New Britain Herald Newspaper, February 25, 1919, Page 6

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PESDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1019. o E OF THE WORLD fulness. They never dreamed thal it | quite that. now, at any . A 1D HOP [} would be a Europe of settled peace | this storm of war had cleared the air, 4 and of justified hope men were seeing eye to eye ever:- ENT TELLS H[S COUNTRYMEN And now these ideals have wrought | where and that these were the kind this new magic, that all the peoples | of folks who would understand what of Europe are buoyed up and confi- | the kind of folks at home would u 3 e dent in the spirit of hope, because | derstand and that they were thinking Challenges Foes to Test United States on League | they veiieve that we are at the evo | the same things E = of a new age in the world, when na- I feel about you as I am reminded Nations, Sa)’il‘l}-’. PCOPIQJ "‘d\'(‘ l)emandcd tions will understand one another, | of a story of that excellent witness when nations will support one an- |and good artist, Oliver Herford, who Something More Than Mere Treaties other in every just cause. when na- |one day, sitting at luncheon at his tions will unite every moral and |club, was slapped vigorously on thae every physical strength to see that | back by a man whom he did not the right shall prevail know very well. He said Oliver, If America were at this juncture |old hoy, how are you?' He looked at to fail the world, what would come | him rather col@y. He said: “I do of it? T do not mean any disrespect | know vour name. 1 don’t know vo to any other great people when I |face, hut Bton, Feh. 25— The full text of foregone. They remember territory - thatwas coveted, they remember rightt d Vils ‘s addres h ightt ent Wilson's that it was attempted {o extort; they y follows member political ambitions which Bo . e, AYE Mayor, 1 was at V 1 tc ealize, a Bovernor (oolidge 1 it was attempted to realize, and, while e 2 1 VO T 2 ik P J s e hope of the r a1 that B Citons wonder 1f you ' {hey helieve that men have come. intc | *8¥ that America is the hor the | ilia And T must sa . me as I am :q different temper, they cannot forgag | WOrld: and If she does not justify | manners are very familiar, and Bec vou. 1t warms my heart to these things, and so they do not vour manners'are very far & ihatl hobel the reauliallars nthink | me add oy aciishetul able. Men will be thrown back upon | It is a greal comfort, for one thing. the bitterness of disappointment not realize that vo a1l understand ti only, but the hitterness of despair. All I am speaking. A friend re- a sreat hody of my fellow-citi- | sort to one another for a dispassionate again, because, in some respects, | view of the matters in controversy Buring (he recent monihs I e heen | They resort to that nation whieh hae ery lonaly indeed without v com- | won the enviable distinction of being | "2tions will he set up as hostile | mine said that to talk throush an Fadeship and counsel: and I tried at | regarded as the friend of manking, = | C3mps again: the men the peace | terpreter was Ii itneesing L the every step of the work which fell to Whenever it is desired fn senq | CONference will go home with their | compound fracture of an idea. Buf me to recall whal I was sure would | small force of soldiers to occupy g | Neads upon their breasts, knowing |the heauty of it is that, whatever tha be yo counsel with re, to the | piece of territory where it is thought | ("t they have failed—for thev were |impediments of the channel of com Ereat matters which were under con- | nobody else will be welcome, they ask | "idden not to come home from therc | munication, the idea is the same, that for American saldiers. And whep | "Ntil they did something move than |it zets registered SR I do not want vou to think that I ;other soldiers would he looked upos | NBN a treaty of peace tered in responsive heart have not heen appreciative of the ex- | with suspicion and perbaps met with Suppose we sign the treaty of peace | tive purposes L] conerons reception | resistance. the American soldier jg{ @M that it is the most satisfactory T hnvalconaiback forla atre was given to me on the other | Welcomed with.acelaim treaty of peace thal the confusing [attempt to transact business for sideration e, | v . a i1 In saying that it makes me T have had S0 many srounds for | CleMents of the modern world will | tle while in America, but T have real- Zood | very happy to & home ain. 1 do pride on the other side of the water | ffOTd. and go home and think about'|ly come bhack to say 1o you, in all | | s .| not mecan to suy that T was not very |that T am very thankful that they are | ©UF labors, we will know that we | berness and honesty. that I have heen | deenly touched by the cries that ' not grounds for personal pride, but | "?Ve left written upon the historic ! trying m best to speak yuif B er Camie from the great crowds on the | for national pride. Tf they were | !2Ple at Versailles, upon which Ver- | thoughts v other s 1t T want to say to you | Erounds for personal pride T'd be the nnes and Benjamin Franklin wrote When 1 sample myself, I think [ ; snesty that I felt (hem to be | most stuck-up man in the worla their names. nothing but a modern |find that 1 am a (ypical American, [ whimen e Sreeting to vou rather than And it has been an infinite pleasurs | “CTAD Of paper: no nations united 1o |and, if I sample deep enough and get B canic to me to sen thase gallant soldiers op | 70fend it. no great forces combined | down to what is probably the true of good they | not feel that the greefing was ©OUrs, of whom fthe Constitution of the | '© Make it zood. no assurance given | stuff of a man, then I have hope thaf United Stafes made me (he to the downtrodden and fearful |y i personal. 1 had in my lheart the A proud T part of the stuff that is like the Pmings and victories | over-crowning pride of being your | fommander. You may be proud of ;‘""""" of the world that they shall |other fellow's at home. And, there- rep ntative and of receiving the | {he 26th division, but I commandea | ¢ Safe. fore, probinz deep in my heart and great name plaudits of men evervwhere who feit | the 26th division. and see what they | TSt the Sentiments of the Nation trying to see the things that are right, B ¢ believesit l Voub heaytst beat Wit theirs In |(ighunder miSdirectiont S AN overy- Any man who thinks that America | without regard to the things that may i cause of liberty. There was no | PedY praises the American soldier, | Will take part in giving the world | he debated as expedient, 1 feel that B . . = mistaking the tone in (he volces of | ¥ith the feeling that in praising him | A1Y Such rebuff and disappointment |am interpreting the purpose and th " i : g he ices o : purg the Mad | who expect profit by creating bit- FACTS AND FANCIES those great crowds It was not a|DN® is subiracting from the credit of | @5 that does not know America T though of America; and, in loving be: | terness and sectional rancor among iy St tone of mere greeting, it was not a | 10 _0NC else invite him to test the sentiments of | America [ find I have joined the unbe” | fhe faetions in Ireland has been the T fone of mere generous welcome: it They Saw America Acted Tdeals. ihenation EWelset this uptopmaked grent) maforitylflot Somy They Representatives of nine cuses | was ng of comrade to com- T have heen searching for the funq- | Men free, and we did not confine our | throughout the world H ; e S (T e oibny st S L imental fact {hat converted Furope | cONCeption and purpose to America. et Pee “ihey may an off as been made to| 7 ™M¢ T P RmCH S i 5 i have frens % i R 1 that ffort ha en Gamoils emteler by vritiine 60 o have waited for this [0 Pelieve In us. Before this war, | And now we will make men free. If OMMUNICATED & Al olitica 5 L 4 . fellow-men Falgtous question. It cannot bhe de- tives ” . aude | isolate the “Catholic” South from the| doubt that peace is here may be dis- | day, when the friends of liberty = 2Urope did not believe in us as she | We did not do that, the fame of sy o, L @QITPE oqi- | “Protestant” Nopth solely on the| missed.