New Britain Herald Newspaper, December 11, 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)

NEW BRITAIN - DAILY - HERALD, THURSDAY, D¥EMBER 11, ‘1919, Boitan Heralar| ry eooiimomie B ieie st e e SfiE&BlNG MONEY leKE WATElK(m 25 YEARS AGO { is a. small one, Lieuienant B. W. Maynard. the y < 1 ¢ s & 5 | but there sl 818 >Ler P~ > BRALD PUBLISHING COMPANT. S0 ing paraon Eia [ ivers Las traonrint |l e dutene BRI ADE RS LI OU DOl | . (From The Herald of That Date) Proprietors. : 1unity o “get together” i s of this dally (Sunday excepted) At 4:18 | than iu a similar one much greai- ! | | A 1 y e al fignl recently held appears to be in daughter Ella was born vesterdas , at Herald Building, 67 Churon 8t. i = appear 1t ‘g e . i . 1ts decisions will undoubtedly be e 0 e o a Year w rather tight position through recent 2 o aly 1 | to, Mr. and Mrs. Frank J. Moore at g0 Three Months. e e ot red e (he public in the diily press 'F | their home on Elm street. c = Month LLena of his which indicated that The annual communication of e several of his competitors in the aerial | Centennial lodge will be held this d at the Post OMce at Naw BItAld | (oo wore o i e .. other convention fo act upou the pro- ——— Somvine e e B ast omesfari e v re undev the influence of | vening. flicers will be elected and and the miners will probably hold «n- , yosai made cut W is the future it 7 aa Joln Rarleycorn, and wade it appeur | Lo ; k il LB oSt TELEPHONE CALLS TRt thoy moieht have b e course, as outlined Owing to engine frouble, the E oy Mg ave bee e win- | - o OMes i en the wi There should be a greal relief {o anley Works had to shut down at ms ... ners rather than the parson had it not {he American business interests in the | i o'clock yesterday afternoon. ly profitable advertising medium in | Deen for the liguor imbibed. A cn I H Officer English, who was injured in e city. O books and pre a assuranee that fhe coal crisis is not S y rabaiipia] n -{'.'(:ir:\;l::ln'r; aavertisers, of protest has gohe up and the Wai e saw s S e the Polish fracas last week, is able n s0ing (o be . rse the < s oy A Department is prepared to investi to sit up part of the time and w [Mamber of the Associated Tress i\ v nt . . “lnow. There will he o time, probably 2 B A Gel A fow tins ssoctated Pro 1e exclusively entitled e charges ealling the Licutenant i . i = e GETTIN it v N e : the use for republication of all mews { = .. o i1 which we may be skirviing closer to kY AR Horace 1ddy was elected recordinz mdited 10 it or mot otherwise credited aecount our available supply than we now TAREVL secretary and treasurer of the Baptis this Haper and alio local mew. There have leen but few daysi s ! Y. P. 8. C. E. at its annual meetin: shed erein. | are. but we are sccure in the knowl- i~ S : which passed lately withoui some ex Gl e . held last evening 5 L8 =olnciion Ay ’ X Several names have been suggested have the word of the labor chiefs ¢ as possible successors 1o Councilman i carnest endeavor will he made George W. Andrew. who recently & make up the shortage. Regula- X resigned. e Re slica 3 after by reporters and been very will- : 7 orms 1as hee the Republican National com tter by report J ; i tions concerning lhe use of fuel are i Frank Zimmerman has been su e, in Washington, comes the | ing to talk. His remark of xeveral | gested as councilman for the Thit rd as successor {o the late James be discontinued very soon, {hat is, if Brown o : - the miners arve sncere. . . National Happenings. o on June S, next year. Gentle- | bacliwhileishie svas togzed out in eve: S = « axplosion—A hiige steap boiler in the campaign is on ! ning clothes was spread from one end | T SRS ) a Carolina sawmill ecxploded thi= of | of the land to the other. Of course FACTS AND FANCIES. 3 = morning, killing five men almost in - T = stantly: explosion heard more than g Now thai the world has been made <) five miles distant (e for democracy some of the old Canada's Great Loss—Death ol T A t « sight—-bhu o 1o point out | = D / pighest office in the land and that | from sizht EL e hoped to point out | yimers are wondering how to make de- premicr todav: died suddenly will be many political tricks [ @ moral. Theire was no investigation, | mocracy safe for the world.