New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 17, 1919, Page 6

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, JULY 17, 191& o . Probably there are Democrats who | velous opportunity 1o question his AND NEVER A SENATOR HAS ew DBritain Herald § | | feel the same way about its adoption. | motives. It secms, though, that they 25 YEARS AGO BEEN ELECTED PRESIDE L e CEEIWEL There may be a totally altered view-| were sincere but misguided. The ST (00 T : i Proprietors. o ¢ o ) F sides, acturer had better ack the Nonnets of republican senators roprietors. point of the treaty upon all sides, | manufacturer h T B0 bacK 1o | (rrom the 'Herald of that Date) ‘ publican senat ’ . ued dafly (Sundav excepted) at 4:15 | after the Senatorial quiz now beins [ manufacturing when the trial is over | | | p. m., at Herald Building, 67 Church St. conducted, is concluded. otwith-| and forget that he once had the am- i i has provided an afternoon of amuse- ment for Senator Thomas of Colora- do, democrat He reminded fthe senators that ALWAYS REL LE, $3.00 a Year. WAYS RELIABLE $2.00 Three Months. standing, there is now, in the United | hition to become a world political Fire départment called out for the 75¢c a Month. e thirteenth time this nmonth $T,100 80 in the history of ithe United A desire for the adoption of|icader. (histeey ntered at the Post Offco at New Britaln | the quickest and host available docu- Gonsral Faioud of Stony Ciesk & n L St brin Pt ment for the preservation of peace.| Our idea of a s proceeding | in town foday. b TELEPHONE CALLS There is a sentiment that the treaty is | is the threatened the glass- | J. R. Fogelgesang of Florida is usiness Office ... Sl nooton | - : S R r! . 26 | the best solution of the difficulty-— | blowers for more pa) Just imagine by ¥ " au ogel- - ~ ditorial Rooms ...... 9! C th gesans, For trimming Summer Dresses and Underwear, offe v ppor- 'he only profitable advertising medfum in Frank . Rackliffe of T*hiladelphia G H tunity to purcl now a saving. French d Round Vi the city. Clrculation books and press | crat Should a referendum voie on! gince July 1 and which may be used | is home on a few days visit with his = Edgings and Insertions, all to match, in width of 3-4 inc Toom always open to advertisers. among Republicans as well as Demo- | the number of glasses that ave idle the proposition be submitted to the| for water, if the worse comes to the | Parents at 222 Kensington street i wide. JULY SALE PRIC Member of the Assoclated Press. people it would be carried, wholly. _ F. L. Hungerford appeared for he Associated Press is exclusively entitled \\'v = i ) s = worst. Claflin & Kimball of Boston in the o us, - v s rsity o n there B¢ ¢hiz paper and also; locall news | would bhe little element of surprisc in The lifting of the blockade was the | ceiver for the Warring Electric com- published hereln, the farmation of a third party, ono| cause of a fall in food prices in Ber- | pany of Manchester in Hartford yes- = terd P which would support the League and | Jin. Hoarded stocks were thrown g | Y Dr. John Martin of this city and THE COUNCIL MEET would not commit itself to the tradi-| upon the market at a great loss. The | \[jss Margaret Wheeler of Winsted A large amount of routine business, | 10NS Of either former political faction. | Germans are only fooling themselves | were married in St. Joseph's Roman |Slatcs hix a sonator bucn Bliaing the adoption of building Such an organization would receive| when they think they arc zoing to | Catholic church in Winsted * this and elected to the presidency R which make up into Dainty Summer Dresses, Full Skirt Widths % ; many vates and might prove the only morning. “And from some of the perfor- Fine Quality, Tucked, egulation legislation and the pro- E. B. Eddy and family have re- | mances that I have seen since | have hibiting of parking cars at the north get it ourselves. turned from Watch Hill | been here,” he added, ““on both sides, could figure to keep the Republican | S e Pnd of the west side of Central Park = S and T, I.. Dunn | have long ago ceased to wonder at . ([iaesusRe cotens and St ouan i Bey o o en i il son B hopos I Lol b g [ INiSER i en s Rto phutolaling i e fn o (TS URORESHA CoRe et iR Lo U RO I i £t it holatlast Democrats who might he dissatisficd ey YR - DGR R license law and their trials were set | mind a remarkable phenom- o he Common Council held las i r “leaks” hy having only ¢ " | ¢ Thursday % [ e e with the methods of the administra- el lown o B aleinoon i 18 to 45 inches wide. JULY pvening. A report from the commit- | . ; " the treats mtti. | Accredited correspondents at White Bernard F. Gaffney appeared for Senator Borah swallowed his 8 to 45 inches wide. JUL ion, irrespective o ¢ treaty atti- AT 2 b e e andl ee on renting conditions was heard. & House conferences. Most of the harm | ieorze A Burr of Bristol against | -\dam's apple rather hastily, and a Bt spccial assessor, hired by the I oo e e o [IMoses| Rostiofithialcityiio) secureRbal-iifei o lhel ho are known to have ar 5 | ] It might he that the League and tha | _{ance of bill due him. Decision was Presidential aspirations batted their [J ity, from out of town to take up the B A ndneal e s the time for everyone to Know | .ondered in favor of Mr. Burr. eyes. matter of property assessments and ~ what is in n. National Happenings, The remarks of the senator were BEODCHES cause of an entire overthrow in our = going: o t appenings. | - he adjustment of the present figures | ; ; ; ; o S The new tunnel under East v"x\'r-ri“\fllfimflf"i by the holding up of a . 5 present system. [verything else has formally opened today. The water | resolution that was favored by the vidently proving more and more iy e e P Wales ally oy ay. he water | res 1 the as fa R 3 g b v changed. The old parties refuse to [hic news that the Prince of Wales | ypocqire over this tunnel greater | democrats i | | get food cheap from us. We can't Ruffled and Embroidered Nets salvation for the Republicans, who | is g pf an added cxpense to the city be- is coming over herc in the Renown, [ than any other in the world. ‘We all know that since the death of Mr. Roosevelt many candidates for Sheer Embroidered Lawns, with Hemstitched Ruffle Edges. E . PRICES B et = keep pace with the changes. It may : y which was originally con- S I G TS G T e e e pond tha be time for the transfusion of few | One ©f Great Britain's famous battle| The house praises president for emplated. A request for two more crulsers, should be reccived with ac- | ¢alling out troops to quell riots. the presidency of the United States SAL blood into the veins of politics. E R . $1,5 5 % Oxford defeats Yale in hoat race | have blossomed, and will continue to olerks whose salary should be $1,500 i claim. The United States, particulai- | ung also wins five out of nine events : blossom on the other side of the year apiece was granted by the ’ ; Iy some of those who have control |in track meet. The yacht Vigilant | chamber, and cach of course. is plow- c an ° yar ouncil. The assessor, who was hired FORD AND HIS IDEA of Navy funds, should have a good | €Xpected to defeat the Brittania. ing his own furrow with his own at a stated price ($4,000 a year) and Henry Ford, jitney king, com- : The act of admitting Utah to State- | heifer, in the hope that his plow- = - : i 5 5 e o & i i hood was brought to the White Hou share will turn up the particular WHITEE COTTON NETS—36 and 72 inches wide ho was allowed two clerks j;A once m:\n(lcv‘ |‘n-rh|°f of the Oscar the IL, | we have none. It was in a ship of | yvosterday and laid hefore the presi- | presidential grub.” SILK NETS AND MARQUISETTE—For Waists and Dres lseams to be unable to fulfill - the | and originator of the phrase “Out of this class that Balfour was brought | dent. Expected he will sign shortly - earlier expectations of results from [ the Trenches by Christmas,” which Two regiments “of federal troops Where Statesmanship Has Failed. look at this type of ship, of which across the ocean in about four days Jhimself and thegrelpers. Three thou- | came so far from realization is striv- | quring the war called from Chicago. Situation is (New York World.) 2 nd dollars, the added expense, is|ing in court to justify and co-ordinate 3 less threatening. Nowhere has statesmanship risen to ew u y u lngs Inot much but the four thousand paid | his mass of publicity work which THE CONQUEROR. = the emergency with a solution of the y : » problem of the high cost of living. he expert, three thousand paid two | seems to have betrayed him. His = down a few lines we are =oing to | From cvery quarter of the civilized B¢ nis helpers, and now three thou- [ search for advertising for himself and | L 1€ Sea and Shore held converse, long | bump up against the word, “drastic.” | world come the same complaints of | [sand more is obviously ten thousand | his fliver has seemingly led him into And ;Y\Zvvgf.\w mocked the Land, and Bl e oy o s m'\«'rvs”rv( 39c to $1075 yarfi i 5 = o s s necessaries since the signing o he s - ass: b, provid- » water ) o e is fi SR G dotlars for the assessing job, provid- | deep water from which he Js find- said, “Aha The meat packers, not content with | armistice. Month after month has led it takes a year to complete it. The | ing it hard to extract himself. [is| For all thy spreading acres thou dost| controlling the pori, are now said to | passed without any cffective means sum is running into Tespectable fi million dollars suit against the Chi- Bhow . Betalieniibcliieanspesbinetonibtatai hayin=fbecniid eviseditofunanze conilis But the hond-slave of Man: each 2 year more far What the average American politi- dication that there will not be still | great many inconsistencies in his va- | He plows and sows and reaps, deepen- Nets, Organdies, Chiffon and Georgettes tions for the better In countries de- i moralized and exhasuted by the pri- | Sovernment of the United States who | observation of Manha(tan subway cian can’t quite understand is WhY | vations of war vernments cling to | should have suppressed it before its! guards. Let them, & they seck in th more men required. Thus the city's | rious campaigns. As a seller of auto- ing the scar Lloyd George doesn’t run for king— | the poliey of drift, as though people | operations covered the continent. It|land the fine flower of gentle breec AT e et D B || Sty Y e ekt s e pr Upon m_\‘ patient breast; all thou | pajlas New canst bear wres for the job and there is no in- | cago Tribune is bringing to light a who are pinched by want could he |ix suitable subject for Congress to | ing bod training, extend their traw ool ' T e e e porsuaded that their only hope of | investizate. and the men guilty of this | els a bit. We h hinted where this e claims his own; thy beauty he doth | somehow, in spite of its lcaders, the S i honTikbe nunislied orchid of human clegance—repose— a fair salary for doin his P G me - £ . I ade relief was to bide in patience the ad- [ gross blunder should be punished. gé epose: getting a fair salary fo g that he is far from one. mar S RIS | BT e o e et e oina = flet nim a0t Fdhe en thols PhereRare fowibutthatinllres L‘“”,‘j.:‘:;,,?fpr‘:’x‘W.““C' that he | News. In Haly the government has had to The Peanut Gots a gand dollars paid for the extra work | members the manufacturer's expedi- And mimic mountains to the laugh T face acute social unrest culminating (Providence Jour \ Den of Wolve is in addition to the salaries of the | tion into Germany and the famous The annual controversy over wheth- ing air. regular board. trip of the Oscar the ade regular bo: o P e lended e “\What th b white sails fleck hore | NS Started in cortain casten papers. | their desperation have seized stocks The adoption of an ordinance re- | the gunwales with peace advocates R PEIVSIE S IO (il ! The solution is simpler than usual and there my blue y Hi puny ships are but the wild residential districts was adopted with [ human race, destined to save Ger- el little, unnecessarily. The assessor is | cess, but as a propogandist it appears - {in widespread food riots, during The senate, the other el (New York Herald) er tomatoes are a vegetable or & fruit { which the people in many cities in | torest awakened for the first time in | Confucius was the author of what that little thing, the great American | Siice his becomn known as fhe Gold- 3 of provisions. Premier Nitti pleads At i this vear. If tomatoes arc vegetables, | hefore the pariiament that the why do the dealers charge fruit prices ! spnment has done its utmost and that for them?—Cleveland Plain Dealer. to reduce furiher the price of wheat, unanimously and en- | € Rule. The Chinese have listened stricting the building of garages in[and would-he bencfactors of the | to American protestations of brotherly astically to grant the department f agriculture twelve thousa GoleH oy andghay 1t:that in this country lars “for collecting and distributin by telegraph, mail and otherwise, in- 2 8 nese equivalent of “double-cross,” but . formation on the supply m and Hamburger steak—it's peacetime | (i supplies, restricted importations thefSUPDLY, R demarnd i e e e R (o e T era lallite i ] commercia oveme disposition now, and they are all coming back.— | and excessive prices are pictured as mmercial movement, dispositior ’, {e ' - quality and arke wice reanuts."” Seattle Post-Intelligencer. the causc of dire want among large | JUalit D RulCSRoTL e sl The meaning is that, so far as the modest initial appropriation will so, the government will now begin to furnish crop reports, the state of the little controversy. The ordinance states | many from herself and the rest of | Oniy when Neptune wills may Man they hud a true friend, it ven alreac handle¢ at heavy loss, will that public garages shall not be built in | the world. Even Henry's Uready handled a Wienerwurst, sauerkraut, pretzels | mean ruin. In France short domes- pursie nany Ameri y y hi His brave adventure and his sol- a emn quest, of the buildings within a radius of | great share of publicily and needless | Though Golden Fleece, or Islands of five hundred feet are residential. It|to say the orsanizer of the trip, and the Rlest, Or unknown, dream-zlimpsed shores squirrel, a locality where seventy-five per cent | mascot of the party, came in for derstand why Chinese now hold to the opinion that China was double-crossed by President Wilson ' The situation is one that does not classes of the population who have his sealrch may he. Not many people cared to live on | jgoked in vain for easier conditions g cc i s and cov- | of, gained ma S L bl the plains of North Dakot fer any ; \ A > building inspector’s findings and ¢ , zained many columns in the news- | Loves dven eall. ambitions high be- | the Plains of North Dakota under any | since the cessation of hostilities. In e on s hone faatiaoss At ; ne £ cari )ape n AR ety ond N, and now that socialis as [ ' Bnslanc ‘ona Yoxle redicts i} 1 € ¢ ydoubted e ers the announcement and hearings | papers despite the fact that it was heat gonditonRandinongiatgeoaislisnih England Dr. Conan Dovle predicts | TUIN Sk €iob 1eports the stute of the | china in the £ Undoubtedly th united with cyelones and blizzards o | popular uprisings if price-jumping is a refusal of their delegates to sign the defines the right of appeal from the | the person paying the expense there subjects. There is mention |‘war times. His decc o e Are fo-the Sea-god one; nor mark- et on the subje & e / is deed may have been e & maks residents there unhay py and un- | not promptly stopped. “There is no | Yelating to peanuts—such facts and | peace treaty has the approval of the of public buildings, such a ctuated by a real desire to put a Tnetica OEo o benclor: comfortable, we do not anticipate @ | Jimit to conscienceless greed.” he pro- | forecasts as have long heen distributed | Chinese people If by it China is nor civic buildings, such as the Post [ stop to the war, most of us wished heavy inercase in emigration to that | (ests, and insists that the dealers be | for the benefit of arowers and con-| “left out in the cold,” the Chinese find n P o ser. s 0 « ders 1 | T ©ffice and the Library. . Presumably | that the fighting would stop at that| The Air then mocked the Sea, and | State.—Montgomery Advertiser. Sy sumers of, and traders in, cotton, the | comfor( in the fact that this is not the inspector will act in his own dis- = — The universal cry is against peace | cereals, tobacco, apples, hogs and| the first tinie their countr has had time, but there is no doubt that puk said, mi z * b u at pub- C i T vhich there is abun- | virtually every crop except the peanu I e 5 3 icity was 3 “0 thou. JOMMUNICATED. profiteering, of which th K u 3 L[ tha; experience eretion in this matter and the right | licity was one of the reasons for the Who vesterday didst make such i) & dant proof in all these countries, as Why the peanut has heen hereto- It may even bhe P good of appeal of the property owner will | party. boastings vain, IS ANDREWS TO BE OUSTED? there is today in the United States.|fore overlooked is only to be ex-| than harm will come to from still be present. Mr. Iford consistently fought any | Of thy unconquerable might. see how From what took place at the Iast | Amainst that abuse it.should not be|plained on the ground that our | desertion on the part of those who i 3 Py Cl e A = el S G v % LAt possible to adopt measures that will | paternal government has heen as | protested friendship. Modern disciples re is little opposition to the| efforts on the part : Man drives his mighty fleet throush | mecting of the school board. there = . The ¥ of the United if not stop it Yet the food | ignorant of its economic importance | of Confucius—an eminentl clear thy domair seems to he a movement on fool to | Check Thy raging waves are but an emerald | pust . S. Andrews as truant officer | cXtortioners and profiteers are = per-|as most of us—though we are a pea- | thinker, who did not chase moon- plain on the part of a few members of | Mitted to go unmolested while lawn- | nut-cating people The senate was | beams—hold that the stand taken by Park. It is only for a short stretch | pose. He did not wish to see our O'er which he speeds: Man rules the | the hoard to whom Mr. Andrews has | makers and official bodies solemnly | told that, last year, our prolific soil | the delesates at Paris will drive hone why nothing can be done. produced more than fifty million | to the Chinese people the fact of the proposal to prohibit the parking of | States to enter into quarrels, so the Butomobiles on fhe west side of the | testimony at the trial leads us to sup- from the morth corner of Main street | National Guard sent to the horder | . 19 A e el | pecome narsons Hon (Erate S hisiis discuss el : ; h o ek : x b eoata ither : hat my far fiele i Sledl| R il - »ushels of the goobers, as they are| country's isolation and that by so do= that this will be ""‘““‘"“““v “7'"‘_"““ “C{”‘_“ did he wish to have us inter- must remain: :,:,,:(..q,‘;.',,':;flh‘-,,ri‘\-n]‘,'; :,’,‘,(,|;L|..”2”\\h:{ Scandal of the Russian Soviet Mission. | called in the growing country, down | ing it will promote the unity and de- prove necessary. The one-way traffic |/fere in Germany though he did lend Hehnay not chartsthes pathway ot Heis o iinown aa the tiuancydepants (New York Sun) uth. Apparently about as many “ proposition was not discussed. his aid in gathering munitions after the skies. ment and setting up in its stead a rom the papers seized last week | more bushels were rooted up by | for their count protection. It may All other business transacted was| the step had been taken. Now But he is lord of what below him | <gapartment of attendance” which to | in the offices of the Russian Soviet | droves of pigs, turned into the fields | be so. But if the proposed League of lies. the ordinafy lay mind is a difference | Mission in this city, it has alveady | for fattening. It is estimated that a | Nations looks to Chinese very like & without a distinction, mere subter- | become known that instead of r hundred million dollars worth an- | Pack of wolves, can anybody hlame fuge, pure simple camouflage. Is it | stricting itself to commercial trans-|nually reaches the market in the | them? ———— — if the League of Nations is not put and held their breath, the ohject to oust Andrews in the | actions, as its head declared it would, | shell or in the form of oil and butter, 2 into effcct. *He is for preparcdness or still they saw Man conqueror— | iptopests of economy? Tardly. or | the mission has consistently and per- | and an equal amount in the form of Buried Treasurc, S knew him king efficiency sake? I don't think so. Mr. | sistently cngaged in political propa- | ham and bacon. The vaiue of the (Meriden Record.) : f Farth and Sea and Air; though to |\, q.¢ has been truant officer for{ ganda. «It will surprise nobody if | peanut as a food crem is unquestion- Alas for Stevenson of the graphic that preparedness was merely fur- swift death i pen! Herc is a subject worthy of h scientists ! re is a st of his the past fourteen years. He held the ) politics should turn out to have been ' able, of course—the dietary thering murder, as war must follow His "_‘\"”“““ plunged, with fearless, | ymce quring all of that time either | {he principal business of the mission: | say it is a perfect substitute for megt, | POWers, and how he would have rel- preparedness. o h,"j\‘"‘l“m‘” ':"""msc mights pulsings | PeCAUse he was capable and efficient, | and its politics is directed to the over- Almost every day. if we keep our The answer to the whole thing BEine or because those members who are | ihrow of the zovernments of the|cyes and ears open, we may now trying to oust him were S0 [nited States and of the several omething interesting about some- grossly incompetent that it took them | ¢iates composing the United States. | thing or other tales, the island of Samos, certaim fourteen years to find out Andrews ! pic mission came to the United A o small hoys have been digging up was inefficient and that the time had velop the nationalism so much needed he of routine nature, none of it having | says that soldiers arc murderers, all peen the subject of any agitation. of them, and advocates another war | Then the great stay looked down, LEAGUE OF NATIONS AS A PARTY ISSUE. It appears from the trend of the Teague of Nations situation that lead- ers of both the Democratic and Re- publican parties will attempt to make 2 partisan issue of \?\e pact at the SR S i 1920 Presidential election. Rumblings Mr. from Washington rumor it, many such forecasts are being made about the on _our part despite the former stand ished it! In the very region where Stevenson learn : 3 . n vrote some of his most delightful may be found in the arguments of Terror to Jore's own bird, above the mass Of sheathing couds, the thunde . ; : trumpeting, ! ; : States and sought official recognition Orchids of Human Elcgance, conduct a campaign against pre- He soared; and paling planets sigh- | S0 to make a change. . Il seems{ .. 5 {jme when some of our soldiers (New York Sun) : g {o me that the fact that Andrews has s e ning E paredness as it was being advocated | ”\’] I e e om R (e B e (s ighting the B : = T'he New Jersey commuter who he- s % SR ¢ si s < A strict and others were | queathed a legac. $15 by ihel Chicase Thine . | as Do A : o Archangel distri ueathed a legacy of $15.000 3 Tribune and many | can stars their secreteep? teen years without a single complaint | IR, ity the enemies of | | el ST e T having been lodged against him is the || S Soies) TR T S RN ety o | Tl 5L (T T SO et strongest argument that could he York Times. || 1de in favor of not ousting him but Ford, who was authorized to buried treasure . The treasure is fc chests filled with gold and buried by the German officers who sought to flec from the to islands after the United States joined E S conducior as a | the Allies. Bolshevism in Siberia. It did not get | reward for unfailing courtesy proved e e official recognition, but it did gain{ something besides the value ¢ th country, it may come about. Members of both parties wiil find themselves hopelessly lost when the fight comes to the polls for decision. other newspapers in the United States. z00d | cers questioned cording 1o his own testimony, reac the privilege of opening oftices here | manners; the cause of them ! Lo g claimed to huve dispo Broadminded Republicans will fur- i FACTS i ~. | of retaining him unless the change is ; Bl e 1} 1 : s what he said, nor did he know the | AND FEANCIES: | o fet s e este of onivar | which served ns headquarters for its| Note that 1t was an Brie conduc- | money to German agents nish the majority of the men without — . participation in the politics of this| tor; not a conductor of one of those | mander Strum of the U S extent of the arguments until they | = my” to try and keep down the mount- e aiparty, though a few prominent 2 If our encmy wef thirsty we | ing costs in the running of the schools, | country. It aligned itself with the mile a minute traine which rush and | thing or two about G ™ were put into print anc > Democrats will also be lost. The fol-] ¥ [k 1 not even lowers of Taft, a larze part of the : Y | e % Tork state G. O. P., and others| 2 Victim of hisfown ‘search for thei|t S It does not seem that the pruning, can soldiers in the back, and con- - 10 benefit was conferred ‘upon ney found nothing. hen it o he need of | lime-light of publicity. Now he iy The house, by a vote of 247 to 135, { knife could be used to any ‘extent | vincing evidence has been produced | & conductor whose nerves had been | appealed ta the Mool children of might be confronted with the need of | refused to reject the president's vetn | here. 1 don't think Andrews has ever | that it took an active part in support | Soothed, temper cooled, deportment Gbtl SRl L 1 voting for a Democrat or deserting calmed by vears of tranquil and de- ' oh more to their and they delved { might be willing to dive him & soft | This is not likely from the fact thaf | radicals in our population who were | roar at breathless speed with shakings ™ started details of his men then, in some cases. Mr. FFord was | drink.—Ohio State Jolrnal. \ndrews’ salary is but $300 @ year, | doing all they could fo shoot Ameri- | and joltings enough to give a body fits. | for the trea Strum having a hard time making his va ae of the daylizht saving’ repeal bill. It | received an increase in the past four- | of the propaganda of violence, of their party. The opposite might be [ Tious expressions of opinion and those | is a wise congress that knows when | teen years although some other school | which bomb outrages are an essen- | liberate iravel. ; X of his agent's hook together in a | to.override itsell.—New York World. | employes have in the same time ré- | tial and inevitable incident There is no one well mformed on they prospected. and did they of Col. Watterson, of Louisville, and | harmonious whole. e v o ; Seedgingieaes) M, eilierty 1008 0oE The toleration of f{he Russian | e i : T E £avs the July weath- | cent notably the superintendent of | Soviet in this country while' Americaa such men as Gore from Oklahoma.| As far as his fight with the Tribune | o naen't been pfetty good of late is | schools. Now does the school board | soldiers were being shot by Bolshe- An interesting situation will arise and | £0¢s we cannol judge. Efforts are, | one of those unsrateful Juliars,—Bos- | wish the people to understand that | viki the case with the large constituency the subject who is not aware of the; gold? “Thex did. Leave cause of what is frequently referred ' Almost all of the supp! to as Rritish imperturbability; it is the ; earthed and turned ove English infantile training by nurses | Ssam the constant admonition, “Don’t rush It is easy to imagine about.’ It is well eo to go ahout teacher: in Samoa fou your business, be about when wanted | hard during thes or come ahout when beating to wind- | hunting. for what hook could hold a ward. but do not rush about. Youth- | tale half so exciting, or what arithme- it T i g ful submission to this wise command | tic problem be nearly <o thrilling as T rue P alone eration of it here would have beeN| qoes not, it is evident, impose upon | {'¥iNg to guess how much gold cich to be fought out on political lines. 1t | based his suit has been almost lost T o s WA true. Time alone will ':Y“]"rl'/,h GEFTEEotl BT ok Dl et || A e 5 it o i dmnosolt 1mm [nesiasaene) : L n onlasiondpet| EntRoEend ey ryliconaeivalblelino i TV e Ul LR SRR S 1 ] B N, ties—ahout which the federal govern- | ihastened im spinit: merely if fepresses | Huck and Tom will turn in theie fore the voter next year and its adop- | litical situation is being aired. A p_T. Barnum Wouldn't sell Jumho.— | Editor of the Herald. ment ought to have known at the | outward signs of excitability. e e e o of | million dollars is a lot of money and | New York ¥un Dear Sir:i—To settle an argument | Outset—should have brought prompt S S e T = please print n vour paper the social- | eXpulsion from the country of its| whose days are passed not in rushing | The project to make o Allowing mijlions of tons of ham | ist party stand as to national prohibi- | members through the operation of | about, but in unrufficd, unjoggled, un- | the world's medical an honor and bacon t07spoil in government | tion. Thank you. M. CRESTIAL, | the federal power. They should not | hurried undertakings of duty, in time | heretofore divided hetween Berlin and There may he those who, like Gov- | peace at any price advocate when the | warehouses slows a rottenness more [The socialist party does not com- | have been permitted to plot the down- | develops enviable qualities of mind | Vienna, has a reasonable basis. Amer- ernor Hplcomb, will desert their par- | whole world was resolved upon war rious than fhat of the meat.—Wall | mit itself on prohibition. It claims | fall of America until a committer of | which are inevitably reflected in ad- | ica is already well to the fore in sur- i ties if they support the League or re- to eradicate a thorn in in Russia is, and has been from parties will be formed, | auite naturally, heing made to prove | tom Transcript. the assistant Miss Campbell is to have | jr« heginning, a scandal and a shame. that the paper had pecuniary ad- . i iy under the “re-organized department” | 3jaq the mission in fact done nothing Now you just Watch folks fall over | is to reecive less than Andrews 2ol. If [ o cant to try o holster up the falling B irat . iiision shouldlnet be | themselves in“a Mmad scramhle for | so surely the board has undergone a | pon. of Trotaky and Lenine he al. brought about by the argument, as an | States troops to Mexico. The editorial | things ‘“‘made ir‘ Germany.”"—Man- | change of heart in the interest of the "'.gm, S ‘\',.,’n,',..m )‘.u‘\-”y‘w;‘ pfi 1 matter | upon which the manufacturer Thas ! chester Union. taxpayer. This seems too good to be | 2 L f new political the old ones fading into oblivion. We vantages in the sending of United international league is not a tion is assured by the election Demotrats, Democrats will win, we! the Tribune hopes to keep it. Mr. Believe, Ford is unfortunate in that he was a its side. He | Street Journafi, | that drunkenness is secondary to pov- | the New York Legislaturc published | mirable manners. gery and has made netable contribus . ;i — erty, that if there were no poverty | their guilt. Frank foreign critics who have told | tions to the seicnce ef bacteriology. §use /it endorsement. Our own Gov- | had adopted a procedure that Was| when we free reports of a debate | that there would be no drunkenmess| The history of the Russian Soviet | us that the matter with Americans is | Whatever cash may be necessary cap ernor has expressed himself as being | greatly similar to that of German [ on the quesfion of some new hill to | but it does not advocate vrohibition | Mission here isgraceful nes- | lack of restraint have based their | doubtless be raised without muel inalterably opposed to the Leaguc. propagandists which gives a mar-i enforce prohibition we know that | in its national platform.—Ed.] lect of duty by the officials of (heljudgmenks tog much, we think, upon difficulw.——Springfield Republican,

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