{ title: 'The Cohoes Republican. (Cohoes, N.Y.) 1892-1920, December 23, 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/sn84031577/1919-12-23/ed-1/seq-4/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84031577/1919-12-23/ed-1/seq-4.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84031577/1919-12-23/ed-1/seq-4/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84031577/1919-12-23/ed-1/seq-4/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
Image provided by: Cohoes Public Library
churhwoflwntthom'fildh allndllmmot mom HARMONY THE WATGBWORD .In many respects the meeting of the we j nnubllm national enemas. held at. $o dented in politicai mm Never be-] zfmflld “Mummwlntemm ® B's-mum Womble 'in ~ connection \CJ wiith a ”melanoma“. 'No mlmm under the away of. a dic- “Hm , Aun Aridi made to rally -a Jazge cnond | .. Jin addition tommembmhlo «of the | national committee but .. 33391!le from every mete flocked to the nation- me h! unite! gs evidenoeo: their lluly in. 4 term in the party‘s cause. . The meeting Wan . notable for . the } ' amtotmwmm pervaded the'l Oz ~ dellbmdmmtheeommitteaundflae _ comed- Of, the amofllom Republicans attending 'the means. The total eb- ‘flnelll‘ t hei ee. \POLL a each & wee oblit- m F 3n- goo; iron and not of. marble, 1t was the iron | \#0\ 3 {mien of theSenate who stood out to the: _. | sence of all bitter tooling, wither far- . [Honat, “Warm“ a con- ' {tent for national nominations it pend | * [in, is a happy 'sugury of Regublican |- guocess. Tha necesilty of Regublican | . ”victor; if bo apparent that it bas tend is ~ ik the' yoice -of - £4365:an ' m om ambition. > . Triton-Llhoi. ai Evidently be that he harm; upon & Mousse“ editor of the \Co-; Humbia Bowed\ films this “Themame I4 . es dam over the NationalCapitol is mot: the' \Oly: 'narble: dome : antimately con- | nected with that . building.\ Had. he | been more familiar with the facts this heldome. ofthe Cepitil ik mage of ~,. [list difch against the attempt of the | {President to surrender our national tham long 13%t “with 'a more «mulled amen [ Mor of the W#state's / | win | making. resertiitions. to: price Cf, m e | adride And cousent to ratification. | Now comes 'the Wankington: corte- anemone 'of : the London-. . \Times 1 Arthyr Wiliert, who goes further | than Lord Reading or Lord Bura- | ham newly felt at liberty to go in f giving the that they animat- ~f ad the Senate's Insistagce nut the treaty shall be made safe for the United States before - the _ United States shoulders - the obllntlm '] which 'the treaty would Ampose, - _ Jt is. heartening to 'have so much] evidence of the light that is breaking oyer Britain--the light; of sincerity and truth. 'The United mates has f tatorthip; . its Gangrene 4s - not. the | Jimmie: but a co-ordinate branch. : of) the government. and | its < Senate etltutlon. Jt theré wore. men-in high places who forgot these | tacts, or saw At. to gamble at; Paris upon. his chance that < these Pacts | themselves to blame for the mite they have paid. git Arman}; letter | we Won lrmuecrlfit. _A Helpful oer-um Abollihed. - whoever has occasion, . nowadays, | to, magma, or to receive by \exe. likely. to hi € lmfimfifid firmly on mix wild the fact thatfvgofernmentel ope ”lion l public utiliti¢s | has.] among | its'. pbsaible chericterleslcs that of flew; i; erior, * . menus achidved, evey\ to anew/ion Bby pric were the cum companies before ll: wars 2s 5, With all their team thoee comm tales, in “whee we like .to, 311ml: the good olg times, permitted“ i pefiered | their driver; to foe | , | enterprising wiitd\ would have heelfa- matte ted so 'hit attempt to ridictle: mum t \&om “atom; exfre gr c of 'this sort, but fiobody minded meat“ ~much -At present there are ox- | prfie wagon drivers win for jove. if noverdignty, 200 it was the fron men of | or money, will not cary a trunk up | : [the House who refused the demands of? 5 wag like Stat Ine * 2 breech 1' C m each end grery \rathor bebatise they walit to the Presideng‘e Remnants in the exice olive departments for huge funds with which 40 continue their care6r® of ex- x g nonsense. thereby saving the country 1 nioke than $1,685,000,000, . MM Ad a rule potifical ; reformers believe the; nothing is glekih or decent unless: lit is done by them They never give. Innybody else credit for being sither bonest or mantle Itijesalso @ fact that ey afé filmy: wiXingito accept I job not Dbecauss: they. wegt'tgeggfi ; but leg-Ye the atata, [because of melt“ anatomy, always mean c Doo .~ whniennmitionnastes will have to check up 10 see whet \ _f aémmletmtlon. Ho has. a record for ap. ig pointing comm-alone, which ane. emet- “yoummuv ' | penatvé lum,«-But they seldom ever accomplldh anything more Wm to subs. \\ bulky reports which wre never \\ [read except by proof mam ind they ‘hntouedthem.,,, no JA ® o [ - L] nmhevéenmtobuyetwm , [stamp you orn make somebody happy | ¢ forum-tutu. Bend a \athoore, - {one \dcorts . 1 * new.“ u wt \ ”Wilt “MM-low x Bo it is with alt other ' conditional \| that affect 'our gorbfort and < copu= |_ | veonlenice. - moon; some- ~ Owheta dfluuflegnloMYu-k the nation or Aha municipality ' lured bxthemeelvw. But, gmore has been . ' [a sort of an: awakening, ° Within a week or 80 {inventor smith - [has done during the first year or hie ' endow; & tingle light of stairs, and inquiry at heallquarters' by a redent this -6licited the statement that the refusals of the drivers were in obedience to ordénfi, recived th \e letter tram Washing- ton.\ . o be interesting and pope: wrote that letter, and why. The | drivers say that the reason is that one 3)! its agents was cal-fins? a. drunken or down etelref 1 e As an explanation \thit is indeed <a merry, merry jest. Nobody alive, ever knew. or heard of such & pey- as for getting onp out of the-Govern- ment-well, anybody who. attempted .;] that wouldbe in obriouw need of I what the flew Englanders - used to: eell «a \guerdeen.\a—-N Y. Tlmee... ~A motel Hamil, A Alvaro. “unionism conditions on- gage our thoughts, The pleasant ones 'we take without ‘eppreclation corresponding in degree to our come plants About their appetite. w cold wave arrives and] my: with us- during several days _ wa. become impatient and wonder fre. | quently and andibly _ whether ~ the A -webthey will evep be \decent\ sagain. -But when' we receive the beneit or 'mild wenther out of season, we Thay remark that it in aw it is, but wa don't stop to. commenter our- | weives. upon. it or to wonder that it, Aaste long, if It does. we our Upon the bad ones sohcontrites - our | attention, { thoughts;; the m nes we enjoy without letting our - minds. dwell upots fie tact me we are enjoying film | ; That ii tho pflmlplo mi why | there is so much ulteohtefitwAlhny Sequel eH exeroleeg the general: control of | taxman policy given to it by the con- | Could be safely ignored, they have | ahows tint some of their own coun- | Ftrymen ' are beginning to bleme them 'vate corporations as little beloved as] morte. ~I 1; s so unlike Russia, Why ° \haps 4 little ulcful to know whol the «fovernment. eould not assumetl. flammability tor damage done while. ment by the express companies,\ and | TWCNW VIM. A“ mammaamm animal-em esteem mummy-wot by a | mannerisms. j i nemuoanw-oeumm . Are, hummer-taunt!” C ”0.000 ml! “0.000. tso, i> WM 00m district. “no y '\bnable them 'to-make 'their . wishes | known: ousliy, - Their taste, their | \Judgment their raat motive in put- | ting him forward wa. their - choice| may be questioned, but their rights| | in. the manual!“ ere open to no attack. = ~~ However, under the Comtltutlon qualifications of : , its membeu, and just as the House of . the Sixty-sixth : Berger, so it. may again reject him.| If: the Hone does reject him again | it. is dificult to ° gee why anybody' 'in the Firth “Wisconsin district has} from kis presence, end Mx fBersev wluhneaflhle time to devote to the. _ day. the ' Wisconsin dMatrict will sober: \up and «end an to more-- sent it in the American Congress. AN, ll. Sun. s mune Why Hot Drop Rattle? f ~A pretty 'good idea will be put into: effect it the congerenco 'of powers in tome]; Denlklu and Malena]: l only (o mater mo side they axfe oa,. ke ppople gre wll Ruslans, |_ and mateplat and men, \What gooil . wotld it do it we controlled Russia? | . Would not any\ reasonable ~pergon | dislike to. get Ruésix #6 a presont? One necéssury thing is to prevent Russia com-Alonzo” us. Ruselejs who come over here are. Adam. | \They stent to hate it because [ leave Ftussia alone for the exclusive | enjoyment of those who like that sort of thing'fwnmoklyn Sounder?!» Union. 3 to % \AL James W.. Wadsworth, Jts senior Uni~, tea Btatessenator : froni New York, will be a. candidate for remaining)? in- the Republican primaries. MF. Wadsworth! announoemem of his candidacy mas brought forth sotfife. condemnation from those whom Theo- dore Bmeevelt was wont to calt \the | hysteriont: fringe ol society,\ but to the 'igroat maga 'of voters, ba they Republi- [cane or Democrats, m; name must ap- | . kin force one tive | peal with m1 #\ pont - |say, yes when a noisy minority de approvah - || =. Senator Wedsvmrtfh m given mule evidence of his ability, integrity and: sound jndagment during his service in tre Amembly of New York and the | Senate of the United: Blew ‘ He das never heated or quibbled. 'e has been uyoeltiwwdnotamw Hive Mel/Gt“. Expediency, that term: witich so many have used as their guid Winona lumping made-tin?“ the | sate and Union, has been unknown to «r, maple, 'the principle of right or determingd and judged bis | eunuch on melons electing m m 'Me weak :- | True, We thud: he bu token in the we, as re probably will in the futur®, - 'bave not aways 'been the popular onen. of the moment. 'They haye not present- | od the qnay way, the paths 'of. least re- alsted, or permitted -the plaudity of the | | hour. They have 'beek attitude. the- . quently When mommy condemana- tion was teem-ct nude-emote | iondest. mwuummetutotm w “fillet“ Nut in M he elect as thelp Mancunian in Con-} - gress Ampgrican. political instltutfons the House is the sole Judgo of the | Congréis Hag once rejected . Vidtor| | should. be mun-em \The- majority | gratified 4ts- ambition; to \put Vlc~ u \_] tor Berger over,\ the House of Rep- | | resenitatives wili have: saved itselt political propaganda to which | he} | ktyes support. , Everybody ought to | [be contaited, find song. ' London has determingd not to deat| | with one Roldan Bolsheviki and not | ;- #A attehm; to Impoge;a govern- | | ment upon Russia ds about the last | [ thibg in the world for _, which\ the. civilizea nations. should \waste monéy | Some of me | extraordinary resistive to American- . not ] - Bit 0!me A ~ 051an Deereet Phylum Pray remember. . When you're milking up the: llet 01 your presents for December : {Ubless 4 am to be. missed), Bmoking sets -of. various types, Halt-a-~dozon smokln; jackets, Thirty-seven meerschaum pipes! Twenty patent \Kid Glove Mendel-s, Collar boxes by. the score: |.. Of silk suspenders Forty-'leven pairs or anore' a 'That each year since I was twenty I've received a paperweighto p Have pena-wipers, inkstands plenty ‘Pepor chtlemmtwenty-elght. ' That I've uni-owning and , Longfellow By the hundréeds-every kind:, . Shaikespeare-black, and blue,. and <. yellow-L aC Milton: tlll I'm nearly, blind! # (hlc #e 2 # ~* So thefe’e duet ne present only . That Im wanting in. this. year 0: my beehelorehlp so lorsiy-- ._ Wit and humor ng to tell you; Cop 2 now withog; being botherod'mJudgo. ‘ WOULDN‘T“ Fl T. IN. Bettimore Mormon. - it\ TAKING QHANGES. amen. :of, the guestlon, you the other,\ A family row?\-Loulsvllle Cowley- 'Tournat. 1.0%. Iii“? ~AStrong Man Needed - @ hose dictation C has failed to bow, to 'he has refueed to yield, und it is but. matural that the tew who are so blind” to recogniza or at least give him credit- tor the ainoeriby of his alumnae shoud opposehin. | : But does this nation not need at' 'this hour men who recognize principle, 'who refine to wive way itemize ol: # temporary demoed or insistent clap trapt so a 4. # It/ig the easiont thing in the world: to. mantle amnieeoenee But it takes cour, 'are to say no when a refusal in 3 moo. {ter of conviction and carries with 41. the threat of political annthilation, ,; Mr. Wadeworth's anamies, no mower Thow bitter or how antagonistic they, may be, milst give him credit for this Arait, and in- their hearts aim/out]: {deny #, ninst feel that he hag been tion. saut and sincere in his convictions, _ . Bvery governing body in the world needeomnzmen menwlmoee face. endeabuflthemumudmeroekeon \mellow No nation needs such men. more than America. Our ordeal le‘eheed at a», tiring moments are to come, and Manatee“! Mtothouold prin« thair veinz. Mr. Wadsworth m these qpallfioations und. we have no fear or mmmm “immanent“ Manor | ' m mm & m mi}. ‘ 5,3 f maelunlbhflfibbeldemjoyible ghopetmtbemm . . ' move-Lewes. f That I've slippers, - plcturt - brackets] Op ' hat's yoursélf, 'my Phyllis dear; | ~ fl “dailies Courtney {mania In Judge: - fleece AT. out sosa f “Mathew-Tommy, come right on into |. R 'the house! 'This is the last time I'm xo~ Tommy-Thank goodness! I can play | , _ “Why don’t you want Jibbs? 1 think j he is a promising man for your idea., f | \Maybe ®o, but this 4s a paying propo- . ,“Now your wife will «debate one side . \What are you up to? Do you wani*l our debating society, to break up in | - 'ln the hearts 6 {4 photogriiphlte copy 'of; text enlarged\ Aufictenfly Lo enable it | to be enslly read, for though the orig-. trom their Hips they would probably [ fore somewhat difficult to read.. ~. f.. The inauvation hus proved a rare [the , mu to the library patrons, and it is . Intersithig to note: with what revar- ence it {is handled by wien and women: whose childhood days are long past, | . yet whose pond” memories are #ti}: | bright. Two pages and a. half i are con- sumed (In- Committing the poem - to. . pwier, and the repetition of the old 'to meet them duccessfully, to conquer m, lines brings to mind pleasant the tides of temporary «unpopularity | which hare made us aveat : aha. strong, we and men is our “mm: positions one Rbgistative halls »who. possess courige in their hearts, atam- | mas ' gift laa in then-mutant! MM ln‘ Vin Alzthor Hand ’ “A Wham St. Nicholas.” Written locum <<<<< ta. Moore 100 Years Ago and . ' to Every Child o m J AW (aka/MW s Hm haude . *In Tim-Jul“ “MC \a 66105010,“ jaw“ ; het m4 fiomyflm 1mm (a; the hopes mist It fee-tux,” woutd be m0! aft“; Mm 6/1311le also Le / fl‘“ -a flown WW awith mg ”nonfat?\ “3““511 Jello“: a Wkebw of fa M-fiw danfif ain Mcmlmfi M Mtrnme n fur howhiep;, - Jtcdfwtymfid oun Graimd When oul on the lomun there ane 1mm gm, ta “fl\;MlM/ie M03! Ml» a filaflh kj ”we“, fum- tha fed ks: t pee wheCpokat pras the 1mm QM”? 40 thia poundout~ £. {tam tike a foul: Tau 44m; the mom and. ammfl tha M ton C flu moon,; (mtg! 6“qu the flea M10» [W f ' 95“ “w: Lustre Gifted-dag, (”eta dd {W W‘wm to nelouAq gugq We? amy gy gr“ Fang fiflm munsotuite dla 41». muff” my n (War atutle otd dun, po amd iquath, _ J Amiur im ammal‘pmdl’fi Acs «Vie-fie e Mme za [ed thon. east“ has cowuwlfiry combs Od sa “Md [ guovteil, cme called tham (”mam ‘,,.,i’mf\ee i the 'top of wWew. of“ LIME book: bound in\ red - »mgroceo | holds ithe Kernel . Of the children‘ thie world ver ot Clirtstmas. Pcelebration To 100k- dt it no one: would dream its - bidden words are even now vibrating - countless. children, yet -the . charm Its bright covers em-} brace\is perennial, script of the famous children's classic, | \A . Visit from St, NicholG#s,\ written. 'by Clement C. Moore almost a bundred ] years ago, nnd dédionted to his own. It is the manu- children. in particular, and, as it has 'kince mow/ed. to 'thildhood , the world : over; ~ \Thi . season it has. ea its companion ln the library of the New York Gounty® Histopical §octety in Centeni Park Wost foal chirography. is quite remarkable ~Por a man of Dr.. Moore's yenrs-cighty~ two when he indited the poenm-It> is fine gand Old-faishloned, and there- ts of the season, for no one has ' aver visuallsed our American Christ- | mas from the children's viewpolut as : bak , Ctegient C. Home in His rare ' Hittle poem. -- The lines were Written as a_ ehflit-f for the author's tro young daughters nearly a centaty ago, but if has since become 'n progressive gift to collation other girls and boys. Ac-‘ . [Moubt of the reaponse which his: h l ath. oly | didagy wit have at the hands of Amer. | } the original ~- Mrom Troy. for' his children. i “Mo:- BDeskior! aww’w Meow ond. w éwdd 0h m fi w th! ta. the top of umall' WV“; mop-duh weal Mg compunylng the origlos! manpserlp t “I when it was - presented to the society\ > by 'T. W. Moore, a relative, some fifty | years ago, is a letter in which the- svriter tells how the verses came to be written and how it hepyeneg mg wore eventually whitened. ¥. that Moore lived: aft the time 'in &a [Landsome house overfooking the Hud» >. gon, at Ninth avenue and Twenty fthlrd street. Therm Chelsen, Hike Green- \Wich village, further- eonth was quite xremote from the ¢lty., Kach was farge | - ~ rly populated by the Dutch settlers ~> from Nieuw Aimsterdaro. Living near : [his country sent was a portly, rub 'cund Dutchman; who suggested to =~ him the idea of-miking St. Nicholas ~ the hero of a Christmas. piece for his > childgen. . It was, however, ith no thought of .- Ite ever being published that. Mr. ~~ w Moore wrote the poem, but the lines», were copied by a relative of the au. thor .in her album. Ere it another <; copy was made by @ fmend of hers | 'Some time later, much to - surprine of Dr, Moore, It was a the first time published in a news- paper. By such small chance was Co ace choice little poem saved for posterity..\ If those dhys there was no such - celebration of Christmar® as is now the {case, but Dr: Moore, having absorbed the ancient. traditions of\ this Dutch neighbors. wore them into the; He did\ more than that, for he built up around the cen- tral thought an interpretation wich, | ... has gradually 'come to be our own. .As sonic one has so aptly seid, 1t hus | [becows so much part and parcel of our. literature that It seldom occurs to. peo- ple {t ever had an author, Since for | 7 nearly a hundred years American «dren have been fed on it, it. m now | 0 “lemme their: In very truth. e