{ title: 'The Cohoes Republican. (Cohoes, N.Y.) 1892-1920, September 15, 1919, Page 4, Image 4', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84031577/1919-09-15/ed-1/seq-4/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84031577/1919-09-15/ed-1/seq-4.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84031577/1919-09-15/ed-1/seq-4/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84031577/1919-09-15/ed-1/seq-4/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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paved“) on ou «at hr & mo m wmmuamwmrw; mkmucooouh», f \ 1 (29 C ‘Mmotcmmtwmomn i Them'ocflummm to + toon Fy ithe month -ef ' reported 33; 3.8.Dorioeodoumnym the |.. inlea ”WWW 'of | birtha, azwmmw \|lowest bidders tor the parkig of Mo- |- f ligte eh; confent does: >t |. ingward Surith was clegped mm“lhwkmwmobiddwmoito og |~ , tvg “2\ t Japan: mfiéfimdficWIMQW [book of $85,.004TB. -; So oj 'c ,. 9}. co 'a' \ Com “magnum ~ Fue al s imfi\ MM justich ~ in the ghantung mm . ...' ~, -| thouawie MM. mefi'uflmeuqomref mail-3mm “a \magie sup 'street, Coboon, and David David. of | Shaun un Saranac Lake mm “80m W’Nfl-HVKV m Afio. | “Oh. ”Q!“ not Tecl fink mm” Bou: | quite desperate,\ Amberson laughed. Buti & could not:be 'sot-. Lak: x 302113: mange-a mug“: ff“??? The mum ot with» T. Cook |: Phe Mu m \tor Hp annual“ 23: nnot Juneau? chem-fullness. y 'an seomtary of Witt“- C: 'Oohoce ~Whestmen :| \We'll survive, Georgle-you will, en- -as. the macaw: declares. at : on A. wan: Wfimm of finect. road mot the - | pecially. For my part I'm a little too |- mundanefim'macm Whitman!!! dot Mfim I“ his materialistic and van-Am Nd that ms “tendon would Met. men.) had been downtown. '4D, &. old-ed - carriage. * He. had not remind the | gxeat change, ~~. \The streeta were thunderous. a km toquitmdhtmimed one # a Pmident. He will return. to. privm t a Fi Mix!!! ‘M’MUW of - amusements,, wee twee. Thflufiflmw'df Mr.. 1mm: c Ae ; [trom the fiu‘bimet at any time would | ¥ |afcite no unwise (invite flmciflil’ des | stat . : [Mite & mmmetsamy disappointed man ®,. beeauee ~f the.manper in -which he life November 1. _ | ©); . who retirement. of r. Redifield in not only interesting 'in iteeat but it ism s, | fomatic,'of conditions if the 'Cablnet mmmmmsemwor Com- Wee. mines are not going happily in hamlet Circles these days. Secreta~. xy of State Lepnsing hay come home was whofiimtfi’ut the pbace confer- ©, t The foot that Poetmutor Ganeral. But-1mm is under continual fire and \} a. Jit ~ a Mtiimeut, \what \assurance does this'\give that .Ghina's claims will meek with mare success later? Jt it was- uedeegeey 46 effect com- | promise after: demotomhe to formu-. ifte C3 imam)!“ at- all. what is the violet: oft:a-tnture rgregment On prim cipieg of pure-justice based ont | President /Wileon . .sdys | that | lemme \~wH}H\ Ito Italy, enemy fit! not think thus, nop am she, 10n, wiring! a view awesome than .a 'eoncert : of . views do ndt'3 grovall:\ They are far | less iikiiy ”to at the war wilick pass- ek -and notions recover thelr pro-war duke Plume unitegessiry' Moreover, the dbojs- | | wE :@ personal victory for | aimed», rests rather on his | . What willbe the: when - American | .. mmmmudomu mryotmm'th'i‘ronwb tion. , ~ t, : Miumeonordt mum idyaMJmorm/I’uoemmfl Van Kleeck of Waterford void nairlad. . atMmcudybaflRim ”are Cooper;, ti} gtpastor of the Begum; (1mm oa e [3 0 - - 1. TWENTY YEA!“ AGO. Tie mnpioyea at Pam's grove. “it“ of \the - Giobe Rotating coropany held their anuuat' oinmbake operations after being closed for Bey~ .] | mere . announced: A. §. he Chacles | Raynolde, E. R. \Va; Hayes | Wampum M. Tunmar William Law, James Stewart, MM I., Can ton, Andrew Scotland, Orin H. Mun- . (10, M. .B. ¥iobey, Deca'ge Gunther, Ste- | plum H View George English, Har- | xy rman, Homes Travel: M Wonk | Dialog; Lon ® Miss Lillian Kennedy and Sher stock. ioompaiiiy a week's engagement , lat the Cohoos City Theatre when they | tweet/ed \She Couldn't Manry Three,\\ The 'Atlantic Knitting mill resumed em! months Tariff needs revision. Ail the Cem- l' adian monufaoturer can claim is an [ A Bat OI Poem | old and too accustomed tg. fall back on somebody else for supplies to start -n. big: fight. with lifez Ill be content with just surviving, and T can do it on ah eighteen-hundreddoliam-year con- auit’hip. An ex-congresaman can ai- ways be pretty aure of getting auch job, and I hear Wash by“, . ton. the mntter'st about settled. : §0 mock for me! But you-6f course you’wg had -a poor training for making \your own way, but you're only a boy | after «ll, and the stuff of thé old stock Is in gousIt'll come- out and do -some thing. Fil never forgive mysclf- about that deed; it would have given you ' something substantial to start with. Stil}, you have a Hittle tiny bit, and you'lt have, a Hitle tiny salary, too; abd of courke your Aurit Fanny's here, | and she's 'got something you can fall. back on If you get too pinched, until I their corners;.he saw | Nenpolitan oyet, Roman eyes, Tugonn - oyes, eyes of Mm‘bmly, of Savoy, can look in the Polish Jews, Ail energy heaved. under the. univeragl | ~- . coating: of- dinginess. George walked s through the begrimed «crowds of K§+- } rrlog strangers and saw no face: thiit | | he remembered, Great numbers of faces 'were even of a kind he did -not a | remember ever to have . seen; they - were partly like the old type that his. boyhood knew; and partly Like \types he knew abroad, He saw Gear- man eyes with American wrinkles at. Irish eyes and. Hungarian. oyes, Balkan-oyes,- navian seyos-all with A queer mm- wa- who i inv people: ngfki if\ ed by the smoke-soint. through hi they hurgigd, under the hea hung close ypon the new: or were no longer -G equal competitive condition - wine manufacturers (n other countries. JPL wages are higher in Cangda. than \HALL ' . elsewhere he has a right to consider- :. 'Boston, the (Huts of the. Universe,\ ation. So he hifg 4 raw materiais Motor chanted in tuna or verse. are more costly and transportation |Home of Atlantic chargesgreater. But if under equal 'And all things pedantic. competitive conditions < he - produces Home of high booked old pews, articles of good quality, employs ta- |Of Stiffnecked, conventional views, bor at good wages, and gives his ox- Home quite fetinhes-atock, tot | cess profit to the freasury, it is in Cyliture and god, Plymointh, Rock, 'the national intetm that he shmflfla “that do you think of your ‘Vatclm‘ not be- destroyed by destmictive com-g Trained to and to catch men, | | facturers of the United stem are ro pee \[To: h tow tr tro a, Protected against the world. . They keep t at n free from ait stim * ily 1 s & have a hundreg millions o: (anatomy; in“ fionfkiug' to Poa Sak ers. Our industries have seven ort tog on [Staying oedema eight millions 'of customers. Ameri- wi @ a can farmers Protect American in- tle th ark thievesu' powers and. ir bittons end’indenen.‘ . fexige, (that itely\ in cthé way -of aome of the 3mwxdmt‘e ~aptimism' stands dimple toot Hat puse. : justice . grate it .arhitor| ht the peace confefihéexond that titer; ds'no guarantee If. the light of | History to mi Ska sure. that it will he{ hereetter in QQQ tone of the league. momenta I lN THE “WOW OF lFA'NEle and neatly all , seem \] can begin to send you a dribble now , something tmpendinuwthougfi land th Gem-gain \little tiny bit' was ais | there a woman with bundles would be | hundred which 'had come to laughing to a convulsion submit“ some, him from .the sale of his mother's fur | /.; un 4.00 5 f niturne 3: ind {he “littlgek flnymligflrllrt'; oma war eight dollurs m week which old | . | Prank : 3:15:9an was to pay hilt for “91°54; of the atrests=aud 'not . ‘ services as m clerk and student-at | a girl, 'or a frec-and e Jaw. George had accepted haughtily, | T9U0Z matron, found time to thrd n‘ ‘ phd. “mew removed a burden from | @Ncouraging look to George, . bis. unclean mind, ~ He took no note of these, an Athberson himself, however; had not | DK the “WM “dammit even a \thy bit;\ though he got his | ' C4 mime aximintment, aud to take him | pala to bis \post he found -At necessary to |\ F 4: ‘ A rg | old-fashioned houses, {flame 'Intter but} borrow two hundred of his nephew been the homes of his boyhood“ Wye“ :‘ me“ ; “I Lat hui dollars £ , megmates. old friends of his- grnndtnther | aig, - \ he sgid. \But I'd bet- , £23333: “$3331.“ salary | hid lived herein this aiicy he nid ed. Of course Eugene would do. any. | fOUSbt with two 'at the same ' the} oumerotu mon 'who have the | - Pxfeoimis ar wre. working . ito: hg him is well understood, * | Thenmhqi'eis Secretary of 'the Inte- | [nior Lane. For many months it has | ___ in that Myr. | <> | Janie wie no longer trigh in the Witte | 9s lfimfafih‘ 1648 Well known that | 2 WWW? gdvice . was at -one time | mueitflm by the President now| - - |wwhat he: dike to recommend: is general» |- / sly politely (11556333de rove as. C Atmw MW Palmer is another | sae : Cabinet who is not in a felici- . toua situation. He has been thrust in- | in the Hmiei‘ifiht inconnection with the | bad Baring” at It Again. ~ Postmaster General Burleson was plainly worried when Wilgon . came 1 home. He was {earful that\ with ov- . erybody \elsa ° against him, > Willhon: might manifést lack of confidence in ; him. - My. Wilson shoved no interest | . whatever in the demands of Dems» thi Ltionmtzittmtoaflumtomkemahow» reduct i fieldiifius mim- someeimetheat. i. over |a . nemocmtiefi ¢ ite of thie fact float: prime: nut-leech. the . momma 31m says. H s [\Mr. Witson's fdsity to those who ans | ar mum to mmmviontemoe mpaspad. | ditto mveflr\ Tet's see \Were were ~ ,;amn¢erwu\msmviwwfi“ flight or corta . We be awning 'but envigble, ' {Redfield it id no secret in Washington . {cuse 6f Mr. madame going will be |to contain mo reférence to the rex rea- {wa the Cangatan- Parlfaiment refuses to . ; flow it whole: Itis stat that the Lib» | \{f erals wil! hot outer <th. eisqteatureeof ne (® mewm documénts but that sub- *I it eeeme that | Canadialis are not en» * amoged of the provisions of Article X. , linden which they might be forced to {which they have no vital interest At | \ [feast some Of them are «moaned 'to4, i \\ ask pointed questions about : Article K, - PT\ |Yust 45 ave many . Ameriéanys | and are \not willing to be compelled to assume | » 9&3) * & . f , 507 1 i} 'high dost of living and the Admnistra- a prices to the consumer, If priog; onetime to go up' and Mr, Palmer gays down 4t «6es. not noed a . ° ammonium that his lot 113mm: \to fhe Bubject of ML. 'Inlabout to go.-Mr.- Red» | dilemma desireevto Ey into business and | that\ thero viii be the usuak exchange lof defied-s betwaen himself and the Pre- sldent which will be carefully devised son for My, Redfield’e resignation. memme OPPOSED Aceoiflim to dispatched from Otta« 'take the view that it should 'be kept in the dark about the peace treaty and covenant for the League of nutions or that if is imminent «pea it to swal- v w, emenflmmte will ba proptsed. | fiend hoops «overseas for the protection | ' {ot the bummer; of some nation- in | burdgiie Ad 46 willie}: they have n6 tine! Wins respect to Poin C Game Mamie! Mam Henry | imam\ \Am wit ube tiime vid - [palin melieve the public is | -cratle politicians for the removal: of his postmaster general. ° alumnae. which the unanimous oppo- eition of Washington and. “embody | else Had wedkened. Bure that he can. \do. nothing so bir that the. President wit chastise mm. he proceeds with way,' a Southorp Democrat, has ra- fuses to obey the civil service law; - If the department .of government with which he has most to do will not recognize the merit system Galloway | is sworn to administer, the com- misstoner decideq that he or Burle- 80n should go; and of course, - it couldn't be Buriegon. 'The Congress is interested in Mr. Burféson's latest adventure in. troup. io making. 'The House proposes an inveitigotion of the post office de- mnbment.. Congressional investiga- (lone are, goodness knows, numerous enough, but another would do no harm. - If a congress committee could keep xr, Buriesoo on the stand until Aabch 4, 1921, which should be easy with on the things there are to be inquired into, he would be unable to do any more. meddHng.-Syricuse I oat Standard. |_ m The uranium, -6f a Mere Man. - \The people of me world.\ said. Mr, Wilson at Minneapolis, \are tired GP etetymtixer king of experiment ox» cept the- kind we're going to try.\ \This glib dictum, agsuming not only ~a compléte knowledge ot even © the public expense 'but dizo the ac- ceptance by the «fluted States of a scrutiny in the Senate, comes from a: man who on Jiily4, 1914, made this quite nurman Admission: - \ \Tha world is becoming more com- plicated every day, my fellow citt- went; No man ought to be foolish; enough to think that he undemtondsfl it alt\ \The complexity of the some woritl' began notieeabry to: intrei@s. within 'a faw. days aftep Mr,, Wilion made this: seit-ineiueive admission, add It- in cortainly. muoh-fers aimple no%* . thin 4t was then. 'o recorcile #6. Wilkon's unparalleled wisdom of the I prexont week. with. his continuum: af f incomplete knowledge made i yoark ago it must be taken for grant- | | ed -that while the - Aftrlestop of | mur- 'Ava} \rapid rate Mr. t ; alon .of the worlfifu rush | ~R 4 speet comp rable only with the | itemmiy bodies. As . dun: The Tall a Notion? Question. : Nhe Parts i# not pecultirly an . mature question it is a national | alienated, . There, { ig no more reason } th | that & minnow“? mould be con- | Agnew? manmmmmm‘ is | ie. mun Democratic ® cam- } #idtéred\ by.. Grommets“ than a farm» | 61)-A workman ot K, merchant. : 1f the system whith we hars had in | metowmtmw~ \I 'Mr. Benetton has, regained the as- | his mischief making. 'c. y. Gallo- |* aligned as olyll service commissioner} because the postmaster general re- | those new; of the sphere which thei. §peaker 'his not' 'regently visited at | Canada fi-not flifi utimi interest | ~. «dustries momma! (P. Q) Star. WW. 2°\ ~ No More of Free-Trade, Where has the: Ema—Trader goyie and- what has stiiiofl his yoice? No. more does he disturb the econom‘c tranquility with hig outed-waning. and. the Washington. \ administration. The President in his message at the | convening of the present session of} TUongress even recognized. tho tact; that consideration must be given tO , thé\matter of foreign competition with American products and labor The federal Tariff commission bas recommended several 'increagos in the import duty schedule, nota‘biy on dyestuifs, chemicals and potash To all appearance that greatly de- aired hour in which no one who de- sires recognition ags & leader in the political and economic thought of the country will venture to challenge the idea that Protection is necessary to the national prosperity ig«mow pos- sible. Let such be the earnest nope. -QOkland (Calif.) Tribune. What Limited It? 'Wilson save lhe exorted ail the in- i fluence he was at liberty to exercise to modify the Shantung provision. What limited the amount of influence ho was at Hberty to exercise?-fiiven- Jinx Copper Journal, Hancock, Mich. - {At will o'er the city. [Indeed, it's a pity! Apparently understanding has been? 9m! on sorts of freeboothing, forcibly driven into the heads of the spokesmen of the Democmtie party: | Says h cop ith No wonder you blush An executivesrush; \Troops to keep order . Within your border, | . Stop rioting, looting ; amass ot wom n ewe aome 299 og hs & -. # “l“- But not the. miioemom dod rot it! Not enough cows aon duty to stop it! What do you think of it alk in the shadow of Frnoull Hall? F. L. Montgomery. Wit and Humor m AN INNOVATION. \All in the house who can read, | please staind up,\ staid the moving‘ picture man before starting the show. Everybody stood. \Then ladies and gents, since everybody present can read, there will be no necessity for anybody to act as: announcér for the subtitles. Lowisvilie Courier-Journal HSN'T IT THE TRUTH? Skepp - (with | newspaper) hore that the man who throw the bomb at the premier of «Egypt is a divinity student. Mrs. - Skepn-Oh, you're , always digging up somothing like mm be- cause I.ingist on dragging you to church now, and then!-Buffalo Ex- Mr. préss. In his speech to the people of: Montana, delivered on Thursday in' | Billings, President. Wilson said: . schemg which is new under proper | Thousands of our 'gailaht youth ~lie buried in France, and buried tor what? For the redemption of Amer- A¢a? America was not directly at- ' tacked, Acar? America was not immediately in For the salvation of Amer- danger.” memories extend into the dark days which preceded April '%, 4914. If [-Mr. Wilson's memory was better than [ 1t now to be ho would recall that on Mme: 26, 1917, ho..deliv=\ ored in person- a message (to the: +Congress in which he new. ea s they muttering at the handw of Germany | there may be no recourse but to; kmadflieittmiiw.which, 'Srix . shall \. | Know How to and tor which ] there is abundant Americm prece- 'I dent,.\ President Wilson. On April. 2, 1917, the President appeared again 'before. the Congrem to deliver hik war me»; . duidoytiieomeri \éttomi \American abips have been sunk, Amerioan lives have been taken, in| Mike; in the course of whith he sald: there ia no n \that 'it should be maintained. \3m Muir} 'fl\!hithlmfi\ vety +_ Which Statements Are False For Mr. Wilson to aszort that \Am- | i +] wasg fot directly attacked\ anit that \Ayerica was not immediately | An danger\ will amaze those whosa ( | | Government fas committed re eated | \\Wincte it has “antimony provedim- | modulate 'to: safeguard 'our *. néutrat j dane affaire has women? at & hé Sot america: ° 1 this by Woodrow Wits on ~f\ Thas {8 February of M17 nur neu» ~Aral (rights: were suffering | \uhwar- ranted: Infringements,\ ueeordiflg to; \ were false. afd the preamble. fot the. ® is @i a r “£19 ‘. pot. (s we will not choose the pati ox wabe mission and suffer ithe most sacred rights of our nation and our people \to he violated. _ \Avith a profound sonse of tho sol- enin and even tragicat choracter of. the stop Lam taking and. «of tho grave vesponsibilitich which ft dnvolwes, | wanted -to, but. I felt that-ah-under , [the: oimumstancey-vr\ | necessary to. explain that \the fam- i door and then accopt favors from. him \Itt\ thing tn the world, and the fact is he- \Never!\ George exclaimed, growing 'ed. \I can't imagine one of the fam- Hy-\ Be paused, not- fAnding ,it y\ shouldn't turn a man from the \I wish you'd take more,\ Amberson declined. \One thing Pit say for you, young George; you have- n't a stingy bone in your body. That's the Ambeyson stock in you-and I like He added something to this praise of his nephow on the day he left for Washington, He was not to return, but to set forth from the capital on the long journey to his post. George went with him to the station, and their farewell was lengthened by the | frain's being several minutes late. + \I may not see you again, Georgie,\ Amberson siid, and his volce was a little husky as he set a kind hand on ' the young man's shoulder. \It's quite I probable that from this time on we'll | only know each other by letter-until - mpu're notified as my next of kin that - there's an old valise to be forwarded ; to you, and perhaps some dusty curios from the copsulate mantelpiece. Well, it's an odg way for as to be saying | good bye; one wouldn't have thought it, even altew years ago, but here we . are, tivg gentlemen of elegant appear- ance In g. mate of bustitade, We can't ever tell what wlii happen at all, can | wet Life and monty Goth behave Hke ; aooke quicksilver in a nest of cracks. And when they're gone we can't tell | where-of what the devil we did with 'em! But I believe Pl say now-while there much time left for either of us $o get embarrassed about it-I belteve Ill eny that I've always been fohd of you, We all spolied you tor ribly when you were a little boy and Jet youn grow up en prince-and I must say you took to It! But you've received a pretty heavy jolt, and 1 'had enpugh of your disposition, myself, 'at you? Age, to understand a little of what cocksure youth lias to go through fnslfte' when it finds that it can make: a but in unhesiteting obedience 40 what I deem by constitmtional duly, : Advise that the Congress declare] the recent course. of thks Imperial Gorman Government to Ine. in fTaet nothing less than war. unmet. the | Government andpeople of thie United States .. .\ «THe preamble . of the war resdliution adopted by mm Cong-. ress and approved by the p+ Mdent on Aprit 6, we. declares that :; ~ \Whereas | the. Imperial # dermal! Acts of war against the Gover nment 'and the people. of the United duties Rterstore .~. .\ > We shalt not character!“ Pres dent Wilson's . decidmtions 'in Bi tings | that: “America was not diréctly tacked\ and. that - “America wars nut tetrible foigfakes, Wel, with my train coming into the ghed, you'll forgive e tor sa¥ing thit there have been s: when I thought you ought to be Meade—hm: Ive dlways been foud of you, and now I nike you! And Just, fop a last'word; there may be some body elso. in this town who's always elt about you like that-fond of you, ¥ mean, no matter how much it seem- ed you on: it to be hanged. You might - try--'. Hello, I must run. IIb send: : back the money as fast as they pay idea bye and God bless you, Georgie!” nto -He pakéed through tho gates, waved {his 'hat cheerlly from the other slide | at the iron screen, and was lost tiom e homing crowd; .And its he diam; red, an uncéxpec hum; «nd so suddenly that 'he had. ted poigh -; ° | ant lofeliness Toll upon. his nephew. §+° U thne, and whipped them; in that front yard he had been successfally téased, Afito temporary Insanity by A Sunday} school class of pliky lttle gitia;.Qn. that sagging porch a laughing womin 'had fel him otfier- boys With doughnuts and gingerbread; ¥: sow the staggered relits 'o { picket fence he had fuade s\ Avhits\ pony jump; on a dare, ondjiofl flier shabby, stone-faced home behind ,i the, fénce he had gone tofixhiidréfim | ties, and, when lie was a iittie \older . he had danced there, often, and falich in love with Mary Sharon, and kissed her, apparently by force, under the. - stairs in the hail. The double front aosors, of meaninglessly carved walnut, once so glossily varnished, had been. painted smoke gray, but the smioke . grime showed repulsively, even on the smoke gray; and over the doors a smoked sign proclaimed the place to be a \Stag hotel.\ This was the 18st \wale Komae\ he was ever to take by the route he was now following: up National avenue to | Amberson addition and the two big told houses at the foot of Amberson boulevarm for tonight would he the last night that he and Fanny were to spend in the house which the' fiafior had forgotten to deed to Isabel a morrow they were to \move out,\* 5nd George was to begin his work 1mm son's office. He had not come to is i collapse without a flerce struggle the struggle was inward, and the ii- ing world was not agitated ‘bx \1t and rolled calmly on. For of the \Heals of life\ which the its rolling. inconsideratély fintteri® out to nothingness, the least likely to retain a profile is that ldeél which depends upon inheriting money. ~ George Am- . berson, in spite of his record of fall- . ures in business, had spoken shrewdly , when he realized at last that money, . ttke life, was \like quicksilver in a nest of emote.” And his nephew had the awnkening experience of seeing: the great Amberson estate vanishing into such a nost=in. a twinkling; It seemed, now that if was Indee! so ut- ’ terly vanished. On this last. homewnrd Wail: af his, | 'when George Féucha. the entrance to } Amberkon addition-«mint 18, when he ' chme too where the entrance had for- 4 mefly ©been--lo. gave a littly start and halted. for. a moment t stare.b This was the fest time he had no ticed that the stone SHinrs, marking, 'the entrance, had béen removed. Then i 'been conscious of a queetmness about. what made the difference.. . National? «avenue met Amberson bouieutd here at an obtuse angle, and the removal of! tho piitars made the boulevard-em a. Oross street of uo. ov ni im- ba a boulevard t. ' riediy. arid snug: Mimic his mother's m unwanted.) [ immediately An danger beyond , Ing this: If the. anemone mad is ow. September, 1019, are. true. iii!h ject in: February. and Aprli oi 1987 |- “eeoiution adopted by- (loomed He-«N. ¥, Sun. 20 . désply to learn of.. . © # 5 . tions made by Him on the sami» sub- |' mm: him' an alone Yorever, He mm homeward atowly through appeared to be \the strange. U,.np a swffact; the 'city: hin. He had seen Hit ng his yéars in college, | d followed the- Jong alie : aunce and 1 tragic rétuirn. Since. that | \There is one choiga we mount “WI“ n6 energy (to recoit from the shogk, It] ~ memed to \hlm that the last Fragment | 'of, his famiiae world had disappeared, 4, 1 First Ovarian! Troll-y. Tho first vore wied with a troifey wheel riding on top. outing avite.\ (In. 1885 a third- stalled in\ \Toronto Cai next Scranton, this Hime experimental\ fl“; and mE‘ 'my Prior fa systems Yoga NM been \roar iy outdooral at ali\ horealted that for a long time he had ( this corner without being aware of] { portanca-certainly it did not: hem to] . George walked by the fusion hir } s. practical overhead trolley. - | lins was bullt in Kansas City in 19884, 0C .~ (In which double overhead. conductors | <- rail tihe was constructed Ih Baltimore | > / and. the Van.de Poste syrtem was \In- 0. - f fin In use in Liliane, New York and < .. . j f