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

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SATURDAY, MARCis -, . Fit will havé a billion ANOTHER LODGE SHIFT. Im'er.v probability that it will assume - e tc pay, and will leadership in teaching sex hygiene in ortable feeling that 1t| Senator Had Different Views of Pres- I the public schools. If jt does jts ex of § | 9 worth its hread- ident's Views. Under Roosevelt. umple will no doubt )¢ of con- | siderable influence (From speech by Senator Lodge on throughout the | 1 ' o country, and other cipa b s the floor of the semate chamber on [ o guse oot G NCH municibalities may i crman Sailors, January 24, 1916): 28 h‘“ S 4 9 hf””w“' its lead. In! li ¥ A 3 | ([l o g such a matter school boar filadelphia Inquirer) 1 No one, I think. can doubt the | /" 4" 00 “,“"“' ”y';'“\ are prone Bring not only the Lusi- |absolute power of the president to in- [ 2,75 S8, PEE RIS Grier boards are = fovery other ship sunk by | itiate and carry on all negotlations; f 7 00 1 o “'\'“““"»l“k"'\ _evolves N ks ienl ) X g public schools it will no doubt he t = B of those on board, public | t0 him with the ratification of the : e E = a widely stud#ed and adoptec B, the alliea countries will | senate, to withhold it from ratifica- ely 1 | By make to have the com. | N0 doubt that the senate can by reso- | 15 '.‘””"'fl ,"‘ "i"l" n a recent pul B tricd for musder lution advise the president to enter | 1SR issuted by the Lited States ok veard or I<idd had a viler | UDON a negotiation. or advise the BEin these wearers of the Ger. DPresident (o refrain from a negotia- Bval uniforn. To seamen it is | 'iON; but those resolutions have no el their inhumanity which : 2inding force whatsoever, and the ac- BN o i s tiicis cons M of {he senate hecomes operative IR i of the iraditional actually offective only when Por ihe <ocn. Thoy wantonly | (USAty is actually submitted to it. We el lives in circumstances whers | 12 V€ Mo possible right to break 'sud- B it conon would have tresidenly into the middle of a negotiation B ror and demand from the president what A 1o \liealily sovice, | This | glves . the ; average age at which hors gel their Marc t' sex instruction as mine and one rmur, not half ‘years, and the average age at love Totier Tames o which they receive sex . instructio plaintifs i | | from wholesome sources as fifteen i;m.w one-haif years. “‘Parents have | pret been six years too late,” says this bulletin. *To he effeciive sex educa tion must begin in chidhood, must Wise disap) | ; e progressive through youth and | remarkabiy 2t 5. ono oo . ¢ ructions he has given to his rep- ¢ Britisl < co ete only when the individuals = e UsSh . asontative is complete only wh annulment of Bn’s union I annovnced a - have entered upon héme byildine.” It | medical experts 1, 2 L rom ihe foundaticn of the gov- | s 5 i S -yea against all ( S L Ay is those six years of childhood when | diet in the Supreme i 2 crnment s been concedec % 5 2 § sailors. © ) ning the deatl £ N gex imfornmtion is peing obtained Dr. Frank West = 7, practice and in theory that e Cf -1 B 15.000 of their comrade hat the con- |, 0 wnwholesome sources tl are | street, Brooklyn will not sail on any ship responsible for much of the vencreal ' cian to the Fries German goods or ocnters man port. The Norwesgians, who, 5}1 :cuh'z{w- lost nearly 1,000 men, ! sively in the president. He does not P oo o terly. American sea- | cxercise that constitutional power, nor #n have taken no official action, but | can he be made o do it, under the ey cannot be less indignant. tutclage or guardianship of the sen- L G e ST G G (e e Will Congress Meet? Money in Menico. | : ote and house combined. o (New York Evening Sun.) When he shall have negotiated and | i The. recent formatior. of protective | sent his proposed treaty to the sen- ) locPublican statesmen killing time, mony, the physiclan rer fEorsanizations by the American and | ate the jurisdiction of that hody at- | Petveen sessions in Washington are “In my opinion it ma foreign holders of Mexican invest- | taches and its powers begin. It may | Prolific in new interprefations of the old man might ments shows that a new hope has|advise and consent or it may re- j (ONstitution calculated to knock W passages to arouse his SPrung up of seeing again money | fuse. And in thel exércisel of tnis ;Sonjinto aficocked that One is P nd fcel more ant long loved and lost awhile.” The | function it is as independent of the | announcement of last month, that | executive as he is independent of it | SCSSion whenever the majority of the Mexican treasury was heginning | in the matter of negotiation.” two houses get ready to convene. Of the plaintiff’s ardent hip, Mr to show on its monthly balance shects - | course, there must be an emergency Hart sat beside his two daughters, ition vests the power of negotia- and the varion phases—-and are muliifarious—of the con- cuct of our foreign relations eexlu disease and sex perversion of later | lege, said Mr. Flart | vears. The public schools musl as- | marry according sume the responsibility for the whole- Dr. Fan some sex education of children dur- | pointed to examine the it ng those six vears. Mr. Hart's card trouble said would not i ! have prevented him from living hap- pily with his bride In answer to a hypothetical 2 : ! (Springfield Republican) e TYrrel e {1068 have congress may call itself into extra With her the While Mrs. Hart r ails of a surplus over current expenditures, | Penrore kD onece ok lasng) | to justiy the action, but, it is argued. 100King on unconcernedly. The young b excuse th 2 gun o € peacd ma eaglue of nations and who are | statement of the constitution that i ; B have causcd | (he favorable prospects. Any debtor | manding referendum on the iss president “‘may, on extraordina He asked mue T would like to be Bhe world it is a | V] asree to resume interest pav- {should vesign and abpeal to the people| ¢asions, convene both houses p Tich—T told him I would,” testified Bictivc moans of | Mments on condition that he zet a fur- | of their respective states for a vote of | either of them Mrs. Hart. They held a tete-a-tete parated could not be | (NeF loan. Additional loans often | confidence, Sen Rer sun Ik ; this reply Lenroot comes forward, also, with the 'l € > oy meeting existing interest charges. But It seems to me the logical novel suggestion that since congress \CWing& Saturday, and I kept 2 o] B Tthe last)few days you've had | '° D&Y With one hand, without bor-! proposition would be for Presi- |has the constitutional power fo de- leinfment? she said 3 3 : rowing with the other. would cor dent Wils ) resi N = Fou oceasion to felicitate yourself on fol- | | : S 4 SHUVSonSiofires ENRE A d il CeRY clare war, it also has the power to “ 1 lowing the higher criticism we fur- ""‘;”" Leal sign of financial, vegen- the sentiment of the American | qoclare peace, although the const g cration n Carranza bring Mexicn > > 0 he so-called league 3 e > E A nished on the unwisdom of taking | {/#I8: 2, nza bring Mexico people on the so-called league of | tytion confers on congress no suc ce” existed | som off prematur — Manchester EEEEE nations as he has defined it. This power and never has B . Shon _There is no necessary guestion ' of would give him an opportunity to i ks - the Mexicans giving un forever the explain fully what he has in mind 0 it was an alli- - e The sackers! re. | BEVIS f goir to debt. In a in a way which he has not so far . A new associa- | _After listening to the packers' re- | fow years, provided they and the clearly done. cital of their woes. one is tempted | \vorid have roturned fo law and or If that were possible under our to start a nation-wide campaign for | der, they will be positively ur : ent St 3 J 4 . ill be positive ged 1o | form o government, the World would g " rounds, public ro'nnlnl(‘u!! efit.—Wheeling ollig 3 & “ C rd of Control! L = T 't | their benefit.—Whecling Intelligencer. | wpend on national improvements, and | wholly upprove of Senalorf Penrose's v srant of speciai® st the four other powers. Italy’s ! : ; o to raise the money by }orrowings.ad- | suggestion, and we have no doubt tha d by the provisions _, drawal might mean worse—war. | English papers (wl‘n.\"l at Presiden, ‘antageous to our investors. TFor the | the president himself would Wilson wishes to “lionize’” the situa- | jresent not available for interest nayments, gives (N SR ) { the aforesaid majority may pass judg- Wife was dressed in a smart tailored ¢ s0 asis for hope. o R G (i suit of black and wore the expensive me basis for hope To the World's suggestion that tho{ €Nt on the zravity of the emergency ; black e RERn senators who are t The ability to get on without con A1l this notwithstanding the explicit | [Ur cape which her husband pu traciing a logn would greatly magnify chased jusi before tt oneymoon The power is con (Sor ST O e bl e crraied conator While she was manicuring his nails nish a nation with its means of | sylvania makes “He asked me to mee on the fol- She said he invited her fice : where he exnressed his greut pect [geance. & posal. “I told him I would have to get my mother’s cor nt and he men- sumed that it had such power. Peace- | tioned the fact that I Hatatiecd making is such a different process yight not approve of the marriage. from & declaration of war, necessarily Mrs. Hart i involving the exercise of the trea ¢ making and diplomatic functions of the president. that the framers of the for her and made his marriage pro- congress as said her suitor promised @ he based on far more sub- offE Ve ol a i varadise of ealhyp e " also ve assurances that her mother 1 would be provided for, she said. When constitution saw the absurdity of the | she accepted his marriage offer, Mr ) P unhesitat | P¢ "’Vfi“." which Scnator Lenroot now ! Hart said he instructed her to pur- 8l he certified by the - For i we were to carry out our pro- 0l lolion)z only is money high, as to TG e Sh€ it a5 o] secs At toNtalce: hi loihenand beoniesd 1o MER the school board to the @Gomp- S tor | tion in Paris. The U. S senators re- | {he interest it now commands e e shall pay the shme to | Bram to make the world safe for | cently gave a new version of twisting | it is abnormally low in purchasing | Knows. le school board of such town for small peoples we could not avoid go- | the lion's tail.—Toronto Globe. T oral v N o but 1 as snator Penrose wel = a wedding present of $30,000 together 2 i Food in France. u.vrtl an automobile ‘ Snceonian., No presidential referendum can be g Their wedding {rip took (hem to Y fth I oronto M and 1 50 : 2 . use in maintaining the schools | jng to the rescue of the Jugoslavs, == § other of those presumably acting for | held under the constitution of {he Coronto Nl nd Fmpine P n e cl il e e oA end | Tt is said that the nresident pro- | the Carminza government have kept | United States. If the prosident re.| The Fmench zovernment's endeavor | each night, Mrs. Hart said, her hus erein. who have already felt cconomic pres- | Joses to hold *a general Russian con- | up demand ¢ : Re th to break the food-price system estab- | ba ouite efisitotationty Ny B oximately ten mills based on | . e e ; ¥ o ¢ com- | signs, the vice president becomes pres. ster E band recited poetic quotations. She o 11 e [RehEe RO the western shore of the | foiance.” Does he speak Russian plete cessation of s Wit || . Tice i | lishea by the refaii trade in Pa it grand list is necesas present grand list i " Adriatic RSt e o R DT e STt i TR RS e M R e e R e B o i o P G triTeE | T ol sl londuct the school department of It is probable the Peace Confer- { Public Ledger, the country's materiai future. Tt | take place only once in four vears, no| ‘Watched with keen incorest I'n Fly with me to the land of Elvseum Biulin. snowd the Lesistature | oo rmit matters to go 80 _ o ] would show that the government in | matter what happens, rope. at any rate for iwo or. three “He used to get up at four o'clock g 1 rovlsing the education= {i= ; ; 3 : * | “There is money in moonshining.” | power really was in situalion to act But no such obstacle lies in the|¥ears. sovernment regulation of food | in (he morning nnd i bl revising far. Tt is debatable whether Italy |, gjspatch informs us. Of course |for its hest inferest, rather than in | pathway of a Senatorial referendum.j Prices. and limitations on profits, will awaken m : ] same time, said the bride ol should have Fiume, the bone of con- | there is. That’s why there is moon- | one where it must resoit to inevitable | Senators can resign at any time for|P® compelled by publie opinion, and | him, ‘please let me sleep—you keep tention, which she claims under the V‘ shining.—Charleston News and Cour- | though disadvantagcous measures. any reason and can immediately be.