New Britain Herald Newspaper, June 10, 1919, Page 6

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, JUNE 10, 1919, g i Britain Herald. THE LABOR CONVENTION. follow vour own inclinations in THE REST AR rf)uvfié. Good judgment and reasonalk ac- | treating them hawever. We have IRt rUBIiSIING COMPANY. tion is governing the Reconstruction |told vou all we know and all we ex- Proprietors. Convention of the American Federa- | pect to know. ed daily (Sunday excepted) at 4:15 | tion of Labor now under way in At- 2 ——— — R, & ot Herald Bullding, 67 Church 8t | 1. ity f $2.00 Three Months. day of this meetinz of the laboring 4 of tr ¢ a Month. | Yesterdny was the first “Senate orders probe of 1 Big (ype tends {0 ter ; el e e S S Gt SO o — man and the 4 Cop il Springtield Republican. Btered at the Post Ofice at New Britain | for fwo weeks. Freceding the as- as Second Class Mail Matter. Did the New York Herald's head- lasnid sembly it was freely predicted that a e : with Bo Peae? 3 line--"Senate Wants to Know How R ' B e general strike, remonstrating against | oo, Leaked” cscape the notice of i il . - A(Donay wholi= heins iheld®fortcanas - Bhe only profitable advertising medium In (onlz profitable advertising medum rs | ing sovere explosions with disastrous FACTSWANI) FANCIES. S = 7 WORLD LEAGUE IS Toom always open to advertisers results in San Francisco, would be M by o he Associ (1 Press. | . % B - Member of the Acsocisted Dress | | ied talk of o vadical Slemient which | blessed slow——Bosion Transeript Ioiie b e et credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and also local news | American lahor. The Unionis be- | published herein. S —— With rings on their f re and bells on their toes, the vellow, black, is far from controlling or swaying s “Women and men” iz the order in which the presidential me men Sam ‘a merrv d ety " lieves that Mooney was anfairly | tions them. Unusual, but polite.—— 43 2 e TR Do neaRue o nations plan, according to Senator brown and red perils will lead Unc ¥ A NN convieted but he will not upset fthe Boston Globe. — By ; Jim Reed of Missouri TO CORREAT A MISTAKF business of the country in present- | . S ; 8 The “colored league of nations,” as Ii's Germany, not the al that is e s . = =cared b the fear that German: won't sign tie treaty.— Hartford Cour- gen fit to resort to the press to cor-|ihioduction of a resolution calling | ant. Harry C. Jackson, adjutant of the | i, hiz demands. It is the helief now the senator insisted on ecalli it, will the dark-skinned peoples 17 15 votes for the white Hocal post of the American Legion, has | yhar (he affair will be settled by {he reet an editorial in last night's Herald | r0, another trial for the prison = 3 There was one virtue in Senator concerning the formation of the post. | Thys the Red element in unionism is | | "}""‘“_ “'\"\,”l"]“ ook . f ‘l"; | X = " N Reed’s speech. It was hig nter. v lazy. “Well, if she’s foo lazy to / \ 3 E . 1 o It post affairs arc progressing well | joipe politely “hown wlhere it stands : , ‘ [Biainns AThoushEth el eallonl sigans hunt yther job muaybe things won't 1 hunt another job 1 i Ellalfhal fternonn it on enltho fThe Herald congratulates it heartily. | ppere is no promise or threat of | turn oul so badly.'—Kancas City . - ) had come to see the suffrage resolt- It seems that the meeting held Sunday | ohaog unless the demands of laber are | Times. ; S | [ | tion passed. the antis ceeded in tlacking the vote an it. When Réed got up handling veluminous notes. a was for the purpose of furthering an | o jespite the predictions made to b e . ' s o e presence of strange \isitors a organization that had its inception in| ¢ effect by advance speakers, who R R Hartford, known as the “Soldiers Smcronsenfleadsjitt e gosrtesnaldonls j great sigh went throusheut the galler probably had alliance with the dis- | o Leljeve the ew kasser of ex-Ger- 7 e ‘ Sailors and Marines' association.” | {,;rpers rather than any labor organ- | many may be consulting with his ex- /4 A | 'under the tutelage of Benedict Hol-| o0, advisers with a view to reviving \ . | ~ome of their exploits.-—IKapsas City / den, and not a branch of the Ameri- | . Jccembly as ! Times. a body has heard can Legion. We cheerfully acknawi-{ . .oion from one of its own com- pdge our mistake in confusing it with | Lio0c (hat the treaty of peace is “PLAIN WORDS.” the hest solution of the difficulty of the gutter slime, out that this organization is merely | (hich now faces the world though it | Reptiles and beasts among humans, #nother one of the cliques that are| < o1 characterized as perfect. This born of the filth and grime, Cowards that murder in darkne Ariven by senseless hate the legion, meanwhile pointing | springing up in the ex-military and another cause for lack of strength in the Legion. The soldiers of the city should concentrate. their efforts upon report is interesting as a reflection of the sentiment of the country at!gion we shall rise and crush ¥ large toward a point which is the! give you your well-earned CAUS i} diss ti . a 3 cause of much dissention Reed is known of old as the -winded of filibusters against suffrag the Legion rather than wandering into What do yvou Know of Freedom, mouthing the golden word? Blasphemy. this from vour muzzles— speech for all, and the introduction | R e ear Temporary prohibition of imm the by lanes of small similar organiza- | o000 e control later on, free tions which tend to confuse. ar last However. the afternoon was mem- orable as an entertaining if not highly § night's incident proved. The Ameri-} o0 jomocratic methods in industry | You who are ruled by red passion. e ocatedl whipped ' by your own mad fnrm_efl. by soldiers and sailors them- o (e G e GG i thought, small nations which would ve a SRai T e e R What can vou know of our Freedom ? 7 . = vote selyes. There is no political Partyy .. j¢ a clause in the report which /i v ¢ instructive lesson in ethnology can Legion was formed, or is heing . i In speaking of Haiti, one those = equal to that of the United - _ e the precious ways it was i ATTERF‘E/\“‘ 2 States, he said < o or is any man at its 3 > " 1 Pack of it pariis thers T" :‘““ AL ST ol for labor representation on edu- bought? 7 2 A one-time mulatte slave becams Ay re henefits by at- = : e ave becam helm who may derive henefits | S G e e ruler of Haifi and adopted the namsg have been written by local people | Bullets and bombs and daggers— : of Henri the First. He created g ese are vc omed fangs ' copious hlack aristocracs wherals ¢ who were involved in the school MIGED AT SR SEmen] G ] ' Rk z by the; tempting to lead it politically. Tt is ti.e real military organization formed By soldiers not politicians. i These you would strike at our great More Prightfulness, oo hoard fight. It is as follows: ! . o o fians 4 the footmaon a ¥y v N e TR (ot T e b ones, when night o'er your pur- (New York Herald.) Giermans, Hunzarans, Austrians and gains the Mmaon A marquis. He drew up It is a sad commentary on pese hangs ' German diplomacy is down and out | theiv allies. avor -Hylan can win the It is intimated that a movement i& a cnde of law the Code Henri, .ir which hid military facts from all but gzanizing a party to insist on greater | water side porter became a duke and zulation that no post shou < : | i i gen- imitat [ty g 1 €d the regulation that no post should American education that it is You in our inmost bosom leng we | —mavbe, German intrigue in this| War against crime if he can hide the now en foot to prepare for a gen- imitation of the C'ode Napoleon. Hit be named after any living man. Its necessary to state these condi- have warmed and nuised country is at an end—perhaps. There | fact of crime from all but criminals. eral party organization for next year. court was as rgeous as the court of politics were fo be unbiased. Mean-| tions. Boards of Education in an Now vou have turned upen us, hissing | IS, however, considerable significance Plundered persons who will not bes ) wonder some of the politicians an opera houffe. More than that, he while we see that Hartford has named | alarming number of our com- your sonz accursed ! in the fact that a campaign of whole- | their loss in dignified silence to aid In the majority party ave worried, DBulil the palace of Sans Soucl an uny munities are unresponsive to pub- sale terrorism should have begun here! a cause so just are no hetter than thex - for they are most likely (o he = —ieble soifice wonihy of ASague lic opinion, forget that they and Back to your dens, you Red ones - | just at a time which the mind of the should be. As for the pres not even fected by such a movement, a 1ts. The ruins of this fantasti¢ their teachers are fellow servants ere we use our might, German iintilguer Swould regard theyexcepting the wintuousiteant organs Linesg Dty L CRn e eer i e The promises of the organization are| of the public and assume pro- Tiel evident when we consider its local| prietorship over the schools and ing vou out of our sight; sure to by upon the American peo- in double-crossing the best of Mayors 'gion now going on that there is did one wice thine. He used a silvag sponsor, Benedict Holden, and its the minds of the teachers. In Making our dear land sweeter, cleaned | P12 In the interest of milder terms for i and police commissioners—where be considerable political turmoil be ‘:-’,”‘,: l ead was to cheian for Hig such communities before the of voux hatefnl breath) Germany, and that the method adopt- | the needed power to curb their nefar- | tween now and the election of 1920, *''stocratic brain goal of centring union activiti G SO ST R e ed .should be that of the “frightful-| jous activities? Party lines are very lax. While there —— in the public schools can be fully fear of the sudden death ! L e e = —— are still many who cling fo the old | tv. If there is not h law on “American Legion in this city. Let realized, the report says, labor HARRY VARLEY, Jesomiehianillian. o The "Woman-Suff) » Amandment. organization, the number willing to the statute hook Al thHe ne~ Hartford, Mr. Holden and the Sol-| . and other liberal elements must In New York Times. 3y resort to all of the specious (New York World.) break away arger than ever CeasitlcnBortho¥nl LEHating g i e B methods which characterized the | s7 s . secure effective representation on s diers, Sailors and Marin ocia- eff P workings of its old diplomacy (ier- e s Boards of Fducation. Mt Gohe Gl Darty) patienss ol Bell AU Ieme e RGeis I D rian( follows | the! Woman-Sugs (maktissinavcklicen FoNoftenilused ) sar | Biniah “Hl’ murder and attempted, . - Lo (New York Times.) ence e lif ® ge constitutional amendment. The special aims or for individual slovi- @ murder sncouraging Scluesyare 1y pea makers at Paris to modify the it N T ST 3 fication. Old precepts el forgnit ported at various point We shall Ol lonete ot siraralions s lalilNope thot within fhe next. fdnt THE TREATY OF PEACE. tremors and speeches about the | never been able fo get out af their latures of the states for final decision. Th h' g w(~( r‘ Ectn e L Degthaty ‘fthin e y’(‘\mlf_r: . = 5 a e Btio Fach da nds the idea ¢ PMENSE [onE o ree-fourths of them ratify the much chaff. to be blown aside by the G2% a h ual offende: Senator Borah and President Wilson| Coincident with the advent of the League of Natior Each' day It (imilias theliden: that M Wilsonand | 1 three tourtha ot them ratify |ihe Inuenicia (i (o7 he blon: will he in custody ceems to give him more pain, It| the American government can he amendment, equal suffrage will he wind pportu n. " rises monstrous before his eves, the | Pluffed and bulidezed. and they look established throughout the union, If When leaders take such position §n a Similar role to one that is often | Prother the thirteen year one, both = -5 (o " oh b0 If the demoeratic | UPON Mr. Wilson as head and front of only thirteen of them withhold their i it surprising (hat the rank and its post of Soldiers, Sailors and Marines the “Leonard Wood Po Surning with righteous anger, sweep- | PS¥chalogical moment to bring pres- | whose votaries take perverse delight It seeme certain from the di heights near Cape Haitien. Henri 1, jsalous guardian, the Hartford Cour- By all means progress with the Om the heels of the Prohibition ! One reason for this is the fact that | America there certainly is cnough,to A NEW DELICACY There is na end to Senator Borah's { terms of the freaty, Germans have issue is now passed on to the legis- [ appear before the United States today | SeVenteen year locust and younger g e R R 3 the nutrages have merciv detarmtined : : e wceiened D 2 all law-ahiding citizens that it is £ plaved by the newspaper reporter arid | ©f Which former pests are due o party and the republican party ap- | th® peacemakers. What is more nat- ' approval, it will fail of adeptien file weakens? Unless there s a : - 3 time to stamp out these vicious crim-+ ural. then. with the old machinery in fThe suffragists in their haste have Wighty steadring between now and ¥ this country practically intact, the November, 1920, almost anything will ghe individual who hasa “scoop up his | Visit us very soon, comes the an-|prove it. then there wiil be a third Hlecve’ in their relations to the peace | nouncement that they are not only :':{,:,:,;m"“l' Uj\,m_il,',,.yl.‘,,.:,','v,.m:“::‘ ‘:':1,; powers directing German palicy—as the most confident among them must , happen. ncluding the rise of two o e e R R i uch nowdasivinen Ehes nlingedithel ¥ aox cede {lati viclory: isfuncentain. So §The Senator has accomplished his|to a shrimp. The food prcblem Nas | fnteresting to the statistician and the | COUNIY Inte war—should put that fap only fifteen states have accepted . !0 dueer the hopes of ane or the other B roe indiead the convlos it an i iheenln e i s aincu At the izl s eiolori=i R o= kih oM irreconaiiabla B D st sto o rn < iniith o el 0 RS ez c S H = presidentinl suc-e N theSoldRE e nolitical B crxa nizas ) that a visitation of “frightfulne tions. this time would influence the United A inals Self-preservation is the first forced on the states a test in whic t 1 forced on the state: i hich law of nature. and the American na, greaty and the publication thereof. | edible hut a delicacy, similar in taste igesbaatise ghsuallsies Ruidenonsh ""1'“‘”""""):‘:”-\‘:'"‘ [ "‘“"'\"i e no Sovist government in America, 1o | crude and cruel regime iiks that of | Lenine and Trotzky at Moscow. And e o ; - | we shall fasten the heavy hand of the \ Pretty Predicament. fiow exists into the Congressional | price of eggs, beef and other food- adversaries of the League of Nations frage exists in twelve others and collected and counted at the poll States to take action in Germanys| ' s That aversion to arbitration and | peparre o The South presents a stronghold £t peace should be “American” is one Of course, it may he that there is no #g¥inst the printing of the document| Call up Mr. Hoover at once The | of those little evagzerations of theory | (girect .u,,..r.»nv:-\ ynmn‘:” ,h;‘. 1!,‘.','u #‘while it is vet in its formulative stage | jocust is most upon us and he may | to Which Mr. Rorah’s sincere but en- | wave of crime and the German organ- vield to the kind of organized agita- | apartment she wants to sublat for the | forcible overthrow of our democratie is typical of the remonstrations of any = Uonfioninoliicalfimetiiod siiha tyhiive isummsifshalio sadyitel il g soie it sfitutions person who has news , available for publication. “Do not™print it vet, it " Record. stuffs of a sustaining nature and a . - law on the neck of the wild-eved mis, ;iThe President's protest from France | pleasant effect upon the palate that must be stormed before national | (New York Sun) creants, the sneaking dynamiters, the suffrage can be carried. It will not | A covresponident having a studio | ruthless homb-throwers. who seek the thusiastic femperament is subject Tt on el R ectea et i he eaten if captured young. . n which dir ted earlier waves i R e e B X 2 Twenty-three vear ago the white | of crime. but there is an wnquestioned | prevailed elsewhere. It is intrenched { sympathetic reader may feel compe- TRt e for dentenca o 3Vhat need ot going tolereat et 018 Lol the zod of Lhis idolatry. |lcoincidence and an unfnestionedlaime | solidly benindthe race issue. SThe stent (oigtte SiaVe do not neglect. Rolshevism and anarchy forts to enmesh the elusive shark,'Then. foo. there had to bhe a third [ ilarity of method sufficient to arouse Southern democrats stand in no fear In answer {o my advertisement.” | thrive on public fear and panic. A Whose flesh may be eaten, why bother | party, the silver republican, to ac- | Suspicion. ¢Jt is certain that these' of being dislodged from power by any \hr]w‘ writes. 1 have had a numher of | relentless crusade againsi them will commodate the devotees of the great | Pomb crimes are committed hy ele- ! bid that the republichns may make €allers, but the horrid things always | drive them from their dusky hiding has™not been completed and you may blow up the whole business” is the ines with netting the shrimp when a solu- com en 1 a s ! : : S o sense of his appeal and follows very 2 { American cartwheel dollar. Mr, | ments in this country that fram the! there for the faver of voters by fac- | €0me when 1 am faking my bath o cespag JRELLL A > tion of our cpicurean difficulties lies am in the kitchenette toasting hread. | work their cursed will Rorah was just as earnest then as he | Avst have shown themselves in com-| tion or class. It is not open to reason One time 1 jumped from my bath | - in the very dooryard. The house- now. Then calamity whs to come | Plete sympathye with the German ef-!or persuasion. It can only he coerced (7 ; Kkeeper may go out early in the morn- | Upon~us for the crime of 1873. Now | fort to destroy liberty. the while thev, against its will by the action of three- ‘“ iern. i _'“‘\‘1) called out, ‘A renter | Senator Wadsworth were prating loudly of their love for | hs of the states. 9 a5 gamie Panewsonl iloneluipini (New York Times.) houdoir robe and over that a China T TV AT S (el e e James W. Wadsworth, 5, term er—a man! ‘Giee!' he said, ‘and me | 85 senator in congress doesn't end un. March 4, 1921, but he has watcha # nearly the words that the average newspaper reporter hears nearly ever) day in the vear h s I Z : t 1% to ceme upon us froni fhe crime g 3 ing, within a few weeks, and pluck | "' | il ¢We cannot help adopting the atti- . of 1919, Remembering how the dark | HPSrH i Seakihemn oo, e a day’s subsistence from. the near-|,ronhecies of the free silver men to The crimes have heen committed “tude of the reporter in the affair ‘1._‘ hedge. A pleasant afternoon’s | scors were scattered. how a helped jam throngh natgonal pro- actually by individuals, and every in- i yipition, invoked the principle of S til strument of zovernment - fodera] . 3 trving 1o escape the YVillage!” and B ler state rights in opposing the suffras , ful and vocal enemies who for a yeaf state and municipal-—must be center 5 stazgered away from thare, Another oL 2 & amendment. When it sunited ftheir " i : or twn have beern planning ed upon finding andipunishing thossil "ot ls il Tl ol Gl it eal | i e A woman andihepidatightenscall L L ! ed just as 1 began toasting. and 1 let the darn bread burn and went to the “Despite the numerous arguments can even fbguinst the publication of the treaty 1 | SPOFt may be arranged by the tired thepmastiadmipneBiriend JRot R ey e n A . business man not many Saturdays | Dorah refrain from a zrin at his ppears that diplomecy has not suc- 3 present lugubrious vaticinations? Eeeded in keeping the document trom | Nenee in arranging a locust hunt. | the hands and knowledge of a few not | This sportive animal will give him Socialist Party Disintegrating, at the easy conclusion that the erimi- | any more concerned in it than is the | Plenty of exercise in the chase, after- | (Springfield Republican.) Tk e The socialist party. which has hung together. except for individual seces- nis defe e has heen a useful and « patriotig senator. He has held bravely to his guilty. Tt will not do for police au thorities. here or elsewhere, to fump purposes to destroy state rights, (hey were deaf to the same plea, They took the lead in inconsistency and are convictions He could not he cajoled interview. The daughter was quite or bulldozed hy the olizarchs of the themealves destroved just | dippy about the apartment. but the Impervious to wheedling and stirs a pe= becanes same Clieinsta HAl cvidente | naNinE ihe penalty sooner than Sthey points in that direction sionz, for nearly 20 vears. seems now Tt to us. It has, however, been given to| hunter will kill three birds with one | to be split almost exactly in the mid- vest of the America people. If it were | wards tickling his re S cons mother kept sniffing and sniffing—the had cause to anticipate. If in the end | hread was blazing by thal time—and Incomplete it might be uninteresting | sumed from the family e the Southern statos are overruled on| ooyl Southern sta re ove dl oniliar i must he concednad that the char- with a savage glare at me put ‘ S acter of the attacks and the number | the auestion of Woman Suffrage. they | har handkerchief over her nose and the Germans and therefore should be- | stone by indulging in this new sport. | A}e With small chance left that the| nr them. commiticd at practically the | Will underso treatment no different | gragzed her brat away.” L heh eslesitalgloscieg i two parts will reunite. The national | same time, indicates a nationwide | from that tn which other states A deplorable situation, o be ! L g T MGRL executive committee has followed up| capspiracy. A nationwide econspiracs | (hrough their open connivance were [ One hesifates 1o adviso, even to ¥ i s alloied to/disg its action in expelling. or “temporari- | of foSNulcln TUC BEaN #race them into the original, provid- reat numbers by eating itx yvounsz, | 1V suspending.’ seven branches of the Mr. Wadswortl gome public property If changes fol- | He will prove an aid to posterity in low we have sufficient intelligence to | preventing he return o . cc ligence to | preventing the return of the insect Shaniaiien s e e i a | subjected when national prohibition | zest, the suppression of and 4 it . i nationwide hanzing bee was impozed upon them by Southern ! uatil a desirable tenant js secured % o é oreign langus ederation Dy sinis 3 P T who isn't duly meeg he will ebtain foed and he will get [ [*T% %0 W']‘ff] m’“’l"' sy — votes sealskin coat reachinz from chin fo J read the first draft at all . i s S (e acdloniagaun s S SNSIeE AT EO) Hizzoner Vs a Censor. - - astep, hanzing handy in {he hat # i the aforementioned exercise. Why | ganization in Michigan. The ook " jelansinsitian hemhan ng we are sufficiently intereste i i ed and feeble-knoed he re-elected? Ard sincerity and courage qualities to be 2 v tolerated under the rtened i€ SanbeiL e e Rl s B Mayor Hylan urzes that bankers (ER R TR emergency in that it would mot sug- | 2 ST GOyl 0 TN e <hall influence newspapers not fo print | 1t js not surprisinz that certain | £o5t Villagze atmospherc. Rut we do | news of crime. Evildoers anxious 0 | politicians look with much disfavew| N0t know. diseredit Hizzoner and annoy the poa- el micture ot 5 oaroan (New York World) Pavtics and Tabor, room. might serve heipfully in an and | not organize branches of locust | county body, in Illinois, has also been ¥. American diplomacy will not suit a chasers while vet there is time and Bepublic used to being informed of the 4 Manhattan and the Kings ahd Queens P £ rmed of the| go ahout the business in a systematic ! wounfr organizations in New Tark way? Our enthusiasm ig boundless, The raw reached the hezinning of These are questions intercsting "t8 | the whole people of New York and not upon the proposed entrance of or- merely to the dry ans he feminist Crush the Anarchists, Emioves of its law makers in advance iBlirotean government agents have lice department he directs mav break | zanized labor inte the political field. No one vet has suggested eating bugs, | the end about a xear ago. when radi- £ i L il el egencies. Thore ar £or many Pevergnade it a practice to take the| y ane iden it is cal members of “local New York,” in- | {he 12ws, but if nothing i< said ahout Several attempts have heen made = (Providence Journal.) S vomen in New . dt Serieral public into their confidence.| . ol cluding Jim Larkin and later on |t Al may vet he we Crime News |y, (hicage the lahor party polled a he mind of the American people is 3 R hadioa . : ¢ A word to the housewife who may | John Reed. issued 2 “manifesta” of | MOrely encourages eriminai fair propariion of the vol cast. Even |Made up. The anarchists, who mare i ¥ : 0 do=o. At thei . ctirred by the news of the new | the “left wing” denouncing socialist Hard is the heart fhat docs not beat | i jjariford there was a surprising ;| \15i' second futile attempt at terror-| (o woman suffrage befp rge ®f the publication of the '‘spur- : i 24 b i | co-operation with pitalist” gov- | 28 0one with this plous purnnse! When | o of o wqich completely upset the | (NS the country Monday night, w st dilee abiiach Sl : food and proceed ton rashly with her S ¥ 105 vereunkt’ messages involving as . | ernment The American offense in (& PeOT o OGN caleulations of one of the political ; R b ia: o’ neutral agency, great sup, | PIARS [or capturir nd cooking 1he | chiaf was the action of the socialist | Of the interests to suppress fact, his 2000 2 maudlin voico like that of the o= | ‘jican vote is not. Presumably a sl 3 * things. They must be faken just | aldermen in New York in voting in| Need must be extreme. Nothing seems . cialist congressman-elect to whom the favor of the fourth Liberty loan. Alll to restrain the hardened report ganization did zo into the fleld with have moderate. sensible views. They § these suspensions are to come up for | Who ferret out robheries THey have ,_"' e oy GOt e v “ that as long as the government uses | cannot understand and they will not ma BIE e thel diBloaatich approval .oy rejectio atio no sense of shame: strang Dohans i LEnes 3 woAand decided 10 .puegian” methods, it may expect a i support that fanaticism of opinior Jn king public the diplomatic af- 2 it approval or rejection at a national s ! . 3 t 3 L put a candidate in the field. it would | . b i i i »r t an inion or Wesire of others. 1t was the American | TOMN until their case has heen | convention in August. but thers | O they actually print the fnews { o P ID Er 5 Russian answer rom he prole- | that thirst for power which makes an & as the Americs i | ave a most appreciable effect on the e . . o 0 EntenedBbyEat fe a I - see hg no doubt that the split And an ungrateful popitlace ahe: tariat. But what the people demand | honest opposition the unardonable po- ay and a way which the whole | Parden v few days of living in ms fo * ¥ slection of 1920 : L ok le po is driven to ask aid be crushed. H and there we hear | paw strong the prohibition repub- e jority of voters., men ol L e e It is needless to say this if such an house has refused a seat. declaring | pver the temerity of the United State after they have emerged from their shell and should not he allowed to il e T e e "1 e completfRna final. The regulars | the outrage. When robbed. ihe peo : = s riotic American methods for the ( litical sin ofid. willihave to adopt. The man[? frec and untrammeled world. Do | 5 . W Whey are as much the | ble do not suffer In silence for ih In cerlain directions such a move- i Folshevisilandlanars Is Mr. Wadsworth 1o be punished Bbn the sthect is rapidly becoming a | MOt vonfuse them with ordinary | eft” as the other fellows. and their| higher zood but set up a howl thr D each. And they will not be | for his intesrity and lependence? Betor i foreizn governmental circles | Brasshoppers, caterpillars or June | official utterances —during the war | gefs to the neighbors. When hand in organized labor do mot want such | detorred by any i S . hear themy out. It's a zood deal of a| cross the dead-line respected un action is feared. As a rule the leaders y <uch cowardly bomb- | Is a renomination which he has de- They prefer to work quietl outrages as those that have just oA from the republicans to be 1 . r A bugs. We do not know how vou a 0 (o L i MUNSTE Ul b 2 i s he has'been here. The whole les- 1 ara case of Twgedledum and Tweedfe- | former o ors and “stick up’ a cafe- @ 2nd bargain for 1ch egislatlon a<{occurred in far-scattered American ' withheld at the demand of the coteries jii _=on of the war tends to prove that na- | 80Ing to tell the difference but we | joo (ne il is frankly defiant of | ful of men. the losers of $15.000 do | they need cities under the obvious direction of nf‘ one idea? Not unless the harmless ons, miist bs governed by public sen- | hope that you can. NXeither can. we| American sentiment. the other fatu-| not swear themselves to reticence hut Thaththexd haye been very suceess-|a central agency of atrocious erime. | thunders of the Anti-Saloon league R e B ¥e ot ot callod for| give You any information on coak. |-éusly hopes in some way to win it|chase thelr flecing visltors in the iful fn this method is recognined, so There is only one course to pursue, | and the as harmless comminations : ey, over in spite of constant affronts.| street, crving “Stop thief a courss far af gaining in part what they |and that is to ferret out the dastard- l and . fulminations of a few feminist | | oB.thle peace canference, foreign | ing them. We presume that they L wy The situation will ba abserved with| that only invites undesirable publicity, | want js however, has not satis- |1y perpetrators of this vfllainy and | leaders count more than a popular = . are not to be eaten raw. You 1nay | good cheer by the new labgr party . The war was won by a censorship fied the radicals Wwho talk of or- | subject them to the maximum penal- | good sense.

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