New Britain Herald Newspaper, January 23, 1918, Page 6

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 23, 1918. e Kaiser's palace has been looted Power and Responsibility. THE ' [ TR DL . FACTS ABOUT THE AMERICAN NAVY 'McMillan Siot cts capable of living fully up to = has just won a notable victory for it- || ofty ethical international prin- 3V " < JEN, U. S 5.—Chicago Herald self both in relation to gereral public ! BY LIEUT. FITZHUGH GREEN, U. S. N. - sentiment and to its cnemies among (Incorporated.) e BolshevPki have a great repug- | the employing cluss. It will be found = “Always Reliable.” e to death punishments for en- L O T 3 recorded in the overwhelming votc - 1 s of the country, but arc not so e ver-11me Store Open Daily at 9 A. M. A mathematician may err. A bul- n. on Saturday to by t agree- T ', o =2 = let may miss its mark. An eighteen ) L i v make it in twenty. rhaps President Roosevelt did not | oo & L i consideration of R lut woe betide the 2 jich & ood job, after all, when | OPEratars whith § : 3y Joe Blas {15 late A .4 the peace settlement that | Substantial wage advances, bargains - Routine is the grinning idol he must Russia. from impending an- | the miners against strikcs and pe Strolling With Sarsa. { worship. And it grinned regularly at AF ERNOON htion at the hands of victorious | jzes with fines collectible by the P‘“_i]“) L - '\ |«001;\j' o E}mrh] «;' ! the woe which was [‘)al_\'a during his 1L.——Omaha Bec | ployer those who take part in amy ook, it his left first summer in the Fleet. i i e arm bashfully cncireling her Liberty doesn't come any too often 2 v > danger that should be apparent | PUthorized StobbAses Of Work. SR S KGR S in peace time even in port. Whereas| @Qf 2:30 0 Clock ! is that while they are divid- | PONEE Bt 0" "hower out of har S i grounds anywhere from Greenland to Guinea | (Note the time if you please) amon themselves the | LooPoRS 80 5, = cocial state and ca‘ ful ' Sarsa Iarilla the beauti- || by way of Hoboken, shore leave be- 2 G e e || e e i T il T { comes the kind of dream a young; WE SHALD PUT ON SALE polis News. 2 1"‘” Qe our eyes in the gathering man has on a full stomach and a tive about killing anvone op- . 1 to themsclves. rbury Am- | Workers of America at Indianapolis unionism’s ‘:WT«' of costliest ex- | dusk,” he whispered. “There’s izhted pipe perience to itself were the days when L certain indescribable somep'r b aly’ H t retary Baker, in place of an Am- | i exercised its undoubted and lawfuul e Qesriea S jut Daly’s bucket was & flagship., ’ { Legion of Honor, pri ses a | e ldeliberat of i And since the Admiral was frequently l fen o h Legion of Honor, proboscs a | powers With a dehiberate refusal to At that moment Captain |! called to conferences ash i \v“{ nguished Service Cros and | yecognize any corresponding respon- Bron Ixes stepped from be- LS enoteone | Ia for distingiined sezvice DY | Hufity for mets Qo in transerocion ||| Drce J%c8 stepped from “he- |l a'lot in port At least two davs a Coats s not of military rank. The name | 5¢ the r ghts of others. T principle wmdow ¢ which he had been TeeHithe sk Sombany were aiven not matter, bur the decoratiol | o¢ collective bargaining would be as- devouri Sarsa I"nrv":’w with SonSloes anaton fend patchag e Trade sumetentty important | carted at. the. same. sime that its s || o e | that is halt one dav ana nait e next. | Siz@S 2 0 6 years an adequate and prized hONOT | gentia] mutuality would in practice be e N Comm s nded After working hours, sometimes ag y e high service it is intended t0 | gented. peremptorily, “go and s SESlTISSAT P, o itheinatizn best unls g 3 : e ¥, g0 and see that : 4 H d.