New Britain Herald Newspaper, February 13, 1915, Page 6

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ey “Matter. f part of the city Cents & Month. be ment by mall f60 Cents a | year. iritain jtising medium 0 Ubooke and press advertisers. on sale at Hota- [ St. and Broad- Vi Boara Walk, artford depot TALK. e when there [excitement over his week, people, jo what they say ‘they make lest jthat may not be jocialist speaker | t the corner of Btreets last eve- ithe murderer Ing the member- ons which it is to socialism. p outrageous in e crowd resent- for the prompt police the man frely dealt with. ased about the pwd. 'the exercise of le people may les of the mur- his housekeep- .of place unless for them. Ex- pitch and natur- use of this that careful in their ho have no con- 8 or their feel- | right to ha- | a public street conduct prse, they would should remem- fme for making serious charac- Jer of ascertain- murder should ‘understand the it, what to say 'to say it. Loud ous spellbinders . to keep quiet and BREAD. the increase ha lessening the b in a return uct? There it effect. The eed (hat it can e, It as because op e price has gone | may come back ich once graced again be found in of means of wasg patron- pegan to neglect jphone the r certain goods housew after them, in the list instead of made vhich turned out en a boy got bread hut- me from at stayed 8. It but a h hands ana t two to 3 fe or the anq a with school with was none slab that un- or three e flavor and the | er's cffort 0 boy was was ever conversation on bt the day of home too large to per- disposal g else len consumed while made to until the 1t ng situation to hat mother pming and ¢ economy used when [ the old substan- and for ow her ed he place the frosting en coming cake. Those lady fingers, have an op- onee again up making of the on from 7S REMARK the day s in principal epublican club ity and he came service, the e courage of its hat the most ef- n the jobs. This uld well be made political organi- de the suggestion said be with | banquet | that the republican par(, =hould show | that it was just as solicitous for the welfare of the state as it is for itself. It is recalled was regarded « est men the republicans had for gov- aign but that persuasion Wwould in- the that Judge lenney one of the strong- last of, to run, ! ernor in the cam no amount duce him reasons given being that he wished to lay by some- thing for later yecars and he felt that | he he come governor could not do this were to be- candidate and elected. a for He the and is known throughout the state as one of the city officials, having won an enviable reputation in this while of Hart- { ford. Had he run for the governor- ship there doubt but that he would have proven just as stroug candidate as did Judge Holcomb. He | is everlastingly right on the civil ser- even he ha: some good ideas concerning public service best of he respect mayor is no a vice issue and also on the duty of the party organization. No party can hope to live which makes the spolls system There was a time that kind of thing had { supporters than it has and such men as Judge Henney come out against what moribund issue its death may be expected at any time. His remarks in this city were timely and to the point. New Britain can help in carrying them out. its only object. | when more now when is really a WHAT GERMAN-AMERICANS ARE ORGANIZING FOR. The Lm\raryv Digest says that the feeling of some 20,000,000 German- Americans who stand helplessly on this side of the Atlantic and see their Fatherland surrounded by a ring of flame and steel, unable to go them- | felves or to send an ounce of powder or bread, can not easlly be imagined. It adds that meanwhile, they see ship- load after ship-load of food and war supplies going to their enemies. The impulse to do something has been very evident of late, and equally evi- dont has been the fear among other American citizens that such efforts may involve America embarrass- ment and danger. Such foreboding cruelly wrong our Teutonic citi- if so their critics presum- bly be glad to be disappointed, vet it is undeniable that grave misgivings were heard in many quarters when ihe call went out some weeks ago for our German-American population to organize as a unit for some action not then clearly defined. have in may ens, will These misgivings rather than n judge by press the movement then toreshadowed has taken definite shape and frankly its platform. Aithough the nation-wide organization launched in Washington January 30 fifty-eight representative German-Americans declares am to the genuine Ameri critics not increased ir di- minished, we comment, since announced on by chief of its its be re-establishment neutrality, hesitate