New Britain Herald Newspaper, March 27, 1919, Page 6

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die but’ mate nerve Where' f pres bai is the spirit that i g ot pass” at Verdun? Where is irit that bit through the Hun t Belleau Wood, and stood fast teau Thierry? Where the that the - top and red the Hun until the quitter the white flag to save his own victor. with a went over bss Hide? have peace on earth un- is beaten to her knees. 1t the world must Why not cannot fmany undertaking lgain, sooner or later. it now? BETTING ON THE MULE, feading public has been ghly sated with thrills hst four that a search in ews columns of than passing interest is almost Yet there was contained in Press dispatch yesterday so during years for an item n. soclated from four lines of hat made real American blood The dispatch described the Ities being encountered by the forces opposing the Bolsheviki | ald the ‘big guns are moving bwn by American mules who are 1y plodding ahead and conquer- he steep, high, iy hills and snow Russia from the sleepy, sunny latitudes ssouri the American mule is do- is bit. The voice of the chore finds a substitute in mpathetic boy: “Gid the sharp command ap, alnot discourage, nor can hows hold back the American It's a liftle bit out of his line ldragging heavy artillery through rifts of North Russia. It isn't as able as hauling a plow on a cot- r tobacco plantation But the of the mule.” Arctic Arc- down in the American mule work., We'll Go it, 3 is to y on the mule. lay our mule. A CHAMPION OF MEN. w Jersey for fhich has an extensive repu- things n many s, not the least is its applejaclk, alluring known of guaranteed to strike twice also he name “Jersey ning, e same place. nosquitoes that off New take In furnishes a person's at one bite addition to Jersey the ma 1 on which the gold brick artists York when the es to New the dge Boettner decrecd ew operate their day pay income taxes Jersey appears in a new of man the N stronghold of that the has that court ties of of city, the only real Milwaukee, shall have a npires' gallery” which shall con- the photographs of all the female before his bench. He be F who are hale judge is wise beyond his s his position no person in can Then it has gigan- | t t t t T t t i i 1 500,000,000, wark po- | mond, ihe round type, and the kind 1 bcted to remember the face of | ers have successfully roar is stilled. bly have ganda in this comnionwealth. already passed a measure prohibiting flections on the tary tihg ly under- MEuation is be- l6d haste and the ¥ near when Germany's il be asked to step up to and “sign here” unless con- make it necessary to resume y operations, which is not an impossibility. esident Wilson snd his co-work- fended off at- upon them and the Thus is another chap- P acks made up- er closed. ABUSING THE GOVERNMENT. If the Connecticut General Assem- it will its at- propa- It has fails in every other effort, justified its existence by empt to stifie anti-American he display of the red flag > of arousing antipathy toward I wholesome object or for the YU POS the House bill he government. ves- erday, another was ntroduced with the of silenc- ng scurrilous verbal printed re- federal civil or mili- authorities. The proposed law reads: Any person who shall speak. or write, print and publicly exhibit or dist-ibute, or who shall pub- licly exhibit, post up or advertise any disloyal, scurrilous or abusive matter concerning the form of zovernment of the United States, its military foroes, tlag or uni- forms, or any matter which is in- tended to Dring them into con- tempt or which creates or fosters opposition to organized govern- ment, shall be fined not more than $500 or imprisoned not more than five years or both. On the surface, the bill appears to A study of its text, however, will satisfy all except the fr- that it Under be ultra-severe. reconcilables does not forbid free speech its terms, But abusive hon- est criticism is not banned. that criticism must not contain epithets which so As the government it is his right gest He should careful that ment manner that would it are frequently of to sug- heard every citizen is a part improvements, be not to assail govern- ina tend to undermine the wireless handshake, extended by Mister Lenine to the Huugarian proletariat And now we have Germany’s war bills totalled $46,- turned shark Bill Hohenzollern out to be the slickest land in the game. And as usual, the investors the bills. footerd “Time flies,” said the old Romans they set the clock ahead an hour as the cat and put out When speaking of robins, it distinguish is ad- visable to between Ray- that twilter in the frees these bright spring mornings. Imagine the advantage of the wire- less telephone. Mother may go to the movies as often as she wants to and if father has any difficulty with the | repre- lon have preach and work Few of these Meir audiences. n. f'Wwe hear of a baseball B holds out for more salary 8 carricd back to the days when fhe star player on the team had to chip in his share toward the ball.— Detroit News. peace conference seems to be much less excited over its problems than the correspondents. New York World. The We take it the girls the soldiers left behind them when they went to France, will be mightily interested to see the brides the boys are bringing back from France.—Manchester Union. : The post-mortem activity of the wets will o down as the most fran- tic locking of the stable doors in the history stolen horses.— Baltimore American. or What has become of the numerous and confident students of psychology Wwho informed the world only a short time ago that the people of Furope were tired of war?—XNew York Sun. Notwithstanding the latest tion of an optimist as “a man who believes all he reads in a sced cata- | Jogue,” it is now the season when all would-be gardencrs should be perus- ing this volume of hope and inspira- Boston Transcript. defini- tion It is reported from Paris that | changes already made in the Consti- tution of the League of Nations meet more than 50 per cent. of the ohjec- tions raised by Senator Lodge. No change, however, can meet the sena- tor's main objection, which is that Woodrow Wilson is president of United Stat New York World. A GRAVE IN FLANDERS. e flood in the sounds upon the shore, Eternal sleep Under the less heap, shattered cluy carth's floor; Whilst o’er their couch thunder.; roar And back the blood-red hattle sweep timeless dis deep Mourns for the dead furn no more Fver gray for who / many requiem those dunes in a namec- ) low-iying on he war's sulien tires of The paton of the who shall re <leep, bold hrarts now to rest Judgment S04 let them hushed Waiting the neath the As dies the daylight in the darkened west Their day died out hand of God rorever guard them, they who souz to save The heritage cf grave. New Ave, Day be- | Oh. may the and found right York Kvening Post North Carolina’s Memorial. (Charlotte Observer.) The first step toward the erection of a memorial building in TRaleigh, de- signed to commemorate the services of North Carolina soldicrs. sailors and in the war with Germany, has been ftaken in the selection and purchase of a lot by Governor Bick- ett, under authority of legislative cn- actment. The building Wwill face the state capitol to the west, and its cost is yet indefinite, depending upon the spirit of contribution manifested by the people. The minimum cost is fixed at $250,000. Tt is possible that the people of the state will establish a half-million-dollar memoriai to the soldiers. marines Italy’s Demand For Fiume. (New There is to be a general election in Ttaly in about three weeks, and no York Times.) the ! ‘HURSDAY, MarCii - ) NEW BOOKS AT T & LABOR AND y Samuel Gompers ttitude h2s labor taken Mr. Gompers sots wets in fins thrce ifr. Gompors Boe in Paris fhe official Tederation fadded in s note. D EUGENICS, by Bd R. H. Johnson. uthoritative study its ts on the resulls of sciontific entations. 1t is suitable both tudent text and for lay - B—A. L. A Booklist. g PR BITECTURT AND iby C. 1. Bragdon. [¥en essays dealing in 2 thought- £ inspiring way with architec- Ornanient, design and color, and P effcctive combination into build- pressive of the artistic as well onomic motives of a people A. Booklist * | n in | forth | This uiter- the: case, historic an address in | and the third records o of Tabor in an @ppendix, in the | t s r. Pope- basing the DEMOCRA- a o RTAIN AMERICAN FACES, by C. Slattery. etches from life | . . 3 | DEAR FOLKS AT HOME—", edited E by K. F. Cowing and (. R. Cooper The gloricus story of the U. S. Ma- fies in France as told by their let- from the battlefield H X * * ENGLISH - LIEADIRSHIT f ERN HISTORY. by J. I URTH GOSPEL IN RESEARCH ND DEBATE, by B. W. Bacon. ™ HISTORY OF THE LITHUANIAN NATION, by K. A. Jusaitis v ox HISTORY OF THE WORLD by Gen. P. C. March. A or o | DIETETICS, A MOD- | Larned. | IN M * WAR PRACTICAL Patee. “This is one of the most practical | and comprehensive books on diet that | it has heen our privilege to review. It is in all a book that is invaluable to the physician, student it! by or nurse.'— International Journal of Surger) « SIGN TALK, by E. T. Seton. A universal signal code, apparatus, for use in the army, navy, camping. hunting and life. without the daily | l famong fiE NEW BRITAIN INSTITUTE THE | = SOME ries.) IMAGIST POETS, (Three se The McMill SALWAYS e UNDER SAIL, by Felix Reisenbers. “Intensely interesting, author ship- ped in 1888 on of the 1 of the old-fashioned sailing A. L. A one vesseis,' — Booklist A worthy Dana’s famous Mast'. companion-piece to "wo Years Before the ~Outlook. Fiction, ACCORDING TO HOYLE Austin, hort mind by F. B, stories under the of ting stress pre Ger- the man war.' \MALEA, A by Jose Marmol romance the Argentine. “Depicts the struggle military dictator of against the Rosa See these values we g changeable taffetas and a LARCH-WOODS by Flora Klick- man, “Pleasant the the auaintly amusing sketch- author's mild adventures hirds, flowers and people he vacation cottage between the larch-woods and the weir. Appeal is especially to the nature lover and the war weary —A. L. A, Booklist. of bloom tops in black colors PETTICOATS of all silk and change- able who neighbor " BLACK STONE, by George Adventure story concerning the struggles of a young American, and a German spy to possession of the famous stone of .. Gibbs, gel Mecca. . DECKS PETTICOATS of all silk Jersey flounce CLIEAR mander “Describes work and life on board, of the seaman from his first enlistment, through his academy days at Annapolis, to his retirement after h ing fulfilled the duties of admiral. 1t is full of information for those who would follow the and for others it enjovabl account of its enthusiasm style.”"—In- dependent. THE by ‘Com- ‘he tions ea is on and good Black, grey and taupe i that are so popular Each $ , MAN FROM Clonston. “A younz man dronped out of clouds in a parachute and landed squarely in the center of a mvsterions naval plot on the island of Ransay in the middle of the North Pulb- lisher's note. THE CLOUDS, by J. S, the Sea."” SECRET CITY, by Hugh Walpole. A novel in three parts. “The scene Petrograd inning of the revolution.’ ; A Rhine Bridge of Old Time ‘ (Boston Herald 1‘ In the tedious policing of the ceded | zones along the Rhine, those of ¢ | soldiers who put away their Latin at the be- ) Ha, York Enough (New Been Lost. Times.) | combined | of is There are signs that the of the greater at statesmanship part the calied a peace conference, but is prac- world, now sitting what tically a receivership of several hank- rupt concerns is gong iat the lems raised by the Hungarian tion in a somewhat spirit than trat in previous difficulties. Hesitation now would be disastrous, and panic would be no less disastrous. We hesitated in Russia with the result that enemies seem more firmly seated than ever, and our friends have been masstcred, starved to death, or terri- fied into In the last three months come dangerously near losing our friends in fruitless effort to en- That method has been tried long enough. We have friend« in Tastern Europe, friends who are in difficult We shall not save them to buy off thei cnemies and Our friends who ately exposed to the new Toland, Czecho-Slovakia, Rumania, and Jugo-Slavia. All of them need military support, munitions, and food: their pcoples need to be assured that their vital national interests, terri- torial and economic, are not going to he sacr in attempt to conciliate those who been our cnemies and are enemies still. We have been for not feed- ing TTungary, have heen blaimed for not Rut have not Czecho-Slovaks, the i proh- revolu- more hopeful whict: 1t has met silence we have elsewhere convert our emies situation trying ours. by are immedi- danger are four ficed an have ot hlamed just as we feeding Germany fed the I'oles, the the llumanians, o7 my bhetter than we ve fed the Germ and Magyars yme of the difficulties in the these hung peoples remoyved we Jugo-Slavs ns way of have to obstacles ahout obstacle. Hungarian have for sent first who are o | supplying ry heen removed: just or are about he have I to | nave been affair Fastern of all to our frinds our military in of some new just heen' removed or are remover created ch food Europe ought four who be some new the we by these peoples, an are at present the Red possible outposts Ru German against and milita armies the revival sia v power. I Killed One (Xew Minute Before War's Fond. York the Times.) of A newspaper published in copy Lovraine Cross, a IFrance by the T9th Montels A New of its editors. paper contains an account death of Private Henry M. of Company A, 319th infantr, man of the 9th division to | before the armistice was signed “Gunther was killed at one minufe before 11 o'clock on November 11.” the article says, “while he was tryving to take a German machine gun po tion before hostilities should cease. “Before the regiment left litte Gunther, then a supply was ‘busted.” or reduced From the time the regiment went into | action he was determined to make good before his fellow soldiers and his officers. On the drive east of the | Meuse he served as a runner and de- livered his messages after hazardous | trips over country exposed to German soldiers of the division, N of York s heen received . in " al Montelair, from Lieut. ank Gale formerly a newspaper The ! of the Gunther , the last be Killed man, who is one Champ- | sergeant, | in grade doubt Mr. Orlando does not like to go baby at home he can get immediate advice on what must be done, home and face the voters without | Fiume, five. “Gunther knew perfectly well that the war would be over in a few min- ' utes when | not ! shouted | incidentally tfrom ! individuals and as industrial conce | books when the draft calls came must 1ast | | 0w be finding time to think about the him } Jiories of centuries when Coblenz | and Cologne were but fortified trading | posts on the bloody of that was a good soldier. The - Germans | empire whose marble capital shone in | the warmer sunlight beside the Tiber at him to go back, but he | er. on. Then they turned their ma- | -And these older chine gun on him and he fell dead in | campaigns there re- the minute of the war After th rance Agr Zuns quit firing the Germans placed | Agrippina, tl his body on a stretcher and carried 1t No: Agrippina, the »f the Roman gen into the American lines.” and the mother of Nero's mothe cannot judge a woman son that off his gations. Of the the Rhine that which Julius Caesar such story that Tacitus tells of the Rhine | Germanicus built for the and | pis Jegions into the for coal Teutons. termed another that waves this he started out on his his comrades begged The men of Company ttacked the German pos st effort to prove that he mission, for to go. think he tion in a le the barrier kept among memories of must come the mem of ppina last mother of granddau Germa: You by ancestral the grand rower From the Se: casts obli- American (Scientif ) of vhite bridges across hear most built. But structure Roman always old Most us are familiar with old 2 : > we of term coal,” to designatc e | I | | | | power derived from rope a distinction is white and green coal derived from melting snow caps known as While water powers But therc power. streams. Tn Eu- made hetween Only the power glaciers white are hallows 1s bridge that leading of ts and e the \grippina must dea olonna the still strange marshlands of Now this fearless Germanicus. M paintinz or as Vittoria Michael Ang sculpture oiher coal wife of tgreen have vast source which 1 and tides now termed “Blue store of been practically are enormous difh harnessing the ble, and when violent that wave-power stand up of namely fom the and s handsome as in Ni a e dori of the blue ¢ coal,” by on \ cd o in ocean is eves of 1o: for l o antique her name gives her of feature and in the carriage of head a strength plain to i as steel to her husband, she had made dangers her own. In his camp had borne him that little whom the legionary soldiers called Caligula, his caligas in And when 1 that far the greatesl earth, has as yet untouched. There ulties in the way of ocean, It irasci- angered its fury is vet no man-made have been able its wild assaults But we Rrowing more power every day. Engincering projects arc being undertaken which only a few | the angry vears ago would have bheen thought she had hegged impossible. The time may come when i into safety: * cven the ocean tempest will obey the | ter of Augusius will of and turn its energies to | spirit {o shrink useful More immediate. how- | While cver. of using the | country Pow So far, such hitle abstracted from ocean has been insignifi- cant The and fall of the tides not even though it does in some few places, considerahle power hasins of large ares By damming t Michel in rises about n a charm energy her a see. rue is so R his s she son plants against are to hobnailed shoes the fou or the had el tumu send ul madn patiern of [ own he general fa mutineers i him their not to h she was the and it in time Germanicus, In the Rhine barbarians’ tering their armies, the camp where he the terrifying report overwhelmed horde of Giermans was in anddaugh- was below her of the was man work. danger.’ broken burn scat into wife his and are of the prospects ocean tides power has heen bevond > ing the villages and s there came tides had left his ris G hoy had a g march the garrison and at forces that full is very greal amount to 70 hence, if any be obtained, be of Mont where the is estimated be obtained industries of mincer with has the Thames tidal 1 ternately suppiy of to say the that the often turns commercial i heen and is to must the had bridge nd Some left to once for regardless toward river been at soldiers the do used e Bay N2 camp n the general St ¥ tide that to operatr France. ance half of French en- of imaszina of buildir and it may the cutting of their his surviving enou men Then the undaunted qualit person she their but took \ Agrippina powers het { showed Roman dikes | Nanded the ! cowards Not only horit Single e attemnt e Coneaven and in barred from () across channel selfisi estuary across ot her Nl larae to confirm al- | form e to two asins she to power. least which may used ut herself nish An but history visionary out to enterprise 1pon the duties of commissary their continuous plan H a camp commander and ambitious she gave the sol their And teaches us | diers of today practical medicines scheme clothing e again their when Germanicus he the of tomorrow turned he found her at the 1ying Now Would Imiprove Business Generally. had saved, meeting and of with thanks Yet Rome comld make world and is worth praises wonder herself (Afachinery some us still how Those who are contemplating ing will greatly aid the present iness conditions of the country, and their own business, by rather thun later. This not only to imdustrial con- but also to indfviduals. Af were to stop buying for their needs. there would be no demonstrated to his commerce and ; and to | that President the exient that refrains | points were of buying, slackens. that they were Therefore if the public generally. Loyd Cieorge and party The Magazine. : mistress of | his buy- ! hus whether our Roman reading! the ! fory What They Cannot (New York Col. George Harvey in Indianapolis last Forgive. World.) made a week in which own satisfaction Wilson's fourteen and | by buying applies now corns anyone personal speech he no ingustry the public industry Engiish origin first promulgated the British labor ns, resumes buying for present ! needs, industry Will again at its actual move Tribune enthusiastically publishes an editorial' from the lon- normal pace, and the sooner that con- Morning ost in which that or- dition reached, the better it will of uncompromising British Tory- be for everybodY. Men will be saved | ism demonstrates 0 it own satisfac from unemployment, and the unrest tion that the fourteen points originat that generally follows unemployment | ed with the Germans. will be avoided: Assuming that both don is gan Col, Harvey PETTICOATS with taffeta fAlounce new color combina- Marabou an Store, Inc. RELIABLE"” ew Si Petticoats When you dress up in your new Spring Suit you'll want a good Silk Petticoat to wear with it. are offering in plain colors, Il silk Jerseys, Heather- | $2.98 plain and and Each taffeta in colors Each $2"98 i $5-98 PETTICOATS of silk taffeta with silk $4.98 Jersey shown in beautiful $6.98 Each Eac 5 Japes Spring 'shapes Spring Suits. .95 * $14.50 1 the for ind the morning I combined these G not is pro rmans a inteil : Bou er president bon-0ld Gue the a peopl auto in the hour back the imperialis ith thing pr v ho Prussian an tentior of turning putting That clock is onc Germin Wilso md Americar Japan's League Ideal, (Baltimore A Without evious meric regard to race, color pr condition of servitude o any other obstruction af prejudice, Japan t vould have the leag of of upon na ons ions same right le declare tha footing Therc all is would place the 1bsolutely L » Japan will coextens rea nit footing never he gener tr equalit w and no pol of tical frate between i the sligl s test 1ality itself the But time i course vhen tions, the can set up any longer of against the entrance That those hue of skin is they cere the hey ar vhich t an savin hat Japa league of nat ons fre practice such insure a ilization At it cree more in ory o time! 1ch world is men 6f ¢ v help ible o v to and color an i in per- fecting wrrice 1ain forces which dered the the anybod ject in ai he mation i progress o W can fi to this has this apart o8, n ta “Sleeping Sickness,” (Detroit 1 alarm was Sheffield by ess than a year great d caused Londa: the botulism appearance of adise known as feeling gressed the to a state of s me of characte gressive musc of the evelld eyeball. The istic sign: pro= lar wealknes: squint anc { disease there municable and caths, though it no demic far ciause t hafflea tors, although stalled and the eradicated from by careful stages appearance in the United the of 1 the London 1nd continen the epidemic disea tica the isolation English districts wnd treatment in its early The af “sleeping sick- ness States suggests that botulism may made in the tha bet ism rope have hehe. it its appearance Following influenza may two walke there the Londan is possible some connect the the ion a veen althoug botu- of epidemic While there nothing theory that influ botulism inf enza is to establish the le the as i general nza may ave that germ of not vet L germ a ide undoubtedly t 1t t low tone le would make anyonc prey a disease that thrives bodies and nerves that are “fagged out,” heen vted and ft b influenza an es to an

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