New Britain Herald Newspaper, February 8, 1919, Page 5

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e ; NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, SATUNDY e with justice, that $enator Penrose is o S 5 S Beilain. Herald. | > 08 b e VICE-PRESIDENT MARSHALL'S CREED from the influence of the corporations T believe that the American republic as instituted by the fathers con t ° men and af- | "Maky I rangy New HERALD PUBLISHING COMPANY. Proprietors. and monopolies which in politics he stitutes the finest system of government ever ordained among fords the machinery for the righting of lenco, tumult and disorder. I believe that every ineguality which exists in ic condition of the American people is traceahle to the successtul chot. Millions of woman will vote in | of interested classes for class legislation. and 1 helieve, therefore, that of government my re- jevances without resort to vio- . 10 diftgped ! the social and econom- :”””- I jad Tasued daily (Sunday oxcepted) at 4:15 p. m., has always served A% Herald Building. 67 Church St There is another point to be con- Entered at the Post Office at New Britain | sidered, in the opinion of Mr. Pin- demands | ANd evergls ¥ as Second Claes Mail Matter 1t if he g — Congresgig commission! Mr. Wilson to TELEPHONE <CALLS 1920 and he believes that the attitude practical equality can be obtained under our form e omoelt i 2 928 = : medial legislation in the interest of the American people and not in the orfal Rooms 5 L.....000926 | of §enator Penrofe on liquor, child £ 2 Fadtntig 3 interest of any body thereof. large or small ¢ The only profitable advertising medium in | lubor and equal suffrage has made I believe there is no justification in government. where oflicials are | 'ésponsible ing ;:; etey” Circution books and press | him particularly offensive to women | elected and laws made by the people. for a minorty to threaten bloodshed his conduct ¢y m always open fo aavartise abe £ oty po voters, and anarchy unless the majority shall submit to the will of the minority. | result ahe Heraid will ke found on sale at Hota- I believe that America belongs to American citizens, native and natur- \s for the house r ; . T belleve that Ameries & w0 ¥ aiatronsddictinen ity " zed. who are willing (o seek redress for their grievances in orderly and | nor will it have af! way, New York City: Board Walk, At- | Pinchot brings against the Pennsy 8 S e , - ) B Inntio: Clty. and atifo-d Derat Pinchot brings against the Penn constitutional ways, and T believe that all others should be taught. peace- | authority to act upf vania meneybags. It is made doubly | fully if wo can and forcibly if we musi. thai our country is not an inter- |the peace. The send) cafe to pass judizment and The Arsociated Press is exclusively entitled | f S Ix rvm h to the use for republication of all news | o orthodox Republican newspapers | _ e e aty whic credited to it r not otherwise credited | . T e = — of the Paris conferancagl or and also the ws | Which object to $enator enrose’s | . i SRl nfercaCi SiRET T e % i FACTS AND FANCIES, Bolshevismy in the Senate. authority to participate in aspirations to write the next tarif S (New York World.) tion. Tts discussion of 45 ] 500! g Member oX the Assoolated Fress. strome by quotations from a number | national boarding house nor an anarchist bill. Unless the Republican party 1S In his efforts 1o pose as a philan- | When the Judiciary Commitiee of | and the actions of Amierl LBST EBERT IFORGET. submerged in a reactionary bog it | thropist old John Barleycorn calls at- | the United States Senate begins its | commissioners is wholly gr& tention to the fact that nobody thinks | investigation of Bolshevism in the | Senators know this; at I Of serving free lunch at a soda foun- | I'nited States it should give imme- |of them do. Representatives i tain.—Washington Star. diate consideration to remarks made | at least, some do. But, Havl States and the Allies won the war. | - by Senator Frelinghuysen of New [leadership, they act like unled Herbert Corey, traveling through | .Jersey Wednesday on a playground—each one :chal Gerniany, writes thal he can see no ‘It is very well for the Presi- | his own diversion to his own am \mong the men registered with the | danger of famine in that country, and | dent o break the precedents of a ment, but to the confusion of &V United States Employment Bureau in | When a frec lance newspaper man | century and a third that he may | one else. propaganda of ulness and her : can see no danger of hunger there ! head {riumphant processions in It might not be serious, if t this city are a number of soldiers re- | {11 o . : ¢ the ust naturally ain’t any.