New Britain Herald Newspaper, March 6, 1919, Page 6

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HURSDAY, MARULi “ LIST OF NEW BOOKS AT "fi_@ NEW BRITAIN INSTITOTE 'gTAX' RATE Tfl BE oming ages, | : CURRICULUM. hy J. F. Bobbitt talent for dramatic irony'.™ P 1‘”‘ " ”; i e o A book which looks upon the | field Republican Bng e B rld that | Whole school curriculum as a means A A et the infernal wor'® ‘eall | ©f secializing the pupil for tuture | NERVOUSNESS, by I, & &mers “1_3’;“‘”“' i “\]") _ and | ¢itizenship, occupation and leisure en- (Mind and nhealth sepy T orSOM b Wilson wished peace. and | ;= aasy < ol el . BB c.ciliacc its coming and jJovment Ao L. A Bookli \mn""(' ool " Dsvehological discus- | . ) i b0 1cies of hono : 2 o ousness and its treat g D ‘[j‘ H o Proudfit justment. Tt should %e of help 1o the Bit of thc good. and if he has B f nal nervous suffer p i Bisk, it is becanse he has desived | 6550 U G dward Porritt. . nEaIse e through justice and for jus- | “One of new series of college text- | OLD ROAD TO PARADISE, by Mar it was for peace for Justice | 1ookg on government, this work deals | garet Widdemer ' he went to wa This man of | jurormagively with the whysical rpa-£ “Short poems of the war | the adjourned city meeting love, fairy fancies, dreams and many othe things, all from woman's point of view, and%with a deep tenderness and often a wistfulness in their under standing of vouth and the common affections of life.”—A. L. A. Booklist . i 5 this So e night | S nTo jurist of Ninai. thi 10mon | 165 and population of Canada, the hi in the armory pr ght and duty has neve ‘w”l"" ‘?I influecnces which brought about con- and that of affair, this th t the n ordinate his conduct federation, the distribution of powers f B states of which he was {he abso-| jaiween the Dominion and Provin S mssling 1 " eI P s orderly and 8 representative. to the dominant | cia] governments, the national polic y and timent of justice. Ile Was pos-| of the Dominion, and other subjects fssed by it as by a good demon.| The connection and comparison with Nothing was to be wishod, nothing | the United States in politics is espe- | PEACH GROWING, by H. P. Gould Was to be done—hut 1ch a | cially treated.”—A. L .A. Booklist “A comprehensive text on the i i | Position on the | i se- < | srowing and marketing of pea hes i i could be see meeting had b i at sever EPosition, psychic and 3 al # FCurcly founded on convictions and be- | GLORY OF THE COMING, by Irvin of rocky strensth. alone could S. Cobb to his decisions the serene auth- “What minc eves have seen of heads of the 2ol Mayor @ meeting WASHINGTON THE MAN WHO MADE US, a play by Percy Mack- ave that about 'y to. impos: th and force necessary to impose | Americans in wction in this vear of them.” I, W. ILAROLD, g1 and allicd endeavor : z WOMEN WHO MAKE 'OUR NOV- o HEALTHIFUL SCHOOLS, by May LS, by G. M. Overton 4 Than Old Wilson." \vres and others. | b e lhel sadland Tenioved ot ew—York World.) “Sumir es very readably and | and to be controverted if you please el concisely, in form that will be useful | The enjoyment is certain.”—Book- P to teachers and school boards, all the | man. association and it was voted to rgc- phases of the improvement of the | - ommend that the b presen€ed thellast houisiof the 85Ih congtess 1sfischoglichild’s lenvironment: Tt in- | BELL-EINGER, by C! B, Sed by M. A. Sexton, which now on - [ 50 per cent. personal malice and 30 | cludes the construction. equipment \ delicale episodic study of New egal forn e taken to B that | per cent. volitical biuff. and cave of the school building, med- | igland illage e and chara v’y that all might have atitlast Once upon a time there was i doov- | jeu) jnspection, athletic activities, and | ——A. L. A. Booklist iction to vote ifmes A | keoper of the housc of representa-| ype care of exceptional or unhealthy | B THe huilet 4 tives in Washington who proudly | cpildren.”—A. L. A. Booklist | CRIMSON ALIBI, by O. R. C eLting i proclaimed that he was “a higger man iy ! ey Sin fhational pro- | than old Grant That is the spirit in | \yApAMI; SAND, by Philip Mocller. | DANGER. AND OTHER i budget when f r « . not an unspeakable | which the Todge resolution was e ] oy e s e L R ‘ L inot & saved our do- | framed. These 37 senators. Who con- | word pe Mrs. Fiske. S jeeal puty ; Locitns Many a deed of |stitute slightly more than one-third of “Inirat. written! for Mrs. Hiske 1 § NINE TALES, by Hugh de Selincourt 4;””,\,1 rpo w‘ on flect, resulting in star- | the total membership of the senate.| « ccomphishes {hat rare thing—mak- | “Written with delicacy, and with a .w‘,“” 3 I o= iws.pcontdus [ are serviug motice on the peace con-| jne the reador respect the herains | simple and sHmulating recognition of | aefitn Mk.--Our Dumb Animals. ference that collectively thev regavd} ., at the same time laugh at her. | the bravery and naturalness and | sexton moaced S & e jhemselvssfasiga il man than | rpe conquering, unmatchable George | wind-swept vigor of life."—New York | pudent he that ofromen . L) Some day a republican senator will | old Wilson.’ ol freaiae \insae i Ghon i Tiestl e *“W—‘* 4 } ! N forzet himself and start a filibuster As for the resolution itself. it is re- | feine_all are merily flicked with the | sie . PaNSLTiassociation callingloniil o kY against a flibuster.—New York Eve- | markable chicfly for what it does not| (iin ¢ Mocller's now unquestioned | WHITE MAN, by G. A. Chamberlain, | M Neither Senator Lodze, wha ha 3 meeting | be had some of the >Mcials bad T met representatives of the Taxpayers’ I'hg/Ludge resolution which was ¥ i { Taxpa {od by 37 republican senators in gal v that offered for the ni quire termination oHE e ¥ ning Post sav. 8 - : S NIFORM. s suddenly become the Alice Taul of association Mr. Sexton told of o danger of state Thovals i e ¥ 3 P e » e s e s tobhe . | the republican party. nor any of his several conferences held in the off the Judiciary Committges of the jpc allows her enthusi & 2 e eas s Mo natione e o J, Relmatier shouldiba lortits bl rominn L S il ffrace (o | OTder to remain with President Wil- Al H prialature is the most sensble yetJam forgrause of equal suffrage to | Z0= B BlGc (0 i cretary, Such | fore, they solemnly resolved that “the it (he polls. The two resolutic fers ¢#0 Uncle m’s sailors a sol- se dats “lorida Times-Unio i e fo oF JLOROSEeC RS i doptad One of m Adliee 6 Unc n's sailors and so these dats - Flovida Times-Uni e s = AL D g OLD GUARD IN THE SADDLE. alRjfs as “hoodiims in uniform.” The | o But did they suggest any definite gt From now on it is the solemn duty | suffragists made a determined effort | THE RITTUIR ”(3 2 NA. | janges in that constitution? Not T - - heen olehearted su rt to the national 1esday evening when President Wil- ) inost salubrious and 21 mills, wili be veterd on holehearted support to the 3 © most salubrious fruit e e e e Dartic e A 5 'r" ! b 8. ime he polls v e o T pen islative machinery al Washington | rou visited that city. It became ru- | But welcome vour return from (he | (5% (o they left evervthing open Direct Modern Farms tional Gharges AgamS[ (T e L i it i ardless of political likes or dis- | mored that they intended to burn - = n s It a word is changed in the present eleased from the cmbarg A OEDL S e i corren >resident’s speeche: L draft, if a single sentence is recast, es. The people have returned the | copies of the President's speeches Ao e &l Sexton’s motion w seconded John Sweeney, also a member of lecided nt the polls. Votes will ha ng did not last over 20 minutes 5 : their faces will have heen saved ylica ¥ ower - aturally, New York objected. c | s i e S il s R e el 3 ; - 2 pubicanioanty Rl gnomer R saohg Natiel) W York objected. The | gave meat and zrain from ranches {ppoc can vote for the treaty and for Washinglon, March 6.—A large | Toronto, March & I Canada Ty PLAN CHARITY DRIVE ss. It is the party of authority, | President was the guest of the city and irom prairies e e e T e e e e B R s Desnliatinred ibviicha ngeslimild ol in SETLC [ house of commons | Sir Sam | Exccutive Committee Meets This Afge In fw“- of e ; f" n“;l Wesle declare that their opposition alone | States armies coming from farms or | FOUS > Ere I acquired the taste sl s e e E 1 ughes, foimer minister of ornoon o Discuss Method: Yain ¢ N 9 . . sibilita > = changed a constitution that endan mi-rural environment have raised b i thods it sfeolution o SicH OB exca b il llselvesfth e pousi DIl o iDL tectin sl rouhd i vou ire nilTeccntlloBinomatum | SESRA SR SE S0 Sl S0t s dne vl i o e question in the retrain. | tiat officers commanding the dumin e : : 0 nal problems the nation is facing it | him from unpleasantn In the di But my untutored scorn oI e Al STy Rl () eSSl o [ (e o] | D) TEGRC S e e il ainE oy N L ist have moral and active support. | turbance that followed, a number of Long since have 1 forsworn L r\fi(:e{d\ the Jives of their men in SL S anD Ll theRena e e who were determined to | As just a gastronomical erratum < wide open for every mother's sonflow the hackground of agricultural | !0 advince themselves. Aithou For your discolored skin A S Al T e information of these individuals can | “legalion. were assum o refer Holds treasures rare within Mot b inaea Sir Aribes Currie, commander in readjustment, and that e paper were roughly led. mguessed by s oy golc R o 5 2 e o e Can i faices (are need readjustme in the paper were roughly handled Unguessed by those who fancy gold e el encral impression s that chietiol anadi orces, there is hnot be accomplished unless all hin- According to Mrs. Belmont. “hood- must glitter, c Blsho Hgrimnecs vhen a man has lost his strength hisi 2PParent a sirong inclination in many e SO a J ally Springfielc « blica o g o arte: to dis: r witl 1 Sol- Mlavors that can allure (Springfield Republican) usefulness on a farm is at an end (::]:Ly r\\” . L\)zm;r gt vvn-n 1 The jaded epicure o he commission of I'rotestant Epis- | The federal hoard does mot at a1l | GorS Who served overseas air H\‘ b B T s TndnTacedoninain saladlopsinEuitterai I i arasia smmiy = B sand as | b o s e e i a up the cudgels in support | I¢ arle, Clarerfin copal bishiops and their associates wh ihscribe 1o this and the course which ¢ o¢ G2 0L T Herbe Ernest Sir Sam opened his attack with the | W Frank G. Vibberts, Georze E : ™ ains : E uncement that he had protested | Kimball. Howard Ha Willlam 1 fu 3 v) of the burde 2 ght a 3 S U yr- | The fact remains you nourish and you ool = & 4 = | popaia A e St anno ¥ With full knowledge of the burden | who fought and bled in Burope in or of preparing the way for a greater | popu Dl wen who have | severa] times to Premicr Hungerford, William Hatch. Paul Borden ced upon its shoulders, the Repub- | der that Mrs. Belmont and the rest warm us: K hde so by the fortunes of politics, | and the citizens took upon them- erwise it will fail in its intention | the women charity dr 1l be deriliivisd return the country to a peace basis. | create excitement and get their names noUhis eify April. was held in the chamber of coramerce room 4 o'clock. this afternoon The committee consists of Brnest W hnces are removed. The future of | lums in uniform knocked out and Pelton, president; lLouis P. Slade o0 b country, not the futurc of the [ trampled young women who were yublican or Democratic party, isat | only making a plea for their rights.” R e 5 i Though somewhat poor in fat arc to sail from New York to visit | has heen evolved on “farm manage- | e WRGEE MG ou (O S e oufiere SNe s ol Rome and the Near ISast in the hope | ment”™ is proving one of the most 1 Tiecho ty withi e Christian | faken ooteaining . x Vide the Tacy. Brit degrecfo funitygiwibiinigthe S Ghistian e 15 i “against the waste of Canadian bovs' | K. Rogers, and L. H: Sprague n party nas taken a slep that, un- | of her sex might enjoy security from Wheie arais it “rhvnnh are going at an auspicions mo- | Fara management is the -w\mv,:- e i e i e e i R e an: t of ovganization and management o , : 1 of 2 ' other circumstances, might well | the fate that descended on the women | Your wealt n carho-hydrates is ¢ = S tlefield.” He then read a Ic he had ‘ organizations howi at omen | Your we 4\\ h w‘ 3 shown that relizious aspivations and | fivm cnterprises for the purpose of | cony 1o Sir Robert pratest 2grinst] be in n the d dgs se the public vi sup- aded lands across the Atlantic. enormot a 2 i ceurir e ates co i o Y ise the public to withhold its sup- [ of invaded lands across the Atlantic. SO0 Ol principles cut across denominational | “ccuring th eatest o e [ e e e e Taue e ot [ fronillos R 't, but (he national progress of the | These ““hoodlums” are the same men ol oie bt e, and scetavian lines. “Is he mot also | Profits. Tt is the business end nr~ Caabial andiatativiel il nebnaa and it 15 disc rs is ol such overwhelm- | who endured almost unbelievable om China to Tahiti or Guiana, a man and a brother?"” was a question | farming. 1t deals with farm organ-| jrawn the attention of the prime min- | ing local char importance trat even the reac- | hardships and sacrifices in order that We welcome back vour bunches | answered before it was asked on many ister on previous occasions o the | Boys' club brealfasts, dinners. lunches, | battlefields hy ministers of religion | “massacre at Lens. ["asschendele ing Nurse 2 i whose flocks were the fighting men, classes of farmers including owners etc.,, where the only 10 managers and tenants was to glorify the genoral N NS BIG M In agricultural affairs as they have| mand and make it impossible, through - been carried on, the lack of business' pyutchery, to have a fifth and sixth di- measures has heen amazing. ADso- | vision and two army corps lute mismanagement has frequently He declared that any general who been the cause of failure and aband-| would undertake the attack at Cam-| With over 175 members and out of " g ; 4 . et > ] onment of farms. Variation in profits | bria by suburban or street fighting | town Masonic suests present, Centen I'Tilusiration of Paris recently con- | the object sought. Whether among | o Pm0 @ @HFE - TEPECION T Brates > lard was rampant and excrcised full | tion of woman suffra e . SSh e s : B e | should be court-martialed. The samec [ nial lodge, A & A. M. held one of m o : age is ever re- | tained an article by Henry Lavedan, |the various divisions and subdivisions e ; able | & er re- | tained an articl ) el I eomnon™ | management than unfavorable | was true of the officer who had ord el iAtocet mpctings of the vdur i | ment. The test of the greal war ha ization methods, accounts and v'r‘f\fl!"‘.‘ and is therefore of interest to all Inary Mr. Mann and his crew must | the name of woman might remain At O succulent and bountiful banar London Pund of whatever creed | The movement of which the pres- | ent commission is the most advanced | swallowed. We had been informed | sacrcd. These “‘hoodlums’ are the t the Old Guard had been interred | same men who were offering their 1 an extra heavy lombstone placed | very lives for an ideal at the direction A Portrait of Wilson, Centennial Lodge Visited By Members | 2 r the corpse to keep it down. At | of their commander-in-chief whom I S hes) step was inaugurated by the Epis- e ! : of Center Lodge of Meriden A e i i g E i ;! 3 copal convention of 1910. A working terday’s session of the Republican | the National Women's Party as | mo the Bditor of the New York Times: | agrocemend on Christian principles is nmittee on committees, the Old | heckling al Washington. If the ques- | py. much to the disgust of many | ferred to the voters, the American | conveying the admiration of the | of the church y J A sons or fluctuation in prices, Publican members who regard with lovs and soldiers are not apt to for. | 'rench people for President Wilson the doctrine of the divinity of Christ| " 14« bocome decidely a business “Though it has not scen him. the [ there is cnough in common upon |\ Guosition and the federal board ho- which to build a structure which all } jjoves (hat many farms which be- ed the storming of Mons four hours | AMasonic hall last evening he ocea hefore the signing of the armistice. [ sion was the visit of Cent ol N | This he characterized as bit of the Meriden, with their spec —— whole world ll;my)‘v\.\‘ him, waties) M| i : Suoire s { atrical display which had cost the| team which exemplified the third de Lavedan. *“All thinking men. all those | will accept is a questio o be a cause of mismanagement are un- | lives of many fine Canadian hovs wh e 4 B g ) o iy petans g = 3 0 X i 2 u E anadis LN o gree on one canMdate Preceeding ‘H Amllol blink the f; f‘ll that zifted with active souls, and striving | swered _\m.‘« of the !}vn:‘v\ | profitable, could by reorganization be| could ill be spared. “Bullheadedness| the lodge meeting the ladies Old Guard is in the saddle and | to live worthily as men, have the por- | nominations have reached a tenta stabilized and developed into profit-|and incompete Hella “wore | - S o o it v as L g r 2 competency, aid, re | Fastern Stag d ar WAR PLOTS NOT ACCEPTABLE. | 4,,i( of this great man always before * tive agreement in respect to such | able. lucrative undortakings e e bickind ihcl horrble camunivel|l common ground. and a letter which Only 60.000 farms out of 6.361.000 | rolling up to eight and ten times the Worshipful Master Oscar Mar picion the motives of the back- | get the insult hurled at them and r@-wing of the party. Dislike it as we | act accordingly t its leader is James R. Mann \uthors and publishers are report- | their mind's eve. For four o has been repudiated by nearly B el ! i grave, profound, sovereizn, he ned the papal secretary of stale wrote to | according to the 1910 cevsus, em- total farce of a battalion or a bri-| Centennial lodge presented to the ed rubbing their hands in token of | v ‘jf"‘”"j"""f noyepaper ‘”‘ ”‘." | happincss at the prospects of a re. | LNere through the disturbances. the | the secretan uil:‘\/.‘u]nu\i council of | ployed managers. The small per- | gade .| visiting worshipful master an em st. This is the same James R : fears, the alternations of hope and hes of Christ in America in [ centage of profits of incfficient man- | ome of he papers hint that Sir| possed and framed communication of turn to conditions existing before the | gismay which his unperturbed feat- S days of the movement has|azement. of idle and incompetent ! Sam's attack was inspired by chagrin | greeting from Centennial lodge SVorld hva i Sincel the conllicticon Ilutes b o ke lintis i Durin= Rihal waitic 1 its promoters to helieve [ management. makes thousands of yat the failure ofh is son, Gen. Garnet N | hias been toward Wilson that our lead- | that the holy sce will be in sympathy rmers not living on their places | at the failure of his son, Gen. Garnet| TOWN HOME IMPROVEMENTS. of the proposal for co- | very desitous to secure farm man- | mander of the fifth brigade of Cana- Saveralithances willlbe m at the® nn who referred {o the women and ldren on the Lusitania as ‘“jo ke menced, there has been a dearth of o e ™ turnec e looked with the spirit 'n 5 3 reading on subjects e <o | ers have most ofien turned; we o H G e @16 Enel ik e > Jects other than those | %)y % ¢ we might have looked at a | operation. Indeed, it is said that re- | agers capable of inducing farm man- | dians, but all are unanimous in the| youwn farm in this city in order {o ious error, but we must make the | Pertaining to the war. Publishers | cjock. What docs Wilson say? What | cent correspondence has strengthened | agement. and to eet this growing | assertion that the charges call for an| q4eq protection against fi | hesitated to offer the public the usual | does he think? What will he do? | the belief. The occasion is historic, | need the course in farm manage- | immediate and thoraugh investigation | joorwayvs will be constructed. A | run of fiction for the reason that the | Such were the daily questions of the|as the first time since the reign of | ment for disabled soldiers has been | General Currie was an appointee| ooy Wuiding will SECRECY STILL IN FORCF altention of nearly every man, wo- | Peoples h the preoccupation of all | Hente VITL that Anglican bishops | ¢ olved hy the federal hoard for vo- | of k ir Sam’s when he was minister ot | o 5 vqiant at the farm to protect fire g 5 and ecvervone. The eloquence of his | have® waited upon the pope cational education. «und indications | militia . _ ST e S silence was as universal and individual he unity proposal has been com- fare that the demand for these well Incidentally, Sir Sam mude a bitter fixed steadfastly on that strip of ter- | as that of his speech pared with the league of nations, and | {rained men will considerably exceed !attack on Sir Joseph Flavelle, head of @ 1 s i L Gl Sy Si=abioe . > 4 peris n ) Yoare ¢ ritory in Belgium and Northern When we scrutinized this long. | tbe parallel is a natural one ¢ | the supply. Disabled men taking ;‘y’»:‘_“df“l‘j:‘""?’”"“”\’\‘:"j':m l’)-?\*" 1 lI"\l have apparently learned nothin rance where nations were locked strong face of an austere and intel- | F¥shop R. H. Weller, of Fond du Lac pany, a bhig Canadian packing concern . Jectual thinness, of a cold and bony { Wis. one of the commissione ex- & S ] t of it be erected over a fecrecy continues to be the vehicle | man and child in the country was R S dliread 7 instant use s will e received un- i1 March 12 at noon for tt which the proponents of a new te educational system ride and | | | training are allowed a support fund | | of $65 per month mmimum. all ex- penses are paid and places found for | With hranches in the United States. This training is main- | The company’s profits in the Canadian NEW BRITAIN MAN m the public resentment aroused = battle. Alany soldiers recounted their SiD TAKES WORCESTER BRID force, having the resistance and loval- { plains that what is songht now is not | I e of stone, we saw that it revealed | so pretentious: the object is merely » | |'¢ 8radua Panch . . i c 0 2 v ziven in thr nd g colleges | br es were investigated some time : er, Mar 6.—Albert Kap= writing and propagating » lam- | came glutted their books enjoyed wic ) i d character 9| e ce, t Las or act Y Eoy I EMLN e anticollests RYioLcoate AV L L propagating the lam u i ks enjoyed wide sentiments and character of its | conference, that a lasis f foniffic” & mom eea At e ago by a roval commission, but he|ian of New Britain, Conn. and Mist ed Morrison Code. In spite of ,-p,i sopularity. possessor. That dominant fovehead.| may he established. e savs declared that the operations of the | T.ena Sosner. daughter of Mr. and | | the clandestine methods employed ! experiences and until the market be- wherein lay concentrated the toil of | We want to get all hodics togeihel SElY REDS VICTORIOUS. company in the United States should | prs. Samuel Sosner o Prox With the dawning of peace, read- magnificent and unresting infelli- | and say not what we disagree on. but he looked into. and asserted that Sir t reverses, the authors and sup- street, were married Fters of the Morrison measure will | ers demand lighter fiction from which a virtue they arc a holy body of | of the dying and wounded are elimin- | gecanlike blue of the sharp vet med ffons (e Uit apworld) company by virtue of Iphr‘ influence he \\tf’\l:mv-v\vxlv‘nm“ «'{f,‘f«fn e ated. They are satinted with war lit- | tative eves, the cold gentleness of united today than most people realize was able to wield as head of the im- Jauwhs:’m. of v\‘pr\vv‘»" look in which ambition and idealisin | We believe that, joining tozether, perial munitions board and that he|jonor, and Miss Eva Go together flamed, the look of a scicn lookinz eye to eve. we shall find these | had made profits of $100,000,000 dur- | tific dreamer, that firm month with { fundamental bases of agreement. and | rtford yesterday and turncd 1t deals with military achievements [ ips shaped co utter the word of law, | so lay the platform for a larzer, more in the door after all who had of daring. Herein lies a | that large chin. sign of character as | co-ordinated work." well in hand as the butt of a revolver | The commission has high hopes of X ian churches are more . Gencva, Swilzerland. March 6.— | l.eon Trotzky. Bolshevist war minis- ter, has wriften from Moscow under date ol February 14 to a friend here Prepuring a substitute for the Mor- | crature to such an cxtent that pub- timore, Miss Dora Sa ling the four years bf war. Sir Joseph = S « ring t Bols g S spre: s Miss Bell Dunn, M deslaning frues ‘,"" hevism is spread- | nag issued a cateRorical denial (o the | ang. Miss Anna Sieg ing throughout Russia and Siberia. He | ox_minister's charges. e gays in this letter that after peace is e o ¥ 5 e : signed a new campaign will be stari- Comparative Losses at Ypres the Russian Or- e : < 3 1 cd among the workers of the world | g , . | traits announced that predestined | thodox church, whose head. Arch-| (o gan¢ jmperialism and capitaliem """d:',"‘,‘“l"'rf’ 6.—The _casualties | [ s SN s, e e hishop Tihlon. patrinreh of Moscow, | fooi aues iis frionas. o comeasmt | of the British, Canadian and Austral- e mecting leaked ont so rove most acceptable " - The f wing eloquent tribute does | fo rlv o el Russis Sl e o o ] : A nheifollowing elody L apand formerly presided over the Russian | with Mme. Barabanoff, who is now in | july 31 to November 18, 1917, agsre the public is not entirely unu- | 2 for which the world has been | no more than justice to our presi [ chureh in New York. The head of | gwitzerland With several million ru- | zated in officers and men 258 097 B thit o ncw move is pendin n= will be sought chiefly througn ‘With what a right good-will the CGreek church, the patriarchs of | hles in her DPossession to carry on This fact was made known vester London, March 6.—A number of what a delicacy of action, purity of ; Constantinoplc Antioch. Jerusalem | golshevist popaganda in Ifrance and ' gav in the house of n Code, its godfathers mef Jishers now look askance on the plot n invited had entercd a1 opportunity for the discerning bridesmaids. e | in the grasp of Yanik'—all theso | the co-operation of fmen were not permitted to report | novelist who is Able {o interpret th oo : . T-BOATS SOLD FFOR JUNK discussion, but sufficient knowl- | public mind and decide what themes jan troops in the Ypres salient [rom | pyichasers of 47. Held By 1 Promise to Break Them Uj commons when | Gierman submarines Iving in a Br the State Loard of IEducation | reading and already the bresses are 2 e e science, grandeur and vigilance of | and Alexandria. and pr bly the heac A T 3 conscience, grand and Alexandria. and probably the head | jraly and 19 in England and the | winston Spencer Churchill, secretary are to he handed over to plan for improving the school | humming und the old-fashioned fic- s s e e | S : i I S the spirit, ehar : ( church in Armenia, will also be | {"nited Stat At inlansverin et e tlon s e icntalso tem which licves will stand ‘w n being turned out of the pub- | erosity of soul he has a m'flH red; visited, in the expectation of sym- | Trotzky, Who Savs he is in close co- | {he casualties as follows 1y, Japar " test of critical opinion there | lishers’ horn of plenty. the mission which he did not to | pathetic hearing, Al Christendom | operation with Premier Lenine, boasts British—Officers, 10,795: men 7 bmarines buld be no hesitancy to publishing | ———— undertake even when fa r\’»l by all the | w [” be interested in the outcome of { success for the Bolsheviki has | §38 TS most pressing problems of the future this pilgrimage and, whatever its im- | already lhech 2ained in Germany Canadians—Officers, 456: men e hde and the past. We have seen him: we | mediate outcome may he, should profii | (hrough the Spartacans, and declares 7 that they have admired him; our descendants| by its efforts foward a mutual under- | his belief that Bolshevism will event- Australians—Ofticers, 11, men, | miralty will first remove their e in their turn will wonder at it all, and | standing, ually rule the world, 26,502, gines. facts. Secrecy killed the Morri A bloodless revolution by the Spar- b bill. It bids fair (8 \lm‘u‘m.l\tj!:n’;m:‘ is a revolution in which no substitute, Spartacan blood is spilled.

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