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

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New Britain Herald. HERALD PUBLISHING COMPANY. Proprietors. Tssued dafly (Snunday excepted) at 4:15 p. m. at Morald Buildinz, 67 Church St Entered at the Post Office at New Britain as Second Class Mall Matter. Dettvereid by carrler to any part of the city for 15 cents a weeck, €5 cents a month Bubscription for paper to be sent by mail, pavable In advance, 60 cents & month, $7.00 a year. profitable advertising medium In Circulation hooks and vress always ope1 to advertis wiil ba found on_sale at }ota- 42nd St and Froad- Board Walk, At Hartford Depot. EPHONE CALLS The onl- the ¢ Tocm The TMarald ling’s News Stand, way, New tan'ti i -~ Momber of ‘the The Associaied o tne credited in this paper published Aswociated Press. and also the news herein local Columbia, arise! The queen of the world, and the child of the skies! JOBL Columbia, to BARTLOW DOING THEIR BIT. In a single afternoon there was Landers, factory the sum of the Third Liberty ed yesterday [Frary and Clark B137,000 toward at the oan, plant are to be splendid congratulated uch record. They e a son to he proud their bit exceed the city of the way re doing in helping ritian quota be sub- We $1,589,000, to eribed in this are the mark that approximately oing to stop at let for us Reports today show e first million, the or wo-thin of quota, has now een raised. Conservative estimates that $2,000,000. pdicate we even It may hope to jo over we adopt the and the bond-in-every-home” slogan is not will leaders rry it through there that the The ightest doubt we ritain among in the al standing Landers, hd Clark employes set the other have a mark. Can one better? high-water’ hops them go LEANING ON AMERICA, “It is only the United Slates @ other Allies lean hw in the Housc rday). If “the itain e United States then it necessary for us to lean to the amount on us. (Bonar of Commons yes- other Allies” lcan Great Britain on and leans on would seem at our country is doing the lion’s the nobody. war, inasmuch We the structure. of are in financing we lcan on are ndation stone of a great our stability depends the fate bse we are supporting. is to keep the structure solid and the in budget. Great 525,000,000 to 625, States has be seen from by England’s fn can some of ures presented Bonar Law tlininz itain has loaned $2, The anced to all the 750,000,000 ount st B enormous o mdation er Allies. United Allies a total of the We or almost twice England has Joaned. all bear pur share in burden carrying We reipforec Liberty Bonds must our Government the stone. ne ellent cement. PLOYMENT OF W( CHILDREN EN AND adopting a resolution deploring of state laws af- employment of women children, except in case of urgent ssity, the Connecticut State of Corrections, h is convening in this city, goes suspension our ing the Con- nce Charities and ecord as disapproving any meas- which might endanger the health uch emploves and thus diminish productive powers. Jow more than ever we need every i which is able to If fe- to measure up to health must be special precau- right at this women and is work. 5 workers are their And ctations, uarded are necessary v so many the men the In France and England, yes, 1t done bit formterly children taking places of in ce. in Germany, d that the children as that and it were fullest protection possible 5 their health, The de- s zreatly these employes g this If their work R be hindered or curtailed,,the This s labor laws to too, has heen work by women is .every s satisfar- by deplorable done the would be in- they not to be accorded as re- country upon war, would pe disastrous. me to permit our laxed and we ,are glad fhe State Conference of Charities d to see rections is allve to the situa- <3 i3 exclustvely entitied | use for republication of all news | to it or not otherwlise credited ! Employes and officials of that | upon have ! they | not | find New | Frary | Great | How costly | time | the so-called Chamberlain Bill is has expressed Wilson is of opinion | SPY LEGISLATION. President { that the Court, + Martial unconstitutional and himself as “wholly and opposed such legisl ult, place to the the country tribun- will unalterably As would if at tion™ a re measure, large at the mercy of military als, i tind is doomed. The President of our citizens We that the wajority , approve of his action. do not wish {'to veorganize our national system of government after the 'russian model. { As the President so aptly the level fighting ' We have apprehend our It would put us nearly on of i and the very people we are affecting to despise agencies to pics traitors, and we courts before which