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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, DECLi.: New Britain Herald,| = rmrmowe e e s o s, 12 (HISTORY OF FOOD ADMINISTRATION | |oiee st St [mims iy e it Mr. Loomis has always irsisted that | Amony our masterp Amer had been met by threats of severs | carloads of foodstuff Very many A 3 NG NY. asl con N te e bt es or colle winter was successfully handled [ about 90 per cent. failed to warras { Propristors ex )1.‘.‘@“ « he Southern Ne 5 b 3 Srer Iy ~EVing the ty’s revenuc ol I < through the loyal co-operation of the |action. It was in Connecticut, how. S IZngland Telephone company for its 5 ' great body of Connecticut retailers. ever, that the United States Food B euad dally’ (Nanagy sxcepted)l 4t A:18 p) W principle J oanee : tates Mool A e S Nt increase in eost of telephone service S s o (Connecticut, Being a Consummg Rather Than Produc- Hotel Division. minfstration scored its first arrest | beginning January | It is remark- . % g 1 A hotel was established | prosecution and convietion for hoard : oomis haw atiracted séuport : I T . - 5 917 v [ing. A prominent farmer of stad At the Posi Offee at Naw {able tor ity grammatical construction, in ‘ommunity, 3 about October 1, 1917, with Almon C. |} £ New sincecod \ Ofee at Now Britamn | Al i srammatical construction g Community, Was One of First to Ap | Tuaa: of Waserbury s shairman, and | Haven County was srrested or MEE ax Second Class Mail Matter. [ S e Yl by municipalielections i ditl s L 1R Bond of Hartford and F A.|eral warrant and presen foye ih | SRS t barty’s credit that it offered rinte R i | Harry Bond o artford an A, | eral warrant and presented befoye the | roundun phrases; As an ‘explanation "m»‘w‘ R preciate Foo d Situation. Cantwell of Bridiedort. co-operating. | Umied States Coutt, in FebriarySRRiE ALLS it leaves much to he explained and e _ | I.ong before Washington recom-|on a plea of guilty of hoarding sugar Burincas Omce G | s s voters' consideration ¢ s oo . e e wmy . | mended the appointment of a com-|[and flour. Fe was scored hy Judg orial Rooms ere . i ould bea followad 1 < 3 onnecticnt E consuming 4 A\ =si; Administrator The » . > A wH X T 1. ! D St bl o] Food Adminie. | mittee” for hotol division, Mr. Landers [ Bdwin §. Thomas, who in imposing 3 had called several meetings of the | the fine of 3100 and costs. =aid tluil members of the Cannecticut Hotel | he was reluctant to follow the United Men's association for the purposc of | States District Attorney's lenient re- devising plans to conserve food in the |'commendation that, because it wan . ] > | . ; i hotels and rostauraats. "he first | first offense, the penalty should be : { compos owe of the brainiest seutative citizen nsider what fanittees working on food production | meeting was called the latter part of | fine rather than a jail sentence. Agaiy Ung's News Stand, 4iad aud Broad- | business men in the coun expeets should be done in th vent of war.|and conservation April, 1817, and the way. New York City: Board Walk. At . 2 more detailed staten { . 5, - 2 5 Iy widcawake sorvant | ;e of the firs aliz e presence Uor were housed at 36 Pearl street The oniy pro tining medium i Sl ot lcav e tuetnender it s davk Ay g e L ce i 1 i housed at 36 Pearl street, Yhe' oty culation bboks and press i e ! a It 0w regrett ot a food problem and, early in March, ; Jartford. with the onnecticut Com- room always open to advertisers. 9 yossihle at cphone | S g 7 Bime L N t . S i always open to advertisers. | Is it 1 le tha iepho ' 1s decided to v 1917, the Connecticut Chamber of ittee of Food Supply, which already company, whose bustness personnel i Commeros called i meeting of repre- | had number of active sub-com . hes | ahove mnamed {in June, 1918, when numerous com T LT This mces appainted a large com- ssued First P s ymms ‘s 5 v Ay e ;. W [Ty T e e 1yt (s e e ro “”; TLEET. rA”.L ing xr’vrr .H : A la ¢ om Issuned Pirst Posters, committee was appointed early in| plaints were received that certain antic City, and Harifc po ! o mittee which was afterwards reduced It is interesting 1o note that the [May, 1917. About January 1, 1918, | families appeared to have plenty of this very moment awakened to the | Tiome to the hearts that arn with | to the following membership .m«n,m first food posters displayed in this | {the committec s reorganized with | suzar, while others did net, the Food Walter Garvde of New Taven and Administration sent socret mervie Hartford. and John [orter of Hart-{ agents to the home of a Hartford, ford. acting with Chairman Judd. At | citizen and there an excessive quanti sing cost of commodities which it love pride for you W. Alsop of Aven: William €. Cheney | countey were distributed b the Con- Member i the Assoctated Press. 5 e Associated Dr exclusively entitled to the use fo ation of all newa ' .y Fhere hus been no occasiou for credited to it otherwise erodited y - : L o Binri from | bury: CGeorge M. Landers of New in thi : o the looal mews | adding fu 1l rates during the war { PRV B s Sl Ll )HHU\:,;" indiveet! v supseribers How fittingly and hiningly ou ! pyay Robert W. Perkins of Nor allyr al an ihrill a pation wiose wel- | of Manchester; Charles Davis i 1 [ e { have been taxed throush charges for bore and kept v names wich: Robert Scoville of Salishury; | held several meeting with the ieading | 1570 Fating Places Pledged After publicity, which covered b | war is practl necticnt commities of iTood Supply | | | i spirit e Middletown; Jolu b. Elton of Water fth the endorsement of United | States 1Food Administration. \Within | the same time ldward I. Tugraham |ty of sugar was discovered with the tew months after we entered the | Was emploved to take charge of the | resuit that the man and his wife wera waw, Mr. Scoville and Mt Landers had | @iice work of the division ariested by a Thited Stafes Tnataioat Ciitford I Stodd Woodbgidge. 3 S 10 flag of Lhe states, YOU g committes, feeling the jack of does uot scem likely t - e e cars bins ety SR Tt H],.‘.,wm__ A T The first step taken was the obtain- | only the entirve state, but was prown ing of signatures on pledge curds{nently published in New York papers conservation programs among the | [7OmM all the hotel, restaurant and|{he case was quashed in the balief blic eaiing places of America. Even | (1UP Proprietors or managers in the | that sufficient good results had been \,n.‘ ro the presideni had signed the (5:fe: This was followed by questioa- | secured. In another Instance, secre naires, aily record sheets and | serviee : ated one of the earliest food | governmental authority, requestea the (;v\'nnu company’s evpenses ficld support of Governor Marcus H. Hol- mount higher than at present or than You who ride at anchor while the Camh mm on April 10, 1917, undey coser people eaze. Lever Act, the Connectient food au- Wrough the dark night of the war| .o¢ act of the Legislature. then i llvnrl‘ had instituted food lovy that would not vield e e Statoment The amount of rev- You flashed 1o the world's knight Raey A agents raided the residence of monthly savings veport cards show- |a retired/ Bridgeport manufacturer, ing the savings in wheat, meat, sugar | whose Wife boasted that wheénever she. and fate. By January 1 it was evi- | needed sug ¢ secured it on a can e 1 - rea H err is he guidance of r dent that within the three months of fic: P 1 . = enn Rt thelrnts increare mis the guidance of your : e , : ; i fder h ning certificate and then “just forgot 5 e (et ek o f thousands of pledges from Connecti- | Getober, November | J Ean N ¥ } tober, November a penalty imposed by Mr. will he somewhat less than the S0, when Fresident Wilson on | it housewives during the immediate pas the powers vested in nim by Incladed®in the anunavncement is ornaliy pointed the | servation pledge card campai committee of food suppl in June wnd July 17 1d December, 40 | 1o can.” The to 50 per ceut. had been saved in amount of wage increases that have those vou bring not back snow | August 10, 1917, signed the Lever!| Organtzation Perfected. wheat and meat as compared with the | Kood Control Act and ihereby save{ \When the President’s prociamation |fame mouths in 1916, In February Scoville in this case attracted wide at- tention, Tnstead of ordering an ar- been accorded L eniployes during L zentle shroud rest made, he wrole a scathing letter, the last six months.” ‘Fherefore, ihe . through the drifting whit ) which was given to the press, in which your forms stand full revealed. | minisiration, which Mr. Hoover had | under license and rules and reguia- [Of Wheat: 105,328 pounds of meat. | the hoarder was placed in a class by BEiionignt toulght havihg estab- | antreany b OGO g e You who v ) -oudly well vou | aln ux‘dy partially m-;;an@mjv the state \|‘0n__\ were promulgated for \:4rifn\s A Pu)..f\v»,' W“'_“‘--ifi ;"7 pork . " himself, apart from patriots, and in- a D a n e 3 mas ' : Connecticut had for five months | trades, Food Administrator Scoville city .was givea continuously | rormed that not only would he not be shed an unequalied record especially | charge. 1f such is thd case it s dfars in E ates, vou | beun conducting a war-time food de- | secured the volunteer services of At- |0 the ever-changing rules of the food | arrested, but that he would not ba § NbEpard to the war. A year ago to- | unique in biusiness historygeLabor is Sohe he sea's blue | parunent torney Clark Durant, who was [@dministration as fssued from Wash- | .cjiaved of his cxcessive holdings of mititany Power was at | peginning to . 'return from the field. Scoville Named July 1, 191 placed in charge of the Enforcement f”"‘]‘“'_‘_ “}"?"f“ newspaper articles | oqp which he might use fo swesten & | LUPTON WILIKINSON, | On July 4, 1917, Robert Scoville of | Pivision. During the Iate summer | {70 CIECHaY Shs T e . ! in tha New York Sun. Taconic, Connecticut, representative | and early autumn of 1917,-Mr. Scoville | ;370 Public eating places in the e military situation in Burope for | . 5 line Un R tel Ly 2. Prosentaily 5 - state. : are certain to decline tnless the te i Ee of the town of Solisbury in the Con- | ‘isited nearly every town in the All Conneclicut early six months when it showed | cphone company is immunegfio the o s nectient Legisl tures of 301 andip0a & State Sconterning it ellon dars fof | 25y 5801 b (co operated patriotically in noral weakening. When the | jaw of supply and demand e z iz New York banker and business man | VRTINS organizations and industries. | iy, campaigns for food conservation he vear passed, it carried | paroughout the statement issned ] |@nd connecticut farmer and cattle Pledge Card Campaign. and It 45 certain that Connecticut| Vith the same loyal generoggy SHiE : O T e 7 e e had replied to IHerbert In October, 191 rancis R. Cooley | plaved no small part i1 assisting | Chiracterized thetr co-operafion in Germany should pay, but of what she | Hoover's telegram accepting the of- |of Hartford and D. Newtown Barney | “Food tu Win the War." other war movemen the entire has got.—Greenville, 8. C., Piedmont. | fice of Federal Food Administrator |0f Farmingtan were appointed as di- Dremyor) o state Sdaily Fan or S AN scendency. The year 1918 will | postmaster Burleson, who has - for Connectlcut without compensa- | 'ector and assistant director of the On EOE L0 freryi DeEinilng 1010 (TRICH most for the Food Administration in Connecticut Following the confer- ence of Kducational Directors at Washington in February, 1918, sever- 1919, epess | life to the United States Wood Ad- | placed wholesalers and Jarge retailers | 1418, the savings were 72,863 pounds The yeur 1918 passes into history | {elephone ®6mpany, with benign phil ight, ¢ ferman i bitter thought that evervone in his community knew t he had plenty of sugar while others mors de- serving had none Fducational and Dublicity, & height and continued to domin trenches. Insteud of increasing, wages hotels. restauraits it Germiun suprendacy and from |, \he company, is a studied effort until full the Allied star was in o shift the blame to the shoulders of Rakers Organized. L : L the Sunday afternoon before the be recalled for the overthrow of | sumed control of all eystems of com- London is puzzled by the problem | tion. Former State Senator George |00d pledge card campaign. William |, cajled ~50-30" when! conservation of soldiers who have committed big- | M. Landers of New Britain, one of |4 Sheehan of Hartford, a newspaper| .joq went into effect. the leadinz amy durtng the war. Anyway, the | Connecticut’s most successful organi- ;" » ;”“ secured as volunteer pub- | hglesalers axd retailers of the state nd the Hapsb their respec- > 7 men guilty have proved their brav- | zeps and a manufacturer, Memmed‘(':;: SEsctonon aeooa “‘:‘;‘F“'f”” were gathered together by Adminis- | WaTh SR (6 Fetriam, 118, (eVEEs 7 inently in pultic and private corres- | ery.—Baltimorc American. with numerous New Britain indus- BRI h the patrlotic co-|trator Scoville to discuss the host L e o S Ve subjects operation of men and women, local o veraze were distributed cach month ] ! = LT aitaats P ., | means for puiiting the new regulations = y P St i - sing plate e “'mrs“g“ “’"‘:’]“"‘"""‘;‘ into operation and especially of se- |0 € onn ‘\ry ur papers us ”i;ol ate | be reminded that in a republic rhe g 5 ie counties a oxvng Il Ehe (i nEii et _Of Se-]ana ibis method wus foune e 3 Supply and Mr. Scoville was his most |« = : S olowns, el eyring the requisite stocks of whea : Wt 5 5 DR place fo fizht i3 at the polis—Dalas | 51 iable and eonstant assistent ‘on | o jnade lis duota of 200,000 signed | sybatitutes. At about the same time | QUite 88 effeciive as wae pracicesd awns tonight. It will be the most | \.ih the ,.Wh L BN e : s . pledges. This achievement was con-l.sier following one o fwn prefimi. | the Washington conference. The apressive era i ihe history of nas |op. e e food production and conservation (sidered highly creditable in view of [nany conferonse etine DML | Conecticut food administration iesyed ¢ | matrers. onnecticut’s actual population of ap- L K- 110 printed oulleting, but depended ¥ 3 a . 3 _ E o - “ s held in ew Haven, at which has decreed that such anggsuch must If. Col. Rocsevelt reads hLis morn- Worked With State Committee. ) ataly e lion and a f orEeye 4 . whic e rEpapers L™ proximat one million and a half. |ihe following directors and deputies pon y.]. newspap. .l> and \1\‘vn'n cte o reopites foun 1 - aper sfore by as clay s, “he i 3 2 o i N RRLed a. U peoples found- [ 4. g556 and the alused: telephone | Ing papdrbefore breakfast these days, When Mr. Scoville became Iood| One of the fitst live issues that coa-{ ware a o] w T e T e ther he doesn't eatymuch of a break Ad St sonnecticn Tl ; o feders il o 5 Ere DD oiniec A aEls, the on ed sixe bd. Ne ou vill emerge from | ,ompapyibas no other course than t8] L2197 NS CO80 £ SpL ok pmy:’u:‘;“ -Zmrwrlr‘,;d (vr':‘-ml .(\ e \uq :‘;’nnf;)l '(I)rm:fl(::i::w’v food l’\‘-nlhl.\hu“ Briisenteiam e e R the one hundred and six he flood that has swept over them | 1. offlers 2 i i pe Py 2pD) g ere I LN RO EO: Vas the sugar|p. S Thompson, New Haven; B. H v jons. Th v L re- J N " i e & & 3 b erh; Fox Jor E sribution, ESare ajora B The map willioe e Mr. Burleson would not approve of | “News is property,” the supreme Wetherby, Derhy: Emil M. Fox, Nor- Sugar Disribution prawn. Kew potitieat units will be | ge L Sited ¢ e g been | Sourt save; vet how seldom fhe pron FALSE IMPRES SION OF THE SENATE mich: W Brwhm. Torrinston: [ When the mugar certificate disteibu- i i George H. Kolh. lartfore tion system was put into generalpper- ecognizec n all this. the e - erty of the man that makes it!--Bos put E © pREzed. Il e o Unlted forced to experience the lack of serv-1 " .. 5, Fair Price Publicution. tion in July. 1918, the office fPerce tates wlil play an important part as | ;.o (o whichglliew Britain and other : ‘ (Springticld Republican.) the note vinted in the official Barly in December. 1917, My, | ©f the Food Administration was in- he' Central Powers by the Allles and | munication in the United States. Mr. he overihrow of the Hohenzollerns | gyupleson's nume has figured prom- pondence of theycompany since he . ¥ tries, had been chosen chairman of It can be sa the world will Trouble makers iN Germany rhould | tye Connecticut Committee of Food toolk charge of the wires and all ob- he remade in t rew year that | 5.&iionae hy subseribers have been met jons. Peace is expected {o be “f- food directors. he inspiration which made it pos. ‘There are a aumber of false or ex-:tompilaiior the ireaties and in- | gheenan. who subseaucntly was ap- | creased until at times there was aggerated impressions of the semate's| {crnalional conventions of the TUnited | pointeqd Fducational Dirsctor. secured | nearly ffty officiala and clerks af » pawer of control over this country's|Htates, authorized by a Senate reso- | {he necessary cooperation of the three | Work and. although Connecticut's foreign relations heing given wide cir- | lution gaily newspapers in Hartford for the | Population was estimated in Washing- culation at home and sbroad. The ob-1 The Senate did not figure In the | first fair price publications in the | ton at considerably helow what this vious purpose of this sort of propa-|least in the promulgation of the Mon- [ State. During 1918 fair price publi- | munition-making State annually had ganda is to exalt the senate at the ex-]roe doctrine, which shaped the for- | cations were instatied in New Haven, | during the war, an equitable distribu- open the proceedings by asking who | PeASe.of the president in the shaping | eign policy of the United States for |'Bridgeport, New Britain. Waterbury, | tion of susar was made with a s per week. ' It is cstimated that thalf O0FR Tre BrOrEe s A e mox. | Of the peace settloments. It is heing | nearly a century. Its formulation was | Xew London. Middletowm. Rockyillae | mUm of complaint from the public new charges will prodiice a revenue | vijje Jowrnal and Tribune, R G S (S LT e || ot 8o much as aided by a congres- | Torrington, Ansonia, Stamford. Dan- | and trades affected in {his eity of $12,000 a yvear, or ol % -v‘lxh‘; K'{I\Id:ty f)‘u‘dla'(;:{ 1-;"5 ,ri:_l\nl; sional resoluiion The Senate has | bury and Manchester. In general, the Co-ordinating Units, ‘ $1,000 a &bontl Wills the company The state, of Pennsylvania is send H~‘l(\ |~'?.’.|m-]- “}_l“’:"::i“ .\Ww‘m;mniw}fi“”V".'I even assumed fhe right to [ Connecticut price publication system From the very bezinning, ihe Con- fhake off the armor of ‘war but inmo | o N W ere has in. | ing 3,000,000 pine seedings as a mift | %, N o0 LSl TN, S T terpred the Monroe doctrine. When | followed the standard suggested by | neoticut Department of Food Supph 0ing we must find new clothing as a ket to France as the state’s contribution | = Titias ot the United States ! ant was president the Senate lod | Washington, but the listed commadi- | the Connecticut Argicultural Cg Tege, » L crensed morve than sz&mx week dur- | 0\ ard the reforasting of the country. | [CTCIEN bolitica of the United States|ny Senator Summner tricd to shape the | ties varied in localities and. as a. rule, | the County Favm Bureaus of the De 3 o Hevon it aoinrea i= the absolute power of the senate.:president's policy toward England on [ the price interpreting committees were | partment of Agricuture and several NeA ansisngaaticangbopiatiiediun jingoistic lines, in the settlement of | the grocers themsely chosen at a other state organization® placed all less two-thirds of the senate are in its|the Alabama claims bui Grant ignored 4 Conveoticul cities have been subject- The v nly thing that mars our joy pible. ed during the rast few months. is that the kalser never - 1eferred to it as “the contemptible American Ravy.’ ew York Tribune ustworthy source that the New Brit- = Problems that dazsle, so stupend- Tl HEihld 18 Inrermed. $rrom bus are they in size and so numerous, in-payroll of telephone company From all indications the. German | six months 3 as less than $1,000 | delesates to the peace conference will ags Americn in connection with its Homestic policivs. Nineteen-Nineteen | kives promise of being a vear of up- reaval politically and the vision of hn astrologist is not required to read he signe in the heavens We will ihstitute for the rags of the past. Tt i1l be w year of iriul and tribula- ing the six montha just fhded? 1 nob e vstemayan takemoven by ool Tk i rocers’ meeting (o represent each | their resources at the disposal of the fon and unknown problems will be | i i . 3 The man who sells Liberty bonds | oo 'V sy B % grocers’ moe ' < ac \eir re: ces o e disposal o e e eien, min, | Postmasier Burleson, field cgnstruc- | The JAAn who sells, Lty DORIR | favor.” Out in Chicago the ribune | (ho interforence of the chairman of | class of retall store. with (he Fod | Food Administration, which frequent- e 5" | tion has been brought virtually to a | gogua.Creek radium mine is at least ;""S, Ui fenders o "{f"'t"l G fhe | the committee on foreign relations and | Administrator's T.ocal Food Director | Iy made valuable use of them Foose d i s £ T olicy 5 i States is | shape 3 s s - ¢ stands(ill. thus eliminating another | gcrving b 5 ilineting example |t o, Dol CY 0l Lo LD EeS 11eS 4y | shaped our foreign policy by bring- |acting as ex-officio chairman Personnel. . T ¢ 2 e - determined by the senate and that “It ' jng at the i ages of orr opportunities nothing { . i +o Giel® or the faot thatione suchyis { : ing about {fhe arbitration of the S M Rl 0 OengF i el by is vital that the policy of the United ! Afabama claims 1 Geneva Th . 3 ; pe: : ' i@ About five years ago the dividend | POrn every minute—New Yor orld. | Stgtes should be understood Dbefors|open door agreement regarding China Dolitediian \salaiant roca { : 7 be necossary igh our deci- e s di atic epresentatiyves ave | 5 pointed an Assists od . cess 0 s foo ac stratic in A : : hour deci- | company wes inoreased from “Wilson in [Migh Good Humor.” | o 4"?:(": "' ¢ preganiaty ba peavly 20 years ago was brought) trator, Mr. Scoville appointad g ‘..”‘,‘, w,,i e R ne Lo n e Cont Rl e hhatbern | ol he Canidn t e ol hainmale) | SoDELEoed GRITHRN OF s kxecin entaliwh iohilla ) GuliRDy il SecreCirviliH ny Ith ro ik h (| Diant an kA Galain: o0t (as Liatial [IGonRECHICH 1 Bar e Ui el . | Wil not be accepted by’ its finallan gxchange of notes: {he Sen- el eyl xebiblia, Miss Millie A. Adams. John Barr, Tl el no suggestion from the company that | of London ready to do fhe ]h_mms‘r:_me treaty-making authority. the sen-|ate took no action thereon. Befors | mepnpn it ord and lnter Thomas W. | waterbury; Thomas F. Ha (de eve . pre . 4 thing, and the king himself walting . . 2 : = E rnam of New Iaven and D, I cans Tate - D ¥ Rell, the dividend be reduced to the previ- | i ‘; e g e ate the Spanish war the government's for- | cpiia Wheeler were sppaint s asbaaigdet iy ok i e It is nol true thal the scuate has|eign policy toward Cuba wes deter- | tant Food Administrators with anthor “""l“"'l‘“l":‘"'fi::it Roclvitlon Qo d 5 “absolute power in the foroig = ed by Prosid N osion i eng e 1 au town; Ir ey, Roc 4 {EgaE tes nowar e forolgn af-jmined by Presidents Cleveland and | i\ in their own vicinities. When Mr, | | Jkk. Derby: Francis B. Cooley, Mis or policies of the United States.{ McKinley, not by the Senate. Rofore | o = TRV 1 b o e ) i Durant COMMUNICATED ttr at every Farnam was calied to head the Red | yiarion Cremins, Clark T. Durant, 1 NIC/ B is 20t trite that every international | the present war with Germany. Ameri- | Gross work in Serbia, Dr. Hdward TL | or2rion ! i T as W BRI i henen 4o profinds. victory | plion ¥ illock NEME mcurded nearly| i & agreement to which the United States | ce’s neutrality policy was President | yoonine of the Conmeoticut sgrcul. | TH55 Bllen B. i M gl leven if thiey did not lead the armies | twenty noints. During that time an LITHUANTA’S CLAIMS. ’(-“';;ll*m-"_ E; 1"]]?’:“““]“’(.:;’ W):Lx:”(h’: Wilson's and the Senate side-stepped | tyural Iixporiment Station in New "‘l”\t"‘" s Cloldemith, ‘Mo SRl in the fi have been proffered to | offiéial of the company was frequent- | maijor New Britain Herald L o e RRe e thaissie Haven, was appointed 1700d Adminis- | pnanard Greenberg, New Haven; A Premier David Lioyd George of Eng- |1y in conference with Postmaster| [n Saturday's newspaper cerfain | mines the foreign policy of tho URit. | e ool o ,,fl;l'm!v:] e n fen it Clly isre were no | m VRGL Takeviisiindihe Toubel B land and Premicr Georges Benjamin | Burleson at Washington. It is *not (-news, which is startling to those who | ¢q States. It is not true, eved, that|y nireq G e dasien e ddHSSMILYS opQaac il isirators A idons idonia Jobin fB L Harbison; L ary U " 4 : read between the lines and analyze | the senate is the “Anal" ireats.mak nited States” is a fiction. A (reaty | necticut, the State’s political sub- | (™5, et j. 1. Hughes, Wa- Clemenceau of France within the | Possibie, of course. that o e el e e et e | e LG K- |alone does not make or shape our | divisions being more adapted to the [t Fanly . Ingraham, Dr. E past few days Al (he English elec- | rates w being disctased, thus | gnter Vilna. the capitol of Lithuania | After a treaty has been signed, the rm'“*)w' ‘N"‘""": e .H"l”w, Bes ey linlanio 0y s inseailonal oo diaizectonin | tions, Mr. Liovd Georse received | causing the value of (he stock to risc. | to put down the Bolsheviki, as thes | president may refuse (o submit it | oocia Fanspions or aeroptlons - on [ chacge of oach of the one hundred . » : : | g eign quastions as the Senate. and | and sixty-cight tow sweeping approvil of his war course The ammost damaging evidence ‘“‘r‘)"' — ; lgo | 2 fhe senate; alter e treatyi¥us leen | L ieniitria HotiNe votes) oni ‘alich ‘a 2 Mui‘ 5 ,‘ s | N Haven; | the American people realize | g N aerate b L 8 Fx- ) 7 I | Ken (deceased ow aven; | asainstedlES chmpany™s furnished by Do th 1 peoy 1 submitted to the senate, the presi-| iocion it is more likely to voice | Ex-Mayor Lawlor Appointed Kenne cased) SR - Mr. Landers and Mr. Sheehan have | afiss B p. Keough. Farwel Knapp, i - ) 2 | ! 4 s their true motives? | dent may withdraw it; after a treaty | {ha o g B | the delay in making pubifc announce- | Lithuania is a republic. declared its | has been submitted to and apngoved | (¢ Sentiment of the pegple, for the | ..y’ with the Food Administration | Georze Landers. Miss Josephine( Senate merely represent®states. N0t (oniinvoaly N G rah SHER N . Lawrence { co iosly as Assistant Food Ad- | Iatiner. v H ] \ Premier Clemenceau won an endorse- | ment of the higher schedule of rates. | independence some fime ago, and is | Ly (he sepate, the president ma% kill 2 £ its problems without civil | if by’ refusing to exchange the meces- | P€OPle. [ the policyiaf tihie United ) inixtrator and ector of Bducution | [, Lewir. Waterbury: W. E. Malloy, b ; 2 i ol i stuff, bloodshed, or massacre sary ratifications with the other sig-|. (ite® in the peacefgettiements now pectively. In the latter part of | xaw Haven: D. W. McMillan, New EtouRDl pasin-Raced R ios oo © concern kaew of the | "xyhy poand with its hands full of | natory powers. All these things have | 'SiN8 undertakeg were fo ba formu- | yune 1918, about the time the Food | pritain: W. W. Merz srrington;; men arc expected (o show the | increase weeks ago and that local! troubles, should =08 fit to leave her heen done by our prosidents in swan | [2ted by the lawnfking branch of the | s gmintstration and the State ¥Faod ter 4. Milier. Miss Alice Milla, { i I precodents | KOVernment. the House ' #hould 1he | papartraent removed their original | sodus. New York, Frank B. Moram, which does not oxist in a. neighboringf! fop executive action af any future | 'eATd Do 1288 than the Senate. \ Bes- | moga at No. 36 Pearl stroet in Har ate resolution (1»(;!\\11v\g Armrerican policy ford to mors commodions quarters lin this connection should be acted wp- [ Xo. 45 Lowis strest, Mro Durani ve- powess that earned for him the sob pers in their vities the statement is- | that of Germany going into Belgium. ' ternatignal agreemepits or coaven-y or - the House; a vote by the Senate | yireq on account of ifl-health and | g Scovilla, Salls alone would be presumptuous if it|jocenn ¥1. Tawlor, an ex-mayor of 3 e ator M AL Sk guet of “The Tiger Addressing the | sued yosterday I'te only deduction ! Let America understand that Ulthu- | (ions wiis pughed so far under repub. A { 4 A ¥ g ag ¥ | were designed as an expr £ < an Chamber of Deputies, the former | possivle is that the company did not ania has not lnvited the Poles to | jican administrations that there ars| Wi ot e maome. L Cr20" 0€ e [ Hartford, was appointed as Assistant A. Sheehan. Henryi the territory, and ook upon the move | (oday at least {wo important inter- op o | Food Administrator in charge of the stella Sprague, | as nothing more than an attemp 04 national compacts ia eoffect which lack of the Senate. AMB¥e powerfut | etermination. If we take advan- Administrative. { Among the volunteer and pald Shortly after Mr. Landers was 3 workers who contributed to the suc- ions In the scs of putriotism. America calls to Americans as it FEAR “THF. TIGER'S’ SCRATCH. Within the past few months i | ous mark 3 | » ‘ | Remarkable endorsements of value of Soviliern New Fngland Tele- | H. Jenkins, New Haven: M Helen i B. Jenser. Almon C. Judd, Water- { bury: Miss Stella Kaplan, William B through the bullots of ‘the electors. In the French Chamber of Deputies, ment by & vote of 380 to 134 It is revortcdton’The Herald that the | solving dynamic vizor considered the prover- | lnanagers received formal noties sev- | own hbounds, to fight danger,ua rway as to furnish asgu Murray, Willimantic: Joim Por-i© yewich: Joh nPorter. Berths i Florencr Sar- ty of youth, Promies enienceau { eral days ago instructing them to pros country, is d t to understand i e fdea) icombarealavonahly iy Bxclusive executlve cemtrol of in- still retains the energy and mental | sent on December 30 to the newspa- i} Stam ford 1olmaster allenged | to allow opposition to soldify 1! Suforeernent Division. Furwell Knapp Stone. Danbury: C. L. Up= his pelitical enemies to detlirone him e the new ¢s became effective. | cyhjugate her. Siete nbver suba@Nad o Il sehate | HhendtheSenate S moie (nn(‘hl.\'nntn wos appointed office maunager and ex- | g viden; R Walsh, Ansonia; He mformed them Liuntly that if he | - Unless husiness men are to, be sad Here, one can sec Poland in her!gnd on which the#enate has never @nal judgments than the Senate, is Mo ( ccutive secretary of (he Food Admin- | yics Grace T. Waison, New Brilaing | dled with a permannt chd¥ee It will - true Ught§ No sooner does Poland gake a vote. T hhefficonvention of | American people. Treaties that are i istration, January I, 1918, and when | yirs, Myron Watson, Isidore Wise i ce opportunity to gain its independ- - 1901 hetween the gr powers at the | Stbmitted to the Senate—und repub- | he enfered the Field Artillery service : ence, than they begin Maksacring. conclusion of the "h& » troubles in | lican presidents have not always sub- | fn May, 1918, his place was taken by | pGHTER'S SKULL FRACTURED s typical of the French cabinet lead- Commerce and other trade organiza- | jews and Ckrainians, and 1ow are ' cthina and the supplementary oon- | Witted them-—must have two-thirds | Bornard Greenbers, a New Huven ! er and the result also Is typical. | tions to file objections immediately - waaking plans, to enter Lithuania for vention of 18t wére never submit-|Mmajority to he passed in that' body: | 1awyer Isidore Wise, head of the | "The Tiger's” claws vemain sharp. | with the Post Office Depsrtment at N0 £00d purpose, tod to the senate, although they were | Dut the people in the last analvsis de- ['lurge department stove in Hartford, | The whole plan savors of faith, and gned by the American plenipoten- | term our foreign policies. Tha | was the State Merchant Reproesenta- | t America should withbiold its sympa- tinry, W. W. Rockhill, and the Unit- & constitution authorizes the Senate to | tive of the I"sod Administration in | was favorable to establiching peace | gan thy for Foland until that eountry ' od States was presumably bound by ! ive its advice &nd conssnt concern- i Connecticut. State Librarian George | ern f Philadelphia, who last night. Acases hér German arrogance, and let | them ing treaties. but the peoplo are in a Goodard was the te Tibrary | ed a skull fracture in bxingy @ 'ive her ncighbors, who hay 1oy The important acrcement between = Posifion to give their advice and con- | Director and he was ably assisted at | mafch here with Frankie Britt. of| X o ME. LOOMIS RESIGNATION. wslied her to @nter, deast of all with Japan and the United Stat slgned , Sent to the Senate. all times by Miss Dorothy Welr of | New Bedfovd, was unconscious and on aeknowledzment that he is nof nr)rl X . powerlil ariy e otary 0ot and KEmbassador It the president hax nof the ma- | Ridgefield. Miex M. Fstella Sprigue | the dangerous list at the Bomtgn Cityd posed to a league of natlons removes | New IBritain can il afford to p: Lithuanta, does not want to Join | Takashira in 1908, under which the jority of the peoplg hehind him, he is | of the Connecticut Agricultiral Col- | nospital today 3 ~ iritt has been placed under arn\gJ were not fit to act as guide he should be expelled from ofiice. Thik attitude | he necessary for the g'Chamber of “Peyry MeGovern”™ in Critical Condis tion—His Opponent Arrested. Premier Clemcenceau, in the p Washington c¢r Congressman Loner- Boston, Dec. 31— '"Perv Mol o & “hlance of powes” program | similar to cother peace treatie His the greatest obstacle to the achieve- | company with Tax Collector Loomis, ' hands with Poland. fier Wnguage is twn powers afree to communieate | Itke a & that bas run down; if | loke facwlty was State Home Econo ¥ who announced toddy that he had re. different, her literaturc i different, {h one another under certain con- ‘he hasiihe majorify of the people, he | mics I\lr-tvtqr}:\n(l her as «\..)M was | at his home and will ! ‘lnmvgl}t t : 3 in fact there is nothing 10 OGMMon | ditions affecting their interests in the | can go farin defving n Senate unsup- | Miss Bertha Birdseye. On January | this city to answer to a charge of as -Gegrge alfeady having declaved is | signcd to accept a positlon with a | Gy LT nt Wilkson Nas de- (l,,';“‘:: ;‘fl< Rt e submitted fo p(.ufw by dubrtempicit® It Mr Wil |4 1518 rencls I Cooley, a voluntest | sauit, sotetlitar o the Bostia R #ympathy with suth a proposal private concern. Without attempting (lared that her national integ | {he Senate. Vet it is a diplomatic son has tost the confidence and sup- | for several nfonths. was appointed | MeGovern's imjury was received wh ©f the three greal powers at war | fo disparage the efforts of others who ' respected. [t vnical that t compact very Vitally affecting our’ port of the people he is doomed to ! Administration Auditor. { he fell during the bout, striking W with Germany. the United States | have occupied the office of Tax Col- | to receive the fruit of the war foraign peley. This agresment as- ' failure. But with {heir confidence Enforcement Cases { head heavily on_the noor. His |el.|. < Vi st : 2 : tory, is now the first to ahuse it sumes the form of identic notes ex- . and support he might even venture Among the earltest cases coming to | name is Frank Di Leo but when slong ralied to endoree its leader, if | lector, it 18 only fair to say that Mr. g, i o Tithuania, Poland. hands ' chang#d hgtween the (wo govern- ' to tell the Senate what Maj. Whit- | the attention of the Fnforcement |entered the zoxing game he took thnu the gl¢ctions on Noyember 5 cun be | Loomis' stewardsnip has proved him | o i ments and ROtWithstanding that the | tlesey told the Germans in the battie | Division of the Food Administration | of the late “Terrible Terry” MoGoy- considered in that light, stm- superior of past Incumbents. Al- ANTHONY MIKALAUSKAS, lsm,', or flgured In the businesd | of the Argonne. were attempted profiteering on sugar, | ern of New York, ment of this aln. Premier Liovd