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RDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1918, . EMIGRATION FROM AMERICA. ~ REAL ESTATEMEN BB . oo or three bills Rollin Lyride Hartt in *“The Outlook.”) § for their purpose the re- wos - i‘l::w n;\‘;fll'\'n to stamping Before Germany's onslaugh! on ; tion of our foreign-born workers to [' Y n cold storage il : s B [ 1 ivilization foreigners were pouring | their own lands. Mr Harry A Wheeler, president of {he Chamber of Flaw interrered with the aims Jftein persons to fool the people| N0 America at the rate of a million | 3 ommerce of the United States, takes e time and sell them eggs of | & vear. Historic Ations— Bur i o migrati | the same view So does New York's Bt date for higher priced “1avs.” | gundian, Visigoth, and the rest - | iImmigration commissioner, Mr. Fred Twemy-hve Propeny hflflsfem & Bndther object of the law was to| pajeq ny o X 3 aled by comparison. We had a prob- | eric C. Howe. Steamship men repor tent those who would buy up old fjem on k o v W teamship men report ¢ o i S our hands sociologists | that during the war 1,250,000 aliens 5 w k e cxsv stmost ndygiotin: Eroaned, lahorites tore their hair. The | applied for passage home. There are ReCOI‘ded Dm‘mg Pafi 66 Bhem at the price of first clnss storage | iuation was worth a month's board | steamship men who think 2,500,000 iy annually to a magazine writer, a | will leave us . ! — B | ~mall ‘(()r‘V\mfi to such illustrators a” The great hegira began when Ru- There were twenty-five pal stantly m: the vietim of the wa- T. Benda and his fellow-art- | rope called reservists 1o the colors serupulous in selling storage thing qu‘n in a tw n’mj.n\vnm \\h()ln .Jnd when f’xp,”x‘j‘vnr! patriots valiant. { The law was passed to protect the stopped. like a “grandfather’s [ Iy enlisted. Tt will renew itself pres. il giblic. Tt 1a not in the public interess| C10CK”"—never to go asgain? ently. TRloaming the Greek, Ttalian, | clerk's office. The transferspf Proi Bt shotid b ronialad “T‘r\\ of us believed quite that. With | and Jewish quarters of Chicago, T | erty were as follows sl e e the dawn of peace it would start up | hear always the same story: *Yes Mary Paulauckas and peal easier, the hills to repeal do nof | -{TeSh: not at the old rate, but at a | thousands will go—hundreds and Julia P. Baikauskas, land ad state the ohject They merely re. 'At® vastly more astounding. The im- | hundreds of thousands. They have | iNgs on Connerton street ay. thé | Poverished, the affrighted, the disil- | made up their minds. They are only John H. Burke to Frank [oburns , | lusioned, and the heart-sick would ; waiting for a chance to sail.” Repre- ']and on Berlin terrace. flee a ruined Europe. FEven Germans | sentatives of Greek, Italian and Jew- The estate of Anthony Paujuckat would come. There was proof of this. | ish newspapers back this up. Theyv to Mary Paulauckas, land andbuild- And when America entered the war : should know. Miss Mary Preston, at ings on Connerion street the proof grew stronger. Miss Mary | the Tmmigrants’ Protective Teague, a Charles F. FEIlis, trustee, FEthel McAnley and Miss Blanche Slo- | Hull House institution, agrees with (rban land on Bain, Woleott an{East Bl feel 1iké | fitc fiving -away and they resisteq|C!M heard Germans say even then, | the editors. Her Polish assistant Streets iich he may | tho jast. but without avail. Now | The minute this horror is over we | adds, “The Austrian Poles will go Max Fishman to Anthony Pelaus. the indem- | (00 come back with a move to re.| Shall hasten to America.” Returning | first.” kas, land and huildings on Hden Soawichi a1 home, they published what they had Now it ix true that the impending | street Aaother camouflage move consists| Neard. Tt was most convincing. and | exodus may be regarded as in part a | Max Fishman fo Anthony Petius- 5 \ in sending the proposition to the ju- | !ed to serious conclusions. If Ger- | mere expression of the homing in- | Kkas and others, land and building on hing _\'un'x;ml 2°t giciary committee instead of to ths| MANS planned to come. how much | stinet long restrained. To multitudes ese days is Wheth- 5, ,p1ic health and safety committee | MOTe eagerly wounld Serbs, Ruman- | of Greeks and Ttalians ocean liners A vation Army = Was ypere it helongs. ians, Russians, and western Asiatics ' are ferry-boats, residence in America Kas and others, land and buildingsen g8 boys in the service.