New Britain Herald Newspaper, April 17, 1918, Page 6

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNES?)AY, ‘APRIL 17, 1018, \ 3 - b 1 ew Britain Herald. HERALD PUBLISHING COMPANT. J sucd daily (Sunday excepted) at 4:15 p. m.. at Herald Building, 67 ¢hurch St. t tered at a; the Post Office at New Britaln Second Class Mall Matter. Mivered by c for 15 cents crier to any part of the city a week, €5 cents a month. bscription for paper fo be sent by mall, payuble in advance, £0 cents a month, $7.00 a year. pe only nrofitable advertising medfum In the city Circwation books and vress Toom always open to advertisers. 2 | ¢ found on sale at tlotas- 2d, 42nd St. and Broad- | / City; Board Walk, At- Jiariford Depot. l —— | TELEPHONE CALLS | stness Otfice - .. i itorial Roo) Herald wiil be ling's News St way, New York lantic City, and o of the Associated Tress. q Pross is exclusively entitled for republication of all news credited to it or mot otherwise credited in this paper and also the local new published hereln. Member e Asociatc to the us | civilized world is tending 0 republicanism, and our own reat republic destincd to be he guiding star to all nation: U. S. GRANT. 1 o STILI, AT IT. [Che ich “Hartford thought teemed Courant”, we was convalescing m its chronic malady of complain- about the postal Iy has suffered service, appar- for it i with §1 a relapse ke out again this morning following editorial wail: “The ‘Waterbury Republican’ f Tuesday sadly remarks: “‘The post office department lept 80 hard over Sunday that it ad not waked up until late ves- brd New Haven, Hartford, pridgeport and other Monday ewspapers of the state rambled ato this office late in the after- oon some will probably ar- ve this morning.’ “The ‘New York ommer aysi— “his paper has had an in- inate knowledge of the post of- e service for many years. Nev- r ‘in its experience hag the de- very of letter and newspaper ail been so wretchedly slow fha unroliable “And the ‘Hartford bmarks that the ‘New egister’ of Sunday arrived at office yesterday, Tuesday, ong with some papers of Satur- hy. Haste makes waste, but o post office makes money.” r the benefit of the *‘Waterbury ublican™, “The York | nal of Commerce”, “The | ant” we beg to state that this is year 1918; that this country for vear has been engaged in the war of all and that people are occupied with i ¥ % and Journal of Courant’ Haven and New and a test time; n most problems and serious difficulties, childish for contemporaries onstantly bems bit newspa- a like the men- ba to petty matter as the late arriv- Most newspapers in country nowadays ting their energies toward assist- he Government as far as possible | | they cannot find time to indulge his kina fault-finding. We d not for a even insin- | that have been ng in loyal support, but what we h is that we can’t for the life of gure out where they find the to write such stuff. We honestly . that one of the contemporaries cut-and-dried edi- handy, it about the find fault about a exchanges are so busy of “noment these journals subject always of a “filler” Is on the that when in neced es ih a otiice “stick’ or two THE FIRST BILLIO e Third Liberty Loan has reached | mark. Telegrams are | the Treasury de- frst billion ing hourly into nent, indicative of the enthusiasm hilent throughout the country over | s of the loan. This is the to the German drive. own state, Hartford, the capital has a splendid exalple for other +oversub- here is every reason to be- will likewlse before meeting last night in k. M. C. A. of the captains of the us teams assigned the smen to solicit subscriptions, the of co-operation and determina- Britain “‘over the top” soon most inspiring. And eports of the captains show that team leads We the ¥ progre: try’s reply set communities and by ling its quota pin there that At we o the among o put New was local liquor dealers’ e others by a large margin. from the figures that on day the liquor men rolled up a of $14,000 and that they now khow mare than $20,000, or twice buch as thelr nearest rival. We | ratulate these men on the resuits | have accomplished They have their patriotic endeavors they ave always among the first sist the Government when It help, &nd their work in this re- n by may Wwell be as a model taken jers, Who ire inclined to criticise | times, t the first billion has been W Methodist sembly, nas ! tne the | v Pastors, which wil be made on Mon- cwing pustor of his sonag course New H extend to these noted prelates and to the our will fclks here In New proud of the reverend pastor of Trin- including citizen of New malkers, zage and the only to their mefarious work 18 by notify- | ing the police the minute we anyone say country by the alert for we do mot no Schwab Emergency Fleet Corporation the ri that ancient strongest expression to dat: cured, let at New Britain be lead of the race to reach the se illion mark. The more soldiers nany he Government to fight them T METHODIST FPISCOPAL CONFERENOCE. Bri of New Dishops Beginning tomorrow 1 entertain three 750 the York convenes Unt delegates to New ‘onference which April 19, 20, 18, 21 and mportance is attached to the much as of the one roblems it must deal with wil arrangement of substitutes hundreds of Methodist min ma ar service, end the assignment Tay 1t many night, April 22. task to take New is no easy 0 visitors Bri the 1recommodations, Trinity arranging for stay in lack but to the church, Cook, has succe: his guests who the of nd Wiren n at the homes of congregation. The three mos at the 3ishop York, B of China, Oldham, of distinguished Conference Luther B. Wilsor hop James W and Bishop South Americ ford, delezutes a oordial welcom. city. We trust that their be most pleasant and that conference will be productive of sat- And we takc that are mfi sfactory results. iberty of informing them Britain ty church, whose sterling qual a charming have won him an he esteem of his fellow citizens. ABOUT SEDITION. It is the duty Britain to assist authorities in running down trouble dissatisfaction sprea disloyal persons and others who en- in treasonable activities. believe there are today town a mumber of men in by indulging ay we can put a anything or see an do anything which is disloyal or un- patriotic. country We owe allegiance to and each enemy of is our encmy. Their ence in our midst of and and nation that such action the help nullify speech they We bein, lace in peril. peril by activities v the proper aut ties immediately learn of we are ot doing our duty and w almost as culpable as rerp we the tors Back At His Desk. Of course, its a roll-top Baker ine H The appointment of Churles director-general of It man in the right place Lynn has won such late by being the first to scribe its Liberty Loan quota that we | may be pardoned for resurre ‘wheeze' ’about the Who bought three ships in Lynn and | then left for Gloucester to Salem. This one is from the Boston Dr. Orbison suggested to Mrs. Baton | that she spank her husband on the | basis that it would do him no harm.” | Evidently the Doc was never spanked | on the basis or he would knosw i hurts like everything. The chocolate ice cream soda would fountain menu were 1t not for the gentlemen patrons.—New Haven Register. disappear from the soda Charles 8. Hamlin's declar: that compared to the Kaiser Sitting Bull was a philanthropist, 1s Globe. The death forces on the toll among the western front indi that the kaiser is in no danger of get- ting the “soft peace” he recently de- olared Germany Springfield Union does not wa Towanda, Pa., mon have promised 1o observe one smokeless day a weel. If the Towanda they’'ll veto it. The men wiil about it for the next 100 vea Bridgeport Btandard-American “Our time of trial will not with the war,” saye “Doc’’ Mich women are former German chancellor, Wa think it will. The time of and they'll begin to tence.——~Paterson Press Guardian New York is demanding an ex ation of the higher price of fish, explanation is easy, The flsh-n ers have determiined to monger trial will drives into slaughter, the more | care of of suitable hote! energetic the Rever- members e of Bash- William personality, enviable place of every patriotic right here in | and women | who are giving comfort to the enemy seditious utterances the freedom enjoy and means publicity that it .—Boston German the t cond | ! Ger- | ac itain the Episcopal church and some E here { LSt isual as- first 1 be | for sters | churchmen who have enlisted in of tain, eded will per- D, of We e to visit the the we | ghty | ities, in the ders, We stop hear yone our the pres- must on it hori- them e are | etra- fead- M. the of sub- cting man Post. | ation th, cates nt. wise brag vs. aells, stop plan- The rong- 1t The ofr But on the 1 | ! duty. | deliclous varieties of hey hfty Waterbury is t rea These American who wion e And Then About Just And When And your fric Tiach “Delighted to greet you,” Brings back all the Your how When Things And can H | town.—\Waterhury dollars we will place at the disposal of | i ! iy hav army nur THE low town pro} rog arter tin while ouston the Post mongering is s0 not a backwoods Republican. Was to assert such a necessary self evident fact?—Hartford Times telephone girls © gone abroad to work in headquarters are said to be < the French by their aleri- Lo they can get kai- Tork Evenir vho the er OLD NOME o- thinking tha the Fritz", ap bls mind TOWN, to on gets is ably am; makes 10 vears of rambling, he st realized it's me tiat he pulled up stakes for home. an ask Well, after he has struck the “burg” d settled down for fair, him what he thinks Tdfe's greatest blis: ten str sroaiest to one. he'll tell yvou ictly on the square, youw'll ever if he's joy Inow i3 this: vo! on u're ha the old niore in town ce hoy, nds gather ‘round by the scoro: F1 he; g0 Your triads are ended For each clasp of a I s Ve vo! one appy to meet you,’ ad days banished, of yor rt-ache for- tten: and o'er, hand e vou the stand old town Just wher back in maore. m u're 1o not seem to much wherever vou may go, all ali course place. towns to “run” about ke: when first you dazzled seem v with a the ou're “show’ oon You Yet, soon or late, the Wanderlust for- sak Old Memory, the gone and off “hike.” glamor’s kes you, and again the prompter, gives bis cue, “Home, James!" tra Alzs! how slow cet you where ara ins to you want To hook-up with the joy that waits for you. When youw're back once And vou tread the cld paths as in the cld town more, boy, of yore; ¥ach highway For you With greeting The long dreairy Recede. T'rom the smile and vour When vou're bac on upon and hy-way jov-way of welcome galor days of your e Memory's shore, the nod 4. the is a own native old town ce more. Bread Without White Flour. It is predicted that in 1 vear fiour A cent of —much Ameri ent has meth diced fror wil flon we od the n time tomed to much less than breadmaking. ing wheat brought same introduction of small hand grist- is helping to make the use of whole- ground grains more popular. By this s than practically no wi in this country. larger per take its place advantage of the Iven at the pres- becoming accus- n now 1 be milled r containing will srain to the people we ave in our of sav- Allies At and nills previously used The necessity for the of our about change, the have uso this time, manufacture be pro- the flour can practically a wheat hich has ne composition as the wheat grain elf. Resides of wheat percentage present and prospective shortages whea use more the white breads. meal, effect Into a mixing e D of other the use large the in extended patriotic making necessary flours containing of the wheat grain, roducts makes the cereal grains a There are many tempting and he: an a put one one tablespoonful of white sirup, and cne salt. pint which iled.) b add on; | | ter, and ov of one ourth Sti large Here are su such substitutes peeled dark bread, all and satisfying than By using rye, corn shall he able althful d oats, we saving ggestions for the use of for wheat flour: War Bread. or bread-mixer of shortening, Ralsin bosvl tablespoonful one-half teaspoonfuls of er these ingredients pour one potato water (the water in potatoes have been till it is lukewarm and of yeast softened in of lukewarm wa- pints of Cool cake cupful r in three wheat or Graham flour and one cup- ful light, when hour ries used Mix together thoroughly white bread ful whole of raistn kn it in or instead rise and when ead down, put in pans, and has risen again bake one a moderate oven. Dried ber- other dried fruits may DLa raisins. Let of Four-times-one Muflins. w one cur- one cupfnl pful rye flour, heat fiour, one flour, one cupful wheat bran, one and one-half teaspoonfuls salt, four spoonfuls baking powder, cupful fourt Add of in a 1 of for a similar quantity gives a the protein T o h one water. shortening, and. bake mod D tea- one- sirup. and brown sugar or cupful of milk, one cupful and two tablespoonfuls of melted Mix thoroughly well-greased muffin pans erate oven. One-fourth cup- ca-meal may be substituted of the rye flour. fAavor and adds This recipe nutty content. rich makea cighteen to twenty muffins Buttermilic Fig Bread. Put one end | bowl, add two teaspoonfuls soda stir quart spoonfuls of salt, two quarts of whole serve the sen- | wheat fign ¢ put in place on unti of fl ut pt fo cupful molasses In a large and one tea- add two then buttermilk ] it foams; thick and one ul black bits, Mix together well, cover, nnd set In a warm minutes, Bake our, cuy in ins, v forty-five In a slow oven, RACHEIL DAHLGIE in Good Housekeeping., | arm tha | | bars, | The | category | that | rines, white wheat flour | to | | pel transfers of parts of the entire | { maintain ! which | the | means THE WAGE- INTHE WIN ARNING WOMAN Marie Chair | T National Industrial For On Women's War Work, Committee on Public Ohenaucr, League Woman's Service, For Division Information. (Conclusion) Over 000 the main s industrial defense in review var’” orders, industries have been food and the chief articles of cloth and accouterment have heen named. Some of these 900,000 wo- men, of course, are making the other necessary articles of personal wear and company equipment caps, gloves, heits. tent parts, mosquito and other textile fabrications “war” orders and the calls for woman labor from firms holding princtpal and subsidiary contracts show what the other 600,000 wage- éarning women are called upon to do toward furnishing the fighting forces with the scores of things under the of equipment—tent poles and tent pins, screens and cois, hrooms and brushes. bugles and bugle slings, axes and picks, spades and optical glasses and sclentific instruments. About 100.000* of them are in establishments not popularly recognized munition plants and vet as essential to the waging of the manufacture of guns explosives. Some of the women ing bolts and screws and and rivets for the craft that carry food and clothing. guns, and ban- dages to the soldiers, and the soldiers themselves over the sea; for craft do battle on the surface of the waters and destroy the scorpion craft heneath. Some of these hundred thousand women are running drill presses in locomotive works: others are filling cores in foundries and ma- some are making wire less and other electrical apparatus, and still others are in automobile plants, making spatk plugs and other cssentfal parts for airplanes, subma- and army trucks. Abonut another 100,000 are doing the sort of work which has put them, with the bandage roller and the street-car and theater knitter, in the limelight “war workers They are in the Government arsenals malk- ing or testing parts for guns and other offensive equipment. They are in private munition plants in Con- necticut, New Yorlk, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Delaware, Ohlo, Iilinois, and other States, rolling powder pel- lets, gauging bullets, making fuses, making shell parts and filling shells, making gas masks and rubber band- ages, airplane wings, and war-bal- loon parts, and the hundred and one other things required for offensive and defensive equipment. They form the most spectacular division of fac- mill trained women essen- winning of the war; but are, after all, no more import- ant than the other divislons of the army of 1,500,000 women engaged in the war Most of them have mill, or business drill, and. as with the other 1,400,- 000 in the war-industry army, tie discipline acquired in factory, mill, and mercantile cstablishment malkes them powerful factor in the win- ning of the war. They were not draft- into. nor did they enlist in, the of industry at the entrance of into the world conflict. broke upon us they were already there——trained. sea- soned troops that, without uniforms military organization, have fallen into line each morning at never- failing bugle call and remained in the ranks at the bidding of an exact- ing commander. To the work of other women the war has at least lent the attraction of newness and varfety. Tor the factory and mill trained wo- men in the older industries the war has only intensified the monotony of epetition work™. It has meant less cloth of variegated colors and tex- tures for a Theterogeneous civilian market and cnormously morc of uni- and color for the Army Navy. It has meant fewer met- al novelties and more standardized parts for instruments of war. But the drill in monotony which has been portion of these women in peace time has seasoned them for the more intensified monotony of war-time work. Tt is fortunate for the winning woman” have al- this briet vot only cited and of ready sumiay five passed in of only hats, shovels, as and are nalls as is ma chine shops; and to the tory tial they a ad ranks this country When the war or a form texture and the of the war that, working in close for- | millions of men subject | mation with to draft, there is this godly nuclens of a trained woman’s army to build up- oh as the exigencies of the war com- ndus- now held by men to the capabllities of women. industries” which are supporting the American fighting forces are likewise an indispensable source of supplies for the fighting forces of the allles. As the draft be- sins to deplete the ranks of men in fhese industries faster than they can be recruited from men in nonessential industries and disqualified for mili- tary, service, these factory and mill dvilled women must be counted on to a war-winning rate of pro But the “war industrie furnishing the billions of of supplies for the and allied armies are the ame indnstries (with the exception of establishments equipped chiefly for manufacture of explosty zuns, which supply the daily of civilian population To meet the nee of the men picked industrial troops should he assigned always, but this does not mean that they should be drawn recklcssly from the work of main- taining production necessary for the sustenance of the Nation. The health and fighting efficlency of the \nd Navy itself demands this for the fighting forces are but branches that spring from the selective-draft tion's stalk. Our Taw that we managing our fight for democracy upon the strong- and best branches, but they will long maintain their strength and their health if we make serious In- ds upon the vitality of the Nation as a whole. The fighting man at t tront must. of course, have our bhest Sl e fNrst. He have ail {hat he needs, und he needs more as trial line care and The “war duction are dollars’ worth R needs the fighting care, the Na- are est not ve it must NING OF THE WAR |/ war | Armv | |a fighter than he does as a civillan— | six times as much wool, three times as many suits of underwear. eight times as many pairs of shoes. He must have them hecause of the inevit- able wear and wastage of the fight- life. But the necessity of sup- the actual needs of the civ- ilian population is inescapable and renders it essential that a part of the army of trained lahor he detailed to the work of “home defense.' Because of these facts the people are urged and prodded to dispense with luxuries, to save, and to sacri- | fice. The facts furnish a compelling argument in the thrift campaign. They do more than this—they lay bare to the dullest eve that in this time, when cvery man drafted or en- listed not only counts the equiva lent three six normal consum- ers, counts one out of the ranks of producers. Factory and mill- trained women bhecome such an as It-r‘ in the winning of the war as to | demand the development of a na- tional policy of mobilizing, recruit ing, and conserving their forces. The acts lay bare the folly of trusting to the peace-time method of labor dis- tribution and woman-labor substitu- i tion when the draft and billion-dollar | demands of the war upon industry have rocked and rolled the last ves- tige of peace-time conditions out of the labor market. If in peace times the textile mills Rhode Tsland get the labor away the textile mills of Massachusets, Pennsylvanii | mills lure it away from both, the penalty paid is lost time and an in- road on the sustained earning power of the wageworker and an increased price to the consumer. But when there is a war to win and a nation to sustain and allles to provision, all at the same time and by the same indus- tries, calamity impends unless there is an assured and not a probable, a stable and not a shifting, supply of the requisite labor. TWhether the Nation wlll have it depends upon whether a national war-time poltcy of labor mobilization and woman-labor substitution is developed. Only by the development of such a policy can there be any assurance that men not qualified for mitlitary service and engaged in nonessential industries and the hundreds of thou- sands of mill and factory trained wo- men are engaged under efficlency- producing conditions on work for which they are best fitted. Only by developing a national labor policy of labor distribution can there be any guaranty that labor recruiting and training among wageless women are done in response to an accurately measured need for increasing the number of women in long-established occupations or for forming new divi- sons of the industrial army to take over sectors of the industrial line now held by men who will be needed for military service or for industrial ser- vice that can not or should not be performed by women except as a last resort. As the war progresses, filllng up the depleted ranks of men in the basic industrics will mean readjustments of labor forces in other war industries whose requirements are such that woman labor is available for neces- sary substitutions. If these substitu- tions and dilutions are to proceed wisely, they must proceed in response to the Nation's needs in the war and with mintmum hurt to the Nation's welfare in peace. But to put a national labor polley into effect requires an able, agile, and highly organized Federal agency; for this agency must, in addition to ren- dering lmediately and widelys avail- able information concerning the effect of the draft and ‘“war” orders on war and other essential industries, find available supplies of labor, provide for transportation and housing, cure the co-operatlon of emplovees and employers in developing reason- able standerds of war work. and make labor substitution and dilution experiments in consultation with the manufacturers and workers con- cerned. Tt must recrnit and train or secure the requislte training of wom- en as the draft outstrips the supply of men disqualified for military service and as the experiments in labor sub- stitution warrant. These and scores of other equall important things a national war-win- ning labor agency must do. To bulld up such an agenucy requires money: and while we voted billions for the mobilization of the Natlon's fighting forces, and billons more for mar- shaling the material resources for their equipment, not an additional dollar was given for the mobilization of the requisite man and woman la- bor for war Industrieé until nearly six months after the entrance of t country into the war. Then the De- partment of Labor received an addi- tion of a wmillfon dollars wherewith to discharge its war responsibilities. With this money the Secretary of Labor has enlarged his department’s employment service to war-time di- mensions. But the comprehensive war-time labor policy which he has developed can hecome effective only as Congress supplies the neceded funds. We have not been niggardly in sup- plying the money needs of war. The million given to the Department of Labor only measures the extent to which the Nation has awakened to its imperative need of a national war- labor policy. including a volicy of la- bor distribution. When it is fully awake more money will come, and with it will come a true appraisement and a full utilization of the ue of the wage-earning woman in win- ning of the war of to but of from and the « Msfimate based upon crease in number of women emploved in long-established metal trades plants holding direct and subsidiary war orders and the number em- ploved in newly established or verted plants rates of in- con- STANLEY SCHOOL MEETING. he annual meeting of the Stanley school Parents and Teachers' assocli- will be held tomorrow evening in the school. President Troop will deliver the welcome and the reports will then be received. Miss Fdith Bartlett will render vocal selections, there will be a talk tlon by Miss Sprague and officers wiil be elected. tion 1 i | The McMillan on food conserva- | i ! “ALWAYS RELIABLE” i Those of us who are not St 1 at ing our country. win this great world war, —BUY LIBER in Uncle Sam’s least offer their moncey 'Y BONDS NOW— Store, Inc. | Army or Navy to help schoo!l children will WHITE MIDDY WHITE RIBBONS—Good he require for for halr bows, TLES—Satin caded kinds, price WILTE Win ds Pe Chine Ties at 80¢ each FINE WHITE RIBBED FIBRE BOOT SILK THREAD SILK FOR TH PURLE WHITE BLOUSES collar SHIRT styles or with BOYS' WHITE band BLOUSES—S$1 HOSE—20¢ 1o HOSE—359¢ HOSE—79 —79c the coming Cantata to $1.75 each avy all silk taffeta, molre d 21c to 39e vard org, 25¢ to 50c each; 50¢ to $1.00 pair c to $2.00 pai E BOYS—¢9¢ o T3¢ attached. and 98¢ ench GOWNS Values in this sale up to $25.00. north window until time of sale. Thursday Afternoon at 2:30 them All at one See displayed real bargain and White 1 Croy Do price. IALL THE WHITE ACCESSORIES e BEAUTIFUL EVENING ur $5.00 each BY LIEUT. FITZHU GH GREEN, U. s " An Ol History frankly, wouldn’t a little more variety repeats itself alright, think she’d possible with all rou got day, the U. harbor the latitude she's Just the other 1892, to be exact, town lay in the ralso, Chile. She was a small gun- boat in a large harbor full of forei men-of-war. Her misston was not unfriendly spite of the fact diplomatic relations were strained To quote the records freely, the situation was not unlike that of a peaceful passerby who intercedes among gutter brawlers on behalf of the under dog. Our warship had granted asylum to wretched refugees from the brawl then in progress came TODAY'S TABLOID TALE By Joe Blast January 26, 8. York- of Valpa- zn in some political Resentment When Greek Meets The only difference Cantilever Binding and Roscoe Goop. [ | lLoose was that Binding never | | betwaeen agreed with anybody about anything at any time and would rather have lost a meal than an argument, while Loose always agreed with everybody | about everything and would | have preferred jail to a heated * | discussion. “Mr. Binding." said Axfield Rochester, ‘T want vou to meet Mr. Loose. Mr. Loose, Mr Binding."” “Glad to know you,” said | Binding. { “Yes indeed Loose | “Do you know.” said Bind- ing, who happened to be par- ticularly itchy for an argument that evening, “T've come to the conclusion that the Germans deserve to win the war.’ Loose nodded pleasantly. “Quite so, quite s0." agreed Some of the nicest people 1 know are of German descent. Onoe a man named Schleigenpfeffer paid my care- fare both ways.” Cantilever Binding swallowed hard. and fearful lest he lose his temper, murmured, ‘‘Been a ntee day, hasp't it?” “Blegant. Perfectly smiled Roscoe Loose. Now as a matter had been a miserable, drizzly damp, deucedly uncomfortable day, and still was, and Binding, suddenly remembering, added hastily, “What am T talking about!—I1 mean it's been heastly da * “Terrible,” said Toose, “I thought perhaps vou may have meant that it was a nice for farmers. Cantilever Binding swallowed m harder. On second thoughts the war question, T'm afraid | must differ with you,” he said ‘The Germans are Huns. Do vou hear, Huns, Huns, Huns! ! “Exactlv. That describes them to a T" guggered Loose Cantilever Binding suddenl found himself unable to swal low at ail. An hour later kind hearted lady, finding Ros- coe T.oose ng unconscious on her front pavement compas- alo Iy threw n bucket of said he elegant,” of a day ev ahout at cpld water over him. —_— that | Trick quick, for like the goat American pr bed the situation ; England deciared that | the States South 1 imminent | five. After funity no one himself. of ti It was; but Yorktowr wclk received in Callao, Peru Though no { curred guns { tnder-w i populace { desire | Yankees open hostl were ¥ an to wreak their anger then th mad-dog hate, it on by a Httle kindness | of helple: fugitives As the Yorktown through the crowded masonry no 1 obs of fortress loom a blood-red s against a | shot was fired. No ope n fact though, had been A suspicious one of the Whiie delay military | Atlantic hurri wa | there was nothing to do investigate. Two heavy were found ing heen of the recent | by a miracle | Had the cover cvidently the treachero whole side of the gone with it Si vistory re ending cycles gins go on But s T E tl snare set oise main-eng n was perilous. but 1 ane reasons, e 1ardened inside the isitors was been blow the ve, thank ain of 197 Members teported by Winsted, April 17 224 0 session here today 2 delegates present ting v and this next pected Miriam to th Minnic The report 'of Torrington new lodge, I the and s ¢ 9,600 treasurer will lcdge G used fo afternoon will be chosen Mrs. Hattie Hartford routi yea that lod presidency Raymond of Mrs cretar vear Tonight the In full presence be put on the Chapma in M 1 suite indisputable of 1 hates war America, it i n to was not buttersin day be a period of collar-shot 3 Hand de- ained. tween wag missed pro- atidng telegraphig in and anger r picked harboi d n ha on the o1 what 10w seemed, a orders to leave and land her refuge 1 og etting local savage 1 the was Sort egged handf&l her way the Bt shot a tic s aged black ut no that 5 ed in cylinderé. on \use The t secretly placed there ] will The Mary ath 1y for Soutl ering stop and er b, aboard disaster a sign During Secretary. state sembly Daughters of Rebekah held its It is 10wWec memhersy funds i degree form BIG REALTY DEAIL. real estate deal i way and will in a few day Mrs. M. LeWit 5 to be sold t epot probabl The pr S DRUGGIST. Charles Solomon gist of New York | through Attorney against Rosentein of $212.1 served the papers. has Mort for 5. Constable br a wholes W edges haw- v one Only aped. s was the uman Year e Iness of <lc dvance Mrs. nson 1 one ip of av the worlk rystal Ma an com yperty Saxe overy nkle

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