to denounce it the taking an do | as an attempt to coerce United States government into an actively pro-German stand While the this country foreigner who comes to and becomes a natural- ized citizen be | he retaining | for It natural that th'e man who comes here may U true American, cannot help some love his native land. is therefore from Germany should want to see hig the the country victorious in the Russian, other feelings This feeling, cause this tiality to question present war and Knglishman, Frenchman, Austrian and representatives ot countries should have like for the land of their birth. however, should not to show the whi country of reasons any par- any countries h in for must ap- | pear obvious to cvery one. Americ !p. sition must be one of strict neu- trality, Any other course would mean trouble among the people of our That should be avoided. own country. A Soldier's Prayer. Al when I'll see home again are the thoughts now in mind, Only * Vou just once again and in your arms recline. | ro hear your dear voice, mother; just | as in the days of yore, | 1 can always see your picture standing at the door. | Hark! What's that; ‘tis the bugle call; that means we move away. all in; Forward! March! Then all kneel down to (BY Jumes aham.) Just to =€ now Halt. we pray | | | God we Our ¥ Oh, above, now ither down | Sena the dove | message then | Away with gun and cannon now, and let all the old forts fall. | No more now the fighting ship on the water or in the sky; So give to us just peace and let the peace dove hear our prayer, kneel here and pray, who art in Heaven, upon this day. of peace with to all, as us this on earth fly. are coming back our beloved Bands playing Home,” 1 can clear. Away with all the waring takes the human life And has caused all the sorrow, takes the husband from the wife. home today, dear, “Home, hear that to ones so Sweet old tune tools that ever home to stay And we shall never fight again, sing this prayer this day. | than | 80 now when the bugle calls, it means | NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1918, PACTS AND PPANCIE Congressman Kennedy is at a s to understand the usc of his name it connection with the United States dis- trict at{orneyship in Connecticut, but it may come from the uree s the talk that Congres Mahan will recommend himself SL ter of New London Bul- | etin. samoe min for pe —Norwich . Wilder" that if you laugh the lanughs with you, but pays you ally for starting the laughter. He en- | { tertained the world so well that the i world reciprocated by enabling him to leave $267.000 to his son and daughter. He laughs best who laughs last, and when the late humorist was from time to time counting up his gains and making investments it must have occurred to him pleasantly that he was getting the best of the joke.— Norwich Record. state world not proves only libe Marshall It is perhaps well to call the atten- tion of parents at this time to the im- portance of keeping in close touch with the school authorities regarding the work done by their children in the public schoo! The reports made number of times a year in all of the schools regarding the progress of the pupils deserve more attention than they usually receive. The par ents, who do not know what their children are doing in the schools have only themselves to blame, i they find at the end of the year that the children have dropped back in their work or have made but unsatis- factory progress.—Ansonia Sentinel. Light on the duties of a county commissioner was thrown by Com- missioner Charles H. Smith of New l.ondon county when, in explaining the report of the commission of which he is a member, he discredit- ed the report that county commis- sioners have nothing to do and said that, notwithstanding he had no oth- er business, the performance of business for the count took all- of his time. Counties that have com- missioners who give all of their time | to the counties they serve and who | receive from such men a service as | efficient as it is constant are fortu- | nate. Business as confining and as exacting as this Is not the kind that attracts to itself the average politi-} cign.—Hartford Times. Protect the Fishes” Breeding Grounds. (New London Day.) is a bill before the legisla- purpose of which is to pro- the employment of the otter trawl or beam trawl in the taking of fish within the limits of the state of Connecticut. We have not seen this | bill, but are informed that in its ianguage it refers only to the waters of Long Island Sound. If this be true and if it should be passed in such shape, the bill would fail completely te méet the very worst condition against which it should be directed. The otter or beam trawl is the most destructive devise that has ever been brought into use by fishermen. It Is of comparatively recent development, but in the few years since its introduc- tion in this country it has done more to hasten the destruction of inshore food fishes than all the instrumen- talities that the craft has been brought into action. 0 one is better aware of the ruinous effect of the otter trawl on the state's fisheries than the trawlers themselves. They have lately had the best of reason, in the almost complete disappearance of varieties of fish that formerly con- stituted a steady source of income, to regret the day when they fell under the temptation to adopt the iniquitous “fish dredge. But now that many of them have capital invested in trawls it is impossible to get rid of that de- vice by agreement. There arc re caleitrants who will never voluntarily sion trawling long as a single catch of fish remains in Connecticut waters: and when one persists in trawling the rest, naturally enough, will trawl, too, a4 sort of blind frenzy of protection. So the passage of a prohibitory is a vital nccessity. And tien to the inlets of Long Island Scund and to Fishers Island Sound and inlets is even more necessary application to Long Island If the law is to of any practical value it must he amended to include all tHese waters because, ‘while beam trawling in the Sound is slowly ruinowus to the fisheries, trawling in the iniets, the | wwning places and breeding grounds, s abominally outrageous and calcu- lated to leave Connecticut absolutely fishless within a few yvears, Conversation There ture the hibit in self law its applica- its its Sound itself. be (Ohio State Journal.) The Robert Herrick is glad that the war has come, be- cause it gives people something to talk about, something to arouse their lazy and empty minds. Conversa- tion had become a lost ol <5 1t lost itself in gossip and story telling, the women dolng the gossip part and the men the story telling, ecither of which is enough to kill conversation Mr. Herrick doesn’'t know which the worse, But there favor of the neearer real telling, and | cependence drivel to where a leads in pany to noted writer, had | is in thing he their than the is one says women conversaitpn the are in the gossip story women main leading talk from sense, This is often seen bright and ambitious hos the talk and turns the com- substantial conversation, in which generalizations and funda- mentals take the front rank Men don't do this half as much as women. The other night three ladies and three | gentlemen were together in a parlor and the question came up about the | capitvity and return of the Jews, when the women immedidtely resorted to history and the Bible to decide the point in question, but the men put in their time making rhymes about Nebuchadnezzar, There the trouble have—whenever men latter incline to it is time for foolishness otwithstanding the women do the gossiping and men the story telling, society would bhe he- come vapid, indeed, if it were not for the women. s that women come about, the sume | the 1 it ICWN T4LK. — E | aw history o an et wit He th M o building which at the head of sequently had it removed article in the other of *the was read of amons much says that Herald ain street Giles Stillman the lot at tae Her on the day Raptist ireh by out riber h uh oth interest the old stood sub- who town said was cor- | ner of Lafayette and Beaver streets and turned into a shop in which men's | hats were manufactured | ing will be remembered when the the Young . the exact loc ing being the pre dence of James F often remarked by the bullding had constructed. ing by city proj (S Men's The The build- 1s still stand- was purchased T. A. & B. sation of the build- nt site of the resi- Sullivan It was the passershy taat been very strongly timbers were the rerty 50 trees as they were cut down in the woods and even ssed ance society the | logs as they were rude carpenters of The building was ground and the ti wood, this also of the house whi corner and lived and in was older residents o that Mr, good trade for their d they w by the men of the or, as it as the plug X hat, being a common sportive inclined man conducted a is now the entra and sold not only being the which probably than the chure building itselr Stillman his afterwards being shaped some- | what like an inverted flower pot and when the bullding into the hands of the Temper- hark adhered to the put in place by tae SO many years ago finally razed to the mbers used for fire- disposition upon the Stillman older The Britain say reasonably hats and that in ere worn generally town, the high hat, became known stood Mr. even ch f New had headgear for the gentry, Mr. Still- hat store near what nce to the Arcade the style of hats he manufactured himself but those pur- chased from other parties engaged in same church in drawn This was being the work, through th work hecam used tract for hauling for the liberty the square where and North streets top of which the 1 the banners conta the president breeze, The number of years cared for by the l¢ of the 1 a business. pole, pole” stood lemocratic leader of those days. When tae old moved, cattle was the building being e streets on rollers. e the almost ex- | clusive labors of the late Elam Slater, | who was subsequently given the con- the huge tree used which stood on orth Main, Beaver join and from the ocal democracy had ining the names of andidates for president and vice floating in the there for a and was cspecially ite Lawrence Crean, It yarty is related that when the pole was be- erected the neglected for the ing fair pulley con could climb the pe those things flag could be ccomplished the event being « to to hois managers flag iderable search to find.a man who the amid of the af- rope and required provide and it ble and attach those top that the ted. Tt was finally great excitement, relebrated with the s0 biggest Lonfire that was cver seen on Dublin Hill. The common ¢ transfers this wee one time as if it make a further or provide sufficient 1 mittee to finish Shuttle Meadow finance and taxatic ed that certain tra the $100 referred them. The resolut introduced when the point wa the money was to tempt made t the question. 1t be legally transfe so recommended finance and taxati by the comptrolle; will not be the opinion the depatment nc penses, This ma balances from one other used to be a bate for the some municipal the opinion that line of extravagar dicious expenditure by wa that 1 the s cm management ground that the money had the end in pt saved priated at other department whi heen careful i se as however, dispell ma idea, long fers {ERNS any can partment may the world that made up he found in city service the city this since ure and weak he now no one spots i iy und for good run niost the m wi any « In matt sh n: sons is made subject to a city meeting whilg 3 now it is a charte it was taken up the question was ge the sentiment exy taking money fros and giving it to an inclination to e tures at the close department which economical would lose might purpos bhranch kind of for years again. the as well > more or of the st argument and pe exy le New Britain it for the case, Its h fi with der here gating never af a liquor ca fires, but sought « on heen murder, fered a reward of ture of the murde v nd his house tice that all be given to Supe says the Alderman needed, tended thinks that shortage because money made some at “ouncil k and it looked would attempt to e of $400 to noney for the com- cutting of ice at The, board of »n had recommend- nsfers be made, but to was not among ion in gquestion was Parker and swaised as to where come from no at- o definitely answer could not, however, rred unless it was by the board on. It is believed r than this money because he s of there is enough in w to meet all ex- tter of transferring department to subject of some de- that there were inanciers who Theld it operated in the 1we and against ju It was felt that towards reckless hlic affairs on the department * its balances ap the year for h may not have n its work That ems to have been ed wnd the trans de a matter of there are it de-, so as an- as n the em erstood how and suthicient ort and if it itural thing in should watever surplus e sther branch of tH the early days er of transfer sy [ reas does Lk g o wa s When meeting r regulation at a city snerally debated dhdd Was that m one department another resulted in xtravagant expendi- of the %ear hy the had otherwise heen it felt that it anyway and end ft for “ spme >ss useful in ity service has not been ‘rhaps never resscd its own That heard will the state time in have and police mur- worked investi 1\‘|\|AIV\'(‘ in ‘onnecticut $1,000 for the ¢ ip of Father Zeh- keeper and the no information should rintendent Egan of 18 st a ficers ses in its has the ca has before rer ' make That is and is good to know and the local in perfect harmony efforts prove will bhecause the « solution It can Ix there are theories heing that if known publicly seem strange (o many but prob ably some statement will be made in the near future, if the murderer not apprehended, which tend show why the mystery it ap- pears has not been solved. The fact | that the people to be dealt with do | not speak the English language a great obstacle in the path of the police 1t a handicap, the tence of which must apparent to | every one New Britain's first ex- | perience with out of town detectives | was in the liquor business of years ago, the visit of | tective heing followed some years | later the operations of the Law and Order lcague during the year of no license when there was much | excitement in this city. hat or- | ganization went out of existence sev- | vears ago and the police, | organized under the laws of the state. | has now come into existence and while at first it was antagonized prac- | tically all opposition to it has now | disappeared There are two or three membe of the force at in this city: they make their headquarters at the police station and they | working with Chief Rawlings’ so that there is no discord and sults will surely follow if there is| any way of accomplishing them. It! is a most difficult case and while | theory after theory is worked out| they do not result in the obtaining nf‘; any tangible evidence upon arrest could be made with any chance | of canviction | tair that police | the state and it department is it their ful it | bevond fupon police. this force and just working ! do not success. e ase ix stated worked would is may to as is is exis- be number | one a de- s0 eral state s work are men re- which an | | A story was published in an out of town paper this morning to the effect that the Bosworth murder in New Britain several years ago was never solved, although it admits that Milton Andrews of Hartford was under sus- | picion. There Is scarcely any doubt | but that it was he who killed Bos- | worth and when the annual meeting of the chiefs of police of the United States was held a couple of years ago in a western city the chief of the San Francisco department told Chief Rawlings that he belleved that An- drews was the man. He was never ar- rested for that crime because he com- mitted suicide, but he had been ar- | restéd for killing a woman and it was after that he aroused suspicion hy saying while in jail “that they say T killed my old friend Bosworth in New Britain.” No one had ever thought of him as the murderer up to that time, but out of that remark came the inquiry and subsequent belief that he was guilty. Had he lived and escaped punishment for the murder of the wo- man he was to be brought back he for trial for the killing of the Britain gambler. The out of town pa- per also said that the 3250 diamonl ring which I'ad been the property of Bosworth was never That is not so. The murderer may have taken it but the police learned that it was in the possession of & woman who at the time lived on West Muin street. The murder appearcd for a time to have been a nssterious affair but in the light that has since Loen gotten on the case it can hardly be character- ized as a mystery. The police are sat- isfled that it was Andrews who did the job and it was he who furnished the first clue_as to his identity. The crime was committed a few minutes before noon and the fact that a man could slip into New Britain and do such a deed in a Main street block and get away proves how it sometimes is for a man to conceal his identity. 1ecovered casy Brutal Double Murder, (Catholic Transcript.) The brutality attending der of the Rev. Joseph tor of St.° Andrew's church, New Britain, ful housekeeper, h no the «riminal ann of dyed as those annals arc of a the mur- Zebris, pas- | (Lithuanian) | and his faith- | parallel in | Connecticut, with crime The heart- | creeds and revolting character. strings citigens of all no creed are so wrought up the bare recital of the shocking detail that wonder grows that eevn degraded human nature can stoop uch as these. Here was & man in his pastoral duty. up and down the statc his countrymen in the adoption. He wejoiced when lines were ant He was 1 counsellor, theit and adversity them to success goes world. i his pen, his purse were enlisted in all that fo hizh type “citizenship Waterbury ritain d in irited whose the His priesthood his character followed by to deptas | a wholly consumed | He haa ministeri land of with in to their them ple trusted | | taeir 1=t place weir friend He pointed in prosperity in road this 4 success Voice, a of American | and Nev him a public influence and recogni man of wis ide peace lent 1S order added citizen. He A people into the zhways and bywayvs of an indus- | inl and agricultural community. | Always he led them into pastures that e His sal is at- | sted every hich he abored school he T devotion spiritual o1 temporal weigit ) a his e apostolic s parish is in in v e nad were his to either the welfare of him from his rectory, he was with the things the Lord or the toings thereto He pensed his charities unobtrusivel with hand The the poor the distressed straight nohle unwearied the fidelity Nousaohold confidence hut n hors, Men derlying crected workshops his people took busy of with relating dis and of went In his inspired an even ippenl or he his it lahors he was by companion of his him shared the the | | who them | of who with those Knew them midst of his Zebris s ®earcn lor this double strangulation even the letting of agzers those whoo read the story All the machinery of the eity and the state are now, as well they might of to esteem the “ather wil) multiplicd | struck down. | the uwl which appalling human blood motive crime in more than be, set to discover the per- as foul as this life may indeed in at petrators work If murder can go unavenged, human be said to be held cheap this commonwealth A sterling citizen, priest and missionary, les woman of strict integrity, have done to death. No word of eulogy can reach them now The tribunals for the detection and punishment of crime can never compensate for what has taken But amid all the just indignation of the hour it is con- soling to reflect that the differences of creed and race and place are here obliterated, The entire state reels under the shock of the inaumanity of this double cr! while Te- calls the unselfish, consecrated ser- vice of once blessedly busy lives for- feit at the hands of the assassin apostolic than an no been heen e, memory Register, divorced conditions, just as Sara M. ¥ Washerwomen The from washtub should be insanitary should the Babb, a ana dairy, argues visiting nurse of the town country nursing service of the American Red Cross, in an important article on health conservation en- titled, Inspect the Premises of the Washerwomen,” which appears in the February number of the American Red Cross Magazine The pioneer effor of wreenville, 8. ., Miss Babb, should tention of every board of health and city council in the United Stat Greenville has an ordinance which re- quires all to and obtain from the hoard rermits take in washing. Inspec- tions of washerwomen are by the Red C'ross visiting nurse In refer to housing conditions, general sanitary condition of the premises, water supply and drainage, com municable diseases in the houschold care in handling clotnes, scrubbing boards, ironing boards, and pots and tubs, the latter being required to be galvanized iron. Score-cards are kept as in dairy inspection, and to hold a permit, premises, houses, eto., must be kept clean, and any sickness in the family must be reported promptly to the board of health. The permit is withdrawn upon the failure of a holder to comply with all the provisions of the ordinance. “I know of no measure of more im mense and practical value in the con- trol or prevention of communicable diseases than the ordinance regulat- ing washerwomen,” declares Miss Babb, 1 was sent to inspect the house and premises of woman who applied for washing and found her ironing and placing freshly-ironed clothes on the bed where her son, far advanced in tuberculosis, lay “The remarkable and deplorable susceptibility of the negroes to tuber- culosig, the rapidity with which they die of it, their bad housing conditions, the growing frequency of pellagra among them, and the almost general presence of specific diseases, make this law imperative, both for them and for the protection ‘of the white people; and it affords a splendid method of educating the co pop ulation in the laws of h and sanitation.” Miss Babb embellishes her interest- ing article with a number of amusing little stories of life among the washerwomen. She resorts at times to the use of entertain- ingly line by along this presented command the at- s as washerwomen register health to made ence one wred alth dialect very Missionaries, Madura dis Appeal to Govérnment officials in trict, have South India, appro: with the charge be made proposition of criminal up of the rob ber caste of Kellars strong, manly people through lawless and notorious There are nearly 200,000 of these Kellars scattered through Madura district. The American board men have been so successful in among some small villages of the caste that the government the whole responsilibility in hands of the mission thorities offer to set aside tract of land near Keelagudy, a villayg which is the home of some of il most notorious thieves. This land | ould in teaching the people improved agricultural methods give a place for schools and im proved homes. The Indian governme will pul up the necessary building including a bungalow for the superin tendent who will be given a free hand in the n:anagement of the settlement. | The missionaries are cager co- | te with the civil authoritic believe such a settlement can | self-suporting and more; belicve that profit should be divided to (heir encoura introduce iry in that country that they take settlement to robbers work for to them The an a large the w be used and for to oper They made they eve which might | imong the | ement. They gardening wgricultural would people market well a ger They schools and boarding the children of the of the district brought for education would surrond the wholsome religious government is pleased the and n=es except the salary in of the settlement schieme opens o would and d on Ish to which other parts work as a sculg estal day schools Kellars in | would be thoey with Th plans pay of the mis and village influence with the offers to whole of mission exp onary The that th another district mission as to the ing a settlement tribe near tion char " il has approached the possibility of locat- for a smaller robher to the hoard's st Arruppukkottal that it supervised managed place. up hopef police commissioner of a enough 2 at =0 be and that could from the of the plendid serviee in taming castes i the mission and people direct- This recognition government of the the missionaries have and civilizing the gratifying rreat bringing 1y to the the children have longed but they to finance properly ment will it financially in other it opens up derful possibilities before bhoth people and the missionaries. on part done lawless It to most gives a preach the giving chance teach, as it does mission and It access to which the larger sealc not been abl Now the govern is a work do on a which have support and ways and won negro | place | McMILLAN'S ANOTHER SPECIAL SALE 4l WOMEN'S NECKWEAR SATURDAY' 49c each FOR VALUES UP TO $1.50, W neckwear fore day twel Vestees, finest laces, em N and laces. WOMEN" Special black a Saturda Three plque self sew fa WOMEN" WOMEN" window, TONS Sale in York expe tric Clean ing a | | Vacancies nutior | Hartfor States i ination f men qualifying fill e a day at t ington, D. | mit | perience ¢ { employers 16 on | Ve | | | and | be made 1 ton | ne 1 Ne or house An oper is o ician for Hartford town. Th to 81,800 filled ment the field twenty-fiv not more quired on tion on ven e for tigations The lar 800 Ve M and assista Gradua in rnized course year's marketing Applicants An of will for only ford Th $ Hart ' n to led i departmen ington 20 and 45 The news f(romw has The old siders 1t state in « to and « disc dur fore re-er to Ney women short for this they will American. too ‘W e Saturday last eek to contracted ues greater ve Gui Orjental b Spe Made of emb s TEX for nd SALE OF v a row n i Ancy s S valu SHIRT AND $5.98 for did around for than ever hundred mpes, we g0 ete., and reandies clal 25¢ GUARANTEED HOSE, Saturday tan t $1.25 emb, prix black, emb n BLOUSES es up to another Dainty made Brussels' only pair, tan WAISTS MISSES' any $16.00 "RATION AND e rt Government a il s roi on two ies he r G complete and g to t it » H hair Demonstration reonal dresser of the charge I Trantz nat have enough We there- lot, val. For Satur- Collars, of the point FLATRE COLLARS, cach. and pleated organdies DURA. 22¢ pair, KID GLOVES, value $1.50 seam and and white, ANIDY Each, value $1 COATS. the coat in ALE OF REAL HUMAN HAIR GOODS. of a New nd matcher, Elec~ Make your house clean< J and not Be Be Held Feb, 1 ervic nstrument March 16 will be in this n: maker a task Street. comm wehed | unces an open competitive representatives of the American hoard | position observatory, Wash- CIVIL SERVICE BOARD ANNOUNCES TESTS | i Several witions.— United ans® exam- for those to $3.84 From hosen at Applicants should sub record ‘hey must old he many vitford w York 1« announ mer Ne Ay he 1 the Al e v the ch 1 Middietown an open competitive marketing ind nt for v ra v tion au sta experience ex m en nd 1y Ne 000 (r it Applicants ve: nti-suffrage making re-enacted rde ne ga e brac ad N to relapsc do cmpetitive a 1 only " lary on ar wireau of interior yplicants ars old An [ two day of 7, at} in city both men nges from from niversity nding and in perience ugt be competitive drug held Marcl v Haver lary range a year. \ e burea r agricultur ars old vada old not her did long re t ta t. Their nt into ment ¢ thi gA ovember hold We \bout pert March and ranges f Vacancies B e under of their recommendations be between Applications commission other heing mines for mu A yeurs wrtford there a so1e ex- from 21 can at Wash- g the the custom ves, xamination mechan- 17 Middl $1,400 will be depart- ervice in t be over photograph old is re- examinae Ha¥ also xamination inve women to $1, at rom New will 400 re* ot one? of requisite rooye college t loast place 35 years examination inspector hi that for 17-18 a M men at dle- rom $1 ios Willyy mistr { Wast ® th divor require ident The thore « " ene, Yon operatg, lawe £00 1o 14 old P a ffrage t Whiit Watervury D. McMILLAN- 199-201-2038 Main

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