they brought. Y the agencies or the courts are not doing all they should in the wity deallng with such persons, they should be provement does mot mean that abso- in authorities. of de- our executive and have can he improved, but im- authority should be placed hands of the military convicted Tute the if is really @ person conduct one will punishment, even the death out to still treasonabld no plore any which may be meted him. Nevertheless it more deplorable if we were to divide pea would be into military districts as the up our country with a court tribunal. That savors too much of Hindenburg and { dendorff. We want no such legisla- tion in the United States, reason to rejoice that there is a man lilke President Wilson at the White House who will not tolerate any in- fringement of our rights in this gard. He administered a stinging rebulke to those who were in back of the court martial bill and by so doing he will probably discourage any fur- attempts to of the second Hohenzollern domain. martial supreme a of Kaiserism, G and we have re- ther make cut Union a New | Does your library contaln a thrift | stamp book? This is the kind of weather which work that beside it makes us so fond of we could curl up right and go to sleep. Princeton about Professor McElroy of addressed an audience recently the “Souls of Prussians. . generally do choose Professors such abstract subjects. Some of the sidewalks in this city are in disgraceful ‘condition. Tt would open the eyves of the mcmbers of the Board of Public Works if they made an tour the inspection around town. It is reported that Chinese coolies employed as road menders tock part the great stand soldiers in the slaught. Probably boss was Whang- Ber-Lin. in made by the Brit- ish last German on- the section zan von Richthofen, most brilliant aviator, has finally Jaron Germany met the fate of Boelke and Immelman, his illustrious predeccssors. The Ger- mans elaim that von Richthofen, who was a caplain, had downed T8 enemy airplanes. North Da- Minnesota, In- all filled Liberty the IRast lowa, Oresgon, Arkansas, kota, Montana, Ttah, diana Misscuri their quotas for the Loan. have done likewise? have Third tes n and How many The latest joko over in England is about the man who the doctor to attend an injured man. The maid who answered the bell said [ that the Doc had been blown up in a Zeppelin raid and wouldn’t down for a week. And they say the British have no sense of humor. ran to summon be How about clean-up week for Britain? There including back s a New are a number of spots, s in this town which rake and a bontre. are badly in need of a ACTS AND FANCIES, all abont the clocks ahead. vowve forgotten when you sct the Telegram Question—How going to last? Answer—Haw big York Evening Post. Appointment of a Middletown will decide the of civil service. Watch and Middletown Evening Press. Bet time 3ridgeport long is for reality postmaster wait.— use the privdege of denounce the, war, to protect just free speech.— Guardian. The frec which such Paterson sociallsts speech to is being used principles as Press engaged of ashes the five winter, Elbert Severance is in figuring how the 1o in his back yard canic tous of coal he burn Kansas City Star now tons from this G. A. R. loses many by Newspaper headline But the national up their deathless make men free death. army has taken cause—the fight to New York Sun some spots. at least, onsg with their backs to the pulling the wall forward | an l the Brit- wall are a little, wrote— | D AILY HERALD, TUESDAY, APRIL 23;1018, Just springfield now every little Republican. counts. In the rate in Tast rmany ha decreased nearly one-half. But look at increase in the German death New Haven Union the rate! three years the mrn\-t i | \ | “Thus Saith the T Ofier Phings. Wendell 1562 paisonous dens, where traitors hide Lilke bats that fear the day, While all the land our charters cluim | Is sweating blood and breathing Hamnc Dead to the Country’s The recreants Tord, Thee | (By Oliver Holmes.) in woe and shame, | whiser, i patriot fires slow. | The mother hides her trembling fear, The wife, the sister, checks a tear To breathe the parting word of che Soldier ot Freedom, Go! Stay In where altars peaccful homes, On Love's own halls where And Mamuion Where flattorers cronch, The dreamer, startled from his couch Wrings a few counters from his pouch, And murmurs faintly, Wait! Luxury lies keeps fawn In at ease state, menials | his and In weary camps, on tramplede plains That ring with fife and drum. ! The battling host whose harness gleams | Along the crimson-flawing streams, Calls, like a warning in dreams. We want vou, Brother! Come. Choose ye whose bidding ve will do-— | To