New Britain Herald Newspaper, March 29, 1918, Page 3

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, Bostgg_ Store ONE OF THE “PLUMS” OF THE SEASON IS 'ON SALE AT OUR WASH GOODS SECTION. One Thousand Yards of the Celebrated BATES GINGHAMS In Beautiful Plaids and Stripes, alse Plain Cham- brays (a very scarce article) 32 inches wide At 39C X a yard. These coming in lengths of 2 to 10 yards, give an im- mense variety to choose from, much greater than can be found in any regular stock assortment. , McCall are here: Patterns 10c, 15¢, 20c. Magazine 10c. Book of Fashion 25c. With a 15¢ Pattern Free. PULLAR & NIVEN Goods for April Read What Father Lynch Said A recent attack of pleurisy left me in a rundown condition. My + strength did not return as fast as I desired, nor did my general health improve as it should, and a bronchial cough distressed me greatly. I con- sulted my physician who recom- | mended Linonine. Before I had finished the first bottle I began to im- prove, the cough disappeared entirely and I commenced to gain in flesh and strength. Linonine has my hearty en- dorsement. I recommend it to all who are in need of a builder, or who suffer from bronchial or lung troubles. REV. H. J. LYNCH, 8t. rFeter’s Church, Danbury, 17R6-1905. Linonise has been the most ef- fective remedy for all forms of coughs, colds, bronchitis and wasting diseases for many, many years. It ‘was best in Father Lynch's time, it is best now. If coughs or colds threaten to bring you low, or have already Pastor done ®o, it will bring about a rapid improvement, and you will be yourself again in a very sort time, Look for this famillar trade-mark. All druggists sell Linonine. FRESH CARLOAD HORSES WILL ARRIVE AT OUR STABLES ON TUESDAY, MARCH 26TH, 1918, These horses are right from the farms of Ohio. Clever and broken, ready for hard work. Splendid matched peirs, 2700 to 3200 pounds, and some singles 1100 to 1500 pounds. If you are in need of a horse, see us. Every horse as represented. Satis- faction guaranteed. Sec our complete iine of dump carts, farm gears, bot- tom dumps, harness, etc. ~ P.H. GONDON & CO0. INC. 80 Laurel St. Bristol, 'Phone 58-3, Conn, ! BEAT GERMANY TO | * HNEES, SAYS TEDDY. Only Way to Get Righteous and | Lasting Peace, He Declares Portland, Maine, March 29.—There but one to get a righteous | and lasting peace and that is to beat | Germany to her knees, Colonel Theo- | dore Roosevelt declared here yester- day in a “keynote address” which he delivered before the Maine Republi- can State Convention. Colone] Roose- velt lauded as ‘“whole-hearted"” sup- port which he declared the republi- can members of congress had given to the administration in Washington. i He decrled ‘“mis-management at | Washington” which, he said had been is way | such as to cause all good patriots | srave concern and urged the neces- sity for pursuing a policy of *per- manent preparedness’” is won. “War is won by brains and steel, not by kid gloves and fine phrases, said the former president, in his ar- raignment of “some of the most im- portant divisions of the govermment’ which he said were "almost chem- ically pure of efficient organization.” In discussing post-bellum readjust- ments which he declared have al- ready been shown essential to the continued well-being of the nation, | the speaker satd “we cannot afford to | tolerate flint lock methods of war- | fare in time of war or flint-lock methods of geovernment for meeting | the problems of industry in time of peace. We need new weapons, but we need the old spirit back of the | new weapons. The simple govern- | mental processes which sufficed in | th edays of Washington and even in | the days of Washington and even in adequate today in peace as the flint- lock of Bunker Hill and the smooth- bore muskets of Bull Run would be after the war in war.’ { | Republicans in congress since the entry of the United States into the war “have sought to serve their party only by making it serve America,” Colonel Roosevell said in his intro- ductory remarks. ot in all our history has any political party, when | in opposition, shown as fine, asg whole-hearted and as completely dls | interested patriotism as has been | shown by the republican party, es- | | pecially by its representatives in the | senate and congress of the United | | States during the vear and two months now closing. ‘ “There have been during this pe- riod very grave faults and shortcom- | ings and delays in governmental work. | But they were not due to the action | of congress and the action of the re- | publicans in congress was consistently } designed to correct them. { “We are pledged to the hilt as a nation to put this war throush with- out flinching until we win the peace of overwhelming victory. We are pledged to secure for each well-be- haved nation the right to control its own destinies and to live undominat- ed and unharmed by others so long as it does not harm others. “This is the people’s war. It is not the president's war. It is not con- gress' war. It is the duty of the re- publican party to stand like a rock against inefficiency, incompetence hesitation and delay no less than against a lukewarmness in serving the common cause of ourselves and our allies. To support a public serv- ant who does wrong is as profoundly unpatriotic as to oppose a publiq servant who does rlght.” “Germany has wronged us far more seriously than Great Britain wronged us during the years that led up to our Declaration of Independence,’™ said Colonel Roosevelt in discussing the reasons for America becoming in- volved in the war. “In common with all civilized mankind we have been outraged by Germany's callous and | cynical brutalities against well-be. haved weaker nations. This 1s a war on behalf of treaties as against | scraps of paper; for the freedom of the | sea against world enslavement—tor ! Germany has been the real foe ot freedom of the seas. | After enumerating German barbar- ities in Belgium, and the crueltles of | Austria, Bulgaria and Turkey, Ger- | many’s “vassal states,” Colonel Roose- | velt sald: “Unless we war on Turkey | precisely as we war on Germany, we show that we are insincere when we say that we wish to make the world safe for democracy. We are bound as a nation now to remember that fine phrases, that bold declarations of | purpose, are of worth only as they | are turned into brave deeds by men | who are both strong and true. We “o{ this nation must now prove our truth by our endeavor.’ | The speaker attacked German- | Americanism saying ‘‘there can be no ‘ such thing as a ‘fifty-fifty’ alleglance” | and declared that ‘“hereafter we must see that the melting pot really does melt.”” ! Relative to American unprepared- ( ness for war Colonel Roosevelt said | “If we had even begun seriously ta fight last September, Russia prob- ably would not have broken down and | victory would now be in sight.” Preparations for a three-years' war, the training of an army of 5,000,008 men, preferably through adogtion of a system of universal military train- ing and the rushing of ship construc- tlon were urged by the former presi- dent as most vital to America’s “first duty—the winning of the war.” ‘“All our other activities in making arms, ammunition, airplanes and other war machines can be made to synchronize with this, he said. The speaker sounded a warning against ‘“‘professional pacifista” who he sald, as “apostles of weakness and | | folly,” would renew their activities when peace is won. “Friends,’”” he sald, “it is not only | our duty to be prepared against war. Tt is. if possible even more our duty | to prepare for peace. And we are! almost as unprepared in one respect NEW BRI TAIN DAILY RALD, en’s Clothing for Easter as supplied by Hollanders’ HE man who weighs Quality and Cost in making his Clothing se- lections cannot fail FRIDAY, MARCH 29, i¢ A 5 i8. P—— carefully the question of to be impressed by this splendid generous Easter display at this store. ) We are pleased to say evidence of War Prices here. that as yet there’s no It’s a stock equal to the particular demands of the Easter season—and it will prove up to and beyo tions in value. HERE ARE SOME FEATURE YOUNG MEN’S SUIT SPECIAL These present a lavish assortment including all the smart young man effects and every Suit is actu- ally worth $5.00 more than we ask. Other Suits that include the season’s complete range of styles and coloring. $18, $20, $22, We are specializing on Young Men’s Suits, giving ever one entire section to these garments ex- clusively. SP..ING OVERCOA WE ARE FULLY PREPARED Come here expecting a great deal. not be disappointed. This Store Will be Open Ail Day Good Friday HOLLANDERYS’ 82-88 ASYLUM STREET, HARTFORD. THE DAYLIGHT STORE nd your greatest expecta- 925 $28, $30, $35 TS $20, $25, $35 You will as the other. Moreover, in the af- fairs of peace, as in the affgirs of war, let us as grown men, as serious citizens of a great republic, impa- tlently brush side the silly sham- trust in rhetoric as a substitute for action. ‘“We cannot afford any longer to continue our present industrial and social system, or rather no-system of every-man-for-himself and devil- take-the-hindmost. “Is it our business as a nation se- riously, to face our industria] condi- tions, to realize that we cannot with- out folly permit them to go on un- changed, and yet that we are worse than fools if we permit them to be changed for evil. Therafore we must shun equally the Bourbon reaction- aries who invite disaster by refusing to face and grapple with the needs of the hour, and the sinister dema- gogues and loose-minded visionaries who preach a red folly that would bring us to even worse disaster. “The great Russian commonwealth offers a lamentable example of the effect of vibrating between the tyran- ny of an autocracy and the tyranny of a mob. The autocracy of the Ro- manoffs united extreme with complete despotism. “It was overthrown. After seeth- ing tumult the Bolsheviki came to the fore. “The Bolsheviki have no more to teach America than the Romanoffs themselves. “If we are wise we shall not per- mit ourselves to be withheld from a forward movement by the Romanoffs of our own social and industrial sys- tem and neither shall we permit our- selves to be plunged into the abyss of fathomless disaster into which we would be plunged if we followed the | American Bolsheviki.” | incapacity LITHUANIANS CARRY ON PRESS CAMPAIGN Trying to Acquaint American Public With Their Aims | i | Washington, March 29.—In further- | ance of the program adopted by the two thousand delegates to the Lithu- anian convention held in New York last week, the Lithuanian National council, through its headquarters es- tablished in Washington a few weeks ago, is carrying on a vigorous pub- lictity campaign. It is the purpose to acquaint Americans with the aims and ideals of all true Lithuanians in Te- spect to national independence for their mother country, free of interfer- ence from Germany, Russia, or Po- land; with something of the history, literature, and race characteristics of the Lithuanian people: and to show the basis of their cleims for a freo and independent government and a sovereign status. The Washington headquarters is the official mouthplece of the Lithuanian people. It is under the supervision of Dr. J. J. Bielskis and C. V. Ches- nul, both of whom have for some years been active in the work of unit- ing and organizing the Lithuanians to ald their native land to throw off the yoke of foreign domination. The council proposes to remnder In- nocuous the mephitic propaganda be- ing circulated either by Prussian agents of Russian Bolshevists, mas- querading as the Worke council, many of whose members arc at pres- ent government suspects, and who do not believe in the absalute indepen- dence of Lithuania. The New York convention has eliminated differences of opinion which might previously have existed with regard to the cam- paign for independence, and effectu- ally reconciled all parties firmly ecow alesced for the regeneration of Lithu- enia; the socialistic element alone having been repudiated. There are between 750,000 and 900,000 Lithuanians in America who are supporting the National council in its work. To them 1is vouchsafed ifree expression of opinion. From them have come nearly 25,000 sol- diers for America’s war against auto- cracy, and never a murmur ageinst the draft. Taday the parent state is crushed under the armies of the Hun and gagged by his iron heel. | L B B Ry FRENCH BREAD RATIONS. Only the very poor and men and women doing the hardest kind of work may have more than 7 ounces of war bread a day in France. The entire wheat crop of France has been requisitioned by the French gov- ernment. ITALIAN BREAD RULES. A new Italian food regulation limits the amount of bread served in res- taurants and public eating places to 2.8 ounces per person at esch meal. The bread must be untoasted and slices must not exceed three-fourths of an inch in thickness. il ; i?";'u';‘,lijl Malted the grains. Delicious not only saves wheat in making Grape-Nuts but produces actual sugar from No sugar is needed with Grape-Nuts and less milk than with the ordinary cereal. i gl ("i“ Wt bl ! Barley War Bread Svon Xt |Our Easte The tailored suit Allen & Company I (. able garments for the in endless variety. " Buits of Sllvertons{ Mon's Wenr Berge, Tricotind, Poiret J e, iret "Twill, Oxford Cloth, Gabardiny Tw > ne, Po! \ line Btripes, Biack and Wite :‘m' L CoveT Mg e, | Hatk ur special festn the i N the best suit val Gonnsum.‘"u at $26.00 1s positively SPECIAL FOR SATURDAY n® and ©a lactical, we re shown herd For Baturd: we will place on sale a speci pecial lot of Coat ’ID‘:J;:“D::M' all Wool Serge, Gabardine, Poplin or Polret il D! p le materials will soon be growing scarce owing to ”onmnm s increasing demands and the curtailingf of produc- "&;"l.:m '75.00 and $29.560 Coat Dresses on sale tomorrow at Icanoces SOLD BY A. A. MILLS 80 West Main Street Baking For this Faster we will have a large assortment of wholeson and tasty bakings, Included m this variety will be Chocolate Moch Lady Baltimore, French Walnut and Chocolte Layer Cakes, O! P\MNWWIMAWICERU.WMMMI. Charlotte Russes, Chocolate KEclsirs, French Pastry, Coffee Oak English Bath Buns, Boston Brown Bread and Baked Beans and tho last time this season our deliclous HOT CROSS BUNS HOFFMANNSBAKER 62 West Main St. Two Stores, 95 Arch St. EASTER The Time when Everybody” Thoughts C'nt:r on howa: E glorious event of Baster calls Sor“hcmutjoyf\llgt;:in the calendar — flowers. ter and flowers have always been inseparable— fowers are the one thing that can fully express your sentiments on this great oEc:!uimu “Say it with Flow::" this ter. B ts Ly SR —these are but a few of the many sug- fstions which we can offe you vee floral gifts. Vo.z Floral Co. 92 West Main St.

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