— This is the sort of movement which | Plan to come? | a sojourn, and migration a shuttle- | Belden street Daily News. hrings discredit exislation. And But reflect. We have stiffened our | cock adventure of drudging here, Max Fishman to Anthony Petrag 8 e the surprising part of it aM is that | immigration laws since 1914. They | spending at home, and returning to | Kas. land and buildings on Day strat I8 well. that the quarreling fac- men of standing in their communities | NOW provide a literacy test ruling out | drudge anew. For yvears now these Bessie Andrews and others to fi« ons should be told that they cannot .vil] lend themselves to schemes of| “all aliens over “sixteen years of age | peopla have heen unable to revisit | Bodwell Tand Company, land an A, 3 come asking favors at the peace CON- this character. No one will vote for physically capahle of reading who | Flurope. Savings have accumulated. Duildings on Hillerest avenue estatd transfers in the city thisweek AC‘ cording to the records of the tow™d ofers 1G build« quest, in an innocent kind of way, ! repeal of a certain statute. When “— | you look it up you find that it relates fo the egz law There was a hitter fight against this s taround | Oy 04 Those who would gain | e 2 few " jeceiving the public saw their taJohn Belden street Max Fishman to Anthony Pefrus v gress with drawn swords and cocked this repeal who would properly aad| cannot read the Fnglish language or | Soon restraint will cease, and home Flizabeth A. White to John W. Mq receiver. \The seeohid is tain seerefly con- | guns in their hands.—Boston Tran- reasonably protect the public against|some other language or dialect.” That | will go the [talians and Greeks. To [(‘abe and others, ope-half interest it ¥ T i o B | land and buildings*n Milk street B ) ) ¢ v g e hd Marshan | seript. those who would deeeive alters things considerably. Then, too, | stay? ilar in structp®, “althoush™*¥mer ) &goline a Marshal S : G 5y % - e governments abroad have a new and They think not. As they look at it, | James F. White to John W. McCabg and others, one-half interest in land . it ‘Broviges’ for the jglates ‘:rc‘hm:n\’g% g oron: asslsntie to Members of {he new. aviation Why America Went Dry. {remendously compelling motive for | it is the old experience over again, Bt of a1l taxes payable to thasfate | Nerseli¥all SHEglman “islinda south | J(uad of the New York police Wil (Letter in Springfield Republican) | keeping their people at home. They | only with added incentives this time. | And buildings on Milk and Tremonf of the éguator. . Cayolfie, and | of course, he known as the fly COPS. To the Editor of The Republican: need their man power as never be- | Trapped here by the war, they have Streets i E Marshait groups e directly “#§ _the Springfield Republican T used to think that the nezro was | fore. Ttaly. for example, has lost on | had no news from home, or news Flizabeth A. White to John W. Mc- : — the cause of prohibition in the South | the battlefield some fwo million work- | exasperatingly scant. What has be- Cabe and others, land and buildings &, gy ; YTy (ph eiands ana beiw It seems that the tendency oVIYT fill T went South myself. Then when | ors. They need fheir iax-hearing | falien their relatives? What has he "”I,T"’f"'””_““\."':“" L ThiA @ big question is: - Why Seng- | b L between | wnere is to get away from the old 1 14 say that ithe Southerne power. For pensions. for civil relief, | come of the family abode? They are Sagdsar arton to Joseph Josep House must realize that when she-% the Hawaiian jslands and Australasia. | plan of long, wearisome working o.,u1q stare, It was a new idea to|and for reconstruction enormous | obsessed with anxiety; must see with land and buildings on Cherry street favors of thidtype are grapted a | Pniess thesa, islands are' nationalized, | hours—XKnoxville Journal and ‘wri- ' g op, ; sums must be raised. Fvery citizen | their own eves. And among them not ';"f;“""; Dealty oTpasy ’IO‘BT;- . » bune. The South went~dry so fast for an- | Who leayes makes the per capita bur- | a few expect fo “get something’. pos- | Well Land Company. land and build-g rden heavier for those who stay by. | sibly a bequest. So far as my person ings on Hillerest avenue. - Protest against his leaving will be not | al knowledge goes. not one of those ' John M. Brady to William McCor- only an adnfinistrative protest. it will | foreigners suspects that returning ™MAck, land on Ledgecrest avenue Peter Wichowski to Frank Karpin- ski and others, one-half interest in be a popular protest as well home may mean staying there ihe r Meanwhile there are those among mainder of his days. Tt may. though 4 : ; % s.—Rich- o 5 2 5 e Sh land on Rooth street talking to Yankee soldiers.—Rich- #=7% s us who foregee a phenomenon whelly | After being trapped here hy war, they i ; e S SR »ut is impelled by the moral. The PLens ¢ L s Staigis fo \ ! nses are growing and it is not the | Sive when the Repul mond Times-Dispatch. 300 2 e :)1{ the anti-saloon lengue of | 1€W #nd startling—emigration from | may be trapped abroad by law: per- INGmash Staleiy Anthony _J ber course to fRrow away money Senator Lodge might ‘well be = North Carolina told me that mhen a | America. Shrewd observers predict | manently at that. Moreover. there is Bakanas. land and buildings on Mil- the asked some plain questions. Does Those who are fighting to prevent e L R i Yop 1 it. “Instead of a large Furopean im- | a large and quife definitely tangible lard street. - i 7 he approve of the Anglo-Japan- operation of the natural law of sup- Mman ir 2 : &h( r\:n}z s to rqwm dm' migration,” says Mr. W B. Jovyce, | probability of their. being trapped _ Andrew . Bengston to GustBy A, ese secret agreement concerning Ple and demand in the regulation of COngress, first he takes a Bunday({ . iident ‘of the National Surety com. | abroad by opportunities—good Jjobs, Sandberg and wife, land and buildifgs people. e P slands? D fices may as well try to sweep back §Chool class; then he becomes a SuDer- | |1,y texperts expect a large emigra- | high wages, a chance fo thrive on Wallace street the Pacific islands? Does he de- | pr Tlendent. Than sl he he s Abraham Zevin {o Barbara Browh mator Bailey “was never known to sire its enforcement ardleg: the seas.—Baltimore American. - — - — e - ¥ b 5 g gardley 5 ready to' run for congress. Get the and others, land and buildings on L Bolshevik or anarchistic ten-| ©f (he American sentiment, Y5 : ; 3 : . BRI i or anarchistic ten Hithertoloravalint aeeit o If the retailers will only follow the Methodist and Baptist Bihle lasses Milwaukee's Reform. Dwight streef. ies. 1M friends know him as a ments of that character?* If the | lead of the Chicago wholesalers. who and vou get the political machine.” v (Waterbury American John W. Watson to Henry Fengler and others, land and buildings on riot. & S ca sus 5 a i i a The . scientific movement patriot o it cannot be su: settlement is to be frankly, on the have been reducing the price of food fhe modern, scientific movemen T e e T St ind oth against alcohol set ‘men thinking | Cliff street d that hg is encouraging the mal- basis of the principle tha quite substantially, evervhody will be ) et e e L Ther o f principle that' to the 1 gt Caels e RS e e R e G et G MTlwalu Kee here ¢ y Anna M. Gustafson t6 Hulda M8 nts when he introduces a = bill victors belong the' spoils.’ "how, happy.