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S and cal error vertisihg We trust derstand to receiv not be ci mechani ture. can spar jal nows petty de commun ment. One o who ha France the accompl bons, co Tribune’ ceived t lowing our boys “over the top”. In out that his United men TAKE EMANA CAPITA PEACE at Mr. Gibbons affirms that Germany will make winter t and tha send Berne, neutral mations pacifist be to will come the war. us to know, that th Hun po minds that Ge be gooc The o ing to the for new but to so that for whe mt guard ¥ We b m bons ar pers w hat W offer, w properl be avo must b a peace In of the ing the gard tc Kaiser ferred 1t American States a t protect the public from this sort nake the nt. atical in form, Similar sheets of pa- both refer to a typographl- in the ad- this newspaper. will which appeared columns of that our readers un- that if communications are e consideration, they must onfined to trivialities such as cal deficiencies of this na- is remarkable that people e the time, labor and mater- adays for such trifling and tails as are dealt with in the ications under acknowledg- PEACE T. the ALK. most prominent heroes returned from tell home what - ve wounded to us here at Expeditionary Force is ifhing overseas, is Floyd Gib- rrespondent of the who lost one evye, “Chicago and re- wo wounds while fol- other lectures, Mr. Gibbons points he has only one idea in view To bring to the people in the message front. That NO STOCK IN TING FROM LS CONCERNING TALK! from the the message STORIES NEUTRAL GERMAN many attempts this coming o0 secure peace by negotiation, t German t Madrid, propagandists will stories continuously from Stockholm and other proposed refor- o that those ot this country persuaded that the time has > “talk and stop The men at the front want declares Mr. Gibbons, kind insidious ison, calculated to imbue the of the pacifists rmany points about in Germany, tendencies in things over is of news is with the “quit idea is ready to and e »nly way to combat it, accord- wounded correspondent, is spapers to print such articles, label with a brandmark all who read know them at them may they are. The newspapers on, just as a druggist must la- ily poisons in order to safe- is patrons into whose hands 1y come. weartily agree with Mr. Gib- that suggestion, nd all in we trust newspa- adopt his we read so peace and 1en of a new e may see it stamped y labeled in the news columni in the grass which is to There that is accomplished by military vic- ided or annihilated e only one peace, and ERMAN PROPAGANDA”. New Britain news columns Hartford Courant this morn- an article to “hang the re appeared in re- > the b rin that proposition the article it was in- the jlat no one can certain{y object scapego In tion of cil of Ea Food that boy. mind Food work tion Defer A of a Boys been the State ment Th taker town curin 50,00 child with woul oblis: ties, ete. tural our hene Su been ects, been feel cut read coun State the bene! whic how bo patr To strong opposition Food THE Army potato, these vation desire better. than Let Middle re. ht. JUNIOR FOOD ARMY. ok announcembpnt splendid w: the Food Conmittee of the State Coun- Ddfense. rly duction and Supply they ers nse. basis Junior Food 3 steadily and of e 1 by in g an 0 boy ages of ten and who the Junior idea contribute the d ation clubs devoted such As 1y community rural fit of ment. ch a Junior proved the food production program. Through a system of local and preceding the membe Army stimulation the spirit of competition, and the the standard feature v ty fited to ch res iots Mrs. town, Army - as home patriotic successful that the Committee connected confident that the Connecti- Food Army itself a exhibits > exhibit, Junior by attain Another work has been the training in all | activities of demonstration teams are clear and concise information on sults have It is still too early the commercial food grown and conserved and girls, likely deds of thousands of dollars. us extend to these a and support have undertaken. Samuel NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, d the idea is noth- Ban propaganda un- ‘apprehension *¥might ichings. encou The that rage Her- nice in the strong- this dastardly at- f the autho: r of b the patriotism who agree with proceed rould be belit- for fis this morning vledge of the ar- ithat it could not from a to confpection with Berlin Falr, we beg to call the atten- | the with cit onents to the feran, W in last eran is spected Fvices to ‘of a news- Were Defeat- the reporter chair- | t men, e that . And laimed page acity to Civil erman e ihe has the Bhs and does Ong opposi- “hang the templa the c it appears that e decided %of ‘“‘hanging the Kaiser”, fnstead hans flie committee is of the opin- object But we think the donkey, i} he Ycould express himself, to donkey to being made he con readers to the following of one phase of work The nation a vear, Wit Connecticut Committee pointed to organize and under the give State for the of A. Teader J. local enlistment and girl became Food that a in possible, to pig, interest good with Junior and all with Food the proficient but to reach hearty in the is due movement. reads h the them C which Junion Committee in nearly every the state resulted between eighteen. accomplished Connect: Junior Foodl Army has rendered the state and the ice which is entitled to the warmes commendation of all Joyal Americans. The announcement this seemed neces patriotic serv- thus: when sary to mobilize all forces of our state for food pro- conservation, Committee of State Council of Defense realized might well account the food conservation tt t take in production and activities and girls. , the Army of this Juni, was tY recogn Council organization Army 1s Clubs which growing bers for over three years, direction Club thiss division of the T Agriculture. enrollment the 11 hs was in und Brundage, representing S. Depar W in near t of member Army his something wards helping the state meet supplying needed to win the w Wherever and girls have been enlist t ar. the bo; grouped special poultry, cookery, a result there a gradual development of a com- mon interest which will lead nat- to the establi thu sections will an agricultural t Food who and been to value it appreciation task they Russell, great the satisfactory results of the Junior | cor canning has be hment in reap t percentage workers ha heir Arn ha the wor has & factor tt ha of t in givi estima of t by t is nany vou Jr., credit Those aban- would ap- Junior num- Food Hach effort its food activi- time move- proj- conser- attained more hun- hose eve- one citi- his and the vet in that in- war pro- the ting om- in this the ning the by icut it he he to he in or i of he vd er o- ly he of ed e in n, en of he of ve m ve ck, Al in his of ve of or | he | n ate | he | he ng of visit portu the fz worth a ger ning (N ncks a sent troop: along every ¥ Wher 1 For a the On E And it gets In his way when he starts t From gun So th Set o lose. To tr t A Hu And a On h home Clown The, n Forsa One f If he a But t Berlin, B t The h Ma is reminded that Prc Use some ing to he ity Star. “On phras their credit gram. Ger day event, broug New Debs holdir of th to im New Put and t good had would cord We the o by osity Ge “H says winte they rmy sas C Ka on sales. from bune. e from guage foreign culat thing; Uniorn ( Wh whea this pl can 1 guara ove to ha have grant order stands carries count the | suppl | while the United States ws pelled full s Bu one ¢ which there | wheh larg the crop | presc ter season and of every year ther be long throu no < tak | upon for | who | tenance, ath e rad" while Hell American from a to war SEPTEMBER 21, 1918, the Berlin Fair will have an op mity of seeing for themselves ar-reaching effects of this praise hy auxiliary force which is doing nerous share of the work of win- the war. One impo before | long of it the time the when Dr tendent the most far reaching and recomendations brought ordinance committee in was referred to that Wednesday F. Moor asked that as a city a body night superin- the fol- ordinance CRLIN BOUND. - at meeting Henry of health, be voted enforced ews note Most urope with of the for this German helmets our fighting found fields retreat.) mail leaving I coun- lowing a re loaded as All tling from trophies souvenir cans, dippers, machines and 1 the dairy cream sale in the city | where milk or subsequent measury other s. These are bots forest and Germans oac utensils whero in th = handling of milk or cream or other plices where sold or offered for New Britain, or is produced for in the city of New kept clean and sani- in use and shall be thor- shed after each use in a soap powder or soda in followed by rinsing in water, and must be steril- live steam.” sanitary measure, no found with thisy but after a tudy of the proposed ordin- and existing conditions one can- but believe that it is altogether drastic and will have results that harmful than beneficial. In proposed ordin nno sounds mighty and practical words. The in any milk or Tell ay 1 the ines helmet fat, Tun,— mit * Helmet”, the Germans 2 cream sale Britain, shall be tary whilc oughly ws solution of hot water clean hot ized with As can Yanks awa start mowing their weighs flat head close to a ton of a fleeing o run the danger-zone of an old shot- be careful % fault kid ut Kaiser’s minions, with non- like sprinters whene'er they o ance not too he right or left, with mighty is oss, ire more itself the cent the own pell-meli town Prince ish hordes ke all trappings words. iend Tron ( that heaves far his other ross juni holds him o ince s enough ind it to the conclusion with live steam" and is excellent last “and good lown is chase to his old seven must sterilized immediately puts the milk producer in an awkward, and temporarily at least, impossible position. The wording is such that it leaves no alternative for the milk producer but to have a steam sterili ing system installed. Not only does it affect milk producers within the city limits, but it also affects produc- in other districts. possibly other states, who produce milk or cream “for subsequent sale in the city of New Britain.” The superintendent stated that he wants this to bec ome an ordinance, though in order not to work too much of a hardship on the small producer he willing that it shall not apply to those who produce less than 12 quarts of milk day. That in itself is absurd; for is it not just as likely that contaminated milk may be found within that 12 quarts within the 00 quarts produced by neighbor; and will not the germs the 12 quart lot be just as active in the larger quantity? ordinance is necessary at all it should be all-inclusive. Having come to a realization just what this ordinance would mand, a peep at what it would r in not amiss. In the first place, oon as this ordinance should hecome effective it would automatically shut lown on most of the milk supply that is brought into the city for the pro- ducers are not at present equipped to with an order. If, aft- reasonub.. time, the producers their dairies with the nec- essary steam sterilizing apparatus it would demand additional fuel and additional labor to it. What would be the price of milk would, immediate- ly jump quart, for it would who would have to additional ex- | per of New Brit- ain this extra price? And this, 1t. would 1t discrimination. Large tities of milk are shipped into state from New York, Massa~ chuse Vermont, a likely some this out of state finds its way to local dealers. city of New Britain is powerl to make laws that will affect inter-state com- wnd the only way the ordin- be enforced reference would tech- hurries; Hun- be his from guns to might stop for a “Kamer- on seeing his dear old to - hopes ad; he Helmet,—Never! To gain ers Prussian of in loses that piece he shouts, as the Yankees um, mit ¢ here they of health has omo’. t' Helmet, J. DALY is AND FANCIES. 5 Bill of Chic is not yor Thompson the Journal o war over pvidence his in of soldier. get time wr never can tell letter.—Kansas your You your spare > 2 may of de- arms’ il but that Evening is it's i victorious e of the Kaiser's, victorious legs —New York comply enen o fifty-eighth birth- a very successful some of the most unwilling n. Pe party even rht in York rshing’s was 2 if were World cquipped guests maintain result? The undoubtedly, several cents per be the consumer pay for this Are the people willing to pay in addition to in unjust Stokes have been the sentimentality not American Rose nds, but performance press the great London Day ng is does scem jury.— railroads then a and Maine | the system now is..—Con- into the out of Boston the ¥ it ting \king money politics If in idea the au lone it 1 not be Monitor. 15t this vhere d miilk The of = we regarded that the sung inquiry rmy, “Where do here?" will not be sneralissimo Foch his plans trust merce ance could to this milk nicalities. in curi- to juggle Sun 1s undue ¢ be New York as to wus, according to disinterested parties, it is obvious that the age of such an ordinance would result in two things: Curtailment of the milk supply in this city and the immediate increase of price With these views in solutely necessary to utensils with live steam have been “thoroughly solution soap powder hot water, followed by clean hot water”? It another city in the state, try, has such a stringent milk ordin- ance as is this proposed one. Why would it not be better for the health department to strictly enforce exist- ing precautionary ordinances and in- that sanitary measures be taken let the state authorities look aft- | er the more drastic steps. The state department can be relied upto to act, and to act with force, when it is nec- ary. The ordinance committee well to hesitate before blindly passing such an ordinance, and to consult with others than the health department Winter”, the, as uns Di Prospect of headline Why not ignore r then—deny presence, do the presence of the American nd Allied victories?—Kan- ity Times mind, is it ab- sterilize the after they washed in a or soda in rinsing in doubtful if or the coun- fast getting in bargain advertises: marked Tri- nsas merchants are metropolitan A Wichita sorted new to $12.98 tricks of ore fall a hats, is $4.98 Chicago hars newspapers any lan- also the not only published in, German but are not allowed cir the ¢ We do here.—New Haven rmany being except papers within differently ion mpire. s i 1919, P Wheat Evening £ e will d ranseript.) 0 thhe from Boston that \en one consider t-produ late ough ing year forth, as the their the farmers beg winter Pe a price of the it 5 3in crop, it ident’s order, $2.20 per year 1919, is not extent W. ¢ T the Herald that Taken of september 15—New Britain is keep- ing pace with the times the tele- phone company is laying wires under- ground in Church street Edward and Maxwell Hart will spend the next two weeks in Chic: at world's fair Lieut. Col. George M. Cole has received his appointment licutenant colonel the Third ecticut Infantry Daniel H ham has been appointed county health Butter gone up in price the creamery brands are cents per pound and cents, from years e seen ant ing of all 1ing ve carried it through 1920 would protection to the it the of | world act in Certainly for been excessi to an that for ending the farmer Even it element ;0 the admitted is wn of risk as Con- Mark- any sudden re-open cheape ry since of the s would certain makets still com- farmers the President’s bond st this risk, there ympelling ~ necessity There from officer has until at be to to its um t, return of the as agains reat and far dare may st while selling 35 will soon retailed at 37 September 16 appoir is George >d night company No. 2, — ord of the there were other H. Dyson driver of A few years city directory more Smiths family n: changed can be, measure omitted to guarant offsets it has been no cded American be, s be n € re that wheat The possible has ent order takes care ¢ been of 1919 s can talke ¢ this and Ander- n respect st more Johaso this vea Johusor > 8 hs tursed f Wells C. E to work P of 's directory Ande ind M. Finnegna world’s fair has resigned his posi- White store 1re there sons that the as. range viey war endures of the w The people will of any measure mly Smi 1gh ahem oster omplaint and Corbin’s. has | stand i ong iy which range vie ard Butle effer Brothers is di they reject and s fai rit_school last night.— will attend Huntsinger lege this fall. Work was resumed today at Landers, Frary & East Main Street shop, the taking a cut of 20 per wages. A. J. Barker of Medical school, had a narrow from drowning at White Oak day when he fell out of a boat. Stone steps will be erected at Mary's church this week. September 19—Engineer W. H. Cadwell today laid out the new trolley route to Berlin. — O. F. Curtis began the joiner work on Col. Bacon's new home on Lexington street today. September 20—Willaim Farl ploved in E. E. Linke’s tea gone on a t(wo weeks' vacation Miss Mary Bingham of So. Main street has returned from the world's fair September William Fred Latham workmen the Yale escape St. em- 21 warles D. Bliis and Richards have returned from the world’s fair, Michael P. Leg- horn and M. J. Ryan have been visit- ing friends in Waterbu —W. 18-45 draft peculiar and The some truths, These incidents with men who have falsified, either knowingly or inavertently, for vari- ous reasons, concerning their ages and now that they are liable duty are trying to secur sion of their correct ages. This is not confined alone to adults however, for the mothers of several have been to legal authorities seeking advice on the same subject There is quite a it is being found took out thoir is not bringing out uninteresting have to do chiefly the admis- who when they enship papers a number of years ago. gave an age really older than what they were at the time. Inasmuch as in many cases this is taken the basis of legal age here they are becoming wor- ried. On seeking advice a number have been told that they had best let their ages remain as they are written on their naturalization pape: or else there langer, on the truth ing known to federal officials, they may be charged with perjury. Therc is yet another case, particu- and young men who, when they were 12 or 13 years of age, were taken to the city clerk’s office by their mothers or fathers who swore that they were 14 years of age in order that they could go to work. Now that these falsified ages will probably call the hoys into service quicker than other- wise, worried parents are seeking to have them changed. Some men, born tries, when they took out marriage licenses here g@ave their ages as younger than what they really were. Probably this was for reasons of pride at the time, but now these men are likely to be inducted into the service on their own age record as evidenced in their marriage certificates. There is yet another cass, particu- larly Russians, who, in order to es- cape military duty in their own coun- try, falsified as to there ages in order to secure a passport. As it is impos- sible for these men to secure authen- tic birth records from their own war torn country, their passport records will have to stand W. 8. 8. People are apt to grow weary of the continued complaint that Hartford is trying to “hog” everything and poor New Britain is being left out in the cold. There has been an inter-city rivalry between this place and the ad- jacent city for many years. Doubtless it will always continue, but the utter- ance of public complaint is childish One of the city fathers from ' the second ward in complaining about the airplane fizzle of a week ago, told his colleagues that ‘*our friends from Hartford hogged things as usual” This never does any good and be- littles the complainant, whether it be an individual or a community Britain people think Hartford ting more -than her share let put their shoulder to the wheel and work harder for their home n. But they must not, even in their native pride, forget that Hartford is a very rich city, has many wealthy people and many wealthy business houses and, above all, is the capital city of the state. These things count for something when civic favors are being handed out citiz is in foreign coun- it is wet- them to is —W “Gee! It was a narrow escape. I sure thought my time had come when that bullet whizzed past my ear.” The young man in relating the incident to his sympathetic lady friend, was much excited He had recounted how, on last Sunday, he had taken a stroll in the outskirts and had sauntered into an apple orchard when a burly farmer, boiling with rage, had rushed at him, drawn a revolver and fired at almost point blank range “Yes) the old bullet just whizzed past my head, so near that I could hear it sing and feel the breeze. But before the old murderer could pull the trigger again I was upon him. I wrested that gun out of his hand in no time and threw it aside. Then I was going to have him arrested but he was so scared that I didn’t do any thing else. 1 just left him and I'll bet he won’t be quite so brave an- other time. Why, yes! There was some danger of his hitting me, but I didn’t intend to let him shoot a second time. Naw! 1 wasn't afraid. I knew if T could only get hold of him he wouldn’t do any further damage with that young cannon he carried,” concluded our hero modestly, while his fair female companion looked her admiration and murmured soft praises to “My hero.” a them with where was agoing Sunday, two them away out gentleman 3 wondered fellers and girl there suitcases here,” remarked the old from Clayton to a local policeman Monday he recited his week-end news. policeman’s - garden in Clayton had been raided had the old man's in the same vicinity and a mutual connection had thus been Jlished. The minion of the law, the feebleness of the aged utter inability to defend had given him an old of July revolver with a cartridges to scare on as The recognizing man and his his property, rusty fourth blank any marauders “Yep. iter road 1 took to away went down the there gun i they that and Jjest 1ed their new saloon near the Bur- j took a walk up in the garden plot, | store, has | If New | | cluded Business col- | Clark’s | cent. in HxMr" yester- | In particularly in regard to ages. | for military | minor boys | large class of men | their | becom- | that | | been apicking them apples and throw- | making. There under the apple tree, working like time, was the woman and the | man apicking up my apples and aput- ing them inter the suit case. Course I yelled at ’em,” said the old man, “and how they did scamper When she went through the fence the woman left part of her dress adangling on it."” As the old man stopped to chuckle listener asked what had become the third man “That's what 1 wondered, so I trotted up to the tree and there, hid- ing them down the other feller.” | TRY 10 STAGE HOLDUP Year Old Boys Draw Revolvers on Grocer—Demand Money and Ge Can of Beans. over .17 staged a li hold up at tore ) 118 Hart. demanded Two youths years old | Jullus ¥ street last and probably not of ert's money ot only a can of he was w highwaymen ing them down was the other feler.” | frightened by the screams c Again the old man stopped to | I chuckle as the remembrance of some- | thing funny flashed through his mnd “He was a right smart feller alright. | 1 asked him what he was doing up there in my tree and he said, ‘playing a ukulele you old fossil run along now | or I'll bean ye,’ whatever that means.” | v t “Then I pulls out that there gun | the sor and T fires the blank cartridges up | in the air. Say, that young alec didn't | climb down outa that tree at all. He | just let out one yelp and he fell down 1 guess he's agoing yet, he was last ! I seen of him.” borhood litt vouths entered the ind called for a c ert the proceeded o ovs took asked . if thinking of his ould y ome they v want s of tomers, ¢ ‘No want them, Eggert and at joke is this?" 5 “We mean busine \ is no L joke. C ross with the money.” | My mon - gert we dox money both produce sht the bo ht of he your too!" 1 one as pistols. thou the e were vouth joking wi In (Manchester, Guardian) it the a concern of Eng:. house,” said In Mr. tion ours; the for a sense, of Balfour says, of Finland not true in the sense that it is for people of Finland to determine | t themselves how they shall be | outery governed. But we are in the midst | dits that of a great war with a desperate and ggert then ruthless enemy. What if, by violence| A telephone or guile, he should impose upon Fin- | police and Station land a system of government devised | responded to suit his purposes, and up there | of the a ruler to act as his instrument being about against us in the present struggle? | lected Could then remain indifferent? | Clearly not./ We ould be com-| pelled, in that event , to ' form a| judgment on the Finnish Constitu- tion, and shape our own policy to- | wards Finland accordingly. -\'Onl('—‘ course, that is true, Constitu- as !} him who he and at he revolver that direction ard the talk, ¢ sint she in ume to the door with is is the of the youth med would ed startled t they scampe fainted wwa Mrs for H desc Mr. ¥ havin sent the 1ber Only a W 70 vague Line iption set vears old them neg-t to scrutinize wrefully Y, W. C. A. NC 1ssociation we = [ e will occu~ days! have The completed pancy Already 1 be and Te for in about a week or ten or the i of 20 young womer thing of this kind is actually happen- | moved ing, The Finnish Government are at- | the tempting to set up a form of mon-| f archical government. They intro- | duced.a measure of that kind, which | was debated in the Diet and only | withdrawn aftér it was made ,,Mm; that it could not secure the two- thirds majority prescribed by the | Constitution. The project has not| .yred been abandoned. Quite probably it | Both will be taken up again, and perhaps, | cjacses as constitutional means fail, be put | into execution illegally and violenily. | The character of the proposed Con- stitution is worthy of note. The mon- archy projected by the Finnish 1 ernment is not such as we know in England, or as Norway and Den- | mark or even Sweden know. It is pure Prussian in type. The King to have the executive power; he is— this is significant—to decide Fin- land’s foreign relations: he is to have an absolute veto on all bills affecting the Constitution, agriculture, and trade. Add that the Finnish Gov- ernment contemplates putting on the throne certainly a German Prince and probably a Prussian Prince, and it will be seen how nearly we are af- fected by this Finnish Constitution Tt is intended merely to put into rt comj section the new home yet to be inished will accommodate about A0 more hoarding Application for rooms in the 1ouse may to the endent be made house supe started A, will De Miss Gymnasium clas Tuesday Octoh Ha Saunders of the b will and advanced meet eve, the coming SALESMEN DINE the Traut tained T, & H. sales force of Co., were ente of the th last The Mig cials given™in lingford was given the oration of t the company Lynch's Hine the offl« at a banquet Tavern, Wal The reception in commem- ry of evenirg & Go = = company Oakdalie ht s salesmen ¢ nnivers During the ed a And automol rende musical m the orchestra The tip made by program to tavern was ile. CELEBRATE Hill of t Church ITATIANS Rev. G. W. C Congregational Rdsario Giamo were the the patriotic Unity Day the seal upon the double revolution | at the Grammar school hall last eve- B the inclement effected by the present rulers of Fin- |7 Because land—the overthrow and subjection | Weather there was but a small attend of the mass of the Finnish people to | ance at meeting but an excellent themselves, and the subjection of | program carried out neverthe Finland to Germany. less evening a program Here in England insufficient atten- | of numbers was carried out tion has been given to both these e - strokes. When the Finnish upper DR. DOBSON WRITES. classes, with German help, defeated Dr. James E the Red party, which shared the [ States army dental corps ideas of the Russian Bolsheviks, they | to Judge James T. Meskill proceeded with a violence which im- | was dated at Bigaey, France, proved upon the worst charged |ber 3, and in it he inquires against the Reds themselves. Seven | boyhood companion, Ii thousand persons were shot down by | Glover, who killed lat them in cold blood. Every labor pa- = per was suppressed. Every working institution—bookshops, librar- meeting houses—was destro; confiscated. All but one of the Socialist members of the Diet, | 1)1cy S killed, driven into exile, ex (et from the Diet. There ave| ..o some $0,000 Red prisoners now confinement. They are ravaged disease and hunger—eyewitnesses port that they are driven by lack food to eat grass. They are to be tried by special courts, and it is be ing assumed that not less than 60,000 will be sentenced to long terms. In the Diet it has actually been proposed that these prisoners should be hand- | ed over to work in the (erman pot- | ash mines in return for nitrate. One | of the leading organs of the Govern- | ment demands that the children of | the prisoners shall be taken away | from their parents, placed under the Poor Law, and supported by the local authorities in schools and colonies, because their own mothers would ir spire them with their own “indescrib- | able bitterness” and “bottomless hat- red of the bourgeois and the whites.” | Such is the temper in which the| present rulers of Finland regard their own countrymen of the ‘“‘pro- letariat”. They add to this fierceness of class hatred a fierce race hatred The Finns have practically ejected the Finnish Swedes from the Govern- ment, and they contemplated depriv- ing them of freedom to employ their own language and develop their own culture. The latest measure of the Government is a decree expelling all | the Jews from Finland, and edict by | which Finland secures a unigque pre= | eminence in the contemporary world for mediaeval obscurantism. To merciless class, race, and religious persecution the Finnish Government adds an extravagant imperialism. | Here it comes into conflict directly ' not only with allied principles, but with allied interests Although it is are actually being ambitions, of the South Lawyer -~ e and realers celebration g, of the W During t musical e Dobson of the has The Septe the Murman railway, Petrogr line of communication wi sea. We safegnard walit d's ¢ opén class ies, ot eighty were the taken me Murman oast how far Finn drive have the 1sures see will season, such a winter. or il in thos n with the ernment which the whole labori which it loathed, ¢ the nation’s State, and future of Jerman ic \cides Manife live tly, a Gov- : by terrorizipg o population, hy vhich sacrifices independence to a which Finland victory ver based In the fulines masses alone would it has not all the hind it As h actionary Finns are with reactionary of the Finns Government subservier wh upon upper Swedes ity are republican the is monarchical the r e to Germany is questioned General who led the White command deference of to Germany followed b litary the Lrmy of Rege He severa becaus; the nt and his 1% nto mporta inees went e, leaders. Assuredly it for Allies to ternal affairs | nish people ther /ndifferent ernment ternal affairs then Against defend people fail in check. interfer h a Finland L settle t Allies cannot e Finnish the regi must oF But wher rem selves the be Gov- sses into n and by traverse such aggre themselves hold to their its (L The made by word mit has he lan oIt h Iy gl -, rowing from the volcano ? But the volean It took fthe for. in th obscure what to T taken the Regent Finnish Senate forth that secure great smbrace the Karelia is ¢ Shy these members or Cabinet have the time to which shall coast and Russian indifferent to these but for the fact that with German, Germany of Finland, and Finland is being in- cited to these adventt in sion by her German master. on the Murman coast me man submarine the Arctic Fin- land in Karelia means the cutting of now 1 from Finland Murman We might pretensions are at the master set is worc a mi yow!l (f meaning. from slod lom to mix) in whic s rliest with cared or These sicuous T the ed be water the we war ared at is stood in hall the craters cdn- werd: ositions ir € s gres- | ofter s i 1- Finland | blaance o the d ‘c ern volcanic sense. fic o hases on used wor in the mode