New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 20, 1918, Page 6

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, JULY 20, 1918, . o Srrgara s e ' ore than anything else, FACTS AND FANCIES. Congress and President. of Germany are approaching a point | would enthuse. The cotton manufac- | not likely to pay less than 2 per ce d equalizes the cos- AL s e BTN 8 (New Haven Journal-Courier.) where some desperate move isalmost | turer, however, feels pretty certain | on the face value of the bond fo Ples of America is our T e lemv T NS ol e S mm-nw»ln, If it has been determined | that the government will afford some | which you trade, and may pay a g00 8chools. With truth | ha0n Pr 5 members of the senate of the United | 10 disregard the neutr ity of Jlol- | measure of protection to the cotton ' deal more. And 2 per cent added to land, the inference is irresistible that | growers of the South as it has 4 1-4 per cent, which the Libert i States is that they have never Inted out that in the - ) 1ave never be- 3 fore boan (oficors 20 | the Germa ch command has re- | raisers of g i ol canish binar el Al Dor Gont e school there is mno | Managed to zet a Sunday school ex © been oflicers of the zovernment erman high comma rs of grain and other commod 1d carri v 1-4 1 E cursion boat hound for one of (b 18 the prosceution of a They ] R class or creed on ind for one L Booh 3 : e | whose success would bring the Bvit- | of price fixing for the re el yonds bearing a high rate. 2 G o e Ry e T in no position to measurc or the raw materi fparents are endowed the relative importance of the execu- | SIt to their knees and hold the n»st |a measure, by the way, which is not | And i of Burope spellbound seriously opposea hy cotton manufac- | transactions you will probably find. | olved to stake cverything on a stmoke | ties. This might come in a d you are not likely to find well se- vou look at the stock exchangs: tive and legislative branches of the e e turers of the North Bchoolroom afong- | but the aim must be at practical :”””I'” LY assucl . | o E | things. 1y Jonrnal b8 pcoutaeiiob Rt Rdiscussion | fand the young miss i the senate last week upon the pr ( Detroit Free Press) | ford manufacturer would lie in the and from school «yWhere will all the bartenders | P°53l to have the congress take & Speaking broadly, a great deal of | lact l'“-”[ the plan would insure a b o ) recess of several weeks, Senator lain and fancy nonse s , | supply of raw material at s e & butler rubs el- |find ‘essential johs omebody s veral weeks, d plain and far honsen i being )IE" S rial at a time ! h . ; Well, the Y. M. C. A. needs 4,000 new | L2 Johnson of California spoke scattered broadcast in present time | When a lack of transportation facili- | ers, who will try to sell you almost ] ass whose needs i > secretaries—Meriden Iecord or tattered and o perhaps, little that can accom- | Is not to say that such discussions are | P'rices. —An obstacle which would | and take your Lil Bond in pay 1 b world’s goods occu- High ideals are good for the view nt hond 1hne our 6 or 7 per cent bonds selling 1Pood Substituies Another advantage of the New Bed- | much below par ere is no other 1 United States Bond u security so profitable upon the whole a 1 sut, above all, look out for sharp follows: *1 recognize that there discussions of food substitutes. This | {ies are giving greater concern than | anything on e L fancy prica Baweep the streets O e hy L Ouien w ion), that | uniformly unprofitable, nor vol to in. | Seem to be insurmountablc is the dif- | ment. They rely upon being able to we have lost our initiutive, that in a Chie R o 1o be | ficulty that would be expericnced fool you. If an such person even hlunt- B immediate future will be the drive o0 novee o great degree we have hecomie a mere | lookin ter and making of all | completing a warchouse in N 5 e s el bt then that the ?,:,;t}i::\‘w‘i.y\y‘u\‘:-an'luyv »[“m,‘ 11‘1"],‘»1:”_} rubber stamp overnment of | possible substitutes for (1 tood- | ford to house a hundred 11 S any place you happen to B itself a melting | Kansas City Journal. 5 the 1 fliis country entered — Stood in a class by If Hindenburgz could spare more men from ihe western front, the kai- ser might take a less indulgent W PiGture of our de- | o¢ the murder of i assndoe 5 e murder of his ambassador at i § s how another | Moscow.—Springtield Republican can act upon that possibility.” It is | whole matte publican senators as Mr. Knox of |of the goodness of hisheart, isoffer- 4 | ECOW.=—= & 2 i oy Senator Johnson's idea that the crisis To il Certain enthusiastic | Pennsyvlvania and Mr. Colt of Rhode |ing you a chance to get rich auick. fwhich even th ST < menacing and perilous and | PYR: o 3efore the war /! ericans isite b ane B into - insisiin- ]»l(l 1“ h = n'f'r\x”j Tl visit ‘() aris rather than Berlin, e grea A . Pt which does not displeasure of the kals SRS T (e S f quainted with the consequences | have suggest the shaping of issue If you have bought a Liberty Bond of those thrown | that ey ot e T Senator Johnson's attitude would | knows that consumption of these | for the republican party in future po- | keep it. 1f yon have subscribed for A i £ FCLIRg c i3 S seem to be the only dignified ai- | “greens’ must be limited, very limit- | litical campaigns. A few republican | one try your best to keep up in- Berely for a few | deserts. At present 1,000,000 Ameri- [ (ioao (ne ey rake % ory | CANS ave bound for Berlin, via Paris, f 1Lring every and there are more to follow, and dur of the twenty- | Germuny will get her deserts.—Louis- nited St Wl e e e T o o T bales of cotton and have it of and take his wares with him only a spur ov ervent, and that | fighting men have been <o lor yeceive fall shipments. Mhaktrounlat LSt vy oot now | possibly in the s to come there ig | customed and which mu he econ- wie *7, 2 he is a sharper. The devi] that 1othing we can do. But possibly | omized for the winning of the war Control of Wire Lines, mart, and the tempter is likely to there may be something we can do, | But it is to plead for scientific rather | (From the Springfield Republican.) :appear to you in the guise of a kind} and we ought to remain where we | than hysterical treatment of the The votes by such conservative re-|and benevolent gentleman who, ou fger and as a cor- on that | food savers urge free use of pigweed | Island for the wire control bill broke | He is, in fact, more likely to appear account the congress should remain | and dendelions. Yet anybody ac- | up a bposible alignment that might|in that form than in any other 1 who is a mem- | ed, if serious injury to health is to be | Senators who participated in the sen- | stallments, and when it is paid for ber of that body. It is more or less ' avoided. Other conscrvationists call |ate debate last weck professed to see | you who have something you can re- true, though the expression is a very | attention to cabbage and tomatoes. |in this: grant of discretionary power }ly on unfortunate one, that the congre But both are mere filler :amou- | to the president to iake over wire svs- —- mean' the canton- | ville Courier-Journai. . “ e v kas hecome {0 a greal degree a rub- | flage, so to say, On a diet of cabbage | tems “for the national defense,” in Women in the Partics. gan training camp. — % <ing Albert d Queen Illizabet] : e idepi melting pot. z "‘- A S ~‘“ s ”"”") i ] the president is bored with the legis- | possible but probable. Sawdust pud- | toward socialism, althouzh in Great 3 literally came down from the 8k | iive pranch of the government or | ine Britain the telegraph and telephone R & metamorphio- |4, yisit King George and Queen Mary |p 00 0 5y 5 (8 BEEE TSR B 1 I JEliSen cesghaye alvays heen gundoieoy, AT ry has 1eir wedding ar orsar Tha = 2L esource en producing as sauerkraut and 5 he always bee der goy- Ch this country has | on their wedding anniversar That | {hough both of these charges have | catsnp crnment jurisdiction and Great Britain gre there is only one | makes William’s hoasted descension is still some distance from socialism There was not a little exaggeration in ber stamp. This is not so hecause | and .tomatoes starvation is not only | €ase of emergency, the ‘*last step” (New York Sun.) Woman's remarkable strength are as lite sustaining and as the politics of New York State made more than ever evident b t n made by thoughtiess observers ( S gt L o e from heaven look like vaudeville | % performance.—New Haven Journal- etarians are having their day in rollment. Of the newly enfranchised friotism; one desire, position in which the congre which to exploit nuts meat substi- i finds itself is the inevitable vesult of | tutes. Scientists of some reputation | {N€ declaration of the Indiana sena- tor, Mr. \Watson, that the passage of the bill meant a “fizht fo death” with | |7 thing to say abo th nominations sex more than two-thirds of a million ding hand,—-discipline. % o 2 took the trouhle f o to the polls Courie being at war. No matter how many | indorse this theory Blic schools are deserving | e things war has taught the world ave | {leman points out that monkeys live because they frown on SAID THE WOMAN. not so, it must be credited with the |jargely on nut foods. But what would | 50cialism after the war. While such BB . “better-than- i sclosure of the fact that it cannof | happen if the American people at- | [CArs are prevalent, owing to the vast | fual Wil sont Bude on the part of the |“Ye have to do with wounds”, be carried on by legislative process. | tempted to supply their tables for say | SXtension of government authority What B R - onen Iixecutive action is alone equal 10 | a week with nuts? It is safe to say | 0Ver the country’s business and indu i the public schools are to | e i hain S T That there womtan't be Tt enoust | tries, it was plainly impossible that the | politicians, whether in Jones For fmended because therein our | (Jose the tired eyes that Death ha This is clearly recognized in the | nuts on the American continent to | SChate should be controled by them in ¥ "-h or W ington Is t Nbecomes fired with patriotism; left staring, constitution, whose framers knew ex-| supply one family of squirrels for a ""‘”‘"‘_” its cour. ) e o PR o e public schools by their very Staunch the red stain, ctly what war is and to what an | gingle season. lgPanasniable@thatiemsroncles s ReanBanyine andiitial vay ; o b 11d up the walls of the tem- | extent it upsets the established or-| Nor can wi cubstitute fruits for | Ma¥ arise in which our government, [has in politics—the figures shina Help to build up the Nor can we all substitute fruits e ; nctions have become a vital part in ol der of things. It was because they | meats and wheat R like every other government on earth, | brightly for the Republican party, Of our democratic system; then what Ye did profane” understood this that they made the | adequate, that's why Hould take “possession of the wire |ith 9,618 women who are qualified S systems and operate them and such | to vote at the primaries there ' i e ) president the commander of the i< gs stane he individual ca 3 £ E et % are shall be said of the training camps As things stand, the individual can | ¢mergencies most easily arise in time | 127,417 more Republicans than De- JRte- | where the crude civillan enters, 1s | “Ye¢ have to do with Death”, said the | land and sca forces. They could see | use as many substitutes as are in is | op war, It would be an absurd state | moerats. The enrolled le R fed i - : - woman. 2 no other way of fighting and there | o; her reach and manage thereby to | o¢ of o Tave ire & > i ‘ maof Remry WEF, Weems as |tried in the fires of discipline and “and T with Tdfc is no other way known to mankind. | got along not only tolerably well but | poctacsos ‘op l"]“ s --';\'_m'wr]u\ in | licans outnumber the enrolled mala fardly probable | community life, and emerges, not |foose your legions and hurl them | Colonel Roosevelt declarcd that the | fo improve in purse and in health | by .r‘«;;‘:.’:w' (I]‘,‘r\;:j B o [w‘y“’,»:»:y | Democrats by 103.587—a figura R an enemy subma- | only a better citizen, but a splendid headlong ;—1"\"""'"‘“‘ could not' be ';nv'h-d on | and at the same time give patriotic | {101 electrical communications This | \;iniw].)» A ((.Vm : ] : - S i s Teithe 2 oame L Ins s = r g did not have to ind comparisor fich a torpedo at an |soldier as well? Tnto the strife v eloquen He was right. Neither | sorvice. Broadening the food list Will | view finally commended itself to the | mparison a Who shall re-fill the ranks of the |can the war be carried on by legis- | prove a wide and lasting benefit NP e oLl of et it A e oa | Nithe gar vessel so close to our In this great melting pot there fallen?” lative deliberation. Instead of a con- But what is needed just at this time | prpeti 'x‘l‘nn and u;‘ hn'lr‘n of a ortunately, the loss of life s | seethes the noblest tissue and the “1”, said the wife «;“"{1?“\:_ (H »h“f‘onl‘!; A ””‘{”“‘“‘“”‘; is some co-ordination and applica- |{ion will now rest upon the president. ery small. We can afford to lose [dregs of humanity; the son of the Sani o nd Gl . [ lon onihs fand Lenohe it pre be- The country will expect from Mr. “Ye have to do with Time"”, said the j ous 1t to he in session in order {0 {j,» <o jnexpensively and profusely | Wilson a wize restraint and caution woman. BICGUIESGES {1 produced and set hefore us hy not | in exercising his power. If he.should | Shovt runs its course e a coherent planned campaign for | fake possession of any particular wire | ., i I ur fighting men are most precious. the morally weak; in short, the Al- | Eternity flows throngh me like a riv Holland's Kxtremity. planting more nut and fruit trees. for | system he would be likely fo have | ReP 275,093 745,893 8,986 There is no cause for great concern | pha and Omega of the human race, Sharing its force (New York Journal of Commerce) |ihstance? Roadsides and waste or | reaséns justifving his course, and con- | M 247,676 610.006 887,682 One worthy gen- gain the privilege of having some- that will soon is even more interestin look large enough if it stonishing majority of thq distaff side of the Republican housef The table showin the enrollment of men and women in the four lead- ing partigs will cause cheers or hips—we expect to lose more before | plutocrat together with the off-spring %e war is finished, but the lives of | of poverty; the morally strong and groans Women AMen Total God flung the years at my feet for ful- + Germany's latest demands on Hol- | impoverished lands might thus e | sistent with *‘the national defense.”” It fillment-— land are explicabie only on the theory | profitably utilized.. Why not a drive | would surely be folly to overload the i am the Source” that her neutrality has ceased to serve | for increased acreages of oats, harley, | government with .new burdens in | S st American waters our Navy will take | John Doe, millionaire clubman, finds any Tentonic interest, and that oceu | corn, carrots, potatoes, sugar. beets | these times merely in order to please { Tota - 679,618 1,173,088 2,162,708 sare of it. We may not learn of its | himself just an ordinary private in | —Fdna Valentine Trapnell in pation of her territory, with or with- | and the like Why not campaign | government ownership advocates: nor Nobody will he 1rprise fo note New York Times. out her conmsent, has come to be re- | for ‘more Zoats.'more rabbits, ‘more |is it quite intelligible that the Presi-|that the women have achieved what G garded as a German military neces- | hees, more fish ponds? Then we |dent would take such a step merely [ appears to he onirol of the Prohibi- Right. sity But the invasion of Holland | might “get somewhere™. As it is our [in order 1tify a passion for pow- | tion party. the liquor question is a could have but one object—an attack | discussions seem to lead to the mini- fer. Mr. W is undoubtedly keenly | keen one with t're many women. N on England. For, as Demetrius mum of action conscious of his duty to conceive of T Tt o e Sl o e g s = the. tremendous executive power| women have a very faint interest in Duatch-German railways in the cur- Cotton Warchouses. lodged in his hands as a means to the réialist part But there will rent number of the Nineteenth Cen (New Bedford Mercur end, and what that end is no one be g many pencil T f Soc 19,950 67.665 87,615 yecause of this incident. If a Ger- |with all the various characters in- Pro 36,899 21.524 bman submarine is lurking in or near | cluded therein. In the training camp, jestruction, but we may be sure that | khaki, with perhaps his chauffeur or it will ind this side of the Atlantic a | his gardener as drill-sergeant. The nost unkealthy spot. Our transports |artist stands in line with the rag- America in the (F. L. Avery in the Automobile Dealer 3 % E and Repaire roops, and as long as the enemy is | skilled lahorer; and the servant sleeps | One hundred and fortv-two years | hody e surprised to ohserve jwill continue to cross the ocean with | picker; the specialist’ with the un- ot able to prevent the movement of | beside the master. azo, our fathers declared themselves free. TUpon the Fourth of July, the X little country of America was born, together of all kinds of men? Do |ganq like an oak tree, that little they quarrel, or chafe under the | country grew until it is, upon its| S : orn out hy farces overseas, he will have little tury, these railways