--New York World 1 is a fact that ihe trades unions the canuons are ctaciken fo: forms, shaved pink, and armed with at o eac nguished service by others nflf which have bcen most observant of the night."” ta “(‘mmhfiron»hvaHS" (dollars) would R S e i s T s o e o AL Baahl i s . | muster aft. Followed a thorough in- |\ r'4 but ihe decoration should h*u:::‘v bargaining have been the most Iy \\‘nlr M)ml . T ”i”',‘mm .:,,’ | spection for non-res. duds. for cer- |NoU one Coat in this lot worth e sufficiently important to be Aan | gueccessful ones and almost invariably Captain Bron ixes’ arm siip | tain unscrupulous wretches who didn't than .98 and several of them regus |+~ hdl prized! honor for the|| (heitonly successtul lones. [t can ped around i Farilae || Tate liberiy. and other infractions of [lar $5 Coats. All at $1.49 each. Wa service it is intended to reward. | fairly be said that this great union of waist i || the law. Then all would embark in|make the time of this sale half past v York World. coal-miners made of the day on “Don’t let me interrupt yous huge motor launches drawn up at the e S ohE e o tadiitol Stan i by it Vol Sroliine i zangway like coaches for a rooting ng. Nearly 200 men can he crowd. | %0 that mother can bring in the chils cd in cach of these roomy hoa iren and have them fitted. Now Ten : J:sc before the coxswain shoved off | member the hour and none of the eck a final shouted admoniti S o, “Tiberty up on the dock at sewens|Uom VIESEC than to At a chily f thirty tomorrow morning!"” 6% years and down {028 years. ¥ To Daly this was a premonition two o'clock on Thursday afternoon said zallantly. “Oh, Americn Awakening. untary agreements, moved thereto by what eyes! They got that in- | the weight of the covenant rather than cxpressible . . by the extraordinarily criticul nature about ‘em.” East to far | of the empoyment at this time, a red- Before ithey ! hox letter day in the calendar of American reaes to a sound like a mighty wave rising »ding a continent, Woest ind deep-throated song of a | trade unionism T e N veople ‘Ixes,” he commanded per- | | | Il » | ‘ erty, Justice to Nations Op- Staie w iCty Joans, emptorily, “zo back and Iwni he wouldn’'t be there until se . ) prossed!’ (Boston Herald.) sist at bugle inspection.” Cap- | |+ m“m»u - o : dren’s ats O —_—. If the Washington authorities carry tain Ixes saluted wheelingly, ' || "r \Y‘"“n' \‘flr:‘ Hvddnlm drink, . 5 f Nore e an a - e e e ahire Tren smarted, s = 3 nor fight, nor get jugged—anyway not AN il I it i mane Selves. in there the gleam of an army | through their proposal to require Fed el L —Tqv trode off. L s e i | X day, the same hawving | little while. With the President frecly POl oy, Sralflionsesiion e loond et e e R e semenl Rikes ] ol other’s o | an 01 nets Herald yesterday, - tie : : L ¢ AN yn mile, to the pulse of | by private carporations, in order thut said pleasantly as his arm || 0Py his fond mother's injunction | \ peen received by Connecticut’s conm- | acknowledging that mistakes haye | N se e e e R fomnd ihe warm plaic made !:imi, look up omg obscure aunt or | gressional delegation in Washinston | been made, and pointing out that the | Patriots’ “rave in voung life-craving | tional government may not be im- by the arms of T.euten- [;"‘;" -lito ';‘““‘t I h‘?“’"’_"?‘“d S for 49C \ach 3 as protest against the Garfield order. ! remedy is now being applied, we ha o maniood,— paired during the war, they might ant Teeny and Captain Ixes. i £ is friends next ' : Gilorified, march to a veiled destiny. | well consider the expediency of plac- Did anyone ever tell you EROLDAR S whatyoumayecallem | been strol- minutcs General Ric- | | | | | | B¢ {he- workingmen of the state and : for the job his short-cominzs would nation - was: a total lack of any com- | have been unearthed long before this imunication from labor organizations 7hy was this? If any one is inter- 1o SAVE COAL IN TENEMENTS. lested in the welfare of the laboring : should be the labor organiza- e man it should be > o e e tion. Yet labor, organized or un INoticeable among this gala out- no need for fcar of destruction If ing some such camper on the issue of there was something about | Rut wherever he went or how, in About onc hundred | ats and Bone pouring of sood-will for the safety Wondrow Wilson were not biz cnough | We who remuin the stronghold | bonds by the states and municipalitien vour eyes?” | variably he came back late. Not wa¥ | nets that go on sale | th the Coaf | b There would be some constitutional \t that moment a messen- || late. but just in time to see the lib-|ypyrsday afternoon at| 1:30. Valuek | Teach us, O Lovd, through com- | difficulties in the path af such action, zer dashed up, handed Gen- erty boat shove off. He seemed fated, | . * o 1008 B | pa srow, if made mandatory, but it is, never- eral Rickey a telegram, and || NVPnotized, bewitched—he couldn't ats and Bonne| up to $1.25, | So that the s and the sound of | theless, a clear duty of the Federal dashed down. ! mako that boat! but you get them if ; w1 come fop | the murc | authorities to discourage in cvery wa: ‘Curses,” explained General || ‘‘Daly late again!” the Captain |them Thursday for 49c ‘ach. - ! Sink to our souls striking fear to | practicable the existing tendency of Rickey T¢'s from the seo. | would exclaim in a kind of hopeless | has been susgested by & leading | B ol both States and cities to o ahea: retary of war—orders to move || impatience at mast next day. The See The l“ ats. | MARJORIE F. HUMASON with their customary annual borrow- on to Camp Sproot at 7:15, || ©1d Man knew the boy was just care- y ; el e B = se were perfectlr S S | less, and that the brig (ship" N ilies living in tenements may save an- |* in the New York Herald. ing as though these were perf and it's 7:01 now. s, 2 a e brig (ship’s jai A s foral tnes “Wha's the Scoretary of |ion bread and water would only tend | onnets an oats U'HE HOMIE TOW The present legislature of Max war?” inquired Sarsa with a | to make him sullen. Experience had , organized, voiced not one word of A sanizec. thracite and at the same time ex- | protest. | In trying to get a consensus 2 U S s o s 0 . § oninion from workingmen them- : undRr the SIPIS | gone toc leave home for money | SAchucstts, for cxample, as the weusl| | patient sigh | Shown that extra duty and restristion s [igplayed ivs) Ounk ; i e angwer °SPedicnt of shutting off a few ra- | IREy R e crop of expensive projects be '»:w it “Mr. Baker,” replied (Gen- | aboard had little effect. The case | selves the following compos ans | D + consideratior 'he ¢ GS T 5 = he for consideration. The war ) B T | diators. confining all the work,to one | Some seek skics always sunny, : looked hopeless. | . J { = : ¥ no appreciable degree diminished il ¢ s | w & i i or two. There are some rooms in And some depart in shame. R ,‘,-.‘(,“Mr v nrorgh'-'xmv Fr AT 1 wonder if T'll like him? Young man,” the Captain would | out in ow dread the three days' lay-oft because e L ;| 1 care not what the reason T e e mused Sarsa Farilla. ~ And she ¥. shaking his finger and in hifi; o h/ v cxpeot fusk such a thing at tni Men travel east and w e 4 hor sroll. but no || | Until 2:30 P. M. on all the livelong day. Likewise, there | S the month or seas one eclse showed t we are at war We must depend ime of the year. In the past they SO what the month ok season. state bonds to the extent of sever:l 8 cAopanowec up o some rooms that re homey oo m is the be: : it A (Copyright 1918 by George { upon every man to the minute, ave sve suffered this loss in wages so RIS ELI M L T oty The home fown 1o the best millions. The city council of Boston, | tes am s T A i e ursda than others. In these the family can likewise is dickering with proposals % < ) The home town is the glad town, Be o ! 1 — | faith should be shot!” The last word sathe: < y - s L o various public improvements, 1 e zather during the hours of wakefu s b e L S for various public 1 e ness. To those rooms which are set | ric not the money.mad {own f\'v‘:.:‘] : ‘,‘,,(.‘;,‘.;‘Sx"\.‘“Lf,fq,."i}il”‘n";;i"'l"l.'} WINIeh ivenid iacare aly modineid I OTD EENTIa - aside for sleeping quarters there need That all its spirits hides. T o e 5t 18 watn e im. | man ana the colored as long as the | have to zet the master-at-arms to tell hi S o ; be administered little, if any, heat. Though strangers scoff and flout it tics, cities and towns throughout the | colored man “knows his place and | him whether he was going to be e: Mooshine Feclipsed by ~“Moonlight And even jeer its name, T nwealth, keeps it wted or not. ) i s L It has a charm about it Why should we require mercantile There has been no inflow of for- He wasn't shot. But that was about s e I eshinE Rlofort Sz g and rianufacturing corporations, pub. | €iSn white labor to the South. The |the only thing that wasn't done to tions Greatly Changed. Sidmes! all the radiators in all the rooms | T serviee companies. amd all - ofher | Whites haven't encouraged it. the | him. Yet he was still incorrigible. S far as they remain within the bounds .o;,,. a¢ ful blast, the effect is not | The home-town skies seem bluer | private business concerns to have tha | Dresence of the hlacks has prevented | Not purposely, for he had periods (St. Louis Post-Dispatch.) ‘ Than skies that stretch away. urgency of their financial needs ap.|it- At the same time the relations | of reformation that showed that he The literature of Fastern Kentuuky % S The home-town friends seem truer proved by somehody at Washington, | between white employer and colored | Was really trvins. i i the radiators going and closing And kinder through the day. vhile all form of subsidiarz publin | Worker, in a broad, impersonal way, | ‘‘He's coming to a K.O. (kick-out)”, > : " Th h e bos Tas far the rooras not heated. By a common And whether glum or cheer: borrowing are permitted to he under. | have not been happy. A few colored | despaired h: dh'lsion' (:;fif‘(‘r one | Tconshine and interesting mountain PRSI0 FEangLe T as far |, recment between all families in a | Light-hearted or depressed, taken at will, without regard to na-| men and women, because primarily | morning. “Flanigan,” to the turret | characters. It has been known as a pack as the Civil War, or those who | | Or struggie-fit or weary " | tional necessities? There is no good | 0f individual rather than racial | wmm:;'. ')"N you \Inlw nnvl ”w.u ‘m | section where moneyv was not needed like the home town bes reas Or ANy S scrimination. It traits, have here and there made | save the beggar? e's go he mak- “ 2 S % DG @l sl B (l“'flv@d, : i :1‘12‘1’::{1[-(())"\ a41”'\?\.\\1:1:\?1:.‘”r‘r‘nv‘x‘i:‘mn-»nl~- iwrn | themselves offensive to the white | ing of a good man too.” |and human life was help cheap. That i by all who live up to the agreement. Let him who will go wander entitled to priority over one ciass of | people. Resentfully the whites have “Well,” was the Battle-Axe scented | impression has been held by severak lace between '61 and '65, know that | py o gheme is simple and deserving | To distant towns to live, subordinate bond issues, as they un-|in many States passed laws, curb- | reply, “I've séen 'em good and bad, | S€nera‘ions of other sections of the ven the great Abraham Lincoln, { Of some things I am fonder | doubtedly ave the brakes should bg|ing to the upstarts doubtless, but | biz and little, heaven-horn and Devil- | ¢0upfiy and has aot been much lvhom we all now land, was not with- | | Than all they have to give. | applicd all along the line. galling and humiliating to the en- |sent. Daly ain’t no rose in a bed of | (fanzed by '31@ rornantic stories of { The gold of distant places S— — tire colored population, which they | thorns. But he's got hisg virtnos moonlight schos At have com, in his own home and has succeeded Could not repay me quite e T e had no desire to offend. The result | 'm thinkin’, the canteen'll s vom the hills within the past few in saving quite a bit of his coal sup- For those familiar faces e Fighting Irish. has naturally been not improved con- him.” "t;j‘:i R : il That keep the home town bright. (Waterbury Republican.) ‘vthn\z but bad blood on both sides, i ‘What do you mean?" { > ow s coming from thaty "EDGAR E. GUEST, % s it o S veiations more strained than before. | Just this, sir. We've been out!Scction an entirely new story, thq In Detroit Free Press. h,TL(‘Iv}'u’:\‘\ ‘l':fl’\,.‘.},‘:"\,‘{”j,“ 1,,\(,”;:: ‘cither side was happ { so much lately that the Payvmaster influence of which is being felt even precaution is now worth more than o z e Col S e e rrer Then came the great war, with | is selling about a million dollars |IN the warring countries and will be he fire of the discontented, that iS|ip, proverbial pound of cure that COMMUNICATED | out the blot that the Jeremiah | enormous demands in the North and | Worth of sweet stuff a week to nm\n,““l' with ‘much greater force an4 perfectly natural in the course Oof . yignt come later,—probably another | e : O’Learys put on the race at the en- | West for labor of every kind, the kid W’r: e a5 REecrilty -rhe((;;ra]:;r‘v‘\m;‘;inlI(h;u:](:.rsi;owryr;re t;;alc‘ vents. It is to be expected. At the ;... S | “ 5] JAG trance of our country into the war. | lowest degrees of skilled white labor | ship’s canteen never done a business | 3577 o 2 s S ame time, it must be remembered : ‘“,i ((”r( 1;,1:?‘?:;.h(,Asu‘::?:mto s SEEONEN To, TH}' ELAG Into the history of the nation will beina made to do the work denied | like it since T been aboard | few vears acquired great tracts of thef h I i 1d Out in the Hoosier State They Have | 80 the figures of the provost mar- | to it in other times. To take the va- “And, sir,’—dropping his voice till ;,":;‘ »*d“\"‘nmi\"f“fi\'\l_fli.;' l:“l:!nérun]d. .'mriI alw at the cntire world now hangs upon 3 . Sta > J : e Sl o R a Kindly Regard for The Herald's shal general's staff at Washington | cant places in the unskilled ranks | it lapsed like a leaky steam-trap—— is very word; that he has carved a Lob A which opened there. Towns where thou= 3 g ribute to ** Glovy” ¢ . note that for fervor and will- | iabor agents scoured the South for | “Daly is the head of the line come galleries|| Truly hasit peen said, “Theso are ingness native sons of Ireland not | colored men and women and, for the | every noon he’s alive! “The workinzmen did not hat the factories could close down or purposes of inventory and re- JUST FOR THE MOMENT. The instance given is a seven-room Schools” and Mines. Condi- Outbreaks of criticism are to be expected at a time like this. And, so s xrason, ar as they are uttered | ¢ o noticeable as in keoping oniy F cocutaiiniand moninithidisovaliy i ale is famous for its stories of feuds hey are good for the country. tencment this plan may be put ave read sufficiently to he well in- fformed on thos: events that took | of attention. The dealer who ad- vances the project has experimented ut enemies who stood up upon every brovocation and denounced him from B cmetons | ply. As the winter promises to be a It President Wilson and his admin- | 1,1 qiawn out one, every ounce of | stration finally succeeded in drawing | Cut hie can. |5ands of persons live now flourish | the times that trv men’s souls. These T vot citizens of the Tnited States increased wages, found them eager | teen rights, sir, when he's late from | Where stills were hidden a dozem ag The railroad development. /hich will never be thrown down, Hemmond, Ind ot A ! e ok e . ight | 3 are the times when the summer sol- e 1 i Dayelbeen fsunnasifbyincBotisold na g HoRpulliioila ceaNeDOal caxe sy Riian e andiho L comegack thanis Nl ieive e bl aelie o e i 5 s B, tionality in accepiing the call to scr- | larger pay was, indeed, an induce- ' hefore rather than miss his boat- A h > To the Editor of The Herald |l vice in the national army dra One | ment. but it would perhaps have been | and his ‘chocolate-cream bar' next | DUt It appears that only a beginning ast in the winter of their own dis- Somebody had the sense to copy | in ecvery three Irishmen waived his | far less attractive if the colored man | day." been made. With the output of greatly needed coal comes some ) i T & i | that dandy little “Toast to the Flag” | .|, to exemption as an alien and | ha ¢ felt, and felt for a long time 1z S STEIED o content. These are the times when | { claim exemption as an and | had not felt, anc & anigan was right. And now for tHE¥nRast natdwoRal In bl e | | | | piche in the international nd that statesmen of the world look p to him for leadership and enlight- dier and the sunshine patriots shrink nment. Al] this insures his safety at home, when men retarn to their sec- | vou wrote and printed in a recent is- } \ent into training to fight for {he|and bitterly, that in the North and | the voungsters “Canteen cut” is thy duced in this country—thick timberg sue of The Herald, and having some | cipse of liberty that the mation has| West he would not, as in his South- | awfullest punishment in the book. | . ) time on my hands T went 'em one | riven jtself to safeguard. Tt is a|crn home, be reminded of his black | . and wide boards from the great