—Kansas City oreign capitals, sicep in were really nothi egiti cently returned from duty who are | mine. RERIE S e Germany should be informed once | cannot ignore the warning signal Mr. and for the last time that the United | Pinchot hangs out on the track No more temporizing and circumlocu- | \w\NTID:—WORK FOR SOLDIERS tion should be permitted. 1In spite of her crooked practices in battle, her inhumanity foward civiban popula- : v chambers of rovalty. dine off gold congress to do just now. But tlfe sit. e e exchange the khaki for R = ; plates in (he palaces of the uation is quite the combrary.” Unfin4% & Blue jeans but who have not been The peace conference might quite modern Caesars. and have his ished business is piled ceiling high. | uation to seep ifito the brains of Herr [ L 0™ (10 roctories. These men | ©45IIY persuade itself it has sufficient photograph taken standing in There is no possibiifilhat the hop. | evidence fo prove that the uncivilized line with Kings, Queens and Pers can be emplisai S Ve portions of Germany’s possessions in- Princesses. Those are interesting some of them were employed in sur- | clude the Fatherland itself.—Boston ind perhaps alluring pictures gress ends. Measires of the greatest | miario 1l i « rounding cities when called to the | Transcript Rut what of the American pri- T pontance to (e Tiita 8 ot the oo | : & Br | TORSOTANYA T Milintkos heen extended every opportunity to i s 2 vate who returns to his native [ ailment €hit betrs & &= i Tt iar o v colovs and others were in business for : ¢ : i - baolk ile | Hriking resern- slan constitutional domor armistice Some great men are content with | shores unhonored and unsung [y ate ”""“' b ‘1’ while members | hlance {d #he influenzi, call™ tha formerly foreign ministes ot themselves. making history: others must Snake | dismissed from the service, miles | PrAte on matters that concern them | “‘epizoofic*epidemic,” call- | naipe fe.inot Includod i rot e It is stated at the bureau that man- | geography too. The people have fo! away from home, without a dol- | MOt at all. Problems of reconstruc-| ed, of twenty-five vears ago. which | who make mublie the ayamors, thos teously and with plry becoming €0 | | . ers are living up to the spirit | make the arithmetic.—New YorkgSun in his pocket on (f;f' =38 ilen, ofanonontla Jon. n‘n! caused wholesale deaths among the for Russia, civilized nations. The victor imposed ; . s . rowy is the very warp | forced to wait for this diszusting daily | horses of th That 1 “The Girma Elizeination v | of the times ard taking back former Such demagogy is the very warp he country. That ailment, The Gérman tions, Germany was thrashed soundly Etert and his associates S are residents of New Britain but Sino Novenibor 11. L91sitwe have | remaining before the Sixty-fifth con- | are in tried 1o be patient. Germany has comply with terms of the In fact she has been treated cour- : : n ] domination in Rums- Texas is a state with a great deal and woof of Bolshevism. That is the | display of rhetorical. political bunk. | too, resembled the infiuenza, and got' sin and its artificial splitting into. in employes who entered the military | of natural pride. “The Houston Post” | way the T.enines and Trotzkys talked The legislative branch of govern- | its name from the word ‘epizootic,’’ dependent parts,” says the Russis . o orvice. The men nowy on the waiting | takes pains to point out that it's ( to the deluded fools in Russia. Tt is|ment is drifting without responsible | meaning an epidemic among animals, japresentatives. e iontihe o any of the war machinery dema list are skillod in various trades and | ©Ur Mr. Burleson they've been talk- , the way Liebknecht and Rosa Luxem- | direction. 1t is a sorry reflection of | Which in the popular mind was a ispirations of the masses and of all but because the vanquished nationy o 0w iole as well as others | (N8 about in the senate.’—Kansas | burg talled to the Germans whom | governmental helplessness at a mo- | Sumed to he the name of the diSeASe (ho same elements which a - ek I ool S ICitE S they were inciting to a class war. Tt | ment when leadership and efficiency | itself. If the reports regarding "the ino union of the whole v W HENGS BRIl el il @il - is the familiar language of the I. W. [are needed as much as at any other | Moose are trie, it would be well for » € counthy Ui S i to their situation. are anxious to see What a lot of social unrest we |W. in this country. time in years | Canadian -and American autharities puld ot be pted Dl e e I e tactor s could abolish for a little while if What could he more ridiculous than . - | to watch: out for and take such mea Jated sacred covenants so often and somebody would only tell us how to | for the Senate to engage in a solemn Peace Conference Makes Progress, | SUres as’may .be possible to guard e s e S make a pint measure hold,a”quart.— | investigation of Bolshevism while (Bristol. Préess) against a irecurrence:of the gpizootic 07 '35 Purpose active help i of ] & BTaone Torecr tuired from the Allies for all those The sensational press at home and iR e parts of Russia which are in confliot of the Bolsheviki and who certain conditions en the vanquished not because the victor had need of the ecould not he trusted. Germany's single state whose .ultimate fate must be determined by the free decision of the peoples inhabiting Russia hlack past proved that her word with such reckless regard for the that we all MANDATORY OVER TURK LANDS Manchester Union Senators who invoke the evil spirit = Bolshevism in the Senate (Chambers 4 came to believe she had a deceitful The_proposall to appoint Belgium After what Poland has gone | go unrebuked? j abroad is having a happy time over 110 Soldiers Blinded In Wi are striv- heart. And so we insisted that she | mandatory over conquered Turkish | through, she should not be offended if —_— pefbsacEsconRuessiidoine s g Tolda e (New York Sun.) Ing to reunite and regenerate Russiaf it has gunessed wrong nearly every In the south this help P must bel render herself impotent to renew the | territory wilt meet with general ap- | it took us a long time to recognize The Newest Great Hotel. Colonel Allea Greenwoad of Boston her ew York Tribune time, but that does not make a par- ston, given first of < . (New Yorl World) e N Al the senior consulting specialist in sur- = £ of difference to hitter partisans | go.. ,ffecting the eves of.members of L AL the American expeditionary force - Northern Caucasus. Germany promised to comply with | ploited by (termany, should direct the | rolled army of 7,131,172 men when | &reat hotel of “a capacity of 3,000 | against the opposition. Tt is a Merry pac returned fo this country with the BeSides. to create order, it is neces the war ended,might aid the how-did- | Persons” is not so remarkable as ifs | time for antazonists. But the pedple | news that not more than 110 soldiers SATY t0 occupy temporarily the most it happen cogitations of Herr Hohen- | supplementary hoast of “a staff of | as a whole, who care chiefly for the ' have been blinded in. tho war, The IMPOTtant towns and railway juncd i Cdeliverine zollern in. Ameréngen.—New Yorw | 5,000 men and wemen.” This is the facts and the accomplishments, have public has been prepared for a higher 'ONS in the south of Russia so as to was starving and could not delive 3 as b s ' p A rics < = . 7 . e | = £ " i X 5 > yreve: ¢ v wa arving and cc It has been suggested that America | worlg equivalent of an employe fo1 no cause for agitation. The instances | total. Dr..Greenwood’s announcement PreVent the advance of the Bolshevik required number of railvoad cars and | ;o .5 hointed mandatory over this re- zuest, and the fact throws light in the history of the world are rare ! will relieve the anxiety of many In. from the north and the spreading o locomotives. The people were threat- | onoiated realm. To accept this of- Connecticut’s senate appears to be- | the! high cost of hotel living when a body of men have been called fumerous™cages blindness has been AN4rchy. that has already ruined the ening to rise up. The Bolsheviki re- | 5o, ould be a mistake. We havel lieve that ‘the Land of Steady Hab- Gonditions hotel operation together to satisfy so many conflicting #verted by the skill of the sur- north of Russia its should not rashly indorse the sen- i (uiring, sq’ 11 a personnel go far to | disputes and clashing inicrests and de- geops. The nation will care for thd A barrier against the Bolshey: Ishevism good will of the world all to the voluntary army which is fighting agains the| Bolsheviki in the N fwar by surrendering certain tools of | proval. It would be the irony of fate battle, if Belgium, which was so brutally ex- That the United States had an en The boast of New York's newest ( who think they see a chance to score the stipulations of Marshal Foch. | future of provinces wrested- from the Then excuses were offered. Germany | Hun's powerful ally in the Near Ea » quired the comcentrated attention of SRS B T e ‘ ) i i trouble 0] he incro: charges | cide problems of the present and soldiers who have lost*their sight, and Sbreading from the north will enabie 1 . Germany x tence of elimination passed on an explain both the de facto governmen termany | ,q,ird-to become godfather of any| o1a friend by most of the other states; for rcéom® rént anc anrant | future that directly involve the wel- ' be thankful . thig affiliction has not the valuntary army to consolidate 1 lavishness of | fare of hillions of people. It is a tre- come to more of its fighting men and to grow. It will be possible could not provide the instruments de- territory in Europe or Asia Our ac-| —New York Sun service The: Aenote b: = expenditure Lich is probably unique | mendous burden to impose on any e — conscription to convert this voluntary fined in the armistice terms. hese | .optance might come under the head- e ' and ofher lies came across the bor e n i ene A noa The Paris conference now elimin- | to New York hotels and indicate why | hody of men, and the duty is being Men and Work. army into a vast army in the soutk N \WH,‘ ‘ates the word “league” and calls it a . the art of hotel-keeping has heen | performed remarkably well. Nol ‘many (et e of Russia and. together with Siberia L g der of Hunland £ % . preign countries society of nations. Better call it | raised {o higher business standards »eople will he carriec v Py the and arr t societ ig ndards in | peopl L[ arried aw ¥ th Ihe Wit has fattened pay envelopes ) 1orthern territory to ecrush but simply because the world had ind to reunite the learned our lesson even position of cénciliatory governmental world of politicians bta bay fancy prices in order to tempt g the comin TRUTH CRUSHED TO EARTH. | functionaries and let it go at that o) ewine T ety to ; PU pring i disposed to consider them (rue, not “heterogenous and accidental juxta- this city than anvwhere else in the | spasms of politic and vocal sruptions | through ar Germany unloosed few available laborers (o,seite it We have waited quietly Bit by bit. the public is learning of Washington Post scale of hotel operation on its com- Republican, But With Wilson. 1t no longer will have to do that mercial side. .\ corporation that must [ (uvid Lawrence's Copyrighted Tnter- | The labogers are aot few—=Ahey are If it be true that the former kai- - pav wages to 3,000 employes hoesides view in FFrance, with Representa- - | ‘many. :and. the harvest isn't quite -so @1 offensive aguins Bolshevikil allied help nof on the world the irpose of N N " required for and with all possible dignity for the | the inner workings of the “Big Five akin enemy to comply with our terms. Per- | meat. machine. Henry Veeder, coun- | gor 55 allowed to read no unpleasant . mieeting . the heavy inferest charge T e iy Slenteonsie B iy fatural | Dut to create conditions i oul of us have heen deceived | sel for Swift & Co., téstified before a | refarence to himself, he is deprived .3 iher necessar expenses must North Dakota.) enough that ‘organized forces of work thle the same lement org¥nize of a large volume of current litera- cparge all the traffic will hear ers’ should have learned to fancy, 'hemselves, io create a government ture aleigh ” ’“V‘*_ = the President told us. He impressed | themselvs, iavincible because they .mec hanism and a All the rest fiad demanded ships. Was it only a | among friends of the packers to block German radicals are planning to Control of the Caspian. me as fighting for the things all Amer- , Nave ‘f""»l‘,”_””f( R Mo il e nternal organization of 3 e ad i ean. Wiat 1f whei Taliola is inttha s Tong “Hut th@veaton ivas mok o con 0 the Rus- g hour we saw him todaycovers what | 88nization; it s circumstances’ agwf sians themselves he is attempting (o do at the peaca | SiSting ofganization Quite a sepavate problem is the tabje, I say candidly, though I-am a | Republican, I am with him If every \ Voice From Mainc. Bolshevik regime the population had Republican knew the situation as we (Lewiston Sun.) diminished td §$00.000. The liberas have learned it, he would give his ap- ' mye amendment is there. ¥Now may| 17 ©f this city at the earliest pos proval, for the Preident seems to be | we exypect, on a gigantic natiomal| S'P!¢ diate by the Allies is called for standing for true American concep- | scale;.