New Britain Herald Newspaper, February 23, 1918, Page 3

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» bust, ranging in price from| $1.00 * $5.00 | , 1o do everything meces: ’Oét(;il Stbre CORSETS It is an easy matter to get properly fitted at Our Corset Department. We carry m-ost‘of the popu- lar models produced by the| leading manufacturers in this | country. W. B Royal A complete line of Chi R. & G. Nemo Thompson’s Glove Fitting Ferris Waists etc. In high, medium and low Worcester dren’s ana Nisses' Waists. APRONS Extensively featured here. Everything from the dainty tea Apron to the Cover All Bungalow. Nurses and Red Cross Aprons. McCALL’S PATTERNS 10¢ 15¢ and 20¢ REBUKES JAMES FOR T. R. ATTACK .Rep. Langley Believes Certain | Criticism Is Admissible Washington, TFeb. A th inly veiled attack on Senator James (Ken- his Roosevelt of ucky) for Theodore the plain structive ins in marked terday secretary criticism congr a speech by (Kentucky), republican. Mr, Langley incidental while war recently tement of the course in con- that the intend in the house Representative reiterated that attack 0 repu to fol ve: it on defending d a bli- low Langley is the intention of the republican party ry to aid the president in the conduct of the war, but with added that he h the argument t ad hat no “he patience who criticises errors 1is guilty of aiding our enemies or bein with them.” Plainly indicating Senator in Ja sympathy mes then but not naming him the speaker said: tuckian deprecated t he injection “The same distinguished Ken- of politics into a discussion of war mat- ters, and yet he himself is guilty of Speaking in a facetious vein, he is said to have references that beloved and patriotic American, doing that very thin made some sneering Theodore Roosevelt, of San Juan Hill' of the Riv £, too, when Roosevelt wa: when not only Ameri lies as well, ing th “When speech,” Mr. remembered he that was referring German hibiting its ship: shores of the land of Doubt itself Admiral Dewey tho o fleet ready to sail in order was mot obey how much joy it to the palace of th same ‘hero of, San ame ‘King of the it in his power to gi tum before the Ia to the Tmpe 1 fro 0 flows m Jun refer: as the ‘King of the Jungle,’ the ‘he ‘discover r of Doubt,” etc., and that, and the part continued, where and ng to lying ill and p of to wt same Government ouching the R who to him o and ans, but our al- were hoping t ho might be spared to us. I read this Tangley the man was the the a hom ona who delivered the ultimatum to the pro- the iver AvC r to have his would have Kaiser Juan hours if T wond bro i, haa 1o tho ered ught this this had a like ultima- nia bottom of the sea.” sent .. .. TURN RULE .- '. SLOVAK ARMY IN ¥orce Numbhering Side of eb. New York, ment that anp Slovaks, now army of Czechs training fight with the Allies, number: was made at the closing s in France 120 ion FRANCE, 20,000 to Fight on Allies. —Tha tate- and to 0,000 here today of the convention of the Slovak Ieague of American in connection with adopting a resolution to cable the convention's greetings to Slovak armies in France Other resolutions pledged tha un- qualified support of all the Slovaks of the United States to the American government and confidence in tho leadership in the Czech-Slovak nu- tional council in Paris Albert Mamtey, Pittshur vas elected pri of the lea e Paul Si lgeport o vice president, and Mathew Cadzki, I'it burgh, secretary. ‘WRITE T0 THEM! THEY'RE LONESOME Letters Fronfii@w Send New Spirit to Boys Abroad This story 1s a plea to the folks back home to write to their soldiers wherever they may be and to keep on writing. without the mail from home | the Canadian troops could t| never have endured the hor- | ror of the terrible winter of 1914-15, when though outnum- bered and out-armed, they held at bay on their sector the Kaiser's trained troops and helped save World Democracy. ¥rom practically every man in close touch with the troops comes the appeal to do every- thing possible to get the folks, back home to write. They urge that the home-folk bo asked to write now and to keep on writing, that they do not wait for an answer, but send letters regularly. New York, Feb. 23—"Tell the wom- en of America to write letters to their men at the front,—and then more letters. It's home-letters that hold the front-line trenches.” This is the message brought back to America by Captain H. H. Pecar- the first Canadian to go to ¥rance after war was declared, and the first to see service with Kitchen- er's army. Later he was wounded when a bomb struck the Young Men’s Christian association headquarters at son, Belgian Poperinghe, of which he was in charge. He has scen hundreds of men go over the top, and a lesser number come back again. ITe has been over the stop and come back again. Both from experience and from observation he knows what it is that NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1918, grows up (o he half so good a man it will be all right These are the letters that are oftenest re-read by the soldier before he goes over the top, just commonplace letters that tell of everyday happenings hack home and of the love and the trust thit are in keeping for him there Don't Blur Ictters Witth Tears, Certain other tiypes of letter ousiht never to be sent to the men at the front. One is that written by the selfish or thoughtless woman who closely written pages are blurred with her tears, and taken up witth her own sorrow in having her soldier so far from home, and her plea for him to come back at once, since everything is going wrong without him. One of the Young Men's Christian Associa- tion secretaries in France tells of promising young chap who came back from leave witth every appearance of having been drinking heavily. “You sce,” the young soldier told the Young Men's Christian Associa- tion man, “I got letter from my mother, and she was so worried about my going wrong over here, and so sure that 1 had inherited alcoholic tendencies from my father, that T sot desperately blue, and went on a spree to forget all about it.” Moral Conditions Are Good. Moral conditions in the army are great deal better than is commonly reported; Captain Pearson said. No mother, he thought, needed to wor- ry more about her soldier-son on this score than she would if he were anywhere else. The army is as safe a a place for a boy as can be found. But the home-town across the seas scems a long way from the shell- scarred field in France, and there is | little to remind a man of the home- standards and home-traditions in the strange new life within range of the bursting shells. He eeds letters from his family to do it. In maintaining high moral conditions, as well as in keeping the morale of the army what it should be, Captain Pearson believe that letters from home play a larzer part than any other thing. “Men don’t talk much about home- sickness, don’t life and perhaps women nd just how lones + there,” he said. *“I've h soldiers, the most ones in camp, turn all wo- n when it came to cuddling some French youngster who happened to De about the place, some bLaby that looked like one of their cwn at home, vou have a relative or friend at the to and do it often. Letters from strangers don't count, of course, but tho others—no one can say how much they matter. Why do vou suppose that the Young Men’s Christian Association spends thou- sands of dollars every month for pa- per and ink? Tt isn't so much be- cause we are thinking of the home- folk; they must look out for them- selveg in time of war. Wo want those letters written so that the moth- ers and the sisters and the wives and tho sweethearts back home may an- swer them as soon as possible. Tty the answers we are interested in, be- cause we know how those letters in the familiar hand-writing are going to help win tho battle. Americans will never sce the most terrible part of the war, Captain Pear- son declared. “The most terrible part of the war was the first winter of it,—the end of 1914, the beginnig of 1915 he said. “During that first winter of the war, when the enemy marched ag: us with machine guns and all the modern instruments of war-fare, and we had no guns, no ammunition, nothing but sheer strength af will to go on, it was really the letters from home that held the lines for us. Wo did it because the home-folk expected us to do it and said so in their letters. You may say that this is all senti- ment. Well, this Is a war of senti- ment. It's sentiment that took us over there to fight, and it is sentiment that taking you Americans, “Anyhow, soldiers are like that. T've known some of them that haven't got- word from home in all the time front, write him, ten a thev have been gone, more than three | years now. It may have been because their women we: ckers, d it may have been because their letters had gone Ay, They were a very dif- ferent s a rule, from the chaps who got letters from home regularly, ind they went into the fight with a different spirit. Sometimes a boy wha hadn't heard home for two years or more get his letters, at last, a lot of them in a bunch. You ought to have en his face when he saw his name on te envelope. knew that those let- You ought to have from would and ters were for him! n how many times he got those let- ters out and re-read them, when he thought no onec as looking! You ought to have seen the vim with which he went into the next hattle Tell ¥im the News. What kind of should the home-folk write tto the soldier at the front? Literary quality isn’t the thing most needful in *hem, of course, Perhaps the best of them all are the ones packed full of little homely de- the new neighbors \d of the words the letters tails—accounts of across the street, baby has learned to say, and of how | is wrowing out of all his | clothes and setting to look more like his daddy cvery day,—and if he just puts heart into soldiers when they | or that they imagined looked like one stand near the edge of No Man’s [of their own. It's the unusual soldier Land, with the shells bursting around [ Who doesn’t come and show the Young Men's Christian Association thern worker pshots of hi girl hack IFor two years, Capt. Pearson, as & | pome, or a picture of his mother, or commissioned officer of the Canadian | ¢ 1is ehildren Army, has s d the Young | y) women want to help in Wi Men's Chri Association WoOrk | (ip,e he trouble is thar most of ong the entire Canadian front in | jiem would like to go over to i rance. He was wounded twice and | . in some way to give personal ser gassed” and has now been sent home | vice o, the soldiers. But the real way by the Canadian Army to tell the |, ho of aid is to do ordinary. un folks back home of conditions “over | pectacular thines overe here, to send there.” tireir men off cheerfully, and to writ So Captain Pearson, a big, modest | the kind of leticrs that keep them of man with as untroubled a smile as if | good cour: he had never heard of a world-war, | PR but with the remembering eyes th: Get Ready to Do Men's Work, Ul men have when they come back | “There is very little that women from it, a good deal to v 0!l can do for our soldiers over there. woman's plain duty in war time. e aptain Pearson declared “What Write to Him and Do It Often. the American women ought to be do- “Write to them!™ he urges. “If | ing now, in my opinion, is to bo get ting ready to do men's work, in case the war lastg a long time. In Francc you will see them busied with almost every task that men formerly did, hitched to the plow in the field driving the motor cars in the cities, doing almost everything you ¢ mention, brave, devoted women who are every whit as good a soldier as their men at tho front. In Canada and in England it is almost the same: there are few men left at home, and the women must do tho work “When it comes to sending homc boxes to the soldiers over-seas, wom- en should be sure that they send gifts that are needed, and that won A lot of junk mercl up for the soldie letter is gift that and never in the way. “War just shows how wonderful women can But sometimes they “don’t understand how lonesoma sol- diers get, and how far from ever: thing they fecl over there on the ho der of No Man’s Land. They wait for answers to their letters, and don’t stop to figure out that they are neg- lecting one of their war-time jobs. Write to them!" en route. ters things But timel a a is be. “BACK OF THE in Packing House District Brought to Light. Feb. the stock YARDS.” Conditions Chicago, 23.—Packers repre- sented at yards wage arbi- tration today introduced bearing on welfare work evidence done among their employes, pension systems and even summer resorts maintained for employes Swift & Co. accommodated 900 women at Fish Take, Indiana, last summer. Jlbert Beeman of Wilson & welfare department produced a of the “Back polyglot section of the Yards.” The only 4 per cent. of residents of district were employed The maps showed stores and 400 saloons. report hy the Y. M. C showing gross receipts saloons averaged $15,000 Residents of the district, spend $4,500,000 a year in loons. Since 1912 he added of saloons has increased known lo as 25 said this yard in retail read a in 19 these year. said, these the He of a he number 25 per cent. -_— TOO LA TOR CLASSIFICATION. FUR ISHISD keeping; all conveniences. 16 Pros- ROOMS for light house- pect street 2-231f TO RENT—Closed and open cars to rent, hour or trip. Cohen Motor Co., 86 Arch street 2-21-10dy witness | the | ! .\Lnumu’nfu ; NAMED. DEATHS AND FUNERALS' Chamber of Commerce Sclects Work- ST ers for New Britain Gardens, R L i John I Vivian of 217 Iassett | | At a meeting of the Gardens iroet, 66 vears i i mittee of the Chamber of ; . years old, died suddenly of | merce held yesterday afternoon, pre. | 'CArt trouble at 4 o'clock yesterdayl liminary plans were made for the | #fternoon at his home. He was at | | (:uyf"y‘y.' r.\y‘(y::‘)l];"(‘l;l':é‘_\l‘.\l‘;,rk conducted | v;.v\\;“:lml('; employed by Landers, Frary | L L R .M”,‘:r;(,whgvmh.“ suffered from Il | bren appointed to mssist the general | oo "y 9F SOME time. He leaves his committe Bubliicity B W Cleriini B e Sl SIC A LR Tor I MIss RIRENS) Toward Timbrell, Joseph Roche | i son, Dr. William E. {ana A Magnell; land committee, | YiviaN ©of Fast Walpole, Mas he G. K. Macauley, chairman; W. o | oneral will be ! at 2 o’clock Mon- e Mangan, Aaron Danier. | 12Y aflernoon at nis late home. Rev. son, F. 0. Kilbourne, Rev. Lucyan Boj- | 1., 1P41e B Cross will ofciate and nowskl, T. F. Lee, F. G. Vibberts, 4, | PUF1al Wil bo in Cheshire, i M. Halloran, B. F. McCarthy, P. McDonough and Rev. John T. Win- | | ters; membership committee, S. Joseph Manno | ITolmes, chairman; M. A. Paonessa, Joseph, the e | 3. Andrulewlcz, John Gerdis, J. e e | O'Brien, T. Abrahamson, H. Wessel: 168 Ok stroet, disd Tast eveding, finance committee Georze P. Spear, | 8¢d two years, cight month. Tho, :::ftlrr‘r’\éxn;h\,]\{ndnxlzl‘h ]r],‘ ]A(‘pm(: funeral will be held ,v" 10 o’clock | | . Lela E . Corbin; | Monday morning. Burial will be in cultivation committee, E. 0. Kil-| St. Mary's new cemeter | bourne, chairman; Fred Parsons, ! | W. E. Winters, H. S. Hart, J. M. Cur- e | tin and E. A. Moore; supplies com- | mittee, . 1. Rackliffe, Jr., chairman; ORI SEEIEy | 1. Reynolds, Severin Johnson, . W. Word was received here this | Beach and S. P. Strople; plotting [ morning of the death of John Leach | Aipon™ committee, Max Unkelbach, chair- | at the ¢ hospital, Worcester, Mass., | in low | yvesterday Funeral services will be | and | pENE ..m) D X TR held at Worcester Sunday afternoon | figured, ! Ly at 2:30 o'clock. Interment will bo in | popula Pleasant Washington’s Birthday Pro- | Rockville, Conn., the body arriving at | Silk G S Rockville at 10:55 a. m. Monday. ably s George W Leach of Rockwell ave- going to be's A Washington's birthday party was | nue, this city. is the only surviving best develop given last evening at the G. A. R. | brother i at the sames building by L. D. Penfield Camp, Sons S | A genulne gy of Veterans, Auxiliary No. 1. The David My | Pussy Wi | members of the camp and many of | The fine of David Muir was clever nosel | the guests were attired in Colonial | held at 2 o'clock this afternoon from navy and bia costumes. After the flag salute, [ his late home 33 Franklin - Square. IS which was the first event of the |itev. i G. W. C. Hill, pastor of the; 6 night, a program was given ag fol- [ South Cor itiona church, 1 u | SRR low: ed and burial was in Fairview R i o T Battle Hymn of the Republic .... tery. m i e O ~ \GERMANATTACK ON LATED FOOD LAW | ! Piano solo ... .... Carrie Smith | St | Character dancing ... Gladys Marsh Julius O, Deming. | o i lor MoriineiRdicre Bl S e e ‘_Mm_;” S SEG Greenhut & Co. Ordercd to Answy I PP M Griffith | Deming was held at 2.30 o'clock this | T INTENSF 3 p, o % ¥ ; \";1:;:'1;1::‘61“ ----- e e &Fhernoom frova Fis lote vestaence b . 4| o Charges Preferred. by Biuiy | Parsons. :ERuabach s snd & Rinty Camp street and at 3 o'clock at the 1 Administration. cloralh Erwin Memorial chapel in Iairview Monologue : Arsfiiownsendl|iet et o T R e S Tt (Continued From First Page). New York, Feb. The firm. Vocal Solo Mies Dorothy Datham (s s isen ane 1lev. Warren mE ookl = Greenhut & Co., owners of one Vocal solo B Mr. Weidman { yagtor of Trinity Methodist church, | ‘Should result in the clearing out of |the largest department stores hel | _The speakers of the evening wero | \winiaged. The funeral.wis largely | (he enemy from west of the Dead | Were served with summonses to @ [y . latham, W. Schultz and | tanded by members of the Masonic | Séa since it gives the British a line ar before the local food admin| Past Commander Beckett of the Sons | v icnity and also members of Stan- [ Might across Palestine. It endangers board Monday to answ of Veterans. They spoke on patriotic | 1o\ posr. . A, R the enemy’s motor boat flotilla which [ charges of food law violation topics, and complimented the society The bearers woere (. I’. Wainwright | 'as had its base at the mouth of The charges, made public by onits work. and George Kingsbury, representing | the Jordan and cuts off many Turks |food board, include failure to reg = i N \.: | left west of the Dead sca as well as | ter their food license number on th BOYS' CLUB PARENTS' NIGHT. Ghorze Ho Walld and Geori I A, | from those in the east where they tionery, advertising the sale of President B. W. Christ of the Boys' | Paker, representing Giddir Chap. | €Xposed; to ihe bold! ralds of the|gar and flour in violation CE S Club and Past Commander F. V.| (ler, R. A. M, and W. W. Pease and | fledjas Arabs, thelr means of sup. [tions und sale of suger'to SUSIGEN Strecter of Stanley Post,\G. A. R.| . B. Aliing, representing Washing-| POrt from this source. It must not (In excess of quantities directed by § vere the principal - speakers at the | ton Commandery and Doric council | 2 forgotten ol ransellR ol 2 Parents’ night observance at the Boys' | . 8. M. Burial was in Fairview | WOr¥ing thelr way up the Hedjaz JE R B SN Sl e e L directly east of the Dead Sea; Turk- S 3650.000 were delivered During the course c s eRacting Hedlaz Ehael — i s el M R ol Sl U. . TAR BIGAMIST. southern Arabia are also in danger. e e e Gen. Allenby, having scattered the | Heavy Damage Caused When Susqy Miss Trone Toomis on the piane. | Only 18 Years Old But Uad Two | Turkish forces concentrated west of Sl oo oomisian@itho Sniano e _’,N.“.h“. now is free to choose a line| hamma River Goes Out of Lous A St il or an advance northward by what- ”','“ w' e ‘\\ml ','h'__ ”‘! w‘m:» i ‘”“ New York, Feb. James Hanlon, | ever route seems best, My At ook Lnyem i 3 e ek oA who is attached to the United States The Daily Chronicle, in its editorial T.ock Havers Pa., 7l rdo e ot i [ G il ion N epo e e | lcomm en B e v Much depends on [flood in the Susquehanna ri S R e i only 18 yeurs old, rushed into the | BOW the Jericho advance is followed | all but inundated this eity Wi | MERCHANT MARINE RECRUITS. | showing every evidence fright. | spite of the handicap of rainy weath- :,:. :\1._ \?r“lr)lu* :"\:(,),‘ S “\‘;In; u | New York, web, —Iirst gradu- | “What'll | do now?” he asked Mr.| . We may perhaps hope that the [ Other lo \mount to $6i50,000, J‘}I:]«:;»l(:r :hv United States shipping | pecrystal, an assistant 1o Judge | Impetus of General Allenby's move- [ Relisf for thoso whose hoacs ol ety sntorsd fon el Siles! i I ve 5ot aristher onel andl svaid rals iher R . |tatives of the state health dept It T he first of a Ll ey wds that the first troopers 2 | ment are taking precantions to B uadron (;r\(‘,‘a.,‘n.., : vessels for Youd better wlend suilty wiien | Witer their horses in the historic Jor- [vent an epidemic. Domnitoriss RS Sebil ks and | vou say is true,” McCrystal answerec et = eyt ot v hospitel [liaes s ‘1“" national merchant ) . nes Hanlon did, before Magistrate GLVILSSERVEIGH (DX | marine, docked early here today to| (i et In response to the request > ) 43 U | discharge a class of 50 of her 1410 | GEOSmAN in the Tombs court. Dall | 'g SRITEE 0] ‘,m“‘m'i‘::h:"”";:;g PREDICTS PEACE 1Y AUGE { apprentices who were regarded as fit | e et FL 00 hing like this: | General Tederation of Women's | : R 1 ‘ for regular apprentice “On Octaber 15 of la ir T married [ Clubs, attention is called by the Tov. 6. H. Staton Mot i | > T my first wife. She ws sabeth Con- | Chairman of Civii Service Reforms to Secs Fnd of War. | AUTOISTS ARRI ED. nolly and lived at ie avenue, | the open competition examination for A prediction has been mude | muel Applebaum was arrested | over in Jersey City. Father William for both men and women on | Rev. G. H Staton of the M. today by Officer Nealon for operating | T. McLaughlin married us in St. Luck’s « ch 9 to ba held at the following | Zian church of New Britain, that thi an automobile with 1917 markers, | church, at Girove and Fifteenth : in the state of Cornecticut: | will be world wide peace by the mol The accused claims that he paid for Among others waiting outside the rl. Middletown, New Haven, | of August of te present year. this v s markers and has failed to | church to throw rice at us and wish W London, Waierbury, Willimentic | Staton is an ex-Sergeant of the a receive them. He was warned by the | us a happy honeymoon was Bmmal @nd Bridseport. Applicants should at | anga was a distinguished sharpshoo Police last week about securing prop- | Rolk. She was 17, and lived at 503 ( Ohce appbly for Form 304, stating the | having been pre od with a cer ey Jast Bighty-third street. New York, | c¥act title, ‘Clerk’, of the examina- |cate and a medal by the War dep louis Reynolds will be in police | When I g0t ready to get marric zain | ion desived, to the Civil Service | men in 1897. H one time figu | court Monday morning charged with |1 chase I3mma. We were married on § C'omuiission, Washington, . €., or | prominently on Wastern PAg { violation of the automobile law. | January 7. in the chapel at the Muni- | the s iry of the United of the Uniled States, being with | Reynolds is an employe of Louis [1- | cipal building { Cwvil Service Board at any place | detachment of troops of the 25th. R, el T oL S Hanlon made a signed statement to | Where the examination is to be held. | fantry of Montana which v | morning charged with similar of- | this effect erday. Wife No. 2 made | Applicants must have reached their |out in the effort to round up 700 [ fensc. At that time it is alloged Bl | #fidavit ot the same time that she cighteerih birthday on the date of [dians who had escaped from Cani nmier stated that he had ordered his | stw Hanlon and Ilizabeth Connolly | tae exwmination. The War Dey and drifted into the state of Mon !.-n.mm < hot fo operate cars without | Ieaving the church in Jersey City and | ment has adopted for tse dur . | i1e was among the first soldiers to 14 [ the proper markers. that she threw rice at them, but she [ continuance of the war sa of | in Cuba as harpshooter in insists that she had no idea ket (hey | $1,100 4 vear as the entrance rate of | Spanish Ame n warr after ser! i B - were married lay for Clerk and states that it will [in the capacity of drill master 1 PATRIOTIC ASSEMBI Le the policy of the depariment to | Tampa, Florida. He figured in all ! Last night a meeting was held ot s promote to $1,200 a year all clerks ¢ noted battles from the Sibon | the Sunday school rooms of the South =y | who after three months Santiago also at 181 Coney and at i church by the Assyrian Mission. Tho | CITY lTEMb reporte:d by the burcau chief Juan Hill. On returning to tha sta || vincipal speaker of the evening was | ing well qualified and in every with his reglment he comUISHER o s G e e SErthy lofd proraotion' ) ‘Thersiilis term of service on the southwest | Camp Devens. In his specch, he said, [ tremendously increased demand in | frontier of Arizona. When liv left ) We must be loyal to our Uncle Sam Harold Gorman of the Naval Re- |all departments for stenopraphersand j army he reiurned to Brookivn ‘\ | to win the present war. He is fight- | sepve, is spending o furlouzh at his | typewriters to take the place of men where he entered a branch of | ing for Democracy, Justice and Lib- ! home in this city who are being scparated from their | Columbia univer: b o criy and the whole safety of nations T () . will attend the|usual occupations to enter the mili- | Fulton and Hond sir . ,',“"'f' | for a universal peace.” Tn closing, [ yoii® Co it b H L e hureh | tary branches. Whila women with [ took @ cours bueincas, INGHEE R ‘i”“‘ national hymn was sur anditho Baphst on whieh are fo | merely a common or high school cdu- |;3s:;bn Theological | L 1R | e R T 3 bo held tomorrow morning at 10:45 | cation may readily find employment | YOrk cifs . coney and SUNDAY THEATER FIGHT, o'clock at the Baptist church on West | in the government service as stenog- ‘{n.l'im\';)» To the full ordination = Main street. All members are invited | Faphers and = typewriters, unusual ’f‘;' e ounsel For Poli's Manager Demands | to ba present. opportunities are offered to collego © ®I90TS GIVET ), en pastor of Wholcsale Arrests. e A llcense wailissieq inis | vomen oSNV ReRaon o Eheln betterliAterifel ivoll fordaoma (Ui i | 2 . el el o e e | edusSoniars o Hed BRSOl e TEOT ol followed the war situption ol Waterbury, Feb. 23.—The case 000 to elans & the more important branches of office | 175 "\ fedq in ite outcome | against Walter L. Griflith, managor of | Street and Miss Lena Lenora law-|.ork, —Competitors will be examined | *¢"% ™ i Foli's theater, for conducting Sunday |¥ence of 171 Main street 3 ~|in the following subjects: Spelling, b ace With the Kai | herfarmances in his theater, was to- tanley 12ddy, with Dr. Lee's medi- | arithmetic, penmanship, lottor-writ- “race to Face With the Kaise day continued in the city court, until|cal unit of the aval Reserve, is|ing, copving and correcting manu- | Another at hook Ambassa next Wednesday. Attorney John II. [ home on a week-end furlough. I =eEnts sorard. Just finished. It carries | Cassidy, as counsel for Griffith, today Donald Gaffney is spending thae | - Ambassador's exposure ( Gorn| \I(lrln‘nmlwl a warrant be issued for all [ week-end at his home on Vine street. A. M. E. Zion Church. war methods, and covers many o | theater manage who open their Tlizabeth B.- Sampson and Arthur At the A. M. E. Zion church to-|that could not be touched at | houses on Sunday and also for stores | w. Sampson have transferred proper- | morrow, pew-rally will be observed | time “My Tour Ycars in Germa and other places which do a business |ty on Hamilton street to Sadie Mec- (at both the morning and evening | was written. Will ha published on Sunday. N Lough Stanley and Catherine Stanley. | ser <. The eapt s will be as fol- | daily installments in the New. ¥ The central figure in the fight for | wells, 1o ection 1 Mrs. L. Richard- | American, comme ng Sunday, ¥ | Sunday closing of theaters is James son, Section 2, Mrs. C. Moorhead, | ruary 24. Another hig featurs | W. IFitzpatrick, international president X Section 1 .. E. Wletcher, Section | running T1E8 s 1Taz | ot the White ::Lfi :A;-Lumflunisn, ‘\lvlm WAS WELL SUPPLIED. 4 Mra ¥ fth. Sermon wil be ! new masterpic Vva nd recently appeared before the board o Z ¢ 2 orning and evening by the | first installments and follow thig public safely, demanding that if ;u‘.’ Torrington, Feb. 3.—-A §50 Liberty | Proached morniuge i, ooy R ‘\‘.,Mu‘y‘ Y lowed to continue Sunday perform.|bond and $1,100 in cash were found !) :I“\‘ hool, conducted hy H. Brewe ;mmm March the Tictori [& in the theater owners shauld b |in the pockets of John Sipos, a labor- ( nye young People’s society will meet | vure Section Will be a new feat made to turn over nect proceeds of | er, when he was searched at polico | . 0. The even worship will be | of the N York S Amerie Sundiy ShOWs to & fund for the hene- | station today following his a on i | veld at 706 Subject Will Power. All / Order from your newsdealer ug (it of wounded soldiey charge of intoxication. Jre welcome. s advt. ‘

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