| I'rance’s experiment may teach new ! me awake until bde of the state, including the sec- on “State aid in the payment of two o'clock and then hers” salaries,” wpproximately o e S T gland mhe |Hier = come candidates to succeed themselyves| Methods. compel me to get up at four B iy el L Erense ";‘y’ “’m"b‘ o _ 3 Rritish Land Girls, as Conklin and Platt did after their| It the first week of March about! She then told of her hushand’s!® 1 interests of the Jugoslavs must be pro. Ts 2.75 per cent. alcohol beer intox- (Yorkshire Obseiver) | quarrel with President Garfield ovar] 100.000 tons of provisions zrrived in | abrupt’ announcement while - . fhéy tected and at the same time Italy's | jcating or is it not That is the ques- P e { the appointment of a collector of thg| Paris, most of it to the order of the | were living at No. 837 Monroe &traet, he administration of its schools. |, /. must not be assailed. It is a | tion. Why not settle it by having the | ahroad 5 3 ¢ port of New York. Furthermore, un | fo0od wministry. Targe sheds in va- | that he was through and “going back fng six for the city to pay. President Wilson has | partakers of a test dose of it subse- j pecause the war is over ek der the new political system of direct| rious sections of the city have been !ty my daughters i quently attempt to repeat the follow- i n¢) need bhe done on lanc nominations and direct election hired, and the food will be sold at Before an adjournment w ake | jng: “See Susan snoozin'. Soothin’ ality the situation is jusi ihe re. |fenator who resigns and appcals cost Supplies will be sent by spe- | until next Monda Mrs. Hart testi- ous and skill and diplomacy may | snoozin’ suits Susan.”—Boston Tran- | his constituents has the benefit of a| ¢igl trains to the other large cities. | faq fwealth to New Britain to assist dilemma. he Taxpayers association stands | . ized from others almost as seri- o platform calling for economy in et erse. for, much as land girls were | b T t ¢ e needed during the war, they are still |double rcferendum, one at the party ¢ '_xlunuxml that the dumping husband ol LRt Ted o R )mli The World has shown how 16 of the| €08t into consumers’ laps will com ToEE o ont ey bilomeete orivs oaatosionios i kohghe leagudfics Agliipel SLMRBUGSIVSWeL B Aok T too 2 < | tions, one-sixth of the total member-|and commodity prices. The French during the war have now an oppor-|.nin of the senate, can, by rosigning| Bovernment, like every other govern- tunity of enlisting in the Land Army {,nq appealing for a vote of confi-| ment. finds it difficult to wage a cam- and of doing work which, from the | jence, give the country all the prac-| Paign against high-priced, home- health point of view, is distinctly ben- | yical benefits of a nation-wide refer- | Brown food, for the agrarian interest eficial, and from the standpoint of | cndum on the issue. These senators|is too strong. By using ir ed pleasure, infinitely more interesting | ave Hale of Maine, Moses of New,foods for the purpose, it avolds the than their previous occupations. Girls : expenditure of the city's funds. |, mojent to carry the conference while admitting his finan- e | & 13 an opportunity for its mem- | = T o Gaeration | — ‘ musband. while s i | Sinking German batticships will be ! t0 managed that there will he no THE, VAUDEVILLE STAGE. I ionotatic tto shell srews! txyingsto lifeboats. Washington Previonus to the tr prove they mean what they \ hearing on the bill will be examined in onnectior young wife's action for separation and explained his source of incom Ho Brooklyn ite, with an assessed aluation o 400 from which he d before the Committee on Pduca- g U Dangers beset the pathway of those | €scape in o General Assembly at the | star Jior the © who criticise the vaudeville stage for | =0 bitol next Tuesda \ ¢ H | its lax mora Chief among the ! tyhy is it that the leaziue of na- i g o i 3 ai in 2 a | dangers is that the critic himself im- | tions is being discussed i England in o amiable a spirit, while in Ame ¥ : : o ! jea the whole discussion is electrieal % Hampshire, Brandegee of Connecticut, | Political responsibility, and vet forces e» Rnnouncement that a recciver has With animosity ?—The Churchman who like agricultural work need have | Calder of New York, Frelinghuysen|down both retailers’ margins and the i derived a gross income of $45.693 and | | | { I | bn appointed for the New York | fossilized. But it does mnot require i | no fears of unemployvment. The Iood | of New Jersey, Penrose of Pennsyl-| broducers’ price levels. A scientific | { | | | | 11 CONNECTICUT COMPANY, net income of hetween $20.000 and 5.000. The income was used In pporting his four daughters and randchild. he explained mediately becomes a target and s placed in the catalogue undcr | The war department’s move rega | Production department has received | vania, Harding of Ohio, New of In-|daily ration for a workingman worked be merely part of a | requests for women as mole-catchers | diana, Sherman or McCormick of Ii-|out by a commission costs 65 cents nois, Reed of Missouri, Thomas ol|in Paris. 42 cents in New York and TO RETAIN CAMPS, biays Company, which Is a merger | the ardor or fire of a reformer to no- ; ¢ cen individu ‘oo s a lorable tendency to substi- | ing aviation may &n individual surface lines in | tice a deploral T O inx aehema of forest conser- | and bee-keepers. A hedging course | 1 erica’s great city, lends color to | tute for the “suggestive” song ome | Wt ™ o (v Herald O O T oGl AN ]G o c « fear cxpressed by officials of the | which is positively immoral and re- v in Monmouthshire Hedging and olorado, Horah of Idaho, Poindexter| 35 cents in London - Washington, Hiram Johnson o/§ As the Ontario government's fish | War Depariment Docides to Purchasq alifornia, Fall of New Mevico and} distribution scheme proved to us, 15 Original Cantonments Ifrance of Maryland governments can, If they will, and if We have selected these particula the need exists. step ‘nto the food seyns el ¥ decision of the war partment tq by direct action assist > purchase 15 original encampment sites for use as permanent military > this trouble with | to be going through this very meta- | Bolshevism 2 The Aw!!‘>fi‘\"jv = \:)n W ‘\)w-llv\ fl?::fl:;kys ‘nnm_' "l,”m‘m" LA e 2--<hoe and Leather | take a ors have been husy ir » probability 1 will s00n strike | morphosis and the young man will 'rfirvz{,{‘,lp‘ s e all parts of the country, and a hu';if‘* senators because they are the chief| business and { recalcitrants in the fight against the! the consumer. The best field is in | lcague of nations. They believe injthe bringing in of large quantities the ald order of international rela-|of a certain food. and the distribu- tions which produced the most terri-| tlon of it directly, or through regu- ble war of human history, and aro|lar channels at a small, fixed charge determincd that nothir shall bel Roth the British and French food done by the United States to change| authorities have repeatedly worked 2 e the system. Many of them have pub-[ along this line, in a small way, and T T ing of girls in tractor work has re- ey demanded a referendum on the| the result has been the growth of a ving Wheat Subsidy. sulted in an increase of available | question of the league of nations, vei| sustained demand for continuance of drivers for the land directly the | they refuse the only practical method} the practice. Both Britjsh and French weather allows cultivation to proceed. | hy which such a referendum can be| food ministries are going ahead with | schemes for government restaurants land girl this spring and summer. The enator Penrose, in his reply to the| to serve meals at cost | one thing to watch is that her wages | World, dodges the issue, and does it | are based on the principle of equal | deliberately Whatever the senator's | C. 8. COMMANDS SHIFTS pay for equal work wifh the men, and | limitations may be, ignorance of the) | Washington. Marc that she is not used to depress the | general machinery of the United (Brooklyn Hagle) ary H. Royall hnecticut Company (hat {(he system | pulsive. At present the slage seems | Tt is not cnough to ask “What litching are keeping many girls mm-‘ | Washingto March ¢ Definite e — part of last year's corn harvest was Chicago's straw vote on the league | got in by girls. of nations continues to show more “Ofher employmenis, apart from | than {wo to one for the league plan. | girect agricultural work. in which | even without change: while the twWo | women have been engaged are road cenators from Illinois weep over the | apajring and the collection of fir- hy be taken actuated by business | sical contortions comprise the equip- i crring city.—Springfield Republican. cones for seed purposes. The train- ase the owing public realization | or his sweetheart to attend a per- | camps, has been announced t Act< i inancial reef. It also serves to in- | think twice before inviting his mother | | | ing Secretarv Crowell. He said alsa bt the Connecticut Company is in formance. kened condition and while littlc ! f a short skirt and a that us a general policy, the so-called National G mps w ban< doned with t ntic ‘ampy K \lifornia 1 Be uth Carolina mpathy will be extended, act | sonz which permits syncopated phy- btives | ment of the average young woman i he can I 1 P i o Camps 3 Dodge. Gordor Knox, and Upton President Storrs of the Connecticut | Who appeais on the vaudeville stage. | mpany recently explained in a let- | She may be the purest voung creature (Meriden Record.) | to a ¢ newspaper that finan- | in the world, she muy think that her | The artificial stimulation of wheat is only eclever, but the impre productian for the present year may ( | turn out, after all. to have been a wisa policy. The nation has been recon- Bl the company must have if it is | that shé is vulgar. : This, of course, i8 | nijed to losing about a billion dollars Keep its rolling stock in repair and | not true of all women in vaudeville | as a resuit of the wheat guaraniee to i1 e atner | American farmers. This has been ac- 2 < z ¥ he rule ratner LA iy 2o & war. cx.| Wages rate. There Is no hope for | States government is ot one of them Ten vears ago. the man who offered | pe that could not have been fore-| British agriculture till it can support | When he suggesis that the president( $1,000,000 for a business site on hase at Carc 0 during the past year Most people attend tho theater | homee A SO0 ime o statements| its workers in decent comfort. Pau- | resign and appeal to the people. hol Jamaia'Bay would have been resard- | Andrews, Hyer since its organization he | with the expectation of being enter- | made by Herbert C. Hoover, interna-jperism 1is ufterly demoralizing to in- [ knows ihat it is a constitutional im-fed as a fit subject for the alienists. | (he American % ; ! tional food administrator, the gavern-| dividual or trade.” possibility, but on the question of hiv| roday, when a syndicate offers that | Adriatic | ment may not lase anything on thef —_ [RoRnesiangduionRand ‘.M"'fl he i dis<| sum to the mavor for the right to i 2 " e ord < g creetly sile 7 the ) ro! 1 s oot ¥ | wheat crop. For instead of a great Prosperity in Kentucky. i reetl nt. With the control In his| 519 14 1000-foot piers on the main Bolsheviki in Am | There is a colossal task awaiting the | held 1 assistance is imperative. He | song foted the advance in price of ma- | 8i0 ¢ creates on her audience is R o The Growth of New York. also paid attention to the 1~ | but it is becoming mmander ¢ ease in wages of more than $1,000,- | than the exception pnnecticut Company has submitted | tained with morally sound variety mely to criticism and abuse. That | acts. It comes as a shock to sce ! £ s . < C owy ands of the powerf re: f las its greatest mistake When it | brazen gir stand before the foof- | el surplus of wheat this year, he (Grant County (Ky.) News) 5 vlh nd |w)n m‘\ rful v 1:\}1”“‘)‘“ channel of Jamaica Bay, to use : q - ¢hine snnsylvania, with 0 L las hit, it failed to defend itself, Had | lights and discuss with rolling eves | foresees a possible deficit again The banks of the county are over. | machine in n I ! hel hiers for 50 vears, and then fo let o - o ; s certain support of the great corpora- : i 1 ontrollable lnees subjects | The close of the war has not imme-| fowing with money. The deposits of tain suppo reat cor et sy ek i e e officials of the company com- | and uncontrollab ubjecis | e e ilo aanized inteeataior kit e | giately increased production. Severall{pe two hanks in Williamstown now | a hol cerious question whet e culosis germs olae : e e e state which are always in partnership | questl heritheRoffen Bl sl sl countries which n ally v imount to more than a million dollars, [ Loi™ (8 B g0 G e ho acke| JATEE enough, in view of the obliga- Pt wheat. among them Russia, Bulgaria,|znq there are eight other hanks in the | [ | tions which its acceptance would im. | damage until som ons their side of the case instead of | {riotic songs swept the slage. The |India, Rumania and Serbia, will havel .ounty. While we have no informa- | | (New York Times) enced a campaign of education sey- | that polite society avoids. During the bal years ago, had they given the pa- | war a deluge of semi-military and pa- : the courage and candor to submit his case ta the Judgment of the people of his state Is Senator Penrose afraid? Hard Words. ¥ which ens the w >r their pose upon the ci hich opens th that | to import grain this vear. Thus ifl 4,5 ayailable to furnish our readers | ages. Nobod contrasts the there is freedom in the world mar- J Fi Their successor N i | present materia nd moral situation, If in a corner today. Until recently | thrilled are gone 1 ccessor is | 1SS 06 TNl rise. American ipesendnicienle/ (G ion, A (St. Paul Dispatch) likely to be very badly scared by this bmaining silent, it would not find it- [ war is over and the songs with a correct statement at the pres- ent time, it is quite probable that total e company made no cffort to con- | the song that chills and makes a | wheat, therefore, may actually be want to sneak out | worth $2.26 a bushel, or even more | than that, in the oven market I Tt is too early vet to make more o eadiee that 1t da . bus- | than a rough guess. But from the ! deposits” in all Grant county banks Sex Education in Springfield. will exceed $3,000,000. This is a mil- (Waterbury Republican.) lion dollars more than last vear at The Citlzens’ league of Springfield this time and fully three times s | yiass, has asked the sehool board to [ | ; o i i | great as the deposits were ten vears | sive “serious consideration® tc noculate Bilious e aE s Bess concern which, like all other = present outlook. even if the pl.m'lma Jeb e i S O e e ‘:“‘ Cercerais o Americanization in Connecticut. , { < e e | o spring wheat is as heavy as hag|ase 1endonsly high prices | ouching of seX hygiene in the pub- sens ify aes cerns, ca ¢ tepresentative Joseph W. Fordney | of spring wh : ! : e o usiness concerns, cannot exist when Representative N on expected, and the American crop| the farmers have veceived for all i schools of (he city, and the school Anyvone who can spell these ten e ty -8 Connecticut communi« i . oialls | e e g i e o venty-six beats all records, it Will still be nm;«.\! kinds of produce, and especially for | poard has direcied the superintendent [ Words and spell them correctly 2 have organized committees taq The New York Railways Company | Republican candidate for the Presi- | o1 readily absorbed. | their main money crop. {obacco, may | of schools t0 Obtain all information | smart man, accordinz to Professor | cupny out the program of the state's 3 farmers and| be attributed the increase in bank de possible upon the subjeet, and has | W. 8. Miller, of the University of Min- badict the suspicion that it was | 1ady or genileman Repellant Inferred | Plot which the Post Office department, Collectabie Sacrilegious has brought to light Picknicking Dissipate reedy octopus. Now the public is nearest exit while the lights are (Springfield Republican.) s expenses exceed its income. nominates Charles M. Schwab for the as gone into the hands of a receiver | dency in 1920. We awail with bated The net result to the | department of Americanization, and may be | posits along i ealth of the | hound each Member tc give ‘earnest | nesota, who applied the test to 90 | e field is steadily expanding. May /& nsumers i ountry espite the fact that it furnished | breatih for some humorist to announce [ the consumers in thie ¢ 3 E as if the pric ~ountr: i ears ago we had study to the vuestion normal students Who intend to teach S e t the gc e 2 < i 5 5 retty nearly the same as if the price| country N years ago W an | stu t the state also set the good example of ransportation annually to 300,000,000 | that a bottle of cold Water was |PIECF | 0SB T Thig subsidy to] assessed valuation of less than §3,000 Springficld bas long heen a pioneer | school next yvear. sticking to the good work so well be< bassengers. Those in a position to know | smashed on the bow as the boom was | farmers. Even so, the public willl 000, a sum not equal to our deposits, the field of vublic edqucation and The best record was seven of = Tt's the steady ,grind after the the Connecticyt Company is head- | Jaunched, dfind considerable satisfaction in umsrr,m; our people are growing wealthy, sralifylbg o learn that there is | ten words spelled correctly. | #rst enthusiasm. that tells the story,

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