ash, better. common #aving that where there is| skin every time he met a policeman, | In“k and poplar trees that are sought E k Have a blotter with us which I |, fght an Trishman will be laoking | cntered a street car, railway station === —— |in vain in other section of the mid= reaking out of the fever which hag | (0r% BT ONF (A BROVE, AR OO ihipping out to our dealers—a | for a chance to met into it, but there | or frain, and in a hundred other less | White people toward him friendlier, § dle West for war purposes. een kept in confinement since the | APout: only the foval and the true|inousand of them more or less,—deal- | might be added to this the fact that | conspicuous ways in the course of | and that equal opportunities with the A recent outline of the promotioni can remain in the open. ers, not blotters, | almost invariably the Trishman will|a day. | whites for his prosperity, enjoyment ; WOfk planned by the Louisviile & ) A e e S = e Hammond, Ind. | he found fighting on the side of the of life, and the education of hig | Nashville raflroad indicated that ney, efore that time there was bickering CH LT ) ; Yours truly, under dog. which is the same thing | children be assured to him, not {f» than eight branches would he d b ing a ello 1Z on every 3 ntucky 1a8 endorsed ) mericia t e re edge, s ving e b eprende. 10 1 ringly, ola P B P i i is s i a grea - nd bantying b ving Rl : : : An American to the wire edge, as saying he ¢ e depended upon | Ricnmong negro lawyer, o become | ETUdEINZIY, but gladly and abundant- | Duilt in this section to tap great min k.. Pro-cer held the floor, | the federal amcndment to the Con- H. W. WARDEN, to join the side of right and not of |4 S et R e | Richmond | IV If this change does come, and |ils Plants ind that each would create stitution for national prohibition Enterprise Bed Co,, might. | Chamber of Commerce at the recent | C0mes quickly, it will do much to |an industrial community. The na« aters of English and all things b " 7 —— — convention in New York of the | kl‘(;p the negro where by nature and :\“‘":‘:1'o:n(tl?:—\ri&‘:'}:ft():ht»‘“:n:-“]:nc”m‘ v i Iy old Kentucky home, GOOD O A LIGHT IN THE SOUTI. Southern Commercial congress, then | eNdowment he is most at home, | SRt s/l nglis 1 the coupling of o) g ating for Efficiency, the i) o addressed by @ negro for the first | Where he is best understood, and in | control Wil not hinder it, so Fasterm P World’s War Winning Wonderful Op- | time in its history, and to plead with | Feality best liked, and where nis [Kentucky has little fen ™ the that body to do cverything in its pow- | D€St Service and highest happincss | future. o itRbogacceaiihacy tiimy e e companies which are building the o > | | new communities in this tion are( 5 5 vhich he said had reached the | il be e put e table,” New Times.) Ero; Wi | stz ght. Th 3 & e nrixcnif\?\r«‘\rfi-]nwjfi i Sl e vaesarioe S0l of SU0.OU0 Emes tha) Al in the Family N I’ s e ‘rr(;.:r’:flg:":;mt K siigts it e . | world war began total which rep- | E O il i B = school« American woman to make The recent enormous and still un I s | (Oaklahoma News.) houses, churches, Y. M. C. A. buildw that little palatable We have be-|checked exodus of the negroes from | resents the most intelligent and ‘l.uY 8 o even before the hotel and the : , . ’ s S E A sirable product of the negro's civi- | A colored lady who recently came £ come acquainted with scientific man- | the South appears to be reacting on resident manager's home are put 2 = Ssiy atti > lization in the South since his eman- | over from Boley to do some shopping i E agement. Now those powers can be | the attitude of the Southern white | lizatic [ o RO B called into play with relation to the | people toward the negro in a thore cipation. arde he trs ere at the station — most commonplace thing of our | oughly wholesome and natural way: What has been the effect of "".3(‘,({3\‘: c:er::'cr"'h?;i:‘g,fnfiirafh;hi,r;?::[ Laerpoy s =i | duct 2 £ s | (Washington Star.) | she handed him a bunch of postage b 2 stamps, with the remark: “T didn't So you favor Ggvernment owner« take no time to get a ticket, ‘cause my ship!"” exclaimed thé friend e e e