McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 18 Sep 1919, p. 2

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

rerun U. S. MNAIE uort on Peace Document Given law Makers Says It Wig \ Breed Wars. , ..;7 Chief Refuses to Let Any Striker Go Back to Work on •^-•'••rwws'the Force." - ; 45 AMENDMENTS . ^Reservations Gtw tittCAfiitlliBil'Wflll'l • I to Withdraw From League and Give •""v U.S. Exclusive Right to Decide ~ r^'Own Domestic Questions. Washington, Sept. 13.--Rejection of 11 le German peace treaty with Its •l^eaguc of Nations covenant or adoption of amendments would mean sacrifice by the Tailed States of all con- ; -Cessions obtained from Germany un- "r"#er a dictated peace, minority mem- ;?ilers of the foreign relations coromitl| ee declared in a report presented to , ir%he senate. The report presented by Senator fc3pitehcoek of Nebraska, ranking Demerratic member of the committee, .•^Urged speedy ratification of the conf'.:^| entioB without amendments or res- , jfcrvations. It deplored "the long and 1 unnecessary delay to which the treaty Jhad been subjected, while locked up '-jfti the committee whose recommendations were frefti the start a foregone conclusion," and asserted these reemmeadations could have been made In July. Washington, Sept. 12.--Cliaracter- .iaed as an alliance and not a league! 'mhich "will breed wars instead of securing peace," the German peace .(treaty, including the covenant for a league of Nations, was formally refwirted to the senate by the foreign Relations committee with forty-flve amendments and four reservations. * It will be the first great document vief its kind to be discussed in the open --without the confines of "execqtive w m fcFV Session." i Accompanying the treaty was the anajority report of the foreign relations committee, subscribed to by every Republican member except Senator McCumber of North Dakota, explaining the amendments and reservations, nil of which it was declared wen "governed by a single purpose and that is to guard American rights and sovereignty, the invasion of which ; "Would stimulate breaches of faith, encourage conflicts and generate wars." The reservations propose: 1. Unconditional right to withdraw from the league. . ' 2. Declination by the United States i* Jo accept any of the legal or moral ^ "bligations of the much-discussed arf*,- tide X, or to accept any mandatory ,V' ; from the league "except by action of |p 4 «the congress of the United States." #V . 3. Reserving to the United States -'flic exclusive right to decide what i -finestions are within its own domestic Jurisdiction. 4. Absolute reservation of the Mondoctrine to the Judgment of the gfe-'VUnlted States alone. The principal amendments are pro- !|>osed to provide: J; • Equal voting power for the United ^. ^tates with Great Britain in the as- E", . pembly of the league. •:*, ' Giving to China instead of Japan t4>. ,^he province of Shantung. Relief of the United States from tiavinjr representatives on commissions deciding matters in which it has no ll^'^-i-oncern. - Others concern phraseology, p,,;-: : These amendments and reservations, |^v r the majority report says, are submltf 4'r#ed "to preserve American independ- 14,-IHjce and American sovereignty and ' thereby best serve the welfare of man- * ^ ' fcind." ^ Fears that other nations may not acf> i" cept an amended covenant the report i| Dismissed with the statement: ¥"•-..4' "That is one thing that certainly will not happen. ... The other na- H-'j fions will take us on our own terms J for without us their league is a wreck, ;; nnd all their gains from a victorious f*i:l"*ace are imperiled." jjjt '-' German delegates, the report conf(: tends, could easily be brought to i' C «jl'ari8- and as Germany is not a mem- 0 ber of the league she need not be con- ' suited about changes «if the covenant. : I At the outset the majority report deals at length with criticisms of delay iV*. and points out that whereas the |>eace £ conference took six months to agree <m the treaty, the senate foreign rela- £4; tions committee had 47 working days, j; Demands for speed "in the most important subject that ever came before ihe senate of the United States," the report says, were "largely the work • > of the administration and its newspa- | ; per organs." 7,000 SOLDIERS PATROL CITY Machine Guns in Plana Ready to Quell Fresh Outbreaks--Doubt General Strike--Loyal Policemen Are to Train New Men. Boston. Sept. 16.