—Fa L 9 s e e SR e the study of Geriman is to he discon- son. land and buildings on Belden under his proposals; will the - i} thinking reached the mz'v ey | tinued in public schools. The language s k i United States “eash in? It's here again—the hobble skirt— moralized it and put it right into the | nag prohably heen cultivated there e T T every motor vehicle being towed There are no perfect solutions, and once more the great mystery of Bible classes; e. it inevitably be- | 5 ore assiduously than in any other = e o rs ot i 3 woman's dress is, forced upon the came politics and tirned the whole | \merican city. Tn 1916 there were 300 ple Corporation, land and buildihg l a1l charges or assessmentsalevied outstanding against. the Hartferd Springfield Railway Company trade q’oinc\‘ between the ‘Hawaiian and P oration the public must fuenish Japan would occupy a strategic posi- tion cutting off American territgry other reason, they tell you. The for anything Teutonic forglany South is old America. Tt is, I think money abated tofthe company Sympathy ough theisum -may be small, | from tle American continent in case | has become ,qmmu]\ imnos M;;n \le‘: T S e = i : el sor or those 2 Z X of war. one just has to feel sorry just like the New England America of y person in Connectitut must 1 3 irls who were arested for ] Setmal B 0. It does not care for figures, directly shis pro rata- Share. State Senator Lodge is put on the defen- is needed, especially when fien is shifted tosthe shoulders of iring the display of a red flag [he highway between sunrise and probably, of the questions before on West Main street let. Wery recently Senator Klett the peace 'conference. Interna- pained attention of man—Waterbury ' South prohibition. This was the ex- | feachers employed in the teaching of Ga]ls ior Ghmcal Servme; Medwa] Louis Conti to Salvatore SCENSE 4 Lo . e by men who had o : tionalizing the German colonies Republican planation given m ey the German language to 30.000 pupils. duced a bill to forbid the carry- g S why E { S f 2 oHELY under the protection of the F39% thought on”why the South went dry Now there is only one such teacher . Joseph Caslowitz to Rebecea Silvér, tor Bailey's measure, what is to defects, hut does any othep plan Fhough they knew all the time theyv | editors, like the editor of the Colum- | this one is to_bhe put out of business. . 5 Mary E. W "'rr)lflx to Edith D, ‘Hors Qs i usnevic oo formante | nzom s o U Sl Den S Rt e o ot \’:LM e bmr S'va}:v.; th, th S e e oS0t S L L NC O RO fall, one-half Interest in land on oS AT e s .~ Indiafapolis News. n South, the sizns outside the | has be assi 4 s s ' 3 . the world? .No cne can view on - [ the en P Ol : e Lasgbeenfansassistaniiingane iRt ool London, Dec. 30, (Correspondence | Rocky Hill avenue : the map the pasitibn of the Caro- e towns read, “Good Churches.” at theffor 35 years has resigned on the | 5 = The records of the town cl&rk'& mate car being towed and flying line and Marshall islands in rela- Do 1ot in Your haste condepm all 45 i ¢+ ¢1e battom comes “*Bi &round that he “is entitled 1o a rest.” | Of the Associated Press.)—Changes in | _The records of the town cibrkd EReR aitorn? It they do raise ool iolin: e o the “skies”. Look at Paderewski“= You have old evangelical America in s i Kngland's system of medical serviee ' 27TCC fO7 the MESK C rimgon rag they will be arrested Hawali and bélieve it. The un- Shoe and Leather Reporter. the South and that is why the move- Foreign Orders Not Coming. whereby the “panel” pan now appli- | e derlying principle of making cer- o ! ment went so fast down there, At (Toronto Mail and Empire.) k < i 3 : : et ' Mall : > cable to the poor would be extended taim nations mandatories of the 1f reputable hotelkeepers intend least, so the men on the spot Y ; ¥ ¢ N 3 - run it up they will be arrested SRt R S e Aot o el iiohie And theirepeal RS b oS DE L SR S Many exporters of staple 'lines Who | to all classes are proposed by a gov- EDDY—ROWLEY WEDDING s e eag 2 s vistra- . - ke, Gt o Y » thev | oxpected big orders from abroad when | i A s br Senator Bailey's hill tion pitposes was virtually recog- of national prohibition. they, mu ¥, “Well, he may have had a little | 1/ iitities ended are disappointed be- | \cinment committee. Many physiclans |y inzton Church Scene of Bibtty find some way of dissociating the li- ence, but we have never though S e ning Dot e e & romger. | Mfluence, but e have nevs ought | cayse these are not forthcoming. It A%e Strongly opposing the proposals Wedding. tling the affairs of , Morocco a | censed liquor tre o e e : i ] 5 e R was inevitable after the fighting stop- -~ For a number of years, under a dozen years or more ago. That fes which have provided ammuniti T Son -the nation went dry is 2 5 4 Miss Char » Mar ey e e Connell for the appropriation of e i i e o ihe Anti-Saloon Leagué - Dhe mcasop ehefng e ¥ 18, | ped that, pending a definite settlement “health insurance act, wage earners i ATl ooy [t 763 43 1 o UILERRS ) B L e i S ial of course, the great industrial appeal, | anq demobilization, the European na-" ' . = 3 ter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank H. Rowley .762.43 for new buildings at the | States Senate, then under repub- | York Commercia Plus the marvelous ovganization, the | yans chenld an clow in baviee mates: have been called upon to make a small | ‘7 OF [ Sn¢ oo Frans g vich State Hospital for the In- lican control, with Mr. Lodge's T gt e weekly payment to a fund which the | O oy n8tom and SnbJuce el : The Pos n Portugal save s L & M thonght there would be ho| ADPProval " pEeIEostmen lpRanuet f el movernment uses to provide medical hem s = b 5 Suffra ov cks o one vo P r ’ g at t a cla E 1 oJ a- gelty of building and maintaining — e e e e Satters at church.In. | Suffrage now lacks only one vote in | that, burdened financially as they are, attention fo all classes of the popula. s for the feeble minded af: % ~ i 2y A congress. 1 had sympathy with Miss [ the peoples of Europe are going to 100 affected by the insurance law. | minded after the | MR. BRUSH ‘AND HOG .ISLAND. | dlanapolis News Rankin when she said thal we ought | provide for themselves as much of FVvery practicing physician must treat bn rum had beer! driven into his They | @ certain number of the so-called Boy. page Mr. Anderson of the “panel” patients. receiving pay for Betacn: Liwand this work from the government. The | ] . yath new scheme ‘pfovides.for-whole-time | {rimmings and veil and carried %8, ! shower bouquet of bridal roses. medical service, and practitioners en- | tering it are to be graded into five | Katherine Rowley, a sister of the classes, corresponding to military | Pride, acted .as maid of honor. Shé rank, ranging from lieutenant to | WOre met over green silk and carried : Is it naught to you that the home- | colonel red roses. The bridesmaid were Gladyvs ith the zlory that (he women | it up and fire it on congress as did | |anq is untouched?” This grandilo- Glass | would he paid! $7,500 a year | Olmstead, who were pink silk and 2 K the “drys.” & tiareating (to| (he refirnitg 2ol fclae a t& = = ' | carried pink carnations and Ruth Ens pm” has ‘'met with a frigid recep- | ex e e 4 A know S N i ruent greeting to irning - Class 2, $5.000 and so on down to ! al s 8 u inE- . [eresie Gaye ViR Bncumons Mothers of soldiers, turn you not BLIZABETH TILTON diers by one of Germany's statesmen | Class 5, which would pay $2.000. Ex- | WOrth of this city, who wore torquéiss from the people of Connecticut | Mr. Brush declares that every - cent RE Cambridge, January 20, 1919 is likely to prove a real incentive for | aminations would he held for promo. | Plue silk and also carried pink carna-, P is only one person to blame— | expended was well invested and that Oh. when the troops pass. let her % = — the peace congress. in arranging for |tion to higher classes. Txpenses in- | [10NS Private Henry Rowley, (& stand with vou B \rmenian Girls in Turk Harems, reparation, to see to it that Germany | curred by the practitioner for drugs, | Prother of the bride acted as. Best Her heart and yours may heat alike = (Constantinople Letter, N. Y. Tribune) | j5 adequately “touched.” o llanaes Tl cliy {cal= oo o mee el iman Fred Ensworth and Willlam & today he commissioners, seeking stolen 2y ! penses would be paid by the govern- | Buell, both of this city, were ushers ode’ has Leen cloaked in se- | building facilities, the construction of | Recause, though all unvisioned by | children and abducted girls, visited not Republican Prospects. | ment. | They have recently been discharged Mr. Morrison has spent the | Hog Island is justified as a terminal”, Your eyes, only the orphanages and other insti- (New York Wvening Post.) ! Each physician would be expected | from the service There with the others, where the | tutions, but private homes and harems A il G T e e e G e e B e R The bride was given away by H&r high flag flies, as well A visit to one of the Tfl’l\"’flfi tical dispatches shows that the Re- ! patients. The, higher classes of medi- | father, on v\rhn:\” arm she entered the The son she never had is marching' houses illustrated the enormous diffi- | pyplicans have an ecxellent chance for | cal men would deal chiefly with ad- | church The wedding march wa$ teachers to explain the code and | cause it is as good as any deep water &= generallylenc ered ; | i g - Jlayed by Miss Florence Readett of s as 3 ¥ too culties generally encountere 1920, and won't Penrose please stop | ministrative work and with the giving | P13 Mis teade penefits to be derived from it. Al | tarminal in the country”. In addi- MARJORIE (. DRISCOLIL, A Turk had killed the parents of an | rocking the boat? | of consultative advice. jitiartiord MisgEMyrtlesiNordutrotg with a benign demeanor which | tion, Mr. Brush says Philadelphia can in Fverybody's Magazine Armenian girl who was well off and A T N et patientl wonldlbe lexpectedl to]| 2208} LOn Promise infe \fler the “I hav othing 1 B " 2 : = handed her over io his son, who, after | A Soft Answer. attend a surgery in the morning. Fve- | Wedding a reception was the T have nothing up my sleeve”, | aford to spend $100,000,000 for its s = At Tt 4 1 | B R ounal The oonnle ttastn Bk dwelt at length on the great (oo i Cheaper Food At Tat. having forefbly converted Ther to (The London Beacon) ing consultation would be disconti- | Paris NS e N ¥ & great | acquisition and develop it. The (Roston Terald.) Taan T aricabhier andl thuslabtainen Dear Old Lady—“So you're on a nued and less visits would be paid at | cipient of many gifts. They left for ntages to accrue to the state by | “jsland” is one of the greatest ad- No onc can read Mr. Hoover's state- | 1o \ealth that was rightly hers.| mine-sweeper. are you? 1ind where | night to patients tha is done now. | short wedding trip after which thes adoption of his educational sys- | vertisements the United States -has|ment without concluding that a AroD \when asked if she would like to leave, | 4o vou sweep mines?” Work out of hours would be taken | Will take up their residence in this in food prices is inevitahle \;vl it e this girl could not make up her mind ! autious Tar—"Oh, just 'round the | over by juniors ‘;'\ l’””&" will reside at 392 Stanley may venture to give the retailers and . g Caiq she was ahout to become a . 7 : All hospitals would be taken over | Street. eak his audiences were as muc : , : e : x She she was abou tops of ‘em, lady, where the e | : ! were as much | fluence on the world of commerce. restaurateurs a hit of advice, it would | [ ;¢ una knew that if she returned | cottles by the fRoyernment | undert thisl plan e dark concerning the aims and | Anyone who uses the words “psy- | he that (hey should ‘nnl m‘me any v‘xlnr to her own people they would not take _ e According fo the secretary of the RUSSTANS NEED HELP. oses of his program as before he | chological” and “Hog Island” in the | necessary time L "‘:‘:‘:“’:‘ N | her in with the child of a Turk, and A Stripe in Passing. Medico-Political Union, there is & flow i . ared on the lecture platform same sentence is indeed an intrepia | 0 P 2t T¢ 7""“",;HZMHL°” YROIeSAleT | ince the haby would hecome & Waif. | (mirst-Class Pricate Jonn R. Sharpe O Prolests from