-the markl desradation that DY considerations of humanity now tions of things.” shamed Maine * so ® many . yearge- A1 the Allies e acce to thel - .- abundance of prohibition statutes.and| (YiN& capital throuzh the Baltic sea. The British Embargo. i protected ! rumshops. .-, Fhe: lfe. fs o] If In tieof mar Amerida considshig haps some by the “revhlution” at German ports | senate committee yvesterday that mis T R e Saninst the government. We | sionary work had been performed coincidence that an “uprising’” oc a Congressional investigation of the | set up a parliament of their own to dispute the authority of the nation- An inconspicuous dispatch records : e al assembly recently elected. 1f the | that the British forces have advanced sitips would proceed plies and prices. These friends were [ o nang had acquired their political | from Baku and accupied the Trans- Now comes the blatant Ebert per- | to intercede with members of Con- | jqeas a Mttle more gradually they | Cancasian railway and also have oc- ewrred in the cities from Which those | allegation that they: controlled sup- R salvation of Petrograd. During (hel son ,\‘vh a grandiloquent, pompous | gress With the hope that the pro- | wouldn't be so likely to take them in j cupied Petrovsk and Astrakahn, atl overdoses ansas City Times. the mouth of the Volga rivey ; 2 a If that be true, and if the army of st Home. e tells the Allics that | tracked. Coming from a man of Mr. e 1] [[occerationtint ookl s Bae it siump speech dellvered to tickle the | posed investigation would he side- Germtny. will not ne imposed upon. | Veeder's high standing with the pack- { cause the Hoover line to be more re- | probably is, it means more toward “We warn the Allies not to push us | ers it must be the truth. Now let us [ spected than the Hindenburg line— jthe safety of a large section af A toni St rope and of Asia-than all the language expended on the matter (Providence Journal) greater enemy af socicty ° than . the| it her duty to save Furope from the oke of Prussianism, now at the will follow unless the Allies ease the News from Amerongen is becoming | to see that she is reimbursed for all ¥noment of the approaching peace a the ships which the Germans sank. [!o India and restraint of any reac-| merce is, aboul the menace of a dump- | e T on ¢ new .,task is ‘confronting her—the But Norway will probably find that ' tionary move within that corner offing of German goods, when the sea s RO et | 3olvation Jof" the: Russian democrae her neutrality is not se profitable in | Russia itself. (Engineering and Mining Journal.) | and of the Russian state from the these fimes of peace as it was during | ‘With Baku, Astrakhan and the rail- The British government is offering tyranny of Lenine and Trotzky. nay 1t the real menace, the growing be- May we not ask bwhatt bustness will | the war New Yorl INening Sun way safely in their hands the British its: accumulation of electrolytic cop-| the salvation of the whole Russian dominate the Caspian ea and the i . A ~ | ber at,£105, to meet which price pro-, civilization from he Bolshevik bar- those bunches of grapes have on the rch oil fields Possession of the| LY trade that is not disadvantageous| qucers would hawve to sell here af an barity If the help + 5 fom and Jerry have secured posi- ¢ e _ is not given d by lbert and others, that the heatlont Sta e 5 5 m and Jerry have = e s 4 to their domestic interests. Any other | . & B e L Connecticut State seal after July 1?7 | ., 0 "3 " Mexico for next winter. Trans-Caucasian railway coatrols the equivalent that is variously reckoned| guickl and decisively, Russia, in- itone arejsill g ainel facedestinad e e | Minneapolis Journal outlet from the oil fields to the Rlack | COURLrY is at liberty to adopt any safe- | at 18 1-2 to 19 cents. Nominally, the ot to propagate their Kultur, which Will “The Pied Plper” appear inthe | : i : sea. On the Caspian, opposite Baku,| 81arding course it pleases. If there is principal American copper agencins 4 e N e omplete ordination | 1S the terminus of the Russian strat-| one dominating British characteristic are asking 23 cents a pouad No more ¢ ete co-ordination % egic railread, whieh runs to the hor- hat ever existed than that which ex- g 1, i fnts today batween the fuel adminis. | 9eC Of Afghanistan. It may be a| to mind its own business Progress and P atience Is at an end. We wa 154 ong step v rian - & oo Patience at an end want no | pipitionist B e Y s e :mv; p toward a permanent settle NN e Gt (Baltimore American.) only to its neighbors, but to the world ' t P ermany e e ~ 3 1 yO's Se The g revolv Loy h bu he more trifling. Germany will not be Arkansas Gazefte. e b 2 | ,N" wheels revolve and we get no-| of Burope. srughed but she must be spanked, and \s a motto the Washington jail | — e S e (Montreal Gazette.) | where! Because of wage increases, rail Mhe! Soishevil army Haay thel il rrogance in the Senate. Admiral Mayo would have the|road freights must go up; and when ' ijan'army delegates now has inoreased he sooner Ebert has this fact driven | authorities might adopt in prepa LAST LEAVE, . 2o AREAOx Iien s adopiyin iokenaing (Springfield Republican.) United States go the limit in expand-' freights go up, the cost of living in- . (0 500 000 statement, the socialist mentbers of - toé far > and continues to | hAve the rest of it. mRLplepinaniiciatept ol SRorRy e i} Norway asks the peace conference | Paris. It means control of the Cas The British, at this time, are not[ UP. pian region, protection to Persia and{ worryinz,. as our seéretary of com= | pressure. The danger of a renewal | gcarce. As still waters run’ deep, of warfare by Germany should not be | Hohenzollern will bear watching ! K e anes are again open hey simply do not propose to allow it. Their barrier will undoubtedly he lowered to friend- xaggerated but we should not blink SV i lief of the German populace, strength- stead of a free democratic country ill be crushed in a state of unheard lemocra X1 1 as poisonous | expurgated literature of the Tuture it is a readiness to allow every nation i : atorshin ) that Iwill - muaire stable and a lasting peace impossible, ophistry after it has been censored by the Pro- fter thelbn that will be a constant threat not auicker ean the | for the next visit of suffrasettes, we | T el T Tt How far America is from accepting | ing its navy. That is natural an his| creases. Then higher wages, highe e According fo g l\w \"';(‘v“"“‘I”“"':f:"lr;m“\ dh‘l"‘_m' and | L1e free irade principle was seen in [ part. The sailor chief is always con- | freixhts. higher wages, higher freights —_— R ) \}wlmx-dm s Senate outbreak against | vinced that his country’'s hope is in toot! toot! we're off—certainy we're Great Britain for the imposition of | its navy before evervthing els The off. On our own hearthstone, we may rest, s S 3 cerfain restrictions on imports into | military authority. on the other e - The firelight flickering on familiar the United Kingdom The senators | hand, pins his faith in the army New York's Garment Workers, be reduced soon, inspiring us to e Who joined in the attack would stoutly | And the civiliahi powers. which con- (New Orleans Times-Picayune.) burst into song with “The flour that | (How ihe blue flamics leap when an | 25%rt the right of the United States | trol the situation, never agrec in full| “Thousands of Garment Workers nen but in the case of Gifford Pinchot e to do cxactly the sanie thing. The | with the views of eithor. Cangress' Ordered to Strike.’— Headline over ner blooms in the spring, tra, la.” [ “""“’4" "“_‘1““‘"( and soul.sccur- | Pilish government has done nothing | will not act in accordance with the New York dispatch. Conditions in the f“mn' and_ content, and so ;.‘(,.“;t‘ :‘::‘;’,"E.::. to do, since 15 Lo .'\,‘f.‘."}fln“‘»'.:\'"fi'?\41‘,'.',‘.”5'“,,,‘“}f«fl',\'»fi'{fi" °X:| New YVork garment working industry, th senator Boies D'enrose, who at- | 'Jim” Mann seems to have lheen | These are within. Without, the waste' | 0700 FECATED BL SN toreEn e | mia, neace-tine atatus, -~ |to 116 ta put into the revenue hill a lost sight of in the race for the 2 AL . | alike. Foreigners migit be justified in | Sinn Feindom Without Strikes. g il Speakership of the next House. Tt is| ‘Vith storm clouds sweebing by in fU- | ¢g)jing (ne Senate demonstration an (New York Commercial.) For a Ten-Hour Day | & buckwheat pancake hetween Mr rain '\\q-‘:‘:”(:u“‘:‘r\\v‘y’”‘\\‘\'\‘4‘;\‘1”“:,:\.{‘;,y':: ’(,h” some than the Sinn Fein mnovementi A notice at the Quidnick-Wmdham | understands that ’ y the Democratic party in - T T i GOy Ty S ::?vv;\r-m\ for American manufactur- | jyilders in Ulster may yet envy the f“nrl\s;\_\‘!(t:‘f”j;)‘\hfl\rxr:-:“v_::‘rr;:‘vwnr:-';““‘ Hv“r?jl:l:\):i l»n‘y;\h?m:;!!\;”sy ‘\:‘:.:u :lvv a 2 ashwe ke comfortable position of industries in d BY Imovalas His principal fear is that the Mayor Hylan of New York has a flames are low S O i | other parts of the couatry. where the o et e a- [ 200d prescription for shaking off wor- , We do not heed the shadow, you and is Peculiar Fyesig Democrats will be victorious if $ena- | & ¥ | J His Peculiar Eyesight | people are too interested in politics ries. He simply hops on a train for A man who had been called up for | to think about lahor problems and of Penro$e becomes chairman of the Nor He fears also | Palm Beach and forgets it all. No medical examination had curiously | where labor unions are practically un- irn to normal suggest: “They shall not fast.” the delegation are of the opinion that Soviet rule in Russia is the deadliest MR. PINCHOT FIR 4 Members of Coagress express the enemy to democracy. opinion that the price of flour will ‘ o e To Stop Big Campaign Gifts, (Brooklyn Eagle.) A strong sentiment in many parts of the country, particularly in th Ridicule may he an effective wea or leashing i(he tongues of some t serves only to refresh and invig south and west, is voiced in the vote ate and so he returns to the joust af the house of representatives, 191 empted to dodge the issue when Mr. ool o o T $3007 5 contributions of more than $500. Of course there are no revenue possibil Pinchot asked him to withdraw his Strikes in Relfast are more trouble- (Willimgntic News.) T s tandidacy for the chairmanship he Senate Finance Committee Mr. Pinchot's principal aim is the —— - hody 2" American soldier took an Fng- Bocker—"The government raises lish girl to see game of baseball in | both rates and wages."—New York London, according to a story told by | Sun lLord Dunmore e i 4 there is any- thing you want explained.” said the He (at end of quarrel.)—"Oh, of | doughboy, “tell me. 1 guess a lot of | course T am always in the wrong, in fear the gray wings of encroach- ing gloom, continue in pow- | household should be without a ticket So softly they enfold us. One last Finance Committee defective evesight. At times he could | unknowa hat Democracy may : & g see fairly well and at others he was - : Flashes and flits, elusive as a dream. | so blind that he had to have a friend Get Down to Brass Tacks! things seem meaningless to you.” | Your view dent in 1920, expressing the convic- - > = o = rkenec to guide him > 5 S TR & 8 o e~ 4 ” i & | And then dies out upon the darkened = e (New York Sun.) Everything seems meaningless,” re- She—Certainly not When you ion that “the party which wins the Industrial fanatics should paste in room, n the day of the examination he Peace | plied the girl, “and some things seem | admit that you're in the wrong you're by o, even so, our earthly fires must die: | arrived on the arm of his friend oyt { idiotic.” “What seems® idiotic? EIEh e Yet, in our hearts, love's flame shall Several ordinary tests for the eye- Halts i“\\'.u. was the answer, “why do vml; — leap and glow sight weve tried 'in vain, and at last | call th i o fieves the De 2 . e 4 . 2 2 e seats the stands The Out- { American officer (getting ready to ieves the Democratic party has lost | when strikers boasted théy would \yhen this dear night, with all it |the doctor, growing exasperated, = look ‘ return home.)-—"Beatrice was always er if it elects its caniidate for presi- | to Florida ext election may well hold the gov- | their hats the announcement ernment for a generation.” He be- | Mayor Ole Hanson of Seattle, made he confidence of the voters but if | take over the police department and holds for me, seized a large empty metal garbage I heard that farmer using naughty = 20 fond of Bau de Cologhe; F'd.liks Is but a meniciy can lid and asked h words when he was sawing wood this ‘How old would you say she is?” | to take her home some if/l knew what From The Bookman “Can you see that orning i eraricq ihslditvechildiio “Twenty-four.’ | to ask for in French."Zlyudge “Yes," came the reply his mother She's older than that.” P— Time aione will prove whether it ‘“Well, what, is it? “Well,"” explained the parent, “per-- “l1 know it; but 1 wouldn’t offend.ls c and file of the (Republican) party,” | functions here will be shot on sight.” - i¢ {,ipe a just peace or just peace. A silver half-dollar.”——Onta haps the wood was knotty.'—Portland | her ' hy avyin L Rdding that "many will contend, and | Good food for fools Life. L post. Press. i . Pepro$e is elected chairman of the | establish their own guard. It was Finance Committee ‘““the tariff hill ‘“Any man who attempts to take over will. lose the confidence of the rank | control of rmaunicipal government

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