New Britain Herald Newspaper, February 26, 1918, Page 10

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1918, | TROOPS ADVANCING BEHIND A HFAVY CURTA'N FIRE REORGANIZED RUSSIAN LEGION IN FRANCE ; ; | ADOPTS THE GLORIOUS STARS AND STRIPES fwdvance behind a heavy lire curtain, | «nemy trenches, W th ra- | Bhotograph shows | which makes them indistinguishable | pher evidently ris } he } | to the enemy. This raid was inade | miost have been vy lis- | ling head on in the | i 001y aeross No Man's Land on the | tening post | N —— e e - Cia dl | t shting < g nt Ling from their habiliments, the prop this, or' may A:vyu\\lin\um» effective lighting a igement g fro abilim : himself directl? | for this effort than the staunchest | € Place for them wis in the bithitubd) S Conyrieht: o mmanding officcr. | devotee of ancient Athens or Delos | °" Sl . s . | srwood & Buderwon 4 i Miss Moller's interpretaticns may | 2 s militars SR | ever dreamed of. 1t was one that com oy Bt il ¢t hide the fac S . QR | it her, but they V't hi i { (T 00.000,000, I ALE/OF HISSES FOR | NIy Siliien this modost cheoniclar i, " s dnecr, aher 15 ameracerul | $9,200 4 e >\.,x her performance and he is still ;nd oftentimes awkwiard. The cn- , is now active r I}y among ITD}& WOR AN DANC( }fi” in the dark, as it were. So was she, ' tepgainment was patterned after the ing yinions of ltussian j Half of the brigade turned Bolsheviki, camp, where they met American res nibe e Nea o HiBn ERAll Ao { except for the few thrilling seconds | Jeadora. Duncan standiord, and those courage will have to be|and refused to fight against the Ger- | eruits, and they took n great fanty ta R e e o —_— | when she leapt across the green spot {who may wish to decide for them in respect to these fighters | mans, preferring to fight against tho [ the Yankees. \When left camy reau it ; S | on the st disclosing herself in the | gelves whether M Moller has or | i f the old Russian rench, There were hloody unters, | for here ! 1 Star O Lk b (Sl S . | o | selves whether i h ol part e ol nco tor Star A “‘ Y,‘t““.‘i(, Hclen Moller Shocks, Blasc New \"'l“‘u”.u primitive of hot weather €os- | hasn't may take advanta of the which fought on the western the loval Russians gathered about | and Strip | il fag, and Sl Ada it o With Tmitation of Mother tumes. nest pecformian hedulch or | front. They ve usked to be per- | their brave commander, General Loh- | here they ave shown with their Amers e ate e | Prior to this Miss Moller had ex- March 19 A larze orchestra, fed by [ mitted 1o roturn 1o the front, where | vitsky, and have won the good-will o just Dbeford e et tive. | hibited a group of her dancing pupils, | Max Jacobs, provided the aceoni- | they cin uphold the honor of Russia. T e S < Rk X S | all very smail ' and, judg- | paniments. e ——— - —— - & \f“” g New York, Peb. 26.—The main in- | g St e ] ne orth (taro- | e e = oI T e e RS ENROLLING TO BUILD AMERICAN Yamiins. Cam ten Moller fan ‘ T FEAR GERMAN POISON Gas| VOLUNTEE s Jmes fial | il at the Metropolitan Opera House | SHIPS AND CERTIFICATE EACH ONE RECEIVES nmensHnsured) CAmbivestardy iternoon had to do, not ! with 99 9-10 per e b Miss Moller's appreciation of the X oy | Greek ideal in dancing, but with the | ng fn insured ng 97.9 { more, prosaic query, had she or y.;‘in‘x{ imount o vernment | she Anything on ) 0 nore than | Miss Moller might arsuc that this | r I tul o em has nothing to do with the | nary e insu ¢ with fand t) her work must be cons n ympan nthe | ered from the viewpoint of art alone. | orld | Anyhow, the query loomed big all Defen in- | afternoon and attained its climax in nou nformatio Vv he [ the Valse Lente number in which sin \ irean of War | those who ought to know such mat- |, \W 1 n ) (0o ter claimed she hadn’t This claim N Y ank wit upported by hisses indicating 1 yut the | the presence of some in the big audi nd s them | ence whose ideas of the Greek pric . The per- | tice diffsred from' Mill Moller's. i mus - an 1. Certainly Miss Moller used a far i * ] ] ) [Fy ! This is but a small batch of the |men volunteering for this work arc |given a riin signed by Fdware | These American soldiers are wear- { photogr just to ow how our| Bl e daily enrolling to build | PTolled In the United States ship- |N. Hurl chairman of the [nited [ g the marvelons new ¢ mask |fighters have sunk their individunhty rd volunteers of the- public service | States shippinz board. to tostify td8 | adopted for our army. Fach man in [in the combined fight for human jus- (Ships to beat the Kaiser. Al the rve. To cach c¢ne of theru will be | the voluntéer's patriotism | the wgroup =cnt home a copy of the |tice and liberty S L R e R P URT 2 dnET P i { e | mApe WIRFIFSR KEV Tar mic 1inel £ cam | DANGEROUS ENEMY ALIENS BEING TAKEW TO AN | TAPS WIRELESS KEY FOR HIS UNCLE SAM Sl | | INTERNMENT CAMP SOMEWHERE IN THE SOUT “A MOORLAND IPARME Did it ever oceun to you that the only substance that Nature ily and solely for use as a food is Milk? urai it is then. that mitk should be makes p This being the case, how ns the BEST Food MOORLAND FARN MIL clea ourishing. i is v Healthy, i COWS, 1comes to y i 1 waral raw stat ized SOLD BY GIROGAN & HATPIELD, OF DD DINYIAE { ) Y] RENIER, PICKHARDT & DUNN Oon. Arch. 127 Main St. Phone 1409-2 Everv day scems to bring in something new in Dresses and VWaists, Underwear and Corsets. Pmschall has lost another player by | showing wilh the Salt Lake ‘r.m‘ of | 3 ) f rcason of the war in the person of | the Pacific Coast league, that Christy L f inCom; E : ] . | Mathewson signed him for a trial s s in order to make more room for the incoming [ | Morvis Ratn, who joined the Unitea | MEICRSOT siemed ham (o € 08 - 5 | States navy recently. Rath is now | Rath at one time played second base goods we shall continue the sale of our Skirts. [learnme the fundamer of wire- [ for the Kansas City club of the tion to entrain for a detentlon cump | u special train carried them (o Bl | 1css in the naval wireless school in | American ociation The photo Daugerous enemy aliens mm:uled[-‘,;m,,owhem in the South.” The men | place where they will be out of mi Tarsets fitte . X DO itte ! 1 "hiladelphia He was given a try- him operating a wireless Kkey |y, t service operatives march- | were detained at a concentration ! chief until the end of the war. Arme Corsets fitted by an expert fitter when desired. by several major leasuc teams, of the government naval rvice operatives MArch-| o oap at Gloucester, N. J., until | United States soldiers guardedg il last yewr made such a good | training station } "8 through Philadelphia to the st ¢nough of them were in the net and | party on the trip south

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