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oston Store NOBARGAINEDPEACE ' e the thought 3 R < ladeni ; peoples engag l l ; : : 3 ik cularity of this | 3 : 2 S e while statesmen have about for definitions o . THESE COOL NIGHTS AND.| — S e e . and have sometimes ‘5o morninGs wiLL creatk | Thrilling Speech in New York at 2 B e i m o e, : P ; : re supposed to instruct & A 8TRONG DEMAND HOUF Oi Bulgar Appeal ) i e : ,i;:)\\ o ‘m;n’r i “:xcmre', FOR HEAVIER 3 - 4 more and more certain of . that they are fighting for. 3 New York, Sept. 28.—President Lo 5 . . purposes have fallen more and THOro Wilcon’s speech here last night fol- o : 3 R B ¥ into the background and the common P lows: 3 i . ; Al ) purpose of enlightened maakind has “My fellow citizens—I am not 3 k: % 5 _ 27 taken their place. The counsels of | here to promote the loan. That will 5 & : plain men have become on all hands We are prepared to provide |be done ably and enthusiastically : o =~ e more simple and straightforward and done-—by the hundreds of thousands i ComERe el : b more unified than the counsels of that full measure of Comfort of loyal and tireless men and women 3 & i % sophisticated men of affairs, who still who have undertaken to present it to ; R g 5 % < B 1* the impr jon that they are y : ) i S triere L . : | playing a game of power, and playing ntain n the Popular ou ind to our fellow }Hlly(‘l‘ £ 3 " E 2] B y contained in the Pop through the country; and I have not o S ¢ for high stakes. That is why 1 have R the least doubt of their complete suc- v & % o said that this is a people’s war, not cess; for I know their spirit and the T S 2 a statesmen’s. Statesmen must fol- spirit of the country. My confidence i S 5 low the clarified common thought or is confirmed, too, by the thoughtful Sl i S 3 be broken and experienced cooperation of the o : 3 g = 3 & Jri “I will take that to ©e the signifi- bankers : here and everywhere, who K o : ; cance of the fact that assemblies and are lending their valuable aid and o o i s associations of many kinds made up of UNION SUITS AND VESTS | zuidance. 1 have come ather, to % 4 b 3 plain workday people have demanded, seek an opportunity to present to vou . 2 3 2 almost every time they came together, AND PANTS FOR MEN, some thoughts which I trust will s R i s : and are still demanding, that the lead- serve to give vou, in perhaps fuller 4 % oA i % g ers of their governments declare to WOMEN AND CHILDREN, |measure than before, a vivid sense of ¥ 5 RO 5 them plainly what it is, exactly what the great issues involved, in order A i i B : y e it is, that they were seeking in this In All Sizes, In All Shapes, that you may appreciate and accent : : i & : war, and what they think the items \\'I!h added enthusiasm the grave 51!- r: F, W " o of the final settlement should be. They nificance of the duty of supporting 5 5 o ] B 2 3 " are not yet satisfied with what they and in Various Qualities. the government by your men and . S . 1Y e oR mu'x They still scem to your means to the utmost point of fear that they are getting what they :f'(",',"}_'","",,;.‘"'l ;e:]f—d::n:\‘l» ‘50“;{1;1"”(;: R : g ask for only in statesmen’'s terms- AC el TineRor s e e b : 2 8 > only in the terms of territorial arrange- omplete 1 O: war means can hesitate to ~+-~ to the % & b i f i e i o ralther hevi i d 3 ments and divisions of power, and not Y lin 2 Y have, and it s 3 y terms of broad visioned justice and . my mission here tonight to J ; i ST : DR. DENTON’S SLEEPING |mako clear once more what the war mency and peacs and the satiami il STt e iH L e BTG PRESIDENT WILSON of those deep seated longings of ops SR G Smmees 6 S pressed and distracted men and wome GARMENTS FOR ALL AGES. | ;. : fen ard enslaved peoples that seem to At every turn of the war we gain|ment of the principles we have |clude them in definite and binding | NeM the only things worth fighting a fresh consciousness of What we|avowed as the principles for which | terms. §o W for that erenlls she ar . BNE meaa to acamplish by it. When our|we are fighting. There should exist { haps statesmen have not always recog- hope and expectation are most excited | no doubt abont that 1 am. (1 {nized the changed aspect of the whole we think more definitely than before | fore, going to take the liherty of jworld of jpolicy and action. Perhaps af the lssues that hang upon dt and of | speaking with the utmost frankness | tions merely and the well known prin | Loy, Deve nofalways spoken in direct oo burposes which must be realized | about the practical implications that | ciples of international actio which wo Loplvito o s ons awed h“"';‘?‘sc Y means of it. FOEsE has positive | gre i e i 7 ) % hey did no Know how searching M e p S du,lx]_n\_mu,:iAm it. have always professed and followed. 2 T e et i r’; it be indeed and in truth the | In the CLEORSE ity oAk 2RO | : s 5 | same sentence in which I say 3 i We did not determine and which Wel common object of the governments | that the United States will enter int, | Of 2n5Wers they demanded, cannot alter. No statesman or as- f B S - “But T, for one, am glad to attempt associated against Germany and of acial arrange: S . sembly created them: no statesman or : 00 suesial =sipnecments Jormunder, the nations whom they govern, as I |standings witt s ” the answer again and again in the | preys y m‘% assembly can alter them. They have | pelieve i : e J standings with particular nations let |} ;6 that T may make it clearer and M H d H l | ( arisen out of the very nature and ieve it to be, to achieve by the | me say also that the United States is | LOP L 111100 ana a a - gCTUIe0" Sl Rl s e I 15 Bl st- | prepared to assume its full share of | CLo2T, that ~my = one . thought . : kel ) o Bieonen of ssvmblcs | 1 D, 6 Wil b nosearary that il | TCSTOLh o o ntanangs of | 7y 0 e et | ATIY o Raise SR00T,000 NP e M, is to them out or be false to| oo 0 ™ ©% ad! willing to pay the | Lig common’ covenants andimderstand= | Jy v ol others, entitled to & reply { the nation be informed from '@ them. I v were perhaps not clear price, the ‘Onl\r price, that “.”]‘ pro- ings upon\which peace must hence- whose meaning no one can have .A‘n;‘ s { day of the risimg tide of loan Dig at the outset, but they are clear now. | cyre it and ready and willing also to | [OT( TSt We still read Washigton's | crouse for misunderstanding, -if, he { The task of dccounting for cae The war has lasted more than four| ....vo’in some virile fashion the only | [TMOrtal warning against “entanglinig | \'q >0 g o Pran o oo B B s je| | Washington, Sepf. 28.—Bedfore | 1oy raceived, and each item Jof years and the whole world has been |, trumentality by which it can be | *lliances” with full comprehension | chorih or pan get some one to trans. | WD today the Fourfh Liberty Ldan | paign cost is cistributed among wa_into it. The commen will of | L1oq M0lh B B e e of | #nd an answering purpose. But only |15 o0 s eorraotis 1ote bis ora At 1 he. | cAmPaiin was on. Sanlls of expert accountantg, 49 of mankind has been substituted for | €9 PO E MEC LIS SEIIENENE OF | special and limited alliances entangle, [ e £, COreTtvintd Ais owh. And The-| “go eager were some‘communi(ies th [ day and night of the ¢ weeks| the particular purpose of individual | gio PEHC - and we recognize and accept the duty | o c, ' "”,‘”“ 2 i the Bovern- ¥make strides toward| their subscripk | wil work to account for every & states. Individual statesmen' may| Tt L o new day in which we are permitted | N With wiichy we are as-) (on goals that thepant solicitors to] ut the bond. subseristion haryl AN e e B e 5 2 justice in | P8 7 sl e el °0 | speals, as they have oacasion, as plain- | o0 S 0 e 5 gt i VO every item of the settlement, no mat- | £0 Bobe for a general alliance which |, g T gye tried to mpeak. I hope that | * .. oF the St/BERES amidnight. Campalgn orgenizers, ‘S neither they nor their opponents caa [ £7ETY, 671 A4 YIS SEHIOMOnt o MAL: | (i1 o v0ia entanglements and wlear the | 13 25 T ave d =t S Scores of towns ame trying to give | pourth Liberty Loan honor: . flag sto it as they please. It has become| o W o b e e a0 the | #Ir of the world for dommon under. | (16¥ Will feel free to say whether they | 511 expected of them’ before nightfall | prove an even sreater stz & peoples’ war, and peoples of all| L E L EtEA, e eral . peoples | standings and the maintenance of | (10K that I am in any degree mis-|ang to devote the remaining three | communities than in the third sorts and races, of every degree of | % S AC O OF the SeVErsl HPeoRIes | common rights taken in my interpretation of the 1s-|weeks to doubling or trebling their | ¢ will be glven to.a communite power and variety of fortune, are| W08 toritnes are deait with. That [ =5 0 L 0 ade this analysis of the | SueS Involved or in my purpose With | quotas of the mighty war loan. { subscribes the quota allottefiN rvoived im it sweeping | process | indispensable instrumentality is = HANE Jan his analysis of the | .. arq to the means by which a satis R e R 1L subsoribeaiiio Mole LG volved in " 8 | | agte of Matitne. formed. unger wov.|iaternational sitnation which the war | ™ a | A million and a half men, women | y(ar will be acded when the com: of change and ' settloment. = ‘We ] Zo- B e e eacious, Withe | has created not, of course, because | 2Ctory settlement of those issues|ang children are enrolled in an army | ity has oversubscribed 50 Per o8 came into it when its charac- out such an instrumentality, by which | doubt. whether the leaders..of. the | MYy be obtained. Unity of purpose | of active campaigners to place a bond | Honor emblems—cards = beair e sl sl allily o eleal et Sl ar. | 8reat nations and peoples with whom | @1d Oof ceunsel are as imperatively | in every home. lesign of the honor flag—wil Bnglt’ was.plain s thatemp - pation e Deaco of fhe.mrorid .qan be guar- .o S st L il rare oF € necessary In this war as was unity of | Holel vest ninery Sy : s could stand apart or be indifferent to | @nteed, peace Will rest in part-upon | WO are assoclated were of the same| ' 0 4n the battlefleld; and with e e e Beh ) mandsa codnau o SO ite out come. Its challenge drove to | the world of outlaws and only upon mind and entertained a like purpose, e s s el 1 smoothly into motion. Like the | or other organizations holding ce] the heart of evervthing we cared for | that word. For Germany will have but because the air every now and b e P. Pr» n 11“( U“f_‘? grimmer campaigns across the sea, | yccords of number of subscribers| and lived for. The voice of the war | to redeem her character, not by what |then Ests darkened by = mists and | WL €ome Sssvianse of LOmBete Vics|jevery detall had been planned long in Jiagaition, theve will be the honog had become clear and gripped our | happens at the peace table but by f:rn\xndl_e.w vln)xh\mgs:\e\d mischievous f)O‘l 1" Jf«t \fl; n no ot f"‘ “-'“ advance. Salesmen began gathering | of names of subscribers kept dy e e BT red ol e e perversions of counsels and it is neces- cace drives' can e w(m:n_x ely nat- | subscriptions b well-organized | tne third loan Subscribers will DR. CLINTON J. HYDE lands, as well ha our own murdered|| | And, as T see it, thel constifution saryonceand again, to sweep the irre. | urallzed and slienced only by showingi) methods. = Fosters appeared In shop | badges-—metal buttons bearing \ dead under the sea, were calling %o | of that league of mations and the |SPonsible talk about peace intrigues|that every victory of the nations as- | windows and told the story of Hberty | hosior flag gn on a biue fizld- THE PRICEYOU PAY ) ceac spcer tholses, were ca & 10| olear definition of its objects must be |and Weakening morale and doubtful | sociated against Germany brings the [ honds on streets and frora fence cor- | wiil he urged to wear them. 1 “I know T ought to take treatment; | oo o EL » ey And o part, is