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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, DECEMBER B3, 1818, Shas I'OR CRIPPLED SOLDIERS. is indeed dead in Germany when we | 0N \ ) i 1 STITIN | 'The best thing that ean happen to New Britain Herald.| ‘o cnersss souwmms oo oo | COMMUNICATED. (ST OF NEW BOOKS AT THE NEW BRITAIN INSTITUI |0 s .5 homees g el Eeionio g : 4} ith a full beard.—Toronto Mail and I S o i ret to work as soon as possib r Proprietors. | ut not disabled, soldiers. «s inspec- i | VR r JAPAN OR G MANY, by F. A | TEACHIN GOF ARITHMETIC, by D. | done by over four years of war, the ) : - Why America Should Insist on Sclf- Yesucd dally (Sunday exceptsd) at 4:15 p. m., | tors, should meet with general & \ soldiers’ and workmen's council d Insist on SeIf-) " goleman. . Smith | cost of which in the aggresate “ e timated in London at approxi: | at Herald Building. 67 Church St is composed of soldiers who won't | Determination for Ireland. The inside story of the struggle in | 3 . Mo Newl Buie it e o Siberia. | VOCATIONAL GUIDANCE FOR THE | 200 billions of dollars Germany fight and workmen who won't work —New York Sun D PROFESSIONS, by T. Brew- | present condition seems rather men but this will release two men- e LIFE AND LETTERS OF JOEL & ster. | that of the South after our civil war; bers of the regular fire department Vice President Marshall seems Lo | pOWers from the consent of the zo: CHANDLER HARRIS. i e for she haq evidently fought to th be somewhat confused by the glare | erned.” “This popular account will have | WOMAN CITIZEN, A PROBLEM IN | point of economic exhaustion. Horac of the limehght turned so suddenly Prasidentt wilsoohard speclal interest for all friends of Un- EDUCATION, by H. A. Hollister Greeley's celebrated advice -to the ediate ressing duties. The - ¢ T 2 e 2 eside son laid down as ; B 15 5 ] iy ediate Fandypressine Rantics ) In his dircction.—New Haven Regis 5 o 4 cle Remus, as the personality of an . South to raise more cotton and les one of the principies for which Am proval. Under the present plan Entered at ‘the Posi Office at New Britain | witl he possible to employ only (wo | Second Class Mail Matte | 3 ; as Second Class Mail Matter 1 jovernments derive their just | who can devote their time to more only profitable advertising medium In | e efty. Circulation books and press { commission does not expect to ap- ' ter om always open to savertisers hell had a sound economic truth hack of it, for the reconstruction of the tdefeated and ruined South remained without the necessary bread and but- interesting and giffed man. and a de- = = ica entered the war that “no pvr)y»h\‘ lightful rather shines out through his If the telegraph, the telephone, s b e " ®enEhters aficctionatel anv aolationy Heraid o at Hota- | the next fiseal year have heen ay i Lo ) ¢ overeignty 1 Mng's News Stand \'aud Broad- , ‘ | cabic and the mails are not hopelessly | upder which it does not wish to live.” | ™. L. A. Booklist s o e oada Wallke, at- | proved by the common council and rambled it will not be through the N et tenon e et ol . lantic City, and Hariford Depot | the city meeting inactivity of Mr. Burleson—8t. Louis | progdent Wilson's queries of Septem. | MY LORRAINI. JOURNAL, by Mrs. NEa iobs-Bigmociats be 1918: | O’Shaughnessy j Fiction. point the men untit the estimates for i SETH'S CAMPAIGN, by Mrs. ! Humphry Ward. 1 A stovy of the various currents 8t | .o hasis until its power to produds | work in English life today-—ardent i | patriotism, selfish indifference. pa- It cifism, war-weariness. women in was restored Glie « » s should ake Horace Greeley's sententious ad. Member ol the Associnted Press. | il lepartments should tak | S The Associatod Press is exclusively entitled | lea; from fne book of the Fire Com- S i i i to the use for republication of all news nore we read of Dutch min- | g | | H (@)l Shanfiberminitary Bowaror “This description of the part of 3 X e I Franoe now held by the American | XDaki and the many scrifices that are | \ith (he aid of the victors in the being made for the great cause. R e AT e i e s ow o i 3 : 2 i EYES OF ASIA, by R. Kipling | War stories | | e | | : vice were to be applied to Germany 1y nation or group of nations be suf- fered to determine the fortunes of peoples over whom they have no rigit | to rule excopt the right of force?” throush the foir yeors' war—Kansas iile fox g conditions of the present,” 1 cconomic solvency. Judging by the for ordinary employment. We all | oy ain o hf‘l' tron fnaiionsf balfiesl oty present political and soctal condition owe o debt of love and gratitude to | o o o wrong weak nations and malke them o | FROM BASEBALL TO BOCHES, by | i Gern e 1 2 1 T enan AR mnke fien i S in Germany, the people there will help these defenders of our honor and in- It Lenine or Trotsky could take | y° Tngland has Snditeees RUMANIA'S SACRIFICE, by Teoh | L e . | the bolsheviki make Furope'a bed i 4wk as no right to -ule et | “sprignty letters of Ba Harmon, |15 Uiick we misht have to polica Trelund eXcogt, the {rightt o fos - - {an ex-basevall plaver who ‘leti \.a»\«‘; el e e st exerted 746 vears ago. She holds | pHROLG i o »all flat on its back and signed u 2 ¢ THROUG AR PEACE, by A. | to revivie their industries and thein Ireland in subjection toduy solely for | | g merian | 10 TO PHACE. t with Uncle Sam.“—A. L. A. Book- her own puvpose andinterest i p n eredited 1o it or ot otherwise credited | muission and locate returning soldiers | jsters with names like Puija de Beer- soldiers is artistically reminiscent of | the Lorcaine of history and literature, | and poignantly alive to the unhappy side obstructioh to the restoration of the German people to a condition o tr wper and also the local news | (o o0y tho honorable scars of war | enbrouck, the gladder we arc that published herein 1 R e . which handicap them m competition | Hollind didn't figure prominently charge of the rioters in Germany [ Count Wilhelm might Ffeel that he | was still in command of some inter- | Ishevik influence.—-\Vashing- tegrity and we should extend to thos wio have iest limbs every opportunity to rebahilitate themselves and earn commerce their own way in lite. L “From the sociological point of Where lies the real interest of thd 1o Irish nation is one of the . 5 SR ) ¥l I o : G jew this author shows how Ge i . outside world should be obvious to oldest in Europe. [reland had he e g f GREAT TAB DOPE: and Other Stor- | ) "p, s b p A million and a quarter tons of | > ang: icla many has diverged from and threat- 2 T win. | the Paris peace conference, now thaf | own code of laws and her own lan- | ened that code of International mor- Tes byl U1 RIulci(Col Nk SWIN- | German autocracy and militarism guage. Her vast contribution (o the i als which has naturally developed | '°7) have been destroyed education and civilization of Confi- ' from national customs or “folk- gt nental Europe long centuries before | ways' and which has permitted civ- | “OVE OF AN UNKNOWN SOLDIER DUKE OF GRAFTON DEAD | the English invasion is an higlorical | ilization to progress.”—A. L. A. Book. | — manuscript found in a dugout THE DIFFERENCE. fuel were conserved by daylight sav- It makes a difference whether you | ing, d now we should like to know { who's got it.—-Portland Press. @ . 5 ave in Congress or in the army. If NO REDUCTION OF ARMAMENTS. | h e e i Wins o S Chl e JOUSEIe fa i ember SAELESS It is announced from Washington { & ~HEIS s Spencer Churchill, Briti are aaife in style attacking President | that the restrictions om the use of | fact which no campaign of falsehood | list. SR o t the restrictions can alter. Geographically, the boun. | " MAN WHO SURVIVED, by Camille Marbo. 't d e i 5 N Dot el “A curious study in personalities | Furopean food situaticn hag improv- o "Y’IIOP Iyr;d n;-\\v urrendered her | ART OF TEACHING AND STUDY- N orkediont by the fantasiic device of Dies at Age /of 97 Yoars—Was = ed.” Co-operation by Furopean hrew- | national rights. Ireland fought against ING LANGUAGES, by F. Gouin having a dead friend's soul enter a Wilson vesterday demonstrates what | eries might help in n~xpediting the | English rule in every century =inen | S (;idip?"bodx “nh'mé Ealist ithat Retived Army Officer, - . 72 3 25 . % B s y 2 .3 .~ the spldiers think of the Chief ¥xecu- | improvement.—New York World. :14— During the last 125 years she ' CRBATIVE IMPULSE IN INDUS- passed through both their brains. - : her naval strength, a decision that dis | {ive fought against it in five armed rebel- | TRY, by Helen Marot et matslarincialltvitoriitnia [ L ondol BEDeC Ml e THe bk e o Turkey at halt & dollar a pound is | Hions—1798, 1803, 1845, 1867 and “The author, a worker of the Bu- | {rck the book is one which will meet not that much more nutritious than } 1916. It is now-admitted in a pum- | reau of FEducational Experiments. | tne new interest in psychic flelds.” tripe, but more sentiment attaches to | phict issued by Professor Dixon, of | makes a plea for better workman- | & 1. a. Booklist . 3 it on Thanksgiving day.—Concord | the University of Glasgow, and re- | ship through creative joy and social- | ~~ " % . This the first official statement the roaving cheers of morve than Aoty printed with approwal by the London | ized effort her than th chan- | o S Roney 2,000 Amcrican soldiers returning . g I RO i Al tt " | MERRY ANDREW, by F. Roney from any of the powers regarding s e S L - e Times and the London Observer ‘hat | ical efficiency which highly special- Weir, one of the must important matters to ish (ransport Lapland. From A SONG FOR HFRO! crowded riggings. from densely i packed rails, and from every A song for the heroes who saw the Minister Churchill's znnouncement porthole the homecoming fighting gt men shouted erectines to their Presi-tent Minister of Muniticns, makes plain, | Wilson But the fellowing extract | grain by prewers will be retained | In a statement published elsewhere, | from an Assoclated Press dispatch | SfOr an indefinitg period” until “the daries of lreland were fixed by Giod. Books For Teacl describing the sailing of President | Head of Fitz-Roy Pamily in England that England hus irrevocably deter- mined not to pernit the reduction of Grafton, head of the Fitz-Roy family {and a retired general in the Britisn} army, is dead. He was 97 vears old Augustus Charles Lennox Fitz-Roy seventh Duke of Grafton. was born in sipates uny anticipated armament re- Across the waters of the Hud- son just s the Geoige Washing- vislon program. ton was about to sail there came the so-called “rebels” of 1916 appear | ized machines have brought about” | < siory of a girl, or two girls, who | 1521 and entered the British army ir to be “the leaders of a dominating | —A. L. A. Booklist help te matge (ko mortgage on their | (357, becoming colonel of the Cold majority” of the Irish people A timely and significant work.”— | go0 a0 gt . It 1s @ clean, | Stream Guards and retiring with the n 7. The so-called Act of Union was | Springfield Republican. | Wholesome story that will Interest | rank of general in 1881. He serve S50 St passed in 1800 by a parliament shame- | | older people us well.'—Publisher's | In the Crimean campaign and was ai) And took their place in the hattle | Jessly bribed and corrupted by . the | it | note. equerry to Queen Victoria during mos B P . . line: English government. Only a smpi | FRUCATION FOR LIFE, by F. G. | § e of her reign. The duke was an hon ritain’s real intentions. It is fat No question there of whether s- | They were walls of granite and gates | paction of the 300 members of ihat| < Peabody. | OUT OF THE SILENCES, by Mary |orary equerry to King George. I and final ident Wilson vViolated the Constitu- of brass parliament were elected and four- sty OF ERROoN IO I ey T heir is the Earl of Eustgn 2l g © 2 Sl IO SLEEY | fitths of the Trish people (the Catho- A \Qlume of deep. human infer | Lppg gtory opens In Manitobu, near - . question there of whether the Presi- | ana thew huried them back in @ | 1) had no representation therein. BOS | the Dakota line in the winter of the IPALIANS VISIT BOSTON. be discussed 4t the pcace congress. leaves no room for doubt as to Great “We en the peace vonferemce |tion by starting for Burope. No with ths absolute determination that | The remaining members were Enslish e ! carly eighties.” . dent is cham n of manki E 5 cheers i ' 2 | 3 h h e And r‘!r:"rfiln‘:-lm|h\‘\?1‘1 cho on over the | Nominees and “placemen.” Gladstone | EVOLUTION OF A DEMOCRATIC SRS ERLGT Wheoy LIS et G i i uman rights or merely plaving poli- | e said of the union: “I know of no SCHOOL SYSTEM, by C. H. Judd. TAbrary Notes. Points of Interest. right to maintain our naval! defense,” | tics. Your U. §. warrior knows & vears. 2 blacker or fouler transaction in fhe ST The Tnetitute library has received ] ’ ’ i i e o - - e | e bpeal for novels for sol-| Boston, Dec. 4.—The Italisn inkl 18 the opcning sentence of Minister | man when he sees one. And a song for the end, for the glor- | Mistory of man. FOUNDATIONAL STUDY IN THE ;an urgent app: mission to this country arrived h ¢ g S. The net results of English dom- | PEDAGOGY OF ARITHMETIC, by | diers in the hospitals and on trans- s o 3 ed hera . today and was greeted by repr up over | ination in Ireland are the destruction H. B. Howell ports. y and was greeted by represgnta. The supply of suitable gift books is | tives of the Italian government and no limitation thall ke imposed on our Churchill's warnink. This leaves no e ious end. i T frT | And the soldiers marching 1 : chance (or hair spiittine. “Naval de- MUST HAVE FAIR CHANCE. e b of industries, ruinous taxation and de ** i f books | labor leaders. Later, the party w. Representatives of industry in con- | Of the broken roads in gallant | Population. Ireland’s population HISTORY IN THIE BLEMENTARY | exhatsted. We want the sort of books | labor, leaders, Later, the party wa ' 70 vears has decreascd from nine mil- | SCHOOL. by C. N. Kendall and F. | voung men like. Theology and old | S3cOriel 1o Qiiney for an inepection BTl i S ¢ mili StryKer, oAl o ;s i not apply. r Squantum ship. Britain—the maintenance of the | | S Homin. T hetoss b k the {lion to four and one-half million,| Stryker, (Riverside educational | school books need nof rore ¥ is no move than falr when they seek | TN ’1“‘”1’(‘“ heroes ShosRto0 U hils et ot aelait hae el onoRromhe) | "“If you have n soldier in France to | bullding plants of the Bethlehen a free hand in readjusting business | who looked on life, and with even | threefold. Enzland taxes Ireland this * e { whom you conld only send fl'tdmrk)r f:;:’:ux ding ‘f‘urnorflvt;on and the ex world to a peace basis. Their chief alarm breath Present year (and controls every cent | HISTORY OF EDUCATION, by P. J. | little hox here is an opportunity fo sive granite quarries in that . itv) IR o < spirit to expand. If | The mission will return here tanight : o e o e - . Gby Tt or HoE inla st i Ste McCormick YouchChristimasian i Continuing the statement says: “We | seems to be over governmental inter- F‘meg(’;:;‘o winds from the gulfs o el rfi:::"”:fi,;’fh}’;e(nln]':’xl'(’-s you haven't a soldler you have a |to be entertained for two days by city] ference lanal they are Sconfdent of [im i tiis 00 Tinning on over the | and! between' foux andisisl Eimos! the | HOW IO MEACH ARITHMPETIC, by / chance toido| twice as much forithe jjand state suthoritics: guiding _heir ship through the shoa s tl respective o o e of| J.C Brewn and L. D. Coffman. | bovs who navent folbe Sxpnns graves- len respective to revenue of | 2 B Y e i nave haan =g PROBLEM OF THE SOUL, by B | plucked bare there are hook stores. A. Holmes ’ | We will buy them for you if you m:e. Absence of Messages From Wilson| i S t bring them In, tele- A i : foam——- matic and consular service throughout 3 < i B eLE youscanng mer Pl Reassures Washington Officials, vent the British navy maintaining its | the repetiticn of abuses such as the | on to America—on to home! the world and a national government. | SUPERVISION OF ARITHMBTIC, | phone and we Wi = Boiey by W. A. Jessup and L. D. Coffman. | Now is the accepted time fense” can mean only one thing to | 1 vention at Atlantic City ask for what France i most powerful sea force in the e do not intend, no matter what argu- ments and appeals are addressed to | & - if allowed to do so in their own way. | Over the battle-wrecks—over the | Greece, Bulgaria, Switzerland or Ser- 5, to lend ourselvesinany way to any | Euery precaution should be exor. waves—- bia. A1l these countries majintain an fetterimg restrictions which will pre- [ cised hy the government to prévent | OV, the scarred felds—over the jarmy (some a flcet as well), a diplo- Washington, Dec. 5.—Rvidently al well-tried and well-deserved su- | Public has experienced in the past, 9. Of the national councils of er was well today aboard the transpord but Big Busincss should nol be ham- 18 pressed peoples that have appealed 1o George Wushington upon whiel strung merely l-ecause it represents | And o song for the others. the heroes | our president. none was more clear * nections which seem to have incress- | President Wilson and his party are Siain representative of the will of its nation | | ed rather than decreased their sensi- | crossing the Atlantic. No word had In Argonne Farest-—in S(. Gobain-— [ than the Dublin Mansion House con- |15 Really -Shell-S Without Any | tivity is indicative of hreakdown ot | come to the White House, nor had the In the fowery meadows of Picardy ference (not Llovd George's hand- "Action of the Shells. “!'the nerves. Rather the reverse! navy department heard from Admirl thankful as it can face a concrete, | €ver, there should be a frank under- | Tn Belgium—in [taly picked convention), which spoke for| (“F. H. P.” In the Manchester Guar-j A truer view of this tangle of phe- | Mayo, commanding the convoy, angd standing between the government | From brave Montello to the sea 80 per cent. of the Irish people in Tre- it . nomena is obtained If it is realized | if there had been the slightest ineiy end industcy. A fixed policy should land in its addvess dated June 11, A few days ago irench fever and | that the troubles described above are|dent worth reporting since the ships Minister Churchul serves notice on |t 00 00l ol encotrage ca A song for the heroes gone on u‘hvfl.fl 11918, Our patriots conld muster no [ shell shock were descrbed as “possi- | predominantly mental in nfl?“:e» Htififl 1}“‘;{ /f\i_ffl_f‘rlfs_un shores yesterday a the world that Great Britain will not | j.q i s 48€ AP~ | mo join the hosts of the marching |such proportion for independence h | bly the two toughest problems that| agaln we meot the difficulty that this|radio flash would have come promptly, 1a] to expand and produce and at the deag— 1776. Democracy is majority rule, in | this war has presented to medical{ word has acquired an artificially nar- | to the Arlington naval towers accept the fourth in Presigent Wil- | same time protect the public from | A song fhr the sculs that could behtly | no nation is unanimity found. fng- | science.” Both these terms now ssam‘»rm\-;-,a Imogmm: i o 'h|;av:u :s :w“ ) “"hlie:' }){:’ms:]‘ nltfivmh say the presi e A : fling , S 5| to be admitted into our everyday vo- | medical science. A “mental ¢ase. ent left his desk clean and until son’s “Fourteen Points,” which reads: | Pirates. There s nothing to fear from S‘\.»vn{l lite away as a little thing :i:dw:?fd:; x.,';]" r(.”,:;,(:' :(.“,“.,Dvm.?nsl:s ‘ff.buelaf\-, and have even xlrc:;):pml el e parlance of the general hospital, | there are developments no instructions {he honest business wasn: For the sake of the mighty meed of | b ‘v g0% “0 Pl s the | ologetic inverted commas which | often describes a person who is likely | are needed for the conduet of the SUCE Rt e i, 56 R SER St PeO | arked their hesitating popular ter-| to become. or is mlrr‘e::z,h‘r‘:;lt(gij‘?)n\' executive offices. ovu Y o LAR. The need of the ages coming to birth > F YR minology. insane. Now the nervous br ) - be reduced to the lowest point con- = i \‘”‘ THT n\m,T i of1:}n~ J;;;};T‘:m:.',d, T?r\:h‘\h;md hoqe It 1sgvl'obahl) unfortunate that the | much more often than not, does 10t TO SPEND $203,000.000 Fhose who find enjoyment in| (jj praize for the daring God who Al e 5 MAeren- | om “‘shell shock,” at any rate, has|fall into this category at all: Never- MIETA0e mentally jugeling hillions were sur- zave el Ao ;’,.f;,“a,‘:fl;’,fn'(,hff established itself o quickly anij theless, in the true sense of :he word, | George W. Perkins and M. L. Schif other statements by President Wilson, | feited until their brains became dizzy | Herole souls that CEpe ke and."| irmly among us. For its apparent|it is a “mental case.” So also is the| p;,oting War Work Expenditures grave et o definiteness and its specifie reference | ordinary man who is suffering from i hro i the interprotation of this “point” is | While poring over the annmal report | L BYA¥C Lo 0 vouth | Civil War: “Not less than 40 per | o war conditions as its cause may do | 4 polgnant sorrow, a great anxiety, or | New York, Dec. f—George W. Per- of William G. McAdoo, as Secretary | mo challenge dieaster and die for | CeRf. of the enlisted men in tha|much to blind us to two vitally im-|a severe moral conflict. As a conti- [ Kins and Mortimer L. Schiff, repre- Union Army were of Trish blood.”— | portant facts. These are, first, that{nental physician has said: “Those | senting the ¥. M. C. A. and the Joseph I. C. Clarke shell shock, or rather the class of| ‘suffering from nerves' are sick in |Jewish Welfare Board, engazed pass. ! In the present World W IneE e et ana aiRondars whohfitcon® | mpixit ) age on the steamer Maurctania today figures were marched up and down |, EU0 (o0t dle that the truth | third of the army and over 40 per | notes, is always with us, in war and| And It is here that we find tho|for Burope, where they will super- srgument for the continued existence | the page, striking at the enemy here, i may live! cent. of the navy are of Irish hlood, | peace; and secondly, that the tough-|kevstone of the modern conception | Vise the expenditure of the 5?;‘\3.004\,- of the greatest nuvy in histery entering the employ of farmers therd £ according to Josephus Daniels, secro- | ness of the problem which it nogw pre- | of the nervous breakdow:. No longer “"»\“- _Hlmtefl "‘t‘;" ‘\‘0"_‘}"““ They will and everywhere with a single pur- | Glory to the Tord, the Hero of | tary of the navy. These men offerad | sents to us will not vanisf when | is tha“pm's\og'ap afraid of using the H:;(vn&.lna\e t c“m of nn.‘\..fmua S & e their lives for world freedom-—confi- | peace comes. word “mental” in describing such con- | crganizations engaged in war activi: He whose wounds in His side are sev- | dent that such freedom would he ex- For workers in this field. both in [ ditions. Rather does he realize that| ties :H@({am and eliminate I«lupl\ ation In’ addition to being the annual re- | = oo tended to the motherland of their | our own country and abroad, ave|these sufferers are tortured by the|so far as possible. Mr. Perkins and General Pershing is possessed of | port of the Treasury Department it | Glory that He gathers the heroes|!race. Submerged races who did little | agreed that none of the pratean man-| same doubts, fears and hesitations | Mr. Schiff were delegated for this 2 ] or nothing for America have feen | ifestations of shell shock is new to| which are the lot of all men who have | work at the request of the committe: q fields, G ihe e b : "l us. Their apparent novelty lies not|relations with and dutles toward their | of eleven of the seven accredited oi- thing at the right time and saving it | occupying a foremost place in ihe | OVt Of the red fiexds —out o g e BV n Delan S their ber | fellows. He finds that In these cases | ganizations. ! E 11. At this supreme moment when | 12 their nature but in their number/ fe 8 & o foam- i i 3 3 in such a manner that inere is never | archives of the Great War. ' Defeat | Gathers them out of the Everswhere, | the wrongzs of centuries are oine | 8nd severity. Most of the symptoms|the common factor is mental conflict] They probably will remain abrokd sathe & E “| of shell shock are the everyday disor- | —a mutiny in the patient’s own mind, | for two months Ny qu ion of his meaning. For many | for Germany is written through ever nto the Camp that is Over-There! righted a military despotism is cr: 2 e 3 \rousl ery | Into ¥ ROUBIEIS e rtiah o i e e s breakdown That| caused by the discrepancies existing —_— RS s L e R et F‘.)\\\ 1?&,\;\\13\1\'\((”A\;\:‘zm." va-:mal.‘;:\];d?q M,{:‘ k:m.vt fw," oy for| hich is called shell shock today is| either between his individual instiac- | INDUSTRIAL WORKER TO i : A o o ame world. | {he “nervous breakdown” of the past| tive desires or botween them and the s AGo ALir vorET tatives of the Trish weanis aoPTeSel- | gnd—immeasurably more important|imperlous demands of his social and Woefully Petty Politicians. e “: ,' ‘; y." ‘1 "‘"‘“ 'v”"”‘ M“" ——of the future. It therefore be-| material enviranment 1 B N Sl Sngiand awithout Strig, wes 0 carefully into this Rut the physician is not conteat torm of shell and steei that greeted | nitions, suns and a thousand and one (Bristol Brest) or legal accusation because fhev :;"y‘t‘,l" ‘;"*“:"m‘z::‘ ) f“hn ”"':.fma":‘(:: m”'e]‘y el phyalclan e not con et | e e e the ardd theu go aheod, always on other items that brought success to The depths to which petty. per-}dared to preach the doctrine that Tre- of tragic opportunities for the study | ture of these opposing mental forces: temporarily released by the = onal and partisan politics can de-{land can stand alone and that she is| o mental and nervous disorders| he endeavors to discover the lines[ment to act a white flag of defeat. i | scend was dlustrated when | entitled to the status of an indepen- | which this war has afforded have|along which the spiit occurred, and, | League to Enforce Peace ~ 1 i | dent appeared before congress dent republic. Hundreds of their| vielded results of immense signifi-|in the light of that knowledge. o re- | nouncing Mr. Collins’ appointment In his report 1o lhe War Depart- The Crown Prince ys Germany | made his address. He faced a host principal supporters lie in Tnglish | cance for the future treatment of | store iategration and harmony of ac- | day the league said he would dire cannot be crushed. Probably not, but | gathering. many of whom are menjand Trish jails for the same reason. | these troubles in our civilian popula- | tion to the patient’s mentality A | its campaign to co-operate with th i so small that people in their own dis- | Public meetings for the advocation of | tion, nervous breakdown is regarded not|American Federation of Labor and tricts have to get a congressional di- | the principle of self-determination It is important to fealize that thelonly as a failure of the patient to [afiiliated labor orgnizations in popu- 1 i rectory to identify them. Soma of| have been suppressed and the press ! inadequacy of the term shell shock,adapt himself to his surroundings. | larizing the idea of a league of the few words arc presant with | roppnie Evers is reported to be on | these little fellows attempted to em- | prohibited from publishing the argu. | has served to cloud some of the most | blit as aggravated by his repeated and | nations among working people Warillsiand SseliBthefwholes s torys his way back to the United States, | barrass the president by introducing | ments in favor of national indepen. | essential aspeets of«the problems pre- | ineffective endeavors to overcome fhis Yl I pay the supreme tifbute to Appatently there was mot room on | Pills declaring his office vacant and | dence. In these and other ways Eng- | Sented by it. But aa almost equal|failure. . CHRISIMAS TREL RLANS, ur officars and seldiers of the A R otherwise advertising their lack of | Jand prejudices the fortheoming sen- | Portion of bl‘?m“ s deserved by its ! : e anr A jine. When I think of their hero- : € LY and the § prains, character and intelligence. | eral clection and demonstrates that| Popular pre-war equivalent, “nervous Put Europe Back to Work. charge of the municipal Christmas ism, their patience: under hard- League to Enforce Peace. Senator Sherman, of -Illinois. 1 no- | she will not apply the principles of | Preakdown.” Literally interpreted. (Springficld Republican.) tree celebration will meet next ships, their unflinching spirit of o = | torious character, was one of those | self-determination to Treland—unless | SUch a Word would imply actual ma- e oo ke offensive action, [ am filled with Governor Whitman of New York | who went on record as a political | it he upon the insistence of the United L:r:flmoim;:fl(:v“('h:n:::::‘x?sn;;scfl?" e et S R S L ;:::; :: o 1 1';_“:”.\“1, for the HNow, thoush BioD cigiie sedes 1 sl M piever L vl o \1"‘\!’ s ('-l i?vhlfl\‘wn\ is .;"'w[u ;rl ‘m out- actually occur, t is safe to say that|German commerce s that the Allies | Yo40* 5 exX} the term ‘nervous breakdown” is sel-| Will never be able to get their indem- | " = 00N RE AL L s dom applied to them. The symptoms | nities and restoration funds pald un- Sacemminy e - premacy Great Britaln is ada- mant and is frank enough to admit it | ;ninions of dollars and an ines- for which th: peace congress should be | timable wealth of brains. Now, not nebulous. situation **Adequai guarantees given and taken that national armaments will stent with domestic safety”. As in could dare the open to discussion. As Great Britain's 5 el tne | ©F the Treasury, published in vester- truth. omain extends to all coruers of the : : 5 - High Go. day's papers. Like a vast army, the | What sreater gift can the High God give, sphere the word “‘domestic” offers an pose, crushing autocracy. THFE MODESTY OF GEEATNESS, the happy faculty of saying the right | is a unique document deserving of home, head of the American army in ¥rane jaid of the vast military machine that He has se=n his men charge at the | sgruck down the Cential Empires. It Now York! Dec t i beter W Col lins, of Boston, industrial expert 'MX s enemy lines. stund and ywaver in the | was yreprosented in ships, docks, min- ward, until ai Jast the Hun raised the | ouy arms ment, General Pershing summarizes g A few tvords the gallaniry and [ii¢ has been Jjostled ‘around a bit. valor of those two -aillior men, but The answer of thesconomist to pro- emotion which 1 am unable to and Henry Ford of Detroit and Co- | idiot. but such a demonstration is not | States express. Their deeds are new for him, A chap named Roden-| 12 If Treland be left to the mercy mortal and they have c 3 burg. a house member, also from pe- { of her oppressor. while the Poles eternal gratitude of o feat at the polls instead of contesting | cyjiar Tilinois, showed a desire to en- | Czechs, Slays, Finns, Belgians and Ser try. the election of rival candidates for ter the class of men in their dotage. | blans are guaranteed their liberty, the | ¢ the “nervous breakdown'——*mind |less the German people are allowed "‘f‘“'" office. The public has no sympathy | Such acts are exasperating when they | ideals of America as expressed by | | andering,” “insomnia.” accompanied | to trade and make money LAULOL, for a poor loser occur in such an important body as! President Wilson will remain unful- | p & 08 due to mental excitabil- It will even be necessary for Ge: e TS 4 i N N congr but perhaps after all they | filled and the world will not be “mads ' (v Iack of self-confidence, so-called|many to market bonds abroad on a ANGFORD DISBARRLED. the accountis of battles forwarded to FACTS AND FANCIES. serve the excellent purpose of fur-|safe for Democracy.” Until the 1dult oLsessive worries, false mental per-| great scale in order td meet the finan- I'renton, N. J.. Dec. 4.—Sam Laigs (lerman Grand Headquarters by the e o nishing a background of shadows | population of Treland is granted self- | upective, exagzerated emotional re. | cial demands of the victors fov repar- | ford, pugilist, has heen disbavred fop enemy leaders. The difference is in Willie Hohenzollern must have to | against which genuine patriotism, | determination in the freest and full- | action, irritability, hyper-sensitivity— | ation, and those bonds will have to be | six months by the New Jersey athletie chang> his visiting cards uncomfor- | brains and manhood stand out in re- | est manner and the desires of her peo- | al] these hardly indicate that the suf-| bought by Germany’s former enemies, { commission from participating in box- . . [ tably often these days.—Meriden Rec- | lief. The president is not harmed and | ple guaranteed by a League of Na- | ferer's nervous system has broken|if they are to find any market at all. | ing bouts in this state under the com- Sncy 8o the first. The German. of it .5 the mongrels have photographed | tions, there can be no peace in ihe | down. We can scarcely say that the| France thus made the payments on | mission’s dircction. He was charged was “I did it”. The Pershing of it is — themselves for public view and re-| world ontinuous transmission of numerous| her war indemnity to Germany in | with violating the state’s boxing regus “My soldiers did it l We shall belicve that militarism | membrance. THE EMM#T CLU ind disquieting messxger slong con- 1871-1875. There was no ather- way.. | lation: ¥ enhag ould 2 o DinneEen ouldidu well, fo AdatE By rival all demonstrations of previous, There is marked difference between the report of General Perehing and the use of the third person in prefer-