New Britain Herald Newspaper, March 29, 1919, Page 6

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PRDAY, CIARCH 20, 1016, Pt e srso00 1 pirrorr| 91900 AMERIGANS (DON'T GET LISTED i vioviden | P o [ —_— - “(”\”wh g Reburial of Soldiers Aids in | Government Warns Against Trad- { aris are likely to | ©'al Women patrons, in‘o the lavatory AR S ( e } objections to the cove- | and the vault of the West Side branch o~ . - E irs e . ashington, March 20, —1In Washingtc h 20 : tly insists that 2 of the Commonwealth State bank n! hington, Marcl Are round-robin in the sen- N 3 4 . X ; cablegram received at the war dc part- | on the suckep 6 obposed to the principle 7 e, b S R B ctions.' day afternoon robbed the institution mean time, news comes | of $10,000 in cash anl unregistered pEton that President Wil- |y iherty bonds which officials say ber carried on casualty lists as “miss- | ‘“fllflfl with the amend- jnay exceed $65,000 in value ing in action” is being reduced as the | O a zood thir e oM. Taft that he | ity fhousand dollars in currency | reinternment of bodie: moved from he oo ichgauick iswinal ana s g ol hie Pis ) had been removed from the branch to | isolated graves fo centralizad come- | ane, EICAl American s« hd\-e i ’|"‘ xyr:g a ;1\ In- [ {he main office only a few hours be- | teries furnishes additicnal identifica. H: sharpers who sell fake - e o tnments | fore the holdup, according to J. W.|tion of men heretofore reported as| «ici' Fame endangered when Uncly o the constitution of | \ecausey, president. iteine Sam started his great Lib Loai} nesmuch as the Taft|' mhe holdup was ono of the most| It is posaible a considerable num- | “27Paigns nts covered most of the ob- el 5 & But they are smiart ¢ daring in recent years. Two of the | ber of the 5500 men cnrried as miss- at Senator Lodge raised to R g % . 7 5 men who live by their - ocee rased men stood guard outside while four | ing will turn up alive and well. The 2R i ; SagshaLe i SteRs lentenadiwitnd ke Emant ati theitt hend || Britistigo e inmantiallo e Al r i nstead of complaln tell of Harvard, there will be g 5 in and put themselve Beiia 1ot for opposition ew. | Waving a sawed off shotgun. Charles | period of twenty-six weeks to clapse Bct or vw‘: e 1L l’; 1. Mooney, cashier, and Paul Mallick, | hefore presuming the death of a com- T an:‘ q‘;n;'r;f“;;“; his assistant, were ordered from their | missioned officer and thtrty weeks in B oinaexior, who have de. | OK°T and \\‘\vh e ;mvl ]pa}:rg:? the case of an enlisted man. = Gen |, 9 % orced to stand with upraised a 8 | Pershir = o 6 ) 3 s B they personally will con- T osmang w 5 o | Porshing states that 161.800 Brlsh | . nece for 1 ock. You B 051G that no longer while the hank was being rifled. officers and men are still carried in 3 4 ’ que % 2 The two bank attaches were then | the lists as missing nae ds brobably on the sucker s ordered into the bank vault, together | “Of this number,” ne adds, “il is | oz ) odl v ol irper because | with four of the patrors, and the big | presumed that 97,000 are dead, leav- | O i million patriots hought Lib- steel door closed. Fizht other per- | ing 64,800 to be accounted for. In | & Bond sons, including severai who came m“\m» French army there are approxi- | 10U A€ blame for heing list Gen. Pershing estimates that If you are ft is probably cause approximatel 500 American soldiers | you are not .0 a sucke { a patriotic are still “missing The total num- citizen who has known the gentle all thei employes to work 1rac their fake stuff for Liberty Konds. If you have a Lihe-t or ook of War ou are has performed a great and iblic service in this matter ves the fullest recognition £ of the American people dge and Senator Knox done what Mr. Taft has ; fobtained the credit that now ;;\mht-;r‘ arms, were ordered into the | ‘T\-mmmi what l‘!‘rllr;‘rl of time should ® hi - ~ + av: ry elapse before an officer or soldicr is h:cr?m?:v :‘h:;‘ p:%t;eru‘e;isu:- The bandits then gathered up all | presumead decad.” “m‘n 'x:v’nn:‘k s a mj ion dollars a year fhem would formulate a | (M€ currency in sight and eseaped in In some instances the hodies buried | 0, 10 © ”‘,"”" of worthiess e amendments. When |? touring car. Their machine was by Allied units to which Americantl S5 S et m‘r" Mh’"”"\ B do sc. Senator Knox in. | S€en to turn west on Wort street, one | troops were attached were not com- wor of the main thoroughfares leading | pletely identified or wore improperly | __ out of the city. The theory of the | registered at interment © | Sttimate glven by the ecapital inigl police is that they were headed for| “Deaths of American soldiers in | COMMi‘tec of the United States trea Toledo #nd authorities of towns on | French hospitals of which only mea- | I¥: And the committee assures the highway between that point and ! gre and often incorrect records are | Al it is conservative | | after the bandits entercd, and among | mately 290,000 still missing. The | (o 1€ Pt e © o to ge o away off th them two women, eacn with a baby | Frenh government has not as yet fivst e 3 irst opportunity Thé American people ¢ paying tock ere- 1 of —thin air, k | That is not a wild guess. Tt is th he must bhe allowed to entirely new constitution, and | ¥ Lodge made the excuse that Toould not prepare amendments be- lige the senatc was not in session. | !he M : o : i £ ) Morcover, the half BNt of ihe noticr it etroit were immediately notified. on file are hkewise disclosed by re-| 2" 0V € neither Senator Lodge nor Senmator | It was several minutes after the | burial of these bodies resulting in | jo"tS Just the cold cash that is turnd Knox wanted the constitution of the | Pandits left before the lavatory and | complete identification.” states Gen: ;” every year by otherwise level league amended in Paris. Their plan | V2Ult were opened aid the impris- headed Americans ,secking a milky Pershing. ‘Access to sites of prison |.heafed American: E was to force the amendments into the | ON€d Dpersons released camps in Germany and to territory j “n0-1oney path to quick wealth b treaty after it came before the sen- ] formerly within the enemy’s lines is | (ho_fake stock certificate route. It Ble Church: of | ate, even if their amendments wreck- leading to (he discovery of many | 9065 not tak to account the vast Fdirfield Avenue. | ed the work of the Paris conference, Magyars Always. | American graves and identification of 81 when inter-|and then try to throw the hlame on (New York Times.) casualties previously reported e the president. on the pretext that he It hardly needed a dispatch from | missing. Boon has always been a pay- | had not souzht the “advice” of the fl"'(‘fonuhlirwuu}n should he’ given to fon s ot k F senate hefore the covenant was e fact that the mathod of warfare 2 FI1S | 10000 will ot pay also. Is there any | The country showed thai it was in | were staged long ago by Count Ka- [ over lent excaptional difficulties to tho | 1 "5¢d "","fi"”““f e he oaldws ‘Brateful | reason why a church should not go [D0 Mood for that kind of palities, and | rolvi, A Magyar magnate remains a | dlscovery and burial of dead. Burfal [ 7 FFHRENT FOURTS @ work ?;flsht by shrewdly presenting amendments parties frequently completed their S B i ar as made & Thatl R S e o e mission under heavy fire and often | SC2TCMINE inquiry fnto the devious RLG GRS 6f he G Wi their work could be done only under | PY-Wa¥s of fraudulent stock promo- professed lo favor the principle but | cratic, proletarian, or Bolshevikian | cover of darkness, thus making iden- | 1070 Its conclusion i that never - £ oth disapprove the text. Mu. Taft has left | qecoy he finds it necessary ta set up | tification difficult and often impossi- 4 ‘thamlet singularly un- L e L O e L h it ol standing Hn hconrt tand ([ his b usiness B NOE muck mere than (tblo) has wild-cat promotion béen so i in the fine arts, and |any sort of sabstitute for the saloon| "y csident has completed their dis- | a vear ago it was the admitted policy | “Reburlals are now furnishing | fromcosst tof consteas i ke i closq solafer memo- | they must put It on a pay YOUT | comfiture by making the Taft amend- | of the Magvars forcibly to expropriate | means of identification in a great ma- . J grips the hearts § were ‘desired, no one even enter basis, for nobody wants charity. |, an(s his own the lands of the then subject races.|jority of cases. ST e result of the government's to manhood with EHbUBht of any other form than “The saloon has ministered to @} =\ do not know who is paying the [ The minister of agriculture declared | Krave registration and chaplain re- ey h:;:"r'h"jr""”(»["'"“"”‘”}"y'::‘»“ "‘“r"’;‘ ars R b calloa T S areat 4 the ready-made or to-order tvpes very definite hunger in mankind, the | cxpenses of the Borah-Reed-Thomas ! {hat the soil of the most productive | ports are being again investigated.” Jinop, S ueands of gmiEE o ed him and thel of cemetery monuments, enlarged Tunger for brotherhood. Strange junket, but it {:ins out to have been | gistricts of southern Hungary ‘‘was| Secretary of War Baker said yes- ans converted to the idea ofy sEi= is shared by others whose ac- a little hind furnished with ar- it may read, the saloons of this city | {jc kind of an investment that would |j, the hands of a pepuatien by no | terday that he has asked former Af- pnce he made in hls mellow | - tillery and ammunition. offered the only actual and universaly have been prohibited in Kansas or | means reliable. The soil of these | torney General Gregorv to make a | ProPortion, their investment expe- Now, when a new wave of pa- brotherhood of .man. In no one|any other state having a “bluc-sky” | 1hrentencd districts must be in the | careful sinvestigution of Isritish ang | rlence is limited to the good, roek triotiM - is bringing to us again |church in all the city, including my |jaw. The fight against the league of | hands of those who deserve confi- | French laws covering the removal of | "OLOM sovernment bor the oppdrtunity of dedicating |own, has there been anything ab-|nations was like Ludendorff's 1% | dence.” The Czechs in the Austrian|%bodies and any intérnational ques- L of an active life. The world new wi€morials; our first fear is of proaching the comradeship of rich | offensive last March. Tt started well. | payliament protested. A Budapest | tions which may arise in connection er for his having lived 4@ return of that dismal stone age. and poor, high and low as exists in | but it never reached any of its ob-| ey calmly reminded them of the| with the transfer of the bodies of Such. fears may, however, prove | the saloon. The brewers and distil- | jectives and has ended in a complete | Aqjagvar doctrine that ‘“‘the Magvar | American soldiers to fhis country. A unfounded, for the times have Jers were fools in not understanding | collapse. state has tne right to decide what| good deal of the confusion apparent- e . ot OUR EXPORT TRADE. completely changed and there is the great human hunger they min- = clements shall possess the seil.” | v exists in this connection Mr. | "‘ P il ."”)“j"" a pa- a general acquaintance with istered to, and in taking For granted | AN EMay I Winlyor: The policy of the decree must be en- | Gregory is to make a comprehensive | ]"”"‘m_‘;‘ m"'"““"'h“'bm': "vv:):."'\’:f:;‘l:‘?:\ 5 works of art and a growing ap- that men came to guzzle vile whiskey e e jarged to cover all Hungar: The | report. Mr. Baker cxpects to safl | S BUT HAALINCE the warh cuis vl i Foocet axpett Dusincss of preciation of their part in life, and rancid beer becausc they could- : & state “must carry out a healthy dis-| for France April 8. He will remain | YOUT Sacrifice, the war v now 1,000,000 annually. By the lat- as we have become accustomed to n't get along without it. They have | here was mever any doubl that]irihution of iand to the Magvar race, | fhere only a short time f““'l-n "": i“ = “;_: ‘,"", o 'lw re- live with them. W¢ are impatient had their reward. The saloon is the | Germany and her principal accom- | which alone is a support of th_(: state t LRt el >.r< imes— "f us when unworthy substitutes are : This is “agragarian reform.” asun- exchange your honds for this exeep- T S | inking man’s invention and drink- | plices were secking to thwart and i - ~ G S Rt offered. At all events, the former | or. 3 ; " derstood by the then ruling race. still | INCREASED NUMBER | tional offering positively guaranteed | ! | i | i economic loss incident 1o broken for- | tunes, impaired effort of discouraged investors and ‘to the diversion from legitimate business enterprise of new | productive capital Prague to tell us that the late and| $0f the CivilJinto the business of supplying what ays: the saloon supplied to men in the IR our own time way of fellowship so long as the war period found ever same institution can be commercial- Magyar magnate, however he dis-| guises himself and whatever demo- aps in the histor. of the coun ing and investing. With a very great while he was epjoving a rest R T ek v The fakir is after them. Thousands of “salesmen” carefully drilled in the entle art of “selling on the first | call” and getting out -of town, ‘are abroad 914, he was struggling along rt of 1918 he was sending out to the value of $6,000,000,000 : i en have voted them ut of | preve: e ‘ts of the A s SRy e h o here b o 600 ow his business is $20,000,000 a | cxycuse is gone, for we now have L“"ih::;;‘ AN IO S 2 [EEeen RS elion ol e SN b s ionatel et rminedl toenle o i to brirg in anvwhere from 10 to 50 pproximately $7.500,000,000 a at command skilled and trained B e e o B o scttle the future of central Burope on | yiatter what temporary ruin, even to IN AGRICULTURE workers in nearly all forms of 0 broad lines of nationality and radical | itsclf, ensues. the arts. problem will take care of dtself.| o oo 05" oo Hinzary would op-|, A few weeks ago Count Karolyi . or the mine shaft completed, or the His name is Uncle Sam. B e Clubs will spring up, soda fountains | USRS, SN (00 W HIBEE TO0S ond | then provisional president, went property developed, or the like. staggering values filustrate | 1 o Dritaln, in common With hun- | wy) thrive and men will find other PS5 Mg B8 00 00y 8O0 ™ ereelt | inpough the form of dividing his great | Disabled Men Studying Specla What. is the brand of thé - Eiai dreds of other communitles, has & |sources for their desire for comrade- | 0" Guimany, just as Germany bitter- | landed estates among the people, the | . % § i swindler today: that he is “willing’ vague idea that it will ersct a me- | ship and love of talking. ly opposes the establishment of a |proletariai. Like the modest man Lines Now Offered to Those in l;.s an accommodation to you, you un “But I am concerned with the [ . S EEC: < a buffer | he is, he had the distribution made in derstand—to “'accept’’ your good Lib morial to the boys who bled and died ) { strong and united Poland as a buffer | he is, he had the dis n Orades land Tadusteite. e L for goods we are receiving A 4 Flanders, | Problem in the slums. The swloon in |y etween herself and Russia. But it [ public. Same peasant, some little re destand Stnausto erty bonds in ‘“exchange” for his on the flelds o ERTEEHILE IO TN cal ite difforent 5 e e t clerk, would de- & - worthless stuff. good security, or the word of a ; the foreign sections is guite d | scemed incredible that in order to|tired government clerk, Wou 1 Washington, March 29.—The report ey - ratio sovéreign people. Aug,| T the vague ldea ever grows to sub-| to anything in the center of the Cily. | event this:Germany., and still less | clare his thirst for land. his mability | oy tp f 0o 0 oo W50 G0 | Happily there is u government d 1s not in ht. The oOlq | Stantial proportions and takes form | There the saloon meels a great need | Austria or Hungary, would be willing j{o buy it. Then the “boundary Lt i : | agency today on - the irail ‘of the S | it would be desirable to seek advice of | and is nightly crowded by men who |, destroy the whole political fabric | pegs’ would be shuffled about, the | soldiers approved for re-training by | swindler today on the trail of the will provide some of the e e [ [Somsin ol to intoxlcation, but | and hand over the country, if only for | applicant!s little estate duly marked | the federal board for vocational | stock sharp. It is the federal trade sities of life we are now sending : L “ | who seek to escape the qualor, the|a time, to absolutely anarchistic ele- | hy metes and bounds; the Dpeople | cducation shows that 245 selected | cOMmmission, w:xpnv.mwl by congress our gates but it must also fm- | ¥R of memorlal construction. noise, dirt and odors of toncwent lifo. | ments. Events of the last few davs |would be impressed bY the eount's| apriciiiural tiaining in some wf is | L0 Prevent unfair methods of com e = Here of all places could he churches | have, however, proved (hat this is sa | self-sacrifice, and the count would | various branches and specializations, | Pe(itlon in interstato commercs. The “Daylight saving” commences 10- | try out any scheme they may have to|and that Germany is prepared to do | prebably wink with that curious| phese compare almost identically with | COmmission may wel expected to X - s dent hi, hoto- look upon the fleecing ¢ Americans niorrow and all clocks in the United | teke (he place of the saloon with | what Hungary has already’ done in or- | vight oye so evident in hix photo- | he selcction in commerce, sy BT DRO R R e 2 an S -di \e same oppor- | dec to avold compliance with the | graphs. 1f the count gives: up hiS| trades and professions, 7 indicate a | © e verty Bonds | s . la forwiar something affording the same oppor- | dec ' ) oy ? 8 A ate : o { AR o Rl Rt one tunity te the peopla from Huropean | peace terms imposed by the HEntente |jand, it is because he ocan't help it | growing interest on the part of dis- unfair ) 4 i { hour at 2 a. m. The more acceptable ocountries wheve the village tavern was |'Allies. The latter now have the|Tndoubtedly he expects to get it baek | jhjeq men If you own a Liberty Bond yo plan is to set the clock before retir- | rogpectable and n respected placa, | choice of-leaving the loval Ozechosio- | again. While the number of these electing | d0ubtless have an carly, call from on ing for the night tonight. All church “Phe Church of the Redeemer is a | Vaks, Poles and Rumanians to defend | His newspaper organ beamed upen | ,gijcuitural education und re-train- | ©f the pleasant representafives of the . 1 b d downtown church and has a plan{ ad. | themselves as best they can or ofjthe attempts of the Magyar authorl- | j,0 yave not approached Lhe percent- | Sharper outfit When you do, just services will be condueted In son- | €Ot e E e rovide sectal holls, | Sending them all the aid pessible. | tica to get control of Serb, Rumanian, | aze of those elesting agricultural ed- : drop a postal lo the federal trade s 4 bsti- | Unless they decide, and decide quickly | and Ukrainian churches and 8e prose- | . .4ion in other nations, 1t s pre. | commission at Washi-gton and tell s y i & 3 3 pre ; renclog coonl ol ““‘,}’1“"‘1“ 2 7""1‘ to do the latter there is a strong pos- | vtize and Magyarise. They are all| gui g", B OFSL CRHODS, b T BEC | them about that visit cnd send th i e tute for the saloon, which may seem | i " that fire and sword, anarchy |alike, these Mag%nr Eenass I | Siates department of agriculture that | the attractive literatuce that is Tl o SID I 'S ¥ S necessary | will swe: o i o t with Bolshevism, it is ' ed you, together with the name and SCHEIDIEMANN'S FRARS. ’ 5 won band desolation will sweep over central | they coque 8! there will be a very wreat inerease 5 e ek YFACTS AND FANCIES. We have talked the matter over| i, o and Germany will ultimately | for the purpose of breaking down, it | Jo S YO T8 & U SRt (REHEOR | yome address of the “salesman.” Or i dficasues insist on living in == 5 Informally, but will make no move| . . ye from the welter the winner of | they can. the Czechoslovaks, Ruma-| o-"f Wl (ol SHEE (0 BEY TR0 send it in to this paper and we will Pparadise, Philip Scheidemann, |, There is reason now (o hope that | until assured that the abolition {he war. Ona of the first answers to | nians and South Blavs, and out of the | 2. 1O%% SLATERE SEHCWTAIE (U® | g6 rward it to Uncle Sum’s mer * TR e ] the presidential filibuster regarding | alcohol, and the probable disappea the action of iarolyi in obedience to | general destruction recreating the old Togicallaftectt nonliraiaent b It would be interesting to now i . hancellor—wha '“'\N | congress wiill end early in May—|ance of many of the saloons, presents | iy German masters is the occupation | intolerant. masterful Magyar state | rul great advance in the Invention | ROW much of the $500,000,000 a year pray -‘~: does not intend to allow, { Kansas City 1‘““‘»\7 X a real 1.»«-t-lx-|.| -“hw"‘h;h“l l'l‘\';::\\‘\‘f"f | of hoth Rerlin and Budapest by En- | with a »no\’ernmpnt of for, and by thell Tham teaed s Sai et ”“E"v“mr ofi _\,:w ;n»uiu\r:o‘u:hd.:i to d ndisturbed. Into T (e e AR S [thes fresori=acoluRenlc R o Ve Rt [ tente treops MAagVArS chiners have placed agriculture as an | MM of onr banks, our merchants repose njects a mightmare, 2 3 3 e and | themselves. == industry on a par with all others; it | 1 our legitimate buciness develop- | the irony of fate have both befallen ““Whatever we do it will be run on is the leading industrv and is repre. | Ment. Also, how many of us are on the residents of Camdenm, N. J. To | exaptly the same basis as our present sented today by 51 por cant cempared | the sucker list e cruel oppressors of the gentle, | make up the loss of $125,000 in liquor | jynch room, not a charity affair hut (Providence Jeurnal.) (Senator Capper of Kansas in the To-| %0 Let's keep our ioos: change per cent in dividends before the vear's out—as soon as the oil weli is sunk, He's the greatest man in busi- pights to which Ameriea has Pd as an export merchant, In om America machinery, farm- Inplements, finished steel prod- foodstuffs and a mile-long list er articles. i erica is the production plant ne storehouse of the world. And bve 2 hundred million sharp th the Yankee ft < - rith b & Bift ol] formance with the new time tomor- g the order. o are of Imperialism as typified Rhode Island Farm Orops. . * Capper For the Leagur. | . te 49 per cent representing all other eutons | licenses the city council, T f " 1 rops e val a Cx 1 5 ike Teuton ‘1;‘:"‘:::: 0'; ‘ei;tct;pfi::a"r::\:.\‘b; ;_(l‘f:‘l‘l(g a stralght business proposition. Staple farm crops to the value of peka Capital.) industries combined. The importance | BOMe ed up the water rates In a lik of agricultural machinery has placed 2 Bumerated the belfef “that un- | coatmt o Clacienatl. Saquirer. ° Mr. farm mechanics among the most | SENATOR PHELAN THREATENED. ented sums in compensation —— ’ (Now@onivorld ) contained in the 33d annual report | phatically for it, because I believe it prominent.features of ugrioulture, and San Jose, Cal., ,\;ww :’nr.r;\ 1 se0r, /. Wicker: ‘er at- 8 Z t th time gives a vening in reate . signed “C. C. of O’ b be imposed; that wide stretches | AS Theodore Roosevelt once said | George W. W it “*“\”"":’,“f"’\“:' L’“ of the state hoard of agriculture, sent | (o be a great step toward an endur- | % ”'"’: :“r':és;m.‘ = ot = ,?‘h‘]?:,; i t:'zf"“r'l”'\f ':",r:‘r, o eian st aidi i | chaotic ¢ jons co. | torpey general of the Unlted States, bl el 5 s il = o AL recelive: Senatc elan o B German territory are to be| T{m‘h:rohfl"‘f\:(m-JZ":l‘a'fif-- ::1‘ M:::v\r”i went to Europe last December “de- | !0 the General 1‘ s s .‘\’““‘:";‘t' | I A S LD R of the| 4, disabled soldiers who have had ex- | fice in San Francisco an March 20 was 2 X < 2 ; he crops and their values wera as . 5 5 \ st . - p g B , and that crushing restrictions | myrope.— Providence Journal. cidedly opposed ta our country’'s he- - fl" ot [:"’"’:‘ vn.:‘ . 1.;\ e warld, and which the must and | jarience with the tank, the truck, the } made public today The lett be imposed in financial and | coming involved in any ‘entangling “‘ :‘;";1 e isod on 58000 acies | Will have. The people are now de- | automobile, and other Unes of ma-|manded payment of $2,000 to the ¢ | alliance’ with the nations of Kurope” | &0 b /w5, PR O T nted | manding that for which they gave | ohinery. Such experiencs, coupled | writer, backing up the demand by “upon the ldea of a|Ph SEC. LT ded 650,000 bushels, | freely all that humanity has te give | With vocational training in a short In- | various threats. Senator Phelan an- a1 191.000; 372.000 bushels | and for which our boys died in|tensive coursc as offered by the fed- | nounced that he would pay no atten. A1uae 2 o il 5 s anth v ral board, wili prepare the rehal ion to the demand of the league | Of corn valued at $1,030,000, harvest- | France. It is unthinkable they will T iy Ieff'lcuu\L'stn[\(:\‘ 1\1;9 tion to th h, we shall try to treat Her - vert Rot only to the Ides of the feughe | 0 G000 "0 000 acres, and 2.000 acres | be content with less. The principlo | ta 0 Iy mee 3 : E | of nations, but ta the plan drafted hy 3, - ; e e vn s demands created by modern develop- E & = demann’s alarm seriously as| With martial law proclaimed mittee of the Paris confer-|Of oats yielded 84,000 bushels, val- |and the idea are lllle.\. Our isolation :Mm ol e m:énma:«v ,l‘,‘he u‘“ DISABLED STEAMER TOWED IN, | throughout Hunzary, anyone not a la- | the committee of the ~HHI COR TN J0q 4t §76,000. The anple crep con- | is no longer possible. Real A 5 oo, Goian o B o = borer will be fined $2,000 if discov- | €Pce: asn e ted of 201,000 bushels, valued at |in the mavement {6 prevent war anc fononcolh eact L Sapinero Belongs to Shipping Board— convinced me,” he says L : 11,550 {o stop military rivalry is America’s 3 sing. Was Built This Peand no beer” with a vengeance!— | er understunding of the facls > - demand - =y I have no sympathy with the een- Coming Tuesday London, March 29.—The American Connecticut’s Oversight. “Germans in Par tention that a league agreement will y 2 B | steamer Sapinero was towed into Are You Going? Where? Why t0| piyouth an Friday evening after ong Herr Scheidemann's fears | == = $4,500,000 were raised in Rhode | believe Kansas is overwhelmingly Wickersham’s Casc. Island last vear, according to figures | for a league of nations. [ am em- | ry matters.’ Resisting the im- | The peace conference needn’t wai g for the daylight saving time to put |and looking ) Jdea W ol its clock ahead and get busy.—Man- |league of nations with skepticism. Iy and “German” in the same | cpecter Union. Mr, Wickersham came home a con- to laugh at his use of the words g from one high in the councils ® honest, hard-working, perspir- | areq arinking lquor, That's ‘no od-worshipping, sin-hating Ger- | work, people. New York Sun. Old John Barleycorn, though for- (Springfiéld Republican.) (Boston Globe.) tendptol involye RS iR inatead o8 ren VTl Miesdny B veh 8 R o bet| isabled at sea hur mally retired, persists in announcing The bill to grant presidential c]m Dr. von Kuehlmann, the former |keeping us out fl‘f m\r.h 1 b?hmve the e .,\rlv(form::n‘k A e having “‘\\U“»’S-tnn]f M’: (»1’;”\;': ‘\’1“: ensation are to be imposed. He | that he is in the handsof his lawyers. | frage to Connecticut waomen, which |, 3 q .| war-weary peoplé of both continents |’ - L ane pa : s : FELE S| iun s “liberal” foreign minister of Ger-| . ! military and an eco | famous Dixle Jazz Band will be on | ticoned to save her from foundering.g fligcovered that the dancer really | —Washington Star. was favorably acted upon by the leg- will support a Yy an 8! 3 ‘ e o et hand and say boys, this is a Broad- { == ative j ) n suffrage [many, says tha mder favorahle | homie boycott against the first nation § pay the fiddler and as he lacks isiativoldoinygicommisigelio) ol way attraction, so take advantage of | rhe sapinero is a United = Staths sporting spirit the knowledge thaps the Chancellor is right in g that unprecedented sums in : R . . . 0 pts to destray another or Peace conference is taking its speed |last week, is now said to lack the|conditions the Germans will be in which attemp Sel i Sl e 1 ik . from our Sixty-Fifth congress.—Wall | necessary accompanying’ provisions|Paris before 1825 but heaven help to again ru}hlea!ly plunge the world | it and get 3‘?»“ :::‘mew‘blr m\ri1 (?fl-‘\'f“fl shipping l\u? ’1 1'r:'mrylnlvr7fi~h,,’< :S‘n.. Unprecedented sums must be | gireet Journal. for amending the existing election|the first Germans who are bold ;into war. That means there must be | to your heart's co o Tueaday e¥S. fiaross, complgled 8. (ARSI but they will not Be#a tithe of laws, but the omission was an over-|enough to venture into Paris after |an international organization andl is the time and Turn hall is the pla \mfi“ _.\’hnux,;z; Ve fladelphia Ggl-mq;‘\ would have gouged The master painters who are to‘ <ight, Connecticut is getting in line.|peace has been declared! agreement. —advt. on March 8 < v

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