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1 iched the crest of the hill aft- hard pull and now they are o the ]'L“' sweeping every- It Allies’ Bimagines for a mo- e is the fllies will be lenient is due for a shock too long in- vers have atrociti upon civiliza- ey mu and in e Allics, at rate by the Allies, and with as the Alli pay prescribed W interest such choose to collect. [ Have You Bought a Liberty Bond? VANISHED DREA S Their vanished the mist, fires 1 face and now, dreams they rning, wait through left the home To the talke i shadow thei endless without a Their lir are roads, the France. out beyond fighting chance, marching eep turning out the roads ©of And backward blotting long white And ghosts of years that used to be before the final order, dreams of years that wait ahead beneath some friendly sun, fade together through the mist, where out the shell swept bor- der Their until the job is done. And Must It's sweet enough to dream at dusk of eager, wistful faces, Of eyes that across the sea to where last track runs— Of maple lowed lanes that wind through well remembered places, < That come and go like ghosts bewildered by the gun It’'s sweet enough to dream and hear the lonely night wind callin With ghosts of voices blown across the weary miles So hea® them whisper | as soft rose Of life where summer long and summer green. & gy nderstand- een heard ference to | hrmistice, | ent matter. BT the “‘peace feel- | luring the past weeks | | | look the sh Pand Austria. Here Is President thinks of them: e all agreed that there peace obtained by any rgain or compromise th the| governments of the entral Empires, because we ve dealt, with them already End have Seen them deal with other govianments that were Lonergan was-fnterviewing Sur- | parties to thi§ strusgle, at Brest- i ; = Litovsk and = Bucharest. /They n-General Blhe,j¥ho promised to | 3 /0 %, viricod ws that they are WhAL he conldl. to elp Connecticut without hogor and do II(D( intend of and doctors justice. They observe no cov- with J. T. Black | enants, acegpt no principle but of health force and ll‘}\l‘ir own interest, We the effi- between; back to you, leaves falling, days were fields were ind of years it used to be no- may remember, men have come be- never ending line, with shrapnel than Decem- How many body For marching tween in June, arrayed snow, is bleaker o T, 0,00 PYPe used ERfing the epidemic of influenza, And ber, Where are the sign amid mud the s for sullen nurses Dr. state department he matter waiting o-operating in its toll and sleeping, For gather legions Fate must its he his ey of first riet. in W et capmot “come to terms” with e fis ane morsip oot ol them. They have made it impos: | o (@8VE J8 <ible. The German people must LS enasty by this time be fully awave that S we ““"v"" juupl( t:lf: ol d ro‘ MomFrae toEcthe those who forced this war upor S us. We do not think the same o thoughts or speal the same Tan- |y, "0 i now S bt gnageiof asc et | front until the job is done. That what must tale dreams until the and pow time the man representing Connecticut congressional i | ‘ in the mist where, dawn creep- shington Y6 You Bought a Liberty Bond? the That is hear to cepue v AND FANCIES. Pr s to make people love a six to run fewer cars Pr talks glibly | “death-defying navy”, but | mention where that navy | itself.—Philadelphia Pr. | is the answer. to if only refer “THE DAY”. —Grantland Rice in the Stars and Stripes of France. we must we ould there be a more auspiclolls | ,,0ifists hinting that we ought launching of the terms” with the We must repeat, ident Wilson, that think the same thoughts or speak the | ¢ent fare is same language of agreement’. || EoEREL e their arms | | ing for the “come to with do 2 On powers Loan three | rth Liberty i France the “we not | One way ahead, ts in Belgium jes are plunging while in edonia and Palestine T does not keeping The kaiser e won gigantic victories from the Have You Bought a Liberty Bond? is the nation - = = THE ALLIES' REPLY. As was to be expected, Great Brit- speaking for Allied replied King my, and Bulgaria, ich joins the Austro-German troublesome system, This grip bug is a thing enough to have In one’s must Hindenburg feel to Australians prowling around Manchester Union. jces with Constantinople, is so the Govern- Ferdi- nand’s request for an armistice in the ain, 3 offen- how the his system? hly crushea by the general | but poamsion Y e e { ments, has to | in by the | = N The Tageblatt complains that Mr. Balfour nothing about paying indemnities “to the Germans injured | throughout the world by the en- tente.”” A strange oversight, show- ing how unscrupulous these allied statesmen —Boston Transcript. begging for Al- which to b that her ministers are peace. What a day the same as that employed Allied great financial drive which, | donia—viz: | present tone military commander in Mace- at of bt And what a day on i o There can be, the field is point- rt the time, no suspension wonjunction with Marshal Foch’s operations. ed any ! Furthermore, it paign in the field, is to bring us | . of complete severance of all out to the government that are! question peace must involve | German rein- ans is now be- ance of the army having grasped the secret of fast and un- 1 cannot be other- New York Sun. of Ball signifi have written and sung | a relations | | between The forcements dispute; presence the the Bulgaria and the other cen- | in tral powers, and assurances that the | YOnd i ALl 1 b N Maced 5 rill Bulgarian | Allied troops in Macedonia will not ' i B e be hindered in their military maneu- | ghserved withdraw: The of the Al- | wise interpreted of cours safeguard their i forces now pressing on through Bul- The it clear \"’l‘ho Day"" drunk to hnd pinned their hopes on it They have But e Day” of which they dreamed ] never dawn. Their armies have | vers, i e bn checked in the mad rush to | lie: , is to I e . if there is any satisfactory reason why the libert fl is not displayed more frequently and why when it is put out it is allowed to remain out all night in the We confess we don’t know. Can one answer the question ?-—Deep New Era aske: ris and those of their allies have | garia to Austria-Hungar of the Allies there will be re- | that Jjust n demoralized by staggering blows | ply malkes R.it them on every side. Even Bel- ho bt maie rain. m, poor down-trodden, ruthless | now to arrange a permanent terri- o | torial settlement What in baded Belgium has joined in the in the Balkans. River the Entente Governments s g if for eral offensive movement accord- tondon has been Amer- been assured that that New Yorlk hes and that the are bhe: ng troopers natural- well light after their affairs.—Ex- Having lies in ruins, reduced ican const mercy, the which might | 1y assume that they out for home and look own long-neglected change. substance, is that Bulgaria is to latest reports, and the | sincere in her desire peace, she i nted troops of King Albert have | must cut absolutely every connection cities gun a distinctive drive against the | now existing between her German and interfere the garia and her al- make oy with Balkans. ches from Ypres to Dixmude. | lies no move military And must expect The Allies single operations of t in Bul- re- uly “The Day’ ed. Allies has ar- furthermore no promises in the We ‘have attempted, in good faith and all sincerity, to corkscrew some- thing out ex-State Treasurer the | ex-Senator Judge James K. Walsh, about the political outlook for this neck-of-the-woods regarding the probabilitics and bilities of the rapidly approaching campaign. He owns up, sar without re- | proach that a thing | about the Fairfield county threat of bringing J other | qown here him from News and o insur ultimate success of | qurn. G At cause and to enhance bril- | her thing at the The the Day’" present of f th juncture last paragraph in is worthy It is most clever- It implies that if the Al- ne dawn of “The the reply from London cial hited States Government asks us to oL ope consideration. nish, within three weeks, the co- pos ly worded lie present of six of sal sum billions of dollars, reply is not acceptable to the fear and he know polities two billions dollars weekly, | government at Sofia, then it doesn’t g of Greenwich or hich mea something like 285 | is incumbent upon the Bulgars to (releh e E Henry him it stand phic. se! representatives to whor h llions of dollars daily for the next nd represen to whom the terms will be acceptable. In to coach ree weeks This is 4 J >ndous jreer ree week Thi L tremendous door th Green- If rulers budge wich words, it feaves a open to the | hount of money—the largest loan | Bylgarian people. Mo e h ac- | floated and their will the Allie overthrow er by the United States or | peace, not The T (The Wage Increase. cede S any other nation in the histo to terms, then they | New Ierald.) ! must the present govern- but of rail- rnment nearly the e world the stupendousness | The order raising t pay ment and ‘send representative del- | poad workers in the Gov the | service | one hundrec it should not bewilder us egates with instructions to accept is estimated, will add mmunity has been assigned a cer- of the 1 dollars to Entente. : million dictates relatively ts classes in quota the @ result can be no other than that jished which it is to furnish and This reply must meet of with has heart. the drawing low the | wages B No | | not various units do their *bit”, | approval everyone who »fore the Government a roads there that wages did : N cost living. excepting complete | 1 5 to be hoped that the advanee will As Marshal | prove satisfactory to the nearly a round numbers, and of course the l Foch recently remarked, the Allies | million employes affected. at sumed control of the meet success of the Allies were omplaints compromise, no cessation of hostili- s ties, terms surrender by Bulgaria. for. New Britain has been of no jked to pledge 3 millions of dollars, | who are goal is now the western front | | startled | only we | able | sas | of the H. S | light for | [ W. and | | derman BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 108. X = Town Topics s LR ) I'here pointed few lic are several the n that know, cxist, or only. Chief committee to tions in the that many boosting vond all committee committees, ap- or during the past far the pub- exist, in name these was the amid much c.- investigate the rent condi- it had charged tenement the vrice of of reason this to investigate these ngs and make a report and recom- mendations. As far as can be learned this committee has never met, and what has been done in the nature of arch work in this connection has been done by E. C. Connelly, proba- tion officer, ad the mayor himself. But as far as the common council, which authorized the appointment of {his committee is concerned, lutely nothing has been done for no report has ever been made. Then there is the committee, appointed months ago, to investigate Burlinzton water supply. Sever- al meetings have been held, nume ous little automobile trips to Burling- ton have been enjoyed by the inves- tigators and there the matter hangs. No final report has been made and the burden of the whole affair now is d to rest on the manufacturers understood to be doing some investigating of their own. And there another committee—the special committee to investigate the advisa- bility of the city going into the mu- nicipal wood busine: It does seem too, as though o. some time in the dim past a committee was appointed to take up the matter of building a public comfort house. —W. S. S. the government thinks the paving of West Main street, from Black Rock bridge to the town line, is absolutely unessential and that is absolutely corrcct if essential things are determined by their effect on helping to win the war, To con- serve materials and to liberate men that might do other work, the gov- ernment has ordered the state to abandon this work and now there is no telling when this stretch of state highway will be done. The board of public works will have the street, which has been ripped up, put in passable condition for the winter. W. S. S.—— vour peach stones for the government? We would too, have not got any peaches. The proverbial boarding house, where, the wit tells us, prunes make a staple article of dessert, should be to contribute generously to the defense department, for it is in making a chemical used in gas masks that peach stones, nut shells and fruit pits are used. ~W. Herald of 25 by nmon dia among appointed, city, been owners were their rents be- bounds and was res abso- sceveral is Evidently that Are vou saving Gl S From the September 22— Work started on the Whiting Washington street B is at the world’'s fair. - The at the Main street crossing are and it is likely that will be put across vears ago: been and has street sewers. — H. Batty track being repaired the trolley tracl there on Sunday September 23—The Stanley Russell & Erwin, the American Hos- iery and the Stanley Rule & Level company have attractive exhibits at the world’s fair. Court Clerk John H. Kirkham will be at his office in the Russwin building this evening to issue naturalization papers. Rob- ert M. Dame has resigned as coach football team. — The an- nual financial report of the city shows a balance on hand of $48,000, an increase of $1,800. September 24—Sunday. September 25—The electric com- pany has at last ben granted permis- sion to run tracks across the steam road tracks at Chestnut street but must exercise the greatest caution, using a red flag by day and a red by night. Mrs. E. M. Wight- man of East Main street is visiting in Hyannis, Mass September 26—The annual of the superintendent of schools was read yesterday, showing that there are 48 rooms occupied in the schools by 2,625 pupils and 54 teachers. The average attendance at the eve ning schools last year was 69 each night. — Mr. and Mrs. F. H. John- ston are living at their cottage at Morris Cove. — Local barbers are considering closing their shops at § o’clock during the winter. — Frank Oldershaw is to resume his studies at Yale. September 27—The electric cars went over the Main street crossing for the first time yesterday afternoon. —— There are now 121 lady voters in town. Someone threw a large stone through the window of P. S. McMahon’s saloon last night. G Klett will begin his studies at the Yale Law school tomorrow. September 28—The local politics are getting active and the A. P. A. is expected to put a ticket into the field headed by C. H. Smith for first se- lectman Works, report W. S The prolonged attack made by Al- A. M. Paonessa on W. TF. Brooks as chairman of the park com- mission, which he unwilingly dropped the council meeting last week, is causing no little comment and much wonderment is expressed as to the reason. Several months ago the al- derman wished to purchase a triang- ular plot of land at the junction of Hartford avenue and Stanley street, adjacent to his garage, but on the ad- vice of Mr. Brooks, who saw in it a possibility of a future city garden plot to beautify the approach, per- mission to buy this land was refused It can’t be that the alderman from the sixth was peeved. L The service has not Improved very materially since the government took over the telephone and telegraph lines, The telephone oOberators to- day don't seem understand any more than they did before that when a person calls “ring 47 that it is “ring 4" they want, 8nd not ring 1-3, or 2. or 1-2 or any other number ex- cept “ring 4”. Also, they don’t all seem to understand that when a per- son calls a number they re='ty would to like to get thé connection sometime that day, and not next week. ——W. S. S.— That which the weather man provided for the Beriin Fair this vear has been anything but pleasant and certainly must have proved rath- er discouraging for those who had put so much time and thought into making the arrangements. On the whole however, the Berlin Fair man- agement has been pretty fortunate for there have heen only a compara- tively few vea the fair as- sumed such large proportions at least, that the weather has hampered them materially. This year, how- ever, is not the first when J. Pluvious has attempted to inundate the srounds. About six years ago, during Gov. S. B administration, there was a veritable deluge on gov- enor's day and the fair had to be postponed. The following day how- ever, the storm cleared away and the governor appeared, the sun shone brightly and everybody pleased as has been the case this week. —W. s, Owing to the large population of citizens of Swedish ancestry and the very frequent recurrence of the names Johnson and Anderson family name, it is quite likely that there are more pcople with these names in New Britain than with any other single name. A perusal of this vear's directory shows that the John- sons lead, there being no less than 323 Johnsons registered. Andersons come next with 237 by that name be- ing of the di- sinee Badwin's was, included on the rectory:. The old-fashioned names of Smith, Jones and Brown, so often used jokes and anonymous stories are not as many as the frequent use of these names might indicate. In this city there are 155 Smiths registered in the directory, while only 37 appear and but 51 Browns ——W. S. 8.—— Come on now, get Fourth Liberty Loan. in France get ready for the bloody arive towards Metz, let us at home prepare for the financial drive toward the allotted amount, that the fighters may want for nothing that will tend to bring them success. Thomas A. Edison’s suggesion to the Liberty Loan committee has been accepted and every indlvidual, business firm and corporation is to be asked to conclude every letter written during the next five weeks with the words “Yours for the Fourth Liberty Loan”. It is estimated that this slogan will be uttered and read more than 40,- 000,000 times every day W. S, 8 The munition workers of New Brit- ain have every reason to hold their heads high, and the people of New Britain, both at home and at the front, have every reason to feel proud of them, for without question the munition workers here have given the government as little cause for worry as any body of men in the United States. Tn Bridgeport, at the Bethlehem Steel Works and at other plants about the country the well- paid workers are almost continually heckling and threatening. New Brit- ain’s war workers are well paid, it is true, but no better paid than are the others, yet they stick to their jobs with But one vision looming up before them—Victory for the Allies. To this end they have set their minds and bodies. New Britain has reason to be proud of her army behind the army behind the gun. £ WSS —— It really begins to look as though the proposed health ordinance com- pelling all producers of milk to equip their dairies with a steam steriliz- ing plant will not be accepted. New Britain is not ready for any such sweeping ordinance. There are too many small producers here. Let's hope that the same results, that of providing healthful and clean milk, can be obtained by a strict enforce- ment of the present sanitary rules and regulations and under the direc- tion of the capable health department this seems quite probable. —W.S. 8 Probably a dozen men, the city offivials, attended the special city meeting Tuesday evening to vote n bond issue of $12,000 o complete the work at the Elihu Burritt srhool grounds. There was not a dissenting vote. The question was raised by acting Mayor H. P. Richards who wondered if the government, at this time of retrenchment and conserva. tion, would saction the outlay of this large sum of money. W. S. A half dollar for barbers decree, Kidd and Jesse hoys of ye olden pikers. ‘A half eh? Well mother, howl and scissor, a la Bither that, or some br voung swain malke himself by starting a new style in men’s ap- pearance by inaugurating the wearing of long hair. pages ready for the As the boys including only hair «cuts, the James! days were mere dollar for hair cuts get out the old childhood days. W. 8. 8.—— All praise to the gallant little band of nurses who had volunteered from this city to to Camp Devens to aid and succor the poor, suffering sol- dier boys who are ill with the Spanish influenza. They are the “minute wo- men” of the day g0 Economic Peace. (Manchester Guardian. ) What kind of world do we seek to up as a memorial to the blood of best? I it is a world of States seeking to grab as much terri- tory as it can and to close it against the rest of the world by Chinese walls, then let us have protection-pre- ference—and a peace which is like war and will generate war. For such a world the life of no man should have been taken and it will be haunt- ed by the ghosts of a wasted genera- tion lured to its death by the false as- surance of noble purpose. If we want a league of nations, if we want peace, if we want right feeling among men, then must have also the commercial policy which is nécessary to them. not the commercial policy which fatal to them. There are grasping groups in alt countries who, if allowed, would sacrifice the future of humanity to their own folly -of set our each we is has | ag a| Joneses Shades of Captain | Those old | ve and bold | immortal | | they were mere children, I | ling in America; and Germans, aspersion | § COMMUNICATED. GEKMAN EFFORTS IN U. Joseph G. Mann Gives Timely Views On This Question. From newspaper cular letter I have learned of special activity, of late, on the part of Ge mans and citizens of German descent, along the lines of special efforts to have all "“American friends of Ger- man democracy” unite as a ‘‘war- measure” soclety, to help the German people to establish a reliable govern- ment in the fatherland, and, at the same time, to prove that Germans in this country, and their descendants, are loval. As a native of Connecti- cut, indeed, of our own Hartford county, and born of German parents who came to Amecrica and to this State before they were marrieds when and through ci cannot present thought, and I help, trend am being interested of the German again constrained to express my individual convictions as an Ameri- can ‘““free born”, glad to leave behind all claim to German ancestry, in ful- filment of St. Paul's injunction to leave “behind the things that are behind."” To me there is absolutely no good reason for any special German agita- tion in this countr: for, individual Germans, or German born, need only to do their duty as any true Ameri- can is glad to do it, and all well. And the duty of every American and friend of America is to help to whip many, so that America and our Allies may dictate a peace that shall not have a tinge of German in it and that shall also free the German people from the tyranny their own “Kultur" The formation of new German so- cieties proves nothing to me, unless it is the possibility of preserving still German pride of a degenerate fatherland. Loyalty to America de- mands no German organization; but, on the other hand, German societies are bound to cherish at this war- time, some sympathy with the enemy, which must prevent whole-hearted loyalty to America and her Allies. To my sense, Germans in America should be ashamed of their one-time fatherland, and by washing their own hands of all personal interest in Ger- many, prove themselves Americans, letting America deal wholly with Ge many. The accursed pride of the ruling spirit of Germany is the weakness which has robbed the German nation of all that civilization holds dear; and it has followed its victims over the ocean into this land of true-blood liberty, here, under the protection of the “flag of the free”, holding Ger- mans still under the spell of mesmer- ic-engendered fatherland influence. It is a self-proved verity are selfish; therefore, it requires some regeneration to hear the call of duty above the call of pleasure. The laws of society demand that humans first consider their duty to all, and last their own pleasure. From the standpoint, then of a Chri ganized community, rather than that of their own preference, which would be the greater proof of loyalty and the most helpful to mankind, includ- ing the Germans themselves, the vol- untary disorganization of all German societies in America, or the organiza- tion of a single, ever so well meant, new one? 1f Germans and citizens of German blood are disposed to be loyal Amer- icans, why do they need organized societies to prove it? If we, as friends or citizens help America, we must do it as Am- ericans; and if America is to help Germany she can do it only by being pure American untinctured by Ger- many. So Germans or their descend- ants in America can prove their loy- alty to America and can have virtue enough to help Germany, only a they have risen above Germany, what is. German-inherited, or in Germany.” Only one who himself is out of a pit can help to pull another out. In other words, if the German people are to be helped, they must be helped by the peoples of the world who are not German; and even the most well- meaning German or descendant of the German in another country, can give a helping hand only in so far he has risen above the German If, as history records, Germans, especially Germans of the Schurtz and Sigel type, who in America fought for the union of a democracy which they could not establish on German soil,—if such Germans of . principle were enabled to make their mark only by fleeing from Germany before the wrath of self-crowned autocracy then what is expected of the Ger- mans of today? True descendants of the best German stock will today not stop short of a complete renunciation of all that smacks of the German, for the same reason that these old-time true Germans left the abomination of German imperialism behind them. The hyphen, which, since the war, has been so justly condemned, should be ruled out by all foreigners sett- in this in the of are to of the by the land all nations in country, by reason cast upon them birth, should lead elimination of all half-hearted citi- zenship. Children born of German parents in America will then be Am- ericans true blue, and not German, or foreign-qualified, Americans. The awakening German will bless himself and the land of his nativity and the land which invited him to share its boundless blessings, only as Am- erican, not as a German or German antecedents, The German people had not the in- herent virtue or strength to free themselves; and, by reason of their unacknowledged weakness, whole world is now obliged to this awful bloody world-battle keep itself from being enslaved, the German people still are, by Ger- man, or Hohenzollern, rule A maniac will never know until he healed, that an influence for good outside himself saved him from him- an as the fight to as is self-seeking. The democracies of the world must conquer in the economic as’ in the military and political fleld, or the democracies must die, hat mor- | stianly or- | “made ! of their | the | this, | | self. A maniac must be apprehended and incarcerated, or killed outright, by a community for its own safety. And so Germany has run amuck; and all the most virtuous nations of the world have been forced, by her, | insane determination of world-dom- | ination and indiscriminate | slaughter, to self-defence | of her | world is | ser, the enslaving German p suffer and die defence cause of their German s We really help the the German people not as German descendants merciless kill her, in in defence that in thig The Kai- the evil * behind the they the arrest, or to only, but and ¢ ition not own people, for. of hiding worth liv personific them ople is self-deceived, in of our world-cause and ¢ themselves, then, s even the best Germans, but rep- inte leaven of to even of as resenting principle which serman blood-relationship I cannot believe that tion as a war-measure in the least of justifiable, in the light exposures of German and iniquity. or his descendant in individual tion is at an national is superior any organiza= even that Germany, ig of past untrustworthi« Only the German who loses himself aggressive Americaniza- from German directly or iy savors the ness this time manipulation,—a indirectly safe miasma pired Ge Societies which still savor pride can not help cherishing a false-self-mesmeric sentiment which is not conducive to a killing condem- nation of the Geérman evil which claims to have made German-war- measure ATy by any. of Ger- man societies American our Allies, clusion will high racy, ne statesmen are unaniméu that the avail with ces nd those in the only argument the Kaiser command under Ger is cold steel well only Americans, shoulder with our faithful Allied impress this enforced rule of reason eloquently and conclusively upon Ger- many; therefore, organizations which speak to Germany, ev sincerely in German, or of German blood from America, will either not be heard, or the Kaiser, through tha avenue of national or sentimental ap- proach, or through too well organized intrigue-army, will rob them of the they do, and could, as humble individuals, by an unheralded invulnerable self- sacrifice, rather than through vulner- able world-proclaimed organizations. Individually proved, rather than’ racially organized, loyalty, is the de- mand of the hour. Patriotism, that individual sense of principle which dependable and helpful to the world-cause of univer- sal freedom, must be demonst Germans, and Americans of ancest not so much by o tions with new, perchance, names, their lution of all German tions in th country,— the free”,—by a disorganization every ‘“verein”, all etc., all places that the German self-i inimical to civilization’s of world-freedom. By voluntary patriotic ing to prove to the wor unanimity and loyalty, wholé-hearted Americans no longer German, either adoption or nativity, would do themselves and their foster-land jus- tice, while helping honestly to al, with their blood, a victory by Amer- ica and her Allies, which shall mean not only justice to Germany and her various dupes, but the greatest bless- to all mankind Democracy not national their descendants in wre friends of way of, con- that hig autoc- and to shoulder soldiers, can and 1an deivered s0 as Germany’s good woul is ited by German 1niza- patriotic voluntary dis inspired as by e institu- this “home off of bunds”, more or less which is great cause inger foster eice tend- merican action, by ing Ger- Amer- democracy, themseves to the core, from doing their best soundness of de- by American inviting the German that shall be mans and ica who 1 in individually | principle toward mocracy deeds, not people to a d more than G A humble spurning the in German will, hy a righteous the German people what they now have most need of,—a whole- respect for America, a leading their part toward establish- ing a responsible government of their own. The only organi that is able safely help can one,- of which and active established cvery prove sound and so, proving the in America, words nocracy rmen | German self-denial, pride lurking organizations, give to just possible patriotic example, some step on ation and is that the American we should all be reliable members; and this well- American organization is already speaking officially, to,' and for, Germany, through the growing American army in Europe, in the lan- guage which even the Kaiser, dead as he is to every speck of manhood or principle, will hear and undér- ! stand in America effectually to purely Ameri- government, Germany, is JOSEPH G. MANN. REMINGTON LINE-UP . Bridgeport Shell Makers Have Galaxy of Against Stars For Game Tomorrow Pioneers. Fans who attend the baseball match tomorrow between the Pio- neers and the Remington Arms Comx pany nirte, of Bridgeport, will see a bunch of stars in the visitors line-up, and the game will undoubtedly be hummer. The locals will have to ex- ert themselves to the utmost to emerge victorious from the contest as the from the Park City claim not afraid of Cham’ pion, the elongated slab artist who will shoot for the Luby bunch. In the box will be either Meyerjack, All three state league will be Kerr, gunmen they are ‘em over for the Bridgeporters. “Pete” Wilson, “‘Andy” “Darby” O’Connell. well known here fro day Behind the bat former Giant and’ late of Lancaster, Pa Ed Hart of Meri- den is slated for the initial sack, Captain Bowden, ex-New Eagland leaguer is at the keystone, and Bob Christy, of the New Haven{ Bastern, } league club will hold down the dizpy | corner Casserly, who was with Bridgeport this season, is shortstopa In the outfield will be Shay, of the Capital City nine, Joe Briggs and Chordus, a fast semi-pro player. The game starts at 3:30, or are