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'MoNpay morxinc -- \THE TC T an i t* Cpe Argus - no. Established 1818 _C \lflflllfllfl A CEATORY A REAP NEWSPAPER _ e enne ' ALBANY, N. Y., MARCHE 22, 1090, - LL ___ 2100022 ____ Published Dally and Sunday, by The .) Argus Co, Offices, 410412 Broadway, ' Albany, N. ¥. , President, 95 Stato © Chartes : J, Tobin, tel Vice President cath 'John H. Grin, roadway, . 6. Richard A., Douglas, \Editor. - OFFICIAL PAPER CITY OF ALBANY iTfiqusiocxncmm-ess' is exclusively en- Med- to: tha use: for publication: of all news; dispatches' credited to It or »not - othérwlso credited. in this newspaper, and Hélocal rows: published herein. ,. i Moil\ rages pald in advance. .. , LY-§.1$ Ona Month: :$200 Three “gain. £55 Sx Afonths. $6.00 Ond Year. SUNDAY-£.49 One Month, . $88 'Three © Months, $145 Six Months, $50 One Year, DAILY and a Years ' ___ _ L222 ___ crass MATTRRAT THE POST so normies ar v. TELE P13 05915! | ? NG ALL DE . Pc MA1G +The increase of 18 percent in the popu- lation f Albany between 1910 and 1920 - “Inc; {bk}. this cit; is gding ahoad. [It 5s than twice the growth for the mfiécdiné 10 years. In another dcqude, there is every® indication that the per- fceizif‘ngc. M11 be correspondingly gggntur. Afbnnyflmé unique advantages, which [ “(hiqfl liiing fre good; and \th t of living here, while abnormally 'is Toss than in other cities of, its ith the Aiprovement the housing situation which may be expreted withfni a, few years, than.“ js every reason 10 believe many hundreds of persons will . be attracted here. > Dore C ( Tames J. Nolan, the community is * indebted for the zeal and efficiency with y‘:hii:h\‘thc1 census . was supervised. . It was due to his cforts and to the-excel- ficsfi cooperation he received . from the éonsits enumerators that so few persons were missed and that the envoliment was A0 years. .And on the bsti‘eng'th of that figfire,1.cmutgr»‘prosperjty will come to ~The tumor that Mildred, Harris Chap- m, ~Avife' of \Charlie\ Chaplin, | world us' comedian, is about to file “suit iveree from her husband is followed .by {grumoi‘ that Charlie intends. to foxfifilfhehby bringing sult himself. Op '4h6° principle 'that where there's smoke ~~ there must be fire, it is pretty safe to uéfsumc that all is not harmony in the Chaplin family. , * . Following éotclosely on the shock of Mary Pickford's divorce, the world of fli devotees is pretty well shaken up, \/> and many ate asking if the profession © will ba developed. . It isin clear city, in, ip complete. . The figure announced on | , Saturday night will stand for the next |- cinployes at 760,000. In the District of Columbia\ there were 37,008 in. 1917, just before we entered the war, Neces sarily the munber was increased duting the war, reaching 111,457 in 1018, but by this time it should be reduced to pre- way strength, In July, 1019, it was 102, 120, and is about the same now, At least half of these are employed principally in drawing their Snlarles,<and if thore is no fore wcvcgtcrcd the yor, there are nearly three times as n’mny federal cmployés in the District of Columbia, eatitig up the taxpayers' money as there should be. Fedcral ehmloyes thraughnuf the coun- try haye: been allowed 'by \Congress to hang on to their jobs just as they have been in' Washington, and the natural de- duction- is that Congress has permitted this for. po'ligicnl reasons. Election: is not far off and the votes of federal para- sites and those of their friends are taken into consideration. It is a conservative estimate that the number of government employes could be reduced one-half with- out 'in the'Teast impairing the service. This would«turn back toffields of produc- tion more than 350,000 persons, while at *| the same time relieving the country of an enormous unnecessary financial burden. + Members of Congress for several mionth$ past have been sfibuting about the need of economy.: The bill to pro- vide for unjversal military training has been sidetracked on this pretense.. Yet these same Congressional economists, while putting up a front for the purpose of gaining votes in (be coming preéiden- tial 'and | Congressional elections, have taken no step to reduce the force of fed- eral employes to a pre-war busis. As if this were not bad enough, the joint Cofigrcssional commission . on