New Britain Herald Newspaper, February 22, 1919, Page 6

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DAY, FEBRUn. - 2 1 Victor Hugo's Phophecy. ON IS DOING. o ! NGTON'S PLEA FOR UNITY (New York Times Sunday Magazine.) | T retor Republican Newspaper Explodes Ats Vietor Hugo the illustrious French publican pap ¥ poet, took a great B government which | In any quarter may endeavor to interest in the po weaken its bands jliticaliferof Wrance E In contemplating the causes which | The armistice conditions imposed | It t is justly so, for it iS | ;;iay disturb our union it occurs as | upon Germany by Marshal Foch Biin the edificc of your | matter of serious concern that any {cluding the occupation by ; of the entire left 1 guments of President's ¢ orie people is ulro now (Philadelphia Public Lc is an American interest to pro in- | vide a just peace for Europe. This if the Allies | what Woodrow Wilson—decent, peace f@ence, the support of | &round should have heen furnishea Shore of the Rhine | loving American citizen—is t yiag 1¢ fat home, vo characterizing parties Dby _geo- fand ihe four bridgenead cities— | do. He may have undertaken the im 3 sraphical discrimination orthern | Treves, Mayence, Cologne, and Co- | possible; but in t seasant villag your safety, of vour Pros- i .nq Southern, Atlantlc and Western | blenz—recall the speech made by Vie- ‘i o o may endeav- {tor Hugo on March 1, 187 of Poland, in the murderous cod : ! oA Tarc) before ! mines of prize. But it sy to | O to excite a belief that there is a |the national assembly, a speech full 2 : {erests and | of prophetic vision. He sa real difference of local intere and prophe said to the Atlantic ' ven ca “From now on there will be in tle” th \,'“‘.‘ "L"‘ theqdumbpar) e b s : ere made of our brothers mo to acquire Influence within particular | rope two dangerous nations: the one | curnestly hope and. pray . me ons B taken, many artifices em- | districts 15 to misrepresent the opin- | hecause victorious. the other hecause ! thing at all . ovonts o Sery sertan You | vanquished ! and that is that i€ Woadrow Wilson 5 C to throw up his haads and came e e R ind heart- | torious, Germany, will gain an em- | back to Amerlea with the me burnings which spring from these | pire, accompanied by servitude, a mil- | that he ¥ h the batteries of internal and njsy £ hs: thev tend to ren- [ itary voke, the brutishness of the har- | peac c risrepresentatior peace fithat very liberty which you whence designing men ilesia and in every con- ribt-cursed country from the Pacific fEhat from diiferent causes and e : ? views. One of the expedients of party fferent quarters much pains i, to weaken in vour minds the | iens and aims of other distric cannot shield vourselves too much “Of these two nations, one, the Bction of this truth, as is is the in your political fortress agair found it impossible to get a P 2 carrylng conteat and opportun- ernal enemics will be mo: con- | der alien to each other those who |rack: military (1y.~’,p‘1uw to the wyery | ity to all that ¥his latest peace must ofton | OUENE o Dhe hound together by fra- |soul. a parliament tempered by in- | be like the old one, Crw it (e ternal affection, The inhabitants of | carceration of the speakers. tions na : in shackles so intolerable o e e lately had That nation, the victorious nation, | eventually to compel revolt n great head. They | will have an emperor of military man- | s of despair would sweep over the I . i, csiimate the immensa value | have seen in the negotiation by the { ufacture, as well as by ‘divine’ right, |0ld world that all the fanfares of fm: 3 Fooottien and in the unanimous rati- | the Byzantine Caesar combined with | berialism could not qrosn fiention by the Senate of the treaty |1he Germanic Caesar. The sabre will Ythat thotvariionints Sii nio o With Spain. and in the universal sat- { be her sceptre; free speech will be |sade, when the scales swing hour B -houid cherish o covalal, habitu- ;| i ™ event throughout | muzzled, free thought strangled, con- | between success ntly and actively (though Bovertly and insidously) directed BE' infinite moment that vou should userul lesson on this Of your national union to vour collec- il tive and individual happiness; that and failure, a con decisive proof | science on its knees; there will be no [ Pany of incorrigible partisans gather suspicions | free tribune, no free press. There will | €d in a luxurious New be darkness in the namc al, and immovable attachment to it; | the United St a accustonmm=-z vourselves to think and how u v vere fhe York hotel and SpoaR