go. to wait, to stay! Sons of the Freedom-loving town. Heirs of the Fathers' old renown, The servile voke, the civic crown, Await your choice Today! is laid! O gallant youth ilvered brow, should lose and Hell should The stalke With yet T Heaven win, On whom shall That eries aloud, God calls you- COMMUNICATED. Win This war must be lie the mortal it might have answer Now sin heen ? the War or Become Slaves. in which are engaged won or freedom perishes. Slowly. agonizingly, creeping up ward to be again and again beaten | the dust under the tyrant's heel, | the liberty we possess today has been | gained througl the age long travail of the peoples of earth. We thought the struggle over and victory won for all time when the curtain slowly feil at Appomattox. But despotism in the ; suise of Prussian militarism, was even | then training its legions to renew the | fight. It disclosed its hideous malignant | ugliness in its dealings with Denmark in 1865. Again in 1871 was the veil, | for a moment, removed from the face of this monster of iniguity. But the free people of the world failed to in- terpret the signs discernible thereon and the prince of cvil went his way unchallnged, matured his plans un- molested. developed his fiendish | instruments of enslavement without remonstrance, until, strong enough. | in his own conceit, to defy the world e flings the mask aside and appears to humanity in his true colo Even {hen for a time mankind refuses to believe the evidence of its own senses. It takes nearly three years for the American Republic to awak- e the fact that thouzh frecdom may be won the battle-fields of | we to to on | T0DAY'S TABLOID TALE Ry Joe Blast ho Dozer. i g cried there work Pon- Twivvers over your Arbuckle Twivvers' cmployer and boss, " v oolerle [ must say you're a fine piano tuncr, Now, Twivvers, if this happens agaln “Confound you go de again! ders, "sir,” apolo- blinking T “I'l see that it's sir. Sorry, sir, sir, ves sir.” his = flinty hearted employer strode stuckily away, a great idca occured 1o him. “T'll enlist!” he thought. “T'll st in the army where a man chance! [I'll show the “¥os ¥ slr) gized Twivver sleepy eyes the last time sory a old— IT. was the very placc excecded his wild- He was made the very start as a reward for valor and his suggestions to to he col- Per- was Ar- private for The army for him. It est expectations. a lHeutenant at and after that, his deeds of many helpful his commanding how to manage was rapidly made onel and then general. haps his proudest moment lis formenr or, huckie Ponders, a mere brought Lefore him sentry duty. said General snanimously. I you, though give you a and only years at oificers a the army, captain, wien emplo sleeping on “Ponders,’ Twivvers m won't be ha you deserve le you labor. sir d it Jieney to ten on losson in sent hard 1ce rhank sin tremibled Fon of von, sir, and I sir, and I'll take it N i) = At was “Very good appreciate it to s, heart, Twivvers de- *houal- ¥ vers, this too ¢much wfnutes after I just You're complete- houted Arbuckle vt mioment kened violently on av by a hang seendin his der Pwiy is not five warned ly fireat Ponders. And Twivver who believed in dreams, went and joined the artny and seven months la- ter was shet for falling asleeep a charge. 1918 by Georgc Adams) n during (Copyrizht Matthew | backs of mankind. r | necessury still be maintained by "ZOO\lS, or in the manufacture and’ 1918 sale of luxuries cease, thus releasing of the mask has |our entire energles to the one great the gauntlet to the civ. | end in view—the winning of this war This challenge, through |in the shortest poseible time. We we have been forced to | might as well make up our minds two millions of our voung 'that business will never return to now training for the bat- normal basis, until the war is won. But men cannot be main- Let traitors and spies,—no matter the front without united | who they are or where they ma, b the rear and here only u | found—be dealt with strictl Al available force has [ the we value in life is at stake. It is mistaken charity to take any fur- ther chances. It seeius, at times, as though { the people of this country were issues or do Wo | ngieop und nothing would awaken the vital issue | them short of an earthquake or San Francis-g pombardment from the sk | 1776 it must force of arms in The removal thrown down ilized world shame accept and alen are tle-front. tained at support very in portion of our been mobilized, When we have v hands, thre and business, ries on a conflagration on tening ruin to our do we employ hair homes Eel " e side work on Look at the aster, ialveston, every man within reach com pelled to aid in rescue while looters and th who hindered were on it We bave thing which of b 1nc iss usy and is 5 stalke Baltimore. | thers seem to think this the op- portinity to make big monev. Thay 1nay be likened to the ghouls who rob the dead and dytng at the scene of a disaster. They should be hunted down and awarded the same fate when convicted. Still others spend their jcizing those who are trying something to kelp. They are lmperor who fiddled while burned It operative 8s shot i hands some- | the very exist- | homes. busi- | lives, all are | Almost we acknowl- | now, our threatens nation, institutions, honor invoived and in danger vear passcd since edged the fact and took our place be- side those who have fought long and faithfully in our common cause. We, with our are facing most aigintic military orsaniz jounce of encrgy which existed this earth. | winning tnis war. This wization 1 verfected ' united cannot be through fifty ye unrestrained | dom’s cause sate effort, with the hands. Avake view to dominate the y Unite! and world and make them CHAS. despotic ambition of a | Bertin, Conn. schemine tyrants. This is the foc we fight, wily. resourceful, revengeful | and without honor. He will not hes- itate to 1 means, however vile, treacherous. despicable they may he, in orde win We can nothing word only by may we him. and deeds have been unspeakable, He burned his bridges hehind stuked everything on the | Unti has placed on the bowed | newed servitude, | hands with the chains of | deprived them of free | thought .the vlive oranch of peace he | pretends to hold forth to a blood sick | e as empty of meaning as { OWing to the fact that 1 had not co were the pledged words of his nation | fronted a paper in some time. Al- ravaged Belgium. { though T live in one of Newington's It g residential sections—"Cider Creek' — magwn Babithers do not get newspaper service as none within the German lines. Blat by e rot, m s some way, working German success. If not willingly otherwise it win against on ence oty our hours to erit- has Rome united nses want co- that we posscss A people defeated, and and sure in such Awake! Unite! is action we the | action tion ever toward thus llies has ever on = singl the | the purpose »ole of siaves to hanaful Arm! H. ASPINWALL. Dear Editor: Even e any or to his though it may be too late register regarding the proposed jail right here in our peace- ful midst, according to the do hereby plaint against it complaint | | by desds JusEe ol Newington, 1, has | ! n| congcience, most bitter such a ridiculous mave. I don’t get into the than dictates of my issne. register a com- he Being as center of is, bound thei : town hondage, and our more once a month. so you see, 1 haven’t had the chance to write you an editorial 1o is a are | we vet. It seems to me this here tion about erecting a Jjail icinity is outrageous. 1T have been living here in and about Newington since 1868 and never have I seen our town in such an uproar. The other day when | was right'in the midst of affairs at the Post Office [ never witnessed such heartrending ob- | jections our town folks had re- jestered. contrap- in our sonable to think can such a foe with one hard ticd behind our We are in this strugele lo maintain the insti- tutions for which we have already fought three wars, and this is the business every batriotic, loyal citizen should be engzazed in, until vietory comes. By so doing we will shorten | " g0 "1 qon't claim the war and save unnecessary blood- | byt I'm just giving you my views of el | BRG should ask him- | (ne *fracas’, so hoping that these If these questions, Ts the work in | gharp words will ruin the plans of this which T am engaged the means by | jajl committee. which T can best aid this cause? Tf [° 1 remain as ever, not, how can T change it in order to [ of Newington. muke every atom of effort count LEM HASTINGS, The manufaciure of shipping is now (R. . D.) Cider Creck. the first vital need. Aeroplanes fol- Newington. low closely after, munitions of war and all the various machine parts to their manufacture are When the season opens every individual. not helplng clse- where, should zain access to the land and faithfuily to incrcase our food supply. we back ? to be a palitician a patriotic citizen also vi It Is Foolish, stand- expect To expect to set up our own ard of right and wrong and everybody to conform to it, To try to measure the enjovment of others by our own. To expect uniformity ! this world. To look for ence in youth. To endeavor { tions alike Not to yield in unimportant trifies. To look for perfections in our own actions. To worry ourselves and others ahout what cannot be remedled. Not to alleviate if we can needs alleviation. Not to make allowances weaknesses of others. To consider anvthing impossible | work are handicapped, and helpers have drafted for e prices paid in muni- on overnment away This made good much roduction of stuffs douhle that of last vear. event he largely D there will be needless suf- privation at home out unnecessary labor, divect bearing on the malke this ain Of an arcu of over 500.000 of tillable land in Connecticut only 100,000 were used last yean. \What iS | we cannot ourselves perform. ‘rue regarding Conuecticyt i= trie, Mo bellye b anl i in equal measure, of the fest of the > ' minds can grasp. country. In addition to v e e e o, the land cultivated was gnly partially the day were so important that it used would live forever. \V\ To estimate people by some outside vation quality, for it is that within which on a ¢ makes the man.—Judge Rentoul iIn T.ondon Standard, Our many farmers their hean hizh and drawn he of sons of opinion in enlisted front The judgment and experi- factovies have must Our he tion work others, to mold all disposi- Toss and more food ouzht 1t must in creased or fering and But eutting that bhas no war, we will to any here all that for the acres finite ohser- person, garden, came tnfler my whefe one afre of amount of vege- Witherto, and this, the ground work- We can doubls food products, If our available instance last year rter of an double the raised there Ty keeping all the time. our production of we will co-ordinute forces, Stop ing drink. raised tables «imply ing | ALFORD SUCCEEDS BALDWIN. Mayor George A. Quigley today ap- pointed Frank H. Alford a member oy the f‘!l..v Hall commission to suec- ceed Car H. Baldwin, a entively the sale of intoxicat- Turn this worse than u less wasie Jabor into some line of ¢ production. 1f, as cenceded, oup sol- | clined to serve on the board any long- uniferm hetter with- | er. The new- appointment is for two why, in the of { years. sense, are ot M- | ———————————— diers of labor al the rear. also better | without lignor. even though they |TMPORTANT TO ALL WOMEN U no uniform® READERS OF THIS PAPER The diversion of sugar for the | A manufact candy should alvo | Jousands upon thousands sle who of - are o in timulant, ;mmon dier name the s nlai o w re of of wo- | thus liberating added in-|men have kidney or bladder trouble | of men and for war {and never suspect it. { Women’s complaints often prove to suriicient tebaceo for the use |be nothing else but kidney trouble, or but curtail its |the result of kidney or bladder dis- behind the as a patriotic | ease | Turn this s land labor | 1f the kidneys are not in a healthy | ratsing of food that will sus-{condition, they may cause the other | organs to become diseamed. and =irls; You may suffer pain in the they | headache and loss of ambition - | Poor health makes vou nervous, ir- will bhe stronger and | ritable and may be despondent; it it when the ols are | makes anyone so i the fall | But hundreds of women claim that Use the labor confined in our jails | Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, by restor- nd prisons to produce 1 health to the kidne: proved to Conipel interncd men, pr {be just the remedy needed to over- | and slackers generally ! come such conditions I share Bstablish Government | A good kidney medicine, possessing | throughout the land. in every |real healing and curative value, thereof, to which the producer { should be a blessing to thousands of his product, be assured | hervous, over-worked women a fair compensation ..n<!i Many send for a sample hottle to certain not | see what Swamp-Root, the great kid- profits to mm»,E lver and bladder medicine will of the yw}dd]luldn for them. Hveryv reader of this the worl, as |paper, who has not already tried it, | government swents to run these | by enclosing ten cents to Dr. Kilmer and let the men who are not '& Co., Binghamton, N. Y. may re- needed, enter the productive end of |celve sample size bottle by Parcel the game. | Post. You can purchase the niedium an women crenien work Raiac our units, lines of fishting use duty into the tain lite Use the h the farms, afehy jury, b healthicr f opencd ved and bovs bacls 1ahor phy of our in such without ns on can it ienl v oo |ing soners of war, to do thei stores clty to = ca receiving the constimer payir half dozen mediaries. Use such men, hest adapted for bring of he he is a nev, stores let short, like the | to | The McMillan Store, In “Always Reliable” Not Asked to TO INVEST in LIBERTY Are VITED BUY You A stili | Give the BOND YOU rity Your Money soundest sec in TODAY. ARF, IN. HOUSE CLEANING TIME WHEN YOULL NEED NEW FLOOR COVERIN f“c LV IS ] existence, This important selling of Rugs should be unusually interesting was made possible only ago for <pot cash deliver the mills from today large advance purchases mean frec- | ~—We wish to state that every Rug p through placing Price are considerably od for (his SPE quotations these on 1er——Our saving to our CONCOLEUM RUG: of Size 3x4 1-2 feot $1.25 each. $1.80 cach. Good wearing quality Yinoleum Tnlaid Linoleum Oilcloths that It E i3 W R 1ATS i 4 Q c LINOLEUM N ipestry Brussels, this week. Rich colorings. upward, 6x9 AXMINSTERS, 9x12 feet, from from $1 $30.00 each. ‘We recommend these wool and 6x9 $7.50. 9x9 feet $9.50. HUNDREDS OF THE PRICED FOR THIS feet . S s Electric Cleaners Fully guaranteed factory work. $29.50. to do Special satis- priced THE OUR Some BRUSH VAC at slightly soiled. Without MATS, Size 22 1-2x36 SEE OUR STOCK OF RUG APESTRIES. 9312 ft., from $22. Size 9x12 feet room size VELVET RUGS. colorings, make it a point to sce these Rugs. SMALLIER SALE. SPECIAL CARPET SWEEPERS AT rollers, fibre the newest designs, Size 6x9 feet ...... Size 9x12 feet $ $1.25 are extra good values at COCOA DOOR MATS 98¢-$1.25-51.50-51.65 KACH. Inches All new designs. 0 upward., 8-3x10-6 2.98 upward. upward, 8$-3x10-6 upward, 6x9 from $16.50 upward. Handsome rugs: 9x10-6 . 8-3x10-6 UTILITY RUGS The customers, and $1. Sweeper and Vacunom marvel pach. A real $8.00 at 8300 20¢ aud smmne $6.50 59¢ from designs, savings LINOLEUM AND OILCLOTHS TAL SALG arge advance orders months Rlugs by each, 13.50 each, vd, $19 cach. Axminsters and Velvets at special sale prices $29.06 ric FOR YOUR SLEEPING CHAMBERS b Specially priced at $10.50. $12.00. Torrington SPECIALLY Cleaner. the §$1.49 TWO ODD LOTS OF WINDOW SHADES cack price cach, BY LIBUT. FITZHUCH GRERN, L is still. the of But adventurous. The Navy profossion was adventure. weeney from Friday night movies on the main deck were enough “for his loving mind, He had worked up to be a gununer's mate. This of the battleship's deck force divers fleet., it came that one Sweeney found that had sclected for the course in diving the Torpedo Station in Newport He had plenty of nerve. Officially he had a strong.heart and a level head. But by the superstition which every good sailorman ‘has or ic- quires he dreaded the thought of div- ing. He shuddered at the idea getting into a rubber suit helmet and going down under He knew Death would come way, But he was afraid would think him af Newport. He put diver's umped the metal hood head. And he slid down dim depths of the sea He didn’t die the the second. Nor in the weeks struction he so fearfully He was the first man qualify. “Sweeney said. Which Skipper picked steam Jaunch Roads. A raw pecially for new fathoms of water. and knots current on a citing peace wasn't stupid because he hranch provides for the day been at So about he a and sea him the to his shipmates went clammy He his id on union ne the suit, to clinging o over 5 into first time, Nor in- endured squad i of of his to s a the to horse was nim sunk it reason find in a Hampton thougt man well-nigh ¢ ebh job it was heavy looked nasty Worst of was said to \ horrid green-gray dreamed about all he for Sweeney body in the bloated dead man. crab-nibbled corpse. it all the night launch A H ! fore At him [ into a. m his the striker helped suit. The weights on n useless labor, whether }..nu large size bottles at all drug it be in the handling of tood stuf or lalul‘eu. I Vis fect sulfocated seemed bim The helmet envied the civilian tons He ex- | that cold | there | diver he just hi in ‘the the going hélmet For iround the the at dawn it. Then The Tts »0at loved work over telephon« thirty mi in the mud launch 1 bo bottom murlk Sweeney ra his heart launch had coxswain, ather by the his head th 1 the crash of before As Sweeney ¢ opy the head lifted opened, and the a ghastly leer the utes 3 prote he we stuck at drowned collision ept mouth Sweeney tide was Sweeney The head lifte lifelike Sweeney malk stooi face didn canvas about bloating neck The vo spla v loomed like I towards dist didn't bad 1s0 Sweency and sa v tested in squashed 1 he a he leaped, ed hood e And withdrawing it the losing bloate 1 cvented Sweenay know he t did ad ivil in i diver just laun inside Jody head plopped in | I Dut ported) row squeak than Bven he : ment drag wain's Sweency the bla ole Swec ey did that h and would 5o down again Colunmbus superstit tious sailors, Proceedings dicate that the iz about ready inst further bombi towns, Frightfulness the some of in 101 Germa ag is to it himselr! World. perpetrator faiy h and was ¢ that the ted ag lap ng ound through. wdland over sudden tinsd had hole 1e had ca eves d in know terro awn n mo 20X in zovernment ment open reat York

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