New Britain Herald Newspaper, September 6, 1924, Page 6

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HERALD PUBLISHING COMPANY Tssued Dafly (Sunday Excepted) At Herald Bldg. 67 Church Street SCRIPTION RATES th, Y $2,00 Three Mo e sonth, Entered at the Post Office at New Britaln as Second Class Mall Matter, TELEPHONE CALLS Business Otice 9 Editorlal Rooma 926 The only profitable advertising medium in the City. Cijeulation bouks press room nl}(( open to advertisers. ber of the Associnted Press Ciated Press s exclus! to the use for re-publi ~credited in this paper and news published hereln. also local Member Audit Bureau of Circulation. The A. B. C. Is which furnishes new tisers with a strictly ers and advers st analysis of ition statistics s nsures 0 newspaper h national and ho! protection distribution local adver gures to bo The Herald York at Hotal {s on sale daily tn s News Stand, New Times Entrance and | a natfonal organization | to bear the names of Dawes, Perhaps it was fate or fame's way compensating the Dawes family for the robbery of the fame to which it was entitled as a result of the ride Paul and a Dawes progenitor to inform men at Lexing- ton of the approach of the British. around rode & along & of of Revere Longfellow's poem revolves who horse to the same objective Revere, while Dawes, different route, was lgnored, the mind alone obtained credit for the master- ful ride, when that just as important, as hazardous and wo that in popular Paul Revere of Dawes was as effective These instances are mot the only american history where the favorites, One of tho greatest pieces of won- ones in goddess of fame played gresstonal legislation bears the name of the Sherman Anti-Trust act, of | which Sherman was not the author. The author of this law was George Frisbie Hoar of Massachusetts while he was chairman of the committee on judiciary in the house of repre- All Representative Sher- man had to do with the act was to | report it sentatives. from the committee, of T NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER. 6, 1924, —THE OBSERVER— crossing #nd approach with reason. able speed only, so that a quick stop can by made in an emergency. FROM GREEN TO ORANG! A news item from Boston indicates that the Boston Elevated rallway system, the concern which operates the surface, subways gad elevated Hnes of the city, will abandon green as the color for Its cars., Wo had alwayd imagined green was an exceedingly appopiiate color | for Boston, and furthermore assum- ed that the reasow the cars were painted green was due entirely to the Jarge Irish population of the city. The trustees of the strect car sy tem, however, have outgrown this assumed attempt to please its Irish patrons. What they will do a%out it is to paint the cars orange. There is an qutstanding diference between green and orange which has nothing to do with the pigments themseives, The reason given for the con- templated change, of course, has nothing to do with Irish politics, but is a matter of practicality. It appears that the green cars were not easily Makes %ndom Observations On the City and Its People L ] Thoughts of an earth, causing the little flowers bloom in the spring, tra-la. humming busily in the ficlds eventide, showing that all's with the world, fairy's tears. the ground, ty with which those men of affairs received the ‘proposal. The most sagacious of them did not dream as any one could make that short flight of about & a possibility that mile,"” After due to the Wright brothers drome exhibitions, was induced to make the trip idealist — The warm sun casting its glow on the Insects right Tho drops of rain coming to ease thirst of a hot world, The beautiful green grass like a cool mantle spread cver The rough and rocky considerable negotiations, being disinclined to participate in hippo- ‘Wilbur Wright ) orags of the mountains rearing their crests toward the sky like so many bold warriors, daring anyore to con- quer them. Cattle peacefully graz- ing in the ficlds with an air of ¢alm and peace that encourages and lifts one up, Thoughts of a materlalist—If that sun gets much hotter I'l get sun- siroke. Me for the shade, It those bugs don't stop that notse I'll go crazy with the chirping and buzz- ing. More rain! Here go my clothes, These storms give'me a pain in the neck. Well, I suppose I've got to cut that grass again tonight. I wish I could go somewhere to es cape that ordeal every two weeks, These rocks will be the ‘death of me yet. Why'd you bring me up here? 1 don't sce any fun 'in climbing mountains. Me for a hammock. I'm not going to move another inch. Climbing mountains on a day like this. You idiots., There's some more of those cows. They're the dumbest things T know. I only hope to at for DOLLAR DAYS MAY COME AND GO§ BUT THE ONE BIG. Dollar Day \ $15,000, the conditions belng he was there isn't & bull among them when to remain in the air above New York which he also was a member, to the I try to cross this fleld. s fleld, distinguished at night, and ma A SEWAGE DISPOSAL PLANT L ny the | house. The house called it the Sher- The way t once said a pseudo-philosopher, This | R R ovements in| 1 fame had played fair, the act should have been known as the Hoar | Anti-Trust act. It would have been |a worthy honor to bestow the name | of its author to the legisiation. As | it was, the wrong man got the credit. proceed is tc man act because Sherman was the applies to making i sewage disposal else. E. W. 8 gineer with a mass of data, sult of long-continued investigations ants as in anything Peltor an en- the re- automobile driver who could not calculate just how far from his ma- | chine one of the street cars happen- ed to be, so that smash-ups occurred with consistent regularity. The com- pany painted the bumpers white, re~ sulting in a decrease in accidents. It was concluded that a bright hue for the cars would add to the visibility harbor for an hour, or fly Governors Island to and return. Wilbur Wright brought his fiimsy motor to the metropolis at the time of the exhibi~ tion and thousands of people watch- undaunted alr adventurer box-kite and crude ed the make the trip from Governor's from Grant's tomb . . ‘With an 1ncreued. enroliment of 25 per cent more boys than ever be- fore, and all indications of between 425 and 500 new hoys coming in early next week~the New Britain state trade school is busier than at any time in its history. ‘While the school operates all sum- mer, there is some slowing down of Is- | necessity and fall activities will be- DON'T WASTE Wise, Smith & Co’s to rely upon, tells us that a new Although given no credit in the popular mind for the great Sherman act of which he was the author, Hoar is remembered by old-timers for springing what is regarded as one of | the most spontaneous bon-mots ever | handed to an opponent on the floors of congress. This was after -Hoar had entered the senate and Senator John P. Jones of Nevada was making a “strong speech” in favor of free silver, The speech lasted two or three days, and in it he described the medium of exchange since the dawn of history, referring to one people who had used oyster shells as money. | Senator Hoar arese, and begging the YOUR TIME LOOKING AROUND Come Straight To Qur Store Where, as on Every Previous Dollar Day YOU WILL FIND THE BIGGEST DOLLAR BARGAINS OF ALL even more, besides adding to thelr attractiveness. From this it may be seen that the Connecticut company has an attrac- tive color with good visibility for its cars, The Boston concern is adopt- ing the same features already so prominent in Connecticut. gin next week. The present record at the school shows a total of 13,000 student hours a month and is 25 per cent more than ever before. The night school courses will start the latter part of the month while instruction iIn all branches taught will be offered provided there is enough demand for them. The teachers training class will start about October 1. This is a normal school for craftsmen in which the state gives instructions in teaching to men who are experts in their trades but who are not expert at imparting what “they know to others, About 40 per cent of the men who entered the class last year have been recommended for positions in | schools thiroughout /New England | and New York this year, the Obser- land to Grant's tomb. “We saw him disappear,” says Mr. Beck, “in a September mist over Governor's Island, and half an hour later he was seen returning on the Jersey side of the river, flying like a sitver gull. To those of us who saw him alight from his machine it was a crowded hour of glorious life.” Mr, Beck dined with Wilbur that night, when Wilbur expressed the opinion that the machine eventually would be able to rise high in the air and fly with reasonable safety over any city; but he did not suggest the possibility of traversing the en- tire American continent within 24 sewerage disposal plant is needed. The present plant in Berlin, which has resulted in to be below does not meet lawsuits and is said | the required capactiy, demands of the growing city and will be found even more inadequate in the near future. Mr. Pelton’s figures are illuminat- ing. The pop practically doubled in 1920 there were , yet not quite six miles tior he city has MARS AND VENUS Mars is on its way further from the earth after its recent “proximity” of 34,000,000 miles, and if any sclentists learned more about the planet than they already knew it is not evident from the mass of con- flicting data they gave to the press 20 years. In 72.5 miles of sani- 1 to them in the following three years. In 1920 there were 36.2 miles of storm sewers, and by 1924 | > more than three miles’ added. The conclusion of Mr. Relton is that a disposal plant should be built having a capacity of 6,800,000 gal- lons a day, and a peak load capacity of. 10,000,001 Competent gallons. engineers having in- vestigated the situation and all hav- ing come to similar conclusions, the city sooner or later can do nothing advice of the It will cost money else but follow the engineers. that is unfortunate, and but as every- thing worth while costs money there i8 nothing left to do but provide the disposal plant. New Britain has had much trouble with and waste from our ex tries adds to the trouble of all the tangled circumstances, lh?! problem can be solved, according to | All it | action to that end by the municipali- ty. its sewage disposil ensive indus ut in spite the engineers. needs is proper | WHY WASTE TIME? One of committee make use phasized by the 2 fense Day committee the faults of the citizens' is frequent S8 Thig is em- of the De- last night in | voting to invite manufacturing plant | managers to pledge the resources of to the aid of the government in time of war. their establishments Is memory so short that we have forgotten what occurred when Uncle Sam rolled up his sleeve took a hitch in his as we prepared to do our part in| the World War. He did around with perfumed notes asking | Instead, | belt and said "Get busy” not comce factory owners to cooperate they were he jssued orders—and exebuted. In one New Britain factory Uncle | pqjantic is economic jugglers on the | Sam's representative falled to nm‘lln‘mlwr side may start things, but|receiving the unstinted plaudits of the cooperation which he thought|gipert wiil finish them. ® They may | was justified existing. The mar ing to help, but i in its own W, It plant for some years and it going to take di from any 1 stripling representing partment threw out hi as you are told taken over by twenty-four hou changed its attitude. There is n ed of asking fa | heads to pled are part of t war. Al r conditions then | P ed the wasn't | the acto! nment within ment support. willingly, ast which did not as: ed unwilling cooperated because Ur m ordered them to do so. DAWES, HOAR AND FAME How eclusive G. Dawes has a p ot Europe named af Bimself admits and is fame! Gen. Charles 1 for stabilization him when he ecords indi- gate he had infinitely less to do with #t than Owen D. Young, the Democrat who virtually had of the committee sittings Shich the report was evolved. Dawes attended some 40 such gathering! while Young was at more than 60.| ©On his return to America Dawes de- glared Young should get the credit Put somehow the repsit Was made | charge as a result of methods, | | speaker's pardon for the interruption | suggested that oyster shells would be | a very good substitute for gold and silver coins and greenbacks, “because | with oyster shells as money, a man | can order half a dozen oysters on | the half shell and pay for them with | the shell “YOUNG GILBERT” Youth will have its fling, but Sey-| mour Parker Gilbert, the successor to Owen D. Young as agent | gen has had & record of careful prudence in finan- | cial matters that gives the lic to the | theory that fickleness and super- flclality is a attribute youthfulness. named ral for reparations, natural to | during the heydey of the Martian visit. True, possibilities for observation were not ideal, due to various as- tronomical causes which it is stated | will be eliminated between now and October. Mars 1s expected to yield a better view of itself in October than it did recently, the astronémers say, On the whole, however, We Kknow considerable about climatic and at- mospheric conditions on the planet, and what we don't know about the presence of high intelligence there isn't hurting us much. Astronomers at Yerkes observa- tory announce that Venus just now is | only 26,000,000 miles away, Which | is & much more intimate visit than Mare vouchsafed us. Venus is re- garded as a twin planet to the earth, and whereas Mars suffers from a lack of substantial atmosphere, For Gilbert is only 31, and has to| his rear a record of five years in the | federal treasury; four secretaries of | the treasury, throughout two admin- | | istrations, | He will face cle | as safe w At the tender age of 28 he was next in power to Secretary Mellon himself. He was identified with the war loans throughout the war and was active in in negotiations for the funding of the British debt. As agent had his confidence. assisting cral of reparations under the Dawes plan he will handle his biggest job, and his most difficult. states- men ready to take advantage of the er foreign But we have His record in he Kknows of politics and the “boy agent-general in Gilbert. Washington confider indicates something of the kind played on the other side | crafty foreigners will find him a poor talker, a youth given to making no promises, ar foe of back-room dip- and a hard nut generally und The impression on this side of the not be aware of this aa yet, but the ment was Will- | ime il come when this self-pos- | sessed, well-poised and quiet Ameri- can will lay down-the rules and en- force them with dispatch. AUTOS AT CROSSINGS A train traveling a mile a minute e second; when traveling 45 miles an hour it covers 66 fect every second. Consequently autoist who attempts to “beat 1 train over the crossing” is about covers 88 feet every hile doing it as if he took hold of a live electric wire with his bare hands, y-six Nutmeggers attempted to beat trains across tracks during period from the first of the year middle of August. Not all of kitl em were 1 but those who are | still alive to remember the frightful ¢ went through a term in a drivers crossing gates. of them to push trains off the track. Some of them tried to stop but their brakes were defective: sthers were going 0 couldn’t come to a stop in time when the em: swiftly they gates went down im front of others couldn't see the gates. he motor vehicle department of inecticut gives good, short and It that autoists should merely have their machines crisp advice is under gerfect control when mear a | Venus has an enormous belt of air which prevents us from seeing its surface. The Yerkes astronomers be- lieve they nearly saw the eurface at high noon a few days ago, but ares| not sure. l In the opinion of many astron-| omers, Venus js more likely to be the habitat of intelligent beings than is the case of Mars, Venus is nearly the same size as the earth and its mass is | quite similar, It is also the nearest | to the earth of the large planets. | The atmosphere is much thicker than on our earth, and this, if any- thing, is regarded as an advantage to possible life on the planet, al-| though it balks our attempts to as- certain facts regarding the surface of | the planet. AN ECHO OF EARLY FLYING With the American world fliers back on the American continent and their fellow citizens and of the world, it is worth while to turn a few pages back in the history of aviation to the | day when the Wright brothers in | Dayton, O., tussled with an idea ina ramshackle bicycle repair shop un- | til they constructed & contraption | whic heavier than air, could be made to fly. Qld-timers remember quite vividly the incredulity ridicule with h their efforts were regarded by Ithough and wh | those who relied upon the universal | flavor of common sense and said it was and ever would be a physical for man to fly. The| regarded as | impossibility Wright, brot cranks and “nuts”, who were destin- ed to lose their necks in the attempt | to defy the law of gravitation. After the two lads had demon- strated their ability to fiy on a small | scale, using race tracks in which to | take the air and return to terra | firma, James M. Beck, solicitor-gene- | ral of the United States, happened {to be chairman of the aeronautics connection With the celebration in New York city. celebrating the 300th an- ! the discovery of the the centenpial of the rs were | committee in | Hudson-Fulton niversary of | Hudson and | first trip of Fulton's steaiboat. Mr. | Beck suggested that an aviator be | employed to the river from | Grant's tomb to the Palisades and ! return. | | I shal not soon tforget” Mr. | Beck writes, cross the amusing incredull- hours or a through the air. —_— ‘Wonder if playing Mah-Jongg has alded anyone in understandfhg what this Chinese war is all about—and where it is taking place? Facts and Fancies BY ROBERT QUILLEN Job! Blah! gum in a movie seat. Few girls ever are bored. It's a case of real love if she will risk her complexion on a coat lapel. TR Description: He's the kind of chap who carries stamps and aspirin his pocket. It's easy to pick out a mechanic's He's the one that does the helper. work. Science can tell you everything ex- to cept the psychological moment buy new tires. “Woman {s crazy roast him in summer. We like all birds, especially the one that can do that hook siide into second. There's one thing about cigarettes for ladies. fect the price of tobacco. Others can write sea stories, the hero so ardently. That chap who fell dead in a post | doubtless found a pen | office lobby that would work. It's strange how lame ducks get Even in the time of the flood by. the ducks floated. As to the house selecting a presi- mu dent, it can't do so darncd worse than the country. The jilted lover who blows Hard times are these only 40 loafers watch - a studying a brick before laying it. Some small boys are abnormal, but | most of them spit with great fre- quency and proficiency. If a girl is forever falling from | trees, ladders an doutbuildings she'll never be called a fallen woman. One reason why it's bad form | discuss the weather is because you can't get an argument out of it. “If a girl breaks the engagement she must return the ring.” Weil, she breaks it, it lsn't much ring. round-the-world tour He never sat on used When fhey feel that way they take & nap. | for wearing clothes that freeze her in winter,"” | says Man, who wears clothes that typical They don’t af- but only Conrad could make you despise ch | his brains out has to be a crack shot. in which | mason ver is told. A number of them al- ready have received appointments. Applications for this course are be- ing received now by Director Her- man 8. Hall. The school will operate under a somewhat altered staff this season. Lawrence B. Watson, a New Britain trained nian, has gone to a Junior High school in Akron, Ohio, and his position at the head of the printing department has been taken by Arthur Higgins, a graduate of the Oswego, N. Y., state normal school i(a:nd who has been with Gunn and o. Paul F. Clark for two years in charge of the carpentry department has gone to his home in Hartford and will take a position with the J. A. Fay-Egan Co. The vacancy has not been filled, the state board of education having several applicants under oonsideration. .. Alexander Pope, poet of the old English school, once wrote: “Of all causes which conspire to blind Man's erring judgment, and mis- guide the mind, What the weak head, with strong- est bias rules, Is pride, the never failing vice of fools.” But if Alexander Pope were livisg today and should experience a trick soon to be described, he would probably agree with us,.give vent to his opinion and say that no fool, | who would place a soft. squashy tomato in the driver's seat of.an automobile while the latter is at- tending a theater and has his ma- chine parked on a side street, could pos: even the faintest bit of pride. There could not be pride in a person's makeup who weuld do an act such as this whether for the purpose of making it a practical joke or not. Yet there was someone in New | Britain, probably a child but more likely was it the work of a grown- up so nicely was it “planted”, mean enough to play this trick on an in- nocent autoist recently with the re- sult that he not only spotted the soft leather in the seat of a new car but ruined a perfectly good pair of light colored trousers. It would not be sacrilegious for this| | man to ask that “the wrath of the | | gods descend upon the would be jester. | in . e | A cross section of the averags| | American newspaper: The three planes got under way after a 19 minute dclay one down | playing the 18th she put a spoon shot | of 175 yards to within five £cl of the pin Premier Herriot left no illusion among his hearers that France con- | sidered that arbitration alone could save the world nothing more was| known of the prince’'s movements ex- cept that he had returned to the | Burden estate sometime between 1 o'clock and dawn troops were pro- ceeding from the Lungwha head- quarters of Gen. Li Yung-Hslang the executive in a letter declared that | the Kian is a potential menace to the | peace and security of our citizen witnepses sald the car was going only 20 miles an hour he also asked addi- commission relative to the sugar | guty in other words if all the cars | registered in Connecticut were to be | operated on the public roads of Connecticut exclusive of city streets at one time there would -be one for | every 238 feet of roadway through- | out the entire state after I made my selection 1 submitted it to the criti- cism of General Scott the new blouse is made on long tufic limes and reaches within 10 inches of the hem of the underslip the manage- ment has so far secured the services of several of the staf performers of past seasons Washington now enjoys a lead of two full games over the to tional data on the report of the tariff baystrict who is known by the voters the nominee will make a second in- vasion of the west add the whites of two eggs the beer was valued at $2,- 600 and was bound for New York city his operations covered a period of 15 years pushing up the oil shares to the extent of a point or two failed to intimidate the bears Ete. Although there is a lull in local politics, it is intimated in anti-ma- chine circles that it is only a lull preceding a storm The “next num- just before the primaries for the, selection of republican cnndld"101 for the legislature, according to the Observer's informant The regulars won an casy victory at the primaries when delegates to the state convention were chosen, putting their candidates across by large margins But the insurgent clement is not discouraged by the result, it claims. It takes satisfaction in knowning that the only indepen- dent candidate; without lifting & finger to get support, polled 20 per cent of the total. This, in spite of the well organized and well directed drive by the regulars, who made certain of winning with their ticket by employing automobiles to bring the lame, the halt and the blind to the primaries. It is said that the independent faction does not intend to submit as meekly in the selection of candidates for the legislature and\will organize a movement to arouse sentiment among registered Republicans in favor of its ticket Whether this will be successful is open to doubt The situation is different than it was in the spring campaign for the election of city officials Today there is no voice raised In a shout against ma-| chine domination Apparently the movement toward -the sclection of | independent candidates is without a leader who is sufficiently interests ed to walk into the office of the ma« chine chiefs without knocking at the door and tell them not to monkey with the buzz saw Unless this 18 done the nomination of candidates for the legislature may g0 by default | to the regulars The lack of interested leadership was lllustrated in the failure to op- pose delegates to the congressional convention who are favorable to the renomination of E. Hart Fenn. All that was required was a leader who would rise up, organize the ~anti- Fenn sentiment afid put Across a ticket which was hostile toward Wethersfield’s famous citizen. There is enough feeling in the city against Mr. Fenn and he may count him- selt among the lucky that this feel- ing falled to crystailize before the primaries. If any other man in the and who enjoys their confidence had come out and said: I want the republican congressional nom- ination,” he could have had sup- port in New Britain. If Si Seymour of Hartford, for instance, had made that statement many voters in thig city would have railied to his stand- ard. Even the most optimistic insur- gents here admit that Lieutenant Governor Bingham has the inside track for ‘the republican gubern torial nomination. The Wadhams boom has increased in within the past two weeks but un- less the unexpected happens Col. ambitious Yankees it is announced | that after & campaign in the cast i Bingham will be handed the nom- ber -on the program’ will be heard |- strength | expect. The democrats would pre- fer to see Col. Bingham nominated. They believe that, because of his close affiliation with the state re- publican machine, they would have a better opportunity of putting a democrat in the governor's chair. Every machine goes on the rocks some time and this may be the year for the close corporation over which J. Henry Roraback rules to take its medicine. Observations 'On The Weather Conditions:—The disturbance cen- tral over western Pennsylvania yes- terday moved ' northwestward and passed out the St. Lawrence valley last night. It is followed by an ex- tended arca of high pressure which is producing pleasant weatler this morning in all sgctions east of the Rock Mountains. The temperature is rising in the western but con- continues low in the central and | castern districts. Conditions favor for this vicinity, fair weather with slowly rising temperature. A Rockland, Me., man, afflicted with a nightmare that he was being attacked, rose and returned the blows of his fancied assailant with such force that he broke both of his | arms on the bureau. | returned, Monday, Sept. 8 25 Years Ago Today From Peper of That Date ) 3 Max Unkelbach, assistant to the city engineer, ‘is enjoying lis an- nual vacation. The post offices empfoyes are en- joying a basket of peaches left at’ the office by Elijah Rogers. They are products of his orchards at Shuttle Meadow Lake. €. J. Parker and wife have turned from a vacation in Norfolk. * Louis Schlcicher has purchased a house and lot on Griswold street. Mr. and Mrs, C, J. Symonds of this city were among those who enjoyed the ideal weather at Lake Com- pounce yesterday. Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Andrews have from Shrewsbury, Vt. where they spent several days. A class of 150 students registered at the New Britaln etate normial school today. This number greatly exceeds the number registered ~ last year. The records for the past month show that there were 43 deaths in New Britain during August. Heart diecase was the ailment which re. | caused a majority of the deaths. R SRADESIREEE The king of Spain observes the neient religious ceremony of wash- ing the feet of 12 oY m® L Maundy Thursday. | E————————— DR, FRANK CRANE'S DAILY EDITORIAL | ‘__b_____——______——_————-————_—-____——_—_— Liberty By DR. FRANK CRANE Liberty is like everything else. It When Mme. Roland, on her way what crimes have been committed in carried to an extreme. There is no liberty, of a practical nature, can be carried to extremes. to execution exclaimed: “O Liberty, thy name!” she had in mind liberty in the world, that is not, limited by the demands of others. And only those experience the delights of liberty who are the readiest (o a The fall of the Bastille and it July 14, will foreve) evitable result of incompetent EOV The only way to establish & stands for equality of all before t in most When government become when with this purpose it tramples sowing conditions which will erea France learned this grea America stands { the same truth, that the peace and upon the peace and prosperity of its It has long been recognized by government that the na people themselves, The more educated and |s its government. ¥or the government wiil he will of powers are alwgys set by ! te the revolution which will t lesson and helped to teach it to or the same thing it out of is the safest which can most easily be pul tural check to the tyrannical evidences of governments is the dmit those demands. s destruction by the people of Paris on_ r remain a symbol of the fact that avarchy is the in- ernment. Jasting government is first to see that it he law and, secondly, to recognize. that, cople are to be free to do as they please. et s occupied merely in continuing itself, and rights of the people, it is overthrow it. the world, and, in its way, Eogland recognizes prosperity of a government aepénd people. upon the students of political economy that that ¢ office and intelligent its people the firmer recognize that the limits ohits the people. And, furthermore, that that government is surest which is founded upon popular good will. Both the French and the to all governments that the inevitable is revolution. The frequent revolutions in the South Ameri- he same thing.. It is not only necessary to give to incompetency, can republics fllustrate t American revolutions constituted & warning effect of tyrannical goveramental the people the kind of government that is best for them but it is necessary for them to realize what is best. In order to maintain its security a govern- ment must be founded wpon the popular approval of its people “whethet that government be a pure democracy, The effect of tyranny, whether it is that of the the reactionaries in England, or the tyrants in Russia, is always the of same. ination on a silver they a republic or a limited monarchy. Bourbons of France, Copyright, 1924, by The McClure's Newspaper Syndioate.

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