New Britain Herald Newspaper, February 28, 1923, Page 6

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getting Tunds and s will have 10 take | and 1o persuade labar that capital is - - be any tee faverable to Wranee, IT'S HARD ON CHINA though possibly net to Germany America, England, France and Ja- B DR TIOTUNE | o sme aves Gon e wort of aid-| duine \aie. Yoo “WWorhons | 1M o 3 DOMPANY | ing the discouraged spiritually and | rights s is a 'tl“flull\-: d:l'umrn.l “un-i 'mA T’.g Go’”a o” ..';;AT e UprAkANT ::-.:‘l:‘:w.l.ml.m UGHT! AERALD PUB | physically, but it witl find that extra | one which all wish might mean somes . some of her foreign fAnancial obliga- (Tasued Dally, B Bacopted) | At Herald ullq _l‘vvlnuvrl- Btrest, time needed “u.m. redl. But as long as men are Tuo o CUBSCRIFTION RATES: Sinee the day this matier was first | human it seems a program too geod m A news ageney made a rather un- .N“:b“y—-fldl"lu ence| —who's 00 8 Year, | brought up a little more snow has|te be true pleasant suggestion the other day. famillar with the eondi under 0000 Theoo Montha semth | fallen, there has been a littie more J g Events of the Week, Briefly Told It was this: which China gets her loans can help , e G Suppose Ameérica got into a war— |sympathizing with her a little for hat- cold weather and a little more distress BADIOLETTERS |'S = - . o ) vl ont o L e Mo O In & vague way we realize the ad- | By Charles P, Stewart ing over to the French side, too, but |she'd want all llou::mu which owe |45 Lhe m'um on what she has to Bntersd st the Post OMes st New Britain &8 Becond Clase Mali Matter 19 be relieved The Salvation Army | ,.u',“’,;".'“l_u: has been meeting these added diffi-) vance made in the radio and accept Ameriean publie opinion seems to|the British press doesn't sound like | her money to pay up promptly. Quite |bdrrow abroad, TR A e SR culties and eiding those who have suf-| it as something that is great and ["8Ve come over to France's side to a[it. The more It talks about the [iikely she'? be so anxious she'd offer | In the first place, she's al rial Foons . o 1600845004 0845 fered because of them, Otherwise the | wondertul, but of little practical value anll!lvfl‘hh- extent since the HRuhr|French course, the nore pessimistic [liberal direounts If they'd hasten [eharged a pretty stiff rate—generall B0 s seodirte aaecriome modiom B dtuation s much the same. THe|to the man in the strest, BovhADS “.‘-“"' invaded, it gets, : their settiements, It would pinch |around 6 or T per cent, which is high nd “,' profiatle advirtising mod g | Mtua s mu s | n o ¥ ps, At first the selzure appeared to be| Apyway, it's against nature, Eng-|them, of course, but they could af-!for a government, o adv | people who give to the Community | hear radio concerts, and hear Hboul"“lflldesl very deubtfully here, ovi-|land is always, not perhaps the open|ford to be pinehed if they got fa- But the main peint is that, having dently on the theory that it prnbuhh1 enemy of the strongest and continen- | vorable terms enough, ne recognised money wunit of her she | Corporation would give more happily, | them——and then go along about our :UOuld 1 hsr ey b e i P g4 g g e - Aoy o Member of Tae Sssoclated Press s believed cerel 3 y to| & D | ‘ Sineas again, pean n. ast op- ust thal Ie hint doesn't amount |own, whatever China borrows e A aret re e eaetusvaty ratiied | 1 18 believed sincerely, were they to| businees, writing letters and #eiMINg | ywien overybody but France wanting it [posed to it, It's been the same ever|to enough to get suspicious of other | wets in.silver, at its market t h the Salvation Army would | tel ) ",}"" use “for v publication of ‘all news| know that the Ralvation Army | telegrams as usua quieter, Now a great deal of sym-|since she became a first class power | countries over, lest they stir some-|the time the loan's made, on l;';' '-_"' oA .;n"m_ receive some of the funds they cons-| When, however, we read an ad- pathy Is being expressed with the |--against Spain, aguinst France, |body to start trouble with us, By an odd coincldence~~which in- P Aehed herein tribute, And it would seem, possibly, | vertisement in a New York newspa. | i'rench policy. against Russia, agalnst Germany, In| All the same, it's been noted that|ternational financiers may be able to s— that the people who do contribute are | per, advertising radioletter eervice, we |, ", 10P8N't mean that American turn. Now it's France again. wars sometimes are ‘“framed up ain, however—every time a loan Mym'er Ard't Vureaw of Clrenlation T A h Saull B ob posi = Foig big business has changed its mind| The British consider the ¥rench|for just such reasons, is pald over to her the price of sil. “$he A. B, O 1s & natioeal erganization ‘4"‘ ones w “:" wishes should be con- | begin to realize that, after .5ll, the | but oply that the average individual's|dangerous already, If they “get| For example, only a day or two|ver chances to be very high, so that "lllrn r:;u'nn:'|||:r-y;?m:‘ -.v:::“...‘a:w;; sulted if such a thing is pessible, day may come when this form of changed hia, N .I'l)"" with their Ruhr enterprise (ago Dean Inge, the popular London |the bankers making the loan have to tection ceatnet fraud in newspaper ale:| THE HOUR OF DAYLIGHT Ommon s those Lo Which We are 4e- | pgny fromy getting moral support she [such thing If she can help it. worked up in America for a gratui- |back the price Is very low, so that tribut'an figures to bth waticeal and u--' The man who believes in the peos | customed, “New! Daily Il.uuol(-uerl}wu hoping for, but it won't help the| Not that the British want the|tous attack on Japan," the kind of |she has to give her creditors a great cal adverticers. | ple about him s convinced that the[te London and Germany, effective |l'rench much, Ruhr {rouble to develop into another |remark that isn't caleulated to make |deal, *| vest majority of them are efMecient,| March 1; 6 cents i word,” read the| h'"ll:l'::'..)vlf;lvhxng -ne;l -'I"al m:r- :nr. That would be too disorganiz- [the Japanese like us. In this way, probably it wouldn't advertisement, and below are given | ' situation” and has a lot|ing, But it's better than an even| It's an unpleasant thought that| be fare out of the way to guess that ¢ . |more to say about it than the United |bet that, through England's tinker-|there may be interests that would (she pays 12 or 15 per cent. on an the addresses of the offices WRence states, certainly doesn't want France's [ing, the whole thing will drift into|look to profit by it if America were |average, for her forelgn borrowings. geason for holding back expression of | ... wiin their lives, The time of year | Sueh radiolettors, to be delivered by: Ituhr venture to succeed, True, they|a hopeleas deadlock, and then there'll{{nvolved in a serlous conflict, A their views, and the people wWho d0 o aunranening when, according to the [ hoon the day following thelr sending, do say the British have been chang-|be mediation, and the windup won't Bot walt for others to decide & matter | slock. daylight comes earller than it| may be staried on thelr fourneys. | NATIONAL NERVES ALL | WORLD LEAGUE AGAIN JUMPY President Harding's advoeacy of efore making up their own minds | yug in the months of winter, Mén can| When full realization of the possl-| oo ganue 1 bee am participa eAgY 3 | p amforth will be 0 v bilities of this sort of service comes, day policoman during the month of EASES I]F nlsmEss -Ix“a.;‘tlr:ho,:'.::oublo: l:‘:::: c?vsmu'y.l;; :lml.vrl"?o:l' "m::d umnl;“lwn !hnun. ’l l: have expressed themselves emphati-| 46 work hetter by daylight than in cally on the matter of the United | yno garkness, 1f the surmise is cor. | Changing us it may the popular| March, He will go on duty at noon more Importance in themselves than |suddenly that a little time's needed to o | . Btates representation oif the World | vy that most people are, in fact,| Method of transmitting messages, we ‘"T“f”“" 5% st the little frontier squabble Dbetween [let the idea sink in. yman A, Mills of Middleficld, E TEI] AININ Poland and Lithuania. Probably most people will wonder THE PEOPLE APPROVE energetic and worth while, Most peos The people who had no politieal| 1o want to nccomplish all that they Court, And the approval of the 1dea| ,inpitious and energetie, it follows|#™® tempted to look at our electric Conn., has sold & house and lot on Of course the reason this petty dis- |“how come” the president dJidn't [ Mehts, our cooking apparatus and our| curtis streot to Herbert L. Mills, turbance attracts so much attention is |spring his scheme unui after it was Bas been pretty general. It was not 10 ogicq)ly that the majority of people | furnace and wonder how long it will. The selectmen have assessed I°, C, the fear that some country a good |too late to amount to anything in the be expected that Republicans in the [\ want to put that added hour of Senate, or elsewhere for that matter, | 4. viieht—the best h in the day— | be before these thoroughly satisfac- Jost and Louls Teiche $12.60 each tor H H H deal bigger—me: e -seventh Col 88 an t i e e A o | thmis done b shr dor - | ARG, 0 Nood of Asuitanog o, e meanine Rosseh e ssvnt, Coneies v v 0 would rush forward and acclaim the |, ;.0 | tory affairs arc charged through some s A Marsh's chickens. of no more consequence served as| An echo or something is llable to lan, even though it was put forward o startling discovery of man, g “ » The thing desired by the majority . Candidates for the High school atn-| - Fonnd Prostrated by Sickness |[the sinal for the Worla War to|anawer that maybe the administration was afrald of Senator Borah's plan by a Republican president. The man- | is protty apt to be the wise thing. If flactps Jetic team must hand in their names start. mer of his presenting it, and the time| ty0 majority want to go to work to Physical Director French by to- —— It isn't likely that this spark will[to stump the country all summer in morrow if they wish to eompete In) o L0 o0 cavere weather, the coal |{OUCh Off any such explosion, but it |favor of an international court, and X hoped, by the presidential announce- ‘he chose, indicates that he did not ex-| carijer than they have been, and get F t dF ® : h "‘.’ n ¢'n‘.‘ e the spring field day. t goes to sh h t! éct prompt action and he has shown | ¢ ” 2 . Sa l 3 ’ shortage and sickness, welfare work- 1 8 to show how jumpy the P hrough work an hour earlier * than| Thomas J. O'Brien, the popular s vlgmnx nu.c 5 :nd ot:e:len‘"kd world's nerves are that it should |ment, to bust in the head of the sen- L 489 | cause so much worry. ator's drum. . wince that he is not sorry there Will| ¢ormerive then some method should | young barber, ha ened u I 3 (Y BODERT QUILVEN) young » Dag opencd up o ArSE(y, i line of work find it necessary “undue haste” on the part of the vl v 9 stroet, "be n i be .adopted which will tell the world "r]a\‘:fir;h‘;v‘\\wmu:pnf:tll‘;:l: ;‘:r::l been to spend every minute of their time 5 trying to soive problems which face senate in granting his “request.’” men are doing this estimable thing. I A0 L B L it et | A pa by Lramps | eyem dally. The number of cases of 1t is almost impossible to belleve| poggibly the best way, in theory, to| It's all relative. In a town of 400 ¢ "\ qcinee this winter. Rhatf President Harding made this|yping o general understanding of this| People, the residents call farmers 44 g giclock this mox:mmz Rev. R. sickness is increasing and many fam- ’ ° suggestion on his own initiative—that | pian of going to work earlier would | MK®: [ . Moore offered up a requiem mass| 1153 470 Prostrated, G0 e at St. Joseph's church for the repose fuel. Although Miss Cora M. Deale, m ans en l ‘ 4t was not discussed by him with bis| he to tell everybody about it. But un- H & Thrift consists in the knack of say- a y v s close advisers. He does not do things| fortunately there is no way to pass|ing “No" when friends come n.bof.‘fif,"\m}:'c]";?&;fl"r lost thetr lives In | yooyive secretary of the Welfare that way. It s not at all characteristic | the word, each day, that the plan is| rowing. 5 i : ;‘C:“::;":;‘e':;"p;:lee 'smn""::{e; YGI!- erday Ve C V] ed. n entous deci- i V. an's v i of him to mnke' a m'om . iy being used. No man's voice is loud i sl | TAORE oases’the SUDDLY WA M Edited and ; slon without advice. In view o S| enough to enter every home and cry: riendly nations are those that pre- | the people were living in one room, fact it seems a poor excuse for delay | “Time to go to work.” If it were, "’"';u“’ see altrulsm in one another's clustered around the kitchen range, on‘ :e has been chosen by the senators Who | there would be no necessity for any |5 o | trying to keep warm. Warm clothing and warm bedding ask for “more light” on the question|talk about clocks. When the day| Modest le wouldn' A people wouldn’'t be so an- is needed, agcording to Miss Beale, ! the Presi- at we w ) - i ythi t e gen- i of the World Court and the Presl-|comes that we will all be mental ma- | noying if they had anything to be although there have been many gen- Many g'ood tickets for the Orpheus Club dent's proposal. It is quite possible,|chines, perfect in the matter of | modest about. | i 4 erous responses following the discov- 5 2 however, that it was President Hard- | memory, it will all be simple. The : | ery of a family on the verke of frecz- Concert Thursday evening may be had at the Our idea of zero in temptation is = ing and starving recently, by a loce . . addresses given below. As the cause is a ing and the Republican party leaders| clocks will not have to be touched.| Berlin's offer of marks to keep the i physiclan and policeman who were seeking “light,”” not on the| But unfortunately we have not passed | Ruhr miners loyal. | P One family, which the Welfare As- & - i ‘ worthy one we trust the public will support it sociation is looking after, is of a very matter of the World Court, but on{the stage of development that re- 5 I the question of how the suggestion | quires daily reminders. But we have Automobile touring isn't the adven- | peculiar case. The father is an able €61 a ture it once was. You never get very| BY JOHN J. McSWAIN bodied man, able to work and says he loyally and buy out the house.” is willing, yet the family of seven or would be received by the people and | those things that will remind us in t ar from a hot dog stand. o Iy ) the press of the country. If such is the | the shape of clocks which were made : Y (::z{;::,fil“;:'ir‘l:‘ l,;::::’_k:‘""h cight members suffers from lack of Tickets sl 00, $1 50 $2 00, on sale at case they have been shown. The ex-|and set by man, not by God. As man i 3 COLORED boy|Proper support. The father is said 3 : ’ i g pressions of opinion from those, as in- | made the clock, certainly man has a |: X thought he saw |'0 be @ neurolls, ’"g""e":;!""‘:’;'r'k’":;f Crowell’s, Quality Smoke Shop, C. L. Pierce 0! e time he imagin v i ¢ st I 8| gpite the fact that he has been oc-|@ and Fox’s ticket office. dicated above who could be expected | right to change it. If a man can not 4 to give an opinion immediately, have|change his hour of going to work un- | % a3 . E{:;;z:mm u:g amined by physicians who say that + been almost unanimous. 1If there|iess his clock is changed, let him y: s ) elsewhere id-|he is well but lacks ambition. The o : ¥ y o o | Janid mother is described as a “woman with Né“’ Bl‘ltaln Llons Club change it by all means so that he will Iy. He hadn't than | the brain of a child” and the children are neglected as a result. This fam- could be as splendid a separation of this mafter from politics as there was| join the majority of men who are de- : / ponc.