New Britain Herald Newspaper, December 4, 1918, Page 6

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 4, 161&" L N B -t . H H criticism of the Democratic adminis- | sible for a revolution (o overthrow | ndividual manhood (under gov ew ritain erakl. | . .on. the Hohenzollern dynmasty but when ; SThment, but independent af govern- ment and if nced be, against govera- 5 \niong the party aims, accordi e tin ime e Eohenzollerns : HERALD PUBLISHING COMTPANY it ZonondinaRifEhes e LAY th tohenzollerns | jpont) to life and liberly.” '~ Praprietors. presentatives Gillett and Fess, | were thrown out bodily. ! “Take the first eight amendments Hivian aai1y (Sundev T ented) atd as p mut| ) be the dcvelopment of foreign | Herr Hrzberger says it is impossi- « to the constitution of the United at Herald Building Chureh St markets for American manufactures. | ble to deliver the locomotives. Ko it ' SUILes as an example.” Ar. Wilson b 4 - S o n . suys, “and see in ther 10 charter Entered at the Post OfMco at New Britaln | [t ix carnestly hoped that a substan- | seems as if the lccomotives will be | of Jiherts which the stafes e econd Class Mail Matter . pRSIStee “ALWAYS RELIABLE" tial policy be adopted fer the prosecu- | aeliverad. upon having added to the constitution TELEPHONE CALLS { tion of foreign trade.. In possession R at the outset. The whole spirit and Business Office e manner of the thing is exhibited in Editorinl ROOME ...+« e of an unsurpassed merchant marine John Viado, King of the Gypsies, is f e — : e - ’ 9 iheir businesslike phras. hithe ; - The only profitable advertising medtum fn | there is nmo reason why Americ dead in Bridgeport, leaving an estate | w1y precading the eighth day of gF I | 1 g‘ S the eity “uru\auo‘n bunm‘_::ds press | ghould not excel all other nations, | Valued at 520,000, Who was it said [last January, when he pronounced 4 # & wavs aavertiser | Lo : . rouz &) sl 3 ngland included. with respect to | # rolline stone gathers no moss? the famous 14 articles. his mind had S SF i : The Heraid will be found on sale at Hota- % 7 - ol 2 been full of the sirusgi-s of many ' ‘ I OVFS I O SHOP FOR L ‘{Ib [ Q¢ ¢ 2 4. | commercs enterprises. foxte! > — - 2 ling'a Xews Stand. 42nd St aud Broad- o tal “enterprise: Fenas Ghseiver hben enslaved races who looked to him ) - | ¥ S . way, New York '"'”'(‘3‘“‘, alk, Al-| fields ars open in Furope buf in our bservers in Berlin claim to have | ¢4, succor. The amendments desiz —_— lantie City. and Hartford Depof : O T = eagerncss to sell to countries on the | discovercd i new comet. Quite cor- nated by him as our “charter of lib- 5 s S e . S S Member of the Associated Press. | iho. side of the Atlantic we should | FeCt. And his name is Black Jack | erties” he knew were framod to B OUR STORE IS FILLED WITH CHRISTMAS SPIRIT The Associated Press is exolusively entitied e e s to the use for republication of all news | nol ignore our opportunities in South | Pershing ; ; ) | g i credited to it or not otherwise creditod i splendid imagery he has projected fnihis paper and also the local news | America. Development of South s G T TR (5 i e M1 J ) nublished herein American business should be special- Dr. Garfield has gone, but his coal | ladium into such forms as render jzed and placed in the hands of a | 50es marsching on :;;:»mm-gl”‘;:‘j_"f‘-‘zl"" Iolile pxisncio of Make a visit to Our Doll section—See the children's faces wreathed in smijes - competent and energetic branch of - m— Drostiant Wilson et i s ibeoitn at sight of our wonderful collection of Made in America Dolls, we have them the government | FACTS AND PANCIES, quoted in full two of eight | priced to each i There s a persistent rumor to t which he referred. namely. fhe i posed for immediate action ave the e polsIstontinumorfitoR the/lyhichih e reicnned inam ole iheptourtn effoet ihat Col. George Hurvey has |and the fifth as especially forcible. readjustment of businest and labor { not heen appointed a delegnte to the | And the u‘\snrv‘\:‘y‘v‘vm:‘nn::u.M,(y,r’lv'u‘\"‘t?n:;f 3 MATTING SHIRT WAIST BOXES TRi\VELlNG BAG " conditions, a program of government- | peace conference.—New York Ive. | them, of the slsconcnugetectyelation e iunaRine) Bt .«:\T:‘.V‘(f\”.i;: R are always acceptable as Xmas gifts. SUIF CA%ES %NB ri K'JNKC) adapt f a budget syste All of 5 adoption of a budget e i John Gentman, who “skinned The | clearly caabodied in the fifth to 13th fare of the country s in town Tuesds ith oad of | also underlic the first article. They | K . | " ; ’ e e e O SES e e Tre ot (s ° * | now on display, 3rd floor take elevator. i - ’ { Those who think from the forcgo- | Watermeions.—Oxford (ia.) Leader. SUCH AN AMUSING CHAP. SR S S CRACT: | hosed to apply to nations instead of - — ing that the Republican party has Hosed Col c nstes - = L - z £ Theodore Roosevelt, self appointed | . S . The peace business is likewise go- | ndividuals) of the first, second and , - . - B it e pver | forgotten polities are doomed to dis- |4 4o cause some embarrasement fo | third principles enunciated by the u eSthe 1 t mnes o t 1e S fl“ K d ce commissioner and chiel high | .., intment. Written in its “assign- { the large and vociferous bunch of | Eresident in his address of February | g g e i in o . o i 5 i1 last, and of the first. second, third | ment hook™ are an investigation of the . fellows that have been blaming all 3 | makes it unnecessary for the United thelrish ortiotiiingston the wap—ln- |\andSCthbasesy forpes tel namediDy| Coats Umbrellas Blankets conduct of the war and what is more | : . aidubadin States and the Allies t a pe % dianapolis News. him in his speech in New York on b e . he Allies to hold a peace | yonincant, “abolition of executive | e Setterinei vt v bl s s Suits ?landker(hmis Comfortables control of Congress.”” These are not rmany must pay to the limit."” principle of February 11 seems to be | SOS § loves 2ins s tho | similarly a developmeni of our first Blouses Ay Curtains . | amendment, covering the subjects of eckwear ; 07 s ¢ executive | Cistomary discount of cash.—Boston i e e cor and harsh criticiem of executive | SUStOMATY discount o ity S i Sl Petticoats i Portieres plenipotentiary from Oyster Bay, conference at all. Colonel Roosevelt knows what should be done and With | o o (ja) and are liable to breed ran- | —Lloyd George. And with only a dip of ink and a stecl pen he set- tles permanently all the international S e e e e e e Though unubic to attend, the Mo the war. With native bashfulness, 7 s e Colonel Roosevelt waited until the efliciency, with which the public i i bly and religious exercise, To one House Gown 3 - with the pregnant vision of the Presi- Hand Bagfl Couch Cove Tho. owtlined_program s cxpected | henmoliorns hraarcd he wiy for ona | dent there wust ‘ave beex the| § Dresses Jewelry Rugs P 1 ¢ of the finest partics Paris e t- TOnEoE pitlosLOR tran gl d! R z Tart mGment before meauainting the | 12 Mo a deefding infuence on the O the Moot BarPes AT SYer WIC | jternationalism something of what is Furs French Ivory Bed Spreads g cans will go before the public anc Dr. von Bethmann-Hollwes € : 5 Llon : ¥ - . . v £ be regret for - 2 smpted to specify o K 5 Pipioh fa to be reeretted for had thetll |\ ") Vol expuision of Democracy | mo| move: than the truth in putting || I Have sttempted toispecity but o Kimonas i ch:vmg Boxes Table Linens Colonel only informed the interested | for oy ‘oo S0 oF B | blame for fhe war mainly upon the | T atriking identities The whole Kimonos Toilet Cases Fancy Towels nations earlier it would probably have 5 pan-Germans and the German naval | PUMATY e o con- 1 : e i 7 = brogram Bprinatai Repusican | pisition have heen mugntacently and | § - ndermuslin Shaving Sets Turkish Towels ments for the congress at Paris. Any SMEMICA Edlt aMat AT 4 e ool cet ot ‘the fabric which is finally to In,fan" Wear Men’s Scarfs Bath. Mats one who knows Colonel Roosevelt's | Suspension of immigration for a | Seets fotil (OF & WEPHOL 10 OMO | represent the most momentous treaty Silk Underwear Suspenders Coatings dislike for publicity and his strong | PeBied of five vears, as suggested BY | 1o goi his Job back. But lots of them | i {he history of the world, ©f s (oo Silk Hosiery Pajamas Suitings y ; a New York committee which has Il have to do it. The girls who | 9°€¢ 2 2 2 ‘ 3 3 % . desire to shrink from the limelight R lFhaye OLibeannel e VIO | president o the United States goes - Xmas Ribbons Xmas Cards Silks inderstands; of course, that he with- | Pe®N SCAnAINg the future labor situa- | have made good and like it will ot | 45,43 to expound to the old world | - ; S v tlon in this country, would be the ' Want to let go.. There are quite a | j.¢ strument which Bryce so glow- | & by = ) held his opinions because he did not number of little problems In this re- | et “ o " 9 R : most radical step ever taken in this | sy e * '~ lingly hailed. The idea of Bartholdi, N care to meddle in affairs that right- S adjustment business—Los Angeles | h&F O €GO 'S island, has | Ro i i\ 1 respect by America. It is obvious, | Pime L E » g fully belong in the hands of other g Pecoliicel ey FOR MEN i i however, that lesal restrictions of L e e e Specially priced for THURSDAY folks, B ¢ wing they s i ¢ - come nature mus+ be imposed in or- | BY Way of sbowing they are inf o 00 S A Ribbed Fleeced Shirts and Drawers | 2and FRIDAY LY. §1.75 “It is our duly to stand by our al- mpa ir ith the stoms Zov- ~ 5 N 1 o sta v our sympathy with the customs of gov ¢ srase Teshiched I $i66 1o 'SlIk Hose el by Colona iR deme soliae et RtoRpIC e (A DL RO T e S imehitib v il sl elactionsiing — - $1.25 value. Special for Thursday and with fancy clocks . able Europeans and Asiatics whose | Germans o ediately setting : tude which admits of no discussion Germans immedlately SeCting WD | ., re's Where in German Revolution Friday $l 00 garment. illebiose Swliitelan iy Jblact Miiw ks B Eney . presence wounld have a tendency to shout fo ‘a full dinner pail.”’—— < : i 2 S although it might he more heneflcia : A Rinetor Star IS T Russian calf at 1. lower labor standards and to darken SLE B0 ncle udley in Boston Globe.) cordovan at $1.59 pr. pr. to America if “standing by". like _— e T 5 the prospects of soldiers and sailors The German revolution is of ne- LR e & ty, t r{n 3 \(Imr Pre u'::nt e e e SH N D O EEN \un\s,l censity a thing of ],,]md?s "“dhpfltchies‘ . ilson’s *‘Fourteen Points”? his The Ishmaclitc of Nations, she shal no wond r the dispatches paint H incss of snapping the fingers) for wait - o e | tri2l system Until the crawling centuries mute | 0f red—from Bolshevik in Hamburg - 5 N £ ) EoTutalie roll M et S | L bR e e e The store where reliable merchandise is to be had at reasonable prices. of and need mot worry the ||\ = T hy foreigners | The hideous echoes of her Hymn of | German map is itself * a thing of They're simply not | < 3 £ Flate. shreds and patches. GG ] ey TTowGel i TG @ Ses0 Cursed by the world’s immeasur- We of this generation are accus- be considered. Colonel Roosevelt o 2 shores. The fever of Bolshevism is abla disdain tomed {o think of Germany as a na- The | British: Bmpire, needs lemic i other parts of the worid | Cursed by the tesys a million moth- | tion. Yet its 25 states (of 26, count- { instituted ought to be carried along the graatest navy in the world, the | . i AC: S ers shed ing Alsace-Lorraine) were not united at least until such time as the legis- and it must be prevented from gain- | jlature can pass upon the he did not Colonel asseverates. As the Brit A st e Tnited States | Cursed on the ficlds where countless | into an empire until five years be- : ing a foothold in the United States boys lie dead fore America celebrated its 100th an- believe the time has come when Empire now has-the greatest navy in A i > : . 2 : th 4 vorld it i robabl S unless the prople are willing to su Whimpering for merey blustering, | niversary of national life Of old the organization could be wel! dis- e world A0 ds Drobable SNe WL 18 enider complotely their present forms desolate— Germany was the most sectionally di- pensed with. In his opigion the com- No less than plete organiaztion which the Council 4 i tain it unless Colonel Roosevelt can d The Ishmaelite shall wait. vided section of Europe. of government and society. In cer- 906 Gtites sok o iele petty sover has effected throughout the state pos- So the “Fourteen suggest some magic by which some e f Eur AR i ; tain sections of Europe are organiza- | oo o (1aes her empty ships'| clenttes. sesses possibilities of too great value »ther courtry o build e 4 2 . .—7 . = " fertile field for the spread of Bolshe- | Her slattern towns their poverty |success of Prussian arms. Ky con- Un furtr I i n further expianation of his attitude over decides to step off the throne we | Sl acan e e quest of her neighbors, German and . f ) vism. Members of (hese organiza- | m’;" L storien onels ‘m,_Ge‘_mn‘:‘f . i el e DlltleS Are Fumlled the Governor made the following man Bll“@[ on OG[ODGF 25 know one man who will gladly S e i i - L) SineRe Taaroucea black by block German neighbors in fresh conquests, exttordent tempt 1o inculcate Bolshevik ideas,in S i T (S |t ot e Rl el : “The fact that the State Council . 5 ; s atr f Defense in Massachusetts and Pr ‘rederick Willia America must be prevented from brand of shame to it added the cement of 19th cen- . of T setts rivate Krederick William Schade The Colonel's unconditional surren-| o5 " hest way fo pre | Thiust from fhe Door of Human |tury machine-industrialism SRt i De Many, of the or-| Maine have resigned has been brought = 28. a member of the 323th United fer to England places him in line for e de s FErotherhood Yet each of the 25 German states ! Sanizations throughout the country jto my attention and there seems to =States Infantry, was killed in action Ml s s NS Misunderstanding and misuncerstood, | had, and has. its intensely local tra- | from the War TIndustries board down ; e in some quarters a feeling that | in France on October 25, according trines is to bar the disciples. Lock Bogsared, tnpardonec, excommun. | ditions— traditions which stretch | which wers called into being by the | (e Connecticut State Council of De- | to a terse war department telegram g i the door before the horse is stolen icate—— back fover: the centuriest onibridzes (| = S8 TS TR L S e | onee should take a similar action | received by his parents, Mr. and Mrs the colonies they have conguered The Ishmaclite shail wait of dialect, custom, religion. architec- | - ' . e gl mied ey j Alfred F. Schade cot Certainly. Otherwise Tare, music. Titerature . .. A Saxon | fairs and going out of existence or| It is true that an armistice has | street JUST PLAIN HUD Gray skulls plow up through fields of | is a Saxon first and a German after- | are greatly curtailing their activities. | een signed but we still face a crit- Private Schade was one of {he Picardy. ward A Kentuckian is an American | Naturally men and women who have | ical f‘O”d\H_on and peace is a long L city's most esteemed voung men and Great fanes lift shattered arches to | first, and a Kentuckian afterward. | i .. . . o 3 The solution of the many per- | the news of his death has come as a s downt T e e e e | ElverRupRm oSt RofStheizguimeRLopna S ng problems which are likely to | sad shock to his many f1 Be statement which must not pass with- | of the Austrians received treatment f~where once dead babics strewed the | German nation. The American na- | fional or public service of one form {arise in Connecticut during the com- | fore joining the calors he on a par with those who early became bitter sea tion is older than all “ut 13 of the | or another during the past eighteen | IN& months may require the work of | ployed at the Stanley It Leve American states. months would be glad to be able to|Such a body as the Council with its; company in a responsible position their own pri- | local organizations in every town in {but when called to go to Camp Dey | the state. There are also certain un- | ens on March 30 of this year he gla sumg tha burdens of office. Then he'll show those Americans a few things. the ermine “The British must, of course, keep , Of 126 Greenwood ne Colonel will start the pesky war el ot g aint American soldiers who were so un- There s one point in the Colonel's | fortunate as to fall into the clutches out contradiction. e savs that = : Ge The sa seorn President Wilson is himself respon- | ¢aptives of the Germans. The same : fiendish hatred characterized their re- Th liffs still whiten ndyiy The Imperial government falls, rev all their time to sible for any division among the 7 2 Down weary vears shall men, behold- | olution bhursts into flame. But as ' Ve occupations. In some states, no- ception in Austria as at any of the | R this {he German nation is now headless, | tably Massachusetts, the State Coun- | dertakings which have been carrvied |1y laid aside his civilian pursuits an Kaiser's prison camps, something we | Turn from her bribes and pleading | it is not one revolution but a | cils have already resigned and dis-©n by the Council which cannot at cntered into his military career wit should not forget when peace is be- with a hiss score. FEach state is obliged to have | banded. { this time De allowed to lapse, :uv\; | characteristic zest and enersy. Sing : : EDe : e Sullen unpitied in her self-sought | its own revolt. The dethronement of | Yesterday Governor Holcomb was|4s the work of the Council's Food | March 30, the day on which the col the American people az this hour it is LS s fate—— (he King of Prussia. who happened | asked whether or not in- his opinion | Committee and the institution of ! tingent left for Camp Devens, Pr S mohatreyselcter s wholitstinn ed The Ishmaelite shall wait also to be Bmperor of Germany, does | the time had come for the Connecti- | Americanization on a state-wide scale. | vate Schade has never been hom on the Mauretania were several who JAMES CHURCH ALVORD not automatically dethrone the Kings = cut State Council of Defense to go | American people as regarvds the peace sonference at this time. That is not true. If there is any division among because of the picayune, underhand- There are also likely to be certain | Soon after arriving at Camp Devens impression | —in thé New York Times. of BRavaria and Saxony That is a | oul of business and expressed hlm—“'“""r" imposed upon the communi-| he was selected as one of a tail to,| joh for Bavarians and Saxons, and | sclf to the effect that in view of the | ties by the return of a great number | fill a quota in the 325th Infantry they naturally have their own ways | many problems to be solved in an | ©f our soldiers from abroad and from | was sent to Camp. Upton, and a of doing it industrial state like Connecticut dur- | the cantonments during the weeks to | weeks later was ordered oversea onal prestige. the Austrians their airplanes were S Potaen the 14 Toints s Geozraphically. the main split in | ing the period of readjustment and de- | 'r’m_lm- which will need to be provided had been in practically all of the Th\DrooE of the' previous paragrann | eroushiidowaland:Sinkthe bwordsto®i s s 2 iy Germany is between north and south: | mobilization and because several of | for. ; .. | Rer Dattles of the summer and > el Bill of Rights Devcloped. between Prussia and her annexations | the activities which the Council has Connecticut has maintained her anq was pleased that it should he so | place in the front rank of states dur-| on the night before leaving for Camj ing this war. chiefly by being prepared | Doyvens Private Schade's friends g 1m advapce for whatever might arise, | the Kenilworth club tendered him a ed methods of men like Colonel Roosevelt, men who would not hesi- | described the favorable made on the Italians by two daring S tate to stoop to any political trickery - ; Yankes flyers. During a combat with | DRAWN FROM-CONSTITUTION. If they could thus increasc their per- ! Ll e ol Hoose. | one of the returning heroes er [shthic staleman PRYSCOlGnLER Hloos (Letter in Springfield Republican) |on the one hand, and Saxony, Bava- | ____ = ria, Baden and Wurttemberg on the other. Indeed. it was not until 1871 | sian would lve a point against it—the . Prus- | nd we®should not at this time aban- | farewell banquet and in respondin don that policy “The Councii is winding up its bus- You might just as well call a ¥ Eiun a Hun, even if he's an Aus- | To the Editor of The Republican: trian and not a German. The I desite to calliattenbion lolnthe oo ity Germany defini ; ther states’ resentme teen Puints” are President Wilson Ausirians manmgled thelr bodleq |fact (which must have been ob.|that South Germany definitely cast | ot states’ resentments Honssl VieeclVand s ndean Ard isted thers nude served by many others, but which has | in its lot with Prussia, and then only | sian domineering are too recent e - 3 not vet, 1 believe, been announced by [ Under military compulsion. Before When reading dispatches about the It, & nunber of pro-Germans and pa- e anvoae) that the source of the 14 ar- | that it had sided with Germanic Aus- | progress of the revolution in G cifists and international socialists.” h 2 tria, had fought with her sagainst ( many for the next few weeks, there- Tha: sneaking insinuaticn cannol go Impossible is a word with which | basis of the peace treaty to be signed p Prussia in 1866 .and to that former | fore, it will be important to watch in Patis. and already broadly ac- | preference it is now showing signs of i not one center, but about six; Berlin, su e es, and a disposition to return | the capital of Prussin; Hamburg and joining cepted as such by our allies, and also | & disposi | Iii5 5 e e MI,,,,( nine principles laid down by Prior to 1914 many a Saxon could | Bremen, the two great northern seu- | ! -““I’ ’“‘»“l”“»‘ ““1 ‘_"‘r':\'s o d 3 sanism, which comipires \ery favor- | ance and which Marshal Foch does | the President in {wo subsequent | refer to the “Preussliche Schwelne | ports which seem just now fo be pro- | Sire that the members of the Counct velt, his next “plank”, that the only peoble who have sccepted the “Four- to a toast he declared at it was his one ambition to he sent overs m | | iness as fast as practicable and mak- ! Modiately thntire aish | ing radical curtailments of eXpense. ! iace i the fighting line af once with | The policy will be continved as rab- i the hundreds of thousands of other idiy as possible. but until the work i Tovel b AT ariEAns His b finished and disposed of in an order- e ke his ticles proposed by Mr. Wilson as the wrmy ntight be detailed for duty in country and he did not want to unchalleged by anyone who knows | the enemies of the Central Powers President Wilson's brand of Ameri- | have not even a speaking acquaint- 7 f 1 itsd and the thousands of loyal Con- ably with the Guelph wor- | not know exists speceches {o be found in the con- | as feelingly as a Belgian after 1914. ' nouncedly Bolshevik in hue: Munich, | f1%elf and th f“‘,“' o ‘l‘““v_‘ on 1 cantonment on this s - o i iy stitution of the United States—'the In religion, too, this Mason and |the capital of Bavaria; Dresden, the |hecticut men and women who repre- Private Sehade was duated from hipping Rocsevel Herr Erzberger protests that it ds| F0h 00 ter of fundamental law | Dixon line divides Germany, broadly | capital of Saxony: Karlsruhe, the Lut wh Decor i over Col- | impossible for Germany to deliver all G % 5 e 787." | speaking, into a Protestant North and | capital of Baden. and Stuttgart, the given) L) byithesconvention ol 1787, A1 g | ganization ready for such tasks See it b onel fioosevelt? 3 weh.an amus- | the locomotives requited by ihe armi- | as he, himself, describes 1t in hig|a Catholic South. ! capital of Wurttemberg. | z % 2 2 of the subject. Thus, since the torpedo of defeat| If. for example, a similar social ; the immediate future may put w prominent part | sent that body throughout the state + Cenreal Grawiniar | shall continue to preserve thei s i fellow, sort of a court jester, and | stice. Marshal Foch replies that it is | well known study 1 e e G 1y e has often bee: o has punctured the hull of the Ger- e A e e e R e ee| There has often beea pointed out uncty e e lat without the sauce possible and that the locomotives | " o nentary distinction between | man Empire, the floods of revolution e e DR s e R el iened the early Latin idea of government, | cannot fill the hiold ai one sweep, but | New York, Chicago and Washington | (\ppoy OFFICERS DIRCHARGED, | #rded 1s one of the best ifig an outcome of the ancient Greek and | must find their way from compart- were in the hands of the Bolshevik { =" "0 R 0 e e it an republics, which coasidered | ment to compartment, and these they | forces would not not signify until we | Mars 5 as b dis- Homun Sopd i i { charged from the officers’ training radically a part of | are filling, for the present, unequally. | could learn the complexion of such R i alo, New Og- | school at Camp Lee, Va. He left this | pu | city with one of the last draft cor tingents and shortly afterward w commended for ihe oilicers’ school revolution were to break out in the | them 1911 was captain o United States, the news that New | pionship football team. H a chuckie for tho Lreakfast table why sermany said it was impossible for 1ok attempt to keep him siient? the United States to transpert troops ! o R e | . | the individual as e SIS to Kurope in sufficlent number to af- | 1/ " (o ve and the Anglo-Saxon spirit [ Tt was different in the French Rev- | diverse places as Buff ZPUBLICAN PROGRAM. | fect the result of the war. The|oe popular supremacy whose deep | olution of 1789 and the Russian Rev- | leans and Seaitle Bach of those au-| This sectionalism of Germany in | Kenilwor il Republicans in Congress have out- | troops were delivered mutterings found expression in the | olution of 1917. the tnird member to lined a comprehensive legislative pro- Hindenburg said it was impossible | Magna Charta. “In the Massachusetts | tocracies was highly centralized. ¥ach | revolution makes both for contusion | J all ssible | e of libertics, in the Virginia bill| of those countries had centuries of [ and for stability; for confusion in | He has taken a temporary position at|pheen killed in actio Pease; whioh, it followed through will | for the Allles fo smush bis, famous in the immortal declaration | national unity behind if. Both wera | the short term, and for stability in;the New Britain Machine Company { member New Britai b Shn of rights, | make for the prosperity of the coun- [ line Yet the line was in fragments | of 1776, in all the great utterances of | so accustomed to be ruled from a | the long run For while Bolshevik but will return to college later to| 1", AT M cv. Tt has immense possibilities | when Hindenburg suddenly discov- | striving for broader freedom which | capital thnai a relatively small faction | Humburg and Bremen may be held | resume his studies in ‘osteopathy. | has marked the development of mod- | capturing the cabital. coptured ths | back by Republican Pavaria or Ba- Harold Prentice hus also been dis- | leaves a hroth | | service, he is the fir Besi which must not be lost sight of in | ered he had a pressing engagement : : ) - 5 ich m &l | Lk ern liberty, sounds the same domi- | government, and so the nation den, the republicans will, in turn, | charged from Camp Lee and has re- Miss the desire which seems uppermost | several miles to the eastward nant mote.” savs Elihu Root. “of in In Germany. by contrast, the mere | e forced along more radical path imed his duties with an insurance & now to devote hour after hour to Hun pohticians said it was impos- . gisteice upon the inalienable right of | fact of the Berlin Soviet being Prus- ! by the momentum of the extremists. [ company in Hartford. wmuel Clark of Greenwood street.

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