physicians in the | Will Become Barbarians Within Three anagtheitioml tmans s i Some sort of scheme on a large scale in Judize.) Y ‘:‘“'"“i}:.h;"“r‘fi‘y’“"] ol Years If It Is Not Given. e hould be put into effect for the hene- | PETolEo e ( falCarp B SamB Tohnt ot one-third of the doctors want | pst in his desire to improve edu- | 4 good argument. In Hog Island, Roodipriceslnavelladvan cediisonan Sl SHS S SF R BE beelfr St SEUERG IS ”\ who is wearing S0 hn-:im-fl::d it.” he said, A clnical service is an | London, Feh “Russia—that “onnectict T Y " : i o is and other communities. | it oF 2 simdls Lonatac, { 50 3 e t @ e . a BoVIEh Fineal L e e absolute n in Connecticut. Then aggn, | America has the greatest ship produc- | fionally in this and e oer | urk, as is well known, will keep a [ vVera Cruz campalgn rihhons)—Sam, | Abhorrence to both medical men and | soviet Russia—will revert to absolut ineihoteleiandliesta trarinfliayeinal FMGARSIEG RTINS M o R RR B s ' the public. ~ We are not oppoed to |barbarism within three years if assist- e only raised rates, but theyv have re- | F o A - ¢ { BiLo. state control of hospitals. What we | anc t offered from the outside P of men who lonz for power | of it is Europe knows it. | meed portions and have adopted less | Ploom lasts, and will then cast her Corp. Johnson— Well, sah il dea Lo G Ll S D D offered fr ‘ outal aside. There are thousands of Arme- | qon't jes’ know fo' sho’, but dey tells | 0305 0 Ho G 5| savs a British officer who rece es- the destruction of the personal rela- | caped from Russia To the corres- who will not fail to make the Jiheral methods in their service. Why { i rian girls and girls ther nation- | e da s un is fo' S into Mex. | gt use of that power once it has woul it not he a good plan to retain ! Biv 1 girls of oth me dat dis un is fo' gittin' into Mex- | ;o\ ohin hetween practitioner and pa ondin R P Giocatedi tras e tient, and the abolition of free choice | naqeq given to them by the legislature. The calmer minds in the large tex- | the smaller portions and the more .41(’1“\}:%:”11111”1\‘ sxtufn:dl N"v:]wodr:r‘!: ico an' dis un fo' gittin' out.' i = . . ec s- like the charge = of orphans are heing hidden u T — e s 5 i : o el e e | exacting economies- i A of dootor. The women will be dead | o of ttas Qi o be the badrack of op- | IS re? SR e o) e!;uled bY | for bread and butter—while making a | eves of the Allies NO SERGEANT NAMED. ettty e e rh--):fugfi sl ion to the code. The people are | the radicals. On 1 ¥, the coun- | oqyction in gene prices. We are be- Every day a few Greeks and Arme- 1) tha meeting lof thelpolicetcomel| - Ll e o i ratoanins try may hear that several hundred |ljeve that is where the public would | nians are found. Tt is true that these |, i last evening, no seleotion of st year of Bolshevin fonning ], T RG] 6 e a0 e O stolen girls and children are not Act- ; worgeant was made to Al the vacan- | UNION MIG. OFFICERS EIRWCTED, | Peasant garb in self defonse and fdrop- strike. Reducing the cost of living | And food will go still lower. The ver Ily maltreated as a general rule. Tn | .\ existing in the police department. \i the meating of the stockholders | FimE it e dullimanolonons o surplus of labor of which we hear so | fact, the orphanages and other insti- | The absence of Commissioner Stephen i Union Mantrfacturing company | A e LS L e of the Unior acturing company | to do. Russia will soon be as prim held vesterday afternoon, the follow- [ itive as the Congo it allowed to drift for others does not enter into the | 1.} will express itself in an abun- ' tutions inspected show that excellent ) Rohph necessitated a postponement of scheme of things for the mlll em- | qant supply, if not a surplus of food. care is taken of them, but entirely in i actton. The board discussed the esti- | ployes You realize the very close connection e same spirit that stock farms are | mates for the coming vear, and it |ing directors and officers were elect- | along under Bolshevik control It is — between human hands and the supply { conducted—to produce fine animals was decided to ask for an nppropria- | ed: Directors, A. J. Sloper, Frank J. | hopeless to expect leadership in Rus- Porter, J. B. Minor and L. C. Clark of | 8ia which will save the country from to mediaevalism. The Bol- land on Oak street an automobile procession, every r Senator Klett's hill and if they mong the surprises is a measure | nized in the Algeciras treaty set- duced in the House by Represen- genius for politics, of the anti-saloon | rials they obuld do without, for 'a league time. It can be taken for granted son of Mrs. Nellie and the late Frank Eddy also of Newington, were married in the Newington Congregatiohal church on Thursday afternoon. 'Thg marriage ceremony was performed hy Rev. Herbert Macy. The bride wore ivory white crepe meteor with pearl to send the anti-saloon leaguec after | their requirements as they can extensively and frequently of late that & that one vote. The anti-saloon leagie | will buy needed materials. bul they e e {2 | Becruse she has no tall young son to | knew how to gather the sentiment|will soon want to be sellers, rather it comes as a shock to learn that any | Because s into a bundle that could be placed in | than purchasers. —_ man is so bold as to defend it. But £0 ENT o S Because, in all that lonz brown SILENT CODE BUILDER. VRIS (] O B eR, 1500 4 B (6 marching line, Brush, presfdent of the company No brave eyes leap, Henry ¢/ Morrison’s “plan for |‘operating the plant 1 cyes (hat shine Hog Island'hag,been maligned so HER SOLDIER. the recalcitrant senator's lap over T e night, There is great sentiment for As to “Touching” Germany. to meet her suffrage in Massachusetts today, but Raston Evening Transcript.) the women do not know how to gather ed improvements in our school Without debating the charges that | Full, W he is Henry C. Morrison. From | the yard today is worth every dollar ime of its discovery, the “Mor- | put into it. ‘“Aside from the ship- er part of the past month trot- | he says. “It is worth more now than around the state appearing be- | {he government has invested in it be It is & fact that when he ceased | and casts a weighty psychological in- Morrison ma be thoroughly | person. But Mr. Brush seems to have the units of the everydey purchaser hay be an unwitting agent of al ing in the world, and the best fcious. Our schools are not per- but they are improving as fast as ey and the constructive thought beal boards can improve them. To them over lock, stock and bar to the State Board of Education, members of which will administer N n mouthe, The gathering of SO I S e Ll L R ) LT from basement to roof while If it is true, as Admiral Mayo says, | the clams, oysters, lobsters; the pur-! girls for the Armenians are particu- | The amount needed for this will he | Plantsville, and the officers. e | reversion would that the Peace Conference is becom. | suit of game in the woods and fish | Jarly clever with the needle and at the | §8,.200. With the Increases voted last | directors chose the following officers: | shevik leaders are not strong. Op- 8 1 i ; o i . n; tr - s re s veak at place, | ing a “sewing circle”, Amierica’s nay. [ On the sea, the hoeing of Pflt‘dwe\" :“'- . loom. Money is required not only to | Wednesday at the meeting of the com- | President, Albert F. Corhin; treasurer, | position leaders are so weak th T B e b 1 the milking of cows, all mean 1abor. | majntain and educate them. bu‘ to|mon council, the entire budget will | M. L. Bailey; Secretary, Herbert H.| Lenine and his associates seem strong enor- | al policy will glve the delegates a| .. now that it is abundant its Pro-, carry out a vast scheme of repatria- | he about $117,870 for the next fiscal | Wheeler; assistant secretary, Carl N.| by comparison. They are merely bet- would new subject for gossip. xtlnck will surely become so. tion, ‘.)eh". Neumann, ter organized than any other group, communities pay the bills d be radical In the firat Elale Board would ask for b sums of money and it