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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERAIH Just rcceived, some new inexpens '] White | tion calling on President Wilson and | England in her hour congress to urge the peace conference | England now realize sh rule and their determination to ! listen to the voicg of the American i England was compelled less colonie: sive and durablc { Petitions Wilson and Congress o | Hicvsrisc e incependence or tie coi2 DI G, T. Wilson Sags? onies, and within the last year the ef- ¥ or f our ry saved ngland Help Set Ireland Free | (onuncr i oot e ne - Vote Is Non-Representad hands of the Central Powers. The e ¥ G jand to which Fngland was thus com- Philadelphia, Feb, 24.- esolu- | pelled to do justice has just saved | Stk B dn el i) of need. I as the speaker of the that justice to Rev W. F. Cook introg ning at the Methodist® @l last night Dr enc vous loss to Ireland but also U 8 < Wilson. general secretary of the be L] < to grant Ireland the right of national | Ireland which she has long denied, Ui | self-determination was offered by | with gri : . | Cardinal Gibbons for adoption at the | with great loss to herself. will now ! ¥ | convention of the Irish race in Amer- | remove from her path the Ditterest ~of temperance and public morals | ica here yesterday hostility which 2 Jhasio ien countert| the Methodl piscopal church. The text of the resolution follows all over the world and will convinc “We. the delesates to the conven- | mankind in gencral of the sincerity of Ame her dec wtions when she says that Wilson spoke on the question of pi : i hibition, being himself an ardent pro tion of the Trish race in hibitionist. He first told of an incident which the jmmortal declaration others as weli as for herself his early life, when his father, wish=§ }.&un\irhwi in Philadelphia the city in | she believes in liberty and justice for ! : | | o urge this claim that | g to give him rirthday present, i world, and speaking for many peic may be X ens call upon | of chaos with which the whole | @ publication which opposed the liquory # In imitation Convent work, 5 to 8| imches wide, fine guality, strong Cam- in a variety of blind scolloped some with eyelet, others: with <olid cmbroidered dots, cte., suitable Children’s Dresses and Ladies’ | goctrine of national self-determina- | in in into the sunlight of Iiberty, | taking the issue of the paper to his valucs up to 38¢, special | {ion and to recognize the right of the ! let there be si ity and unselfish- | fat a Methodist preacher, and | powers from the consent of the gov- | that shall he made. We urge them to ¢ Something new—fine qualty all silk neat square dot effect in all colors | and widths, special by the roll—NO. | ¢hown in the case of France, that we | with the resolution recently adopted, 10c; No. 1 1-2, 1 No. 2, 15¢ roll. | ; t 1 t cause all efforts to break down nd | destroy that existence have - failed | and because of the extraordinary ma. i ; jority by which less than two months | vy, P s o ekl ago the people of Treland declared, | Woraghas ””“”\\] been recelved ! qierage, 10 mills, two-fifths of the rate Mr ! land but also their determination to ! Corporal Welles dv, of the 301st ! Prohibition in the west, stating that | power. | humanity because we believe that | mur Training school in France, upon ' passthe prohibition laws. He has now is full of thrills. Each one a little better than the other. Don’t miss any of them at | FOX'S, Thursday E THIRTY-SIX MEN AIM T0 BECOME CITIZENS Naturalization Court Will Hold | Session on Wednesday Thirty-six applications for citizen- ship will be heard before the natur- alization court on Wednesday. The applicants are made up of the follow- ®. ¢ groups, arranged according to the ountry of their birth: Subjects of Russia, 9: subjects of Great Britain and Ireland, 3; subjects of Italy, 12; bjects of Sweden, 6: subjects of Persia. 1: subjects of Germany, 1; subjects of Austria, 4 The following is a list of those who re to seek naturalization by Allen E. Church, naturalization afficer: Subfects of Russia—Antonas Miez- laiskis, Joseph Lukowski, Stanley trowskl, Stanislaw Mlynarski, Marholin, Frank Zapatka, Jona kulskas, Antonas Kardokas, Stanley Grunwald. Subjects of Great Britain and Tre- land—Michael William 1.yons, Thom- as Joseph Hickey, Frederick Joseph Charland Subjects of Italy—Vincenzo Man- | 1 Angelo Lasala, Matteo C1 | Guillaro, Nick Mango, | Scalora. Antonio Satalino, Angelo Genovese, Mi- | August Frank Mon- | ¢ ola Carrubba Subjects of Sweden August Swen- Jo il L Johannes Jo- Ephraim Jo- scph Careb Bubjects ier y—<Otto Fein- zary ENTERTAINED AT BRIDG Shuttle Mcadow Club Scenc of Affair for Mrs. Steven Stage. Mr. and Mrs. Steven Stage, of Pittsburgh, Penn., who are visitin Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Hance, of/ Lin- | ‘woln street, will return to their home, | tomorrow. Mrs. Stage w: Miss E beth Case, of thi: the number of inned for the entertainment | while in this city, wua | 0 afternoon bridge, given today, the Shuttle Meadow Country club, which Mrs. 8. W. Irving and M Fidward Case were hostesses. tables of bridge were enjove girlhood friends of Mrs. Stage, American liberty was given to 2 Finally, we , - P 5 k brought out ' Presented him with a sub3cription to lions of American citis | he 1 e el breciient and co s of these | world now seems to be threatened. | traflic, United States of Ameries urge the | Tn this great hour when gove ents In one issue of s pi tion, a peace conference now in on at [ are heing reformed and when peoples | headline appear ad “Kansas Ireiand the reat | lo oppresse d {yranny ars cne goes prohibition Dr. 1 told of ple of Ireland to select for them- | ness upon t1 art of those who are { hoped that he would be duly elated by es without interfercnce from any | controlling the peace conference, to | the news, as he was a firm believer lhier people t n of government | the end that the mistakes of the con- | in prot bition. Instead of receiving \der which in the future they shall in the man expected of W““” iz that will be lasti and | hin, he appearc ‘ m, and said, We urge this claim in the first | permanent because it will be just and Thi in the name of justice recog- | right and insisting on the truth set [ “Upon the shoulders of our presi- | the founders of our republic, | dent and congress rests in the last 11 governments derive their just | analysis the responsibility of the peace { gress of Vienna may be avoided and a | the nev news doc ot make me happy as you might expect is the poorest state in the Union, being flicted with clones and other | troubles. I wisl this might have been | a staze where prohibition might have a chance to show what it is worth.” Dr. Wilson said. “I wish my father might be alive today and see the re- sults accomplished hy this lowly be- | ginning. The Kansas of today, in- stead of the poorest state in the Union is the richest of all the states in the country. Tt has more colleges and universities than any state of its ‘rned fact in accordance with the doctrines ‘Wa urge this claim in the name of | laid down on our behalf when we en- | Americn, insisting, as we have just | tered the war, and in accordance wre not an ungrateful people, and re+ | almost unanimously by the foreign af- alling that no other people have con- | fairs affairs committee of the house ributed more than those of Irish | of representativ to the end that lood to the creation, the upbuilding, | autocracy and militarism may be for- | he development and the preservation | ever destroved and that the right of | and defense of our great country. self determination shall be given to all the peoples of the earth.” size, and has shown vast improvement | over conditions in the days hefore pro- e i hibition became an established fact “We urge this c’aim in the name | of Treland because of the unparalleled | struggle for now seven and a half | | ¢ T i e WORD FROM THE EDDYS. | in the state. He compared the tax rate 5 { in New Britain, 23 mills, with the rates in various cities in Kansas with ap- proximately the same population as New Britain, and said that the rates tional existence and liberty: be- S Local Men Awaiting Transports for Home at French Ports. in those Kansan cities are, on an B i Reonc el Miissotisthtion | with | fromEtnegson=Sot and Mrs.. El- | in New Britain | the government of their land Yy Eng- | ford B. Eddy, of West Main street. Dr. Wilson told of the victory of when he made his first trip ac the continent, his home was in Portland, Oregon, and that on the trip he did “We urge this claim in the name of | months for a commission at the Sau- not at any time cro: state that has sovernment themselves without inter- | g eld Artillery, Battery B, who has rence from any outside influence or been studyving for the past three war cannot be ended and a just and | discontinuance of the military school, made 89 trips across the United States permanent peace cannot be biought | January . entrained with his com- and nearly every ite is “bone dry about, unless the doctrine of self- | pany to Bordeaux, where is await- in the west. He mentioned Oregon, determination be applied to Treland |ing a transport for the States and an Washington, Idaho. Montana, North and the people of that:country be per- | honorable discharge Dakota and the District of Columbia mitied to decide for themselves the Sergeant Stanley Eddy, of the 303d as notable examples. adding {hs form of government under which @ Field ,\rnlh»r\z Battery E, is also / Washington, D. C., signifies Washing- | they shall live. | stationed at Bordeaux, where he is B lcxplainet p “We point out that England has | @ily expecting transportation home. | (e “’j:\m»,:‘\:m e ‘]”‘l‘i::‘fv,’m:‘)‘:"‘;”",‘. tried in every way to coerce or to | Sergeant Eddy was in service at the meanc the prohibition of the sale, | persuade or to cajole the people of | front at the time of the signing of p.nico e’ {ransportation BinE Treland to give up their devotion to |the armistice. g 3 their national aspirations, and >d | - = | | { | | on the person, having in possession, or ving away of alcoholic liquor in the them all in vain. l.lovd George with- | go(TAL WORKERS' CONFERENCE. ' state where the law is in effect last few months has been com- | u pelled to ert that Jreland t | present as mt opposed to British | will meet tomorrow afternoon at the rule as in the days of Cromwell. The | office of the New RBritain Charity Or- industries of Ireland have been de- in the 1 2y i J = The Social Workers' conference I am glad that Connecticut is to have a constitutional vote on the ques- tion of prohibition,” said Dr. Wilson. i “I understand that the Connecticut e e e o, L e v;\‘mw\v‘;:x}l'\\}.:-: e T:\vo W::x; "1}“”1:,:-4“ r” prohibition. wiped out; her population cut in two; quring the past year in several. of i wenonero ok < that those senators her leaders deported and held in Eng- ' the military e lish jails without indictment or t Chh bndl e en, or their repre- d yet within the last two months | sentatives, are invited spresent the views of the people, but predict that when the question put to vote in this statc ose 20 | enators will find themselves standing | =g | ] on thin on, i “Fon | have alig curse and will soon state, 4 dr W orld. FHRST BA] - Crusaders Will Meet ning—Other Noticel There will be a meeting of th Baptist Crusaders Tuesday evenings | This will be in the form of a social af. fa at | Lenox place, Wednesday afternoon | far sewin | | | prayer service will be held at 7:45 p. m The Eye Of Those who arewise The Coffee these days are Drinker seeing not only betterhealth,but Economy ina Change From Cof'fee «©«POSTUM Neither the war nor pre-war conditions have as yet increas- ed the price of PosTumM CEREAL or INSTANT PosTuM. PosSTUM-both forms—has always been economical.Besides,it con- tains no caffeine or any other harmful substance. POSTUM is §ood for the health —the delight of young and old— an economical,nourishing,deli- cious bever'age. Every day — “Theres a Reason” for Postum. THAT WHISKEY TA FWalsh to whek The Ladies’ Aid society will meg P R 2 Fred has receiv the home of Mrs. F. Cadwell, 45 | Bottled Stock, Under Distillérs” Label, | Wepartment that bottl Not Subject to Special Fec. \ from the distill 3 origir | o 1)-«1«1;:“, s covered by the distille 5 TR e err In connection with the new reve- | 1abel, under authority of the dist | lers, is not regarded as rectified spi Wholesale liquor dealers has arisen in | its and therefore not subject to t relation to the tax to be paid on cer- | additional tax that rectifiers have | tain kinds of distilled good RIGLE e --l||||ll lohg-last- ing bars in each package. The biggest value in refreshment you can possibly buyv. A BENEFIT to fteeth, appetite and diges- tion. And the price is 5 cents. nue law a question of importance to Manford W. Schuh, Westhoro, will preach next Sunday.