are important to For severn] decadds the suggestion | edualed him in explaining since Germany mainly hecause they p that cotton might be shipped dirvect | United States entered the war vide shortadireet cuts to the North | from Southern cotton ports to the A s < more strongly 5 GE S B pain and the Pirates. : ke - sl ) AT e - 5 A il S biise | Sea. port of New Bedford met the re : an their ands, to the Republi- bonds of restriction? Does Wealth | 142nd birthday, one of the biggest I} "y 0, war broke out it was fully [ sponse that there were insuperable (New York Times.) n part What is the result of this heaping managers who will try to cause for satisfaction. Nor can the i t means the fact that wos loss of the San Diego, deplorable as it dampen our spirits. - ignore Poverty? Dees Scicnce scorn | the world. i . | expected that the Germans intended | reasons why this was impracticable. In negotiations with Spain for = inrollm.ent is not registration. and EXIT BASEBALD. Ignorance? No! Today we are atta wh\—na 1‘"\[‘ MOTCl” | to cross through Dutch territory as|Then the war came and presto, the | commercial agreement our govern- | if rate Vtractive duty \f . less foe; a vandal who does not 1 well as through Belgium. They re- | thing was done. There is consider- | ment has insisted that commodities i Yoro thirds ofl il Secretary of War Baker has ruled No, these men are there for a pur- | spect the laws of l\nm.vv\H\','vH)‘ ¢~ frained because they believed that [ able interest to know what would be | imported from this country shall not vom that baseball players are not exempt | pose, and the patriotic sentimentsun- | 08nize the laws of God: who fails to show lncn\"l'““ “‘d‘ ’;"‘““\“1"‘\ front between Vise, the .extreme | Ly the National Association of Cot- terests. Reports that submarine pi- ction, when DG o — : o 4 women and children and Who massa- | hopthern Belgian station on the | {on Manufacturers for the establish- | rates have obtained Ameri oil at SR “work or fight” order. This means |each man’s heart. They aspire toward | ¢ros those helpless heroes who have | peuse, and Wasserbillig, the extrem :.mm 1(,?”', . . i dbeiel vorls heve hoen coniileed i T that all professional players of mili- | 2 comman goal and the unity of their | heen disabled by his cannon. A Hun, | southern Liuixemburg station on the | houses, financed in part by the gov- For a long time Norway was send tary age must either secure essential | aspirations knits them together into | who seems to have a compact with | e Mastors. for the time be- | oinment. Jocated in the cotton :ship- to Germany the nickel used in | X Beelzebub, and whose deeds might | ing of Ielgium and the grand duchy, | and consuming centers, such [ making the torpedoes which ink | some American Fighters well cause Satan himself to hang his | (hey do not need to widen their front | warehouses to be operated under the | hundreds of her ships. We hope it | head in shame. {as against France, since it is already | United States warehouse act, under |can be proved fhat Spain has not | ice. This ruling is deplorable in a [of thought in the training camp | (an we countenance such inhuman | as wide as it can be made. Thus the | direct control of the secretary of | 8iven essential supplies to those wWho | codjers Bttt i way, as it will deprive thousands of | which is to be found nowhere else in | actions? Has the sacrifice of our|old temptation to cross through Hol- | agriculture. were cutting down her merchant ma- | o 2 [ eE mon healthy, innocent amusement, but un- | this country, or in the whole world, | brave forefathers been made it vain? | lund Jost that much of its force, and The. p we understand, contem- | rine. A list compiled and published | (oon' the i vho rmed Ctan we attend to our own selfish in- | it scems reasonably certain that if the | plates building at New Bedford, on |at Madrid three weeks ago ShOWS |y o ey - Sl o) | terest before we staunch the wounds| Gierman hordes are to break through [ land adjacent to the water front, at | that seventy-eight Spanish merchant- | o0 0 Y 2 O, geuld hardly have decided otherwise. | from the Golden ate imparts | ¢ pjoeding France? Can we look our | Limburg, it is in obedience to the [ least one warehouse with a capacity | men have been destroved by subma- | “"p W0 f troops scored so i The order states specifically that |knowledge