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|} 4 you cannot s W erve “Over There ” help support those who Do Serve by Buying Liberty Bonds “Over Here” DI'r TO THE EXTENT OF BILLIONS 1l Win the War and What § Is Good Enocugh for Unclej Sam Is Good Engugh for You? BUY CLOTHINGS As You Can Buy LIBERTY BONDS On Small Payments Newest Style Suggestions Ty Apparel of Quality i | Women, Misses and Clothing of Style Men, Young Men and Boys —FOR— Children —AND— —FOR— .00 A Week $ 2 PpOO= NBZCw <=TmME=~ <CW RESOLVE ~To Open An Account Today§ o NEZOW R = Boston Clothing Store 63 CHURCH STREET OPP. FOX’S DEPT. STORE, HARTFORD. Bu-y Third Liberty 1 nan Bonds for Freedom. Buy——Bu_\‘——Buy Now! SUITS Specially Priced for Saturday RACK 1 Materials: Fine Quality Serge, Poplin and Checks. Copies. of models sold for $35.00, $45.00 and $50.00. Formerly sold by us for $25 Special for SATURDAY $24‘75 RACK 2 20 Different Styles Materials: Serge, Gaber- dine Mixtures, Tricotine and Taffeta. Colors: Navy Blue, Tan, Oxford Grey, Copen, Checks and Black. Formerly sold as high as 539.75. $29.75 Special for SATURDAY MILLINERY Style and Economy Strikes the keynote of our Millinery showing. The newest styles at REDUCED SATURDAY. AN EXCEPTION AL PRICES FOR REDUCTION OF TRIMMED HATS 1$1.98 Values up to $3.98 $2.98 to $6.75 SE THE CLASSI Values up $4.98 FOR QUICK RETURNS MEN WHO CAME BACK TELL OF TRENCHES Citizens of No Man’s Land Find War Thrilling Life (Copyrighted by the British-Canadian Lecruiting Missian.) By Captain G. F. Campbell, Of the Royal Flying Corps (Captain Campbell was recalled from India with the Highland Lighg Infantry when the war broke out and after being wounded was attached to the Roval Flying Corps. “The Sol- diers of the Sky” (Davis Pub. Co.) covers two year experience in the air.) A gun jam at a vital moment com- plicated the situatian during my first air attack. We had mancuvered for some time to get our position, the sun behind us and the Huns in front and below us, the sun blinding their vision. Then ‘e led off the attack. Following my leader, I picked out the Hun machine in the rear. It being my first attack I felt a bit windy (nervous) but soon forgat everything but the business in hand. I “pulled up my nose’ whipping down straight toward the earth in a sharp dive. T started a series of zig-zags and spirals, making difficult for the Hun to Teturn bearing in mind that I must keep in his blind bay so that he could not return my fire The Hun was wise and maneuverad also, but I had the advantage of greater speed and height. On and on I went and within 50 vards of him I let loose the firewor 1 planned my shots to enter the fusillage of his machine and after firing a shot burst I saw my tracer bullets entering just behind his engine. I was running at a high rate of speed, pulled up on him quickly, to swear at my rotten luck. Just I had him cold therc was a gun jam To make matters worse, hehind me T heard the Tattle of a machine gun. Thi looked bad for me just then n Immelmann turn brought me ound in the direction from which the shots came to face, as I supposed, an attack from another mach Im- agine my relief when T saw it was one of our own flight, diving ana flying like mad at the very machine I had pursuing. At the Hun he went been and let loose the whole works, the Hun into flan ang stalled, ' today L lege: CAMPS TURN OUT NEW ARMY OFFICERS Will Be Placed on Bligihily List and Called As Needed April 19 student Washington, "en sand or more officers have completed their course training at National A canton ments tional Guard cam will not be graduated and given com- missions, but will be placed eligibilit list, from which in of their rating they will be commis- soned and called to service as the army | needs them. { The men are exclusively non-com- missioned ofiicers and privates of the National Army, tional Guard and regular army or students from col- having military in the | culum. Until called to duly nmen will w white th arms as status. - They service in small thou- who of and - on an order courses cu theso | on of thelr called to the groups. Consequent- ly it 1s impossible present today any list of as was done when the two previous series of camps closed. Any man officers, brassards an insignia will be to “graduates” who has remained in the | camps until today ls assured of place on the eligible list. Late reports to the War Depart ment bear out the estimate that sixty per cent. of the men admitted will omplete the course. Elimination of unfit students w has proceeding practically since the | opening of the camps. Physical | examinations of those who passed ali other tests began on April 9, In each division school, students drawn from tho division organizations 11 be placed in an “cligible list for or elizible list for field ar- to a war depart- ment memorandum. Students fron. ¥ ill he placed on se lists for the same arms. Tt purpose of the War Department return the new officers, so far is practicable to the units from w they were taken r sources v fc Is to s ch UKRAINE RADA. April 19.—In carry- plan to make the Austro-German colon Powers intend to dissolve Rada and to Install an WILL DY JLVE Washington, ing out their "kraina an the Central the Tkraine burstin Nat wishing to leave my 1 got my n jam fixed, 1 and watched the Hun drop, folded, finally a little and smoke. 1t certainly » death. n jam occurring in a machine can put one in and sometimes dangerous atrol until follow: his wing of flum must b spot P oc scout trying, on. tr | | boring with a gasaline engine a | mer dicament, especially if linc and happens to 1 case I worked frantical block and managed to faulty cartridge and then carr In that 15 minutes of fighting we )t two out of the eight Hun machines attacked. he is ov be attacked teed the we By Sergeant R. N. T. Fisher, Canadian Enginec We held 1917, for a gade a & captured 109 prisoners at the salient two weeks in advance. This record-brez fully planned weeks We had rehearsed the trenches, exact duplicate mans’ which we had dug lines We even prepared return nches, as the raiders’ trip back is always most dangerous, the enemy de- voting their whole attention to mow- ing them down. This was done by four- inch hole about five feet below the level of the ground, from our front 73 vards toward the German front line, which lay about 100 yards away. Through this opening were thrust three-foot length of aminal tubes filled with aminol, a high explosiv: A fuse was attached and was ready to explode, the tube rroper moment, thus improvis return trench. Tape lines on side of the aminol tubes were 1 2t before to guide the raid 'm the danger zone. 24 hours before Canadian artillery, had vously on the barbed practically 0 word 20th C: 2d Division. in _January, brigade raid until London-Scottish r the record bri- of ment Ypres Lens was in advance. stunt in the of the Ger- behind our either d the way o the raid, the played contin- wire entangle- wrecking the | ven and the 19th wdian Battalions of Light Infantry, and the 16 engine of the 2d Division went over the to Owing to our intense fire the Ger- mans were In their dugouts. We would | at the mouth of a dugaut, eall upon the enemy to come out and sui render. If they refused or fight, we did not stop to argue, lieaved a tube of aminol into the hole aed beat it to the next dugout. Fach | man went over with a tube of aminol slung over his shoulder. If a bullet or piece of shrapnel happened to hit the tube, he never knew what hap- pened to him. This was carried out along a between 200 and 300 yards wide. We brought back 101 prisoners, all our own dead and waunded, two machine guns and other plunder. We must have killed three times many as we took prisoners. Something went wrong with our 7 vard tube of aminol, and it failed to explode, so we did not have the shelter of the return trench. But we returned with comparatively few casualties not- withstanding. At 6 oand was stop showed but front as ON CANADIAN YLIST. Ottawa, April 19.—The following names of Americans are included in the casualty reeport. Killed: T. Gordon, town, N Died: W. Missing: Wounded ford, Mass A Charles- Morrison, Rahway, N. J J. P. Dent, Bellefont, Pa. S, Williamson, New Bed- | 0’ De Lawrence slass.; 11 Holt, Nashua, N. H. -German rernment, a report reaching the state department today SHOWING UP FRITZ Exploit of British Raiders Compared With Fecble Dashes for Short Dis- tances of German Destroyers, The German London, British na- April against 19. success mine sweepers the Teleg in tegat vily aph, is sufficient i recently, | i CGiermans who hiding. the Rritish fleet in the | German raid N say the British fieet is in Contra paper po w The two insulation and its air circulation. a refvigerator can be made. out that while the Germans in their bases on the Belgian coast ure only 20 miles from the strait, the exploit in the Cattezat was a carefully ; planned operation conducted mors | than 500 miles from the nearest Mmtl on the British ocoast. The enemy, it says, has gained lit- tle new strength for use in the North soa Dby the Baltio situation while British superiority has been Inoreased since the battle of Jutland by the co- operation of the American forces and ithe entire naval strength of the Tnited would be available if necessa Moreover, if the Ger- man naval forces were to ployed advantageously as wing German should have been thrown in hefor and not during or after the opening of the hattle in France COMMENDED FOR BRAVERY, Washington, April 19.—F mem suard of the { bers of the armed naval America s November 4 coast by & commended ! els for bravery ar o duty They are John A. ( Washing { ton; Osmond Park Frs Bath, Me, m J. Henne Cambridgd Henry B o Hopedal ., and Albert I muel son, Minneapolis. camer \ the E ibmarine, sunig pea ar Dan. last, off German toc Secretary votion the army em- right they of the e 3 (7 v sirigerator: © p: its features of a refrigerator that make it either a money saver or A Ioney waster are No expense has been spared to make the Mclee as “heat-proof” as Careful dosigning of ice and provision chambers has resulted in a steady .. Probs and brisk circutation of cold air all through the refrigerator, insuring the utmost economy in ice JIy no other refrigerator gets as much cooling efiiciency out of its ice as the McKeo does. SEE THE McKEE A few minutes &pent in our complete printed description. It alike,” let ns show you how you that a Mckeo will cost you Prices CORPLETE HoME FURNISHERS 40-68 FORD STREET UARTFORD store examining a McKee Refrigerator will nnfalr that is to the McKee—and to yourself, les tell you more than the most «refrigerators are all about ‘We believe we can. convince you could buys you avc one of the many people who think ss in the long run than any other refrigerator $11.00 to $100.00 AQENTS ¥OR BLENWO0S - RANBES OVERLOOKIK® CAPITOL - ICE. QROUNDS/ ALIEN ENEMIES KEEP AWAY! This Is An Expose of the Iniimnate Life of the Mad Dog of Berlin KEENE E K 3 Days MONDAY AISER- THE BEAST OF BERLIN New York Is Wild Over If SE This Photo Spectaclefor Red r Blooded Human Beings. This Child Killer and Wrecker of Civili zation and Humanity. How This Beast Would Spread His Kultu and Destroy Democracy. Guml- 2 mencing . Apr.22 Prices, - - - 25¢c and 50c¢ CONTINUOUS FROM 1 O’CLOCK NOON TO 11:00 P. M. AR T T W R e TR