- Ben- { Windsor this afternoon after attend vertebra counting has been a sport | nington Banner = k ing cabinet meeting. st 3 P 4 French Statesman Dies—President i Burdeau, of the French ci o of 1921 will see a Republican presi- | there was not even a protest from MII‘L‘ -‘Awt] “"“"W”" : I w‘ Cam- 7 . X deputies, died yesterday afterndon i g 6 Coov 617 vt rile fEsInetOlluat. o ine Ry ofl Colt d Akt il Gl | cern starts up' in Texas to bugk th ! » versit, have voted “wel” after more : Standard Ofl e e B 45 there are many aspiranis for | lowever, nis enthusiasm overcame his | {han {hirty vears of voluntars pro- ; - Ancare Dl company; has a capital > ization of $6,000,000 and the larges crude oil output of any company in the Souih. T pression of opinion on the part of THE CAMPAIGN 1S ON. 1h: cential figure m this aifair. He i sought still in effect but they will probably ment that the national conven- | Uays ago (hat it was possivle 1o count of the G. O. P. will be held in | Almost cvery vertebri in a woman® appears that there are many i Republicans who fear the can-| he esaggerated—we all kuow that by of General Leonard Wood for | [here are one or two that are hidden to defeat him in the primaries uch as the Republicans are sure | at evening affairs too long for ushered to the White House for | womankind. The moral is obvious. irst time in eight vears. and inas- ln the statement anent fiving men fbsition Wood's chances, right | good judgment. He inadvertently, hibition, will huve no effect. of course. on the enforcement of the national law. But the expression of sentiment - ; | on the question of prohibition by ni- . Labor Teader Jailed—Debs, the 8th next rolls around. We cheer- | prove, hoping for the good effect upon | tional compulsion will have a signiii- COME BACK. ““:_":'”:\'fi‘l‘:'! ‘j'“(‘"r? Jail again fou admit that the downfall of De- | mankind which he piously desires. cance to all hul Anti-Saloon League = MINUTES } &9! i Jeat o his time for six minds—Now York World (N FIV B months: his companions in court y 4 Vi AdY, 5 sent to jail for three month ew prowising candidates in view, | the fiyers did not relish the imputa- When considering the problem of ;g|c,fi S e = that it is very natural that therve ! tion.that they were drunkuards. even j Americanization, don’t overlook those BE 4,00 S litile {o learn except fo identify th la be a scramble for the nomi-'| though they were to prove of a benefit | college professors who think it is quite by their song: appear fairly bright, but they | and probably for the best. made state- lack (he present luster when | ments that he might find it hard fo ! acy is liable to come about, the The statement proved a boomerang n. Providing that the figsht is! {0 their kindred on carth. There are | 12Dt fo give the British cmpire six | What the Colonel knew about the votes and Amervica one. -Dobuque ) X British birds, evidently, was what "= 4 Times-Journal : could get out of books, and it was b : - S entively Hke him that he expresse ,0ds, nomination means election. bn, bul true nevertheless. I'he problem _of the Germans in | - > { something lilke resentment that nom \lsace "VA.O ‘ ne is ”'v l”’*'*‘(\;' U{ ‘fi(“f" | of his authors had set down the fact 1 : | ter singer thah any' of ifs mom Lpointed Republican on the beaten | 1he official ban of disapproval placed | ize them, have gone home. —Syracuse | [rent. “Fhe Jewish tombs are fairen 1 pends largely upon the arvangement b 1 hfter election day upon him, whereupon he will prob- | Post-Standard. i { than their palaces.” of the:grounds and the passways| famous vivas. 3 i — © Asain guoting rrom the Encyclo- therein. Whether the dead face one olonel Roosevelt did know. an its earl setings the National | ably cease lsoking into personal | ey i : its early mectings th o Nsaerlion thathhiere s overieont paedia Britannica, “The legend s that | way, or another, we must all face the| approach to everything to be found Jnittee has heen caveful indeed | fairs of certain individuals with whom | S8 E 0 SO T i St Christ was buried with his head to the | problem of life and death. As stated | in hooks. for not only did he read an d = . Ji ke SUeAT s ¢ ke fs e . S B - ks about which tuere is a possible | thercon, unless he is certain that he | bany Journal. | {om, more ancieni