re- classification of salaties has 'submitted a bill to make the working day of federal employes seven hours, to give each an annual vacation of $0 days, to pay night rate, to pay double for work on, holidays and to allow time and a half for work on Sulmlsy. , & « e .If the whole system is not shorHly put back to @ pre-war basis Congress will hear from the tn'xpuyer‘s. . C-- ___ NEED OF CONVENTION HALL. Many: conventions | will be' held . in Albany. during the . coming spring and summer, bringing: thousandszot men and whmgn to. this city» who will no-doubt be who' will also be impressed by the fact that we have no suitnb'lar convention hall. Were that deficiency remedied, it is a foregone conclqsion that the . number of conventions held afimually in 'this city would! be at least trebled. It is worth building a cammoilious hall that could 'be used for convention purposes to draw so many outsiders to Albany, and agitation for one should continue until it brings the desived result. - While i6 would not pay to erect a large building solely as:a convention hall, the way. has been pointed out time and again workers-.20 percent more than.the day |° [stitutes for leather are being used, there- a. Tle Sketches fro of < education. clamoring \fop\ solution at: the hands of mien able. to face all the facts and retain the proper proportion of thero is. the' guararitée 'of efficient admin- istration. Albany would be proud to see one of its best representatives sitting at thie-board of regents and its citizens can- lection could. be ' happler than''that of. Judge Tragey. **/ v Glogs '* LABELLING SHOES. . 'The argument made by the shoe manu-] facturers who came to Albany to pro- test ogainst the Canfield bill requiring the labelling of all. shoes with their per- centage of leather is not altogether cqnf vincing. (In effect, they say the public bas not awakened to the fact that stb» fore there is no né’cd‘ut opening .the con- sumers' eyes, ' It may be trus that, some shoes made iumon .\ the different Interests, involved, .. thei od 'of All: Saints' «Parish. 7 Desh Albert C. Larned, of the Catho- dral -of All Saints, was in charge of a meeting. of the mem of the parish yes terday morning following the early mer- vice and breakfast to discuss the Nation Wide Campaign that is taking place in the Episcopal churches.. bit Dean Larned explained in detail the object of the work and said that a sys- tematic suryey. of the parish will be made mest Sunday afternoon from 1 to 6 o'clock and.in this manner every member of the parish'will be recorded as to the miod I THI cratic. Voters Will 'Be .~ Perfected Soon. ! th‘mocl-étiz/(wmen of the First) Seo- ond Third and Fourth wards will meet tonight at headquarters, 110 North Pearl street, to select committee women to reprostnt their distficts. . This will mark the- first stop 'in :the organization of the Democratic women of the county on an equal plane 'with the men. | Tomorrow night women of the Fifth, Sixth, Seventh abd Eighth wards will meet, ho meet- Ings will continue until all the wards are organized, four wards coming together cach night. > * » Mrs, E. V. Colbert, leader of the wom- .] mont, ' the wast surplus of food. andclothing for -| writers, '.| are stored in warehouses all over' the }. '| dispose of these machines, is that it still hopes to induce Congress toxggthorize a | Tok [Daily Editori ow Trey (Title Repistcred and Applied For at the United. Staféa Patent Office,) ; The Secret Treaties. - In .the Shantung caso. Mr. Wilson recognizes the validity bf a secret treaty. | $ In the Flume case ho asserts«that-lie is standing out.ogaiest the validity of an- and General Manager, 412 Broadway ;' ! , B C I . I ~Michiel .V. Dolgo, 412 Br0@0-|anore work how'tlan thore was just be- other secret treaty, as-a mintter' of prin- borrowers upon theivspromise to 'veturn tics TW C+ *\. iv mreast + \ ciple. But Great Britain, France and the same within it- stated: time, or suffer way; A. Sweenoy, Treasurer, it o 28 a a the penalty of it light fine, In order to Italy ave aware that the American argu- mont as to secret treaties was definitely abandoned when Japan was allowed to succeed to German rights in: Shantung, It would be better for all concerned if it were admitted 'that Italy Iequired concrete rights under the treaty of Lon- don, and thrt these. rights have to be taken into account in the Adriatic settle- Whe disputo over Fiume has been aggravated by poor diplomgey.. 'Nothing of vast. importance is at Stake in the haggling over Italian-Jugoslay claims, which should long ago have been com- promised, but «which have becn Sallowed to disrupt allied. “nity and to delay, the ence which Enropo_ so\ much needs.- New York Tribune: (Rep.): *Typewriters for a Big Army. Although the war ~dopartment , was driven by Congress. to.sell to consumers the army which remained .from the war, if still «clings, tenaciously | to. 1ts type- Tt bought 200,000 of t} has sold only 20,000, The‘o‘zh'eygxt'l‘iagg country, .at groat expense: for warchouse space; care 'and ingurance: . A committee of the found. 2,500 «of then stored in one building in Washington, ' 'The only explanation which Represen- tative Wood, of Indiana, could find for the reluctance of the war department to large stunding army of 575,000 officers aud mon, and tvants to have typewriters ready for them., One would think that typewriters were to. be one of the chief Weapons for the army of the future; for there would be one ggr cach three and a |demand-f half men.. . - Here is iMlustrated the fallacy of those men who opposeuniversal military train- ing on the plea of economy. .. The ouly alternative, if the country is to be well defended, is a much larger regular army | than would suffice if all civilians of mili- | BOMd tary 'age were trained: ready . for an emergency. . A large regular army re- quires a large givil staff constantly em- ployed,. corresponding to that huge num- ber of typewriter, 'The smaller army of $16,100 officers aiid men proposed by 'the House committes would need .only to- be tcuiporarily expanded to- cate for the mational guard 'of a maximum strength of, 348,000 men. and for young men dur- ing their ennual periods of . training. Under the the wok 'of .the, department ' couldbe: done by far fewer |- men, with ccchsional temporary increases, than with a largo regular army and no civilian - training.-Portland | Oregonian Qua. Rep.). : - - ,_* ¢ Demobitizing the Payroll | (~ /. Washington / at last reports progress toward the demobilization: of the army of governinent employes hingldg .on 'since <the war, -The high record in the capital was 117,000 compared with 87,000 be- fore the war, Itis now down to 102,000 Fof smoke and of the labor of handling the city. '., i f R ~- a ae y . Fhe , bail - & © \ \ \ . : => , soc lal: , . ; and as a result of the slashing of appro- j J oviES-ANS MarmiMoxy, Chttmed with its many attractions, 'but not help feeling that: no: State-wide se- Will Make -Systematic Survey| Organization . of. NeW Demo-] priations by Congress 40,000\ more swill whioh corcin Far white tac br us (oviEs, ) -. Maben <2 top |i © * ~ - be out of the government service by July ihouldprove practicnumhfiugltu nvend\ 1.. Even.then the payroll at Washington will be/neatly twice the number: before the war, but some of these are held 'by closing up 'war work and others have been added by new peace-time creations. The country is to be congratulated on the fact that Congress has reached the point of not only: refusing 'to inn-cuss the number of jobs, -but actually to make n good\ beginning: toward bringing. tho' federal service back to somethig near 'its pre-war status, With 'the emergencies arising out of tie wat ended, there is no good reason why there should not be an approximate return to the normal gov- ernment expenses before 1016, When it is figured that'the government bill on the contrary is, three and a half times what it was in 1016; excluding the sinking fund and ioterest on our war debt, there seems to be room for a grent deal more 'eamp libraries, and theso|to bo: issued to mimber of books to he tuken eate .of would never be large-cach officq to have a bookshelf of say 100 voltimes, provided y the- government or by the peoples of the whole couittry, as in (the case of the make the little library \circtilating\. in a very real senso, one:ifth of the total number of 'books would be forwarded every fortnight. by pareet post:to the next office, the wending office in. return receiv- ng twonty: books from another office; in case diiplcates arereceived they would Immediately be sont. on! by pareet:.post , i‘ ( from: offico to office 'until -they fond. a place, 'The | shelf of a hundred ' books would thus: be: constautly. changing and at the end, of. ten weeks mong» of the books included in the original list would still be on baud, unless for: some special reasorl longer: retention dn & few | in- stances might be desired. hap The simplicity of 'the | proposition strongly recommends it, _ There is. no-vis= ible reason why, once properly: started, Jb > should. not operate easily.'and 'bring to many: communities, ~ especially in thinly populated and mountainous parts of: the West, My: great boon of an .qetual .ciren> lating: library.-Salt Lake Desert Xe)“ - Japanese Throne Tottering. Another: autoctacy. is tottering to m fall, 'The government of imperial Tapan has.saved itself from retirement by an imperial decree dissolving the dict, which vas just about to: pass a vote of lsck of confidence, The :emperot, dissolved\ the diet: before. it. could take the. vote, .and rioting and bloody disorder followed .in. and about the government buildings in Tokio. ; Tubin 9 j The issue is universal suffrage. The | > Japanese. women do not yet\ demand the vote but the monedo, At present only ~ a/ small clash of rithnobles cand mor- phant kings can vote. 'Where. is popular the' extension of 'the: aut frage to all theemen of the empire, \The © Rovernment is willing to compromise \by giving the voté to all but Inborers and. small proprietors, The people .will not - accept the compromise., £000 uns » Tng premier andthe emperor, took a' itep in dissolving 'the diet. . But an- , \ tocrats never hesitate.to take bold steps. Switzerland: .or Holland - should\ make ready to receive . nuather imperial .refa- gee.-Wichita «Eagle \(Indy |- = 'ol C Belginn Railway Rates: Up 100%Pereent. (~ Whe new Belgian railwnfi law, February 1, increases, 'passenger - und freight tarifis 100 -peroent over pre-war tariffs, . This Jnw' superseded. a~previous Jaw which increased the rates 40 percont dating from January 1, 1010. , s -/ / > ge wo, - ror ull i a [. Coal Wasik 504 \** The* proposal 'of. Interstate\ Commerge, Commissioner Robert W, Woolley, in the Agnnlgg of\ the American. Academy 'of, Political and: Social Science, that. raw bituminous .corl be coked,, and the. by- products 'saved and 'put, to use is 'of de- cided interest in view of the. demonstriited failure of 'anti-smoke devices and legisin® tion greatly to reduce the smoke evil in + > 'the.soft con! cities of America. Abolition the use of,soft coal as it comes from the, ~ mines a mew and brighton.asp - would develop In ,all ofl thd towns now using such Ioble increase of prop result. H Commissioner Woll 'an. inquiry into fuelec . the problems of »traigpgrtafton \\d the war, quoteg the huthork of gybullatin upon the energy resouréés/oftth ited States prepared for the SMiFh stitute as saying. theo \ultimate host! ties of 'the process he- redommbnds A beyond the grasp . of thefd ‘ Among these posslbiHit@§ are: ° M First.-Increase of available \coal. sup- ply from 40 to 50 percent through' the use of low grade ores now regarded ng of il Digest) | i atible with) for combining «other uses with this, so R part he will take in the religious, soclal|en in thescounty, will preside. The se-| retrenchment and reform. ~Tho- billion negligible valuc, ,, - . of “f“??? “For is dncomp hat the b {1:1 would never le £de of \WWW are better than She“ made Taq financial work of the pavish, This lection Pdfl‘“ committee women will be dollar reduction in expendimrekkpromised‘ Second. -All col used! hy railroads, and , wedded bliss. 'As Mrs. Chaplin accuses! that the bui \ing le Ameri *| of the cheapest leather, but the fact re- gzrvpbl‘l is Bltml‘llflr‘tfi flig 11213) tfl‘ftc'ufn'flfiine‘s $5335?! 21. Ufigng-snaéiintmfigodfi by Chairnian Mondell is not too.much to save anthracite which is coked by nature, | w Charlie of having dual-till her; ”fit-nil:- Evnfymccl: mush“: at ct“ Swizz: 11:1 mainsfi that the former ern {r- nglmu; off “1:55:th u el nnt‘ioulpnind Dwm gym“; {33251 flitégfimén meg?“ cfimnflt— ash—Pit‘taibllrg‘qumtch {Ind.). 1 Sigmfisffi‘flx “205k tel; $21: cafe aw; ”be\: play! 4 ot originate} Legion posts ask why the - i n : v. cted. thn K en and com> « *[\ - p h s, , the désite to separate did not origin gion p on the buyer for high grade leather shoes ate Hester Sunday, It.is expected nitisemen 'a Thome plenure. hito How Government Peters Out. Third.-Vist culin banks, -long regard- inggfl * with her. Indeed, it io difficult to see how any woman could break away from .. Charle if he wanted to hold her, for it = is certainly in his power to keep her L aiused. It is true that some women might object to Charlie's feet as they appear in the poster pictures, but it is well known they are only his stage feet and thot in private life bis pedal ex- tromities are normal- pate in the campaign Sundar tation on the county committee, frervice. Now the Senate naval sub- 'It Charlie proves that Mildred tired postion? . * * The law requires that olcomargarine The countyorganization is golng even a committes. gives us a dreary repetition of Jnoeix'jy twice our total production for e-- and, all substitutes for butter be plainly PLAN REHABIL'TAT'ON step. further than what the women ex-} it in its findings on the war medal con- |- Sizth -The total gas supply would bo , of the - matrimonial alliance first, .a woman with no sense of humor has been discovered, and that alone ought to be good grounds for divorce It will be just as inexplicable to the kiddies who » N- - tas $ A ith hy of greatest com-] . The same reason holds good: for label 19, in Reynolds K., Townsend, chair- ment at H lien there is des 4 save up their candy money in order {o Citizens a name wort! h i resentatives and the Captain 3 an at a time when there is des- worth $367,200,000 we-shonld become the see Charlie Chaplin in the movies that |mendation-JudgeJamés®F. Tracey. Itis} ling shoes. -~ , a. 22:31 teats of Switzerland, “f,\ffi‘d and man of the city committee, will be pres- perate gang f“ 0:31:55, xx? sigmngolg “aging “sad“: and chemical producers a t F j win w the Séindinavian countries wit e view o e o e world., . © anybody could want to Teate him as it onlymstflznuhe members of Lh'atbodsbe Naturally Colonel Gillett was at first| of. participation by there states in a . iglfielnd gmfgigogee’sgin ‘Ihs 211m;- ighth.-The 18,280,000,000 pounds of was to the youthfol adorers of Mary |Sclected with an ere to territorial yather indignant over Anti-Saloon Ander-| scheme of etedits under discussion, thel BISHOP G|BBONS AT tion. It is preventiog the r'afwoflm and illn'monilf— “mica—I‘m\! ligand: pg; ton. ol con p u annually wou so Pickford that any man could find it in his heart to desert her. - Up to the present the only reply Charlie bas made to questions as to his pointed by Mayor Watt to suggest the form Albany's memorial to its World war heroes should take has not made a report. Many of the leading citizens hgvc urged that if a memorial building is decided on, the auditorium could be made: large enough'to serve as a convention hall and at other times caulfi be used for concerts, meetings and public functions. 'Why not come to some decision at once on this sug- FOR REGENT: JUDGE TRACEY. Now that 'there is a vacant chair at the the Board- of +Regents soon to be filled there comes to the mind of our sentation. - The Capitol district would be well recognized and the board well companioned by this citizen of whom Al bany has every reason to be proud. Long if they are not labeled. A label defining the material in. the shoes would protect the consumers from deception, ‘Without this Inbel it is quite possible for a manu- facturer to sell to retailers ns all-leather shoes articles made largely of substi- tutes without the retailer's discovering the fraud. The innocent retailer then cheuts the buseflwithout fining aware of it. ' labeled J'sixcb, not because they are un> wholesome, for they are not, but to pre- vent their bein‘g palmed off on consumers for genuine butter at butter prices. son's attack on him;bu€ after a little ro- flection he must adimit that it is quite an honor for any man fo be attacked by An- derson. The. disgrace Hes: in being praised by bim. s ‘ $6,000 will be realized by the canvassers in the parish of All Saints' Cathedral Sunday afternoon. . , Announcement was made of a final meeting of the men of the parish who are to take part in the canvass Sunday for Friday night at 8 o'clock. Frederick B. Wadhams was in charge of a meeting that took place Jast night in St. Peter's guild house to discuss plans and appoint canvassers for the part that St, Peter's will take in the Nation (Vide Campaigo. Captain Hugh MeMIl- Tign is in charge of the men of the Church of the Holy Innocents that will particl- *_ OF CENTRAL POWERS \Parm‘lfimh 2L;Ilipogtnnt negotia- tions are going on at present and bave been in progréss for some time between object of which is to'secure the financial and economic rehabilitation of Austria and other central European states, it was Inomned todiy, . i The neutral governments are declared to be keenly alive to the fact that the col- lapse of these coontrics would necessarity attending the meeting and hearing about the organization, and of taking, part in the rocials which follow. \O . The- committee women: will have évery privilege given tile mon lenders, except that they wil Ihandle the affairs of the enrolled women voters exclusively. This is expected to give the women n better understanding of the organization and firmly cement a good feeling between the, voters and the leader, Albany county will be the first so or- ganized in the State and it is expected the example will be followed by other communities: In giving the women equal pected under suftrage.. They will have their own representatives and conduct their political affairs according to their own lights, a Edwi ning. chairman of the ex- fixlzoggfinee: ; Edward J. O'Connell, chairman_of the county committes, and INFANTS' HOME MEE’ETING Bishop Gibbons will preside at the meeting at 3 o'clock this afténoon in the auditoriara of the Infants Home on - The distemper that is doingithis coun- try nore harm than all its other affic- tions put together is besotted partisan- ship. Except in public life, men.consider and usially agree upon matters of the utmost importance without giving a thought to political associations. In Gon- gress n committee made up of three Re- publicanh and two Democrats may. be depended upon to dividt three to two on the simplest proposition, We had a painful example of this the other day In the reports on \the aviation troversy. We shall have the same thing, |, no doubt, from the sepres of tions that have , been in progress for months past, Where pattyism is upper- tost facts areas hopelessly in disputcas conclusions. This is the disease' that is paralyzing reduction of expenditure and taxation.. It is exposing our industry and commerce to serious perils. On the question of what is black and what is white, our legislators vote three to two. with the expectation that the issue will finally be settled at he presidential election; © ed«as waste» may be mixed. with high volatile coals of 'the authracite region and coked at banks or mines near industrial centers of the North and East' ~ Fourth-By coking all bituminous coal, worth$2,142,000,000 at the mines, by figures of 1018 production, there would produced $2,022,600,400-_ worth of coke, *$3,213,000,000 worth 'of by-prod- ucts, a saving of natural resources wasted . by present (methods amounting to $3.088,487.485. ' Fiftb.-The- annual gasoline: supply would be increased 48,624,110 barrels, orf increased 3.672,000,000,000 cubic. feet, worth $367,200,000, which could be piped for consumption. ._ . a _ Seventh.-Through recovery _of light oils and twelve gallons of tar per ton 'of coal: . 7344,000,000 gillong annually, augment our fertilizer supply. as to in- crease vastly our agricaltural production. - Ninth~~Production of toluo! would be greatly: increased. » ~ Tenth-There would be attributable ° to abolition of coal smoke increase of I & ® s20 Sgn or fe i kod formerly ton , e 7 {. intentions fs: (\Well such is life in|Known for bis work in law, r . have effects which could mot possibly bel Main avenue, when plans will. be made |. No prest nation can er or progress 4 ama to i \ 'his, however, m filling the post in the Supreme court of A 6151).th from Amemn‘gen. confined to their own frontiers or- fin- toflvpxhine the junior and senior ansil- wunder such a agsteumSomewhgg ang productive power estimated by the Chi- i the great West % , may be Lol _ Dutch police now follow the ex-kaiser of a, «->. faies of the howe. * [somehow men must be found who will be| C250 Association of Cominerce\ to be f as fraught with bidden meaning as the|the Philippines, at present a member ji, watts Enoogh to fuake any stlf & \ At least ordinarily intelligent and at least $1,000.000.000 annually. Every town famous telegram from Mr. Pickwick the New York State college boatd, Judge} respecting Datchizan resign from the r ___ commonly self-reliant, Representativel and city would be clean mggkmt it? ins - F e h Tra has always and everywhere dis-] force, i government which is so fixed and hard-| power would in ; 1 which helped win Mrz. Banlell her cey has * eo o ao foree. E NE D AYS a ened in partisanship as to be incapable of crease per capita productivity. mos H Ereath of promite sait: \Home tonight; [blazed those qualities of vision and im- o cl n ¢ I dmshmfl laughing even of Fm onl Twelfth-Our n’gfioglllfi wealth 1:01:51, { f isht; h . . . « . L X -. oa : any subject. is no soverninen -= mented tha e cost of the {| fintton chops with tomato sauce for|DéetSonality of Jndgtnent co rare Set irus surges and magistrates of Spain ~- FROM FILES OF THE ARGUS Se york word (Dan). bait aar coon be absorbed. \- sipper\ nécéssary nowadays. With bim charac are threatening to strike because their . \ The Post Office Kibrat \t Thirféenth. -By transmission of power, M n e® e ter bas always counted for more than| salaties are too low. Probably it is as - «--- - A“ “tenet; p15; 351m)“ ”$- Ines: light and heat frotm the 'pit heads of , 8 IMPOSIHON ON TAXPAYERS, Maintaining almost an army of saper- fGuous emplojes at the expense of the ers of the country is a condition [things, mever wont to throw away his Tots Frade s fortone. who commented : ag- eviously and suggests a ible tripar Want Wilson to Fix Status of Dousi-] Neu York in 1518, move bo thel way ont for the cides and tombs buraing That =boold no longer be tolerated. and if success, and yet he has both in geserous measore. Able to see all sides of a case, with a sure instinct for the best of steps, he has, foo, that bonesty and sure- true in Spain as it is here, that cur Judges make less than our criminals, Think of the income of third-rate food profiteers, for instance. What Out Grandfathers Read 50 Years Ago. March 22, 1810. wks. Death of Drs Samuel Townsend, known throughout the United States as sarmaparills, cut of rannfacturer of the once mlebubts Tmfimd «fig-E’s; e which be went to pensive, for providing reading \matter for small communities where public libraries do not exist, was propored some years ago to the postmaster general by Mr. F. venience would be fncalculable. mines, fit n cost below any yet suggested, the saying of domestic labor and incon- Surely. this project eclipses in irides cttice any fuel conservation proposal Kev. Dr. Hickman, pastor of State Street Presbyterian <burch, sent to Florida for bis health, = . Death of John MeXlicken, of Albany, firm Lloyd & McMicten, Dituminons col which has not been found in patentstoling devices and smokeabate- ment ordinances. If all the supke of factories should be eliminated the soot from domestic chimneys would stil, make boys Along Rthine, sars a headline No i general response to the eall for books for i the woldiers doring the war. and by the trifling that there are civilian m?! . ‘ m % j the country where books are F t to You Might Have Read This Yourself 30 Years Ago. {obtain and get are verhips more badly mess of vision that does not mistake the necessity. The doishboys are perfectly shadow for the substance. 'These 'are! capable of fixing their own status gifts that tell mack for the good of the} \ Congress, which bas permitted this sor- plgs to survive after the necessity for it \ bas passed, does not Immediately take 1 By the time it stops snowing in Albany I 3&prwas]fixtures:whammt'mwulflxvfignxmfifitolbeserr-éawmbegmhsngewmfifinflz xm'axm, R Doll. 20d than by the mmmmthemltmldfieSWfr-m J seeded, f will be eld entountable at the (Tee of the State. And when sach ener-igerlen-or pat in the coal. mgfigfizogmwgenewm as president of I way. wid welltede persss stil 1 tring élection cies ure applied, not to questions of port-! fers so¥iers Broostt Loie Erilea] _,. , Eo O, Edvard N. MeRinwer and Con. Jobe G. Farnsworth, ; 3 ca I sliec ton daga g i & Fe 3 : Americas soldiers brooslt home vp ao the T fors of the Metropolitan Gas Light $ Brice hard cement incl 12 = Congress: Wool, of esti (tice or of rellglon, but as In the ofice! from Ir nations. As Fenstlens im Tore zs) pop Oal of the of Coleaion - = ® ° nak because the cost 55. feck Tour * wxtes the total of povernment \of The Sfite repeits. to those they were in war. . i mmawmmmmammfimvfim te dats w ‘flt a i1