New Britain Herald Newspaper, August 28, 1918, Page 6

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST bases his opinion FOCH. ed page, ; Germany's prize | i I | have been fought before—usually with f to save them- brow e Soldier of France and our great lead- 4 - - s s AN P fGermany to pre R o ther vn‘mu\ ‘;W,“ can be uy n}n\ldiv - . | . 2 , ¢ because she ke syt Madrid MGy Youths of 18 and 19 Included in Believes Camp Community Serv- | Dralt Boards Announce Registra- Bouch the new- | Not with the Prussian War-Lord’s bristling mier the masters of Germany have e o FomD br o s the ugly fice, this menace of com Bill as Adopted ice Keeps Men Living Clean | tion on Saturday and Monday peace. This war is like none to plead ‘not S bined intrigue and force #lllam Smith, | (7pchanging confidence i s whose Kiile > power,” is crushed, al e stupendous | S - A , - ; had mailed might » e At : 2 S| Washir g he draft New York, Aug. 2 Judge Ben i re printed the name that he | Springs from the sacred sense of be- | Sacrifices it has entailed will have been | pill is through the senate: it e made in vain unanimously, i Intrigue strikes from within, while, spite the now see so v as the German -~ - g passed | B, Lindsey of Denver, Colo., who has 3 registrants who enroll 75 votes against 0, de- | debates on the taking of just returned from a trip of several | Saturday and Monday under the feral court | N, flow of windy words, no pageant. | force strikes from without, 1t works | Bt in foreien | v ) In every part of the world. It uses the | it the “work or fight” amendment and Ttaly, has become an enthusiastic | trict had the follow l¥s accorded | Of arrogance and pride; the dignity | Vilest instruments. It fosters treason | But nobody seems to know exactly Germany | Of one whose plans spell victory, yet | in the ranks of Germany’s enemies. It [ when the youngsters will be called, | . ki know ) seeks to destroy even those nations | There were conflicting accounts of the | COMMUunity Service for the Commis- Ik (o, isen g ode of honor to a perjured foc! with which Germany is at peace 3 wiar department's intentions in the de- | §ions on Training Camp activities of John W. Campbel Perpetrated | There is nothing surprising in the | bate, and after the senate had acted. | the war and e is no one { The son of a republic horn to he story of the activities of the German [ On the floor Senator Chamberlain, Its saving, selfless “man of Destiny:"” | Fmbassy at Madrid, They are paral- [ declaring he would “not be a party Strong in retreat, yet stronger in ad- | leled here many times over when the | to the deception of the American peo- | (" fundamental necessity of this | Main s, United States was still a neutral. | ple,” said it was the purpose of the ; work, as a result of his observation James F. O'Bi Myrtle The brain, the hope, the driving Will | Money was dispensed from Mad | war department that the vouths shall | ¢f the of France! from Washington to foment strikes, to | be in France by June 30 next.” paralyze industry to damage property, Secretary Baker said last night that Grave-eyed and sad he looks, as one | to attack the government. Attacks on | bovs of 18 will be called last in the | 'MUnity Service would follow the Herberfilareen sivinl hoys of 18 and 19, and it carried with | months through England, France | selective service a The t worker in the ranks of the War Camp | registered navy departments. So Francis P, May, 344 imbued is he with the conviction of Frederick Arthur armies abroad, that he says: Monroe Simons urtis ‘If 1 had my way, War Camp Com- Williaim A. Walsh, Sexton hey ought i tom | whose W“‘,‘ Spanish ship owners, attempts to blow | draft. There will be two draft classes | American soldier around the world Hilding W. 'of appear- | TO Wear the scars of battle o'er his | up bridges, consniracies with Anar- | Under the new measure, 18 to 19 and B Times. hear chists, incitements to revolution—there | 19 to 45. The secretary said a pub- The wounds of France are his—her |is no novelty in any of these things lished report that there was to be a idence, who grief sublime < But the publication of the facts in | third classification, embracing men | 2'® doing here through War Camp Douglas C. Smith Winthrop . o ,\n‘I"inr untarnished glory for all | a Spanish newspaper, though the Sov 'l‘r“'vll" to 36, who would first be | Community Service. In both Eng- |, """'\""“"’ Lerie 2 WG . . 2 ime! ernment tried to ypress the iss called to the colors, was erroneous b = b R 04 B gl Das BlizabthiNewpery Hesburntintthet(inoseta o dc B el B Rlpresn E ondpendi HranceRvic Rwen idR dnd R < Harpy §B. 8 Johngor New York Times. sinking of Spanish ships, it is creating | ferment or preferment of men be- | PeOPle ready to co-operate with us|Windsor Ct. v 5 e L and the soldiers themselves ready to| (Clesson Wallace Parke Ingland and France especially are in George R crying need of the kind of work we Frank Pawlowsky, 2 Arch e to wear fing on!—TLow- e Evolution in F . the Government, whether dictated by The only radical distinction will ap- | Yelcome us. All of those who hay James H. Horndon Bh the situation (Boston Globe.) fear or sympathy, can hardly dissinate | PIY 1o the 18 to 19 class, he said, but | Peen privileged to visit the front| Paul Kendrick, 128 Bcently without | Napoleon was wont to say that tac- | that feeling. IFor intrigue often loses [ ¢ Was unable to say how long the de- , 'SUfy fo the {ine physical and mental Vincenzo Frugale, for Fooh? That | tics changed every 10 years. Tho evo- | the game by overreaching itself. With | PArtment would be able to defer call- | ondition of our boys. I am con- Paolo Giacckino fice. the whole Al | lution in ways of fighting has S0 | such examples of “the intolerahle | € them. Gens. March and Crowder | Vinced that one cause is the kind of Alfred Benson, 48 Br—St. Paul Pio- | speeded up that in the greatest of all { Thing,” no neutral can but pray for have said that the 18-year-old call | WOrk that has been done for our Sigfried Sny 61 4 wars the transformation comes at | deliverance from it might be deferred until spring. But | fishting forces by the people at home Peter Tragakis least every 10 months. No nation ever carried the uns: 1l have been careful to state that | Communitics Are Responsibie, Anton{ Rydzewskl, 6 Iekel cigars are still be- German tactical contributions have | pulous policy of debasement | this was dependent on military exig- o it Biic Taxsoal 510l von Ble Uritcq States the | been in chemistry and cannon fodder. | enemies and of friends as far as Ger. | SnCies . Aonohi s SRR R nesy oSl B Steve e kolazyic Baustry need have no |The French have led in the surpass- [ many has done Eee A Senator Chamberlain made his | (O7M 18 Work in a sane B KOEE — Manila Cablenews- | ing use of high-powered and accurate | traqi everywhere; whatever she touches | L rcient about the i1§-year men be- BN tlsRan TRtops Rocco Dolce, 181 Arch | machines. Their 75's are the best | cho hefouls, Yet there are those John Ozga, 226 High guns in Europe and in lmn handsiofhl oo o d e et e i Joseph M. Chernoff, 40 Lafavette. g Sam ) has decreed that there | their masters have produced a cur- 2 s O T T : i St : he Bennis Waskicwios: 16 Cliaten Be no more card playing on rail- | tain of shells, a barrage, which may | t;n 0 0 o \“,‘,i,]‘;,l\v\n(,',.l‘,;”WI,'””:‘,’,1.‘ EeLosy Balser nat 1v ovas nob themwar :‘L' \'W’(fm‘ ”'{‘”:f‘““m”’, Bt e he | Tony Walinovsky, 169 Grove, frains. Wonder if he will think | be dropped over a detachment of the | (it 0 B 0 B0 AT OF BT BRE W j;‘yv.nv!unm s m!un;wn‘ mm\.»)vm A]hvm 8 e ]*l ul ‘\f""‘\ in this Peruzzi Santta, 1042 East Ebolish the smoker?—Rochester | foe to cut him off till the poilus mop |y, Jm LB abroad until the other ages have been | Yery lmport: field has been dis- John Wojtusik, 83 Silver. EFala. up the position, or thrown in front of . exhausted. Senator Chamberlain said: | covere ¥ War Camp Community S R - an advance to keep it safe until it = = There should be no misunderstand- | Service. It recognizes many of our Adolph A. Suess, 117 Kensingtén We wait with impatience the battle | reaches its objective. American gun Bewarc of the Fox ing as to what the secretary of war fl;"‘m,m,‘f’“ to h‘? Just as much i 3 2 e et 2 bulleting from the Czecho-Slovak-Ja- | crews have proved such apt pupils 5 2 A - and the department intend to do in | “human as ‘“moral” problems 13 In Second District. panese-American-British-Jorench-Ital- | of their French instructors that word (Boston Evening Transcript.) this matter. The purpose of the war l; rankly, I think they are a great Rouny | ian-Chinese headquarters at Vladi- | comes of crack Yankee batteries There are sizns of unusual perturha- | department is to call these young | deal more “human”. Therefore they Ster republ fon v vostok.—Washington Post which can serve the 75's so fast that | tion in Bulgaria, Anxiety has been | TCD into the service and Hm.x) they | m .;l be met in a human way. This > 2 e - captured Gepman officers ask for all o0 ool b et shall all be in France by June 30 next. j is the slogan of war Camp Community Edward Zack, 194 Tremont A Dixie chorus “We've got the | look at the big new machine gun. i i o s d its origin | 1 shall not be a party to the deception | Service t strikes at the root, the John McGrath, 750 E ived her of her fairest lands. Her | 0.4 “weive got the crops and we've | The British have produced chariots { has been traceable to doubt of the ui- | of the American people. cause of bad things It does this h coal fields, fertile agricultural | got the workers, too.’—Atlanta Con- | of fire. Where the lay of the land | timate success of German arms. Tius “I know what the record of hear- | simply by providing good things that \d splendid manufa 2 | stituti favors their use, tanks are the night- | seems now to have gro s 2yd mplendid manutesturing | [BEAtES LB mare of the Germans opposite. For | "j’ W'y"'m : LR [ s to dread. | jrary affairs committee show. I do But to accomplish this there must Harold S. Byett, 849 Stanley fermany is about to fall, how shall | not know what the secretary of war | be someone to provide, someone {o Alexander Sperry, 79 Smalley ing in Europe next year in replying to | ¢4r our great training camps it is Senator Overman of North Carolina, | /I8NUNg vice, discase and crime as 1 who said he had been assured by Sec- | M4d hardly dared expect to see these Samuel Neistat, 145 Hartford Emil Rund, 197 Rhodes, 3 by military reverses which de- : Michael Gussman, Lawlor. ings before the senate and house mil- | are just as acceptable Francis Korytho, 36 Silver s have all suffered untold losses ’ ; S 916 A Fsnfters 3 The National Prohibitionists have |a brief space on the Somme in 1916 wiped out the Louisiana salient, that | the advent of the armored monsters | Bul ‘ape involvement in the | may have said in some private con- | direct. War Camp Community Service | (larence Sandstro little ray of hope to buoy up | State having voted to ratify the con- | crawling out of holes, knocking down j ruin Ferdinand wishes to get out | versation. But 1 know what he and | conducts the activities for good, with | Park SRR <titutional amendment. — Portland | trees and crushing machine guns, | of the 1en his war lord’s ponder- | what Gen. March, the chief of staff, | a force unequaled and at an expensc Christian 7, Hepp, 20 Wilson ¢ Press. thrilled the world. Last Autumn at |ous military machine is being smashed, | said before the committees.’ to the community not one hundredth IFelix W. Zareski, 14 Bast Lawlor. : ] - — Cambrai they had a better test. Just [ He a ot feel well. “Mental strain Chamberlain Reads Testimony. part as large as that which the com- Alex B. Roden, Stanley Quarter ression to this hope burning now Many a patriotic girl who won’t | at dawn, without artillery preparation | compels his retirement for a time from { munity paid when it left its bovs and Francis Marinen 5 Dwight ly than ever in the hearts | wash the family dishes thinks she can |a line of monsters flopped over the | the cares of the throhe So runs the He read from the printed testimony ' girls to the forces of evil. The com- John Dorbuck, 7 support his contention that it was | munity must pay in either case. Its Attilio Marzi, 17 war, and yet it requires Clemenceau has given ex- ore brigl T e o cret | nurse 500 wounded soldiers in France. | top toward the enemy positions. It | announcement made by his command. | t0 ! oo oty LS i WHE S R e was no fault of the tanks that the | And the weary monarch adds that his | the purpose to call the boys of 18 | people must choose us to the manner | Cecil Delvechio, me since the outbreak of war, so st promising Cambral salient was later | place of rest and recuperation will he | Into the service and to use them. He | in which they pay. While every man | Jaconh Joseph, 119 Nc s we can recall, the spokesman Half a million soldiers from India | narrowed until 1t could no longer be | Nauheim, the German village of saling | Showed that the young men must be | is responsible for himself and his| Louis Wentland, 314 Allcr France has declared victory to be | should help to make things hum in | held. springs and baths, It may all be|called out by the first of the year if | own conduct, there is also just as big Joel J. Dooman Dw ithin the grasp of the Allies. Here- | Mesopotamia and Palestine.—San The in the tanks is in the | true Uneasy lies the head that ‘h,"g””",l::’_,w ‘\“‘I}\'L:L"‘,’:L_h;.u\,:‘\“ (l,:;-“”?er }‘h::"tf‘,:;’,:‘}”,}'“v gnsthefcommuntiyator Anthony Paul, 476 East B .. ..o saiineq tof| Frencizco Chronicle future. v are multiplying fast. | wears a crown.” But the opinion of | JUne, Which is progre | r bovs in its midst as there | Frank Cazzetto, 110 Hartford Ave. o 4 as satis TR The offensive of 1919 will see | diplomats whom he has outwlttad | AT department is_upon the parent in the home for| Michael Gionfrida, 11 Spring leep on fighting and hoping, without One reason more barns are hit by | American-made and American-man- | scems to he that Ferdinand lies with gl amsupportinelinsibIILED seatise i thefchild, Wilfred H. Buck, 37 Corbin Place, ving to keep up her people’s morale [ lightning in this region than formerly | ned tanks swarming toward the Rhine | eqse When the Fox of the Balkans | {N¢ military *“""“’"“‘»\‘Hh"‘\,:fl“l‘y‘{““L":{‘, Victors 1s0Gertain Saul Gubernick, 122 Willow v pointing out the goal in the near | is that there are more l{'\‘:‘!:: th‘]:s 2 {1\“"1[}:;':‘ .“-(u:;u‘\\m“.m« the beaches | retires from the public exercise of nis B et BT el one e v R e | W loditar B o632 Rty umerical superiority and united Germany and Boycotts. to strike out the 1S-year-old mini- [ there is the physical side. That is, its s e L I pmmand were on the side of the Bn- K i (New York Times) ————— mum draft age requested by the mili- | forces of violence. These depend up- Jernes Shehin, Gl : o Preldent ond Senator) ew York B i tary authorities, about which the big- | on the physical strength the equipment Richard Abraham, 179 Jubilee te. any goal of victory which might e e e The growth of popular movements A Place For Strikers, icht contored, As finally passed | of the soldier, and what he does with Fremont Barrows, Jr., 292 Park ppear momentarily on the horizon, g bt : here for the trade punishment of Ger- (Boston Evening Transcript) this provision is like the one adopted | these agencies. Then there is the Frederick M. Anderson, 285 Chap=« Senator Vardaman's opponent in | any after the war is stimulated by | The temper of some of the | spiritual or moral side. The spiritual | Man the Mississippi primaries is Represen- | submarine raids on helpless American | oo iking is ilustrated by z Senator Fall offered substitute | and moral aspects of the problem are JacoB Bednarz, 90 Lawlor, tative Harrison and Mr. Harrison’s | fishing boats and other small craft o ne s llustrated by an i ing for classification of men | closely linked with what we do for Armen Vardanian, 230 Nrth le, when it failed to accomplish a | . = o ‘ere excellent a |Evidence of this may be seen in the incident at Bridgewater. The cutters | /" 12 "ang industrial service. It | the soldier. Generally speaking, how David T. Cherniak, 112 West. ealization of their hopes, that they week ago, according to our corre success of the American (\M'«‘um so- | in a certain factory who thought | was defeated, 60 to 18 well the soldier does his part depends Paul Koslosky, 137 Winter e e o, | cletien ‘ho\u)f\ campaign ‘1\‘\'.. :n) they were not getting enough wages, Senator Kirby's amendment to ’.”;,"‘ very large measure upon how John Bonetti, 2 1 Clark Now However |Premicr Clomenceau | Sinte nis Hette as wiitten e pres || 2ee ek asolthe Bocl LEDEED MG By crelloered byt the S company Wror |imalte ineiminimizyage IRORIRL e JOE i w8 o onr) put dnale it e e i S aatically Si e o hollaeldl lasainot | Armericansiio SED 8 B ecen S |lvhom fthiey worked a weskl . |5 vears was defeated, 12 to 60. The [ “The extent to which the moral and Earle Williams, 28 Church hsserts positively, enthusiastically, | ident has entered t e e Eal ing themselves to buy nothing made ekly wage of | (© -0 who voted for it were Borah, | physical aspect or angle of the war Howard F. Suprenant, 12 Whiting. Senator Vardaman's re-election, With | ;;"Germany during the remainder of [ $30.50. This offer the men rejected | (yiperson, Cummins, —Curt Gore, | has been emphasized is profoundly Raymond McNerney, 1184 Stanley. the very stiff pronunciamento that he | tpeir lives. Already more than 200,- | and thereupon packed their kits and | gondriek, Kirby, McNary, Norris, | stimulating. It presents one of the Harold Hart, 115 Smalley. b Allied troops will be in one direc- ‘r:‘(:,:l(d.\:0:’»:1[‘1:;1‘1:1‘?, \e,,"‘::‘:,;ml::‘lz‘r::“ 000 signatures have been obtained, left the factory. Was the offer fair or | pomerene, Townsend and Vardaman. ; most promising phascs of the World Herbert E. Holland, 23 William L . e £ - AEAE il and the boycott committee’s chair- | not No impartial authority answers Senator Poindexter proposed the | Conflict as it relates directly not only Joseph M. Croshy, 226 Kairvie jon only—Onward And the people | of my Administration If the Dem- | /1o, says that “tens of thousands are | this question. The men answer 1t [ 515 ium 4 2 L¢ France are already beginning to | Ocrats of Mississippi return Mr. Vard- | .oming in daily.” The society expects | themselves, as they might in time of | joreated 68 to 14 in the senate, sit- | the welfare of ec the rainbow which means that | ‘;”\”3"}”'”Q‘“"““"”“p""“’*':“ :‘}:L"'pi::llr‘ie“:l to get 20,000,000. Probably that | peace, by quitting their work and en- | {ing as a committee of the whole, and | munities as well der 22 years of age. A majority e e St DRLCIT SLaks oY sident, | humber will be reached in the near | dangering the supply of shoes to our [ 52 o 21 on a separate vote in the | Never before in the history of the | them come from the smallor oifi e worstipart of there will be no escape from the in- |'t ture. Such movements, of which | army in France. If this is not wrong | cenate just hefore final passage. Those | world, speaking from the angle of | and towns, and from the == terpretation already prepared in ad- | {10 British and French Seamen’s boy- | and disloyal, we do not know what | who voted for it were Senators Bank- | physical force and violence, were | tricts. Just as their e ant :\‘r:‘\”“q"‘\ 1\»::-‘ (‘:\:“5;‘:]‘]‘1"::1;; “'_:‘:'d cott is a prominent example, may be | could be. Let the men who thus rake | head, Borah. Cummins, Curtis, irance, | there such instrumentalitics of devas- | moral health and st ;i S - | considered apart from the plans of | matters into their own hands do so | Gor Guion, Jones of Washington, tation as the aeroplane and the sub home was due in a large measu { ter? Mississippi could not have re- | g vernments for legislation or peace | if they will, but let the next thing for | Kendrick, Kenyon, Kirby, McNary, | marine, to say nothing of the essen- | their training and 5 e 3 L gkt ALOL: sali- | ipeir influence upon Governments | ing in Picardy, possibly with a broken | smith of Michigan, Sutherland, Town- | which was initiated by the Germans. | continue to depend not alc rd company is blameless | ent policles of the Administration. | st pe taken into account. The | pair of shoes | dend, Vardaman and Wolcott The Allles have been compelled 10 | themselves but on the care. and et of the Lusitania, declar- | Vardaman has been oftener in oppo- | w,r1q knows what some of the trade : In the final roll call Seaator Go meet the forces of violence projected | tention others. TI 18 ture. She knew too well that, until ould prove to be but a mirage, men | by the house hich would so disappoint her peo- ound be plunged into fatal dispair nd withal calmly, that the tide has urned and that henceforth the march should be 19 vears. It was| to the welfare of the soldier but to i —_ oi our home com rural dis- physical and strength while at Judge Julius Maver, of the federal oL re and at- wre and at- n by their wme folks vities, but Arm Imperial German govern- sition to this Administration than Mr. | ,,),ng are. Great Britain intends to of Oklahoma, who had fought for a i iy the enemy with equal or Inferior | tention I 3 entior : n be held responsible for ‘I':”f“g"(' “"'\1“’ )”'" ‘;"o‘";fl‘l‘\l;"“”" exclude certain imports, or to ligher than 18 age limit, voted at first | violence, just as we meet one poison | own home folk ent alo: e held | istration and when President Roose- 3 S : them only by special license, and has (New York Herald) ainst the bill, but when he saw he' with another that serves as an anti- | must pass the crime 1 shocked humanity | velt exerted all his influence in Ohlo | ;3 yp raw materials in her colonies The suggestion of Mr. McAdoo to |Wwas not joined by any other senator dote. ut the Allies stand alone in | not their Judge Mayer finds that the Tusi-|to have Mr. Foraker defeated for re- | ¢\ vears to come by purchase con- el i e 835 asked permission not to vote which | the use of finer and higher forces nd Navy i b . 2 3 S E eplace electricity for locomotives on : Lain o 2 y | e election fo ihe Seunte I the fall of | ypeis. wve shiall defond Glir new dyc- : was granted. He explained that he | which find their expression in part, in | Camp Act 1908 and the winter of 1908-1909, he all the railways is probably prema- | qid not wish to be tie one man Who | the great services heing rendered hu- (e el was fighting of course for a vindica- the bill passing unani- tion of himself and his policies Samit The Power of the Future, « well equipped to cope with the usual contingencies which may stuffs and chemical industries against 3 | German competition. In many ways | ture. When the great war power of | would prevent manity by the agencies’ working for | the home atmosphere | Germany will suffer trade loss, what- | the country is developed and mously, and that he could not vote| the Commissions on Training Camp [ in war camp comn unimpaired and unmistakable charac- | e ever may be the requirements of a for it as the age lmit was fixed Activities. Because of their appeal fo | ernment has called : . a S ac S iile The new draft bill, which provides | {} .ce = i hichen S Rete Furthermore she carried |\n‘ - 3 " peace settlement The new W these finer and gher forces the Al- | sistance Wa Camp Vi i Ilincss of Our Soldiers. The severity of these requirements | the mighty force this dream of today [ for the registration of 13,000,000 men | jje5 ure bound to triumph. Seiae Th . (Eostonice) will be determind mainly by public [ will possibly become a practicality between the ages of 18 and e s The accepted figures for the past | opinion in the countries of Germany's el cficonl was inclusive, retains ever \';!"‘!'”""1‘(‘“;]"_"(:; “The record shows that a majority ary is wort of specia te o 3 SEEeLE Sos lork e s 5 o e S el - il <ion contended for by the off s r v at a me - < 5 trar W T year glve the number of cases of ill- | foes, and this public opinion will b the original suggestion, and that | ViS1on €O : : of our last million soldiers inducted | Some and healthy. Without st The Hun press was instructed at the | ness among our soldiers requiring | come more and more hostile in the | (oivcoly will inerease while the war departmen ora e e ; | 39 i : ‘ 5 IR AT Lo ¢ untold wa The senate added the Thomas “work | into the service are boys slightly un- 8 i ent fime of the disaster to lay special em- | hospital attention at 132,000, of which | United States as the number of Amer- | (o power is going to waste all over The senate added arise at sca_ and terms her a “ship of every ; tream and waterfall contributes to | | mu sxplosives. This offiefal denial business of this e B s vils Have Been Conquered. ice is to furnish an environment prompted is good; one that is normal, w : : _ | directly in every commur which our bovs are camipe : or fight” amendment, with the Cum- mins provision that labor controversies ' of Michigan, Smoot, Sterling, Thomas, he referred to the war labor boar Townsend, Wadsworth, Warren, Wat- = o unexpectedly and Weeks and Wolcott—10 This action came unexg ] S Vacein Ic i ERdbAgh sl most Wae on @ motion by Senator McKellar | The “work or fight” amendment as | 270URd them all of the traditional : community evils. Saloons, gambli out. The senate refused to | finally written by the senate is £ houses, dives, redlight districts, prod s than one thousand proved fatal. | fcan soldiers killed increases and ad- | (e “Country. The success that has This compares favorably with what is | qitional submarine crimes are report-| Jiionded the electrification of hun- { known of civil life in our large com- | ed. Probably those who sign the boy- | 4 04" of miles of the St. Paul has rled explosives, passengers who sailed | munities and when the conditions of | cott pledse would have our GOVern- | ingly demonstrated the greater upon her did so at their own risk and | camp existence ,the lack of conven- | ment insist upon repayment of money i . gijency and economy of the electric ience and the stress of the service, | exacted from Belgium and other phasis upon the fact that, inasmuch | hic ey com ere would » the Lusitania was armed and car- hi me, ther 1 up and flourish to the utmo. to strike it do o0 by a vote of 40 to 29, The Cum- ‘Provided that when any pers was adopted 73 to 0. ®Hat the German government could ! locomotive, particularly in mountain- arc considered. it stands a good rec- | countries, the restoration of build- | o\ "opiong teers and exploiters would most : Were | ord of the physical stabillty of our | ings destroved in France. surrender of With the return of peace and sunk during a through a “War | hoys and of the cfficiency with which | the German navy and mercantile ma zone.’ they are looked after. rine to replace in part the ships mins amendment 0 0. shall have been placed in a deferre ; X re res- | "IN ¢ real test of the ‘‘work or fight” | o exempted class for any of the rea- | t2inlv flourish. Every description of toration of the labor supply the work not be held responsible if she were jackall and camp-follower that has | been the bane of the soldier’s life in the past would find that they coula operate without any organized oppo- mendment was on the vote to strike ' gons in this paragraph set forth, he of harnessing the vast water powers | o ¢ bill. The roll call on the shall not be entitled to remain ther B s 9 ) SR e ch have been sunk. and the pay- b : Sheat it from the bl fol i 3 2 L ne German agent who swore sol- “h:”'\ '3‘\\‘ n e ffash o | of the country will be pushed to com- | W F Tl iice out was as follows in unless he shall in good faith con- ¢ oney enou 1 ash o oree to dr Sady 10 ! N \ 5 ;::H\\_ o ’:: ey e e T pletion The for to drive r 1 Ayes—Ashurst, Beckham, Borah, | tinue, while physically able so to do, v ver a trains and factories will be Culberson, Curtis, Fernald, Fletcher, to work at and follow such occup:- | Germans and their Government | ¢ e qurface of the earth and t Johnson of Califor. e ¢ " 5 m the g . : derson, Johnson of Califor- tion, employment or business, and if and sentenced to prison for perjury Minimum wages as a proposition | chould consic he boycotts, with the | 4 i ey Gerry, Henderson 5 r perjury. | proy hould consider the boycott delving for fuel will be reduced to of New Mexico, Kendrick- pe fails so to do he shall again become emnly that the ill-fated ship was The Minimum Wag sition, were no such agency W (Schenectady Union-Star) v ump Community Service in the armed has long since been indicted | ‘Do the people of this country see ..’.' h \( : »‘m won 13121 m.l \\(mk tendency of public sentiment that o B - Kirhy, McKella McNary, Nugent, | subject to the draft. The president |1ze that practically every one o y class o »oth sexes. he las to | suggests and supports il AL e S > ditt N evils: inelt t { !';nm h were the steel worker: '\n the Elee S s i Overman, Owen, Phelan, Pittman, ' shall make regulations for enforcing | eVl as baneful in a way to the sol- e Gl i AT R dier's life as the enemy himself— the shadow of a doubt by the publica- | ;i Bethlehem plant, where satisfac- Strike of Farmerettes. Just sutherland '{'x'\mm,"‘l thi “‘yh \‘m‘,, :‘N n shall not apply in | have already been conquered here at tion of a copy of the ship's manifest s everywhere ossel ondon Chronicle Dé e Aepeiid SPR Y . P ¥ ¥ ¥ e tion is ever expressed. (London ) . e the case of a strike if the strikers|home, and that in this work there is Navs. Baird, Bankhead, Brandegee, have submitted or will at once submit [ no more effective force than W who threaten to strike be You should not call them Yanks Calder, Chamberlain, Colt, Cummins, the dispute to the war labor hoard, | Camp Community Service Its value (Schenectady Union Star.) cause they are not earning as much as | And if you call them Doughboys, { Dillingham, Fall. France, Frelinghuy- | agr to abide and do abide by its|to the community can never be esti Home rule for Ireland, *“whether | they think they should, evidently are Loud laughter splits their ranks ‘H n Gore, Guion, Hale, FHitehcock, | decision, and at once resume and con- mated in dollars and cents. Tt is one Ulster likes it or not, the promise | not in the business for the fun of the | You will not call them Buddies Johnson Bouth, Dakota: Kellogg, | tinue work pending such decision. The | grand magnificent invitation to every pmpers, prior to her date of sailing, | ;¢ 41. British secretary. Doubtless | thing. They seem to have learned And when on Kultur's track Kenyon, Lenroot, Lodge, McCumber, = saidsoard shall take up and decide all ! €ne quality, to every fine instinct iw against embarking upon her. This ab- | tnis will transfer some of the w,“.lmm picking fruit is not as easy as it | You need not- call them forwarq, NaEhn son, New, Norris. Penrose, | such disputes as speedily as practica- Sae~t~ and souls of our boys and surd comtention is dismissed by thelfrom the west front, looks, You cannot call them back.:» ll’mndm\m: Pomerene, Ransdell, Smith ' ple,” The chargc 1t explosives were aboard has also been refuted beyond Americans Tobinson. Saulshury rd Shields, (Montreal Gazette) It will be remembered that Gi Sovre The farmerettes in the Niagara | You must not call them Sammies many also tried to justify the sinking Home Rule Promised. fruit belt, of the Lusitania on the grounds that a warning had been published in new:

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