that itself of lay-y “Life all'buoyancy: and light. and | enormous speed. naturalli—put hs ! ing the dead looking to the’ East, fo1} death that sullen silence. read all kinds of books and he re- | SN E that is (he altitude of praver, and be-| Speed- the.soul fto’ immortality the | membered their contents with an ac- bns and -considerations of foreign o . ) OOEiEei Tation et v e . cause at the last trumpet théy' will all! = final home of man.” curacy that enabled him on almost have heen studiously avoided = - el e e e s i N PR T A T S Sllepfll‘d COlflplleS J0- | vasten gastward.” In one stancs) 5 flinonmexablSglaccasionsllio HEgRinG ricanism, we are told is to he HERCO M S which robs the veto of its power.- martyr explains to his pagan judee T — specialists by holding his. gwn,with thut the heavenly Jerusalem, the} 1 ! them in their own domains key-note of the campaign, and It at least appears that the striking | Syracuse Post-Standard ‘\ [e]‘es[mg I[]im‘mflfi()[] on Sublefit ! fatherland of the pions. lay esactly in (New. Haven Journal-Courier.) His methods of acquisition were o bitter and large factions are | no willing “horrible examples” in flatiened out by steam-voller | the air corp: It is tough on the puar- ever, dog in the manger tactics The aviator may be {ried by court- pursied there is liable to be a | muriial, such a thing is possible, and bgence of opinion. The League of hefore he goes ahead T The governor will have little power e of the Administration and the | Soft coal miners have decided {o Thel rospectivelaiet teteer a ihe East at the rising . place of the| We feel less reluctance in com- | his own, and Blent, the policy of the speakers. | accept the proposition of & 14 D’ yhonier managel ang > sun.” . wienting upon the demand to rorbid | e Some writers have thought that the | the appearance of Frity Kreisler on early Christians were volaries of the|.ihe corcert stage in this city Friday | sun. This supposition donbfless arose | evening bhecau of our vmrmnl(finz‘i they enabled bim to find time for doing whatever he wanted to do—chiefly, no doubt, { heeaus: what he wanted (o do he wanted with ehemence i S a crilic in Paris is safe, where is {he Republican | cént. increase in wages, the promise | may be taken as furnishing the final doos not revel in strippine the | of arbitration of u wage seale through | Proof that France is back on a purely The only point of the compuss (By James Shepurd.) . : : { peace basis.— Ne For S R e . I ? i of any Democrat of the slight- | @ special committee of three to eon- | Peace basis.—XNew York, World. which has any religious significance to | f.om the Christian's practice of turn-|{ devotion fo the¢ allied cause during Christians is the East. We turn fo-| ing to the east when praving. Quot-i(he war. Our position from the first e o v, | oot 1o setn 1o hets work | cobmmnl o 17 IAY® Q0¢ MR8 1 | wand tho st n lie and in death for | ine trom the Cathotc Bnexciovedi, | (oward (ne wniral powers of Burone, | SINN FEINER IS g & Ak R et e According to | Evening Sun ¥ % | the life which is to come. Because We | “The practice of prayving while turned | one of whom. Austria, claims this tal. gh progressive legislation, which | pending emen According > | & believe in “the resurrection of the| towards the rising sun is older thau i ented violinist as a native son, w (& AUGH’[‘ IN 'R AID Qilitic; deires moret than. it ever | €arly advices today the 400,000 men Notice: h the body: and the life cverlasting,” we | Christianity, but the Christians injihat of unconditional surrender. We i ¢ 2 before, will not be advanced. It | involved have returned in large num- | o comio coN e ,“‘&f:““:“:f“" _',']““”‘-* turn the face of those Who sleep in | adopting it were influenced by veasons | are foday profoundly regretful tha s sat party | bers and the remainder are fast co- Roosevelt two-ce So. 0o, will the } death to the East whence the Sun of | peculiar fo themselves. The principal b ¥och did not press his advantage and not profit us that BLCALMRATING . : toosevell two-cent coin if we get it. | Righteousness shall “come: {o be our | of these reasons was that the Orient} gain an unqualiied milita Hetoril lges in an oray of mudslinging | suming work. The coal strike is 2 Poriland Orcgonian