—Springfield Republican <hould come across the sea and shake | 1065 NowW. She did not believe in us | AMerica would he gone. and all her : = Is beside ‘14 " througholt the first three vears of | POwers would he dissipated. She TROLLEY FARES TOO LOW? « dent.wy ils/n et it hip’a;-longnh S R 1 i gm. Pog d be Lasren Y Very well. just so they keep the : ) d ;M;}r QR ek convictions; | delegates have been in attendance at| yineg We may need them in some| [ can't tell vou the inspiration that | MOre by staving out than by going in, | Minds that have no sweep beyond | Britain chamber of commerce, is re- ® O fsin has his own. The |the Irish Race Convention in Phi gladsome future.—Omaha Bee Bain: Mo Ihe seniimenic indl bbhe | %ndralifon afsidden, inta short cichis | tlle nearestinorizon | ported to have said that “the Co., is Plgion VP a8 9 teen months, the whole verdict is re- | I Should welcome no sweeter chal- | overbyidened with i clear., Umless they wish to ground of difference in religious be . s { hands with us, to see that a new t 1 f : 3 Aief. California vineyards are to produce | World was constructed upon a new H}h: war. She seems really to have ;1N‘n '\miu. have to \;:pvp her ;w\‘\r‘\‘ Editor New Britain Herald grape sugar, instead of zrape juice. | }* andfoundation fofdusticetand | belleved fthal we were tholding ot ibe= HEOTMtIoRSE NTIoW Frel 081, SDROCM Gid U I o IS en ctal Smanager (hetony % cause we though! we could make | PUrposes which seem so dear to some | Co. in an address before the New Blares that fight he will During the week past nearly 6,000 5 . 5 5 - out of those simple voices of the | state imposed delph when several important re 1 0 I = il 3 e 5 = P There is a possibility that the | crowd. And the proudest thing [ i Vversed. There can be but one ex-|!enge fhan that. 1 have MRNtINg | charges, compelled fo submit to planation for if. They saw what we | P100d in me. and it is sometimes a | faj did—that, without making a single | 4¢li8ht to let it have scope, but | claim, we put all our men and all oug | it I8 a challenge on this occasion | means at the disposal of those who [ Will be an indulgence. Think of the j o were fighting for their homes, in the | Picture, think of the utter blackness Pro- | first instance, but for a cause, the | !hal Would fall on the world. Amer ceedings or the results of (he procced- | cause of human rights and justice, | 1¢a has failed! America made a littlc essay al generosity and then with- suy un- ow all they have #aid and ad- competilion carries passengers er If | tirely too far on one fare i The trolley lines occupy a portion the public highway The trolley company demands and receives the use of this highway wherever it needs I lutions were adopted. It may surprise " s i names of the military officers who | "dVe fto report to vou is that this| imposed harsh. cruel and inhuman sacolninof I olits fousieos) setting out Ireland’s claim, read sentences for minor offenses will be | throughout the world Cardinal Gibbons, was seconded | made public. In that case public Servants of Their Peoples, Rev. Norman Thomas. a Presbyteriin opinion will make itself heard in de I have not come to report the » minister, and Rey. James G. Myhew, | Servedly harsh criticism.—Pittsburgh fuments “Pwere maliciously put 4 Chronicle Telegraph h or that they were in the wrong. quite a few to learn that a resolution >3 4 they were wwong, the members the dissatisfgd# cloment must ac- pt 'the ' chdllenge. ' Failure to do will be a confessiéh that all their s same in its business. I'hese highways S S 1zs of the Peace Conference that g . I et an Ep'scopal rector, It is not clear T > er j and that we went in. not to support ! are torn up whenbver the. compand . 4 . would be premature. I can say that | their claims, bul to suppori the sreat | 4rew America said, “We are your ! e where the relizious line was drawn The morc Germany how about | i Al UL 1S BTeat e e e bt 5 o cause whic they h [ ¢ u as o today ihere the armistice terms and the final con- . ey held iinfcommon = " L n n- | cjons from this conference Yol il o e not for fomorrow. America saic “Here is our power (o vindicate ys have elapsed that they are op- i il = S y zation approve these terms.— Toronto hiladelphia Record sayvs cditoriall Mail and Empire necessary to make repairs ta its road bed Is it unreasonabloe njust thgt ey must either quit or fight, and it ave received very happy impres- v fight they will know, before many i macted Taent ) only held ideals, but enacted ideals, e i b ) J o L righ ind then the next day said. | ! I e S L,—\ffi'fi! ‘jlp;;j ‘Lot right take care of itself, and | ting its own road bed in as good coui- %1 we will take care of oursclves. dition as is maintained by the town ST el s E RSt ealior ¥ on halance of the high- pression that, while there are many [ diffcrences of judgment, while there | they were converted tisonld 1 ! P R I ed to an antagonist worthy of il S TileRiners It is nat vseful to discuss the are some div of obj ther character of British government is, never rless, common spirii and T met a group of scholars when B edeat Wilion ohioys the happy T e s Doubtless the jox of seeing their [a commen realization of the nece: { was in Paris- -some gentlemen from i ‘\Merica e RS : ulty of clearing up the most com- Irish discontent. The fact is that names in print will induce a lot of | of setting up new standards of r o of the Greek universitios who had | 1620 _men along (he paths of liberty : }'P“““‘M ’,"“, j<“ sl British government does not suit people, now that the names and ad- the world ComeXtolsce imoitandlint whose ‘pres |20 Welliaye lowerediltiic s intend - Det SHstapronontion Ireland and never has suited it dresses of all who make federal tax Because the men who are in confer- | sence, or rather ifi the presence of | e only to light our own path.” We |cost of erecting and maini: tences. ‘We entered the war with and the discontent of the Irish is returns are to be published to stand | ence in Paris realize as keenly as any | Whose iraditions of learning T felt o befinite purpose—to rescue peoples increasing at the very time that up and be counted.-—Boston Tran American can realize that ! very voung indeed. 1 told then we =aid “Liberty’ is a thing on with other user The state tax ' ney are nots them that | {1 e s ipt the master of thelr people: thai they : T had one of the delightful revenges | 'Dat you must wi Uhse placedionsthepe lin L people ought to have same sort of g are the servants of their people, and | that sometimes come to a man. Allj "of call upon”us tion by our state legislatibn = witdf And ‘think of the world that we | doubtle full knowle would leave Do vou realize how ! tice If the Conn. (o ir steel ated situations with a few short sot up a great ideal of liberty, and | bridges which they must have in com m autocracy. The war is won. Do the American doctrine that every intend to fulfill gur duty, or shall a0 it doubtless he government they lilie is taking > : in peaco-—old the spirit of their peopl has | My life T had heard men speak with root all over the world. England ; oty 1 The Little Rodk. med to a new purpose and a @ sort structure or, now that we have recognizes the necessity of giving step back? Shall we complete oF condescension of ideals and of thoir power to rea. ! Of idealists, and particularly those workmen on the site, shall we India a larger measure of self- at purpose, and {that no man | SeParated. encloistered persons whom ball them? Shall we keep our government; tiiestime Bihensfore; The resolution to tie the tongue of [ dare go home from that conference | they choose {o term academic, who | o e™ ik 0 " Witheut a disin- | is opportunc ta give tho Irish the president tntil fie addresses con- | and report anything less noble than | Were in the habit of uttering ideals in to ride from nine to eleven miles for shirk responsib ow we EE e e B G s 3 bady i e S8ytlGo s avatt : i aas e shirk our responsibility now rhel ElTiChre comes from Senator Sherman. the The conference seems to vou | With nobody in particula l;,\ I do? Are you going to sef e o Indreds who 1 recelve. and deserve to receive, THE BOLS v . least tonguo-iicd man in the senate. | slowly: from day fo day in Pa ¢ And T said I have had this sweet | T 8 5 Poland, immature. inexperienced disdain of the world The ghost of Polshevism has been | __Springfield Republican seems to go slowly: b 1 wonde revenge: speaking with perfect frank- many new nations are going to be set | unreasonable redress can up in the presence of old and power- | obtained through further legislation. ful nations in Europe, and left It may be possible for passengerk ymises? That is the question. If obtain s ire probabk yet unorganized, and leave her with a | 10150 o one wants the nations of the | stalking in and out so frequently of ou realize the complexity of the task | Ness, in the name of the people of the | circle of armies around her? Do you | It is now candidly admitted that|which it has undertaken. It scems as | [Nitd States, I have uttered as the ob- | helieve in the aspiration of the Germany deliberatel; broke up what | if the settlements of this war affect, | 12¢ts of this greut war ideals, and |Szechoslovaks and the Jugoslavs. as hat inug she Lnew she could not pav for N e e e ey reat, and | Pothing but ideals, and the war has {1 do” Do yvou know how many pow ¥ g of less than h to return to their pre-war | late that we have become accustomed tus. There i& no help for it un- | to ils presence and while we do not 8 we have an internationa asso- | encourage its companionship litile at- tion formed along the lines of the | tention is paid:to the speetre. The - n the worid, and no one decision can | Were fighting with tense muscles and | them if there were nat the araate £ tition as genera Plea that disarmament will throw | prudenily be made which is not pro- | 10Wered iiead until they came to rea- | of the world hehind their liberty? pplied - and b thousands of German army officers | perly linked in with the sreat series | 176 these things, feeling they were Have von thought of the sufferin l th man's businesm out of employment indicates either | of oilior decisions which must ae. | AENUNE for their lives and their coun- | of Armenia? You poured out vour pplication to their own busi- immense sense of the comic or the| company it, and must be reckoned | {'¥: @and when these accents of what | money to help succor the Armenians | hess seems to them quite unfai lson outlined 1{he despair that | authorities for months and the i- | entire lack of it.—Wall Street Jour- . it was all ahout reached them from |after they suffered: now set Your| We could ! at their slogan in with the final result if the real 'y "8 T F T k : 5 ; ualite and chavacter of that result s | - menicaithe itted their heads, | strength so that thev shall never| would be, *‘cmpc for vou, but .. = they raised their eyes to heaven suffer again co-operation for m Taxation for o merica retire from further | local police and the federal authori- o he properly judsed ol | . uld America re m f r Droy when they saw men in khaki coming The arrangements of the present| vou bui exempiion for me in my bus (cross the sea in the spirit of crusa- | peace cannot stand a generation un-| ness.' If T cannot meet competition ders, and they found that these wera [less they are guaranteed by the unit-| wp u mu 2lp me ou f th ¢ 3 3 why you must help me ou [ is oulder through the mails over night, but Our soldiers are bringing home strange men, reckless of danger not|ed forces of the civilized world. And e lance el ne s [much new knowledge of home life [ 0 F1O%¢ WHO R only, “but reckless because they|if we do not guarantee them, can yon Any man who thinks that 0 ot s | and conditions il fhiose otk forelan BLONEs ‘“‘? SalLahs S Al clalms | ceemed to see something that made [not =ee the picture? Your hearts America will take part in giving A study of the text of the litera-|, ;.55 Many of the cities the sol- he claims that affect new na- yja1 danger worth while. Men have | have instructed you where the burden | poping ai that would be necesa the weorld any such rebuff and ture shows beyond question that the | dier has known have heen sadly | {lonalities. thal affect mew areas of ycgtified to me in Furope that our|of this war fell. It did not fall upon disappointment as that does not writers are imbued with the genuine | ravaged by the outpourings of en- | (10 World. that affect new commercial i jyen were possessed by something | (he national treasuries. it did not fall| know America. May I invite him Holshevik spirit, They resort o the | Eines of war. but his exporiences are | @M cconomic connections fhat have | (hat they could only call a religious | Upon the resources of the nation. It to test the sentiments of the na- e e ey s | TOTe pleasant if the cities which he been established by the great world or. They were not Hke any of | fell upon the victims' homes every- tion. We set this nation up to o Stenmo _the war Was| paq visited whilst out of the line *at | War through which we have gonc.: the other soldiers. They had a vision, | Where—where women were tolling in Bisics men free and we did not waged for the benefit of the capital- | rest,”” though this word is quite a | ANd [ have been struck by the moder- | they had a dream, and they were |the hope that their men would coma ldefine our conceptior and pur- ists and that heartless governments | misnomer for what is actually the lot | #leness of those who have represented : htin At dream. and. fighting | back. pose to America, and now we will sent the fower of their manhood out { {he soldier when Te is mot in the | national claims. I can testify that I i ihe dream. they turned the whole| When I think of the homes upoa make men free. If we did not onlol iiie Datticniias b be riddleq ] frenches. Yores. once so glorious and | have now here seen the gleam of pas- | tide of battle, and it never came back. [ Which dull despair would settle were} 02 s S e , do that, all the fame of America = Sl S ey oautiful. with its cathedral and oth- [ sion. T have scen earncstness. I have One of our American humorists, | this great hope disappointed. T should "'-~) ”d who "fl,, ' 2°8 o :‘“_“ would be gone and all her power | With shot and left to die. This would | ar churches and wondrous Cloth hall, f seen tears come fo the oves of men | meeting the crificiam that American | Vish for my part never to have had | both ends meet could also appeal ar would be dissipated She would be fliclent to bring tears were it} is now a mass of runs Shell-bat- ‘ho plead for downtrodden people | soldiers were not trained Jong enough, | <\Merica play any part whatever in|the nm»vr.nvn _wide open pocke then have to keep her power for v > je. ) tered it is and war-worn, but in its ; whom they were privileged to speak ! said “It takes only half as lo o | this attempt to emancipate the wogld. | books would rush to his rescue. No ] not known that the wounded soldiers ) S U et s e s = hé need lav anyih ad b sinkink those narrow, selfish. provincial received all the attention possible and | fOTM Dosom one may perceive many | for: but they were not the tears of | train an American soldier as any A S g IR eneNoTC Ja Y UUOR ) A RSy as s e ne purposes which seem so dear to 7 pepos Ere signs of former heauty. One of these | ansuish, the were the tears of ardent | other, becanse you only have to train | tion: 1 have no more doubt of tha| fund when business was good to mee some minds that have no sweep that the greatest minds of medical{jg thai indicating the efforts of the | hope. him to go one way.”” And he did only |Yerdiet of tmerica ia this l“#!"'hr:h:\v\ hard times or periods of unusual beyond the nearest horizon. science co-operated to rclicve pain | municipal authorities of the great|. (And 1 don't sec how any man can| 5o one way, and he never came back | I have doubt of the hlood that Ii in stress. v r 1 o W fe o - 1 1 By A e Can the gzeneral manager T should welcome no sweeter and to save injured limbs. As for | W00l metropolis « rmer days to { fail to been subdued by these ! until he could do it when he pleased. | ™ ? challenge than that. I have fight- make their eity beautiful. Bordering b pie subdued The Pcople Are in the Saddl onn. Co. honestly affirm tha ing blood in_me and it is som the strects—though now with gaps in And so. my fellow-citizens. 