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NEW BRITAI N DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1017. New Britain Herald. g HERALD PUBLISHING COMPANY. Proprietors. Tssued dafly (Sunday excepted) at 4:15 p. m., at Herald Buil 7 Chureh St Office at New Britain Mail Matter. Entered at the Po: N a8 Second Clas: Delivered by carrier tp any part of the city for 15 cents a week, 65 cents a month. “ Subscriptions for paper to be sent by mall, payable in advance, 60 cents a month, $7.00 a year The only profitable advertising medium in the city. Cireulation books and press room always open to advertisers. The Herald will be found on sale at Hota- ling's News Sta . 42nd St. and Broad- way, New i Board Walk, At- lantic City, and Hartford Depot. TELEPHONE CALLS, Business Office Editorial Rooms Member of the Associated Press. The Assoclated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news credited to it or not otherwise ' credited in this paper and also the local news published herein. A Mighty Duty. The call is not alone to sguns, This is not but a battle test; The world has summoned free men’s sons In every field to do their best. The call has come to every man To reach the summit of his powers; ~ To stand to service where he can— b A mighty duty now is ours. —EDGAR A. GUEST. ;:wm: A GARRISON FINISH. . On the American turf years ago followers of the track were often nt into the seventh heaven of de- ;?& by the manner in which one ey came down the home stretch. famous rider’s name was Garri- on. His mode of riding was to allow £ others to set the pace, hold his horse .,hr ‘check, and then at the proper | time to come into the lead and win | the race. Such exhibitions of hard ' drfving came to be known the coun- over as ‘““Garrison finishes.” Such finish, too, is typically American. ¢ American nature goes at a thing n off-hand sort of way, gradually ‘waxes warm, and then throws &ll its [ enérgies into the scale. We are now tering on the last leg of the race or'the purchase of the Second Lib- rty Loan. We are, in the language )if the track, on the home stretch. {There are but five maorg, ‘days after ithis, in which_,we\r ean-gubscribe, in hich we can purchase bonds. Let not be said that we lost out on the lap. The race is to the swift is time.' The Kaiser knows that, 1 pro-Germans know it, and every- one interested in the failure of Amer- fcan arms hopes and prays for a dis- al defeat. With one good spurt the igoal ‘can be attained. We must not se. Let's have it in every sense a son finish. THE INDIVIDUATS. In the despatches from General [Pershing announcing the names of those who lost their lives when the American transport Antilles was sunk last week there will be found one sergeant and one corporal whose milies for generations lived in the [Fatberland. One mother must re- ve the notification of her son’s h in Nordenheri, Qldenberg, Ger- many. A father of another Ameri- pan soldier will receive the sad tidings thin the very shadow of the Wil- lmastrasse. These boys, sons of parents born Germany, ostensibly were citizens £ this country for the reason they puld find greater and better fortune America than that held out to them In the old country. That there lives ere given in the service of the new nd bespeaks the love they bore it. [fheir fate was decided to great ex- ent by the ravishing hand of a alser who could never quite come to understanding of the: principles of Pemocracy, who believes in the divine ght of kings, who sees but the one orm of government, absolute mon- chy. German fathers and German moth- s have made great sacrifices in this r. Up to this time the sacrifices wve been all on the one side. They ave glven their all. their sons and heir treasure, that the Imperial Ger- an Government might persue the thless tenor of its way, forgetting Ihat the divine law positively requires mility and meekness in all men. aving made these offerings on the tar of autocracy, there are German nothers and fathers who must see lheir loved ones go to death on the ry opposite side of battle, in the s of a democratic legion which will jght that autocracy be stamped once nd all from the face of the earth. knd when it shall all have been jeared away, provided Democracy owns Autocracy, who shall say the rman people will not have gained 7 the sacrifices? The present gen- jon may not realize on the ir- nent of lives and money; but those who come after will certainly not rue the day that a mad monarch was driven from supreme control. ‘What sorrows there are attached to such things must be borne under the knowledge that after all the individ- uals must be sacrificed for society as a whole. UP TO THE FARM. Mayor Quigley’s warm defense: of the farm committee wherein is ap- pended the request that press and populace refrain cism until the harvest of potatoes has been realized will meet with respect from those who are anxious to sece this work successfully concluded. There is no disposition on the part of the majority of people here to un- Justly criticise the men who have un- dertaken this work. So far as the authority for an appointment of a fuel and food committee might be questioned, the general public, the and the common council are somewhat aware of an existing act passed by the general assembly in January and to which the mayor again calls attention. What has been said against the municipal farm is the result of impa- tience on the part of a few enthusi- asts who probably overestimated the value of a project. started scven months ago. There are some who ex- pect wonders every time a public en- terprise is launched. Pictures had been painted which contained very rosy hues, and the municipal farm was made to stand out as the sum- mum bonum of everything leveled at that distracter of joy fram the hu- man heart, Old Man High Cost ot Living. We will gladly await the report which' the municipal farm committoe must make on the work in hand. Fig- ures will speak for themselves. Until then, no fair-minded man will pro- nounce the public farm a dismal fail- ure. On the other hand, it cannot be considered a success until it is proven successful. The test is very simple. As, In the every-day walks af life, a man is considered successful who delivers the goods, so with the farm. All it has to do to merit the unani- mous pralse of a grateful people is to produce encugh potatoes to help keep the wolves from the door. press LANKY. BOB. An older generation will remember the activitles of “Bob” Fitzsimmons, former heavyweight chimplon of the world, who died in Chicago today. “Lanky Bob” was in his heydey when the American nation manifested a keener interest in the fistic art than it does today, when the prize-ring was the center of all attractions for men. Since his rise and fall various hap- penings have brought a once hitherto ultra-popular sport somewhat in the -decline. There was a time when the visit of “Lanky Bob” to any city in the coun- try was an event never to be forgot- ten. At that time the champion of the world, he was the admired of all who relished clean sport. In his ec- centric moods he gathered around him one of the greatest collections of thoroughbred dogs any sporting man ever possessed, and this, of course, was the great medium of advertising for the holder of fistiana’'s greatest title. The strange assortments of canines Were usually loaded into the old-fashioned sea-going hacks and pa- raded in front of the vehicle in which rode “Lanky Bob.” Those who profess an abhorrence even at the thought of boxing will show little if any interest in the pass- ing of an idol once dear to hearts the world over. Yet there are those who recognize in the tactics of Bob Fitz- simmons the true art of manly de- fense, the high-water mark of clean sportsmanship, the acme of ethics in the hoped arena, and, as such, they will always hold a warm spet in their hearts for good old “Lanky Bobh,” whom men once pronounced ‘“the king of them all.” FACTS AND FANCIES. If we don’t care about paying for the war “over there”, we can have t over here.—Boston Globe. Henry Ford is the sort of pacifist who gives his plants and ais dollars to his country. He has done both.— Ncw Haven Journal-Courier. There may be some relation of cause | and _effect between the scarcity of tea in England and the grim determina- tion with which Haig's army is ad- vancing.—Ncw York Evening Sun. Gov. Holcomb is a little late with his question “Who is George Creel?" The rest of the nation has been ask- ing that for months.—New York Eve- ning Sun. Three cheers for the Russlan re- public—one down and two when it seems to be permanent.—St. Louis Post-Dispatch. Secretary McAdoo complains that the Liberty Loan lags. Perhaps, if he had decided to sell bonds, as mer- chants sell goods, by advertising, he would have less cause to complain.— Hartford Post. There are some mighty clever camoufleurs these days, but the Con- necticut gentleman who made and from adverse criti-’ sold wocden nutmegs has not yet been equaled.—Albany Argus. We have reason to be proud of the | American secret service, according to the T.ondon Spectator, which says it has always stood in high rcpute for professional skill and “will now stand higher than ever.” Has not Secretary Lansing something more up his sleeve ?—Springfield Republican. The caterpillar reaches out for a good hold, pulls himself up and reaches out again. Buy a bond after the caterpillar fashion: Pay a litle down and an installment weekly un- til you have caught up; then reach for another. to lar plan!— independence. Try ew York World. High above the clamor and the rush of many feet, Level with yon flaunting flag which ripples in the breeze, I can see the swaying tops of green and russet trees. I can watch the dancing play of sun- lizht on the street. Purple mists of morning come a- creeping o'er the town, Waking it reluctantly from hills,of dream, Waking it to rhythmic roar of der- rick, drill and steam, Flowlng, tides of eager life that eddy up and down. happy Spires of many churches prick the opalescent sky, 5 Gaunt and craggy buildings loom, innumerable. gray, Turned to glowing splendor by the glory of the day, Crowding into Heav'n itself where flags and seagulls fly! High above the teeming streets those “banners sway and swing, Calling men as never yet in all the changing past, Carrying the message of the silver trumpet blast, Message of a Battle Hymn that march- ing millions sing! ' Vision shining, wonderful, in sun- light or in rain— Purple haze of Autumn, baby Sea-Wind sings, Rush of doves a-flutter with a swirl of 'shining wings— Yet over all and under all our con- sciousness of Pain! —Elizabeth Newport Hepburn, in New York Times. . while a The Hotbed of Race Prejudice. Our individual tastes and foibles may seem of small public interest. Most, women would declare the height of their shoe heels is their own busi- ness. PBut it isn’t. Last week the mighty organization of the Red Cross gave a public parade through New York streets. Fifteen thousand women were in line. Each felt a stir of de- votion and a sense of efficiency—but also a feminine desire to have her feet look pretty. So many women put on high heeled slippers that clicked daintily for the six blocks and limped the rest of the way. A drafted man who ‘stood on the sidewalk as part of the admiring throng didn’t do much admiring. He discovered S0 per cent. of the marching women were wearing high heel Tt cooled his enthusiasm for their “efficiency”. The actual Red Cross nurses, trim and businesslike in their traveling uniforms, wore low heels of serious service, but the great majority of marchers clung to the sup- posed charm of the French hecl. The critical watcher knew how high heels cut in half the capacity and endur- ance bf women at sny work that de- mands walking or standing—and he knew intellizent women also knew. And so, the women who selfishly and foolishly chose vanity instead of com- mon sense for their parade footgear established a bad impression of their own serious.purpose. In the matter of war-service oven the choice of one’s shoe-hee] since it involves working efliciency, is not one’s own busines. Want to Elect Teachers. (Brockton Enterprise.) To show to what extremes ideas of liberty are running in Russia, a re- turned traveler says that the Petro- grad schoolboys are demanding the right to elect their own teachers and to dismiss any they do not like. That is rather extreme, to be sure. But it ‘wasn’'t so very long ago that we read of instances In this country where pupils “struck” against unpopular teachers, and there was an instance heré and there where the strikers won. Parents have in some cases de- manded the dismissal of teachers in this country and have won out. In the “good old days” if a big schoolboy didn’t like a teacher and was able to “Hck him” the teacher found it wise to patk up his bag and move to some less strenuous part of the country. Russia is a little advanced in this school matter, but really we don't know of any country in which an un- popular teacher is bound to hold his place against the protests of pupils or parents or both. Bond Briefs. . (New York Sun) It is thirtv-eight years since it has been possible to buy a 4 per cent. bond of the United States at par, the price ot which the bonds of the second Lib- erty Loan are offered to those who subscribe now. In those. thirty-eight years 4 per cent. bonds of the United States have sold at 30 per cert. above par. Unless your income exceeds $40,000 a year the bonds of the second Liberty YLoan are worth materially more in respect of income than the bonds_ of the first Liberty Loan. i If your income exceeds $60,000 a year the 3 1-2 per cent. honds of the first Liberty Loan are worth more to vou In respect of income than the bonds now being offered—and the chance to show your patriotism hy subscribing to the second Liberty Loan is tWat much the better. Postmasters, cash Liberty bond cou- pons on presentation: they also cash on presentation Treasury warrants for the interest payable on registered Lib- erty bonds. There is no_ better road | the caterpil- | FACT S ABOUT THE AMERICAN NAVY BY LIEUT. FITZHUGH GREEN, U. 8. N. Clear Ship A man clears for action by taking off hig coat. A wild-cat merely sharp- ens his claws, licks his chops, and goes to it. A battleship, which com- bines the flghting abilities of both, and whose notorious intention is to fight, must worm through the most intricate lists of details before she is actually ready. ¥ Preparation entails five chief ob- jects: personnel, battery, power, fire, and first aid. It is divided into two stages: strip ship and clear ship. When war is impending the fleet is stripped of all boats except those especially required for communica- tion between ships. Boat wreckage | in battle starts fires and endangers all who are near. If the ship sinks life preservers must be depended upon. Any other inflammable mate- rial, such as lockets, flagstaffs, booms, mattresses, hammocks, wooden lad- ders, benches, must be seht ashore before leaving port. Nowadays furniture in the officers’ quarters is of sheet metal painted to imitate wood—'tin can homes’ they are called. Awnings must be retained until probable contact with the en- emy. Tropical heat is Intolerable without them, and may cause sick- ness among the men. Mess tables and benches are kept until the last minute, . Strip ship also includes rigging splinter nets under engine and fire room gratings. Torpedoes are fitted with war heads containing explo- sives. Everyone writes a cheerful letter home, makes his will, and the ship sails. & On nearing the war zone boat- swaing pipe “Clear ship for action.” The captain remains on the bridge scrutinizing the horizon for suspi- cious craft. The‘executive officer su- perintends work on deck. In and near naval engagements men must le cooped up for hours in tur- rets and other cramped spaces. Gal- ley flres are hauled and lunches served out. Drinking water, and in cold weather, clothing, are important items. Ship’s prisoners are released, serious cases having been sent ashore before sailing. Every man is given a first aid packet which he puts in a clean pocket of a clean shirt—for regulations require the sailor bathe and wear clean clothes the day he fights. ~Dirty cloth carried into a wound increases charces for infec- tion. for Action There being no boats, 1ife preserv- ers are plled in aoccessible but pro- tected places. Regular .ships. hes- | pital and operating rooms are: put in ' order for extraordinary work. Auxil- | iary dressing stations are rigged throughout the ship. Splinters cause 90 per cent. of deaths in naval battle. All top ham- per, extra gear, and other light work about the ship, if struck by an explo- sive shell must fly. to pieces like a shrapnel with ' disastrous effects, Stanchions bridge ends, davits, ventil- ators, ladders, mess and galley and coaling gear must go overboard. In cases where it is impossible to ellm- inate a source of splinters heavy wire nettings or thin steel bulkheads are | put up to protect the men exposed. Precautionary measures include grap- nels for clearing the propellers of | wreckage, collision mat ready to go over the side; and auxiliary steering and ship-handling stations. Against possibility of fire, olls, paints, and other highly combustible material are disposed of. Fire hose is led out in all parts of the ship, decks wet down and the water left running. At Jutland fire piping rup- tured by splinters flooded water tight compartments and nearly sank sev- eral ships. Sir John caught it going and coming. Full power ig made ready in en- gine and dynamo rooms. Superior speed nearly always wins sea bat- tles.Rapldity of gun fire depends upon electric power operating load- ing and pointing gear. Extra pumps are started and steam lifies not need- {ed cut out. Battle lighting circuits are thrown in. One small hatch is left open for escape of firemen and engineers and electricians. Often, as | on the Suvaroff, they do not escape, but drown like kittens in a sack. Favor the Flag and Liberty By the Purchase of a Liberty Loan Bond. It Pays You Four Per Cent. Interest and Increases PEACE and LIBERTY, BUY YOUR BOND TODAY. CARTER WEEK October 22nd to 27th Distinguish the Best from the rest, and secure Iit—by merely CARTER’'S KNIT UNDERWEAR Please.” saying: ‘What makes it wear and fit and why people ask for it. comes first with many people” ,and the CARTER'S never lose sight From the selection of the yarns right through to the washing and sterlizing of the completed garment more wear is the constant demand of the Carters, and people know it. of that. SO NICELY FINISHED are these garments with every detail so thoroughly looked after by the most experienced operators, backed up by fifty years of manufacturing experience are reasons why people demand “CARTER’S” CALL AT OUR UND ERWEAR DEPARTMENT In war, ammunition is always at | the guns, or men standing by to sen i it. Torpedoes must be ready to fire, ! and rifies avallable for boarding | parties in case the ship comes to | close quarters. Finally battle flags | run to the masthead, and the execu- | tive officer reports ready to the cap- | tain. | The Chesapeake was the Dnlyl American vessel which ever struck her colors to an enemy. So much gear littered her decks she couldn’t | /clear for action. For this rrason, the | ! training ship Chesapeake was recent- ly renamed the Severn. Disgrace is better forgotten. ‘ DOING HIS BIT MERWIN O. PETERSON. In May, 1917, Merwin O. Peterson presented himself at Troop B armory in West Hartford as a candidate for the cavalry. After undergoing a physical examination he was accepted and as- signed to Troop L. Shortly after Troop L‘was reorganized into a ma- chine gun battalion and sent to Ni- antic. Later he was transferred to the aviation corps and at present is at one of the aviation camps. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. John Peterson of 485 Stanley street. A Purist. (Christian Register) “I am delighted to meet you,” sald the father of the college student, shaking hands warmly with the pro- fessor. ‘“My son took algebra from you last year, you know.” “Pardon me,” said the professor, “he was exposed to it, but he did not tako it.” (Dickens). There is one broad sky over all the world and, whether it be blue or cloudy, the same heaven beyond it. His Early Suggestion As to the Prop- agation of Light. (New York Evening Post.) The scientific achlevements of | Franklin were various. but it is prob- | able that the general reader.knows nothing of any of them, except the | famous experiment in conducting electricity from the clouds to the | earth, Methods of taking precautions | against lightning are today rather | those of Faraday than of Franklin | and Franklin’s experiments in elec- | tricity have been overshadowed by | the subsequent advance. Yet they | were of a fundamentally useful sort. | And in a pamphlet published by John | Trowbridge, on “Franklin as a Sclen- tist,”” attention is called to his remark- | able theory, expressed in a letter to ! Cadwallader Golden, in 1752, in re- | gard to the propagation of light: ! “I am not satisfied with the doc- | trine that supposes particles of mat- ter called light continually driven off from the sun's surface with a swift- ness so predigious. smallest particle conceivable have, with such a motion, a force exceed- ing that of a twenty-four-pounder discharged from a cannon? Must hot the sun diminish exceedingly by such a waste of matter; and the planets, instead of drawing nearer to him, as some have feared, recede to greater distances through the lessened at- traction? Yet these particles, with this amazing motion, will not drive before them, or remove the least and | lightest dust they meet with. ” And the sun, for aught we know, contin- ues of his ancient dimensions. May not all the phenomena of light be | more conveniently solved by suppos- ing universal space to be filled with a subtle elastic fluid which, when at | rest, is not visible, but whose vibra- | tions affect that fine sense in the eye, as those of air do the grosser organs | of the ear? We do not, in the case | of sound, imagine that any sonorous particles are thrown from a bell.”” This*is in complete agreement with our present theory of light and Heat; } vet when Franklin wrote it was in op- position to the corpuscular theory of no less a man than Sir Isaac Newton. | . Mr. Trowbridge also calls attention to the fact that in a paper on the aurora i FRANKLIN AND THE ETHER. ’ | \ borealis Franklin propounded the main theory accepted today, that it resulted from “the flashing of elec- trical fire from positive towards nega- tive clouds at a great distance, through the upper part of the atmos- phere, where the resistance is least.” Not a Valid Excuse. (From the Detroit Free Press.) “I bought Liberty bonds a few months ago. Now you want me ta buy again.” “Great Scott, man, you bought beefsteak for your children a week ago, too! Are you going to make them live the rest of their lives on the memory of that dinner?” The Giraffe, In its native country of Africa the giraffe sometimes attains the helght of seventeen feet.' things difficult to design v to perform.—Johnson. Many prave e The Alternative. Mr. B.—Do you think you'll be able to keep up with your neighbors? Mrs. B.—If we can't, my dear, we'll move.—Pittsburgh Press. i high emotion, no responsiveness to ideals, no ability to be carried away | by strong, deep, bouyant feeling? Let us show you “CARTER” Garments in all weights and styles to fit the tiny infant to the grown-up kinds for men and women. INFANTS’' BANDS, Priced INFANTS’ VESTS, Priced CHILDREN’S VESTS AND CHILDEN’S UNION SUITS WOMEN'’S VESTS AND PANTS of Merino and Wool, $1.65 to $2.75 each. WOMEN'S UNION SUITS Ot Merino, Wool and Silk and Wool. Priced $2.75 to $3.25 Suit. Cotton Suits, priced $1.50 to $2.25 Medium and Heavy W}lg‘ht Suit. LIGHT WEIGHT COTTON SUITS Lace trimmed, tight and shell knee; sleevelgss styles, $1.00 to $1.49 Suit. LIGHT WEIGHT VESTS AND TIGHTS Priced 50c to 69c each. MEN’S UNION SUITS, Fine quality Wool, $3.25 per suit. for Fancy Holiday Linens. Extra Large Size. Old Bleach, $1.00 quality, The McMillan Store, Inc. “Always Reliable” 25¢ to 59¢ each. 25¢ to 750 each. PANTS, Priced 60c to $1.50 each Priced $1.15 to $2.00 Suit, SPECIAL SALE OF TOWELS. Starting this week and continuing for an indefinite time we an- nounce this Special Selling of Towels having stocked up quantities of Towels at old prices, before they advanced. Now we need the room Therefore values to reduce our stock of Towels to normal, 50c TURKISH TOWELS Priced now 39c each. PURE IRISH LINEN TOWELS Priced now 89c each. MUSE N0t the | sem—— “Wear Priced I we offer these exceptional Per doz. $4.50. $10.50 per doz. SALUTE THE FLAG. «The Place For a Real American Man'’s Hat When the Flag Passes Him Is Over His Heart.” (Chicago Tribune). While writing “The place for a real American man's hat when the flag passes him is over his heart” we were not unaware that a certain type of real American will pull off his hat, keep it off till the flag has gone by, but hate” to hold it over his heart, since that implies possessing a heart ! to hold it over. ! Nobody prides himself on lacking an eye. Nobody thanks his lucky stars that he is hard of hearing. Why thig boast (for it amounts to that) of having no sentiment, no capacity for Among the races to which Americans trace their ancestry anly the English dread to betray emotion. In Ger- many Hans kisses Fritz and no one laughs. In Ireland display of feeling is not odious, concealment is. Latins weep without shame. And it is puz- zling to guess how the English came by their idea that to admit oneself tender or romantic or sentimental or passionately enthusiastic is a confes- sion of weakness. The ancient Brit- ons thought not. After a battle war- riors could openly shed tears of grief or jov. It is a queer pose, this of the Amer- ican who wil not hold his hat over his | heart. He gives the lle to his own inner nature in a way Englishmen themselves do not countenance. He will tell you that he dreads hyvpoc- ris Then let him tell us what hy pocrisy is more grotesque than his re- Juctance to honor by outward sign the flag that thrills him through and through when it passes. & We repeat, the place for a real | American man’s hat when the flag passes him is over his heart. We are not asking him to assume a patriotism he does not feel; the patriotism is there. We are not asking him to be anything but himself. Instinct prompts the expression, and no finer instinct ever throbbed in the breast of a real American. Ashamed of that, are we? No, nor proud. A man other thing—the attitude of half hearted homage to the flag—away:: with it! It is bad manners. It is, bad tactics. Fundamentally it is bad morals—a species of shamming. Advertised Lett;rs. The following is a list of letters re- maining unclaimed at the New Brit-, aln Post Office, Oct. 22, 1917. Anderson, N. H. Aderson, M., 225 So. Main. Bennett, Mrs. G. S. Budley, Mr. and Mrs. George Berry, C. A. Briske, Frederick, 59 Jubilec. Brooks, F. C. Brown, T. L. Castrio, Fillipfor, 310 Main. Carlson, Mrs. G. Carr, Mrs. Wilfred, East St. Carlson, Mrs. Chas., 25% Kast. Cosden, John S. Cruse, Jessie, E. Main. Demergian, Stephan, 232 Corbin ave. Eppler, Earl, 40 Hayes St. Frotio, Frank, 35 Wash. St., special delivery. Falking, Miss S. Greene, George, No. Main. Goodwin, Anna Good, Mrs. R. Cooker, W. A. Hoffman, Fred A., 435 Mrynte Ave. Kane, James A. Kiroopolo, Games Primi Karwowskl, A. A. Kalenske, Adam, 27 North. Lere, Miss, 262 Wine. Lapnaski, Miss Liskodia, 168 Broad. McCabe, Mrs. John., Belden St. Martin, Mrs. Alex, 138 No. Malin. Martin, R. J. Nelson, Alma, Pear] Court. O’Brien, Mary, 8 Washington. Parcelalak, Thendore Piloons, P. P. Rogers, Harold Ryan, Walter Reend, Theo. N., 86 Foster. Richmond, David, 234 E. Main. Rossora, M., 178 Tremont. Ryba, Mrs. Antoma, 59 Market. Salamon, Albert Sharp, Nora Tuthill, Geo. W. Villafane, Lorenzo Whiton, T. W. Wilson, M. L. ‘Watson, Ed Zemetosks, Joe might as well brag of his religion, or of his devotion to his wife, or his love for the babe on his knee. But the W. F. DELANEY, Postmaster.