PROBLEMS FACING. ‘STRICKEN WORLD Shall Chaos or Reconstruction In Europe Follow the Great World War? % BOLSHEVIST SEEDS OF POISON Avowed Object of the Lcaders of the Movement Is to Stir Up Hatred of Law and Order Every. where, Article XXVIIL. By FRANK COMERFORD. “The program of the communist party (bolsheviks) is the program not only of the liberation of the proletar- Jat of one country. It is the program of the liberatign of the proletariat of all countries; it is the program of international revolution. The over- throw of imperialist governments by means of armed revolt is the road to the international dictatorship of the working class.” ject of the communists at Moscow In 1918, grad, declared “that the beginning of the war was to turn the imperialistic war into a civil war” His aim was to force upon Russia Communism, and to summon the dis- contented of the world to rise In rev- olution against thelr governments, All existing governments were vile, lepine said, and they must be overthrown. Political action, useless. They were Inventions of the devil Capitalism. Force must be used; the workers must arm them- selves and fight; the world could not come to the light of freedom Justice except through blood. lve. He wrote the alm and of bolshevism into the soviet consti- tution when he defined the funda- mental problem as being the “victory of socialism in all lands” zoned the war cry on the coat of arms of the bolshevik government in these words: “Workers of the World, Unite.” insistent and causes for discontent in other lands. It has been a propaganda of hate, | | This “Mapifesto” has been sent all over thé worlll, / It makes no bones e bolsheyviks to “On the contrary, it boasts that this is its mission. Under the caption “The Way to Victory” the manifesto declares: “The revolutionary era compels the proletariat to make use of the means of battle which will concentrate Its entire energies,. namely, mass action, with its logical resultant, direct con- flict with the governmental machinery in open combat. All other methods, such as revolutionary use of bour- geols parliamentarism, will be of only secondary significance.” The “manifesto” further proclaims the the “First International” foresaw the future development and pointed the way: the “Second International” gathered together and orgunized the proletariat; the “Third International” | is the international of open mass ae- | tion of the revolution®the International | of Deeds. The work of the “Third | International” is mapped out In the | “Manifesto” in these words: | “The task of the International com- | muist party is now to overthrow this | governments) and to | its place the structure of the | worlds order. We urge the | working men and women of all coun- | tries to unite under the communist | banner, the emblem under which the | erect In socialist won. “Proletarians of all war against imperialistic against monarchy, against the privi- classes, against the bourgeois state and bourgeois property, against | all forms and varieties of social and | national oppression—UNITE! All Urged to Unite. “Under the ingmen's Councils, under the banner of the Third International, in the revolutionary struggle for power and | the dictatorship of the proletariat, proletarians of all countries, UNITE!" | lands! In the | barbarity. | standard of the Work- | I have quoted these excerpts from | contains the name and address of the printing company, There is an intro- | duction to this document. It signed. A few extracts from this In- | troduction are important. Comment- | ing on the “Manifesto,” the introduce tion says: “It will soon become the | basis of International working class | action, and will become the lightning | will rend the clouds and fogs | that now envelop the workers of the | world. “Comment on this manifesto wonid | be useless, superfluous. Its magnifl- | is un- | In the soil of unrest. It has played to class feeling. It has appealed to the lowest an¥§ worst in men, written and spoken of the “Great War” as the enterprise of capital. It has charged up the terrible shedding of blood to capitalistic imperialism. -It has listed the {ll-effects of the war and charged them not to the war, but to Capifalism. It has pointed to the poverty and the disorganization of the world, directly caused by the war, and attributed all of these unhappy results of a four year struggle with autocracy, not to the war but the system of so-called “Bourgeois Govern- ment.” It has multiplied, magnified and intensified unrest. It hopes bring about a great world which will destroy all except ithe government of the proleta- riat, the soviet plan. Its propaganda has caused many of the people of the to fo Ing the regimes of the czars, and that reactionary governments everywhere are conspiring to bring about downfall and re-establish the and rile of despots in Russia. Tt does not make conspicuous the fact that the ezar is dead and that his regime has passed forever. Lenine Without Toleration. Yenine decries anyone and every one who does not accept his gospel of world revolution. He Is particularly bitter towards socialists who are op- posed to his program. Writing of “the military