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29, 1918. Christianity, that we should on this : iy . ,- E £16 VARIETY OF NEW STYLES FOR : “ALWAYS RELIABLE” :‘; s ooz § ‘ LAST FINUTE SHOPPERS FOR i I =2 FugTagn || Laster daturday e || Nlore New Coats, Swits, end i T * i 3 aw and crepe and otl 3 We have been most fortunate in securing authentic style gar- It o sty sy : it : ; e orna § ments which have been carefully selected by our buyers. Apparel AlES : 2.98 . $4.98 =i e Canmo's 2:98 | ] ihat reflects the standara of this store. o AR - FITTING OUT THE LITTLE TOTS 3 —~ e FOR EASTER rnmenty has coy i < : £ A S, o) — : =z OUR INFANTS' AND CHILDREN'S DEPT.—2ND FLOOR. the Now\Haven 1 ¥ agrecing 1o - 4 ey P o i e " Rl , YOUR NEEDS IN BLOUSES HAVE fact that he lives under this | Thiy must havi pleasant, and ! s : i < NOT BEEN ORG TrN e government quieting news Loy 1 tockholders, 4 i g e & < i ! i b N : Dainty Organdie and Voile Blouses, priced 98¢ upward. ; L ) lose their holdings stz = FEy SR o v = e S oo o e e - H N H_D UF UNTB'MMEQ HAT iN 8] Crope de Chime, Washable Satin and Tub Silk Blouses, priced I'ITE. DEMOCRATIC TICKE g : Dl = is il d g $3.98, $4.98, 5,98 cach which was once in such a floarishing VN MARSHALL: HARLAN. | who are sure now| they will not IFrom all aeccounts, harmony and condition. compelled t he gov | thusiasm prevailled at the Demo-| Sy ET US ™ o ernments assis its in- | B S I 4 itic conventlon last ht, when 3 t L | debtedness. 1 being hon E. Martin was nominated 0 A g ; A\ S he conducied Y G Y AVEL) A ) SHINY STRAW FINEST TIRERE NEW STRAW TAMS o iDyecslamation el O e el he stockbold- | § UNTRINDIED TATS peec a ptance, first | % . - UNTRIMMED HATS Made of finest quality ¥ L of acaepta lers. What a that the ma: % ! % Lissve Tiséte: and 3 end:Tap, Took here for the new things, as styles are changing from se: ever shapes son to season on gloves. We alm to keep up with the pace set by ting out that, under hls lead- | . . 2 S ARRE S regard to interests of the stock R e e l).~\'x;()‘\‘;av1"‘ Party 1 ‘ha‘cz holass : e A 98 $1 .98 $2.49 and the leading manufacturers. Ls e i Rty — (5 WASHABLE CAPE GLOVES, PIQUE SEWN KID GLOVES, in ‘ o $2.98 $3.98 1uman hellet, and ‘h'”; Owing to the food administrator's i 2 black, white and colors, self and fancy embroidered. EASTER SPE- flayed the present city administra-{ regutations our hot cross huns today | oan . e ceiev.... $1.85 palr. Value $2.00 which he termed “blundering | were heatloss ) etless Other extremely smart gloves priced up to .. Lvev. $2.80 pair. stupid.” Dr Martin con l i r p = y . ’:‘ . [l e e aWE \g.as Br*“a 90 ?’gn 3 i ln@r ] KAYSER SILK GLOVES ...... Ceie... 85C o $1.50 pair e : g : L AL it o J B WASHABLE FABRIC GLOVES .. St to $1.15 pair. Bins iy partviwill Dursue if he ds [T . LS R L0 SR = = les crice crocutive. They are asl ,f“ S i 2 3 E : CHILDREN'S GLOVES (Silks) .... .. e and 69¢ pair [ Eiaiesai il i poxcRavE D SO tECOSLY CHILDREN'S PATENT MILAN TAND MADE CHILDREN'S FINEST QUALITY HAND MADE WASHABLE CAPES in white and tan .. . $1.50 and $1.65 pair. TRIVAED HATS o = HATR ; - Mude of i L strage AL IRED IS YEr (e T . trimmed GREY SUEDE GLOVES : Sy . $1.75 pair. on is our platform and | g4 pound. te , butte and v ¥ gl e iy K ity that s it vy MEN'S GLOVES, washable capes .. $2.00 pair i in to §5.08. speocial for Kaster Sa GREY MOCHAS AT n G 3 Saer LS 150540, 0 pair. inostentatious business | 0. : o ard is economy and effi-| ;.00 g20 a bottle Tiese prices | i . e ornaments. New $1 98 i vl S seremass | Ther 180 3 bt Thee ortoe| B S . $2.98 .. $3.9 attend striotly to business. | 46,00 care for coffec, tea or hutter. | mindful that we five in}{ iR - ne and economy must be prac- thelw N earion | ; ey T w BRSNS arinena et tofernearion Q q ! HATS TQIMM ] CHILDREN'S SILK LISLE HOSE ................ 39¢ (o 30c pair. in city affairs as well as in the | the sporting page. the baseball editor : ] fi - Black, white, khaki and cordovan. \te home. We will work for a 9 A oy i . !E ) . would probably put it this way: | iemay sl LU e D s e T T S - Mei’s Sox Women’s Sitk Hose g's lne drive and threw him oUt, ' s A — -~ — service reform; e 1 work dors! o ota service reform; we wi . Pershing to Petain SILK LISLES ....20c—S89¢ pr. Black, white and all the lead- c loser relatian between the n | mitl Under these circumstances, e e na on o iy : ' . } femhilal Sullypamans ofhelnited Stutes H 3 ¥, ) RE, § S 3¢ Sc¢ . ing shades. station of the clty and the board | he recapture of Odess i EMPE%( VEij P! B e e R DDAVSETABIOIDRTALE FIRRE STLKS . g5 to 45c pr. BRI S i ealth As leader of the demo- | eorces indicate clearly that not aill country, we cannot for our part help Byl ios hiast THREAD SILKS ¢ \ as - vegretting most ke at necessity 53¢ pr. $1.25 o $2.00 pr. et 1 sand fort as o T A D g mont Koty 1 M | o sae tem. e an 650 125 10 8200 and champion of woman Ty arlioac oy oo | A sl b TR oyernment e i e ; I ry have swallowed the poison Al ! iy e e Disston Snook was a met system for everything. . J a5 @ platform must appeal strong- | ¢o. the Russians to make a few more 1 dreadful weapon America has when he made up his mind ta i appear difficult, even for the Said Mayor Quigley at last night's e N A Military Necessity. must be absolutely sure sty I > - 3 2 el A e girls nowadays are so fault, justly, with the platform| the ifartford Courant of a German i "\' of the Japanc Lttituds ‘m- denendant e ths ook b I AL AR i Sl ) iy a man unless he is indispensa victory and smiles.”” There is no such A ! : action of the 1 States ve- | miuri, “‘that the press comment on ble to them. Therefore, T must Martin is fortunate. too, in hav-{ tning us German victory or German \ n 2 ticket severa ' N 3 make myself indispensable - = = 2y th him on the ticket sever \I smiles, Mr. Mayor, but a lot of peo- yorts is now recognized by the Jap- i 1s generally been very sensible. Fb Bisns m)mh‘\ e T men whose reputation and qual-| ;1o wil agree with you anyway, es- press as strictly a war mea st editors recognized that the new night school course in house- FACTS ABOUT THE AMFRIFAN NAVY | make them ideal cundidates. | jocially as to the first part of your | U Comment s general, but var asure is an inevitable necessity to hold enginesiing Then he be- . LAVEL. lve in mi particularly, P tone. The Tokio Herald of Asia, war-time Amecrica were es- zan calling on Sasphia Blunt 2 S e | se ; o S : S § A 1 BY LMBUT. FITZHUGH GIt James M. Curtin, of the Com- | & leading article, = : Lppre ¥ pirit of The fi evening his discov i T T United States government's action, s Wilson to avoid as far as cred that the parior closk e e fee SN Ay e | ry Lauder, speaking at a mcet- | placing all imports and exports un- | le infurlng the commercial in- | sn't working, and, whipping i and Professor § ndrule- | Milwaukee, sald: “Don't sit | der the license of the War Trade ts of the Allles and wnoutrals by | out bhis little box of pocket Seago“lg Dudes rincipal of the Sacred Heart - 3oard, has cxcited keen Interest in esiriction. The same sen- tools, he repaired P back al vour five and criticize the | | Ladien neSiction 8 samc he repaired it license control of exports and | the new restrictive measure of Amer- this country There is little room foy 1 was evident In the Gradually Sasphia and her sovernment. Be up and doing some- | qouit that this measure will affec nes los his country. There mother came to depend on him S dam BeasunIuc ks o venI LI - e SR i d scOxactio n S IS AL SN : ot \ | thing to help it. We who know the | our trade with America In a vers . marked difference hetween Thevt &0t in the: oyl qiftel < blessings. Such divine joy must there | which T as an older officer was perd reciation of plen | situation don't hesitate ¢o thank ‘Goa| Serious manner. It has been oMmelal el i e btomard G RA RS e e lave beon in that single fig-leaf. Yet | mitted, nay compelled, to - wear, go B. T, Garfney and Iidward O Iy declared in America that ev ; asure 1 toward the him to attend to broken window how could the poor devil fully ap- | Decply irvitating indeed was the fact preciate his freedom? What did he | that each had its set and proper pos for President Wilson.” Good for 5 rne, members of the board of fort will be made to avoid ¢ Noue of the excited cords, spigot washers, know of boiled shirts, cornfed shoes, | sition on my bosom 1d woolen under-ticklers? ‘But this was a bare foundation tq | You, Harry! Though you're mnot .a | pegessary restrictions of t with which thev regarded the I'm becoming indispensa- Such is apl to be the substance of | my misery. In the concentrated mels e PHeblt i e conversation in the Flagship’s ward- | ancholy brought on acutely by the in« when he callod, Sasphin’s moth room after an arduous day on the | sufferablec expense of procuring sq £ trade resulation (canibe DUl the peoplelae How acolstomad to all er hung up his hat for him and range, when ear-drums and eyes have | large an outfit I hecame frantic whilg STl conndentialiy niia oo heen tortured by vast explosions of | seeking to understand its use. To my You're a real treasure around a sreat zuns, and patiences worn raw | Lorror I found there were 54 sepai< hatigos Zol hapdsana alll aadias in remorscless pursuit of the clusive | ate and distinct phases of social ing I so often say to Sasphia, I Lullseye. Oft comes there the tale of | tercourse for which I must know thq don’t know what we'd ever do (me who weakened appropriate garb. The first wag without you, and, in fact. I He was found by the police. Te | “state occasions at home and don’t see any reason why wa was nude almost. He was shivering | abroad’; the last, “Ordinary social should. Mr. Snook— Disston ind discouraged and fretful. Also | occasions in the evening.” In be< there’s something on my mind he was mad as a hatter. Yet his ex- | tween—oh Jehovah! that T want (o say to vou." planation of such disgraceful conduct “1 wore epaulettes when T should i for the ! palaomos Disston Snook waited witl was lucid beyond possibility of doubt. | have worn shoulder marks. I put on ind far between, who pro-| war that ‘““,‘W,h.”” e __”‘“‘ eves downcast modestly, won- || Snid he, in effect I was an off medals and tails when dungareeg : ; : tect in the new American | fime an imperative necessity ‘“( taon dering whether Niagara Falls cer in the Navy. | clung with ten- | would have been more fitting. I pa< Somebody ha S the ; rulation an anti-Japanese | mxmh.:af of this country and of the or Atlantic City would make acity to the tasks set me hy author raded in sword and gloves at mesg nackerel off Cape Hatteras The on the part of the Washinzton | world 5 the better honeymoon ity. I labored with zeal and indus and took miy six-shooter to a funerall nac cvidently is the springtime ment. ‘We should fully r \ Valuable Tesson. “Mr. Snook--Disston, my to achieve that which was obviously = “But why waste time to speak with \ of seas.—Norwich Record. nize America’s: extreme. solici ReR TApan . dyerner savs R Tliere danghter ran off this afternoom my duty But (two sohs and me now? . War, you say, hag greatest suffering which has| . procure bottoms for transportis erfix sound sensc in the remark of the and married that shiftless RS Al hay e . e e e, 5 & o s 3 e of the new long- | troops and provisions to Jiji recently that to Japan e new Jack Fist But the house “Tt was the uniforms. There are | uniforms. nothing but plain servicd ted mankind. Of suffering is | is that from 40 or 50 . obviously it was to et this urgewt | Americar ule restriction ‘is a lesson wouldn't scem the same with- 47 of them you know Actually use and—and—you say =o long ag 6. Christ ¢ t o he wild he moment that decid that should her be welcomed than out you, Mr. Snook-—there's a complete and different wavs in which | the war lasts?” voui do to shoot as 1o sacrifice part of her foreign tru e feared.’ Almost anything that! dozen things that need fixing an officer can, and is at various times, IHe swooned, foaming and mutter< e e onldn’t hit hatever harm thereby done to our | will check the tendency of the Jap- right now. So, if vou like, you stpposed to apparel himself accord- |ing in his rage and disapbointment London 1 e dod andlingan try B ix ref meso to succumb to the provincial can baard here with me and I'll ing to official specifications set forth | For he had the& very day resigned our enemy s i - y F unir | self-content which war prosperity has only charge you eleven dollars in the service rule-bhooks. his commission Crucified One gave us an ex i Norwich ot \ ¥ recogniz al ! brought to the inhabitants of these a. week These 37 different methods of Which Is as true a tale as Adam's should be welcomed by all Disston Snook slammed the adornment are complicated by 26 | and infinitely more pathetic. front door so hard after him " that it broke 211 the windows in the front of the house ho hold allegiance to the German ! hui a handful of our men are if flag and in these times of stress and | this great tle by which the enemy Catholic school, for tax col- The convention also showed ion, who ‘were nominated to e B e i were Thomas J. | CitlZen of this country you have given | we have no doubt whatever as . embargo, has been revealed in sle,” Disston Snook thought to g n‘ | some persons who- are plenty of food sincerity of the -authors of that attitude toward the v ore- himself after three months had Rplistrateos HoleEb G Othots. | ¢ st i statement. It is at the same time . striction. One reason fou pro- - L { k hard for us to see how the new sys- | vailing sober spirit is, of >, that GOOD FRIDAY. A CT e tem FACTS AND PANCEES. n force without seriously interfering =orts of restrictic me »s from fixus, passus. et sepultus est” E y with t watural course of business ' America and ngland e new ruc - and was 1 t, which used tc aterially redueir ¢ volume | moasure is nothing new fo them; it vl e ow walks like jons. Tt is, thercfore, only ' is rather what they have been ex- uneasiness is widely pecting to come for a long time. ere, and info i hare some of the spirit of sac- | ture um up briefly and We d ' gns t on coming from America in this endurance of the peoples | Iy, the supreme sacrifice, made | \car S & is certainly not of a n: all the belligerent countries, They | a dachs g Daily News taken from the Roman | well-knowr gotten " ture t 'n that uneasiness. X sparing themselves, spiritually han mineteen hundred years least, for the extreme condition of | also?—Don Marquis the 2 N 4 et B 1 commemorated today by the : SDL cannot agree with those. hap ening Sun ed world. This is a day of | tle no one will ever | IS d upon to undergo such tor- the Redeemer endured civilized world today inflicted ! even our enemies k to entert Let us, then, try to emulate | stccess ¥ 01 b ands Am t £ tro heir sincere [riends. Business men this day, and pray with| i . . ] 1 iation f seem to be 1 at the effects tper; rorelve: fhem, for ] I yuntry will and of t{e war rresistibly wide- w not what they do™. : ry particularly | nz and Japan cannot stand (Copyright 1918 by George . 1 , ! . threat orl ture which look in splendia isolation and eoxag Matthew Adama) struggle are not able to repress their | is endeavoring to break through, bui country is fo S as its principal market ated comfort while the rest of the feclings they have the privilege to | we realize more keenly than we eve A YEAR OF WAR. var. the wisest course thag As i domestic iudustr : World is in travail = = pply for internment. ~In front of a | reallzcd before that it is our fighty awspaper office in New York a Teu- | Anxiously we watch the blows tha{ ton read the report of progress in|are falling on the British and thq Him Down. But Tf TIe's or suppos Our flag Stars | Hindenburg's attack and eheered. An | French, for they are blows that ard followed is to prepare for f v ge number of one.—Norwich Bulletin S (Of vhe: countrs RSl pr ooy gear has passed since that | \ Waterford con- | will be Immedia Guy. Call a Cop. and Stripes and its colors are re American standing near struck him | being resisted for us as well as fox ¢ (Waterbury Republic white and blue. ‘The man Mving un- | on the jaw and a policeman arrested | the people over there. Our dangeq that one \ndidates was hit | able be hard hit il | vou hear ving voice ' @er that flag who is not for it ishim. Tn court he told the judge that [ is acute and our fec e se s el e } I £ against it and he does not deserve | he meant nothing aginst the United | This is no time for trifling. The prog Wything that is lous or dis- | gontfe treatment if he shows it dis- | Stat was giving voice to his| German had best hide himself and L knock him doy This is 10 ! respect. We have internment camps | feclings against the Allies the Bolshevik fool who callshimasiy enemy aliens. If there are any Jur army is small over there and |a pacifist had best keep mum. od *Friday, 1917, the United s forced into the World War. le date when we took the | cerning tection riots there savs | 1 Another industry t will tep, and it is indeed fitting { on the “Irish | ning, w h chief when we observe the re- e na confett of the amniversary of that: parentiy as a mea - partial failure &gle, the fight r'or“ wents, —New Haven Register, E Il be a scrious blow to our ' lime for hemmiug and hawing g | for