o as of the palladium of propagated among them of a policy o of Lincoln sought to as» Kical safety and prosperit in the (General Government and in the The other, the vanquished nation, | Sassinate the influence of a war presi- P N ol e s riendly to their In- | will have the light. dent, wrestling with pressing prob- Pas anxiety discountenancing « in rogard to the Mississippi. | “Oh: the hour will strike, and we |1éms of reconstructian on which hang 'tever may suggest cven a susp hev have been witnesses to the for- | feel prodigious revenge approaching. | the whole future, not of a nation, but Fon that it can in uny event be aban- | mation of two treaties—that with Already we hear the great steps of | of a world It is amazing; it would doned, and indignantly frowning upon | Great Britain and that with Spain our triumphant future marching in | be incredible if this petty spirit had the firal diwnirg of every attempt fo | which secure to them everything they | history. From tomorrow France will [ 0L Deeped out elsewhere before alienate any portion of our country : could desire in respect to our foreign | have but one thought: to gather her- | Slashing assaults upon our w from the rest or te cnfeeble the sacred ' relations toward —coniirmin their | self together. to repose in the fearful | 1ent were no doubt cabled S ties which now link together the vari- | prosperity. Will i ! e v arts. dor o rely or the preservation ancient and ° r':,\-‘w s you have every induce- ‘lmiyfl“m'm-.t.« on ‘m»» union by [ France, the France of '92, the France | Unholy system we had hoped to slay ment of sympathy and interest. Citi- - which they were procured? Will |of the idea and the France of (h(“': system of secret chicane, of callous B o e e e nGe TorUh De (dean tolEnose iEwond | bargainings in human flesh and of such there are who “And one day, suddenly, she will [ Universal youth sacrificed to the | | Eat t e his Pusiness. ar presi- i « to Europa { not be their wis- | reverie of despair, regain her forces, | 2nd are being chuckled over today by of | regenerate. become again the great | ©VeryY protagonist of the Poaper that was torn to ! §'the signing of the new ar- o Y pact by Germany was the oy upon which the more lenient IERNC ABURILor thESE " . wore written.—New York Sun. for what Fora thingicalled General Traub testified to refute the — o satistaction DY SEMN ., sc brought by Governor Allen of is Senator Rcrah's privilege to the cphemeral ecstacy | Kansas that soldiers of the Thir | go dinnerless. but it must be humil- jating to plead that facts and rea- son upset his digestion.—New York command during that battle. had been | world. country, that country has a right to ' advisers, if | conzentrate your affectior The : would sevc them from their breth- name or American, which belongs to ren and connect them with aliens® | e You in your national capacit mu To the efficacy and permanency of i'kqv rulv’rmnw: :“L:lk:‘ Alsace. Is Hu.\‘m ; ‘,‘}”“‘ the responsibility of saying always exall the just pride of patriot- ~ vour union a sovernment for the |all No, no! She will seize—hear (that the president, in his effort to se- f=m more than any appellation de- | whole is indispensable. No alltances, | me—she will seize Treves, Mayence, | Ci'@ a Dermanent peace, stands ‘‘as rived from lccal diseriminations, With however strict, between the parts can [ Cologne, Coblenz!” one man, and one man alone, against slight shades of difference, you have be an adequate substitute. They must :.‘.Lt(;p(:.»'m.ss m:unllz;:(; of lh»; American the same religion. manners, habit inevitably experience the infractions ’ i . 1 o pledging this country and polfical principles. You have in ' and interruptions which all alliances Not Ready for Tourlsts. |80 far as he can to policies subversive il the honov | successful in convincing his small We ire promised the return of the | , "o, mon cause fousht and triumph- | in all times have experienced. Sensi- (New York Times.) | to all the pillars af this government | two-cent letter rate tn June. If it is | and which set at naught the most sa- coming by mail it probably will be cred traditions as expressed in om Wash- | unfounded is self-evident to any fair | caveral weeks late.