program of the proletar- fat revolution” he concludes his ar- ticle In the November "Class Struggle” for 1010: “Whoever, in view of this last war, is not willing to carry out this demand, let him be good enough to refrain from uttering large words about the international revolutionary democracy, about the social revolution and about the war against wars” Of those who have dared to de nounce militarism and demand disarm- ament Lenine has written: “What will the proletariat women do to prevent this? Merely defounce all wars and militarism? Merbly demand disarmament? Never shall the women of an oppressed and revolutionary class resign themselves to so desple- able a role. On the contrary, they will say to their sons: ‘You will soon be grown up, You will have a gun. Take it and learn how to use it—not fn order to fight your brothers, as is the practice in this war of plunder, but in order to fight the bourgeois of your “own” country; in order to put an end to misery and wars, not hy means of "kind wishes,” hut by over- throwing’ and disarming the bour- geoisie'” The third “International” was ealled together to organize the movement against the peace of the world, It met at Moscow from March 2 to March 8, 1010; it adopted a “manifesto” which® was signed by Lenine and Trotzky. the leading spirits of the con. gress of the communist International suffering world is eagerly walting to hear, “It the will assist socialist move | compromising, revolutionary action International Socialism.” If the publication of this manifesto | and the introductory comment to it | is not treason then Benedlet Arnold a patriot. It Is a conspiracy agninst the peace, health ad happi- | was the liberty and security, of every man, | woman and child in the United States It is a call to lawlessness, organized | erime. It might be well for the peo. | ple to give less time and thought to | partisan political wrangling and set | themselves to silencing sedition. It | should he ‘an easy matter to discover | the author of this un-American, In | human and eriminal foreword to the “Manifesto” The publishers and distributors should be brought to the bar and made gnswer. Let this menace by destroying the seed. trouble later. By such a course we will allay unrest, Lenine has repeatedly sald written that the bolshevik government present governments of the world. other words, bholshevism in a world of democracy. truth Is that fdeal of socialism, communism: In gross violence, supreme autocracy. (Copyright, 1830, Western Newspaper Union) Ellen Richards, Chemist. Intuition is the headlight put in woman's forehead uniquely for her when woman lost common sense In Eden. Just a few females have been able to clutch at the skirts of common sense, and fo retain its hard pan use. fulness, These have plunged into hard pan studies, and in the erucible have evolved some good things for the world, Among the number stands Ellen H. 8. Richards, chemist, born In 1842, died In 1011, a skilled instructor in the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Not only was Ellen Richards a cheme ist, but she was a pure food expert. Her books and pamphlets are valuable, Among their titles are these: “The Chemistry of Cooking,” “Conservation by Sanitation,” “The Cost of Clean. ness,” and “Home Economics" All honor to you, Ellen Richards, who pur- sued the hard paths of practical out- put unadorned by the Jessamines of romance, Money Yields Higher. The average yield of surplus honey in 1010 whs 50 pounds to a colony of honey bees, as estimated by the bureau of erop estimates, United States de- partment of agriculture. This Is con- siderably above the average of 45 pounds in 1018, and of 41.6 pounds for the five years 1018-1017. The relative proportions in which the honey of the last two years was marked are in- dicaged by D9 for extracted honey, 31 for comb honey, and 10 for bulk honey. * About one-third of the product goes to “outside” markets. —_— ——— THE SLEEPING PORCH » HE sleeping porch 18 something which 1&8 added to n house In order to provide more room for fresh alr and feet. Every night during the heated term thousands of new, expen- sive sleeping porches are crowded with feet which protrude carelessty from the coverlets, Instead of having dow In the effort to cool off. All over the middle West, at this time of the put hundreds of hard-earned dollurs into a eapacious, hard pine sleeping porch and allow it to stand idle and | collect dust and autumn leaves,» It is | equally sad to see a large family troop iato one of those porous porches on the first hot evening and discover that the beds have not been made up since the 31st of the preceding August, This canses much discontent on the part of morn. wearing patent corn pads are led into IT ANT MUCH FoR LOOKS. 15 IT, MIN ———————— Porch Is an Afterthought. where the mild evening zephyr and the stray lghtoning bug can roam Nine times out of ten the sleeping It is one of with some neighbor who started his cistern wag dug. It costs more to tle a work plumbing. This is because the work is never start along and parboils the entire family to a delicate pink hue, Comes save human life. It Is sad to see men L L Pf ’ 4 so bad. {aste to ul boo <¥ | PIN ih pyright 32 Bome enthusiasts use the sleeping poreh the year around, retiving tn the dend of winter with x seapsione, a set of turlaps, a Cur boa and [four pairs of woolen underwenr. This gives them plenty of fresh alr sod also eacour- uges <he growth of the unobtrusive chilblain, After a while they accustomed to it that they can remove one layer of underwenr and substitute gel =O the back” Those who think that all of European war should try this next winter for one week, and jot thelr Impressions after coming out of the hospital. (Copyright) wismmasmnonsn Jonrmpenms Vancouver island bas no navigable | streams, I a SHROUDS. PERSON unfamiliar with dream lore might wake up after dream- ing of a shroud with a feeling that he had an evil’ omen “and be, con- sequently, depressed In spirits. He would be quite wrong. A shroud may | not be altogether a pleaMnt thing to ! gee in one's dreams, but it is accounted by nearly all the soothsayers to be a favorable omen to dream of that grue- object. For one thing such seen . some some money. It Is true, though, say the wise ones, that seeing a shroud in terfere with his business. But It merely a tendency to illness which Is predicted and not illness itself. If | you are careful of your health your | business will prosper and your fortune incrense, If you dream that you see a shroud removed from a dead person you might wake up with affright at the ghastly sight. But really there would be { evil omen In the dream which would call for any worrying. The worst that it could mean would be that you are to jittle strife and no going have some i ol oo The Bt oa Tesh. Gesh.| yt peary J be Joo! | fake » Pike) gis { Kg : Py GEORGE MATTHEW ADAMS DS SERRE GuEoxE has given to us the strik- ing sentence: “To the young, Na- ture does nothing but give; from the old she does nothing but take away.” Your brain is the only Power in your entire body that may not age, 4 Keep Youth alive in Your Brain, jooking back and reviewing of a sin- .gle day.” For Youth never returns to to your arteries—but Youth says so, . Keep Youth alive in Your Brain, Classics anew, tramping the and solving mysteries—stands out as one of the most striking examples of those who kept their Brains young as their bodies grew old. Keep Youth alive in Your Brain. It ‘is Interest tHat puts Youth into your Brain and drives away age. Just #0 long as you are Interested in the things you are doing, just so long work will grow upon you, strengthen. ing your loyalty and enthusiasm and every ounce of your effort, Keep Youth alive in Your Brats, ICON vou least expected to have trouble, jut the difficulty will be of short du- ration; you will get the argument and all will be sis ing again. In looking over many hun- dreds, or rather thousands, of interpretations which have been hand- ed down from generation to generation it is found that the saying “Dreams go by contraries” does not apply so fre- quently as is generally supposed. But the dream of a shroud of the cases where it does. So cheer up If you have this disagreeable dream. | Think of the coming legacy and the { flourishing of your business. i (Copyright) best of the +3 mil MOLLE Sidi dream i8 one ssicmmsninee Boom By EDGAR A. GUEST i WHEN NELLIE'S ON THE JOB. The bright spots In my life are when the servant quits the Although that grim « 1 a frown on Nell piace, the The week between and entry of the | Is one that's filled with - «FF gr 5 1 comfort through and new happiness and th again—a ts rob 13ee}h UR. charm of living's back { The charm that I like the home, I like t Nellle's on the job, Serven 3 i We meals, There's something in a servant's ways, however fine they be, That has a cold and distant touch and frets the soul of me, The old home never looks so well, as iat week or two » are servantiess and Nell has all the wark to do. There {8 8 sense of comfort then that makes my pulses throb And Rome is as It ought Nellie's on the job. to be when her servant's try Think not that I'd deny grudge When one departs we other right away. help or the ¥ to get an I merely state the simple fact that no 3 $1 Len Nea uch Joys I's thos at home we've heen ft als As In when ne. ia an gentlenes seems to soothe And oh, 1 like to eat those meals thot Nellie gets herself! There this selfish touch that place, he work with the grace. ron cannot buy the gentle the mother gives ti | No servant girl can do the proper And though you hired the queen of cooks to fashion your croquettes Her meals would not compare with those your loving comrade gets, | 80, though the maid has quit again and she Is moved to sob, | ‘The old home's at its finest now, for Nellie's on the job, {Copyright by Edgar A. Guest.) Just MOTHER'S COOK BOO PIII A dl Aid dl i "Tis something great to be a queen, And bend a kingdom to a woman's will; To be a mother such as mine, 1 ween, Is something better and more noble still, ~May Riley Smith. —— Summer Salads. With head lettuce in every garden and an abundance of the leaf lettuce, peas, onlons, and other crisp flavor | Yegetables, one need never want for i salad material i ~MILITANT: MARY ~ Ive-tmied-to- be an-altruist, but-in Lifes: gnlling SCHOOL [ve learned A salad bowl of crisp fresh lettuce served with French, mayonnaise, Thousand Island dressing, or even the common variety of bolled dressing, makes a palatable salad. A small bed of mustard (the small bluck-seeded variety) makes a most excellent salad plant and 2 fine dish of green, The leaves may be picked and served alone with salad dressing or mixed with lettuce. The pungent taste and good flavor is most appetiz- Ling. Added finely minced to any vege. table salad from potatoes to peas, it adds to the flavor, Cherry Conserve, Cover pitted cherries with good vin- sgar and let stand overnight. Pour off the vinegar and add to the cherries an equal weight of sugar, Stir until | the sugar is dissolved. Place in a jar | covered with cloth and plate and keep {in a cool place, Tomato and Cucumber Salad. A overlapping slices of peelea and unifoffnly sliced tomhtoes on a chop plate. Alongside of the tomatoes arrange peeled sliced cucumbers, Gare nish with lettuce or parsley and serve with the dressing passed in a bowl, (Copyright, 1920, Weatsrn Newsvapsr Union) Sm ———— Realizes the Importance of His Part of the Work. A city sanitary. convenient, substan. where the houses of the rich the streets are clean and the is clear as the country air: KRViine where the excelien and streets; where parks an are within the where living Is pleasant, toll honorable and recreation plentiful; p- ftal Is but ped ; where commerce in goods Is not greater than intere ideas; where industry thrives brings prosperity alike to the emp reach o where ¢a respected not wors! great the hi er nnd employed ; where education art have a place in every home; wi worth and not wealth gives standing to men; where the power of chars to terest in public affairs | in. 1 test of citl- publie where leads men leader where to the of honor; ernment is always honest and efficient, find expression; nf all the earth can and be blended Into ¢ wenship and devotion wenl Is a badge gOv~ and the principles of democracy their fullest and where the people truest Come and » gach generation past to transmit to better and the last, —The Na- will vie witt the next greater, hoe £111 beautiful Man Who Today Builds an Unattrac. tive or Commonplace House Is Behind the Times. — here is no excuse In these days for bulldir an or commonplace house, A peneration ago not many capable architects were available, es- pecially in the western country. Even when they were, the prevailing taste to frills of turrets and Jjig-saw work. The beauty of simplicity was not known, who stood ont for it often found his client ohdurate. All that has changed. of the bulk of the houses built in the and nineties of or g ugly ran and the architect A comparison eighties with those the country has come. The number of competent architects and of even greater Importance stock of sound architectural ideas bas diffused, Books and magazine articles on the sahiect have multiplied ngly. he builder ought, of to avall himself of the OR has Increased, the become widely prospective Course, servi of a good he architect. ut even if in tl to fails to do this he can find excellent ¢ pub- lie library designs meet his needs, City Planning Public's Business, a pri teal city planning is neither nor a move for “the It is primarily a busi and {ts benefits ac A planning 1 both of plan- vale city beautiful. Tess crue to the publie commission, with ning esperts cannot hope without the "he fact made popular 701 important session of tle realto vernon. Whatever method is adopted, a planning commission, after first care fully preparing its plans m its ideas snd aims to the Through constant publicity He must be educated to see enterprise » enterprise the al and th government, work planning was emphas 1 ra’ ! peo mM a, the pub the neads Lae and volved and to contribute to the COSt~— Stagger Imagination. Suggestions of distances more snd In nitude star, Dr. Robert Trumpler has found a tenth magnitude star more than eight minutes of arc from it that has the same large proper motion and the same paraliax, and he concludes that the two stars must undoubtedly be ecomnected. They are separated by not jess than 13.200 times the distance of the earth from the sm. Revolving in a circular orbit around a common center, they must require hundreds of thousands of years to complete a sin gle revolution, and yet they are so ra mote from the multitude of other star systems that there is no interference with their companionship, “Bali” Lightning. Occllionally readers report hav ing seen or heard of a thunderbolt falling in some place, or an account appears of the damage done by » thunderbolt. Very often this can be accounted for hy cerlain forms of lightning, particularly that known as “hall’ lightning. The “ball” is proba- bly an isolated sphere of ozone gas containing a considerable amount of energy stored In It by the action of electricity during a thunder storm, which falls earthwards as a luminous bull after a severe fish of lightning, and explodes with extreme violence on nearing the earth, The energy thos liberated is capable of causing all the
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers