New Britain Herald Newspaper, June 20, 1919, Page 8

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

year is out. Should labor be plentiful 4 " in this country it is only reasonable M i that the American should ask that . B MPANT, he e protected in his rights and his o S works against the (oreigner but has ’ s By (Sunday excepted), at 4:15 | the Federation satisficgy £ HARTFORD. » at Herald Building, 67 Church St. labor will not be scarce e - “ALWAYS REDIABLE” a Year i e it (l”“ Told in Let ter ol ApeMan of Java. SPECIAL SALE OF PLENTY OF NEW BLOUSES B il R | st v o —Recaled by Talking Ape TRUNKSand HAND LUGGAGE tor Saturday’s Selling TELEPHONE CALLS he, impossib They're New Mid-Summer styles, many of which make their Business Office ..... Sobanan o 25| 3 all Washington, June 20.—Newspaper 1 D s1a1 initial appearance on our counters Saturday Rrononnim e S b, g Dt andy Location Downsiairs 1o ¢ , ) : be convel B U s DAINTY COTTON BLOUSES SPECIAL LOT OF BLOUSES Y o Smithsonia s o o e INK =R SN e e Washington, D, C., has found in tie | TRAVELING BAGS DRESS TRUNKS Priced— Saurday @3 Q@ Each e city. Circulat ooks and pre: i £t g 22hich : ; Seasoned bassw 5 i e o‘:»\ft\m:. advertisers. down an § | French Congo a ‘“man-monkey” or Black 16-inch Leatheroid eAfRaciiibassnood ‘nmi l 98 = 6 98 : 3 b ‘talking ape” lend interest to a com- Bag, linen lined, leather handle caniasinicovered, MiNarar oad Your choice of Georgett 3 s b e late T and corne inside Kets, sz knee braces eac g : Rlerapertiof sthej AsaocintodRIzess, 2 2 munication sent by thisiiate gihicodore e e e e end, brass lock and catches, Organdies, Voiles, Batistes, and Crepe De Chine Blouses in f The Associated Press is exclusively entitled | ¢ , toosevelt to the National Geographic 7 $1.50 Sicichl $6.75. and Hand Made Blouses, White and Flesh to the use for republication of all news y Eocisty [telling of the wue-human Ape frame, $4.50. Lt e Made ses. Y lesh credited to it or not otherwise credited man of Java, who lived some 500,000 s O e, 3 ss g n er in this pap hd also local news covered, hard fiber hound, steel SMART GEORGETTE BLOUSES T airodb e = At present it if i vears ago and marked an upwar inch. cretonne fined. with pock- | A bottom, brass knee and shoul- Friced like this for 8 TO Each migration is entl ®hut off, many | Stage in the evolution of man. ity meson b el el Crle L biice e p s e : : plants will be unable to obtain Colonel Roosevelt's famous jungle and corners, steel frame, $2.98. §114.50. = THE FALL OF SCHEIDEMANN, ] oo hunt was in the vicinity of Professor ers at any pri vithin a year . = <1 I s SRy sor 1 Coming events cast their shadows ye: Garner's travels, as they are described In a large color range, some beaded, others embroidered or 18-inch Black Walrus Grain- 34-inch, basswood body, can- plain, aiso several dainty color combinations Blouses' that would ¢ ed Bags, genuine cowhide, linen s covered, steel bound and sell at T5¢ to $15.00 in the so-called Specialty Shops | If the plans of manufacturers mature, | in newspaper dispatches, and the | SRt ] s 75 in the so-cal 1ty : before anc all of the Scheide f DAl Shaenes 2 : lined, with pockets, reinforced steel hottam, hardwood slat CHILDRE ASH SUITS AND ROMPERS fbefore and the fall of the Scheide-| 4 ypere is no reason they shouldn't,, | Roosevelt big game is mounted in the i b mann government makes it reason- / leather corners, §3.75. brassed knee and shoulder S o the ranks of labor will need to be | Smithsonian Institution, with which 16 ana 1S-inch Rlack Genu- bracesiideeDRto- partitra: 98 $2-98 able to suppose that the signature of Professor Garner is associated bl N P e $11.50, = swelled to a great extent. There will - = | ine Cowhide Bag. walrus grain- 11 : 3 5 -ARANCE SATUR iermany to the peace treaty will be |}, re than . . : Bexgrdingiithisgaaiegman soti =y ed. leather lined, reinforced 36-inch le=men Ly = 1!;(2;'(;’“("" \‘::\"'I\'“I:‘I 1":[(']‘\1\]“-":‘ e B t1icomins within the. time limit |\oo feoie - of enough jobs to g9 | one of the many “missing links” in leather corners, bri d hard- Ply basswood, canvas bound, . AR oot irice 11 Spring | e around. If there are not enough | human evolution, Colonel Roosevelt Bl hardwood slats on top, bottom The big knife has cut deep into former prices on all Spring Bet by the ies. g h 94,99, g ith 5 N rments. 3 ctor he te- ro e National Geographic e and sides with brass knee gal workmen to fill the factories the re- | wrote to the ational Geographi 18-tch Light and Dark Tan sult will be felt in Amelica in the | Society Leat B: ted braces and four rows brass riv- \\u\u‘\' AND MISSES' SUITS ¢ ; % mslica ¢ Leather Bags, warranted cow- oughly explained through the press ather Ba arran X 3 “This being was already half-way % b = ets clinched on inside. heavy Reduced future. Capitol will become dis- y hide, leather lined. reinforced R S but the supposition is that a split in ecome dis- | Lo vd from the beast, half-way be- brassed lack and catches, two- , y . i o leather corners, hand sewed % ] o the cabinet caused by a difference of | COUr28ed and refuse to embark upon | (ween true man and those Miocene an- R LA part tray, $11.98. 7 Formerly priced $25.00 to §45.00 ol 1 tance of the treaty | NS enterprises. It will not be able | cestors of his, who were still on the o Bas 84-inch Breamer ’Lrum«, hard WOMEN'S AND MISSES’ COATS views on the acceptance of the S Sl e e et e e e e o stol ags, | fiber bound, steel bound ends TEA l4-inch size, les B v b 15 at the bottom of the fall. Scheide- | oy igo g o O ces. 10| diverging kinsfolk, the anthropoid | o ‘}‘a|‘;’§P‘izéh°rf‘fq e Mf‘ "'S}‘I"":‘]‘d v‘jf‘a‘]»m‘q asaiknce $10- . mann himself is opposed to the treaty | L) (oop other fields for investment | #P€S He or some creature like him, | 3 Blbad ohfe, HRRhily (Oelegilh el T = , . v Formerly priced $10.50 to $39.50 S e v "Nt | was in our own line of ascent during UER IERem bl R i:;“‘ :1';"”8 catches A tosvart WOMEN'S AND MISSES' CAPES and those fields 1w 3 3 . 4 [ . $11.98. MEN'S a0 Y i#ROT | thess uncounted ages when our an- el pesontnscennidelinen Matting Suitcases. 24-inch, Your choice of our entire stock of Capes of the $18 The affair has not yet been thor- as it now exists and Gustave Noske, minister of defense, is reputed to be gathering about himself a new cab- inet. Undoubtedly this will be a abroad possibly. ; There should be a | cestors were already different from all | | lined, hand sewed throughout, hardi i Al heaa e e S e sufficiency of labor. other brutes and yet had not grown $3.98, o ind st ans boasasdiisor and e Gl o Fene On the other hand, should the mar- | 0 Pe really men. He probably used Others at $3.00 and $6.00. catches, $3.98. G . ketibs slutteatwitnflanon nrona i ime] (aAsconcRCINELIG e SR Ead Ran Sat ou SPECIAL LOT SPECIAL LOT - it r poif i this time he may have hegun very SERGE SSES GIRLS' CAPE other individual is the premier- | mizration or Anancial mishaps on a 2 ERGE DRESSF 1r c rudely to chip or otherwise fashion Value $19.50 Value $15.00 i B SALE OF FOOTWEA s $10.00 Yo $9.00 | 1t is reasonable to suppose that|yndoubtedly suffer. He would have| el S . a “His progress was ver; very slow; he first dutles of the new govern- | i, (ake work, at a low scale, to feed | the marked feature in the prozress of __SHOWING THE DAINTIEST OF SUMMER NECKWEAR Jment will be to sign the document | pimgelf and family. Starvation wages | AN has heen its greal acceleration Because of the steadily in- Collars, Fichus. Sets, l"m.arnu:; and Vest- 49C TO $3 98 S owen, e woms e dnt ol i S i of rapidity in each successive staze, | B o e k @ ings of soft washable fabrics, Priced . 5 S are not wanted by anyone. If free | accompanied continually by an inex. | B creasing wholesale prices of FOR VESTS AND SLEEVES RIS A CEE G Bkl immigration would bring this about | plicable halt or dying out in race after leather. you hardly expect to We have Tucked Nets, Georgette Crepe, TO Yorced to quit his office is sufficient | p,y a1] means stop the flow of for- | race and culture after culture. i i e Tacs ind Netipamige yard 5 3ndication that rejection was not in | eigners. Every loyal American work. | “After the ape-man of Java we skip | [ : jrgsnces atiradu Drlcce; FOR GRADUATION DRESSES popular favor and that acceptance | or should get his share, first. a’_ r}uarvev of a myl\mn‘_\ c;\ln or so rho. However, we are always do- Wide Tucked and Ruffled Edge Flouncings. Nets (Full Skirt widthe) will be the next step. Tt may be ore we get our next glimpse o F\‘ s X e un e Citness pecinliatii e O Ya rd and 1 5 It is safe to predict that American | near-human predecessor of ours. This | | v STl N ! 2 98 3. 8 possible that the Germans are en-|jahor has nothing to fear from for- | is the Heidelberg man, who lived in | B % these special offerings deavoring, through this means, to : peace cabinet, whether Noske or an- eign invasion. The man power of | the warm second interglacial period, WERF §5.95, NOW $3.45 Tr. MARABOU CAPES. YARDS UPON YARDS other countries is depleted to a great | Surrounded by a fauna of huge and Of Dainty signature by leaving the country with- | extent and the citizens of Europe will f:kl\"snTr”hcu:fl:A \:']hnhh'mrmdid the | 8 Values to $10.95. WHITE RIBBONS : 5 ! saber-tooth an i hippopotamus, - - QUL t=nE s soysrn oS T o beonl ok e N Women's Low Shoes and e $7 48 must realize, however, that the time | man 5 ) yard power of the states, though not | phants of southern type. ; = $ cirap Pumps. various styles EACH! o 2 39C 95C hds come to sign or answer further | depleted proportionately, is not o “He was a chinless hbeing, whose for thelr sins. Germany must Know | great that it may not need swelling | JAW Was still so primitive that it must | @ - and leathers, broken sizes, SUMMER HOSIERY s h | hav : s speech imperfect: and : : Sy 5 & CHILDREN that the patience of the Allies has | by the thin stream which comes from | N2V made his speech imperfect: and ; hough all sizes are in the lot, T 19(:, 29(:’ 39(:, 50C s vas 50 ch lowe an any ex- % q SOX been tried to the breaking point and | abroad. There will be he was much lower than an & gain a further postponement of the r air bows and Sash have to go afield for work. The fon Halgehows and dgn Jobs, good | isting savage as to be at least speci- a truly wonderful bargain. Larget assortment of plain and fancy color v ha ones, for all early this fall. fically e R, e ) N $3.90 PAIR ever shown tan Oxfords, dark shade with perforated wing tips, WHITE SILK HOSIERY. to convince her of this but she should used with a certain iargeness. Synonymous wit e chroniclir e of s what over a hundred e ? s 54,00 Were $6.45, Now ... .....$5.90 fomaiting donser. e R e i e s [ e S e Women's TWhite Nublick Ox- DROP STITCH SILK HOSE. DROP STITCH SILK LISLE nation, causing its downfall, comes | Piltdown man. or near-man—a beins | @ en with sensitive, hard-to-fit fords, military heels, white $1 19 e HOSE dorfi-Rantzau, head of the German 0 | i e e feet, very comfortablel foot- welting, vhite heels and edzes . pecial 5@ o and 7 Q) P peace delegation, who is not in favor | the News of the resignation of the i tnan the men of Heidelbers, and in wear, full round toes, low of sole. YVery smart footwear. c of signing, it is sald, undoubtedly had | Orlando cabinet in Ttaly. The two | a great deal to de with the over- | SIMIaT events are much different in | apelike canine teeth Were §3.50, Now, pair. .. .$1.95 orieai: ol can a0 = cause however. e Italian Premier ‘The next race was that of the Ne- Saon=n Aitees Cenya s fords, fiber soles and heels, for SUMMER KNIT UNDERWEAR war forcad by parlieamentaty proce. | SNderiisl mien, much mors niodern Shoes, vl’y‘—'fl"l:"’y“f;::‘ “"‘nl‘” 'f]:“;‘ sport or walking. For Men, Women and Children we carry the good reliablé nation, with that of his cabinet, after rliaymcm L e e el Were $6.00. Now. pair....$4.90 are reasonable). that there is nothing to be gained by S L e further delay. It took long enough — — called “human® only if the word is The return of Count von Brock- Value $1.50 = e some ways less so, for he possessed heels. e ) 3 Black, white, grey, navy and 3 ¥ Were $2.50, Now e 819 Black, navy and cordovan cordovan. - throw. He had stated that he would quit rather than sign and it is pos- sible that his resignation as foreign o} r s s e idw N i he @ n's G Metal : Cid % o inet. His action has little to do | the Chamber of Deputies had brought [ dwelt in Europe, without other human Women's Gun al Kid Colonials. large buckles, Kknit minister caused the break in the cab- from modern man. This race Were $3.90. Now. Women's Patent Colt or Dull MEN'S UNION SUITS, gauze weights and porous $1 = it o e RS G T e < | vivals, for an immense period of time: ent Colt Pumps, medium toes Louis heels with the affair at issue, the Germans Q) CEREED G Wl ok, Lk probably at least fifty thousand vears and heels Rl e S o e $l 00 $1 .35 must sign and they will. CIS RS ferd R ERNGSRCE) B O B i P B e e e e Were $5.50. N .84, Were $3.50. Now ........$2.95 “‘()\:}»‘.’T\ ENION sl TO L King¥and Shelis NN the MR temieni | 2 Ee Lol ol il et i i e Women's White Ostend Women's White (anvas Ox- o S 159(: 79c $l .00 $1 .65. T though his resignation may be ac- | hetween the earliest polished stone heels, slender Jong vamp, hand fords. hand turned soles. Com.- et b THE ICE MIXUP. cepted men and ourselves—in other words, oth Oxfords, covered Louis fortable round toes, rubber itrite”, ichelieu ter” and Munsing wear. T 3 i ERgw [ e ; incdlacies s CHILDREN'S UNION SUITS AND Following closely upon the heels of | The Premier desired to have the | Several times as long as the ages o of Nainsook Suit Cy (& C the announcement made before the|Chamber consider, in secret session, | PO/iShed stone. bronze and iron and : GAUZE WEIGHT AND the total of historic times all put to- ? Common Councll the night before | its possible vote of confidence in the | geipar. it — SUELS ... .. ... sue85¢ 98¢ last. that the city was threatened| government. The conduct, by the of- | = S e e ca e = short time there has been a reduction WAIST UNJON AND i S Sy o : 5 2 : " n the prices of food and clothing STITS Suit C C with a complete ice famine, Alderman | ficials, of foreign affairs was to he | were lived in by them and_ hy their LET]’ERS OF AN ALTRU[,T S GO OG0 ui ; ) § 4.4 per cent. in foodstuffs and 6.2 pe e garments ne. ask to see these Suite Curtis has come forward with the| discussed at the tribunal of the | Successors for fifty thousand vears . .. I G B i e e o e S s “”}:r'p e i © res oile At last the life term of these prim- T H Ph e g vl et y X ASE Statement that there is no reason to| people and then voted upon and the | ;. 4 T e e 0 1S ySlC]an wever. are hardl appreciable, For good hard usage buy our kind fear a shortage in the city this sum-| preliminary motion that the discus- when the figures of 1914 are recalled ooy o o were not our ancestors. With our By D R R T T e T THIRD FLOOR — LUGGAGE DEPARTMENT — THIRD FLOOR mer. He states that he has conducted | sion be held in private was lost, | present knowledge. it seems probabl i i , able tn 65 per cent. ahove the pre-war TRUNKS ...... $8 50 TO 22 50 an investigation and found that the) which was a defeat for Orlando and | that ther were exterminated com- = = level L o “Berkshire Ice Co. willaontinue to sup- | called for his resignation. The vote | Plételr from Furope as in our own | Dear Docior; 1 am feeling better Nevertheless e fee ss, an average drop of BAGS $5 50 TO $16 50 Iy the dealers, possibly at a higher | regarding foreign affairs was not ::: 'Vlf\r‘ nla;rx‘nanmn& were extermi- w,r‘ pained to set your recent letter, approximately 3 per cent. is wot alto- ed fro smania nformigz me onsulta price. “There is a possibility, not a | taken rom nan In inz me the consultation { gether discouraging. Possibly it in- SUIT CASES .... 1 98 TO ] ve is sibility, aken. BRI erT TG GBS (51000 || O Eael A S GRe G, | dicates a definite check in favor of 10.98 probability of a famine,” he says. It is evident that the 1 H | i | | Itallan pub- | whole racial (not cultural) history of the consumer, even though coal and Large assortment of Matting and Fibre Cazes and Bags .of We are not in a position to state| lic desires to have its governmental | Western Europe was the sudden and | Old friend, you know I love you dearly | Some other necessities have not re- the smaller kinds. whether Mr. Curtis is right or wrong. | affairs fought out in the open, in or- | total supplanting of these savages, | And sympathize with you sincerel: fir_:f’lffl ta jh‘" general demand for FIVE HUNDRED PIECES CUT GLASS 1t seems evident that the Common | der that all may know what is going | \0%e' than any existing human type, | I know you must be disappointed Ieyislonidoninatd Jee Sconciusiof AT MANUFACTURERS' PRICES T i e & 3 by the tall. finely built Cro-Magnon | To have vour fondest plans unjointed | that on the whole the retail markets | ON SALE — THIRD FLOOR e I b oo egaction race of hunters whe. in intelligence, | By inexperiznced coadjuters | are somewhat more satisfactory to! - toak a great deal for granted when it | rather than . anything else. The days | evidently ranked high as compared | Who fhus presume to be your tutors,' small buvers may be drawn from the Priced from ......... $1.00 TO $6 50 assumed that the dealers were to Zet| of star chamber sessions are ra S e e | These l-sser men of narrow vision | fisures of the national industrial con- ° ar c her sessi F apidly | With all but the very foremost modern | e : : : v q -our i | fere card s s w. "R SETS Specia riced mo more ice. This has not been| gisappearing before an enlightened | PeOples and who belonged to the same | W ho interdicted vour incision [Feensn Dars. Ihe '74h;"m fsans) ATF':~|1<'«}'I'< i ; For th $1 98 d I . at consumers woul <o o 7 LCES threatened, so we are told. Rut we species of men that we do—Homo e i consumers would flikestorhave or the Set was to gain this world A few vyears ago it would s Xy Truly. these wnal-practitioners grieve' Vet it is something to be given rea- may readily believe that the Berkshire | pave apiens. I been the rule to fight out for- CRE R etV m | sonable assurance that prices are on | S o i S 2 e ol Ice Co. will cut off our supply should | eign policy in private, leaving the Not on own account, Believe me, | the down grade at last—even 3 per - ‘ I a1 i 0 e 1090 20, A1 | Lt . darh aveut whet ves | FACTS AND FANCIES. | ror £ £1% Siiom amifion™ | cons s eoome cnange . i i the friends of Hawker criticised tlte | Americans by birth, breeding and al British Admiralty for not assisting | legiance, while many of them havg him in his flight. never set foot on Irish soil (Waterbury Republican) An additional reason why Hawker Others call r Edward a “placq chould not sneer is that Lieut.-Com- | hunter.” Triie, he has held high Ie mander Read and his party finally got | gal and civil offices in Ireland =an there and Hawker and his companion | Great Britain. But a man who, as at heroes every time he makes al gian't. torney general for England, could trary actions seem to have heen the : Except as it might he my mission intended and what had been done 1 ol e S i .| To offer my collaboration rule of that corporation. The situa-| xow it is Mrs. Rooner of Baltim must | To ofte 1 Hawker Errs Again is imperative that open ac- not be classified as a “rummy.” you | S subject of your operation tion he taken. The lessons of the | know. just hecause she shouted on el rplmen e et war are being rapidly learned. 1If | the capitol steps that she was going | Well. well. let these vain fools con- arry Hawker eras ne 1 on | tion in other cities of the state makes it easy to believe that we may, at any time it suits the company, be deprived | there are wars in the future th to have personal liberty or was goin tent them; his name from the American list of | of the hot weather necessity N €| to hell. She seems to be a sort of | I have a plan fo circumvent them. people will make them. not a ring | 1o ist.— ester T Tet us accept their crass decisic | ve had, according re an local optionist.—Manchester Union. st us accept their oo lecision, | gheering remark at the line of war- S have had, according to traditioh an . ¥ ot even hinting our derision the last one. Ttaly probably RHen Wy Hentem Swe [ enind®an o0 D CHa iy s jtationedifaconong Jitlie pisEhdward cheats g;:Tlm('»fl]?éi:”i\kh:‘ St 1;“‘»::”::3!: SRl i B e he ne. (:; v probably will The Knox resolution should be e = ~ Atlantic on the naval flight to Europe, i (New York Htl.ij o e e RS L ot 1 S| agree with its officials but it wishes | thoroughly debated. A dispassionate | we'll plan a little surgeon's party. [l yRscrefineneRiofesouoandisucaoly Wnatcver grotngs thane WET G ] L 115 simpls aembes Hpka to know the whys and wherefores. discussion of the alternative it pur- ; s the ayistonslinfcaseiof n -cd SEHCHel| And St xRare AMNLERt] Al e e s;::‘:?x‘v‘r;rgre‘;dv = & Ports to offer should bring about its | 1] ofter. for vour vindication, ISre=ulsishonodl inatilneyive nalineaded | Rra ] GO L L O S B e T ! Now he assures us that we ecisive détoat . Ghicaes Daile wewe oifers Sindl N e . hon: fhot|lof thoselwhoRhatethatinictresque a member « ye hou evening. 1 he assures us that we | e d e B! My two-weeks summertime vacation, T astute lawyer seem to | commans for Dublin university fromy il] ge 1 probahly at a high o . hoss aber i o Do i 1892 ? : Qxh ho ',n A :L, yv:r- The attilude of Congress is as pe- | _The war department’s idea in R L e epiaboxs shel mainglan esyotfitranssh) i i ve! culiar as it is contradictory. In one | Mexico is ta send Villa on a non-stop | Ang if vou es should venture Atlantic steamship travel and when meeting of the council may well be ath the Senate leaders denounce | flight——New York Sun Agaln fo cavil or to cersure, he needed a rescue ship he located held - matter of another pos- | the proposed leazue of nations in un- | — o R asured terms—and then proceed to We can still 1look tharoughly gone i tions helow figures that can be fusti. | Springfield Republican. fied only by acceptance of the League Mr. Curtis himsell introduced the of officials such as were to blarge for resolution calling for a further in- of ice before a special meeting of the council o be . held next Wednesday ' : b s 1 ician and something of the sert was needed. He !\‘:“f,‘,rmv', rather illogical way, or for until the last election, when h the wrong reasons gave up that perfectly safe seat 1o S Home rulers and moderate union- | for a Belfast constituency. ists certainly have no ground for ad Sir Bdward Carson may be a faff miring him. But those who favor an | atic. He certainly has upset the ap' | “Iiish republic” ought not to forget { ple cart and has shown his supposec that if Sir Edward had not raised and | enemies how to raake trouble, whild armed the Ulster volunteers—in defi- they have bettered his instruction. Buf ance of king and parliament, the law | no matter how wicked a public M2 and the police—there never would [ may be his foes ought to he accuratq have heen any Southern volunteers | when they come to drawing an indict and Sinn Fein party would have re- [ ment against him { mained theoretical instead of becom- ing uncomfortably practical for all S R e one within two hours. The naval Showl? make them, for the nence, ex- 2VA1ators were sent across a less trav- e ! eled portion of the ocean. They could | Toze ner we'il and thwart ‘em | not depend upon chance vessels . And prove you right—at my post-| Furthermore, they were not flying _ PR of Nations. If the League becomes| It is sportsmanlike to remember SRl in competition with Hawker at all. -0 a working fact reduced armaments | that the “American” aviator Brown “opvright, 1919, N, E. A.) They were not hoping to receive any BARRING IMMIGRATION myst necessarily follow with mater. | was horn. educated and trained in (Fopiisthy e prize moner. They were under or- The adoption of a resolution favor- | ially lessened expenses for military | Great Britain and the British army. ders of the Navy Department to make Ing the restriction of immigration | PUrPOSes. Without it the heavy bur. | —Wall Street Journal On the Down Grade. the erossing, not as a stunt, or in the Al i iRy denfotimilitaciammiust Seofon A no - (Providence Journal.) hope of money reward, but as a Ser- | those in authorits 5 onstruction” period to | parently if it be true that actions It used to be said that every Living expenses increased with sur-, ious contribution to the science of f Then there are those who say: “But l.ltlclll’a He t come, by the delegates to the Ameri- | speak louder than words, Congress' american laborer could have meat | prising rapidity after the declaration! ing. The Navy Department had ships ran Federation of Labor convention, | is prepared to accept the league of what right has a Dublin born man to 5 > . league three times a dav if he liked. Now-| of war in 1314 hut after the signing| and facilities at its command and it| make himself head of the Ulster or ltChl Bnrmnl In session at Atlantic City, outlined | Dations. Otherwise it is giving the | yqays the salaried and professional| of the armistice there was no great Was the duty of the department to use| northern faction?' Yet these very lie to its own violent condemnation | classes in America look upon meat| change. In fact. some commodities these to safeguard the aviators as| critics forget that some of thase who Skl roubles of failure to be prepared for such an | three times'% day as the extrava-| are higher than they were a vear ago, | much as possible. If it had sent them | are most husy with plans for the set- 8 emergency as confronted Us on en- | gance of the rich.—Louisville Courier- | c0al being the most conspicunus ox-| out unsupported it would have been | tlement of the everlasting Irish ques- e Ohc‘;:f;,‘n;gum working man himself, before the next | trance into a great war. Journal, ample. But within a (')“!naran:e]yl criticised much more severely than | tion are not Irish themselves but are - any rate to be st B course of procedure that may work pgainst the best interests of the ¢ H

Other pages from this issue: