New Britain Herald Newspaper, March 19, 1918, Page 6

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PRING FEVER. Brahms VThird symphony played Qi ICD 1A C \A = 1l h a ith insp siclanship as it | b ve! viss Lt nighb—New York Bvening By Joe Blast. | h was placad in the | i'ost | . fhere came to him S i | i | for this. maledy |\ y.tiow's nopes are stimuluted by | . ge been provalent | ihc report (row “a Pacific port” that = ace. And Adam |the mew concrete ship has not leaked | a drop since she was launched.-— | Springficld Republican, | | | ieving. Grisley Clammer started to his feet, his face so full of ap- Bic & good ofii- prehension that there wa: barely room for his features. E. F. Parker of West Main Street § that timo on. | I q “Help!” he cried.' “My pick- 8 Bt in the minds of i PII(S Thougms i} YCI‘SG ot has been pocked! Tho man . QY over classlol o) ade from! castor Loans is the S £hat, was Slulnesnest 1o ime NG known as Spring | most satisfactory 3 st satisfactory lubricant for air- 3 3 e L Bt agrce whether | plane motors, and farmers arc beng Ernest F. Parker, private, first clas He was gon Bbit.. At any rato | Ursed to plant and raise these beans | N the U. S Army quartermaster Butihelim s ARoARi G e N B oo |10 abundance. The sonsible thing for | COTPS, son of Mrs. Mary H. Parker train somewhere—it hasn't QS ¢ TEERIATLY | vernineit te 4o | ¢ UMns 1014 (0 463 West Main street, has written made a stop et exclaimed | ent to do is to fix & price, Clammer. “Only 1 hiven't the Wing around the x 5 the fallowing lines as hig own tribute & | sutisractory to the farmors, at which . s 4 e Tat he L Tool: B it that de- Sheg LoRs 'l to the Red Cross. Private Parker, ! ichtest idea what he looked IDs o Lt will buy oll tho castor beans they hke. Did anyone notice him f melts snow and | rajse e farmers will do the re priioghaet o niom elonFa i Elons bl artic arlv " g R L. M l '!’ ‘ parteunrty 2 0 0 B ugs, Linoleums and Qil Cloths S e since Saturday, will return to Fort ora. : Lot nloo. 1y, Governor's Teland, on Wednesday: | The Red Cross. second,” spoke up an eoxcited During this war. so cruel and fearful, little man with all his bottom When mother's eyes, are sad and tear- buttons gone. ‘‘He was a ver B Ol CLOTH, good wearing quality ................ 860 sq, yd. ful, tall, stout man with gold PRINT; z . 4 % And men march onward to meel their || tooth and a nose shaped some NTHD LINOLEUM, (New Design) ...... . 85¢ sq. yd. S fate, thing like a radish.” L INFATID LINOLEUM, .........-:%::0-- $1.26 aund $1.50 y. Of many Herald readers, Never stopping Lo falter or hesitate, “] paid particular attention B Who is there tint would di to htm—I could pick him out , < ]“;‘dlf"a‘f‘ them | \ moan three thousind yeors a | There's a nolle branch of work ‘beins among a thousand,” sald ® tal fired fecling’”. Sailed in o Submurine. dond man with eight pencils stick- of the nation, as u | Sor the brave bovs who shoulder a ing ont of Mg vest pocket “He Ongo eum ugs e pitfalls that lie| AN ancient preacher onee declarer gun was short and slender, witl IDRat all thinks had becn don | "The “Red Cro workers are the ones | mola on his neck just behind shown heve in the New Spring Designs: \ And no new thing is there to sc we mean his collar button.” 5 20 i i 50§ come to those now Under the shining sun IZich one in it showld be crowned a Biarer) the car—v1) identiry Sie 1x11-2 yards ...... $1.25 Size 2 wards x 3 yards .. $6.50 eéngagkd in employments of queen cried a woman Size 1x2... yards ... $1.80 Size 3 yamds x 4 yards . S13.50 Bus kinds. ) Uncle Sam noeds all | One Jonah was sclected for |. b o ket i i shoes and a copy Let us have faith BE helpers he Yean get. And, if the | The service of the Lovd, heys falth (LIS glve Stheiniutmontints > Oyster Openers’ ] . i g ; ! Within a wicked eity, where tention, Monthly' e was a medium- L S l t f R LTS L ORI, . Ll e i | VL ST T v o, o | ol e v e arge Selection of Rugs : ' afe e aoTom o e o need not mention heavy valizes.” Kbl 3 B s mheri¥Poue e oo dnesaticenceta fininetst | S aeHT L Grtbtey MClatmmer n Tapestries, Velvets and Axminstess. Sizes from the small 18 inch AHAM LINCOLN. | : A Tace £ | bezinning of the emd of a hwcury, “epeaially ewmmloyed L ot RO, (RO CHG drewa bresth offreliof by 36 nch to the large 9312 ft. room size. We are offering these = Was warning wicked sinners al I LONERS R0} “I've found it!” he explained. SOT T call It that., There can be u * i s warning wlic L A SORT OF VALEDICTORY. i " Sl “0“ ;' be s"“f“: That they would be destroyed. ‘Thank you all just the sams I'o those who for* almost three | DFive™ but it mus be accompanied —but. come to think of it chase when choosing from our lar, s i : 3 . every e > s 5 i ge stock. hy an cpidemic of Spring Fever A siacker, Jonah proved to bo: Wach and C deaciie et there wasn't anvone at all sit- : . e T He sailed for Tarshish, Spatn emplioved Xt t " lowed the wanderings of this pen, ) : ) | Show in their actions, that thev're bR adiio Al g kg mco TAX. I Spring House Cleaning Time s parting, at on our There are only twelve days ie |iiosofterfassistance Ralinaftn s gtime Matthew Adams) i { | B aged and those | i ‘D to no one but i | “FELVEX”, new process Linolcum SRR o ed. by Spring NOTENT SUBMARINE AND A , ivorites. War- DESTROYER. it is ever with are men and REMNANTS of Oileloths and Dinolemms st revtuced prices fe warn of the menance the race Ruge at less than market prices today. You can save on your pur- hrs, or nce June 9, 1915, have I The s of strife, r¢ are brigdht days ahead. h to pay veur income fax. Sl fad o S e e R e e e ! de the perfunctory wor- | period for pauyment expires April T lx o SR T > [ Delp to make your work easy, After using one of these machines jut Jonah caimly lay W " s that heset the old sanctum sanc- | and by that date overy person with Where e was fast aslcep. rom early morning, till late at night, yowll wonder-how you ever got along without one. hey push their kind efforts, with all i Y I v e “ e their might, Farthquakes ngs of life, —the helping to win the | discharged his obligation in this re- | N"\{*}" \“ that -‘“'L';”‘.‘;f““"; & dove™, | Neter tiring, or Ceasing, to do all they B hee e R e . r. Where once we gloried in the | sard to the Government. While a L o l’Lm" ”“m ‘L‘o e can, e l eC rlC eaflef | is “a Dest e s ean, rather comforts, f » soldie igilantes. sunsion that the pen is mightier [ great many have already complied Dl i B gather comforts, for the 1ai ; g e s || et gie Minin i e t o man. There was once a. man who ignored We are local agents for the “Tdberty” Electric Cleaner, a sple 30 prove [ with ihe rezulations there are stili a ) - ‘ an earthquale. Between a morning vast number who for como reason or | Now when they learned who Jonah g6 here and there, the live long | and a night the greater portion of the formidahic thin the editorial | other have put it off. The peeuliar| oo W " day, town in which he lived was de- teed. We will be pleased to give you a demonstration at your howe. E oS 't thobe who Dt . Inaiciengwas aies Snnoyecy never a thought of rew. molished but, as his own house re- < thing about those who have not paid | 1ris name. withal, led them to fear P e In our v we lsave frien yet is that in many instances they | That they would be destroyed Their kindness and mercy, it right| placency the misfortumes of others— wly made may be argued, but{are persons who are scrupulously from their hearts, Inoconventent ‘butiimerely | tear S ihclois ivie 0 Thosolare o 2 11 ting ot 5 To fix the blame, they then cast 10tS; | Ang we all know well, how they take . i S caused a {rounled svit, Wlectric Cleaners, Vacuum Cleaners and Carpet Sweepers will bum for the more adventurous | an income of over $1,000 must he hn the sword. we now BY Uicle Sam's war maeh ia did machine; does excellent work, light and durable, fully guaran- List price, $35.00; oun Special Spring Offer $29.50 cach i i their parts 5 ? & nions of many Iks and stations | obligations, and who would not think e e Tl him ‘Business as usual” was his favorite {Chofm o L ¢ motto, and his conviction that what THE “TORRINGTON", priced ... . ...... £8.00 each S : L : you did not choose to see would never T G IR VACY T hong them the lane wherein this | chant or corporation held against wide war. pein vou was often on his lips. FHESSSWIHEEFIR VA G2, Spricedlt. i v stbiL i 218 6.50 cach onah s drafted E i, v 5 —; rveyor of public information fs as- [ them run over (he date when payment | 7opaP; 1M Al S e Cid Which dtakuunnves dally—yes, more| "y on< a great relief to his neigh- THE “BRUSH VAC”, priced .. ... Ll 0 cnch bled,—Cthureh S e S uT e g SR = - nto the sea was cast; and more L 5 s b1 murch Street. Tersons, due. There should not be an¥ | dove like calm lay on the set TWhen we're “over there” fighting for h:”i l‘f}“f“ S ']“3 h~‘d“‘"e;‘"" d’”“" THE (McMTLLAN" Carpet Sweeper, $1.40 each; value $2.25 hce things——if they arc of | hesitancy about paving this tax. It| Their ship was safe at last freadom e e New Spring! Draperies Ourtabis and rard zoods 2 £ ke U R el Bl Rt b With the “Red Cross” beside us, and rega‘r‘d as a flva\:;n r-\o”dhronrh"un fe | ew Spring Draperies, Curtains and yard goods are here for on him and destrore im | your choosing at our 3rd floor. Drapery fixtures of all kinds. Barring the few remaining ignorers L Soon Jonah saw, rise up in sight, God knows we need ‘em of earthquakes, America ix fully Special Douhle Rods for over draperies, 39¢ and 4f¢ each, Fix- life Nor shall we fail to count | of letting an account which a mer- For his last sad farewsll same as in 2 play, in this worid Many @ night, when work was over | owes his country, his community anc s r s community and e s paper row. have we wended | his neighbors. Nothing need be £aid | 1y took him in, and down below, We can’t forget, that trus womanly 10se dining places of the | as to why he owes it to his country Three daya, three nights, was he. | devation That secompanies us all, there over| shaken a world, and te the fact that | de 3 eep SO ’ he leaping flames in Furope have | or : ; "4 he Lord who made that deep sca the ocean t | thio Balsneviki Sanaftherallishonl af setileMitipzomptiviland wiil |aSis i) They share alike with us. Yes, one| sirength and fury enough to reach | partalen of food fit for the |'ingly. As'to his community, it is] (And whales to move about,) and all, and set on fire even a land across the | s of patriarchs. Then, too, are | clear that if he is a “slacker” in p aed it to rise up near the land And, beside us God bless them,| sea. It in I helieve, almost an ac- s B oir Jonah out they've willlng to fall cepted fact that therc is nothing to @ Pleeen wherto not only ace lght fling up, others mizht foltow nis)ex- | Andiepiilicur Jenshiolt o think about. work for., write for, i THE J bmestivies. sorvea but where Gany- | ample and. tho gend name of the | TG R hancing the dangers of the oncs | th iy meutyererk for write for but |l FACTS ABOUT THE AMERICAN NAVY pde, cup bearer of the gods, holds | town or city where he lives suffers hy - 5 peaceful seas, in such & triumph for demooracy that rth soothing ambrosia. Bohemia? | gueh delinquene In justice to his| 2 Cetuhnis Aln Dactics They gacrifice themsolves, just merely | gemerations to come will name the | would rather end our days hero | nelghbors, too, he is hound to com‘,.v‘ i Secrotiof ‘r St s i ngg ; 10, pleasc, o wutse o trv oand| Ti0r n Eiops dad, ThE Jicl e = s, > is d 13 (Lawence L. Driggs in Marper's | To encourage, nurse, to try War’ as well as “The lLast War.” SR n in fleld l"fi the same as they with the demand Jagazine.) i console. To work for this is not voluntary,— K t [And then there are the Midnight| made on him by the CGovernment And ""‘”"'f"‘“""-" well, they partake | ¢ compuisory to any ene with nois meys, husses driven by chauffeurs| And, after all, if it a thy | in their role. braan and a heart and two hands. & i 5 a thing that| ., ¢ the German reluctance to and a heart s A . o Bgves opuple with their delighttul [ must 1s @one, why hot do it choses | oD BYer The €7 i o] PO . . line | Tead recently a tale of a person who It wag during the afternoon dmil vent the equal of a cask-shing, or the ivi o aityiter the iy ot S ) y eer- .nture into enemy territory to offer | We cauld write of these martyT ine | . yas too trues an artist to write period on board the U. §. S. Wal- | 5lings we use on half-ton bales? Just ving proclivities the duty of lock- | fully and during the specified period? | 3 fetch of the wrist and the load's up the town. To all those who | The money caught fight over his task. He had just con-. parbuckling ain’t awake it last to the disaster that s g £ 190 and 63c each. one misht almost say the | except that now above all times he BY LIEUT. FITZHUGH GREEN, U. 8. N Much has been made by the Allied | 1 air attack. Statements appear fre- | after line cuit | Propaganda.’ 1 sed by this tax is nec- | quently in the'press to the effect that | And to continue to dloReoiiwould IsL It B T th oughit that it would be' to pnsport tired souls to havens of Test, | ossary to provide the Government | the Ailies have the supremacy of thel o :]’:‘:"}f'\IQ Ws, 80 away we must go, | the everlasting renown of every artist . . g Salmam and say Good-bse. But| with funds which are imperative if |aiT: that we have ta seek out the| 8us D08 SRR (o Q0 CREY Lo B¢y | in the world it he would take ana | Sumed three rations of Uncle Sam's for roliing timbers up the side. Nor aligh of this. A e e German aeroplanes far into their CUE trantpost fyfalisiila word) e wen® | iclsas foue iSea B leRandiniost ol Shidljitinowlingitoibelibeati WIier the fman Theve is the old town itself,—New | sy s " rieenan 50 M |iasirory: that they never vemtlize over tence that glorifies the ataine of | PAYSical cnergy was being devoted o | zoes down to hook on. When vour g | successful conelusion we all hope for. | our lines excenpt for homb-dropping at heavy lnes are too short bend on o it . S digesting the leaden xlobule at the ; e 5 f Nathan Hale and have for his own | lig # tain. Coming here from larger| It iy estimated that some six millions | night or a well-guarded reconnaisance | This blt we haye written ik il pit of his stomach | new one. How? The Carric : by day: that theiv fighting-planes| . = o 40 e re o perhaps at “T regret that T have but one art The Bosun's Mate stepped up. ! be sure. single and douhle. Nothi ; never give battle unless they are over- R g e el S s Wake up. Boots.” he crowled, “it's | under the sun else will hold ‘em gainst only | poserin in numbers; that when they | £ e me as will be distated for your! together meost said the damndest. place in | nalt a million tax pavers last year. |do attuck they sweep down out of the | ”“‘-“‘”‘-'t";r“‘e‘““‘ QUTRm Ot = woodenness." | “A sheet bend won't flap loose in ven states. It was not g0 with us.|furely no sclf-respecting American | clouds, fire ane volley and dive om) . TEAEE o Incidentally, the motto of the| The Recrnit yawnod in anewer. | the wind. Norl a howline-bizht down to safety, refusing further com- | ) Drade e earthquake fable is that it is ridicu- | Then, “Say.” he said, “what's the | draw taul when a man's workin' his bat. ) | . 4 lous to avotd the obvious. sense of this here knot business any- | heart out over a fouled anchor hooic We are hasty if we assume 951(’ht Donatians to help our boys “Oser A way? 1 heen makin’' knots a)! my lifo | rope, ‘And there's some as sAVe wo loper. The Recruit’s head nodded | to be jual es, many travellers frankly brand | or Americans will be called upon to is ae the dirtiest, dingiest, we had | pay the tax this voar, as who a pw Britein we found to be a 200d | wishes to suffer the ignominy of being | fwn, what with all a working town. | 5 tax dodger when so many millions : souldn'i go to sea without a Black- wnmfl we sa“,""" be great—with | of phis countrvmen are responding | charges prove owardice, or even There.” " . without any need of these is ono fault: They knocked the | readily to the Jaw. Neither shouja | Weakness, in the German air servie.| T8 o To The Slacker's Girl. A mantiisallats naye & try & The | walll iR T'm thinkint they oughin Plvi : e einie g vou stop and consider, ace unmercifully,—worse than a|anyone think after he has paid 1,;s.z'l‘i',’"\"f‘:"g\ dhr L L only fair, (Dallas Dispateh.) Mate brought up the end of a largo | add figure-cights and marlinge.” ep-mother might talk about the|income tax that he has donc some- | sporting proposition. They are part|TO menton a few words in praise of | wrhem Slacker weddings certainly j h&wser. “Here's what vou'd hate on The Recruit ac i impressed : = 2ok -~ | 8DO! §5 PXoRos s - ir w 2 5 tug. The ship throws down a smn not convinee He stood up {ld of her second husband’s thir ohl " carefully scrutinized progra their work - Angora. L | b e ird | thing for which he should be praised ff:nia (L.‘a:\?’:‘r‘,-:,,ln;wm pizedivosteiion Tor it’s not in one of them, to evdd ge’.'Am;ifl tf‘r;”d told -me she was go- | heavin’ line. How are ¥ou goinx fo /g 1 car 1long without thom 5 The income tax is a just debt, and Rt e e e Boe ke shirk. ing to marry her beau and save him | Make her fast so's the hawser can be | for a while remarked Indolently. Yet the passing of the| paving i e N i hanled aboard ™ The Mate grabbed the lad and : paving it is a sacred doty. who had forty-five air victories to his|, . = 1 b from conscription. onths, we noted a change in opin- i g it Rnd. whe dld muoh to es. | Tis a great undertaking, from bemin-| " up ka1 Since .when is Cupid The Recruit tied the hig and little | shook him. “You can can you” he ing to end b " - ropes together, just plain tied them. | barked. ‘‘Took at ver shoes: strings ; particularly amongst the old in- 0 Y i # t sent ogram of air 0 . wearing yellow trousers J 5 B P : i FACTS AND TMANCIES, tebllak the presont progyam of So in these few lines our gratitude we | ™ i 0 VECOT trouser With a yank the Mate pulted his knot | in Trish pennants all over bbitants. So we, too, came to love tactics for his service, stated in a ltet- Listen, Girlie! You're a sweet kid | ) £ 3 \ D s ) 4 send, b Joose, A dozen times the bov tried | Yer hritches comin' down v b a ke a b | 2 ter to his mother htul e kind q and I allus thought there was sum- ) H ; 3 lew Britain with a keener and bette A disposition To trfw_f:\lt ul workers 50 kind and 0 {144y home under your bonnet. But|And failed. The Mate only lauch ‘,1‘ rranny \\fi vve fied In the ve. And, with the place we learned | part of American houscholders to o r N s air " id ¥ ;| and =aid. “'y'see it ain't so easy Yet | ing. And hat neclkerchief men never fly over hostile lines. Sy o | When you said you let that wvellow : g o 9 hold a kindly admiration for ite | DUt in enough coal this spring and | regards chasing-machines, that is true; | V' 1°, 2T€ da‘“ffi’.,”““ bit for the bovs| gungeifon bloom in the gardem of | it's a cinch if you know how. Look [ strike ma dend! the old Man'd h summer—if they are allowed to—to | but it should be remembered. first SRS "3, T your heart, I thought of your ole: at these half hitches—" With 2 deft | vou uj hsolence i tn throbbing in this immediate | LC2P tho home fires burning next | that our new Fokkers have some foa- | 3 granny back there under the willows | twist he threw several loops over the | on fhe s in arts throbbing in L winter.— Providence Journal, tures which we cught to leep to our- | AT who stified her tears with a brave | hawser's end and proved thev | einity Noble men, and gentle == selves; and, second, that our nhjecz! Cm ITEMQ smile to blow a kiss after the soldier | wouldn't siip | Recruit is no longe P | | 1s evident on the “It has been said that German air hhabitants. Theres are some great Then some da omen llve in abundance in these en- “Are enemy aliens in our eamps?” | is only to prevent hostile aeroplanes | as he marched away to a hero s grave “Take the towin' of a spar.” the | knots second nat asks the Detroit F'ree Press. 1f they're | from carrving out their observations. | { And 1rwoncered ‘what she'd sa) if she | oid saflorman went on. “A timber 3 not, the camps are about the only | It is for those reasons that we prefor | | knew. hiteh and noose wili lend her lixe a knot and iwger nor better than the tenor of its | place that are free from them.- | to wait for them where we oxpact to| The monthly meeting of the Bwed- “You think that molecule is too | lamb, whilst any other old maid's| M But he doesn lcople,~—regardless of what magnifi- | Charleston News and Cou r meet them."” ish Elim Baptist Foreign Mission Cir- | young to die for his countrty and vou | kinks will keep yvou crazy plekin® her |1 € He just doe nt buildings are within its precincts. —_— cle, will be held tonight at 8 o'clock | want to hide him behind your skirts. | un For the Herald, Poles in thts country are planning = S {in the chureh pariors. But a broken heart ain't as painful “Take cargo work. (an vou in-| Navy a propasanda in Poland to offset the The Misses Ethel Benz of Camp | s a guilty conscience, Little Girl; and L ell, the less said about shop perhaps | njsrepresentations of Germans re- HELP RED CROSS i"f‘a“ and Anna Brown a,,churcfi his love for vou is only infatuation somewhat checkered career, worked | the man who goes over the top will ek T for the spring recess. “Memory of a dead hero is sweeter V] | years. ! RBorn liege, Dr. Anet worked f vears as a mission be small beside that of the man who | 1.cab Chapter to Open Big Drive for ’ .| than' a caress of a live coward : attempts to distribute allied literature MeyorjGeorms A SQuigleviand Db e - = in Belglum. In 1911, he made an . “Sjacker weddings when the war b ntry boasts of; but for them all | 1, = b 5 s fifth ward republican candidates will | 4 S asnloratiohiinl tY Beleid in Poland in these days.— Buffalo Ex- Clothing to Be Sent to France | { g flage are flying are insults to Ameri- 3 Speaks at VD) raiae il da el elgian e would not give one tHirteen em |press. holdla ntn:v = Sl]((n\\llsky- hallthia)| 280 0 YN Rev. Dr. Anet. Who Speaks at South (c7EYE SR 300 e formation of ofumn in this newspaper. Those —_— and Belglum. over ng;r dOBc Tl': S e “But if you must he a recruit pirats Chureh Tomorrow., Was Present at '1:1” "‘”' ian ‘:“‘;" Mi on As the Rl have rubbed sthows with 1is.in| THe perspossl to construct u ssction | By request of Herbert C.:Hoovar, | o 0% Tred Holisrer o ot | be a'®0o0d one and spend your hone S i o : k Aehtingitrenche Gantihl * 3 4 from & business trip to New York | ... in Germany. 1 hate a piker. the Surrender of Brossels, several of the American Congo M e work of placing this journal be- | Of fighting trenches in Central park | .vaisman of the commission of relief | pnd Philadelphia where she attended 3 i e thaalareatly halped oup AtH. k. S i may appear superflious to peopls |, i reek of March 25 floral showi | — The Rev. Henri Anet. B. D. TLLD. misslonaries Tel faticne re its readers are all that newpaper | (v 10y 10 wevoral years' expert. | !0 Belgtim, the week of March 25 to |some floral shows. | : jonaries in their relations 61k should be-~—loyal, likeable, | ence in the subway trenches in | ) has been selected by New Britain | Mrs J. Hall of 23 Holyoke street, | GOING TO HARTFORD. doctor in social sciences of Brussels with the Belzian government earned, and last but not least love- | Brondway and other streots.—New | chapter of tha Red Cross In which to | BPringfield, died yesterday at her The Luther league of the Swedish [university. will zive an York World make a anccial drive, throughout the | home there. Mrs. Hall was weil | : and it swing a double rons. And, after all, a town is no As for the old shest, n some of the higzest dailies the illystrated lec- He was several months in Belgium under German rule and was presor at the surrender of Iirus he |ited Rheims and the French first Dr. Anet will speak under the | trenches in September, 1016, H Men's Brotherhood 'seen the battlefields and deso | Lutheran church will go to Hartford |ture on conditions in Belgivm at the Somenow Reed of Missourl, ve- | United States, to secura clothing for | known to local peovle, having Hved [ i, evening to visit the league in |gouth church, tomorrow evening at ji e can be sald, (irning 1o the attack on Commis- | the peoplo tn the occupied sectiops | here for a number of vears. The fun- | .ja¢ city. The following will assist | . Tt is a great old habitat, this New | gioner Hoover, strongly reminds one | of France and Belgium. eral will be held tomorrow. in the progiam: Ingeborg Fromen, | ©'clock Britain. Its ppople are the blue- | of the little crown prince banging Any warm, ser(!co::flc glarmems, 1§uth Pcelarfotn. Adeline Ohman, Mrs. | auspices of the s =Re o LR away at Verdun.-—Hartfor 3 referably colors, for 3 . arry Christenson, A OH, blte 1s cordially invited to |Places in Belgium. 1u Octoher fds of tho cavin. - Gid-brass thetn | awdy at Verdun—Hartord Times :—.-roe;\ee:.jso,\-‘-n S A HOLY FAMILY WHIST. Talk ans’ Aot R ol andfcnalpiblcl {he visited the Relglan battletront i pvery one, and teach them to kmow | .. . STOT fuliy Dr. | nccepted. Shoes, stockings and un. | Si. Mary’s Holy Family Clrcle held | ludtes’ ootetts and Rev. Dr. 8. @. Oh- | 2tte8d , : ! Flanders ana the devastated rogions hnd love their own home town as do | Muck's certificate of Swiss citizen- | derclothing aro espooially, desited, | a whist vesterday afiernocon in the |»ian. A large number of the Luther Dr. Anet comes from a long line of jn France. He had a very interost ¢ who come Ly it merely through |ehip and convinced ourselves of its | aleo sheets and pillow ceses. _Then ‘parikh hall, THhe prize wianers weie | cague members and their friends |ancestors all of whom were el‘fgagei\ ing interview with King Albert, who doption. suthenticity, swve arc prepared to | clothes may be new or used. No rub. | Mrs, Willlam Forsyth, 3Mra. Thomes | wiil accompany them to Hariford on [in church and missionary work and gave him an important mescage thaty 3 3D, state that pever was the andante of | Ler garments can be lransported, J. Bmita and Mrs. James M, vCumnfl vhe 7 o'clock dinky. his family has been associated with {will be heard with interest. ble No more need be said

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