Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, JANUARY 8, 1918, ~N | three sacks unworked to 10th Divi- | the first time in years and the gon- r RE Rl] sion at Miles City. Today's reports | dolas find it difficult in forcing a way i OS On Ore J thirty sacks to 10th Division at Miles | through the ice. A light snow fell to- i City stuck in division on line 335 let- | day. § ters (packages) 238 papers and par- = : L8ilund 25 packases Portland. Spokane | Harden, in Die Zukunft, scathingly R ER terminal stuck 2,000 circulars 200 | condemns Austro-German plans for | OUAK - Sommmm—— papers 12 hours limit, 10th division { annexations in the e He declares ! KRAFT Thirty-live Per Cent. HEAVIER | worea "ty sites iy ant-~Snotine | fun “perina, "t yrme beiween i | Held i Port Seventeen Days by train 3 last night. Conditions favor- | the demands of the Central powers to o n able. Railroad service nearly normal. | annex or join the territories in ques- L l ' Thflfl lIl FOFIHEI‘ YEaFS Flood congestion at Seattle broken. tion to the last,empires in Europe, | a(}k 0[ Flle AND YARD GOODS | mas mail this vear wis about e o b e ot e IY e el e ivery | Tl inBlos oy ST Omaha Division: Mails heavy ne | than there will again be only an Er.t = P . . B e - 3 s on Atlantic Coast 5 elayed in ports in this co: v | Have rapidly won their Way |~ 1. i.craphic reports to the Post Of- | Eestion for all points on Atlantic Coast | munities. The key to the temple ot ; lclay ports in fhis country for | 1 | congestion conditions satisfactory. armistice or honorable and lasting Washington, Jan. § —The Christ- ‘Washington Division: which has | peace with Ru ia, which country wi ! New York, Jan. 8.—Ships ready to mas mail this vear was about 24 per | jurisdiction over the mail transit for | not eternally wear Lenine's red livery | sitil with supplies for the Allies and 5 line Scaboard Air Line and other | peace, he sa ( 1 hebiaat eicntieentas e seeee o “';‘m,;"( Y e e the | cities and cantonments on the South. e than on any other day in that periody ; R. R. The mail for these points on tho and a few of the larger vessels wered(s$ T o ad el country show that notwithstanding| g St o S 4 3 2L 2 Curtains from { mail has boen handled as satistactorily | Union Statlon 18 ‘Washington hecause et o mallfern oD - $2.00 to $5 3o | and expeditiously as during any of the | Of failure to 2 ars eft an American por e in D 0 DI a rawr preceding Christmas seasons. Southern for the movement of this fiIVES HIS REVIEW creased deliveries to ships, howev 2t [E3 . s e e mail. depleted the amount of coal receiVy T for New York distribution, and ol o he congestion this year was rather ; L 2 2 s, Goeds by the yard, very|’c (iR $il, 2N Some cases 25,000 tons arrived at piers. This ¥ desirable for window and the amount of parcel post handied . 111”“\:'”!‘“:!:1;!: than half the requi : = : from 40 to 50 per cent. greater ! (Continved from First Page G SUDPly door use, in white and Ivory | ® 4 Deh Sene. 8 E%) o - 7 | than last vear. The facility with which el The warmer weather x\].ld? this “di shade. 35c and 45¢ a Yard. | this immenso volume of both first! lN AUSTRAL]A o o R | oresmeal con an e s et | class mail and parcel post has been | Spirited artillery were reported in ship to the city. The need was press: ey | The reports uniformly declare that e P . | handled is attributed to the success of Champagne and on the right bank of | [N however, and this was shown by Marquisette Curtains in| the universal campaign for early the Mcuse. Hostile infantry was ac- | (¢ number of ”“i pltals and otheiEy . . - | Christmas mailing, and to the fact (Continued from First Page) tive near St. Mihel and in the vicinity | Stitutions that told the I'uel Admim white anfi Ambla‘:" tr“.“mcdf that the Post Office department, an- | of St. Quentin, but the efforts to set in | IStration that they must have coa with edging and insertion E(im}:atimz an ul{msuul hr‘:urv mu‘itl, At the same time, the view of von in((:rl)ox.\ an n!lmvk m.m\l\ \:m French <:;”r”io.‘<;“-( Hl‘m"“ “\\\!\{I"ll‘x"\::"‘vf:yplf‘t_m;‘rol;l ‘ = = jr. | took exceptional measures for itS|gyecnimann and Czernin fail to satis- | Were in each case repulsed. £ho Y2 Re st B0 har ; From $1.75 to $5.00 a Pair. | 1 Giin; ‘far in advance of the usual | Uchimann and Czers vho regard | 'After fighting for ten weeks the [ the ice, and the day's deliveried fy the German socialists who regard | "4 iz e s 1 U time. ) | their. middleof-the-road policy as | Itelians firmly ~supportea by the|showed a decrease over Sunday. UY The reports from the Railway Mail Franco-British forces have been able | {0 noon yesterday the railroads — de. S i : trickery and who are determined that | : « Sun Fast Materials for| service division indicate that = the o sp'?l"l'. S e Nsommnlm re-organize their dispositions in | livered 56,600 tons more of coal tg Over Draperies. Christmas business hegan In Jargo | 110 8PS 56 (UG FECRAS TRPIIET | ihe fleld.” Thus the French seizing u | New Jerscy teminals, G volume two months ago; and t a6 | out qualification or reserve. | favorable opportunity passed to the L et S0t onanea e du :rm mlgmr;lp;crumLu;)ns_and m\m Neatral observes declare that the | 4:n::y:.”:§ oy ”M_ontc llomhz The «;A]|[ s:\‘ the oot i i 1 |'.'v'y;\m:ov?| . @ £, stmas usiness was ‘ i outeo: hei; ertad g was | ¢ 4 es gnt, REALE B, Ca A good selection of Cre- ::::‘hf:mhn,rzslvd,lnvunsirlnrm: its _in- | 832, EoEem 1“‘}(&”’{“3 ’“‘,“;:S”:"‘]‘f singularly [crtun:(: uf\p},‘.?::‘,fliv \,V,,:\ because the orders of Director General tonnes for Bags, Pillow Tops, | creased volume, than at any time [ & “Ba5i 50, He® A B the de. | bortant, point, which had it remained | McAdoo calling for the annulment of ete. 95¢ to. T5e, | Within the past ten years. velopment of an internal crisis of | Il the enemy’s hands would have af- | all dispensable passenger trains had etc, 3¢ 1o (acC. Iho reports from yall of ithelpostail it bac & o el e evitable forded him great advantage was taken | relieved approximately 500 locomo- masters agree as to the heavy increaso S }:’lh"_r hand it 15 paimteq|DBY the French as the climax of tives and 5,000 railroad men from tlm{ of mail matter and o its satisfactory | " € QU HCUS aities in Dn. | dashing assaut t very strong | passen ervice to the work of hand- handling as compared W .Fti.l.h(r e e eaimea Nearly 1,400 |ling freisht on llnes running to New Christmas seasons. Thc‘,'romxvtiw_‘rn'm CemTTS TR Gr 1 e TR .\Avlttn.nfl\b prisoners were captured. York \I.\.M-H . Phe ‘1‘“_ \4]\\({\(\1‘ the x:r}‘vtmrwters at New York, C mgm‘w, G e Ch onteel e et The French success turned the scale. | slowed down the operation of both ana St. Louis, three of the heaviest| Pl WAT, @M% The Ttalians encouraged by this vie- | freight and passenger trains, and the distributing points, are indicative of | Dovd George. tory set about driving the enemy |ice storm of Sunday night caused sof] conditions throughout the country. e — wcross the Piave. The Austrians | many breaks in telegraph wires that | . The postmaster at Chicago, in a en Are Sl sought to effect a crossing of the| trains were seriously interfered with, | Aty persons wishing to adopt dispatch dated December 21, states London, Jan. 8.—Ten members of| jvep near Intestadura about 10 miles | so the railroads were not able to | French child under this plan shoul that 1,100 tons of outbound parcel | a British torpedo boat destroyer which | yrom the Adriatic. Large contingents | achieve the cificiency in freizht hand- Ameri : communicate with Mrs. Barhour ¢ post—27 per cent. above the highest | was torpedoed and sunk in the Medi- | were gatherea for this operation. | ling they had expected. merica [0 Selld 1,500 M&GthES 130 Washington street, Hartford, d record made last year—passed through | terrancan sea are missing according | (ywing to the nature of Italian resis- | Barges yesterday succeeded in dc Mrs. Cooper, 169 Vine street, city. that officc on the 20th, and that in-|to an admiraity announcement kst unce, complete failure attended tho | livering in and about New York Har { H H {s S bound receipts were 12 per cent. | night 4 o ou | undertaking and the enemy was driven | bor a total of 48,404 tons of anthra- 0 llITy drvests LEO-FLANNERY WEDDING. heavier than the vear b(‘,ftnrf'. This | All H:n(:]l\lh(-(ls of the destrover|paek with serious loss. The Austrian | cite and bituminous coal, of which = = AT B 3 required the employment of 30 trucks | were saved. detachments which have held the jabout 23,000 tons went {o the ships. Jersey Oity Man Takes Docal G LAW CONSTITUTIONAL. in addition to the regular equip- S ridgchead at Zenson on the right|The ships, numbering ;Hv]n-n,\im:nl‘-]\ Washington, Jan. 8.—To increase nrm.}-, G w(.d‘::“;_m Albany, Jan. S.—The section of | ment. 8,200 loads of mail of all King Ludwig Speaks. bank of the Piave for the past 5 weeks | 125, which are now delayed in port | I'rance’s crops and to lighten the bur- i classes were carried by the motor Amsterdam, Jan. 8.—King Ludwig| were also driven out by an attackyneed a total of about 500,000 tons of | den of toil on her old men, women Miss Mary Flanmery of Whiti vehicle service between Monday and | of Bavaria is quoted in Munich as say- [ and forced to retire across the river | coal. There are now barges at | and children, the United States Food |street and Stephen J. Leo of Jersd dissemination of birth control infor- | Friday without a single failure to |ing vesterday at a reception on his|sa that no hostile units remain on | {igewater and on the rails at termin- | Administration will ship 1,500 farm | City were quietly married this mor mation on paraphernalia, under which | make 'proper train connection. Dur- | pirthday that the terms of Germany’'s|the west bank of the Piave. The Brit- | .15 a total of 360,450 tons of coal, bit- | tractors to that country. The first hun- [ ing at 9 o’clock at St. Joseph’s chure | four days 500 full car loads of | enemies were exorbitant, jish lead in enemy raiding operations. | uminous and anthracite. In trains | dred are already on the way, and the | Rev. Patrick Daly celebrated the nuf outbound parcel post was dispatched | “Not an inch of German territory | Their sallies achieved excellent results | which will arrive within fo eight | Whole number will be in France by |tial mass. This ceremony was | | New York's penal law prohibiting the Mrs. Margaret Sangster, birth control | lvocate was convicted and served | unq there was, the postmaster reports, | will be ziven up” he declared. ‘W they were able to inflict such dam- | jypre are 132,600 tons of coal of ali | March, in time for the Spring plowing. | simple but pretty one and followi lMirty days in the workhouse, was | no delay or confusion in handling out- | must {ry to safeguard our frontier: age on hostile works and took a num- | g1 jes a : They are expected not only to be of |the ceremonies the bride and groo. old constitutional today by the court | going or incoming mail. The post- | Asserting that the Bavarians, like | her of prisoners. Heavy snows hav The improvement in the coal situa- | immense service to France, but to re- |left on their wedding trip. , master at New York states|the other German were victorious | fallen in the Alpine regions,{ Which | ;51 from now on depends not only | lease added tonnage for the Allies and The bride was attended by her si the increase of Christmas mail over | evervwhere,” the king added | #reatly hampers the Austro-Germans. | oo )¢ railroads, but on barge deliver- | American troops by increasing the | ter, Miss Grace Flannery, as maid last year to have been from 20 per; “May we succeed alsa in defeating|It will be a great iask for them to e = | 2 ol a jes. These were 360 empty barges, with | amount of food produced there, thus jhonor, and John H. Baldwin of Je| cent. to 25 per cent, nmj that it was | our latest enemies the Americans. keep their cemmunications open in the | oanacity of 216.000 tons, waiting for | decreasing the amount of food that | sey City, was the best man. The ushel handled withaut congestion or delay —_ mountain regions cargoes at the railroad ports yester- | must be shipped from America. were Sergeant John H. Flann 1 A\t St. Louis the increase of outgoing Attack Great Britain. 3 5 ! e = day. They could not be loaded be-| The idea originated the with former |obtained a furlough from Camp 4 mail over last Christmas season Was| Tondon, Jan. S—There is no indi- F cause the weather continued to make | American ambassador to Turkey, Hen- | €ns to attend his sister's 15 per cent. ,and that of the incom- | ..iion so far of the manner in which CITY lTEBHS it aifficult to extricate the frozen coal | ¥ Morgenthau, and hi on, Henry |James Flannery, another hrot ing mail 40 per cent. It was handled | premjer Lloyd George's definition of o s cacs. i "~ | Morgenthau, Jr. The ¥ood Adminis- | John A. = from absolutely without delay. e R : s e SR Buslness IS NO Yer sime i s Resn i d,‘“ Russiad ., holic Woman’s Benevolent Le- | The barges which were loaded had | trator «\mu‘md‘ nlrtlu Inl a. 1ml|\ space ailwa ail 3 or whether his speech has been pub- ¢ A g their tias el o o | v provided for the first shipment RrEol anito 19 e e e SR e nocH R Gy fevenin e LTI SRR RSt D SR De N D = 1”\ e B d f R | R \2he conditionsfosiineiRatimayyMallile e s vl intintod Ol tac e i G Ro/cloCE VY SERMAT VIR Sen ool T AR desdosuinhi el haduoatsed the sluking [ bl dio Mg e i il el Bt e et ed 0 0S€ES vice during the heaviest strain, | oo i "0 g hor allies. The Pravda |social will follow the meeting [iof ewentystousicOalibarses i Cnorast o RSt el e el IHOR HN0 SOV DRVER S oI X Second Assistant Postmaster | ]'“ “ o “ iched BT o it Ol teq | four days, continued to be a snace, | tary of the Navy ¥ '-“‘“\“m mw(\«lll, | ter this morning and we : and the Istiviza published Sunday Miss Catherine O’Leary is expecte . : o | and Paymaster General McGowan. The |} ont. N e jener: e £ as xcep- | and towboat skippers were cautious. |'bankment. No one w General Pracger regards as —exeeD- |, (.| pased on some words of Lloyd jhome today after a week’s visit with | qn 1 towboat e e O e Wl i ety ot faRsie e enyy | e tionally satisfactory considering tha | 2rticl o th e e el o vlsit | The fog over the harbor made it nee- | ; y s ; George apparently one of his|her uncle, Dr. Arthur O'Leary of 2 SRl el e i ; unusual increase of mail to be car- ; : | essary for the towboats to feel their | Morzenthau, Jr., a- | pnarter No. 1181, Reserve District NoJ wi2d 1s shown by tis Bllowing 5o | -Ueeclen foousine mim of faylue to | 5y terbuny, |l chines to Irance and put them in op- Keport of Condition of the N g i = have Russia mako peace with Central | mpq meeting of the Altar society of | | 1 cration. He will organize schools of NEW BRITAIN NATIONAL BANK ports from division superintendents: | ors 5o as to give the Allies a free | g B TR e | The coal on hand reported vester- { Sratio S renchiobera o at New Britain, in the New York Division: Christmas mails | POWETS 50 5 (0 Ive the SHICS & f0¢ | St. John the Evangelist church which | qay to A. H. Smith, Assistant Director | 1 «nrin”iolr 1r|\‘« “mnx.. ors andtiia el e o b going into New York very heavy. Dis- | Lok o8 "y oo fines: “the Allies | Lo r,n he_lhnldv ('ll'.v\\ evening 15 Post- | of Railroads, was as follows: o "“‘;' 'LI q’ ("I“( “ n v_l"“;l““ of ;\R'*_ N rndoUCES tribution and platforms at Grand Cen. | YRtage. & CeRimU I, K0 eace | Poned until next Tuesday eventns. | Dumped In Barges In Cars | iculture in distributing the tractors | Loans Lo tral and Pennsylvania terminals in | o1 WSPFUE piCd PUOLE 0l 0o | Misscs Anna and Elizabeth Lynch by fo be atTide- [ And oberating them economically. = |y s. Bonis (other than Liberts good condition. L e = o [ of Waterbury have returned home af- ns Moved water French High Commissioner M. Tar- | 'Bonds of 1917.) i N 3 come to terms with the enemy, she, | 1 | dieu approved the idea on behalf of [ U. S. bonds and certificates of in Cincinnati Division: Situation all | ;.9 10t the Allies, would bear thej t¢r having spent several days with | Anthracite .40,800 38,000 142,850 | 4i¢ l‘»” S % £ R e e points satisfactory. Enormous amount | .o o peace. The greater sacrifices | Miss Anna Sparmer of North street. | Bituminous 26,230 b= 0vj (et spusncnEE oyenmmen BandRaicomL i i EaE parcel post but moving rapidly. No | iy Mrs. Mary Speely of Lebanon, T'a., | __ [ mittec of the National Implement & |Liberty Loan Bonds, unpledsed congestion. : Bave to pay. They could reach the|l8 visiting her daughter, Mrs. Geor Total ...67.050 ,250 | ussiafimokes b oflessfiholiailige il | Vehicle association assured Mr. Mor- | 3 1-2 per cent. and 4 per cont Chicago Division: Records show 20 | con® "o D0 T 5l M the peace | Booth of 464 Arch street [Wimietcoathin transit andinearing: tuis [EERtau e holtractorsican e ur A e U A per cent. increase yesterday, high peak | \cgotiations but in that circumstance | The Southwest Sewing club held a | city was as follow e el e e R B L on outbound mail last night. Inbound | ji is apparent they would have be-|meeting at the home of Mrs. C. H. | Arsive n e Amriein el L o b | e athar e mail very heavy today and increasing | y;aycd Poland, Courland and Ru- | Avery, on Shuttle Meadow avenue fo- | Next 24 lowing 24 g e d b e bonds (not including mails being moved promptly. No con- | mania. | day. The committee in charge of the | Hour Hours Tt etocke) S ESsHoniin IREORCaTs, tenminalsfon sl “The plan of the Allied imperialists | mectings is composed of Mrs. . I’ | Anthracite 62,500 24,800 pume e Smanutastuia an | eaditonal a8 il | tions. Conditions outside Chicago | {5 prepare peace with the German im- | Battey, Mrs. C. M. Avery and | Bituminous 15,530 29,750 Corirn T e e et L B G < ! good throughout division with very | perialists at the expense of Poland, [ Watson Staples. The club does Red ! - A et el SR 13,300 | little unworked mail to date only em- | can he thwarted only by the peoples | Cross work. | Total LT8,050 74,550 3 S e fL:w:x; L pnes 0,060 barrassment due to shortage of sacks. | i a struggle with their 0Wn govern-| 1iarold B. Shepherd has transforred | The municipal authoritics continued | aentan i evel su Weather conditions favorable. Splen- | ments.” e Qid co-operation from railroads and o crops in the | “jn process o uninvaded portion of France in 1917 wvailable as property on South Main street to | their ronge sown to Henry T- Poiren vesterday. The Mayvor was called up- good auto s i U-Boats and Sword. on by Morris Hillquit, defcated Social- | 2 : 2 : e St. Louis Division: Situation very N . - e o & st candidate for Mavor, to have thet tas 20 { doxes, compared S NIEhE 201, Gom nat e L L Amsterdam, Jan. 8.—Discussing the SWIMMING EXPERT COMING. |ist candidate for Alay < 101657208 i creslin 1918 MR x| v ie L0 R B TRa stisfactoryl Here, reports: from Wath, I\ e Eeiicetios W i Gl R coa] businessiisre taken over by tne| (LAY SSEEE IR, IS e et (amounte? el erom b 5th, 6th and 7th districts indicate no | promier Lloyd George the Rhenische | ymerican Red Cross Life Saving Corps | €ity. Tt was eharged that Mr. Hill- | (00 [ sl congestion anywhere. Mails reported | \vosifaclisch Zeitung, of Essen, says 3 3 quith, as a stockholde n Burnsll S n o St crop Drodction in Francs " f located outside at Kansas City, not heavier | . “\when Lloyd Georsc SR Sending Authoriy. Brothers, one of the largest coal deal- | o B8 (O < Bl 1 it o Sy than usual here on account of diver- | jahor demand Alsace.far France and | W. B. Longfellow, field ag : R O s e T et A R PSR s B e ion to water routes. Wcather excel- | {po i T e e T o service Cincinnati and St 2 » servi fric tons (29,462,340 short tons in 1913, a decrease of 13,600.000 metric this morning. Company unable to pay, the answer in view of tihis|paredness, to give a demonstration, | used by the clty in the purchase and | (015 & Gecienss of 13 oy furnish equipment account of wreck | situation is: tend to all wom=n and girls | sale of coal. per cont, or a decrs | but conditions now normal. Received ‘Tt is too much.” e i | considerable Texas stuck mail from | The paper thinl Noweta bt sty il | eastern lines but think we can han- | tho calmer tone in which Livod 8 | dle in terminal and on St. Louis and | GGearge spoke is worth nothing and Little Rock line without much delay. adds in TFrancisco Division: No conges Well, Lloyd George too, will one tion mails in this division. Conditions become reasonable, until then the most satsfactory. -boats and Hindenburg's sword will | 40 meetings a month. Fis demonstra- : B Cleveland Division: No congestion. | help.” e ot il |0t cased for inesioniment Iudtholishoxt i | : . T Hisansinn potatoes. One million acres in fall t. Paul Divisior 1ils very heavy - e T | calendar session of 2 | S heat souldlibroducs 4501000 tan ot German colonies, Arabia. Syria | first aid division, World’s lafe & | bettering condition he Board of L c l | and Palestine for Englan, and speak- | Alliance, will be at the Y. W. C. Aldermen adopted a resolution for Louls train 12 last night or train 24| o¢ the war indemnily we will have |January 14, to promote personal issne of special revenue honds ¢ tons) or cent SHORT CALBNDAR CASES. P Prepares List of Cases o following figures give an of why it is pod tactics to sen lors (o I7rance now and tractors Assigned for Friday. plough 500,000 acres this spring another million acres for planting fall | wheat. Half a million acres in po- { Longfellow is being sent io the various i(vn“:- in the country in the interests of the Red Cross preparedness work During 1917 he traveled 18,000 milc working in 25 states, averaging about | | i i | Clerk Emil J. Danberg of the city court has compiled the following list coming regularly. No delay, con- Schools Re-Open. Diigkroilornel Nt o oo ceny| G vl co TR WG Al Bom b Ve R R e LioTioxs gari (IO e ;i s Venice, Jan. 7.—(By the Associated | tho work: John J. Higgins, motion to restore | ju,;.o would greatly relieve the food Fort Worth Division: Conditions | press).~The schools which were or \pplicants must swini in skirt | €ase to docket, J. G. Woods for| iiation in that country. Leaving, | in division satisfactory (20th) except| gered closed when Venice was threat: | Biouse and shoes for 20 yards and | Plaintiff W. F. Mangan for defend-| , o liqver, 1,050,000 tons of shippir account extraordinary traffic all lines | cned and the city evacuated., have | while still in dcep watr remove the | ant; American Hardware Corporation | i 1a41s ayailable for other including furlough troop movement | heen ordered to re-open on January | clothing down to bathing suit and | V8. Harry Alpert, hearing on demur- | | railroad facilities Ft. Worth badly | 15. This is an indication of the re. | con ¢ on without resting other than [ rer, Cooper & Mink for plaintiff, | - - : | overtaxed. Some storage cars due not | establishment of partly normal condi- | floating for 80 yards making a total | Louis H. Katz for defendant: Amer- | ADOPT FRENGH Gp]l D h bani § | furnished and secmingly impossible | tions as the school board in making | of 100 yards. Score 45 points. ican Lar Lock Co. vs. Georze Levine, | i REN ! reserve T’IE FII'S‘ Blg Lau h | always set cars for advance loading | the order declared its confidence that | Applicants must swim dressed in skirt | et al, Roche & Glover for plaintiff, | e Time deposi(s subicet . g | as agreed on. Had conference rail-| the defenses were sufficient to insure |lease these so-called death-grips: [ Gross, Hyde & Shipman for defend- A jcet to 30 da f ]9 road officials today and they give | the protection of Venice from in- | wrist, front neck, and .l sirangle, | ants; Arthur Littman vs. George .| Iocal People Subscribe (o Fund For nd postal sav 0 ]8 handling mail preference and promise | vasion. Score 15 points Neshit, pleading or default, A, A Support of Little Orphans Abroad. purposes. D | >ostal savings | | | e | B8l | sctting storage cars the proper time. | Honor was paid {o the United States Applicants must in six feet or more | Greenberg for plaintiff, W. Chasc o, | p Y 2 : 2 hristmas time many locs 5 B Save extra force including office men | and the American Red Cross today | waler retrieve a definile object by | for defendant Mitchell v e oibe 'v‘h‘("';"‘ lo l" peo i " ple bought postals o proceeds from | | on platform. Action taken believed | at a charity school for orphan chil winiming from the surfacd, takiug | United Electric Tight aund Water Co., S B | will relieve congestion will use freight | dren of Italian soldiers. The children | fu -k dive. Score 25 points Hungerford & Mitchell for nluintiif, | oo | \“,."_(.,“,; o r;:]v_m L Bk cars or any means necessary to avoid | sang*American airs and waved Ameri \pplicants must demonstrate in | W. E. Thoms for dcfendant: Charles sire taion cnppon s orphans 8 | biockade. Expect no further serious|can flags. Their suffering has been | decp waler on living subsects the fol- [ FI. Mitchell vs. Southern New Eng- | o SHGgEooperswho i = A of Uiis work in New Britain, \ | trouble. greatly alleviated through the as lowing rescue methods: head carry | land Telephone Co. Hungerford & | : Srital 3 New Orleans Division: Account lfif'k ance of American Consul Carroll over ed cross shoulder, under arm, | Mitchell for plaintitf, W. | v T d P8 | of porters two pouches fifty sacks de- Mr. 11 today visited the Asiazo , hunds, and the breast stroke car- | for defendant 0 rs con- s i B voan uncec a « 10 ay an layed in Shreveport twelve hours con- | plateau the guest of the Italia ¢. Score 15 poinis 10 e l“:::] ”‘ l\ytl‘ lx” dition relicved elsewhere satisfactory. | general staff. He carried a huge suj applicants must demonstrs the Daniel Sullivan, Jonn Kenney, Cor- | to Mrs, Lucius B, Rarb. ,,‘ & omorrow W | (201h) ply of Knitted goods for soldiers in |safer method of resuscitation. This | pelius Curry and Peter Daly have re- | who will forward the smour k Scattle Division: Delaved reports |feRirenchcn s the faco-downward method and the | pyrmed fo St. Thomas' seminary to ve- | New Britain people 1 show sixt ree packages an i . } Clvistmas vacation at their homes. | dren for one year at-an expen thank ail who purchased thesc less Children of France p we