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s NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, JUNE 3, 1919, ‘ T m———— 5 1 = 7 s ki o~ o 7 _ . o Britain Herald twenty-six Chief. Executives reported | FACTS AND FANCIES. : e THE SCHEMER need dredging by reason of the stome- ¢ | as being favorable to the drys while i 2 i k g (hr?\l\mg propensities of -~ América youth. one was unfavorable and one did not — u + N 5 = & Sober second thought ascribes the | To us, now that we are older grown mietara. D L e T e R e L e DL | inibtings athvale) toJustiplainfclss = 77 it appears a ridiculous, an irritatng, N portions from other states the defeat | ness of young hecodlums.” That is a \ / 1r-x.<nmlr v!c m: hm] |:!1s a herlet&l} d daily (Sunday excepted) at £:15| of the Eighteenth Amendment is not | sufficient explanation and a moré normal and rational thing to do .'-:“" B“YZ{::.EM R T O promised logical one than to discover Bolshe- | f_’——- : What were thé muscles of the arm $2.00. Three Months. ey vist activities in a college town| made for if not for the swift flinging IERALD PUBLISHING COMPANY, i e S e Shatidid B D B / Sryskinberaiy oot the jugndior bATE e, 1 i e R Ol Tiin or the “shying” of small-sized rocke B hel PoitiCo=e o Dnitain|LZonEnithetaverazenopiiaceimore ol e \ at telegraph wirés to hear them ring? as Second Class Mail Matter. less sentiment in favor of the liquor \ " o nt s D e e Interests, particularly through this| Read ought to guard the NC-4 | / ® | i e, el siness Office . S 5 -5 | section. It is extremely doubtful how- | €lcsely at Plymouth for Hawker | suppose they have their worthy and competent successors. These special- ists were far and away more skilful than the ordinary run of boys. They seemed to be continually bu with ther practce. There was never a moment of their progress along a country road when they were not in- dulging in their amateur ballistics. A bird on the highest bough of an apple tree was a favorite object of their aim. They rarely or never shed a drop of innocent bleod: they never wanted to. They would have been surprised and grieved if a robin or warbler had come tumbling to the ground as the yesult of their too accurate skill. But they delighted in almost touching the golded wings on the swaving branch and sending them off in a flurry of only moderate haste and apprehension for the birds probably knew there was no anger, no sullen purpose, in tke stones | Generally speaking a stone has @ | pretty dull time of it. It lies as still as death, incapable of excitement either subjective or objective, till a small boy comes along. ‘“Want to g6 spite.— Bditorial. Rooms G ver, th 1 entiment will grow and maxpiofursckitiingis 2 ever, that this senti SToW & Meriden Journal. Be only profitable advertising medium in | spread enough to compel the repeal | the city. Circulation books and press| : open fo advertisers of the amendment. \\\l N\ 4 room alw ST E Banker, a telephone operator, DHERCIRSGUSHDS s received the distinguished s The issuance of an order dissolving | ice medal at Coblenz for faithful | o the use for republication of all news ; - service. She is not the first—nor will | credited to it or not atherwise credited | the New Britain City Guard by Cap- | SErvice. Fhot.aas SR in this paper and also local news | she be the last—to carn such a deco- | published herein ration. whether at home or abroad.— marks the passing of one of the most | Philadeluhia Ledger. GOVERNMENT BY VIOLENCE. | Unldue olganizations in the countr : . 4 : Formed about two years ago when the The Duke of Devonshire is spoken A series yomb sions )f as Britis assado Tnit- 3 es of bomb explosions in the probability of a war with Germany | of as British ambassador to the Unit Bast last night when several houses i ¥ pios i zive | € States. His excellency has at least L was present the suard planned to give | o " Gylicanle qualification for the mi- | office. o Cavendish has ever been | military men throughout the war and [ known to bure anvene by talking too | much.—Toroento Globe Member of the Associated Press. L The Associated Press is exclusively entitled - tain Sampson of that organization | city, state and national officials | Were damaged seem to indicate that the gang which attempted to take the city a protective group of . to furnish the elements of training | f prominent lives through the device of mailing bombs about a month ago has not yet given up hope of accomplish- ing wholesale murder. Luckily one of the killers was destroyed by his own machine when the home of Attorney General Palmer in Washington was for such of its members who would | g0 into the service as a great many [ Narragansett Pier has asked the | state of Rhode Island to pay for the | removal of a beached whale. Con- it was only & municipal militia. At no“ sidering the amount of Rhode Island time did it become allied with the | that a full grown whale would cover, state in any capacity though the mem- | We should suppert the town's claim. 3 —Boston Herald. of them did. It was distinctive in that bers were sworn in as special police somewhere?" asks the boy. “Sure.” Pmased. 5 and held themselves in readiness for ———— savs the stone. And so they join an The fine hand of a large number of | " 1) rrom the mayor to any duty that Aother: animated partnership on the instdnti gpep may be seen in the work. AM or- | 45419 not take them out of the city. | cGrace E. Hall in the Portland Ore- anditheduil stas ar-noms | starts off on a romantic journey through the blue sky—as graceful ‘a journey, as gently curved, as nicels modulated, as could be wished by anything or anybody It is all over in a few seconds, but not till the stone has had its brief exs perience of something new—for let W get back into the boyish mood for & moment and ‘‘make-believe” that there is nothing really inanimate afts er all No doubt stone-throwing has caused a good deal of trouble first and’ lasts but on the whole it has been singuf larly free from casualties. And”it must have contributed about as much actual pleasure to veuth from the days of our prehistoric ancestors ag anything we can think of. ganized effort is being made to spread destruction, for what purpose can not be foretold. The gang may succeed in taking a life or two before it is ap- prehended but even if it does it is im- possible to see what has been gained. The loss of some of our public men though it will be regretted will by no means throw the country into disor- The City Guard was the first organ- gonian.) ization of its kind organized here- | It seems we scarcely knew her in her many years on earth Nor realized till she had gone her sterling woman's worth; Too much she gave, too freely toiled for others, all the while. Too much we blindly let her give— forgetting thanks or smile. abouts and has met its purpose very well. Though there has been prac cally no demand for action, excepting policing at the Corbin Annex fire and some patrol duty about the draft d tricts at registration time, it has | { | doubtlessly served as a deterrent to | Now, looking back acress the years, life that is L taken by violence there will spring up hundreds of Americans to take its place with the determination to run the creators of disorder to earth and der or chaos. For every plans that might have our hearts are wrung with pain, Remembering the price she paid that ; we, her own, might gain: military funerals and upon patriotic | ghe placed no value on her deeds— occasions has been generously given. love prompted every one: The organization of the City Guard | We simply knew she met our needs— until her work was done. any malicious been in their incipiency. Its aid at punish them as they deserve. Unity of action against the bomb workers will preceded the building up of the Home Guard on state lines by veral | Those toil-woarn hands had never e be forthcoming with a celerity that < e i S 7 3 months and was entirely spontaneous, meant so much to us until v B e % 22 £ s T . 4 n < . hen we entered the great war. | the events that had been arranged Ger Ruin in France. X will surprise them should they carry P e - - o P \} S e < serman Rui 3 b 7 2 the New Britain Rifle club being | UPon ‘;_"}’fi{’p‘““\?"d1:_’{:’]‘(]5'3':“‘9:',“‘,% 0 COMMUNICATED. Should the habits of these men be |and the zeneral rejoicing, it was a A i Somi ¢ thelnplans, sponsor and its members joinidg the | yrp.t corvice they nad dens for us w SR offered as a reason why we should | memorable day. (Bradstuesssgdourn: If an organization expects to Win | . . " ol w. W. Bullen at that time Al e (et o LABOR AND BEER. not enact and enforce wise and sen- It is too bad that we have not made | Destruction wrought Dy the Gera the sympathy of the American people [ o i on, o o nd was a great | Undll we missed their tender touch| In @ leading magazine under the | sible legislation? : H 1o | this 01d Home Das more of an annual | mans in northern TFrance was sg by murdering its officials and violating | ;o1 i1 forming the companies. The when she had gone away. G (K R0 ReSHeRG 6RO G Mr. Gompers may believe that the | affair, that we have not set apart a | uc ctematic and dianolical” that it wif its institutions it is proceeding on the s - labor organizat has blished ar pinthBofs the s Bolsheylalipwas S yprosdlicertain iday, for icertain fweek iwheniallll | re fi ars to rehabilitate thi 4 s 2. E s need for the City Guard has passed | The thin gray hair upon her brow was | roicate v(g.",:,;f :Y;]uiv;‘f{of\m vlvl»h",:‘ «‘lj hibition. [ think, however. it would | of the men and women who once | Feduire five vears to 2 N4 e wrong track. The public of this coun- | g with it the interest has died out as & halo/ 11 arols against by . ands | o a difficult matter to substantiate | jjved in "Meriden are invited back and | coal, iron and steel industry and 12 4 ! a halo light, for temperance bul not prohibition eler DS ek hild | 1118 try is too civilized to be appealed 10} myo pagriotic services of ifs members | But we had never knewn it—till she | He says: “As a worker for b h;i be 16]- \0 ‘"i\- "" 12 . ne | s i" general welcoming celebration en- | 15 years to return the mines and mil d s t ts suc razy X 7 . Ll & Sl 5 0’ ver- | of anarchy. Anarchy has been more | soooq 1t is a spl ' = 2R T and swept off its feet by such crazy | (1, were bound by no ties whatever | went away that night ance . ., I consider the foisting of | or less rampant in Russia for many | 1o is a splendid thing for a| i, normal output, according to a PE acts. We longed to tell our love at last, and 3 © { community to have such a day of and gave their time voluntarily should prohibition upon this countr against | years, It seems a little far fetched the palpable wish of the large mass | to claim now that the prohibition of of the people to be, in tim like | the use of Vodka has caused Bol- | these, worse than a crimei~it is a [shevism. A certain method of ar- 1munder." Question, How dan a man | gument is to cite the worst thing of be said to stand for temperance when | which we can think and the thin : he advocates the continuance of a m(‘,:\-l‘ Areaded and then assume !h:\f certain time each year is fixed upon ‘*flfrjv'fl Vvhr' llN!H‘nfimhl .1?m 'E& ities of that noble soul who | eondition which leads divectly to in- [ that thing was caused by, in this | for Old Home Day, people will flock | Mr. Probert expressed confidence JeRtianas thatinight emperance? Questio e here a se v el en the ‘“indomitable spirit” of Franée 4 L temperance? 2u s ohibi here and those who live here will find . With aching hearts we know——too ¥ C tion, How does prohibition. ary report by Frank H. Probe how we held her dear, liminary report by Fra > i remiin a pleasant memo: But oh. the hour had glided past— WET OR DRY? s = our words she could not hear! THE POLISH SITUATION. foregathering and it keeps alive the interest in Meriden in the minds of | COM; evervone who ever lived here. Mines. He is a member of a S It is not necessary always to have | Investigating committee which r very elaborate entertainment but if a | 1 returned from Europe ulting engineer of the Bureay Tgnoring completely the fact that Enrichinstvears! Today sve sce wwith the military measure calling for pro- A clause in the Austrian peace visien keen and bright hibition in the United States effective | treaty which does much td solve the [ The Dez after July 1 and until such a time as | difficulties of the smaller countries of i - G i ; . > ¢ ‘ests c and the return of Alsace and Lotraing demobilization is complete has not vet | Europe, particularly the Balkan states late—there never was another 2:' il “n;’“ 1t tolbe against || In a final paragraph M, Gompers | ROW Nistesss i common. {t e ’T"’"’ %o the motherland would soon’ TINKE J 5 Bagano he wish of a lar, ass e ; e o ; 3 who have left and who long | (€ 7 3 3 been made void the world of brewers | and Poland was the cause of the ap- | So good and true the whole wav | peopies Has he. aeeret :,‘.‘?»rw £ e fomthe lfl,r e W ™Y (o come back and it is good for these | the nation the dominant factor i tie " DhoRonts avele s anes e through as she w e ca L o ; ces of | life apprehensive of the future SRS AR ! el s y LR and their opponents are centering the | pearance of one of the representatives, LAToRED hom we called | jnformation on this point? Ias he| The man, however high he may he, | Of us who live here right along. Turopean steel md.uf‘: o prohibition fight now being carried on | namely, Premier Bretano of Rumania, consulted a majority of voters | who sees danger in removing tempta- Let us have a yearly Old Home Day The actual physica R < 0} R ¥ g > i )} e i XS i) 3 - < e it a -, = s es is comparatively about the Eighteenth Amendment to | before the council to protest. He ob- e fzouehonth Blund geinstnofcongl ot omiin S Ep At vl Fing andithen sk olilanioceaslonith s e e 1o tne asstruo AN 1 . B 5 e sulted the fifty n 5 5 g b S il a 9 when ¢ yarved tc e des the Constitution of the United States | jected to that part of the treaty which Canada’s Problem. ety mutlions §of8wor i fen S evilMiUnih e Sioutosyihell flives isnailielilookitorandito andigllienoy: A L p i éaiil : : ¢ : e : who are the greatest sufferers through | must indeed be of narrow vision. If the coal fields of mnorthern FFandss which enforces nat:on-wide prohibi- | calls for the protection of racial and (New York Times.) { the use of alcohol? Does he even | not why can he not see, in this case, | R Y which is as reprehensible as Jt° 648 tion after January, 1920. The right | secular minorities in Poland, IRu-| In form it is a strike that is on in | know that a majority of the labor | that the use of alcohol degrades and | Manslaughter As a Sport. complete,” Mr. Probert said. = of Legislatures to ratify the amend- | mania, Czechoslovakia and Jugo- :nanzrla. In n;tpn( it is revolution. m'znnlnzalinn he represents opposes [ demoralizes character and results in (Nem ¥ork World) In my opinion. Ilm such .:t}rogt‘. 2 he. government is inactive and seems P I° ) o - P : la ring e n ? S was ever perpetrated against he 1M ment without first gaining the consent | slavia and leaves the decision as to the i sernedlipgonibition holding many laboring men down? 2 pery A : powerless. Let us not be too quick Again he intimates that the prohi- i oabiila | Dresidentd (Gompers With one man killed instantly un- | dustrial life of any country. Magni< of the people in a refgrendum vote is | proper treatment of the many peoples | to condemn the government for in- | bition law as passed is an invasion | would throw {heir influence toward | der his overturned machine and with | ficent steel plants, comparing tdvors the moot point and ’is one which | making up these states to the League | action. Under the laws, governments | of personal liberty. 1Is this something | the restraining and doing away With : two men dving under the ably with anything we have in' the promises to be fought through the | of Nations rather than to the nation | aF® Not empowered to act unless there | new? Are there no restrictions now | evil habits instead of fostering and United States, are now but a tangled Bupreme Court T olvcd Premicr) Brotanoliiosth b is violence. Without violence or dis- | on personal liberty According to | prolonging conditions that lead to twisted mass of structt 1 steel'*afig order beyond such harmless things as | law a man may not run amuck like | i % < g I ) hrok 3 illful demol hler : : “ i 3 S as 8 ¥ no E > | social decay and disintegration, the | o Steilicly L | hroken stone. The willful demolige There are a number of states which | point being politely shown that it was | hissing and booing, or tearing an em- |4 Malay savage with 2 naked knife | condition of the laboring man would | o I|‘r:”)“““c"]‘,“';'i‘|""‘ ”",_“( _"“”'i“‘“”‘*“ was scientifically planned and system« have referendum laws and through | the duty of the larger nations to pre- | blem off somebody’s lapel, the so- |in his hand, slashing and murdering | improve much more rapidly than it i L& T BOOd MEAS-T . ically carried out. This after’ the 3 &g Ty X e ure in disaster, a fourth man was tak- | any one of these channels the case is | serve peace and inasmuch as the larg- | ¢Aled strikers. digected by the Bol- | whoever he meets. A man may not | does now. Why not help labor to and Y from’ the track with & fraotured [[temoval® of ‘all*sychimechs i x shevist or I. W. W. clement, have par- | take miadeR Sl t| does nc paoo el il o 4 : vas.tal i a rechancal BN colfcon Wb rorcRtno e Rt (leina rons i e T e tlinn s tnealindt 50 RS S S E R ER el e e e s EReEe i istea D el lse e e el e eann 2 e B e ekl Bl on fonoe that Maveel moviion: (slectxioal PORER UE L a8 coRUBE y & 2l s 2 hough starving | not see that in order to stop & of an automobile-racing crowd which | DY Germany ? ve states e ratifi i 1 ol g 5 he maliciousness and bunal. Forty-five states have ratified | sisted upon seeing that there was no | their assumption of the powers of | may not take the food he sees dis- [fiE mists beS pucout Rentirelyiinot Rallie Sy - st e e tl i efficiency with which this ”?mg the amendment through their Legis- | chance for internal discord. government is spreading daily. There | played in bake shops or on fruit | Jittle here and a little there leaving | » TET R F DY (7€ | i_;"‘“‘““‘}"‘,““; against French industry was carried® . 2 e . i S A s d B > 5 a a E & flying wheels had | 882 C . Jatures and in one of them at least the | The history of the countriés, the |#'® N0 riots worthy of the name; the | stands if he has no means of pay-|the conflagration untouched? presented. to its straining eves the | out is almost unbelievable 2 trikers” simply assume the gov- | ment. According to union labor law = : & has been i thera Fo point will be raised: Has the state | long story of persecution that has|nment of a town, the police gm\d A man may not gm-‘»n\ulwl‘- In‘v\’lrn’ chh“r ”"} mm“y‘:‘n\‘(\:‘;r I":vfm\rlml oyt | sishisglEhatiueason i teaniullygiofiex . Zhe conl vetus Bl nprtants F;dntc g ake a Feder: n with it, j foin : : : 23 e 2 o= passed in a ma . E rlain by water-bearing stra the right to help make a Federal | been handed down with it, justify this | firemen join them, and there is no |is a member of some union in the | bonctitution of the United States. Tt | PeCt: arejoyer.ai i gasoline flames on the speedway ~at Indianapolis on Saturday, a_day's new | tortures of | | . : 5 a , -dr ars has | necessitating special methods of shal amendment over the heads of the vot- | action of the powers. It has been but | overt act of which to take cognizance. | tr: abors, el % . 2 1 Racing in power-driven cars has | necessi : nas vot. actio ep t g ce. | trade in which he labors. He may is perfectly legal and legitimate. You never been justified by its results, | sinking and suppo to keep the min even when free from serious accident. | dry. The steel lining of the sha ers, and without consulting them on | a short time since rumors were float- | . Yet nml\m;\' is done in any of these | not commit suictde by quick poison. | and I, who voted, helped to elect " & cities except by permission of the lo- | Y s a rrib’ ringi or- - reprosents "es anc our = the matter? This is the question which | ing about the world of the harsh | on) strice commitien. In W‘mmogl L ‘“h”;:'“‘n‘“m“;:"“f”;"“‘ "f[““ our representatives and é‘;”;‘}"fl‘ 1| 1t nas prought out no points in engine | was dynamited, ietting in the quicks L5 . Sk . g | s e - 4 3 revent him from | representatives we passec silagy. | oo iER A 0 P ! e jgynas SR E e S will have to be decided in the Supreme | treatment of the Jews In the new Po- | the milk and bread wagons run by | suicide by slow alcoholic poison. It |1t was dome in every case by a ma- | construction and mechanical invention | sands and foosing Sosincan ot Dourt. The State Department will | land. Premier Paderewski of that such a permit. The post office em- | is a dreadful blow against his liberty | jority vote or morc. We have no | 'hal could hot have been revealed in | workinge for mlles afofnt T = PR Sl e B iz J & = 3 sa ad ordiar; Sts. as S~ e Pas Jalais regl 1 is bold ' that the ratification of the | country has but recently asked for a | Ploves join the strikers in one city | to prevent him from spending over [ more right to question the validity or | FAT8 A7 OTEREIY (EOLE mu‘msy it || Gt it 140,000,000 cuble et t . Y S after another, and the mails ar - ar at s d | justic s ¢ tha ave < . S 3 - | timated that 120,000, bic meteds amendment by three-fourths of the | committee of Investigation to deter- B 5 mals arciceyl thembanthe injoneyithat ishouid teed {iiustice ot thig Iapthan Q0 hate 19 | Legislatures will make the amend- | mine the reliability of these tales, livered only as the st committee rights | g and development, but to men's | of water must be pumped before mige permits. The police of Winnipeg ct. , morbid ‘love of being thrilled by the | ing operations are resumed. Havings and clothe his wife and children. Is | yuestion President Gompers not this personal liberty argument a pto publish his views on the subj ment complete. Should the Supreme | characterizing them as falsehoods. | joined the strikers at first, but when | little overworked? With ten vears of prohibition that i flnx'vl\:’ ffnr] xw‘vnlrnlf other men. There { flpoded the mines, the head frames Court then decide that ratification by | Whether they were or not the future | the Winnipeg authorities proposed to Listen again to Mr. Gompers: “To | peally prohibits, I doubt if you could ! ";_(‘V’QF ‘v’:‘:‘:r‘l:x,,,'i’,,p:d,::'?iunffdn,?t:’l::: and surface ou\n:mpym were ,\:‘s:'m‘; i g - raise a new police force the regular | save a comparatively small number of | c per t of the people of i = 280 atically dynamited, the twisted deify the Legislature was not complete un- | will look out for itself der o hare g £ e find Sone pely con e factory-made o o P £ plefe | 28 < itsell under” the | oo roturned to work. This sounds | people from overindulgence in one | tnis nation, who would desive to re- | One factory-made piece of locomotive | in many cases filling up the demolf less authorized by a referendum vote | agreement reached. The countries It will become necessary to hold up | must sign the treaty and when they the effectiveness of the Kighteenth | do so will give the powers the right of Amendment until such a time as a | investigation and intervention at any referendum is complete in the various | time. states. Several referendum votes will Premier Paderewski did not pro- encouraging until you hear the rea- | evil habit. Mr. Gompers says so. If | turn to our present condition. Any ‘“““"‘”‘F"."l_';“' be Jalyen tasie) ,',"a;‘ ished shafts. son. They returned to work so that | wrecking the social and economic | more than you could find emancipat- | nother. [IEven the courage for which there should be inobody to interters|| fabric 'of the nation.’: drivers in a tearing competition must | | with the strikers,-who as yet had receve credit is of the quality rather | | | | | | ed colored men ten years after the The use of intoxicating drink is an | rebellion wishing to return to the evid habit. Mr. Gompers sayvs so. If | condition of chattel slavery. 50 it not any indulgence therein over If the great war results in the total the regular | indulgence? We have hes = s Eat the Elephants. committed no overt acts of disorder. of a spurring recklessness than of a In Calgary the mails are being dis- steady, uplifting impulse. tributed by volunteer: (Ansonia Sentinel) An unusual phase of the food shorfs Since motor racing began. The | | rd of th abolition of the use of alcohol as a o B eES ;¢ be forthcoming within the nexf year. | test the article in the treaty, evidently t postal force having quit. Volunteer | wreeking of many zovernments. both o i (ToiF s i will ~ be “‘);‘:l"‘mi‘:x; \‘]‘:‘:{‘\"‘]’"”_' ;’p"l‘-l']‘\‘“l"‘"\‘,.‘mw:‘f; age situation in Germany which hdl Dt course, if seventy-five per cént, of | being satisfied that Poland would, in | [T¢ departments are springing up | socially and economically as well as|yorth all it cost. With this prohibition D.fce 2 : commented on the lack. | come to light is the fact that Germfg | Lt f | through the West to take the places | politically and intemperance always |enforced, [ see one more chain, | SPorts: has comme A children will look in vain for the ol the states, by referendum vote, should | the future, look well aftér its minor | of the striking firemen. And all | took a leading part in this destruc- | whieh tends fo keep men down, | value of its results as compared with | ¢7 5 4 ratify the amendment the tase of the | races and would have nothing to fear | these strikes, even those of the gov- | tion. Has Dresident Gompers infor- | snorm away. I see our land teemins | its deadly risks. On any speedway, on | cus of pre-war splendor during som# sual- ty potentiality looms large. The In- { any trial in speed madness, the c wets will be hopelessly lost but this | from investigation from the outside, | erMment employes, are sympathetic { mation of any nation that came to with a people more nearly free than time to come. The jungle beasts strikes. social and economic wreck through |they ever have been in the past, al . which once so delighted them, wele The banks of Winnipeg have closed [the non use of alcoholic drink? If | people with clear sight and bounding | dianapolis outcome may 1:‘“ any _“’f‘l‘; sacrificed for food during the hungf¥ % | their doors because they cannot do | this happens in the United States will | pulses ready to do and dare to the | De outrivalled. How mueh longer Will ; 5, g their country suffered before thi It is expected and | free from any expectation of interfer. | business with the mail and telegraph | it not be the first case on record? | nimost. And in case of war I see | it he permitted. under the abused | .ninp o (ne armistice b aoped for by the liquor interests that | ence by other powers. services disrupted. “At the TFort| Does any man in his sober senses | thousands of men. accepted as phys- | name Of]fl“’;“- to multiply invitations | =" it in formation is contained infh 1 considerable respite may be gained — | Garry hotel.” says a correspondent. | realiy believe that it will come to |jeally fit, who with free rum as now to manslaughter? et Byt et R It the remaining German states | Meals are served only to women and | pass here through the legal preven- |yould he rejected. Such men can de- i will take time and will place the ef- | A nation which conducts its own af- fectiveness of the dry law bevond | fairs in the proper manner may rest next Janua e e — Relief administration. Francois de' sefore the law finally lr.(n‘nL e °% | children,” perhaps by gracious per- | tion of an evil habit? fend themselves, their homes = and s A Tessan. in an interview with Walhelfi ng through the means of fighting le- | follow the lead of the Rhine states mission of the strike committee. In In Italy, France. the Balkan coun- | country in time of need ‘T\(‘ Stone Age. e senbhit whish appsarst nac Al gal battles of great length in the Su- | and form new republics who is going | consequence of the desire of some |tries and Central Burope water may A nation never grew great by yield- (Providence Journal.) | ago’ in L'Opinlop of Paris, is qiék Blaric Gourt. Despite this it would | to pay the bill? | strikers to gzet something to eat, the | be scarce as Mr. Gompers says. But|ing to evil habits. A people never One of the chief joys in life is as saying that Hagenbeck's collsctiof shrank:from 300 to 60 animals durf joy, to be sure, but is there a man | the four years of war. Amer . 5 . 5 S TN strike committee granted a permit to o st LR CRCERATE IR ) The Austrian terms were what |several restaurants in Winniveg to ‘he United States is assured. % might have been expected. Literally it is said to be ve: plentiful in a | grew strong by sapping their vitality large part of the United States. Where [ And we can never gain strength to keep open. Tt also permitted some | it is scarce on the deserts it is usualiy | pesist evil through compromising with throwing stones—it is not an adult | i S doughboys had an opportunity There are enough states now in | = : | bakeries to reopen. on condition that | sought for with considerable eager- | that evil ip,n_v\here who did not ance upon a | oo zmmnam 7 il e | :; B rohl i " | and figuratively speaking she has | ihey placed themselves under its jur- | ness. A cache of whiskey would be CHAS. H. ASPINWALL, time, in the dim vears of the past, find a a e which prohibition sentiment is upper- } | e gerie when it arrived at Coblenz ea ; been extensively belittled. The large | isdiction. but mockery to a man dying of June 1, 1919. | pleasure in it? [i5es N e A e B pi most to ratify the national amend- |, ;por of races have been given | Our own laws may be different | thirst in a desert. SR O The vounger generation is at it, ex-( LIS spring to o e T ment by direct vote of the people. 4 : from those of Canada. Certainly the Immigrants from foreign countries actl as ours was, back in 1882 or| < x v 2af% 3 e dlter & Al ) nmigrants fr ; actly HiA ; E I e e Saiibae i) connoalane erritoriesfofithel comm fIIETien CE STl P maile s uld Enotibe | commot hier st (ol eiter fhein leondifion 0ld Home Day. 1872 or whenever we were voung| The only foundation for the repal f o olostn i Eepion) leaving but five or six thousand square | interfered with without civil war. But | in life. They are not retained here (Meriden Journal) enough to fling a pebble without get- | that the Germans used his collectio g e e plants Wi'h" | miles of the erstwhile Hapsburg do- | as things stand, the Dominion is{against their will 1f the benefits Meriden made merry today and |ting a horrid kink in the right arm. { for food, Mr. Hagenbeck is reporil m a few years at least. An organiza- i sed with a problem which its laws | ¢ ere to gain do not com- 3y every brook and pond and along to have said, was that during the mains. faced | they came here & elebrated the homecoming of the L . Hon of Boston people in an endeavor | se owerless to avert. The House the things they | °®€0T@ the seashore, the small bovs of 1919 ten of the elephants were killeq peop e - seem P pensate them for 3 !0 get the sentiment of the country The Supreme Court has ruled that | of Commons will debate the question. | are required to sacrifice in ober- ; soldiers and sallfnrs and .2‘” rl‘we take their stand and row stones. ' Chemnitz and the n“gnlce bits of ; > g Surely some way must be found by |ing our laws they can return whence | return of many a former resident who | Water for some reason is especially carcasses were so to the’ lao 38s mailed a questionnaire to Govern- | rate boosts of the railroad and tele-, G0 " inenaced government may {they came. While many of these (has wandered afield and who came | tempting to them In their exercise of , butchers. Many persons ‘Zave ore of twenty-eight states in which | graph lines are perfectly legal. That|g,q a weapon with which to strike | men are voters a great many of them | back to the city to renew the ties of | this energetic art. It seems as if ev- | taste’ for this kind of meat, Mr. is enforced prohibition and | is another thing to be expected. back and save itself. are not voters as was amply proven ! youth. With the splendid weather, ery harbor in & WUaited States must' enbeck added.