in a sense the most essen. | PUrbose on the part of those in au- | nations nearer the sort of peace which | ners. President Wilson’s autographed | million badges have becn ordered I have been running down for the | SMUTe L ut us. We | tial part, of the peace settlement it. | thoTity utterly, and if need be uncere- | will bring security and reassurance to [ appeal was published in newspapers | R e ast year or two. I am all fagged out, | o Fb, A WS LEAT BEOu M eing | solf. | 1t cannot be formed mow. 1f |moniously, aside and say things in|all peoples and make the recurrence | throughout the land. In motion ic- | ; have nio ambition, worry from morn. | pronoions o i T Y | tmed now 1t would be merely a |the Plainest words that caa be found, | of another such struggle of pitiless | ture theaters films planned by leading e ing till night, don’t care whether I| }aue®scon them with steady oyes and | new alllance confined’ to’/the nations (‘\"cn when it is only 10:';“' over again | force and bloodshed forever imposs stars told graphically why Americans m.-’;'f_ ”'V,' ‘ : “hé f.}‘,:]n‘ va . M7 dean ox aliveiave [satowelwht and | siacpaneine comprehension ever | associated against a common enemy, | What has been said pefore, quite as|pble and that nothing else can. Ger-|should buy bonds. and 25,000 volun- bl sliiai el o cannot do the same work I used 0| gince. We accepted the issues of the | It is not likely that it could be Plainly if in less unvarnished term manyfeiconstantlyfmdmatine fithe |iter sncalots hosmiltoldrive Mionis hte(B8ER8/0 HE U e Sl A Rl lo some years ago. If I were as| war ag facts, not as any group of | formed after the settlement. It Iis As I have said, neither I nor any | “terms” she will accept, and always|appeal. More than a score of special | the SWPPRE DAL - T HL Sl strong as T was, I could earn good | men either here or elsewhere had ( necessary to guarantee the peace, and | Other man in governmental authority | inds that the world does not want [ trains filled with war relics fresh from j Wi Wosdrow Wilson to whom money. 1 know I ought to treat With | defined them, and we can accept e s et v GTeeTCr A o created or gave form to ths lssue of | terms. It wishes the final triumph | France's Dbatllefelds started thelr | Mes. Wouttom WL 0 (0 (e Mgood specialist, but I cannot afford | outcome which does not squarely) afterthought. The reason, to speak | RIS war. 1 have simply responded | of justice and fair dealing.” journeys from town to town S il o aew v to pay for the treatment.” meet and settle them. Those issues | in plain terms again, why it must be |0 o LSRR o an il conll T Indicationsgare jiuatitnaiamorigan ,,‘,u;‘“‘g’; :,:U‘v.‘.;u'\:mv: have been You are paying for it NOW, my | are these: guaranteed is that there will be par- pecpleinow realizofmoresthaniiniany I o e o sosing LN friend, and dearly; yet you do not “Shall the military power of any | ties to the peace whose promises of the dhrec previous loanjcampal /munities shall be given the privi get it nation or group of nations be suffered | have proved untrustworthy, and the intimate relation between govern- i wlnfl"m the names. . 3 | to determine the fortunes of peoples | means must be foupd in connection ment bonds and the fighting American | 0 28 895 8 6 CO Ll o yg over whom they have no right to | with the peace settlement itself to CIGHL i biely Sl MG e TR e rule except the right of force? remove that source of insecurity. It spared the hardships of army life | columns ane we Ve > mostin working capacity is the interest you| «gpall strong nations be free to [ would be folly to leave the guaran- must economize to buy bonds. D are drawing wrong weak nations and make them | tee to the subsequent voluntary action After the opening enthuslasm of | bond saiesmen, = Cteell DOWSE Ty A good manager never spends more | subject to their purpose and inter- | of the governments we have seen de- today, and a dey in churecnes tomor- | CAMpalEn Wi . | i ! ‘The confidence with which I venture to speak for our people in these mat- ters does not spring from our tradi- coming settlements a secure and last- The communitles making the command. But I have responded g " gladly and with a resolution that has | Petter from President Wilson to Yeu varmer and more confident as And a beautiful etching of the issues have grown clearer aand | Statue of Liberty by Joseph Pennell, clearer. It is now plain that they are | reproduced by rotogravure as a sepa- issues which na man can pervert | rate supplement printed on fine paper unless it be wilfully. T am bound [and supplied by the United States to fight for them, and happy to fight | Government to the Sunday American for them as time and circumstance | for free distribution to its readers are have revealed them to me as to all|features of next Sunday’s Special the world. Our enthusiasm for them [ Liberty Loan Kdition of the New York Should he begin to draw on the “Shall peoples be ruled and domin- | ¢But these general terms do not dis- | grows more and more irresistible os| Sunday American. To avoid disap- pital his interest would, of course, ! ated, even in their internal affairs, | close the whole matter. Some details | they stand out in more and more | pointment be sure to place your order ang poor 2 by trained advertising men wil decrease. by arbitrary and irresponsible force | are needed to make them sound less | vivid and unmistakable outline. in advance with your newsdealer— | t© crush I ;us.shnl ;“_””C"’ff, A e e And what are you doing? or by their own will and choice? like a thesis and more like a practical (St holTorE s T tineniEo) them | v A reminder of the nccessity came | d! : i You allow your health to run down | “Shall there be a common stand- | programme, These then are some of today In an officlal report that the | bureau, o s more and more; therefore, you can-|ard of right and privilege for alb|the particulars, and T state them with == = government is spending nearly a half b¥ Lus ey e not work and earn what you used to.| peoples and nations or shall the billion dollars a week, bout $§62,- | un i td gl mhow iR Do you see the point? You are draw- | strong do as they will and the weak 000,000 a day for the war. At the ]‘rf)"]‘ R ok ing on your capital—which is your | suffer without redress? 3 iag (T oeniacal dnterppel By His Excellency same time it “;af borre h?,“crn;:aj 1.500 windows have been pledged health—by allowing it to run down, “Shall the assertion of right be| 7“5 1" 5n duty with regard to MARCUS H. HOLCOME other nations—Armerica’s p;-;‘. e nd so the interest (your working | haphazard and by casual alliance or | o8 © have done more per capite than fhis | Wil be D apacity) is steadily growing smaller. | shall there he a common concert to | PETER0 () o s e moted Governor country now Is called on to do. Tho | loan posters’ Steet CAF F0ll You used to make good money; | oblige the observance of common el > 2 s Let me tell you why. Your health is your capital; your than his interest. | est? stroy Russia and deceive Rumania. row, the country will settle down to | campalsn publicity a = the three weeks of a drive to gather | advertsments vritien by many © from rich and poor the billions nceded | hation’s prominent men and ar the greater confidence hecause I can State of Connecticut state them authoritatively as repre- e N New T British people, half as numerovs as =6 A PROCLAMATION R R L e #eed to get “No man, no group of men, chose | tWeen those to whom we wis| ment about $14,000,000,000. The| Great Britain, Fronce, and € Bt st bttty Sl just and’ those to whom we do not = ] ] a0 T havs raised nearly $7,000,000.. | haye sent soldier voterans To make two, three or four dollars | these to be the issues of the struggle. | T % "5 "suct Tt must be a justice 0! R Government is about to ask us to subscribe to the Fourth HaoaE onas and the Eueians|America in the campalsn Mos] Jo ey wovous dnd voulhad fell \Iu):i‘v :n::»\x:!miel:.o,f, shgent thm; that plays no favorites and knows no Liberty Loan. The State of Connecticut has pledged its support n(*’xrh’"‘"\lfl”"’l this record even be. | those chosen speak ¥nglish and $our heart and soul In your work. S f‘d.\‘:u;“‘,“’t‘g“r’“;“ standard but the equal rights of the to the Iederal Government in its firm determination to bring this B i e teli American audiences grip| These happy days are gone. ECOInL O e O A Tl pevoles conaerned: war, waged against the cruel forces of militarism and autocracy, to : Y L stories of the battlefields ’ You now barely make a living and | terests, but definitely and once for all v victorious end. For this our people have already loaned their 1zed RS eounIEY: Although American soldiers find it almost beyond vour strength.|and with a full and unequivocal ac- Second, no specia oney, our industries ar ducing tions of wa and rica’s Record. sailors will not be urged strongl And you shudder at the thought of | ceptance of the principle that the in- | terest of anu single nation or any gnoney,§ olEindnstrle Rt "““‘H“f”“k \”“j_"“ lORBiHOs swar, el Americ e | cailors will not be : “(“ ae an o £ = Beresllot the veihoo e e i aton ) an b nads Ee our sons are on the battlefield. Here we neither sce nor feel war's By comparison,” the United States|subscribe to liberty bonds, oppor et will happen.when itha final (f87ess OF €16 Werkest v Ae 8 ZslETODO e e terrible scourge. Mercifully have we been spared. As our sympa- alreads has sold nmearly $10,000,000,- | ity will be given them to buy, and breakdown comes. R o8 0 GRS er ciw pin F 0D Cben thy goes out to our Allies who have suffered, our resolution deep- 000 of Liberty Bonds, with a popula- | perience of the last loans . indic Figure out in dollars and cents pe“\."if‘ .lwl:::m‘,‘,‘;“,r,‘:‘m;_‘m::Ehe"if ::i “:"hm'i,i:“ ‘fl'}n,‘;i. n 5ok ens to win this fight for the vindication of human rights. For four tion of more than 100,000,000 | that thousands will offer their s phd Son MO IR el e e T T et || e T e D e e T weary years the invader has been held and now, with our help, and The purposes for which these stu- | savings as well as their lives to xellifipeNamaned dtitie pmiount fund ) seenk Elicoroly totellisently and with [MEnira, there oan befio)loesyien gr ety confident because of our fast gathering strensth, the armies of the pendons mims o, the buge quans|cause of Americk what You arc going to lose Is beyond | & real knowledge and compr e e e M nanebis fand Allies are day by day bringing nearer the overthrow of Germany Hiic £ ey ad sBill, sirrinnes ana ——— o Arei but| “We are all agreed that there can | rommon family of the league of na and) Herivassalivoyoraiithatipeace forfyiichithegcivllizeaworld | motor trucks, ships, food and other | U. OF P. HAS 4,000 IN S. A, ie dollar you MIGHT earn, bu < asre SNCE [ 2 3 e 2 i longing. fighting stuff which liberty loan dol- e be no peace obtained by any kind of | tion Bl ' ok - O g 5 Jasuy & Yo e i 2 J Now is the time for us to make every endeavor—every sacrifice. ars r—these will be ex 2d con- | Tabie siled to 47 Who Have 1 bargain or compromise with the gov- by y lars buy—these will be explained cor Tabiet Unvei ; ety “Fourth, and more specifically, there The Fourth Liberty Loan must be a success. We can save and buy for it. Worry, anxiety, despondency, | Tnments or'n:‘, r:‘nnu_l_ Empires, be- | | yo no special, selfish economic bonds. Tt is our high privilege and patriotic duty. In every town Joan, Speakers, newspapers and solici- Philadelphia, Sept. 28.—The want and deprivation for your family, | C2Use we have dealt with them al-| ' yinations within the league and in this State men and women are serving on Liberty Loan Commit- v willl combine o advertiss €ho War | versity Lof Panneylvabla opendd Whel a0l ol bot el Sution vous| *"'«;H\*\. and have ”“*‘“l““’“‘ deal with | || "o Dloyment of any form of econ- tees and giving of (heir time that all may have an opportunity to b s T G Sty Crery A ey pocket and spend for treatment with ; :": l;lt|"p‘:l\l’(:llfj,l;"‘]‘\:"\‘tl;. (H’v::"ktj\l‘n:;\1‘.’}?’"‘\:.7 omic wombinations within the league subscribe o this loan. ; Die| systoriatic | metholh byl winchllie s onae i the hitory il an experienced specialist in not an | 10 WS StrUgEs, b Brest-lovek and |5 0, employment of any form of Now, Therefore, I, Marcus H. Holcomb, Governor, do earnestly it il s hNal arried ouc 1BH SR S e 0100 st expense. Tt is an investment. And in | " 0 S0 Dy Gnor ana do | @conomic boycott or exclusion except call upon the people of this State to buy Liberty Loan bonds lustrated by organization plans in | yolled more in 4,000 were.in return you get increased working | |G, SAEE, SR (IR0 ve no | @5 the power of economic penalty hy promptly and generously, to aid the committees in their work, and each of the twelve federal reserve dis- | giudents Army Training Corps ability, higher wages, health and hap- | ' > SOTVE N0 | exclusion from the markets of the to do everything in their power to further the success of this iolel oo i iater sonn eweninl| e e iiat D G world may be vested in the league of Loan., Let us do all that we can to the end that our full military . R | covenants, accept no principle but force and thefitown Inlerent We Can | e tions Ttselfias o means of aieipline strength may be exerted agalnst the enemy and that our soldiers may feel that behind them is the strength of a determined people. Which will you choose? | " . jjicr voulionog not “come to terms”’ with them. Given under my hand and seal of the State at the Capitol, in don’t, is an actual expense to you. You spend it. And what do you get cretely in propaganda of the fourth in Battle. city or town, and even in the neigh- { {he sovernment formally takes borhoods, factories, stores, and profes- | {rol of the school, there will be Can you hesitate? They have made it impossible. The |and control; sional or trade groups least 5,000 military 1 naval 4 | Ge yeople I 1is > b “ all international agreements g At the top of this organization | qen nrolled o German people must by this time be Fifth, terna B , Hartfora, this twenty-cighth day of September, in the year of our it oitica iy oficonree e t ! e exere| | fully aware that we cannot accept)and treaties of every kind must be e : 2 stands the treasury, o A feature of the op ¢ o i 2 k ) B ] Lord one thousand nine hundred and eighteen, and of the independ- A eihn siclifaderniiveserve the unvelling of & tantacau . . | the word of those who forced this | made known in their entirety to the ence of the United States the one hundred and forty-third chief organize 1 each fe s : was the unveiling ¢ t 2 ; = e 2 var upon us. We do not think o | 1 ) e world 0 4 3 i ¢ s district is the governor of the federal ' the names of tt 47 University Specialist in Nervous and Chronic | W4F UPon us o I theifrest of il Didcaies same thoughts or speak the same “gpecial alliances and economic ri- MARCUS H. HOLCOMB. reserve bank, with a central commit- | pennsylvania men who have ¥ language of agreement. valries and hostilities have been the tee and divisions of speakers, pub-| their lives in the present war and #3 ASYLUM ST.. COR. FORD ST.,| It is of capital importance that |prolific source in the modern world of By His Excellency's Command: liclty, accounting, organization, sales, | raising of a service flag contain) HARTFORD. CONN. we chould also be explicitly agreed |the plans and passions that produce FREDERICK L. PERRY supplies and women. The form of | 5 huge star with the number f 10 to 12, 1:30 to 4: 7 to 8. Sundays| that no peace shall he obtained by | war It would Be an insincere as well Secretary organization extends to the states and | jn honor of Pennsylvania men in and Holidays 10 to 1, giy g lkadeficompronie Jor Relates | 4xan inseciito b oaoe i did iuot e smaller divisions, with each bureau in | country’s service