of the West to his com- | gwn daughters and wives in tha cyves | adoption of a new military plan in | of one hundred thousand bales, in- [ rine torpedoes. One of these, sent to | those connected with games are con- | rade from Maine, and the latier in | before we have avenged the wronged | the inal phase of the war. The rail- | creasing the present warehouse facil- | the bottom not long ago, was the Sar- | F00DS FIOTEC #0 B ared to be non-essentinlly engaged. | turn expounds to him the. theories |\and helbless women of Belgium? Can { wiys that crossithc Meuse at Venlo | jties at this port by one-third. The| dinero, a neutral ship: carrying grain 5 B aae - 4 o | We enter our homes and see our own [and Rocrmond are the essential | cotton growers and shippers of the | for the peopie of neutral Switzerland and of course this includes baseball [and methods of the Bast. The un-y & SRTF 0G0 0f phose | routes that perfect the German hold | South realize that with an enormous | After the long list was printed, a sub- they had secured a sufficiently broad | {he effect here of the plan proposed | K0 to Germany or serve German in- v zistritio from the Provost Marshal General's | derlying that purpose are identical in there is the pleasure against ren ma ocgupations or place themselves liable | an indestructible fabric. There is an to Immediate induction into the serv- | exchange of ideas, and a communion | W el Wialow) i anyone questioned whether our when given hance he should der the law the Secretary of War [for that matter. The young man | | | markable “cleaning or | grenades; Nathan Lie players. It is hardly to be expected |schooled private drinks in knowledse | youths and babies bayoneted hy the | on Antwerp. and that complete it by | cotton crop of fifteen million bales, | marine attacked without warning the s X German that there will be found enough ac- |at the feet of the teacher, and com- | barbarous German? Can we break | securing the routes to Flushing and | such as is anticipated, a serious prob- | steamship Maria Pia, killing her cap- the Hook. Though the rmans | Jem is presented. The planters are [tain and one sailor with a shell. But have held possession of Antwerp for | cut off to a large extent from a for- | the vessel reached a Spanish port | nearly four years, its ocupation has | cign market. Great Britain has placed The Madrid government desires to brought them no great advantage.| s restriction upon cotton exports | convince our war trade board that in | Over the top wi L for the bors The command of the Scheldt is es- | from this country hased upon actual | no way has it violated neutrality. It | after they had in hed, and made sential to the execution of any plan | needs, which are fixed at about sev- [ may say that Spain’s marine losses | for the invasion of Great Britain, | enty-five per cent of the capacity of | might have suggested reprisals in as- | Of course therc were others o | | after doing his 1 k 2 badly wounded Germa rom the in- tive and capable players above or be- | pensates him by relating facts whih | bread at our meals without being - ke e ougl f our coun- low the draft age to enable the mag- | may be a revelation to the more |ChOKed by the thought of our coun trymen siarving in German prisons nates to continue their schedules. fearned mind. The jurist learns of | nrocept Already the heads of the respec- |trade and the tradesman imbibes America must fight: TUnited we tive major organizations have de- |points of law. And so it goes,—all | must work together. We must stand boys whom we ferno; Ired Sulle 2 who went | i machine gun Muni | his way through il of shrapnel clared themselves willing to abide by | through every nook and corner of the | Dehind those brave have sent over lo France. We mus do our part and keep them supplied parks, if necessary. A number of |is a soldier and where “influence” is | with' food, ammunition and courage and to that end the seizurc of Flush- | the cotton mills In normal years | sistance given to Germany's foes. But [ German origin 11 fough would be the first step. There | the export trade would afford a mar- [ must it not admit that the sinking | like American least a cerfain plansibility in | ket for ail surplus American product, | of seventy-eight ships and the mur- = o 3oulger's contention that this is | the British manufacturers gladly tak- | der of Spanish sailors have been suf- | blood in their “stars” have been working in ship- zligible factor. t prov it even if we can- i | K i P- | a negligible factor | We must prove that b euin , grand motive which is impelling | ing on a couple of million bales a [ ficient provocation for abandonment | training building plants for months. And all Truly ‘n';1 hulm.‘_‘u‘ Ylv ~l“;\<”“l"" ?’:‘l‘: those German high command to break | season over the amounts actually | of neutrality and a declaration of | come to the rest of the playérs, without excep- who do figh 2 HSLs s 5 ! Hun that God is not with him: that alvation of our country. Prior to our | might is not right; that the old law of the ruling and to close the baseball | great cantonment, where every man sands of om the training camp is the faith with Holland, and to under. needed. war as enemies hiet | take one more agsression at the ex If the war continues and the mar- — - | Their sentimen 5 pense of a weak and confiding n ket is larzely restricted to the United Keep Liberty Bonds learned mor POy bit” en called upon o . B RN Gr est” has no 3 s 2 it” wh entry into thic war, we had been so | “survival of only the fitfest” has 1 o States, the large crop may bring de (SantMiaaclccol Ghenicien | those two nations woha 1 representatives a a - S hlace civi i that we are . | 5 = : Baseball has representati at the | jree that our very freedom was place in civilization—tha e ar That the Germans should manifest | moralization to the cotton markef un The public from time to time is | canism srew wit front who have shown their worth on N R i o [Erizhitd o disposition to force Molland to a | jess the government will undertake | asked to lend money to the jon. most a mend he spirit of ind America must, and is, going to win real melting pot, and it will prove the tion will surely be ready to “do their \ the battlefield as well as on the dia SRS AT he I A i decision is, as has been said, intel- | 10 protect it in some way. One plan | To buy a Liberty Bond is to lend ! secieie S dlis hivos ol ead il Sl men lengeiso o soly lncticatsoiin it va America is .Willing to sacri- | jigiple only on the theory that it has | proposed by the Southern planters is | money to your country. To sell it | BIRTH RATE DROPS on sl ¥ mind of every American, was in itself e its all rather than be defeated. | peen resolved to afttempt to realize | for the government to purchase the | after you have got it is to reeall your — cted by this ruling will de © o T ¢ 3 v e SYnonym & { ing i fected by s rulin L doRwelINtor e e o ne for itk misht | it Americs p ar nonvMmausit-the most cherished hope of the Pan- | cotton crop, a transaction involving | loan to the government and ma 12,500,000 Potential Lives Tost Be- when Libe: is crushed by fheliraw Germans descent on the shores of | the expenditure of hundreds of mil- [ other use of your money | - fist, then Ameri LB Great Britain. Tt is sufficiently ob- | Jions of dollars. The alternative plan, It will not do.to say that the man | ance of constituted authority America has gmever heen defeated | vious that in any such adventure the | sanctioned by the National Cotton | who huys your bond takes vonr place | (Correspondence of the Asso. | training camp has solved the - because America has always heen | control of the Dutch-German rail- | Manufacturers' association is the emulate the splendid example they checked in time, lead to direct Jefi- canse of War in Earope. have set and that the government is as well | London, June 2 i war served. Let him buy direct from the | ¢iused the bellizerent countrie | THE REAL MELTING POT. lem. 1t subjects wen to in the right. Our hoys in France are | ways must always play the chief part, | warchouse proposition. The growers | going Lo win, becanse America is still | forming as they do the first parallel | or shippe can ship the cotton to | government and then his right! Stand behind our hoys. do | against a continental invasion of | government warehouses where re- | your place will both be filled | | | cipline-—teaches them to ohey. This country of ours has often been 00,000 potential lives termed the “melting pot”, wherein | this very process make them ev vour part, they are giving their lives, | Knzland. No landing. no serious in- | ceipts may he issued which will be Of course. some who bu decrease in the number the good and the i, the rich and |21y ~dqualified to lead others. vou must furnish the money. The | vasion, is possible that ix not pre- | accepted collateral in ca it is | Bonds are compelled to scll from the war Mallet, register teaches men to think. and a nation of | boys can shoot t only; vour | ceded or accomplished by the seizure | desired to hold cotton for a betier | circumstances change, or are the poor who come to it from the four i + i t money will ; fight [ and by the consequent bringing of | market. These receipts can he used | what was expected, and il hecom taiv his country, thinking men cannot #liverge very far corners of the carth are mixed to. O rieht At German trains to Rotlerdam the | as a basis for hanker ind 1de ac- | necessary to realiz And under the | ! these potential " Hook and Flushing, Just as they are | ceptances and would he negotiable | pressure of the campaigns some aye | Children He beli that other eousness. And lastly, it awakens in | ! 5 e bl already at Antwerp, Zebrugge and | into cash. Spot cottons ould be | induced. and perhaps realiy belligerent countries suffered in tha hearts of all true Americans Gen. Cadorna’s Responsibility. Ostend Of course. the seizure of | dealt in hetween persons entircly un- | pelled, to promise to buy what is respect mor has Great | (New York Sun.) any or all of the main lines within | known to each other and reiections ) have no money to pay for. Somce Britain gether and emerge as American citi- | from the paths of justice and right zens. This disregard of class distinc tion, the freedom of speech and of re & R e e A passionate love of country: a love ; : ligion, and all its other fe: res which b General Cadorna’s punishme the Dutch borders which communi- | would not figure, the receipts guar- | of Liberty Bonds ave n Bernard estimate Y failure last yewr must be partic | cate w the interior of Germany ceing grade and weisht f the w Iy humiliating, because its announce- { would he an act of open wa wnd This would be very advantageous ment is made at the moment when | would constitute such a direct ag. | for the Southern planters for obvious ten to make America the most dem- it is so recognized Buat ir you must sell. sell onl potential lives of children to the cash. Go to the anker from whom | United Kinzdom. France, Italy and vou bought, or subscribed. and ex- [ the Central Fowers. Dealing with th 1 which in truth was always there, but [ of 7,000 acratic of republics has been com- |More active in some, more mented upon at great length and has |10 others attracted to our confines from other It is no exaggeration to say that if } , decoration for his notable successes | would have no choice left in deciding | the port of New Bedford. whose im- [ 1ands hundreds of thousands who |the public schools are the corner | with troops which were beaten under | as to its reply. It remains to he | portance as a cotton shipping port | Cadorna. The latest performance of | seen whether the new and extravi- | for this section would be enhanced. | the Italian soldiers has proved be- | zant demands made on the food sup- | Since the plan is a device for main | But to trade Liberty Bonds for | 1915 they fell to 814,614, in 1916 g nd question that responsibility fc Ply of Holland are intended as the | taining cotton prices it —might u!!wvh r honds does not heln you and | there was a further fall to 780,520, States. which the structure depends for its | jheir defeal last Oetober did not lie | prelude to such a seizure. Indic m,,,\\iu.q thought, not seem one over | injures the country. A Liberty Bond d in 1917 to 669,346; a decline oOf It has been said that the one fea- | safety. lon them, but on their leadership. | multiply that the military fortunes | which the cotton Tnanfacturers!|iisfste. froa it sl taxntion s Youiate i 24 per cent compared with 1913, dormant ! | | | plain your situation. It is alnost | decline in the birth re ere, he said certain that a way will be found (o | the births registered i igland and help you Wales in 1913 numbered $81,800. In his successor, General Diaz, receives | gression that the Dutch government aS0NS would give vantage to reasons. It i thought they could best realize their | stones of our national foundation, the hopes and ambitions in the United |training camps are the pillars vpon

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