the cowards take to the storm-cellars. What is going on now in Washing- | These are the times when the siacl o s nothing more nor less than a | °™S 2 hd th hirkers seek afe quar | | ters. For only the brave can be | eclaration war with Germany. It was such a condition which opened the way for Giles B. Jackson, isloya all over the land, | there is a new significance to the line definition given to food conservation by a food expert, Miss Martha Van Renssclacr, the head of the Cornell portunity for Negro Race. home economics department. ‘“There | merica with t name of Great | ritain, and evervwhere men were at | e ageers’ point Vhen the declara- George Moore traces his pedigree on of war came there accompanied | to Noah and explains its derivation sors; Shom, Ham and one more. up to the Ieis rani \nes that wers Breals| sons; i, lam and one mor v b TACTS D FANCIES. For nine months we have had the 8 CE S8 NDRES NUXE pft pedal on. For nine months Kaiser Bill will find a pot of trouble here has been a warning of “sotto|at each end of the Rainhow Division, | gaily lives, eating. We will go back [ a way which, if properly and pub- [ this on the Southern white man, con- to simpler Tiying, to the ways of the | licly manifested, may serve effectual- | templating his idle wheels? Infor- pioneers. Ve must give up personal | Iy to halt the flight of the black man | mation comes from beyond the Po- gratification.” hefore it has gone o far as to cripple | tomac that the idea is creeping into s s S “Who said T ror it? inquir The most serious question in food | seriously the South’s growing eco- |his mind and taking root that per- Omhilh-t?;iinn‘:z(\;'&:‘lhd R S o (0l e e ) supply. Miss Van Rensselaer told the { nomi» strength. The South needs | haps he has not always given the | ™ 1290 B0 % CHe PR 00 belstocith ] “Why, vour recent specch way Wwomen, was the shortage of labor. | the negro. He is and has been since | negro a sauare deal in the past. In S & strong for the idea.” Think war, not peace,” says Vis- [ The cveased production of last|early Colonial times the physical |no head, straight-haired or kinky, is T e “That's no sign I favor it. That'g count French. Tn other wards. make | cpring, in potatoes and other crops, | staff on which almost its entire in- | there a thought of racial equality or REg " a sign my constitutents favor it.” eek & r Fuel Admini . Germans think peace.—Louisville | 1ad made evident the need of farm | dustrial life leans. He constitutes | habitual social intercourse. One | (Cincinnati Times-Star) ator, i f Uz Courier-Jourial workers. “Don’t go on the farm un- ! practically all of the unskilled Iabor | group does not want it, and the oth- | There are two nations which stand v = the X ] wems {less vou know something — about | of a fourth part of the United States. | er would not have it. But the whites | for Prohibition—Tha Turk, who was The Worst of AN. The Ttaliana are still hoping to | farming.” she advises women. “Take | The South knows no other. At T are beginning to see that if the negro | ever cruelly temperate and intemper- (Philadelphia Inquirer.) show Hindenburg the difference be- | places in the factories and release | it wants no other, for, truth to . | is to remain with them the conditions | ately cruel, and the Russian, who The trouble, as a friend remarked tween veni, vidi, vici and Venice, Ver- lihb men who have come from the| therc is a warm, long-standing under which he lives must be kind | proved to be a bigger boob withous lm us the other day, is that there are T G s i G Vashington Ie 1 damper which put the quietus on | in thic manner oah had three i says | | | | plve will iger hole I ome 3 H 10ld. men = That evervhod doing something it and express their opinions in no | goes not s Drove:that it should Jncer s. The start of the| be done—Albany Journal atter ma buted directly t in effect 1 akers t v e Hvertently on the Indirectly the i at Wash- | ona, Vicenza.—Boston Herald. farm and know how to farm.” fection existing between the white | lier, the collective attitude of the | vodka than with it. too many brainless days.

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