1 have B ai s doiToht ol lst 'it@bave | And now do you realize that this|come back to report progress. and T scope, but if it is a challenge on iy trie Wars are not fought in par- | formerly carefully tended in ovder to | | confidence we . h.q‘\o established Yhu not believe that the progress is go- this occasion, it will be an in- 1d the o ; A counteract any tendency of the town : 2 } throughout the world imposes a bur- | ing to stop short of the goal. The n il = Lo d Rl Y oL S e S ol o nalilinearrunEeialodly et Tl it e i Noue Suspects United States. | den upon us, if you choose to call | tions of the world have set their heads dulgenc bouguets. If the war was waged for | o ™ Coac 0o Conl gt T And, in fhe midst of it all, every in-|ii a burden. Tt is one of those bur- | now to do a great thing and thny are — — 3ritish soldier has conceived a 1ove | torest seeks out, first of all, when it | any i g : SILLY SEASON OPENS AGAIN the sake of further enriching the | of foliaze in fraversing the wonder :M S "‘”‘ L ”“"' 'H.]nm which any nation ought to be [ not going to slacken their purpose. canitallstsliwny R naves saidl capitalistal| fall axiernue fromMERoperinghaiiod| ey cor U e E BT i B SR R Eproud s To NCRTEY R ANy, tian gwhoSines | Andl when ST Rpeaiciofithe fna tlonsiof SLE eyenue Il opeansng b iited States. aus sists the present tides that run in the ! the world T do not speak of the gov howled at the taxes imposed on | YPres. anc 2 £ tet €-land T think T am stating the most | | il find I ithr e > {1inea road from Fletic to Meteren e ’ : world will fi himself thrown upon | ernments of the world. T speak of the | o i A 3 L wonderful fact in history—becausa = e f s E itute the n bntained in a special dispatch from | them? P where hundreds of lorries were wont | {here is no nati i omaae s (la yshorel B high and barven that it | peoples who constitute the nations of | /0 "0 Appeals to overthrow the govern- | to screen themselves under the trees | suepects (he ot ia farope hatlwill seem as if he had been separated | the world. They are in the saddle [V(‘ s R o e Eohen) 1 suspects the motives of the United ! r1.o s : d eve ; are gol 5 a the Co L aangconed fithe ment by armed| force are wasted, The |/from the prying cves of enemy aero- | ; [ from his human kind forever and they are £olng to see to it that. | <€ t18 FORE. TR AED SO IRC Those who have served in there ever so wonderful a| 'The Europe that [ left the other|if their present governments do not i : : verage American is too sensible to | Planes Moy eneral Wood ‘“was sidetracked be-|average A ! © }ltaly, too, know the [talian's love of s (hete evor sa | day was full of something that it had | do their will, some other governments by arguments of this Pl 59 | never felt fill its heart so full before. | shall. And the secret is out and the Luse of the fear that he would have | be carried away the ditvipeautisul AT vekworld s p2 [Loiin s il S e e e i = ands of the peopl i ature. Our system of government lories of Rome, Ven 3 [ Tt was full of hope. The Europe of | present governments know it ess i1 1 le s ¢ Wilson in rsonal | nature. C 3 g 1t | preciates the glori . Venice, | fact that so bound c tio hat pe oL} r 7 e Lo ssed Prestdent P und the mnatton thatli /s FE2 (Dot veo "5e ine war. tha: Fus There is a great deal of harmony | Put al re is into o fect but as between o Terona, Florence, ete. Many British | had won that ooies Shaaiatlee 138 notpeifectiibutias Foetyeenfour e }:mr» Viaited these places and | Loiv tion that esteem forever o des | 0 " 04 tne third vear of the war, was|| (o be £ot out of commor knowledgs. |in othe ! have retained vivid impressions of [ 1 would nef have vou understand |SiNKNg to & sort of stubborn des- | There is a great deal of sympathy to | own b = Silely Indend gton, not from FHoboken, Norfolk, what has been done to free commer- | that the great men who represent the | Peration. They did not see any great | be got out of living in the same at would sesmico ““‘ *V"‘: ,L”M Husiness bston or any other place where sol- | We prefer to remain benighted slaves | cial and industrial life from duliness | other nations there in conference are| {NiN% to be achieved. cven when the [ mosphere: and. except for the differ. | for the state 10 1a 5o ©Fe! this proper | | i { Washington Star. 1 somefimes think every small, nation ! "€€n won by that inspiration. Men | ors would be quic to pounce npon TS @ reikholde | | “lety of Nations. There is no al- | news that the Bolsheviki are active- native Iy enzaged in propaganda work in In his Bosten speech President | this city has been known to the uld descend upon FBurope and Asia | ers have been closely watched by the | nal rticipation in world affairs. And | ties, There should be no cause r,—”-; Soldiers and the Beautiful. What we are doing is to hear the} s was his defi, straight frem the | alarm over the literature distributed | (Yorkshire Observer.) AR hear it from “]" mouths of the men most interested: hear from those who are officially commis- principle was followed in all businese there need never be any ailures. Te the manufacturer felt he was running vould be to appeal to the public and he eat, generous, affluent public vould cheerfully help them ouf. If the merchant found business poor and competition heavy and was running behind why he could simply state {he | fact to the public and assistance would® be forthcoming at once, and-the labor to this feeling, that he leart of Furope Full of Ifope. being sent out onto the batilefield to : : e was not there to assert an individua stocks now owned that corpo be riddied by shot, that may be part- their ranks—are the trees which were | judgment of his own but to try to have never been watered? If so, and assist the cause of humanity he can prove the fact would g oward putting the general publi a more favorable frame of mind garding his company. If he could al so prove that none o dollars of the New Haven systent the millions o A ze ribbons for idiotic =state- All priz which vanished into thin air came ents are awarded to the sentence from his corporation that too mig rashington ta the Frovidence Jour- that the soldiers think Major ness because it cannot do it profitahb thing seen hefore* it might ) resign said opularity if allowed fo go to the the public run thei i erve 17 ont.”” This is written from Wash- e system and the so-called system of the Bolsheviki in Russia, for instance, of the terrible and wicked capitalists, § and unloveliness. Qdisesteemed by thoee who know fhem. | war should De won. They hoped |ences of languages. which puzzled my | ty at its present rum:mm\”ww e and The demobilized soldier, returning | Quite the contrary But you under. | there would be some salvage; they |American ecar very sadly, T could | incidentally relieve M Punderfo to his own city, is struck by the al- | stand that the nations of s 3 n which is Jess most entire absence of endeavor to | have again and again clashed with | territories of invading armies; they | France, or in Ttaly. or in Ingland, | dens they are now carrving. It would th popular sentiment than any| Mayor Hanson of Seattle, summariz- | clean and clear England’s large towns | one another in competitive interest. ¢ | hoped they could set up their homes | when L was on the streets, when I was | make unnece the strenuous can vith 3 7 - > bea s o "1 and start their ind Rl ey resence of the crowds, Wher yaign they ¢ essential to ther place in the nation despite its ing his victory over the “Reds’ in |and make them more beautiful to|is impossible far men to forget those [Aand star thels ustries afresh. But {in the presence of th wds, when | paign th ind it n e O P fouk tmon and live in. At home | sharp issues that wers drawn heo|they thousht it would simply be the |1 was in great halls where men were | influence puplic opinion so i commerclatism and industrialism | tween them in times mast. Tt is im. | resumption of the old life that Eu- | gathered together irrespective vill welcome with joy an in 1t Major General Wood :went te| even reach first base We, t00, must | ave had their way and wreaked | possible for men to believe that all|rvope had led—led in fear, led in anx- | class. T did not feel quite as much olley fares anothe 3 per cen rance he would be on active rlutyl keep first base well-guarded. § their will with, disastrous results. ambitions have all of a suddea been ] icty, led in constant suspicious watch- | home there as I do here, but 1 felt CHAS. H, ASPINWWLL. jers digembark and where opinions ight be sounded, but from Washing- intimatsly in touch | scorned they should mot be ignored. While the sheviki shoulr e k hile the Bolsh hould be hoped that they could clear their | have believed 1 was at home. in |and his associates of the various bu brestige as our capital city. that city, declared “They did not

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