--Defiance met fiance in the policemen's strike. "We will remain undaunted in our struggle for recognition of our union." was the strikers' response to the announcement of Police Commissioner Curtis that none of the men who "deserted their posts of duty" would be reinstated, and that he would proceed to build up a new police force. The strikers' announcement was j made by John F. Mclnnis, president of j the union. Mclnnis was one of the | 19 members of the union who were j fried before the commissioner, found guilty, and suspended from the force, and whose sentence to dismissal was announced by the commissioner. He said: "The policemen are not wavering In the face of false reports of the moneyed interests now so forcibly trying to deprtve us of our American freedom. "In the home and the hearts of the police we will remain undaunted In our struggle for recognition of our union and the right to be affiliated with the American Federation of Labor." Because of his dismissal from the force. Mclnnis offered to resign aa president of the union. The members thereupon re-elected him, as well as other officers affected by the dismissal order. With 7.000 troops patrolling the principal streets and squads of newly recruited police quartered in every station, city officials said they bad the situation well in hand. , The authorities, however, were prepared for eventualities. Machine guns were in readiness for instant action and one gun was sent to the Roxbury section, where gangs were reported forming. Police Commissioner Curtis was going ahead with plans for the organization of a new police force. The firemen have postponed their, scheduled organization vote on a walkout. There was little talk of a gerieral sympathetic strike, but it was still uncertain what action officials of the Central Labor union and the policemen's union would take as a result of the policemen having lost their jobs. Ix>yal police were promoted In many cases and will train new Ben in their duties. WE ALL FEEL M, Iff INDIANAPOLIS NEW®. wttioM - Corpus Christi, Tex., Swept by Flood; One Town is " Wiped Ottt * ' THOUSANDS ARE HOMELESS RAID ON SINN FEIN BRITISH AND TROOPS SEIZE PAPERS ARMS IN IRELAND. Detective Is Killed During Fighting in Dublin--Soldiers Charge Mob With Bayonets. ' fceln 'J. S. FLAG ON 25 HUN SHIPS Great Britain Has Only Six of Mors Than 10,000 Tona, Says Lloyd's. London. Sept. 18.--The new volume* of Lloyd's Register contain information with respect to 43 former German liners of upwards of 10,000 tons gross. These vessels are distributed permanently or otherwise in the following way: United States shipping board, 1®; United States navy department. 9; British shipping controller, 0; Italy, 2; Brazil, 1; unallotted, 9; total. 43. Thus far <of 43 former German liners of more than 1CMJ0Q tons the American flag floats over 25 and the British over six. 80,000 SERB CHILDREN DIE Dob!In, Sept. 15.--The parliament has been suppressed. Detective Officer Hoey of the political division of police was shot dead in the center of the city. The Irish parliament, or "Dall filreann," as it was known in Gaelic, was formed In Dublin on January 21 by 25 members of the Sinn Fein party who had been elected to the British house of commons and who, in accordance with a resolution adopted by the society, refused to go to Westminster. At the inaugural meeting the Dail Eireann adopted a declaration of Independence for Ireland and demanded the evacuation of the island by the British garrisons. The British government at first determined to adopt the policy of Ignoring the "parliament" and the action taken in suppressing it is the first official action taken In its respect. A strong force of soldiers searched the Sinn Fein headquarters in this city. Tne search lasted two hours. It Included even a personal search of visitors to the premises. The documents seized related to the loan of the Irish republic and to the . correspondence upon which the repor^ of the American delegates who visited Ireland was based. An exhaustive search also was made of the private house of Count Plunkett and that of the Sinn Fein member of parliament. Michael Staines. At Skibbereen, In the southwestern part of County Cork, armed police raided a newspaper office and also a number of private residences* Two Sinn Fein members of the house of commons were detained In Dublin after the search here, while the houses of other Sinn Fein members of the commons are under visitation. Londonderry, Sept,. 15.--While the police were seizing arras in a house in Rossville street here a stone was thrown. The officer in command ordered the troops to fix bayonets. The crowd thereupon dispersed. VOTE AGAINST TREATY G. VETERANS FAVOR RESERVATIONS TO PACT. Elect Col. James D. Bell as Commander in Chief and D. M. Hall Vice Commander. Gotatobus, O., Sept. 13.--Resolutions opposing ratification by the United States of the peace treaty in its present form were adopted almost unanimously by delegates attending the annual encampment of the Grand Army of the Republic. The resolutions were presented by Commander Keteham of Indiana and were adopted after a debate lasting all morning. The veterans declared their action was not political, but In accord with their policy of 100 per eent American- Ism. They said they were opposed to engaging in any entangling alliances and were unwilling to sacrifice any degree of Americanism for the sake of the League of Nations. Col. James D. Bell of Brooklyn was unanimously elected commander-inchief of the Grand Army of the Republic. £ D. M. Hall of Columbji* vfas elected senior vice commander. American Red Cross to Aid 5,1 Many Orphans, Who survive 1915 Retreat. . Washington. Sept. 16.--Of the 35.000 Serbian children sent with the Serbian army In the 1915 retreat only 5.000 survived, according to figures verified by American Red Cross workers and forwarded to national headquarters here. Most of these returned to their homes to find themselves orphans and the Red Cross is seeking to aid them by the establishment, of orphanages and other Institutions. '•M'. Former Empress Has Son. Geneva, Sept. J).--Former Empress *Zita of Austria gave birth to a son at Pranguins. Both mother and child are said to be doing well. JIlT"" Polish Poles to Aid the French. Warsaw. Sept. 10.--A convention has >en signed between the French and governments by which 100.000 Polish workmen will be transpoi-ted to France. The convention wllj relieve the unemplAymenJ problem here. British Give Turks Scare. London. Sept. . 10-- British forces Wave been landed at Scutari, across the Bosporus from Constantinople. It is officially explained, however, that this was hiv ordinary troop movement ^f.oniy 1.200 men. HEAVY QUAKES IN SPAIN Twenty Villages Damaged and Hundreds of Persons injured^ Two Provinces. Madrid. Sept. 16.--Twenty villages in the provinces of Alicante and Mor>> sia are reported to have been seriously damaged by a series of earthquake shocks which have been going on for three days. Hundreds of persons are reported to have been injured. AUSTRIA SIGNS PEACE TREATY American Representatives Second to Put Names on the Document*-* ' China Also Represented. lit. Germain, France, Sept. 11.-- Georges Clemenceau, president of the peace conference; Chancellor Karl Renner, head of the Austrian peace delegation; the weather man and all the peace conference delegates were in the best of humor for the signing of the treaty with Austria. Roumania and Jugo-Slavia did not sign the peace treaty. They have been given until Saturday to signify their position. There was no hostility of any kind evinced when Doctor Renner smilingly entered the small Stone Age hall. He nodded politely as he took his "seat at the end of the U-shaped table about which , the delegates were grouped. Frank L. Polk, who succeeded Secretary Lansing as head of the United States delegation, signed after Doctor Renner and was followed by Henry White and General Bliss of the American delegation. > Gives Surplus to Hospitals. London. Sept. 16.--It has been decided to make grants amounting ta about $4,500,000 to hospitals and other Institutions In England and Wales from the surplus funds of the British Red Cross society. * | • !&#? Hungary Jails Filled. Vienna. Sept. 13.--Reports from various parts of Hungary say that "white" terrorism continues unchecked. Persons suspected of communistic affiliations are being arrested wholesale and ip|prisoned under brutal conditions. Roumanians More Prie«i% Pnris. Sept. 16.--The situation between Roumania and the entente appears to be brighter. A cordial meeting was held by Stephen Ptchon. French foreign minister, and Nicholas l&lsu. -- /; Qevernment Probes Coifcty N Washington, Sept. 13.--Congressional investigations of war expenditures now being contracted by house committees cost about $10,000 a month. Clerk Page of the House informed the appropriations committee. Gas Explosion Kills Autoist. Harrisburg, 111., Sept. 16.--Lighting of a cigarette just as a garage man finished filling the gasoline tank of their automobile caused an explosion that proved fatal to Roy Cass and caused Injury to his three companions. Monarchists In Plot. Vienna. Sept. 16.--Many monarchial agents arrived recently from Switzerland and started a violent press cam palgn in behalf of ex-Emperor Karl The monarchist party in Austria is looking to Germany! for support. KOLCHAK'S ARMY JS LOST Bolshevik! Claim Capture of 45,000 Prisoners in Southern Russia--. Admiral Claims Gains. London, Sept. 13.--The remainder of Admiral Kolchak's southern army In the region of Aktiubinsk and Orik has surrendered to the bolsheviki. It Is claimed in a bolslievist wireless dispatch from Moscow. This raises the total of bolshevik captures from the Kolchnk forces within a week to 45.000 men, it Is declared. Omsk, Sept. 13.--General headquarters of the Kolchak army announced that the offensive was being carried forward successfully along the whole Siberian front. The enemy Is being driven back everywhere, with severe losses, the announcement says, and has been convened to abandon prisoners and important booty. FIRST LEO BY GEN. PERSHING »mmander Rides av Head of Famous DiChian in New York Parade. New York, Sept. 12.--With Pershing at their-head and with the Cross ol War twinkling on their storied banners, the First division of regulars marched down Fifth avenue. The colors of three regiments of infantry^ were twined with the fourragere of France, symbol of gallantry, and on the breasts of hundreds of marchers were the gay ribbons betoken I ng medals bestowed for heroism. In the surging, swinging, rhythmic stream which poured down the avenue were 25,000 men. full panoplied for battle--the flower of the American army, the peers of any soldiers in the world. P^tv .^ranaaa, Where 600 s Persons f.lved, Is Destroyed--Communication Cut Off From Many of the Coast Towns. , -- * i •• •• - r + --V' r - . ..... . tfex.,;- Sept.J i|.*^-!i.wfntyeiglit or more persons were killed by the hurricane in Corpus Christi, according to a message from ex-Mayor Roy Miller to headquarters of the southern department of the army at San Antonio and forwarded to the stute adjutant here. San Antonio, Tex., Sept. 17.--<3en. Joseph T. I Wckmaii, commander of the southern department, ordered a relief train sent to Corpus Christi. The train will carry tents, cots,'blankets, medical supplies and several thousand cases of foodstuffs. The. entire town of Port Aransas, where 600 persons lived, has been destroyed, but whether or not the inhabitants had taken shelter Inland is not known. A radjo from the Captain of a Median Line steamer to Galveston says that his vessel bus gone ashore over the piling and that the town is "completely destroyed." His message said nothing about loss of life and It is presumed he knows nothing except what has befallen his own ship. Corpus Christi is the hardest ,hit of any place from which definite reports have come. Twenty-eight are known to be dead there, 3.000 are homeless, $3,000,000 worth of property is destroyed, and water from six to twelve feet deep ccvers one of the finest residence sections along the North shore. Appeals have been sent out for food and bedding. One report says martial law has been proclaimed, but this is taken to mean that only the military is helping to rescue tlie suffering and to preserve order. White I'ontu, not far from Corpus Christi, reports that three bodies have been washed" ashore there, and thut persons on rafts can he seen at sea. v Victoria, in the Brownsville district, Is still cut off from this part of the state. Reports from near the coast Hi the counties of Victoria, Matagorda and Calhoun are that summer houses .have been razed and cotton crops destroyed, but no loss of life is definitely reported. At Kingsvllle the roundhouse of the Gulf Coast Lines has been destroyed, but no mention is made of fatalities. The message coming from the division superintendent of the railroad at Kingston, ulso confirms the report of deaths and destructipij itt Corpus Christi. ( - Roy Miller, former mayor of Corpus Christi and now ^president of the .relief committee, bus managed to get this message through to Houston: "Please spread word that food supplies, cots, bedding and general suppiles, should be rushed to Corpus Christi at once. Aid and relief necessary on account of storm. Damage Js approximately $3,00<MHM). ^Twelve or fourteen known dead and great number homeless." ' As in the great disaster at Galveston years ago, the damage in Corpus Christi and Port Aransas was due to the piling up of the gulf waters tyy a terrific gale from the east a|id by .the violence of the gale itself. The heavy gnle and the rain combined to ruin crops and wreck buildings inland. « Australia Indemnity 300 Millions. Melbourne, Australia. Sept. 13.-- Premier Hughes announced at a meeting of the ministerial, party that the indemnity to be paid to Australia would be about $300,000,000. Italian Commission To U. S. Rome. Sept. 13.--An Italian economic commission will leave Brest for the United States next Sunday. Needs An 6le Hanson 7 > Washington, Sept. 15.--"What the city of Boston needs Is an Ole Hanson and a few Ole Hansons would improve the senate," said Senator Myere on the floor of the senate in a jtpeeeh ,on the Boston police strike. nd Slav Troops Fight; ' Jvondon, Sept. IS.--'Unconfirmed reports received in responsible quarters here tell of serious rioting in Fiume between Italian and Jugo-Slav troops. , tm_, nf al .. . M The allies were compelled to intervene, ij,. 3 00 --rioting is continuing. ' w a1, 1UJUPrepare to Give Back : \ 'W a»hington, Sept. 15.--Preparing for the return of the railroads to private control. Director General Hlnes all roads to begin an invenas of Decem- Pa^s $22,500,000. t. \5.--It is Germany Pi London. Sept. \;>.--it Is reported here that £4.500,OO0M$22,500,000) in gold has reached London from Germany. A portion Is said to be already on the way to Canada in payment for Sees Germany Able to Pay. Parts, Sept. 15.--Speaking In the chamber of deputies. Luis Loucheur, minister of reconstruction, declared that the French financial claims upon Germany in nowise exceeded the lattert capacity to pay. Investigations Come High. Washington, 8ef>t. 16.--CongnaWti)u» al Investigations of war expenditures now being conducted by house committees cost about $10,000 a month. Clerk Page of the house informed the appro- Drlatlons ' Bratiano Cabinet Is Out. Vienna, Sept. 13.--The Bratiano cabinet in Roumania has fallen, according to unofficial reports which reached Vtennw frotp Buchsp^t Is said to be forming a Indianapolis, Sept indictments against 14 commission merchants fend firms here were returned by the county grand Jury, which has been Investigating the high of living. SENATE GETS THE , TREATY Consideration of the German' Peace ^ -ffwrt Begins In the Unm / ^ | House. Washington, Sept. it.--Consideration of the German peace* treaty began In the senate. It was called up by Chairman Lodge of the foreign relations committee ai^d became the firm great documeut of iUs kind io be discussed lu the senate In' the full light of publicity. ISSUES ORDERS TO GERMANY Supreme Council at Paris Telia- Berlin to End Ware in the ' Baltic. >•v .. Paris. $eptn?.--The supreme council of the peace conference sent an ultimatum to (Jermany, demanding that she immediately cease toajtUIUcs In the Baltic states. 'i it ^ Chicagpan Kills Wife, Self.' * Chicago, Sept. 17.--The domestic troubles Of James Kolarik, forty-two years old, of 474S South Wood street, ended when he shot and killed !>•« wife, wounded his uiother-in-law and put 11 bullet through his own brain*.^ Beaten iy Four M«xicm» • Yrdeta, Tex., wept. 17.*--H. A. Games, United Stales eustoms inspector, was badly beaten and left for dead by a- |Mvty of Mexicans who crossed the Rio Grande at the t'onl hei^. There were four In the patty. WHERE HE WOULD GET COLOR Mr. Gloom Sums to Have Definite Opinion of flfenlxens of Certain Kansaa City Locality. "If I were a sensational preacher, and wanted more notoriety than I was getting," a trifle grimly said J. Fuller Gloom, "*I would not waste my time infesting boxing matches, rowdydow dances and the like. Instead, I would array myself In a guileless countenance and a set of false neck whiskers. In my right hand I would wear a cane of weeping willow with a hook op one end and a thimble on the other. With my left hand I would clutch by the ears such a gripsack as we seldom see io real life. Of course, I would wear other and equally appropriate garments. And thus arrayed I would ramble around In the vicinity of the Union station, and let the denizens of that locality play with me. I fancy that In a* short spell I would accumulate more novel experiences than I could otherwise acquire lo t •'T.t".-- Kansas City Star. - % ^ f *, Had a Reason. * t "1 stopped in at the drug store to buy a cigar," said a College avenue man. "Behind me rushed in a lad about five years old. Right up to the clerk he went, yelling: 'Mister, you gave me a penny too much change a while ago!' "The clerk looked_at hi® a minute and said: 'That's your good luck and for being honest enough to tell me, you may keep ,the penny.' ' "The lad still had a troubled look oh his face and soon explained it by aaying: 'But I bought a penny balloon wlih it and I wanted to know if you would take it back. They are selling larger ones down at the next drug store for a penny.'"--Indianapolis News. Good Advice. A school teacher was visiting the boy scout camp at Kinneumapooee a few weeks back. The boys were feeding her with blackberries and in every way trying to make her enjoy her vis- It. .One little fellow, more Interested than the bthers, gave her the following advice: "And, say, while you're here you want to get good and tanned. You won't have to wash your neck and ears then, for the dirt doesn't show." --Indianapolis News. Old Bridge 8tood for Centuries. The new London bridge was opened on August 1, 1831. This replaced the celebrated old bridge, built more than eight centuries before. It had 18 solid stone p(ers, with bulky stone arches and was covered from end to end with buildings. On the "Tailor's gate," at one end, the heads of traitors were show-n. • It was removed' on account of Its obstruction to navigation. Always Have the Ways of the Hopi IndKUM^ir nortj^ -- em New Mexico, their Yood and rf*, . •>'litigious customs, was the subject of all . ^ address in Kansas City, Mo., the other ;/ night by Miss Kthel Ryan, for yeaiB%:: tf| a Baptist missionary on the Hofl reservation. * !j "The Hop! women delight in decora^ . , ing their shoes with 10-cent pieces,"* ' < Miss Ryan said. "The shoes, ^4 resemble moccasins, often have aa" - a* many as five dimes on each. , , 1 4 - ^ "They have a way of sewing qtafi terS to their dresses and using thenar as buttons. When they go to market! and find themselves short of monef^ ,/v^ they simply cut off a button." And they're never broke I Glor* , United States Haa Monopoly*.' Neither Great Britain, France nof Italy has been able to find workablaj ^ helium fields. Russia may have there,! ' f but that is doubtful. Germany has) S none. The United States seems t»j" "| have the monopoly, and investlgatlotti, ^ by scientists of the United States ge*« ' f logical survey tends to show that t have all we need. Great Britain may; continue of necessity to fill her gaa bags with the deadly hydrogen, pending the time when she can buy heihnat of the United States; but here ill America we hope soon to bid fafeweU ; ' forever to fcydrOgen and «U 4ts tragi*! >> - evils. " " • •" "Amen" AH Alone, f ? I have sung soprano for years in church choir. One Sunday morning^ while in a service, the minister ant , nounced a hymn, which was on tlip A bottom of the page, the third venM being on the opposite page, at the tojtf At the end of the second verse (nOtj seeing the third verse) I sang "Amen !$ ? all alone. Every one. even the minister laughed, the organist went playing the third verse. When time sing 'the amen I let the rest of th* choir sing amen. People were stlQt laughing, and it was the most embarrassing moment in my life.--Chicago ^ribyne. Alternate Insomnia. jftftnfrnl Sims said at a dinner ij| Washington: "And another frequent cause of d&> Vorce Is alternate Insomnia." "Alternate insomnia!" said a nerve specialist incredulously. "Pshaw, ad* miral, what the deuce is that?" "Alternate Insomnia," the admir<|; explained, "is a complaint common lib a great many husbands and wivei,- Whlchever goes to sleep first keeps thi .Otlier iW&ke all night snoring." • V . , - , : u V ; j l * A" D e p e n d s . "Brace upl Some people are groui.ii down on the millstone of life. Otherip get polished up. It Just depends oft the stuff you are made of. Seventeen Alisn Prioonsrs Esoape. Salt Lake City. Sept. 17.---Seventeen enemy alien prisoners at the war prtson barracks at Fort Douglas, near here, escaped by way of a tunnel cow stmeted underneath the wire inch u?e of the prison. Ne School; Teachers Strike. f,inton. Ind.. Heptv 17.--The schools In Stockton township. Gree Experts <ht Theorists-- Which? *•> •f<u' > packing industry is intricate, complex--far more so than the railroads or the telegraph. Every day multiplying needs of society increase its problems and multiplying responsibilities!: demand more of it Highly trained experts, specialists of years' experience, thinkers and creative men, devote their lives, their energies, their activities, to solving the problems of the packing industry and meeting its widening duties. Swift & Company is not a few dozen packing plants, a few hundred branch houses, a few thousand refrigerator cars, and a few million dollars of capital, but an organization of such 'men. It is the experience, intelligence, initiative and activity which operates this physical equipment Can this intelligence, this experience, this initiative and creative effort which handles this business at a profit of only a fraction of a cent per pound from ;^all sources, be fostered through b the intervention of political^ theorists, however pure their purposes? Or be replaced by legislation ? Does Congress really . think that it can? $ W as send you a Swift "DoOm*. It will interest you. - Address Swift & Company, Union Stock Yarda, < . Chicago, HL • .tut:-..- Swift & Company, U. S. A. .. t- XJ- • •*- 1 «prsm»- * --. » , - •• irt n sisr •; 3 "W* outside of Linton, did not open of difference between Jamef T. Koach. township trustee, and a teachers" union. "*!9 wwr 'aU'WOKI j SWIFT

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy