- ere will be a pooling of the of Ttaly mutual advantage serica, England, France, » lesser nations engaged uggle against Imperial arms reement to the pooling .nt has heen made by this nation, Colonel and his full yntribution we rough House, ttee, and determination made to what hall make, th the wers interest Three zreat 1dis the report legates. They n treops be sent to Kurope in contributions of the other d recommendations the are in of American first, that Amer- as are, com- | | like might try to purchase a mask ll= pE can’t fool those fed- City Star. @s been virtually frec from BInce the beginning of the re American workingmen less ic than their brother toilers e sea?—Springfield Union. - ’ by day Bulid fain have least was my home ever as I i “store piled high with feanc, or from the ple- n I' wander through the bery grocery clerk re- lasses by the barrel or fch blooming alleyway and fexcept the court of last | no sweetness report. there, my week we have a meat- Wweek we have a wheat- now a sweetless 0 have a bin well lilled with eoal, P a glowing Toll, Nineteen-cighteen’s bless my soul, bin but an hole fire I loved to here, and at empty, yawning is fited ogram and it | it that | The And soon we economize in clothes, icy blasts our pose, Togged out in kilts; far, far above the hos Il ask may To nether limbs ex- PRee to an-supported i e people of America he knows. tried and tested. They are for a T S e arms. They must have victory . anad, way of accomplishing the desired end, they must bear the burden knowing at the same time that the Allied nations have pledged to fully This the new order of things neighbor Jon he knows, been vic- torious since there is only one Cotton Spinning Profits. (London Kconomist) Mr. Frederick W. Tattersall, of Manchester, has prepared an analysis of the stock-taking results of Lanca- shire cotton spinning companies for the twelve months ending November 30, 1917. Particulars are given of fifty concerns, all of which have made a profit. The total paid-up share cap- ital of the fifty gompanies amounts to £1,885,347, with a loan capital of £1,067,387. The total profits of all the mills, after paying interest on loans and allowing for depreciation, amounts to £254,236, being an average profit per company of £5085, as compared with £4034 per company in the pre- vious year. The profit on share capi- tal works out at 13.48 per cent. per | annum, as compared with 11.22 per cent. per annum in 1916. The profit on share and loan capital combined plenty of coal on hand; but it is prac- | jg 8.61 per cent. per annum, as against tically 7.30 per cent. per annum in the prev ous year. The present total value of machinery and plant of the fifty mills amounts to £2,108,273. The spindles !in the factories total to 4,578,147. The | experience of spimners during the past year has heen better than in any twelve months since the beginning of the war and the trade position at the moment is more profitable than for many years back. It is expected that the stock-taking results to be an- nounced at the end of this month will show very big gains. co-operate. is CLOSING THE SCHOOLS. Complaint from teachers that the school rooms were not take consideration the extremely period preceding the Christmas holi- The action of the school au- local public properly heated did not into cold days. thorities in ‘extending the vacation period one full week because of this present wave of cold weather over- rides all former criticism. There is impossible to keep the class heated at the regulation tem- perature, rooms children school in weather such as thi Sending to , when the rooms of the school buildings cannot be kept the mark by is a waste of time and A week lost by the pupils at this time can heated close to et hygicnists, money. be made up at the end | of the scholastic year, when the early A\ Fifty-Eight Pound Ham. (Charlotte Observer.) One of the Bryants of Providence township was in the Charlotte marlet | saturday with a ham from a hog which he had mised. The ham weighed fifty-cight pounds and was of prime quality. Bryant had the hog on the market four weeks ago, but longer than | the dealers thought it wes of too enor- He | MOUS 2 size and made no satisfactory 3 > bids. So Bryant took the hog home is supported in this by the experiences | and slaughtered it. Fifty-eight pound hams constituted one item. Others were a large supply of sausage, lard and by-products, and this young far- mer by working up his own product made about double what he would have made if he had sold the hog on the hoof. Tt is not cvery farmer in the State who can trot to town with a fifty-cight pound ham when he feels in need of a little pocket change, and it is not every county in the State in which hogs like that raised by Mr. Bryant are produced His Sole Duty. (Kansas City Star.) don’t skurcely how Nephew Adrian is going to get along over there in Europe,” said Mrs. Hornbeak “He can’t speak enough of any for- eign language to make himself unde stood.” “I don’t s'pose he’ll need to.” re- turned Farmer Hornbeak. “As I un- derstand it, he has gone to shoot Ger- not to debate with 'em.” summer weather is at hand. The coal saved from now until January four- teenth can be expended in an effort to combat even colder weather in March, should such weather present itself. Superintendent of Schools Stanley di in keeping 1 tates Holmes has been guided by of public the schools closed a necessity week usual at the Christmas holidays. of the past two weeks when weather conditions a made it almost impossible comfortable tempera- school buildings of this colleges and throughout the to to maintain a ture in the city. Many universities land have been forced to the same ruling, closing their doors for a longer period. resort FAOT AND FANCIES. Six cents apiece for eggs—but tren egg is a whole day’s work for Boston Kvening Transcript. an hen a e i see It is said that muskrats properly | cooked taste like chicken; and anyone desiring to know what chickens taste at. | Toronto Mail and Empire The United States has been at war since April without executing one spy or {raitor—and that is not for lack of spies and traitors either.— luffalo | Enquirer. mans, Liked Them Short. you think that under any cumstances a minister is justificd for crime, but to disarm ber for using another clergyman’s sermon? Philadelphia Record. “well, ? = “Indeed, buy 2 sheep instead | cumstances.’ lawn-mower. T a “If it was a very short sermon.” that comes from Montana.— Cleveland Plain Dealer. World Journal 5 An After-Christmas Reflection. (Ohio State Jourual.) Probably the unfortunate nature of n's selection in Christinas cigars somewhat exaggerated by bumorists of the last but it really is pretty = “Dol are not trying to pimish Ger- o1 We many ety in sir! Please state the cir- In 5 of a tion tile the If vou were a traflic and a police patrol, atrol con fire mbulance, a and a fire different di the engine, an a il 11 coming which we Topeka ' | wom to T has be the prominent turee centuri bad wagon in ections, you give right Capital way Incidentally the British showerd rhat is not necessary to destroy a city in or der to take it. And the Tur | | - | thouzh not possessed of the full beau- | | | siness Booming. (Buffalo Express) Druggist's Friend—I hear your cash register ringing a lot. You must doing @ fine bhusiness? Gierman newspapers om Druggist—I'm doing President Wilson's speech that the | don’t know how many Allies will do their utmost to win a Aof pennies I've sold this mor; ty of German Kultur—seemed to have the same idea—Chicagoe Fvening Post. splendidly T nickels’ worth ing. infer | are using four-inch ke | COMMUNICATED. THE LYNCHING RECORD FOR 1917 | December 31, To the Editor of the Herald I send you the following relative to lynchings for the year 1917. I find from the records kept by the Division of Records and Res of Tuske Institute, Monroe N. Work, in charge that there were 38 sons lynched in 1917, of whom 36 and 2 were whites. were males and 1 little less than to death, were ch attempted rape. The offenscs whites Iynched were der, 1; fomenting st The roes carch zec he were Negroes Thirty-seven Twely with fen or a hird on pul rape or the mur- charged rape kes, ainst and offenses charged asainst the Ne were rape murder, 3; killing the law, 2; for not getting out ¢ and being insolent attacking en, 2; disputing white entering woman’s officer of the law, 1 1: stealing coat 1 woman, 1; killin man 1; accidentally killing child by run- ning automobile over it, 1; vagrancy, 1; wounding robbing a man, 1; attacking an oflicer of the law, 1; position to war draft, 1; insulting girls, 1; writing insolent letter, 1. The states in which Iynchings curred and number in each state w ollows: Alabam 4; Arkansas, Arizona Florida Georgis v 31 Missis: Oklahoma, 1; South 1; Tennc xas, Wyoming yours, R. R Attempted rape, 6; officer of road woin- man’s word, oom, 2: wounding molesting women intic with in altercation, acy nd a as Kentucks Bt Carolina, Virginia, Very Montana, see, 6; truly MOTOD Principal. More Chineso Eggs. (Portland Oregonian) Although there h importation of Chinese eggs United States, due in the main to shortage of transportation facilities there promises to he a revival imre diately after the conclusion of the war. Then we shall be called on to compete not only with the Chinese producer, as at present, but with ganized Japanese capital as well Consul Peck, at Tsingtau, tells about it in a prosaic report to the De- partment of Commmerce. He that wealthy Japanese investors, among whom are some of the most prominent business men of Japan, have organized a company with large capital for the manufacture of egg products in China. Two factories which formerly turned out these pro- ducts have been standing idle since the outbreak of the war. These tories are to be enlarged to a of 800,000 pounds of dried volk 241,000 pounds of albumen a vear. The new buildings are to be | under construction by next menth and the machinery installed by May. ) Once started, the Japanese are not letting any grass grow under their feet The most significant statement of | the Consul, however, is the following: “The originators of the enterprise hope to sell mainly to the American market, although they will attempt | to develop the Japanese and Iuro- pean markets as well. The manufacture of will not meanwhile interfere usual shipment of Oriental direct consumption. This was beginning to be established when war broke out. When commerce been measurably restoved to the it is to be expected that Chinese imports will be resumed on larger than ever. been a letup into in | the or- says fac- capa- city and prodncts } with the | egxs for just the has seas egg scale KNOW THE CAR'S LOAD. ¢ Can ( ¢ Service. Mecthod By Which a Motovi the Best 'l “Perhaps the greatest and most im- portant thing a motorist should know about a car is its weight with the average load carried,” says an expert. “By knowing the ght of his car when loaded ready to run the motor- | t is in a position to regulate his tires so that they not only act as the best shock absorber obtainable, but are fit to offset any injuries which may come from over or under infla- tion. “With the weight tha weight of gasoline, extra tires, with the weight of the passengers added. vou have the to- tal running weight of your car. “Ior a quick way of determining what air pressure vou will carry in vour tires if you have no regular ta- Suggested ble of inflation the following table is “For three-inch tires divide the weight of the load by thirty-two “For three and one-half-inch divide the weight by forty “For four-inch tires weight of the load by forty-eight. “For four and one-half-inch tires divide the weight of hte load by fifty- of your car, plus water and tives divide the | “For five and one-half-inch weight of the load by sixty-four enty-two. “To further out of the above car weighed 2,880 tires illustrate table the working | suppose your pounds and you tires. From the above we find that for four-inch tires the weight of the load should be vided by forty-eight. This will you sixty pounds air pressure, which should be carried in your tires. The tire mileage will be greatly increased if the motorist will regulate his air pressuro by the load he carries.” New York Sun. di- zive «Pregident of the New Haven (Shore Line Times) The popular railroad film play hav- ing become somewhat disarranged, will someone kindly tell us who is the president of the New Haven? Time | was when the New Haven's president | was so first-page filmed that the chil- dren spelled it with their letter blocks. How hath the mighty fallen! nd’s Tittle “Famines,” 2epublican) ten famine hints at supply t ve ‘nationnl would do Eng] (Springfield Though Tngland's broken, Lord Rhondda bacco ration; for the out, he thinks, would misfortune.” It certainly something to increase discontent. is a to- be « i of | which | haps, FACTS ABOUT THE AMERICAN RAVY BY LIEUT. FITZHUGH GREEN, U. 8. N. LCHARD . NYGREN. It was hardly name the necessary to print a above photograph re- New ‘Dick™ Nygren because in acronautics. Ny- gren is now located at Kelly Ifield, San where Uncle § is prepar- flock of human eagles, who ex- sail necross the German border pay an informal visit to the Kai- ser, leaving their cards in the shape bombs and other explosive imple- He is an officer in the avia- under produc urly Britain of ion everyvone in knows his vrominence Antonio am ing his pect to and ments. tion cor} Bver since machines proved to he ble Nygr has been interested in rising above his fel- He made a number of in this vieinity and has had narrow escapes from death, resulted in broken bones when he came in contact with trees and oth- er obstacles nature puts in the paths of those who would defy the laws of gravitation. TDespite his many mis- Nygren continued to follow the flving game with Nels Nelson, another intrepid Columbus of the air. Nygren's home is at 766 East street. g were wetic lowmen has flights several n Salaries for Wives. (The Christian Herald.) A Chiciazo club woman Federated Women's of the legislatur laws requiring hus wives a salary. ne-tenths of the wives of the coun- try are home women, declares the au- thor of this propesition, and have no property rights whatsoever. The hus- band can dictate just how much shall spend. If he wants to buy pair of expensive trousers, he do it without consulting her she “wears the trousers” he the right {o regulate the cost. Manifestly this is unfair. Without money of her own to spend as she pleases, and, above all. without pendence from her husband’s domina- tion, a woman can never be an among men in the woman's clubs, She can never go gadding about to con- ventions, resolvir things and de- manding the emancipation of women who don’t want to he emancipated for that sweet dependence in love which i the sacredost a woman's na- ut clip her hair split her skirts and stand before as an example that woman is equal to in all things—not while she go to her husband for permission buy a pair of half- hose or a red necktie. “Formerly,” urges the author of this proposition,” husbands were held by beauty and sweet disposition. While those attributes were commendable, the husband today wants something more; he wants his wife to know who is mayor.” 1t would be interesting to have an estimate of the regular salary sup- posed to be required by a woman to enable her to know who is mayor. It would be even miore interesting to know why the beauty and sweet dis- position that once held a husband seem now to be deemed insufficient When women abandon love and their own natural graces as their in- strument of power over their hus- bands, and resort to laws, they had hetter see to it that the laws are good strong. wants the clubs to demand of all the state ands to pay their she a can but if ves P reser inde- i part of e she cannot and the world man must to a and Suppres: (Des Moines Capital.) Them! Before this war has gone on much zer the government of the United States will, in self-defence, be com- pelled to prohibit the printing of newspapers, books and pamphlets in the German language in the United States. It the disloyal German newspapers are not suppressed before our wounded boys begin to come from IZurope, the boys will do for the Ger- man press what the boys of *61 did to the Copperhead press. There are people who continue to consider this war a primary election. This country makes no apology to anybody for insisting upon loyalty. We are entitled to have it. We are going to have it. One of the first and one of the best moves should be the German language printing office in the United State This is notia question of the beauti- ful words of Goethe and Schiller; it is a question of taking care of our homes and firesides in old U. S. A. Colonel Roosevelt has suggested that the German language newspapers be compelled to print their editoria in English as well as in German. That a ggestion, so far as it £oes. But these German editors would find so-called lawful means and so- called legitimate language in 1o express their treason. If this country intends to live and do busi- ness we must clean house. If we are woing to have Russia in the United States we want the trouble begin in order that the brave men Amer- settie it not a is a good s to of ica may There newspaper is loyal German lan- guage in America. | language | | \ closing of every | i characters | | which | | | Salvage. One of those “Iknowaguy” persons was the train today. He said a friend had collected from newspapers on nearly a thousand recipes and ways for curing a cold. Some the friend was going to combine the whole outfit into one grand cold-slaughtering remedy and make his fortune. I know a better one than that. Every day ships are going down Some are going up. Not a few are Zoing on and up until they are high and dry. 'Tis the age of wrecks and salvage. And salvage—for with all the wonderful advances the war has brought about in surgery, aviation, ordnance and avoiding the bone dry laws and income taxes we cannot over- look the uncanny cleverness with which our Sand Blowers (wrecking engineers) are hauling ships up and off and rejuvenating them, Remember the other day when an American Genius cut a Great Lake steamer in half—she was too long for tho locks—and towed the two chunks o the sea. He rejoined them in the holy bonds of drydock: and today this marvel of modern marine sur- sery is helping feed our Allies Why not clip all these tales the papers, save them, ifter war with one gigantic method, begat of tens of thousands, pile up a bank account that would old Ram’s pyramid look like after dinner mint. This bit I'm about to write would make an excellent beginning for the collection. The American submarine H-3 went ashore on Samoa Beach, California, a year ago. Since it was too foggy to zood place for the accident her plucky skipper was forced to re port, “on the sand and going deeper.” day from make an select a Which needed the loud pedal to mako | it really true. For a “quicksand wreek” goes out of sight like a spoon in custard. And worst of all the tides left her clear less than five hours day. At high water the waves ran up 250 feet inside of the boat, Every sweep of the great Pacific surf carried tons of sandcharged seas around and over the smooth steel hull. In a few davs she was almost buried. After Government help had failed a professional hull ghoul, Mr mm? Frazer, got on the job. His price & $18,000 was exactly one-fourth of the highest bid. But his work soon proved that he knew what he was talking about. Tt was too late to try towing the sub ! out. She was too deep in the sand. Also deep water was too far out. She had to be lifted bodily upward. This was done with seven steel cables eac two inches in diameter and having a breaking strength of 140 tons. End ot each cable was passed under the hull by special high power pumps squirting water through two pipes, one on each. side, and slanting down to meet at the same point under the boat's bottom. | One pipe carried a cable with an eyd in its end; the other a hooked rod for fishing out the cable. | By driving innumerable piles s ing was built for 14 screw-jacks. kK AS the boat weighed over 400 tons somg idea can be got of the magnitude of the task. And all of it with tides and, breakers crashing in at the most em- barrassing moments. ‘‘Enough,” ex- plained one of the assistants, “to drive a man raving mad.” But the plan succeeded. Like § great dead slug the submarine oozed slowly up, exuded from her slimy death bed, and lay clear again on the treacherous sands. Immediately heavy tackles took charge and drew her clear of the water, She had to be hauled more than a mile overland to a nearby bay. Two huge pine logs 80 feet long by not less than 40 inches in diameter were with cabl Wooden supports and rollers under the logs ran on a track of heavy timbers. In one day the | wreck was moved 1060 feet. Finally after three months of ex- asperation and delay — tides and weather having made the achievement many times more difficult—the sub was launched in Humbolt Bay, litt the worse for her behaviour. Cham: pagne was used, but not on her bow. But remember w I satd: Cut this out and paste it in your scrap- book for fortune hunting after the { war . be e THE FIRST LINOTYPE. Typesetting Invention Which Rfll tionized Art of Printing Now on Exhibition in Washington. The type bars and slugs were cast was de. year in the division of graphic arts of the United States National Museum ed in the Smithsonian building at Washington. This particular idea, the invention of Mergenthaler revolu= tionized printing: it was the first ma- chine to cast a complete line of type ready to print from. Previous to the adoption of the improved machine, now used so extensively, many men were necded in the composing room for on a modern example of this re- markable machine a competent oper- ator can set four times as much copy as by hand. Composition and bution by hand, are both tedious expensive, thus the new the printers both first machine from which lino- posited during the last and is lecat- distri- and machine saved time and money. Every big-town daily newspaper in the country employs from fifteen to thirty-five of these machines, and every daily uses one or two, so that there must be about 24,000 used in the daily newspaper ofiices in the United States and Canada alone. It was estimated in 1898 that theye were no more than 6,000 machines in ex- istence. This shows the present in- creased number used in the daily newspaper offices, but it does not show the whole demand. If the 24,- 868 publcaition houses listed in the current newspaper annual for the United States and Canada, each uses no more than five machines the total would be more than 120,000, twenty times as many as existed only efghteen years ago. There are three machines exhibited in the Smithsonian halls, which are closely related to the development of this contribution to the art of print- ing. Two of them are early models with indented strips of papier mache (matrices) from which stereotype casts were made. Some of these earlier machines consisted of a cylin- der which held the type faces and the mechanism to bring it into position to indent the paper, all of which was controlled by the pressing of a key This style, called a rotary impression machine, was built mainly by the late Ottmar Mergenthaler in 1877-78 un- der the direction of J. O. Clephane, who later organized the National Ty- pographic company. The second, called a stereotyper, worked well, but the casting of the slugs was found to be unsatisfactory, and Mr. Mergen- thaler undertook the invention of one machine to do all the work. He started work with L. G. Hine early in 1883, making a small experi- mental machine, which printed only twelve letters at a time, but demon- strated the fact that a full-sized ma- chine built on this principle would he an enormous step in advance. This | was accomplished when the large machine was built—the third of the series exhibited in the Smithsonian building—which was the first machine from which linotype bars, or slugs were cast. On the printing face the formed a complete and solid Mne of type, similar to a line of individual tvpe soldered together, and | | they were ready for use; a number of lines making up 4 column or page just like the individual lines of this | article. The matrices or dies for the daif- ferent letters, used in this first chine, were on long tapered bars, ar- ranged side by side vertically, each containing a complete alphabet, other characters and spaces. of the keys in the kevboard set a number of stops, one for each letter | these | ma- | | The operation | depressed, and when the whole line had been set, the entire line of matri; bars was lowered until the differen bars came into contact with their re- spective stops, which were at varioua heights, so that at a certain point the characters on the matrix bars formed a line of reading matter. There was no automatic justification, or spacing to make the line the exact length re- quired, but it was left to the operator who struck the space key and filled] in with thick or thin spaces on t tapering matrix bars. The line matrix bars was then clamped to- a mold was interposed be- tween the matrices and a pot of molt- cn metal, which moved up to the slot in the mold, and the linotype bar was cast. The line was then unclamped; the matrices automatically raised te their normal positions and similar op- crations for casting the next line wa: performed. Describing the inftial test of this lin- otvpe machine, July, 1884, in the “Biography of Ottmar Mergenthaler and the History of the Linotype,” the author explains that the spectators | gathered at the shop on Bank lane in Baltimore, Maryland, before the in- ventor was ready, and had to wait um- tii he made some adjustments “Finally everything seemed to be ready. . . . Mr. Mergenthaler called for the steam power to be attached; he composed a line, removed the stopper from the metal pump, and touched the line key. Smoothly and silently the matrices slid into their places, were slamped and aligned, the pump discharged its contents, a fin- ished linotype, shining Mke silver, dropped from the machine and the matrices returned again to their nor- mal position. All this was the work of but fifteen seconds. This machine was never used com- mercially, but it cast a number o, | slugs, and articles were set up by this machine from which prints were taken. When it was completed the National Typographic company had high hopes that it would be a prac- tical machine, but a number of de- fects developed and it proved slow. The scheme was finally abandoned in favor of a single matrix—that is, a short bar with one character stamped upon it, such as is used today—in- stead of a long bar with the whole alphabet. The application for the pat- ent was filed August 30, 1884, but was not granted until March 3, 1885, In the exhibits of graphic art the Smithsonian building, there many other interesting series ing the development of instruments and machines relating to the art of printing, illustrating and bookmaking. of gether, in are Petty Naval Prisoncrs, (New York World) Within two months Lieutenant ! commander Thomas Mott Osborne, in charge of the United States Naval Prison at Portsmouth, N. H., has re- stored 200 petty offenders to places with the fleets. Under the old system would have been lost perma- nently to the service. Mr. Osborne is carrying out in official deed the prop- aganda against waste of men which, long before he joined the Navy, he set forth in platform words. And his g00d work is betng done at a time when thrift in men iIs a thing of vital importance to the nation. Hospitable Philadelphia. (Philadelphia North American.) New York gamblers are reported to be fearful of the new administration. Why worry, with Philadeiphia only ninety miles away? Her Question. (Detroit Free Press) “When your father and married he was getting only week.” “Was pa drafted for I were $15 a trying to dodge military service?™ being rigged under her and lashed together ¢ ¥ [} 1 | 5 4 show-, 448

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