‘ more lP;an J fundl it 1 iv ivi izi a mile or two be- UL e e il i e et ke S0 et R R R L fore a big white |ily needs help even though the father ;| has gone to work, In the meantime ceptance, the voice of public approval | the opportunities that offer them-|enough.to know better, and if she has| man stuck a gun to take in washing we shall waste no| * | into his ribs and|food, fuel and clothing are necded. would be even louder than it has|selves and making the most of -him- th: h Bel the t £ he is, 1 ” ic 5 cev sympathy on her. exclaimed: eing the type of a man 8, he been. As this_?p“smvr‘r has lnduatlerl_ self. If, however, he is able to re- A Rus.|darns the ve Aexilt wamss b0 Moy many times the official entrance by|member that the time of the year “Bvery little round gets higher and | S tust 7 Where yuou dom holds a job very long. [ ] ® this country into the World Court| has eome when nature has come to| higher” is about the only drinking| goin' to?"” 1d be the long-prophesied step| help him improve his efficiency, and |song left in America. | “White man,” Z i o | McSWAIN replied the ELtni- |Elliotte Denies Refusing 26 CHURCH STREET that we will take toward the co-oper-| that he can begin his day's work Matrimony settles down to normal| opian youth A ) E o ? . . ation with the rest of the nations of | earlier, there is no need for him 0| yhen the bride begins to think she is| “White man, I ain't goin’ to no- To Pay for Wife’s Burial the world in a great movement to-|change his clock. a martyr to her love. | wheres. I'm just goin’ FROM where | 1 was at!" ward peace—a movement which is The important thing is to use that | Fred Ellotte, who, the *“Herald" A extra hour of daylight—the best & France didn't intend to annex the - was told on February 12, refused to i itable in e bwent -ro);rg P i's OUT| puhr, but she may have bitten off | pay for his wife's burial, states this ELDR]DGE SE‘V!NG MACHiNEs L - UToBressive peo- | niore than she can eschew. | statement was incorrect. When his THE NUTRITION CLASS ple are glad that the world is about b wife died, Mr. Elliotte claims, he was " bout its work an hour earlier A senator is a man who thinks the seriously ill, and could not give the Few people of the city know of the | 'O €0 & | 73 than it has been doing. great statesmen of the day may be| attention to the detalls of the funeral, *nutrition class,” conducted under the counted on one’s left thumb. | the expenses of which, it was claimed, GUARAN'[EED 10 YEARS | were borne by her father. Mr. Elliotte supervision of Dr. Fred P. Lee, health ety ey superintendent, for the purpose of in- WORKERS' BILL OF RIGHTS Heinie's stubborn determination not | says that the father had in his custody to give an inch would indicate that he | $300 which Mrs. Elliotte inherited $29,00 $39,00 $49,00 359.00 structing underweight children how The Babson Institute experts have T 4 cefalle . has changed since 1918. | . [trom her mother, and he knew that £ live 0 that they will become nor-| endorsed John D. Rockefelier Jr.’s la- Statistics Reveal Absentegs In-|rrom ner mother, and ne knew that al expenses. Mr. Elliotte has recently mal through a normal gain in welght. | bor platform submitted to that insti-| Tne reason temptations overcome a | i y § Yesterday a “diploma” was given to|tution, and every workman would en-| man so easily is because he wears| cm]flg Beca“se OI Epldemlc recovered from his iliness. He has | been a resident of New Britain for fone of the first puplls of the class for | dorse it. It is based upon the theory| himself down running after them. | L i 8 years. her success in gaining 11 1-2 pounds| that “Man is a human being first, and $ ok g VERE in the 14 weeks during which time|a member of industry afterwards.” Records at the office of Stanley H. § e ¥ & E [l TRUE les | There i e 3 Holmes, superintendent of schools, WOMAN WAR VET DIES. . she has been practicing the rules ; er;lahnohquostl(:: but the injustice y * | and statements made this morning by PR g il g 1n the class. of which the workingman complains| [N : | Louis P. Slade, principal of the Scnior | Mrs. man, ears Old, Servod ey - 1¢ i fine, of course, that & few chil- | would disappear were this platform, - High school and Miss Avis Kemp of| as Civil War Dispatch Bearer. AND TIHEN THE FEULOW TORNETD AND dren are seeking and finding better | now suggested by Mr. Rockefeller NS ;hil‘“]‘"“‘l“"("‘ ‘l’“"‘“l’_‘ "‘I‘]";" oy ‘:7“:“:; New York, Feb. 28.—Mrs. FEliza- A?\'A}:IDRJ'ESS’LE:?@BETLQAL&Y 1 _BELL 4 N H i ally large number of children abs T . 4 # uT e B e e e g g the eigh . ' from school becase of iliness. B ararer moing the| |IN PRACTICS 1 RiNG T [| YEAH, T HCARD Tl GO oL (A BACS So sy Woeki & ooney Figures for October of last Year| oy wwar g dead at 92 in the Ccp-| [BETYTER TO TAkE A { THAT oG evidenece of the new manner of im-|sideration of the interest of the work- There is something pathetic also, | the month w.hon attendance '15 usual- gregatjonal Home for the Aged m! ly at its best, have been taken for Brookiyn. | proving conditions in this city is seen|er and the community; reasonable|aboue the fender all furrowed and | » 4 in the idea of this clags, This new idea | hours and good working conditions; a | Wrinkled with careless driving. ;‘f’"}i’:‘;‘f‘:‘ :"':‘hl':":i’a;‘);:“:h;“;’;':: Mrs. Freedman, the widow of Col.| anuary s yei 2 . . | the w he | realization of re flity by indus- L year. Henry Freeman, liked. to tell of the| TN ) ML 01 tha warll of ¢ sponsibility by indus-| . o orage man gan't tell the dif- | Street school the average per cent at- | 4ime when a Union despatch rid@ | health board, the school und the wel- | try; adequate means for the worker t0| tarence between a spiritual blessing | tendance for October was 54 and for| .ojjapsed and fell from his horse in| | January 83. At the Smalley street|front of her home. She took the| fare organizations, The old way of | present grievances and a way to reme- | and the way he feels after a good din- | v treating an alling child was to give|dy evils, and, more important than|ner. ‘wschOOf it way 93 for October and 86 message and delivered it to ~ Unlon the child madicines when ho was slck, | all, adequate representation of the r: for January; Nathan Hale, October,|ofticers. As a result, a party of v It isn't the fact® that drys ha\-c‘ 95, and Januvary, 87. Confederates who had been planning and let it go nt that. Tho new way | parties interested. Mr. Rockefeller| o uor that makes the law hard to en-| At the Academic High school the |y gurprise attack were captured. have Januvary figures were 91 as compared fs to teach the child why he is not|says he believes that *‘the letter|force, but the fact that wets 3 , well, what eausss contribute to his| killeth but the spirit giveth life’ "— | votes. {\\;"}';_P; W; U?kf:"' At tb; _V'oc-t;on- ST. JOHN'S CUT OFF 26 DAYS. th | a igh school they were 92 for Jan- st em—— - hnicalit i i gt - h capital and labor|, 0", reed eight years, and his| ShOW that there is a great deal of ill- Reached Newfoundland. air, resd and proper food taken In|would bring industrial harmony and ness prevalent among the High school L4 heart beat madly as he bent to kiss St. Johin's Newfoundiand, Feb. 28. modernts quantities, and, in extreme | prosperity. | her lips."” students as well as the smaller chil- % = dren. The figures for February are|—The first Canadian and American eases the aveidanee of too-strenuous| All this is granted. The thing seems | 1 in 26 v - at| nOt available at the High school but |mMail in 26 days arrived here yester. exerciges, build up a ohlld’s body so|so simpie that there is no answer to| It I8 the ignorance of the mass that - s that they | day When the steamer Sable Island s % of & pigh Thess | such Bt th makes war possible; it 18 the mass of It 18 thought by the officlals that they | (0 (o d "' “puahine ner way AL the need of druge is less, ¢sa | such a program. ut the question ignorance that makes peace impossi-| 2T lower. { ' are the things emphasized by such |arises where are representatives of bg‘& i .p Miss Kemp of the attendance :’;:“‘;’hd::':d “‘7; ::‘ '3:: l':&"‘esl T'hn" oHI ©Y PiD. AND You BIT THERS " movements a8 (ke nuteition elase, and | capital that have followed out this buresu- this morning made. 18 elils 0| IS uf SRS cd vecuinl matt arvice AND LET NE TOIL THROUGH (T ANYWwA Y !! homes where the children had been | € WHEN ‘v HEARD IT BEFrorS DIO |T theae appeals to the ehild's reasoning | full program, and where are there| What man, being flattered by a| - | was inaugurated for the quarter mil- " o " v ported absent from school and out powerq and common senss promise | workmen who will belleve that such | feyeberor STUE-UP ¥OT ::,,‘:.',':",i of the 15 calls, 14 were absent be-|}10n Inhabants of the colony. { HAVE AS MUCH OF 4 PUNCH A4S THIS cause of a sickness. Miss Kemp states| 11 Sabl Island had a three weeks'| |accumulation of mail, amounting to! epiendid resuits, a program Is being carried out? Faith| of the adjectives used? . at most of the children are nuflerlng. 970 bags. The steamer Rosalind fol- s lacking, Capital has suspected la- | from hard colds contracted by sudden | lowed the Sable Isiand into port with THE HALVATION ARMY bor, sometimes rightly and sometimes | | changes in the weather, whopping | cough, measles and slight attacks of;m bags more, | Prebabiy it wili maka littia diffes. giy, and labor has been con- neo;il’:l the B‘Iv.rh:n A:mif_ NHb'i:'}N' :incmf\}l\:t (-:rl:tml s ukix;.l; advan- 5 Yean A:o Today the grippe. | RICKEY TO JOIN TEAM. er n ShAPes in the Junds ol e lage o ) rogram e N . PrOgTATI NS MOVET § (Taken from Herald of that date)j | SUCCESSFUL SOCIALLY. St. Louis, F'eb. 28.—Branch Rickey, T'nited Communily earperaiion drive.| been earried out, and it s not until a { manager of the St. Louis Nationals The minstrel show and whist, zl\'(-n;w” enroute to Bradentown, I t0e . Phe army will ge about ils work just | man has boeome wealtiy and success- | [ih 0. U. A. M. hall last evening by | ; £ the same even if it is eweciuded—at| ful that ha preacnis such & program. I, G. Platt was elected treasurer of | Court po]‘m',ml' Catholie Daughters or:d" to join h:n !e:,m. after recovery . Jeast we hepe it will. The Balvaiion| With all due respest o Mr, nockg.,:z‘r-fl Ncg ;!rl;:.lnkuuc:ln; cmo. ycute;-‘,\m,flcn. was & stcoees both flnnnclnl-]"“m an operation for apfindlclu._ . Army s net in the habit of throwing | feller and Mws, Noaitefalion, ag | 08y. C. J. Parker, A. J. Sloper, A.|ly and socially. The entertainment | ey . & A 4 1 the # ¢ difficul “fetior, wio 8dds |y "y e and Mr. Piatt were elfl"ed[wu rendered in an excellent manner | KILLEFER CALLED HOME. _ Hp the sponge In the fase of difficul- [ her words t» the plan, one might al- | irectors. and Jarge audience enjoyed every| Chicago, Feb. 28.—William Kille- ties—that is why it is the Baivation | meat as weil hiope for the arrival of | There will be a meeting of repre- | number. The winners of the whist|fer, manager of the Chicago National league baseball club, was on his way Army. Its members are quite uced (o the millennium 2g for the day when|sentatives of the teams in the Con- prizes were: Mrs, Strickiand, Mrs, | necticut bagebeil league in New Brll-'McConr., Mre. J. Riley and Mrs! 8. |here today from Catalina Island, Cal- facing dfficulties and 1 heiping | thave will be muinai U | i cdil: i Ufo ) n' . A .‘,‘ M, ."“'illn next Wednesday. Luddy. The proceeds of the affair |ifornia, where the club is doing its ullies. Of course (he|enough 16 persuade eapital to work| 1y qpiriy were seen and heard yes-| wiil be sent to Rev. Joseph Sweeney |spring training, called home by the Asmy will have {o give more time to abseiuteiy aieng the iines suggested, terday In the suburbs. in China. |serious iliness of his wife. R A\

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