—Detroit Free rise again: she will be formidable. | Moloch of militarism | And with one hig lean she will re- James M. Beck one of the speak ew’ short moments, as | Fifth Division, of which Traub was in coned. on Mount Parnasaus. | | ibterfuge, by lies | needlessly sacrificed. That he was citi- | audience that the accusations were ed together, Tre independence and ble of this momentous truth, vou have | No country. in the recent past of | librty you possess, arc the work of improved upon your first eseay by the j “before the war” (hat now seems 50 | Washington's Farew ain | joint councils and joint efforts, of | adoption of a Constitution of the | remote, was more attractive than ! Continuing. he adaegr | S odress common dangers, sufferings, and suc- | Government better calculated than [R50 i i e, i e e R f)‘n:"““ (‘:f‘ - e and moulding i their own | counts of his recital. e cesses. Your former for an intimate union | probably, did so many people depend | ¢ign policy ‘fmm”[;:{f"';‘ 0 “]““"‘f“: »ses and denyin . areat truth Governor Allen was a Y. M. C. A. The German writer who savs he But these considerations, howcver | and for the efffcacious management of | in part or whole for livelihood on | yeins of affice until the oo, ‘”"”“ the “sees termentation at work in Ameri- | powerfully they address themselves to | your common concerns, This Gov- | the money spent by the peaceful army | hag been a black stain of dishenss ca” would do well to take a good | your sensibility, are greatly out- ernment, the offspring of our own |of strangers. Multitudes of Ttalians | upon the Americad neople . Iie e ! Jook at it while he may, for a day | weighed by those which apply more | choics, uninfluenced and unawed. | therefore must be awaiting with more | eiples have heen & crazy patohmerk the Farew Address. | of the Argonne. General Traub does | appronches when there ain't going to | immediately to vour interest. Here adopted upon full investization and | than impatience for the resumption |of contradictions At he e been written. ! not deny thai Governor Allen was | be no fermentation in America, or not | every portion of our count finds ' mature deliberation, completely free | of the tide of tourist travel That, | hag beon consistently lovAl, and vh;“' nothing for unity | present but e says that if such was | OUt Where vou can see it, anyway.— | the most commanding motives for ' in its principles. in {he distribution [ however, is not to come soon. for the is that this great war, the greatest in Macon Telegraph carefully guarding and preserving | of its powers, uniting security with | Italian railway directorate has issued | the histors of the world. must end in - tho union of the whole enery, and containing within itself {2 waming to all foreisners that not | peace without victory. He empha. Leiisadesitahlomn b po s elected governor at that time, had “Frankfort Confemplates Frecting rhe North, in an unrestrained in provision for its own amendment, \until the end of next vear will it be | sizeq that in 1915, and at the presens to your confidence | judicious for anybody to come to Ttaly | hour he only so far modifies this pol= been cntrusted to another. they | that Y. M. C. A, men were unwitting- | mustn't cxpect any American city to | the cqual laws of a common govern- ; and your support Respect for its | whose business is not of a more es- |jcy as to make it ‘peace without full do as much for William Hohenzol- | ment, finds ihe yauct { the | autherity, compliance with its laws, | sential and necessary sort than sight- | vietory' and that is exactly the sig- lern.—Boston Transcript latter great additional r cquiescece in its measures, are dut- | seeing R S S e e mpathizers living in fowns behind Ly maritime and comme Y enjoin by the fundamental In other words, the tourists are ad- | place in Paris, to the confusion of nd our faithful allies.” picking there a | minded man who has read the ac- | Press. e whole. Parrot they speak | worker and he claims to have been at A llianeas for the | the scone of action during the battle it interfercs with their ambi- | the case, Allen, who had not heen Coveting the authority that | disoheyved orders. It had becn learned | a Statue to Wilson.” Rut the Huns | tercourse with the South, protected by | has a just claim tear down the whole structure, | 1y conveying information to German on- in an offort to bend the n to their will ¢ Allied line and, on this account While waiting for the president to [ and precious materials maxims of true liberty. The sis of | vised to keep away until the Italian | ourselves fless moust ) preciscly how the league of | turing indust The Sou v our political systems is the right of | railways have recovered from the| Then Mr. Beck goes mare inte de- iccnses the president of ot .‘ ,,]m O trite Hiey Dind hesmoniercd o i“ "{‘” 5 ty:,lnmv\ wll work various American | same intercourse. henefitir the people make and to alter their |confusion into which they were | fails. He if Governor Allen did secure any in- | (fv o7 e Govising some interest- | same agency of the North % s | constitutions of government. But the | thrown by the war. Whether this pro- | making his league of nations “a pro- | formation he did so by stealth. The | jne (heories of their own.—\Washing- | agriculture grow and its commerce | constitution which at any time exists | hibition, or inhibition. applies to tour- | text” to dictate a peace without ful miles away from his sarcopha- | gansas executive claimed that large | ton Star. expand. Turning partly into own | till changed 1t \n cxplicit and au- | ists of the sort that travelled in auto- | victory, of committing incredib A S e s e channels the secamen of the North, it entic act of the whole people is sa- | mobiles owned by themselves or hired ( baseness in the name of the = & The output of the spring poet has | finds its particular navigation invig- . eredly obligatory upon all. The very | is not stated. They had come to form | American people,” of bullying Great were killed by the Alliec barrage. |y .\ distanced hopelessly this vear | orated nd while it contributes in | idea of the power and the right of the cla of considerable size, and their | Britain and France” and of mehacing Any green “shavetail” licutenant just ! po the lay of the spring hen.—Toron- | different ways to nourish and increase | people to establish government pre- { expenditures were large cnough to | financially-crippled France with with- e public hx o e ar t of a training school could have | to Globe. the general mass of the national nav- . supposes the duty of every individual { make them welcome wherever they !|drawal of our financial support and S igation, it looks forward to the pro- i to obey the established government. | went. But as they are mot told that | threatening Britain, dependent upon The best way to overcome a Bol- | tection of a maritime strength to All obstructions to the execution of |they are wanted. probably they, too, | her navy, with a sreater Americaa shevist and transform him into a good | which itself is anequally adapted. | the laws, all combinations and asso- | should defer their accustomed visits | navy if she does not accept his polie masculine mannerisms and 10 | with. [t is expected that some men | gitizen is to start with his grandfath- | The East, in a like intercourse with clations, under whatever plausible | for the present | He even invokes the shades of Lineain 00k her services to her country j be killed by their own artillery |“er.—Knoxville Sentinel. the West, alreadys finds. and in the character, with the real design to di- —— | and Washington, who are representér surgeon in the Union ranks ‘m,,“ - - progressive improvement of interior . rect, control, counteract, or awe the The Small College. |as amazed at *“Woodrow Wilson's ot veowoman, or yeomanet, or | communications hy land and water | regular deliberation and action of (Boston Transcript.) work in the last four years boisonous animosity raging only DR. MARY E. WALKE e Dr. Mary ral told Governor Allen that this v sit- Fledge of her masculine attire | yation that must always be reckoned he Civil War. Thik has been due e en L bl ese fa + ) & = = e = ree T ouity are de- 5 General Traub brings these fault ;o roonecs just yeoman (F). This | will more and more find, a valuable | the constituted authorities, are dc to the newspapers, which have | finders up to a short halt when he de- 1 ation ool ene veomant || SEreR o e eom mbdliics B which o] stiuctive forhthish Fundamentallinrinci | W Mostio ihelthines iwhioniiwere sald clare ! by the naval authorties—that | brings frc abroad or manufactures j ple and of atal tendency. They f" \n;‘.::v"v; a m‘ 1 y'iy‘,r(v ,," Bos- Union. Fast supplies requisite to its growth artificial and extraordinary force: to i [F% 8 ge In our educational Washington's policy.” As for Lincoln, - and comfort, and what is perhaps of | put in the place of the delegated will [r ,“\,P ““"; said before. Seldom, | he is made to complain ‘I poured - : 3 | i1l roatar oo cdutnce ik must orl) on tHe nation the will ofi eipantyy oft-NIUTIEVED Shaye they beepisaldiwith fuchiiiou ¥ my heartisiblood fol savelthes Gon= who brought the Boche power to “The biggest war garden year_ ever! I necessity owe the secure enjovment of | en a small but artful and enterprising [ I'N8D& force and sincerity. The in- | stitution of the United States, and the dust, and there is no AL tion is the word that is being sent out w_'\w”"lm‘ outlets for its own pro. | minority of the community, and. ac- tensity of the speakers’ utterance was | that which I have saved vou (the el e l “h \'\ "”;\-:vr‘l“‘r: ’v“\(fll!_“w!mgi_“ from Washington. Does your l!bti‘ dw““”m to the weirht. influence. and | cording to the alternate triumphs of !Tm n:m;u‘m ‘|.,(:.);:.;y~». of the inten- | pre sident) have gone far to uader- G ] : ence Y s derful work. ms seed catalogue already present a | SHeEons [0 tne o ot the | different parties, to make the public | SitY of the crisis which the ideals of | mine Atlanticlsinel of the Union ldirected |iaaministration tho mirror lof ithe ill= [ihies small fcollcxe RareRracing. s Ind o It is difficult to deal patiently with by an indissoluble community of in- | concerted and incongruous projects | sapping the foundations of our -gov- { ernment with a policy of universal, | world-wide intrigue that could oaly mean permanent abandonment of red her male zarh and her man- bess rather than the frue wom- SV thel S motcs Dublic prans to the American soldie cket commonly worn by her op- eat beneath the st \~1 ouzht fo be doing is singin | | Hker was a s clothes was based on their | velously well done by the v thumbed appearance >—Boston Tran- derful men our country sent over Gt there Tt was a most stupendous taslk n the North and the South. She and one that our country was not e e candid assessment, the main current 'an irresponsible farrago of misrepre- of the edncational times seems to be | sentation 1 r g terest as one nation. Any other tenure | of faction rather than the organ of partisan malice and hap- The government of German At by ‘which the West can hold this cs- | consistent and wholesome plans, di- vounded during the struggle be- | | t 1 | setting today dead against them. It | is running so as result both of a pull | wazard bludgeoning like this. If the eferences to Washington have any and a push. The pull is the pull of | discerniag meaning, they imply that the great economic necessities of the ; President Wilson has disobeyed present day, the demand for special-, Washington and gone in for “entang- ized fitness, the need of expert and [ ling alliances, Yet every scheolbo technical training in one and another | knows that that is exactly what he has of a dozen departments. The push |most meticulousiy avoided doing: and is being applied by the modern cam- | those who have sat at the fect of Mr. paigning for vocationalism in educa- | Beck in his belligerent outbursts have tion, and is exerting itself mot upon | imagined that an American “alliance’” the colleges only but more especially | with the allies was exactl hat the upon the whole system of secondary |latter most wanted. President Wil- schools which make the foundation'|son always refers to the allies as { an underpinning of the collegiate sys- ; “the nations with which we are asso- tem ciated”—not allied—and his league of © e | nations is the only known scheme | which the (Uaited States can heip handled by General Pershing and test” paintings stolen from occupied | from its own separate strength of } Ified by mutual interests His ctate willlbe e avelor Al Jtalian territory. That is one of the | from an apostate and unnatural con- However combinations or associa- At e sl S e e hardest lots of defeat, to_be obliged | nection with any foreisn power. must | tions of the above description mas she realized the handicaps of velons picce of work, marvelous- to give up the loot.—New ank"\»r intrinsically precarious now and then answer popular ends, World While, then, every part of our coun- ! they are likely in the course of time = = try thus feels an immediate and pa and things to become potent engines ticular interest in nnion. all the parts | by which cunning, ambitious, and un- combined can not fail to find in the | principled men will be enabled to onored. Her single adornment | pines. He seems to know what he o united mass of means and efforts | subvert the power of the people, and If God would give that they might | greater strength, greater resource, | to usurp for themselves the reins of know, proportionably greater security from | povernment, destroving afterwards In rugged trench and storm-beat | external danger, a less frequent inter the very engines which have lifted sea, ruption of their peace by foreign na- | them to unjust dominion Walker had little sympathy for | dangers of a civilian meddling in mil- | The downfall of the beaten foe, tions, and what is of inestimable Toward the preservation of your en who could not act with cir- Affairs The joy of sweeping victory, value, they must derive from union an | Government and the permanency of i . s They'd sleep in pace if they could | exemption from those broils and wars | your present happy state, it is requi- Against High Prices. IR i e e gRecton [ theit Hiad Scramble i WELCOME TO. CAPT. GRISWOLD Knoyw. between themselves which so fres | gite not only that you steadily dis- (New London Day.) e I : e o, 4 into rtangling alliances™ e hallot. She wa arde ntly aff cighboring countries | o ‘regular oppositions to > } t > he ballot e w an arder quently afflict neighboring count countenance irregular oppositi A dispatch from Paris relates that | with them. President Wilsoa is in this he French are to “legislate against | regard the true heir of Washington, high prices.” and Mr. Reck has heen one of the fAicl comes Cantain Mlfred H. Gris To balk tHe Hun on land and sea | alone would be sufficient to produce, innovation upon its principles, how- e e Risked life and all, went bravely | but which opposite foreign alliances, | ever specious the pretexts. One meth- | oo o5 3 down, attachments, nd intr would | od of assault may be to effect in the Here, as there, the cost of llving [course, on the assumption that he has | prey and other struggles that tested That home and country might be | stimulate and imbitter. Hence, like- | forms of the Constitution alterations |y, yolome a national hardship meant the plain implication of his pselves he aid recently. | the mettle of New Britain's manhood. free. wise, they will avoid the necessity of | which will impair the energy of the Rut it is impossible to legislate [ own words—something one caanot be Under the curtain of night, he re. | If they could know how glad they'd | those overgrown military establish- | cystem, and thus to undermine what | 000 goods, tite lcertaintoriatiar thelirelevances be! ments which, under any form of gov- | can not he directly overthrown. In g gimoult edure and wore the regulation rm. When she returped to civil an's garb and was authorized by Iy well done by all concerned becial act of Congress to wear General Traub is an old Indian | 's clot being the only woman | fighter and a veteran of the Philip- T © COULD KNOW. a niedal presented to her by Con- | is talking about. The .same cannot ccognition of her services | he said for the governor of Kansas, he Union army The dispute adds emphasis to the pioneer advocate of women's po- Back from the battle-scarred fields | praye hearts in shades of blue and | not tied together by the same gov- | jis acknowledged authority, buf also 1 rights, but she subscribed o | of France, back from the roar of con- brown ernments, which their own rivalships | that you resist with care the spirit of emergency America can | most persistent rebels igainst the sympathy Washing tradition That is ot m of dignified moral suasion Een willl ot suftrage justh a5 |woldSoric hero of Seiche- as they stop maki fools of ley've got to stop talking so much . ] He s iy & turned to his home ¢ and few other ol . i o legislate lessimoney [iand inon sequiturs ot: the Lincola tiil= do some work to his home city ar ew other ernment, are inauspicious to liberty, | all the changes to which you may be by . o5itn e they have seen that craven | and which are to be regarded as par- { invited vemember that time and To a degree the fact of high prices As for “bullying France and Brit= knew of his presence fleet ticularly hostile to republican liberty. | habit arve at least as necessary to I = than his relatives and intimate friends | could i is beyond government control ain, that is a lihe The presideat The action, in France as here, can | has tald ance the plain truth—that St oo setrum ARG ot i || why. ought to be considered as a main prop | of ot er \yu\.u‘\t\ uy“y‘u‘.‘n.,{x.”.”ythvyv“ .“\”4 hest be directed toward encourage- (@ league of mations is her only sure nt of the next war—if there |, ey L 4 Could they have secn that Hun re- | of your liberty, and that the love of | perience i the surest standard = DY ) pant” of greater production and [supporf. She cannot have an “ea- im the right hand of welcome. He treat the one ought to endear to vou the | which to test the real tendency of the | (oo be qistribution tangling alliance” with this country to upheld the honor of the fifth city in The Allies’ dead would peaceful | preservation of the other. existing constitution of a country: that 1 =y "oy own country the prompt | defend the annexation of the Saar Connecticut in a manner deserving of lie. These considerations speak a per- Wacility in changes upon the credit of | oyjoment of the railroad problems | Valley or the western bank < the God, make them know the viclory! suasive language to every reflecting ! mere hypothesis and opinion eXposes |y .arg directly upon the matter of | Rhine. Would Mr. Beck himgelf zive WILILIAM T. HORNADAY, and virtuous mind. and exhibit the | to pespetual change, from the endless § 0" ot of living her one? Not if his touching refers in the New York Herald continuance of the union as a pri- | variety of hypothesis and opinion; In France the greater need seems |¢Nce to Washington had a 1 dence that the Germans knew he was mary object of patriotic desire. TIs . ana remember esvecially that for the a truth to A WAR OF FOUR WEKEKS. = New BErii=iolrcialces Rat M Gantain Brave Caddock’'s men could reason [ Tn this sense it that your union | the true charvacier of governments our weeks will be the maximunf lild be any next war—in the be- of Leon Cammen, associate editor the Journal of the American So- | ;i 0 cal appreciation and commen- ly of Mechanical Engineers. This | q.i00 The Croix de Guerre is evi- ement is qualified on the ability to be for a rapid increase of ‘mari- | The president also fc willingness of the belligerents to [, =, = oy ew New Dritain sol- he Difference there a doubt whether a common gov- | afficiant manazement of Your common | 4o chipping facility. Rritain-——nothing more. Ig she does not bloy gas and airplanes to their full | L} # ernment can embrace so large a | jnterests in a country so extensive Toward the latter regard the re- | Vest command ol the 4 in a league sphere? Let experience solve it. To | as ours a government of as much [ . cag of American shipyards should | ©f natioas, she ill some day lose it “Name this child!” commanded the | listen to mere speculation in such a !y as iz consistent with the per- | freely lent to 1 dies ever established themselves so sibilities. firml n the hearts of their fellow- (Bxchange.) : ; e rquirve- | to America. That not “hullving r. Cammen believes that Germany h France's requir townsmen His name will be en- | minister, preparing to christen the | case were criminal Ve are author- security of liberty is indispensa- [ oo Bl the Unencapanle answe Kl graved on the pages of our munici- | twins ized to hope that a proner organiza- | hle. Liberty u-:‘o\r will £#d in such a 5 b " : i for the channel ports if A The proud father threw out his{ tion of the whole, with the auxilfary | government. With powers properly | statistics—and human aa its fight for : yal history beside the names of other | The proud e e igle i e e B ihuted and adjusted, its. sunest WANT TO KNOW NEEDS grecws sed ten times as much gas . ches age overnments for th distributed s sures had use fighting men from this city who dis- “Tloyd CGieor Foch Hsig Marne | spective subdivisions, will ¥ 1t is, indeed, little else Mexico City, Feb. 22.—The depart- | In the « tinguished t(hemselves in the present j AMons Jones! | happy issue to the experiment tha ,me where the government is | ment of commerce and labor has or Cornell W uced into the war. Great fleets of | o' "4 who exposed them. | The minister gasped for sccond | well worth a fair and full experiment. oo foehle o Withstand the enterprises | dered all Mexican consuls and com.- Nd Gentleman (in street car) lanes will carry tons of gas be- wind. With such powerful and obviols mo- | of faction, to confine each member | mercial representatives in the United *anvone here dropped @ roll of b “And the other?” | tives to union affecting all parts of | of {he society Within the limits pre- | States to report immediately on what ! \with o ShNd then: The meek, nervous mother smoothed | our country, while experience shall i geriped by the laws, and to maintain ' artlcles badly needed in Mexico can | “Yes. i Y b the dress of the one she held, and | not have demonstrated its impractica- | a]l in the secure and tranquil enjov- | he exported without delay from the ! once in a scarcely audible voice answered: | bility, there will always be rcason to ment of the rights of person and |states. Data regarding prices also ‘Old Gentleman (calmly)—Well, nes will be devetoped to such a | ington Klett. ‘ “Maude." ! distrust the patriotism of those who | property: 1 is requested. I've just picked up the elastic. t 1ld have met with little opposition ple sum in arithmetic lation she did when this weapon was in- selves to Death’s bayonet that right d the enemy lines and will make | o1 q justice might live tain sectors uninhabitable continu- A kly, he says, and the flving ma- Birthday greetings to George Wash-

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