e e el e e i e \)h,‘“,’»‘mfn‘fi;f;‘_fi nst the “extravagant demi-god of | thing of the past. though the ques- “Why should it seem a thing impos- | earthly paradise; * © *.that out Lovd} which ire now . distressing. the worle : : : Oftice women in Detroit are to form 7 ife Zast @ 1= . o : box ; ar the are dble 5 o b S e e in the Kast and el et White House” even though we [ tion of wages and who is to bear the union i @emand higher-salaries fot sible, O man of many doubts, | lived His earthly lit in-general and ourselves in particular IRl : S et At o s T2 e shall come to 2eyae . % 2Us s | ddedicspenser His sl Lefore the Sy ey . g Sl That God shall wake the dead and give | that from he Tiast Fe shal i We.are unable to sympathize with e with their sentiments Yepu I sayin He isn’t jn Detroit News = f s from the i I le to bring { publi i i R this mortal immortality 2" udge mankind. Hmsr rom ¢! the passionate protest offered the os to the people to bring . o ] sarlie: riod sustom of locating = o Sin s R e : £ ; LR G0 Gt e Nl “That the early Christians from the | CATliest period the o proposed concert I'riday evening. h a greater issue than the in- The people will naturally ask = i which — Atty i 4 the altar in the Eastern extremity of gre ; en. Palmer promised us a reduction | PESINMINg used only burial seems cer- | he aitar M 20 FaE T 1 commons. was arresied in the cowise petence of a former office holder, | themselves whether the resumption | in the cost of living are about up.. | {0 says the Church Cyclopedia. Ehe chhncliwesihe an exisling state of war between this{ of n number of raids by ihe police ; | seularly when that man is not | f work marks a victory for the! Columbus Dispatch “The honorable burial of our Lord’s No matfer in what _posiion [hefcountry and ithe central powers put|iand ithe niilitary this egree of merit? Harmony should | sider the possibility of a greate Capital and laboy ‘Thomas Kelly. Member of #House of Commouns. Arvested By Authori- ties in Dublin. Dublin, Dec. 1i.--Thon Sinn Tein member of tite hous of People may talk all they please abont morning when body by Joseph of Arimathea was the | church was placed, the altar was al-| wih such technical menal symnastics | the houses of several promine 1 patfern upon which the Christian | Ways considered as the eastern part of { we have little patience. We are at | Feiners were searched. The based hisloare of the dead # Pwo | the church, The words North, South.) peace and we are trading with Ger- | dences enfered by the anthorities chief things should be made promi- | Bast and West as contained in the vu- | nan More thar that the world in|this process included the honie of is like ihe rest of {he restaurants, pa- f jcs of h of England Pray- i > 3 aurants, nent, the faith in the future resurre brics of the church of Tnigia 4Y- | general must begin ai once to e | C Slunke o was absc L {ronizing it will still be @ samble— trade | Count Plunkett. who was absci - £ . tion, and the loving care which for| er Book are used on the assumplion { ity Germany’ and renew relations | the time of the official visit to mo politician rly stand of enforcing injunctions | Kansas City Star. S 1 & ; S T of or be- 3 = SRy 2B Ok % ng to no v e 7 Christ’s suke we shall show the dead.” | that east lies in the direction of ov be- | yith ner if she is to be permitted, rm‘l Several other arrests were ihadc | | | e to again be a candidate for of- | Public, as it is represented in Americanism is a_worthy object, |-ernment. or the miners. It S They are going to make a restaur- | in which we all believe, but it { matter ot doubt. The government , 20t of Canfield’s old place, but, if it he prerogative of no party, can | has retracted, somewhat, from ifs ossibly we are taking a great deal | ¢ st the leaders in an effort to o o The word cemetery originally meani | Yond the altar,asseen from the nave} he one hand. io pay her debts, and, ‘fP:,l‘, all asked ‘[“ ‘_.t\]‘. coal. All] «y sieéping place This n s | or body of the ()‘mm]-n. x"\.])lllf ‘wmh“l“ on the other hand, to be cured of her g % 5 we need in answer to his ringing ed by Christians de 3 .o | that side of a church which is to the = e g it v ot ngs e a candidate | tences, which we were told certain | s PEEU] ) (CIREBERG) G0 G e M 2 litaniatic) aibitions L son will not again be a candi | told certain | gppeal of Dr. Garfield is:‘some 10| af burial. It was President. However, we cannot | men were to gel. there has heen an ! save.—-Detroit News. ; sides thal of Kelly FIsoners were taken {o Kingstown ir”military S % is highly | Jorries. I'hey were then placed in @ new and beautifd] | right of one facing $ significant that Great Britain is con- | row hoats and taken out to a warship use of a word that Christianity intvo- | being on the left and west in the rear. { Giering nominating: her:for member- | which sailed for an Ensiish - port granted in stating that Woodrow | end the strike. Instead of jail sen- the altar. north eive of his wishing to run again. | inerease in wages allowed hefore the e = ’ duced. [t was in use before the yewmr Entics Dictionary. "“‘“:_‘3” ‘\I;‘ | ship in the league of nations. Passion| The approaches 1o the harbor werk A”“n \.\;mnhklnn‘ they are talking | 2 N 1Dy, * The word has long | defines the word *"«“'}‘“ I“{‘\_”,' it las already been discovered is no | guarded by the military with armored i ) \:1 :\“nl 1} \)(’U\Uell the twol since lost ifs old sensc and now means stern part of a ’I""r’_‘“\‘»- " ‘.\” 1"1‘“;_ match for economic truth Under [ cars and tanks i R e i e el lxrv'»‘n:; ~l‘0u.(< ouse and the White | simply a burial place.” In carly liter- | Digtlonany Blllat, Rs ";‘”‘ b in whien | these circumstances, whieh arve un-| It is rumoved (lLal tie destination ons ) u Joston Transeript ature it w used exclusive of the astern part of the'chuvch in U mistakable, to undertake o forbid | of the prisoners is Wormwood Sorubbs bh to leave politics. One of these | tained what tley started out to ge, | e huvial places of Jews and Christians, | the altar is placed.” No other defini-t 16 falented and otherwise popular| jail in London S If you are in an extravagant humor According to the Kneyclopedia | tion of chancel is given'in cither of i (5 o give pleasure with his instru- | Kelly was s and cannot think of what to give | Brittunica, “The dead all over the! the said dictionavies. ment, and thereby imposing upon vour deavest friend for a Christmas| world and from remote untiquity have | In Spain, Germany and - England ot whien is is duties has brougbt on the ill- | the public sained a great deal. Tis}present we would suggest eggs.— | been laid in {he earth * * * with feel | senerally the eastern orientation is ob- “third term’” understanding we | men went back, slight as they may be ignore, theve are other, greater ' in comparizon to the original de- | bons is his health. Ife has heen | a thirly-hour week with a sixty per | P SNven ane TuGdes N him | ing with @ police magisirate’s_orde no longer imposed | to clpse the Sinn Fein headquarics j pre we 5 - {upon Germany of whom he is not a | which, despite several raids 1, i k. ‘We do not consider him bereft | opinion and orders were flouted hy | Chicago Evening Post. Wl fage| torard the reglon Intwhich | served) butiin mrancc andiilalvithens |0 GG ol R i z el e teees s ety erisnone otk et (IRR IR T ek SBBCR LS IONI | subptession by proclamation, Sede e Cndle DI o Tiotos tay o | monns A dl miians tona d (he far el sonsUnerembetorciaed Nro: BUTCRaNs I ATEE 08 B I A8 R 1 BER itnuee N FCLRCAton, BY Tie ottn S 3 of zlad poor old John Barleycorn was | whither their souls have preceded | tom of buryving the dead with the face f o g0 00 o e e ‘,““, ‘M‘”"”;J,“:“ 1 rer the White House than Wahoo | entirely and when ihe sivike v put out of the way before he could | them: the Guarayos with head turned | to the Mast Furthermore, the castern being open when the raid took piafe. ners, Arkansas, state him 1o be, | much in effeci seviral weeks afer it | be held responsible for a lot nf wild- | Bastward” because their “happy hunt- | orientation of the churches is i reason | ness that's goin' on nowadays ing srounds where the dead will meet | Why one who fa the Ioast inguie Washington Star. wgain,’ lay in that quarter. In the | grave may be considered as still pray- . Seandinavian barrows, skeletons have | ing before God's altar. sations of President again. Tn ad- | far belter off, as far as public opinion The D. K. B. fraternity has se- | been found in a sitting posture, “fac-§ Quoting further from the Catholic on, he is an astute politician and | is concerncd if (hex obeved the first lected Havana for its next annual| ing the opening which alw 1ooks | kmcyelopuedia velating to funerals. it v the trait of the American, po- | call under protest and placed the | convention. s Havana destined, Dy | south o east, never north.: is directed thal if the corpse be that e conditions of drought on the| The custom of the North American f of alayman the feet are turned toward American continent, to become the| Indians as to the direction in wm.-hl the altar, il on the other hand, the unquestionably, and the strain | cent. increase in wages. Neither has | beason, or in a paralyzed condition, | the miners when the leader's call to any gossips who have never been | again take up operaiions was ignored | No far as the technique of {he sit- do believe that it would be folly | had been “called off* as il was orig- { ! | an officer in the Austi 1t avmy he did | | him to attempt to shoulder the | inally. The miners mighi have heen i as his outh compelled 1im to do, figh : rfor his country. All Juring onr par- | English Pound is Worth Only $3.712 ticipation in the war he was scrupu- | lous to keep in retirement. The se- cref service agents of the governmeni Today—Before the War it al faith what it may be, to con- | maiter under advisemeni while they Was $1.86 never had reason (o suspect him in any capacity, and there is foday a e ¥ orkt Dacirll w low rec- complete absence of evidence uttach- ing him fo any form of propaganda not associated with an ever incre ing love of beautiful music and its| pound sterling fell to $3.711-4, 4 1- refined interpretation. There is no| cents below vesterday's closing resemblance whatsoever hetseen the| figures, and live checks dropped: ase of Kreisler and thal of the in- | centimes, being guoted at the rate-of pr that it has given one man all of | were producing 1 which was | favorite convention cily 7——New York | the dead were laid, difered according | corpse be thal of « priest, then the po- pawer that he deserves and to | (heir duly ‘“aus Cin the | Werld : 1o the divection in which their happy | sition is reversed. © * * On the other L hunting grounds lay. The Sues and | hand the mediaeval liturgists appar- GRBY, Foxes always laid iheir head toward | ently know no exception {o the rule 5 the Tasl, fhus facing (he West. | thai hoth hefore the altar und in the whither they will fravel. Concerning | grave the feet of all Christians should their ancient custom. the annual re- | be pointed to the Kast. This custom port of the hurcau of ethnology. 1579, | we find alluded to hy Rishop Hilde- bert at the beginning of the (welfth i S : js century A man ought so to be | tvisuing Muck. nductor of the 18.53 for th Boston Symphony orchestra. Those; franc checks was slightly improve i swrds on foreign cschange vates were eat him for that very reason. Mr. ! words of Acting President Lewis. ords onitorslE . e \de to day when demand hills hson has seen the voter hand to There is no pariicular thanks due xaafieito day nl cont of even life, and al- | . miners for returning at {his. the control of even li v o the miners for returning al (hIS| ¢ ooo o (e (wilizht come, st destiny, in the crisis of the war | iime, when public sentiment is against | Spread (hose wide wings above our vas right that-there should bes them, when coal regulations are in ef- meadows: bring len it was right that/ther « en co . s 1o ! S states that “After the corpse was low- tralized control. Buf, now that | fect and when the shorlage is Leing Coolness and mist: make dumb cred into the grave some brave ad- The jarring noise of day, and gently | gressed the daed. instructing him tol huried. he says. ‘that while his head | emergency is over, ihe voter will | acutely Celt in several districts. They | L d - S et i ing i { 1 i - o turne wio take a differcnt view from this| and cavly quotations were made at the RS walk directly westward. that e would | lies to the West his feet ave turned to i from this, a 1 doller.] us. ek as quick to take that power away. | were bribed to do so by the advance | : e s — 5 1.82 for the g ! i Our woods and ponds with dimness: | goon discover meccasin tracks, which | the Bast, for thus he prays as it were | 3Wids b 8 It o absent them- | rate of 1 firmly believe that this feeling | in wages and their own need of sus- | T e i mogition and susgests {hat | SeIves from his cducerts. - We have no | contimes y 5 i o fear whatever of being £ddled into a Before the war the pound sterlin © is willing (o hasten from West o ; g g x e pro-German or an anfi-American af- b was quoted at $4.865 and francs an titude of mind lire were sold at the rate of about 5.18 1-8 for the dolla Tu later trading demand erling he must followw until he came to a bld beat Mr. Wilson irrespective of | tenance, undoubtedly They have! All busy stir. but let the grey owl| great river, which is the viver of virtue of his acts in the past and | merely done someining which they | sWay death. When there, he weuld find a Noiselessly over the bough like @ | pole wcross the viver. which if he had Yast The rule as (o reversed positions before the altar for priest and lay men, has heen followed (o some ex His Teacher Found Tittle to Do. tent in the burial of the dead, “the e R idea heing that the priest in death should oceupy the same position as| . 3 during life. that is. facing the people | much alive—Colonel Theodore Roost UG LOST IN GULF. = velt. knew evervthing about every- thing wonld be a large cxaggeratio of course, bnt it other arguments against him should have done some time ago if littie ghost; been honest, upright and 200d would And let the cricket in the dark hed be straight. and npon which he could gn of villification undertaken by an their own at_heart g i easily cross io the other side. But if ‘onsequently it hurts to see a cam- | they rcally have amny other interes dropped 1o 69 1-4 but it advancec i : f wicl half cent in subsequent dealings Republicans, who need no such Meanwhile there is promise of a IHis withered note: and. O Immortal [ his life had been one o cledne, and sin. the pole would be very crook- ed and in the aftempt L0 Cross upon it he would be precipitated into the tur- To suy that the late—and 1l _— — ans to gain a victory. Sane ad- | sin consideration of ihe alleged Host Welcome this traveler lo your drow hall | And, standing at the porch, speec agreement al the convention as- | ihe walfer, a proposal thal was made less and tall, ation of progressive laws for the | low wage scale in the commission of ! wham e taughtand blessed in Christ’s Halitax, N. 8. Dec. 11—The: U, 8 shipping board tug Bison, bound fromw the Great Takes for Flalifay, has beei name Tn that case. on {he res yection morning the people will all be ! £ facing their Shepherd and ready to fol- | acteristic of him thal when Viscount ! low him., Grey. as an expert on British birds, | bulent stream and lost forever \ccording 1o the Jewish Cyclopedia 3 2 he t 4 | Py 3 N e 7o (he S bae c 3 S the custom as to the direction in which es them the election. What need | by Pr Wilson. \Ve believe that| Close the g un‘?l‘,\. Ehng o e S S e e s there fo tarnish the loyalty of the | the public is still fairminded and} world, shed preferred it twrmed toward the Iiast, M 3 Your snedicti T is T yine ol S Bubllean during the war and de- | does mot wish to see the miners af-| LCUr Dbeuediction on this drooping| gthers toward the West or South. otn- nefit of mankind and a modicum | three that is fo be chosen to take up as entirely char- lost, according (o reports received e | mere. In compuny with four othet At present only a few persons ever [ t0ok him for a long walk in the| tugs, she saile from Queber soid consider these former burial customs, | cOUn{ry o tell him about the birds| davs ago, and is inderstood to have The point of the compaes toward | thoy encountersd, he found that the | hecoms separated from' the 2 which the feet of the dead are now | Colonel was about as well informed : which are repovted &S coiming dowl ) : | 1. amain toward the exit of the ceme- bnd into muck-raking for campaizn | flicted by too little mec 2 : T e ers again towar nd ,,' f mpaizn 11 “ v .too little money for their | MARTIN ARMSTRONG s Sueh loving care Was taken of e < Worko A miner, an operator; and u in the New York Statesman. § their dead that the saying became cur- turmed s they rest in the grave, de himself concerning them and had . tie Gulf of St Tawvencé

Other pages from this issue: