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& umb1a - Grafonola . What shall we pay for our phonograph? Don’t try to answer that at home. Go where Columbia Grafonolas are sold and look at one model after an- other until you have seen the éntire line. They are all exhibited for your inspection. They’ll be played for you. The Grafonola is a musical instru- ment. To know it you must see it, hear it, and play it. In no other way can the Columbia be judged. To ask you to hear the Grafonola— isn’t that the surest way of proving its tone qualities? To ask you to see it—isn’t that better than praising its beauty? To invite you to compare Columbia Grafonolas with other phonographs you have seen and heard—isn’t that more convincing than repeated state- ments that it is ““the best”’? From $18 to $250, with models be- tween these extremes at prices that rep- resent splendid value, affords a range for choice that is all you can desire. Those who have: already bought Columbia Grafonolas have done so with the complete and comforting as- surance that they have chosen the right instrument. "This same assurance will be yours only after you’ve heard the Columbia Grafonola in one of the conveniently located Columbia salesrooms. Your visit there will be a welcome one. It is a Columbia policy to make suchshoppingas pleasantasintelligence and sympathy can make it. Columbia Graphophone Company New York Ten Ml]llon I\ew Members by| Christmas. All You Need Is a Heart and a Dollar. Join the Red Cross Toda.y 5= = 'Nnnwfw IS SANE |- =iy XMAS GRAFONOLA CLUB Closes Saturday, Dec. 8, 1917 Only Four Days More Don’t be one of the disappointed ones this Christmas. now while the club is still open. Christmas only comes once a 1> does our liberal Christmas club offer. Join Now, Next Week Will Be Too Late | & Club Terms: 1 50c Weekly or More Until Xmas ’ Club lan-No. 4 $1 DOWN $1 WEEKLY Until Xmas 4 Pay the balance on convenient weekly or monthly terms after the ] holidays. Club plan No. 3 includes COLUMBIA GRAFONOLA FAVORITE AT $55, in any wood to match your furniture. Equipped with a powerful double spring motor and the latest number six sound box. CABINET TO MATCH $i5 ADDITIONAL MAKE THIS CHI})IISNI’{ZMAS A MUSICAL RECORD CERTIFICATES NOW ON SALE s obtalned cmployment at unition plant, and laf covered to be Germ E of them even offie n army. " The press is warning. the peopls look for a criminal spy in cvery Ge 1 man in the country. In order to keep sach undesirab uo«s. out of the couniry and pry , vent the increasing number of fory I x..nem of a poor quality from drifth | into Norway, a short bill was pas by parliament forbidding foreignef | who have arrived ta stay here mo without a special Undergoing Same Program AsWe Did Before the War (Correspondenca of The Assoclated ress.) Christiania, Nov. 18.—Norway dur- ing last half of this year has had the same experience of German methods | POCTOI'S CONTROL. as the United States went thraugh be- | (Correspondence of The Assoc fore it entered tho war, splos working | Press.) ] everywhero under the direction of cs.| London, Nov. 17.—"The doctor ' plonage centres in the nelghboring ; made this world struggle probably a of the least deadly ever fought in ! partion to the numbers engaged,” countries, Sweden and Denmark. Thanks to the work of the police, especially in Christlania, many of Dr. Woods Hutchiscn, an Amerie them have been caught, some sent to|in an address at the Royal soclef jail and other expelled from the coun- | of medicine. try. “The doctor’s control over wou great | Infections is so masterly,” he add: “that of the wounded who survive af hours, 90 per cent. recover, of tho Several mysterious fires in industrial plants and storage houses have aroused a country-wide sus- picion against every German, Swede | who reach the fleld hospitals 95 p and Finn. During the last half of the | cent. Teceiver and of those who year there have been twenty-one |rive at the base hospitals 95 p such fires here, two or three occur- | cent. et well. ing together. The great store of pra-| “The twin angels anaesthetics vistons in Trondjem belonging to the | antiseptics have not only enormou British importing Agency was burned | diminished pain and agony but with a loss of several million dollars. | made amputations rarer and gra it proved to be of incendiary origin.| cripplings fewer than ever befare Twa canning plants with great exports | war history. Barely 5 per cent. of ti for Great Britain were burned, and a | wounded are crippled or permanen condensed milk plant with exclusive | ly disabled. export trade to England was destroved “From the statistics made publ] with more than a million cans ready [ there is good reason to believe thi for shipment. the death rate of this year, in spl Three planing mills in different | of colossal increase in instrumen| parts of the country were burned.|and engines or scientific slaughtq Their output was being used for boxes | does not much exceed 5 per cent. and crates for export. The other | day another planing mill in _the icinltylotithelsovernments frc o E¢ "\TE VALUED AT $4,857.10. manufactory at Kongsberg was burned | An appraisal of the estdte of during the night and while attention | beth Schroeder was filed in the com was directed toward this fire a burg- (of probate by H. Dayton Humn lar was detected in the fire-arm fac- phrey and E. W. Schultz. It is valuel tory. The press states that German at $4,857.10 and consists of proper plotters in this case tried to blow on Hartford avenue valued at $3,80 up the government factory- | notes valued at $950 ind cash In Fareigners have sought and in some | Savings Bank of New Britain, $108,1f