New Britain Herald Newspaper, May 4, 1918, Page 6

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8 NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, MAY 4, 1018, Lo X ld. Ift a gun. And that is just as it | FACTS AND FANCIES. | . | Wrong, Abje. It means “One From Magargal, George B. Cgtis, ew ritain era should be. Auch those who have 5 4 ™ | Many,” symbolic of the United States Flower, Leland Pierce, nc;'fm - g roitoll Don’t tell 'em to buy bonds until I ‘l * ! heing made into one great nation out William E. Baker, K. J. Fiffman, HERALD PURIISHING COMPANY. been. granted’ deferved classification, | ;¢ 5,4 ecause buying bonds never own C’plcsk of many Httle colonies, A. Traver, Stanley Hunt. Proprictors feel that their families are dependent |y, It tickles or rather feels like DEAR EDITOR. The C.. I.. Pierce compay mpm'fi ™ fued dally (Sunday excepted) at 4:15 p. m., | Upon them, it seless to discuss | scratching where the chiggers land- e Wl FI]R BDN[;ERT HERE | that the demand for seatshas bec at Herald Building, 67 Church 8t what they would do.. were Prussia to |ed When you went to the picnic. Latusikacp the slow il Ol alo Several amusing little stories are very great. Only a few scas are still tered at the Post OMce at Naw Britatn | succced in breaking throngh the Al- | Fouston Post There is not one loval citizen of New | drifting back to this city from "the seipbisiine e C 0Tl | oy ”I\": as fecond Class Mnail Matter. = 3 \ i 1 . 1 last registrants who went to camp. (‘horal society have decidedto Sell iak Med lines. That would mean that we | Britain but who fecls a thrill of £ of theoncert-a The “stavrs of the diamond” don't | pride as li { the Stars and | One concerns a man whose working 1 i 1 the theater the night itvered b carrter to any pare of the eity | Vet N S Il G L o5 atih ars and | - 5 i e Y or b eritt1iNE Becription for paper fo be sent by mail | slon of this count and then everyY peal big leaguers nowadays are the | Park; and who is there who would | tensive as it was ambitious. Askede bearers to standing room payabla in advance, G0 cents a month. 8700 5! yoar. man, whether he has a family or not, jmen in the trenches.—Meriden | not give his lust cent or his last | What branch of the service he had S()mh t(] New B]’]tam e would impulsively take up whatever | ltecord ounce of cnergy thal this zlorious | rather join he responded: “The ar- i profitable advertiaing medium 1o g 5 5 ] " fing “‘shall never touch the ground?” | HIrv.” “Why do you want to join the SO ofty Circulation books and weapon he could find and prepare (o e e ey s e [ rocm always open o advertisers : . - If Locre had been “Lucrc the | Olive Kline, soprano soloist at the sl ol defend hix home and dear onc X AL " 1in War Savings Certificates, do all | tenant “Because they ride horse- . : Iluns might have got it.—New Lon- 4 Red Cross concert next Tuesday [Herald whit be found on sale & Hota | There would be no choice about it | " you can for the Red Cross, the Y.!back,” replied the new soldier, y 3 Her: B, New ‘Yori Sity: Poard Waik. At | were such @ contingency to arise MG AT fhe iR of (G and Whol Sais [BEEANOther, ot from INew Britain'®is (L SHc WSS SGeDrEIAEon Fhe i SoRe /s » City, and Hartford Depot 4 vation Army overseas . depgrtmeni, . credited with 1oon when word came from the New= Why not adjust oursclves. then, o e replying. when asked 0 . B DL : S e number of Americans going | make surgical dressinis, knlt, do all | What he wanted to he assigned to, | Eritain Choral society that they had . SorTrrons cAtu such an eme before it | o lsurope this vear breaks the rec- [You can for, in the werds of Captain | “Well, I was in the Home Guard hack | Peen disappointed "by their soprano itorial Rooms S actually presents itsclf? Let's not jord, and it is not tourist travel | Keene of the Canadians who recently | in — and if it's all the same to | “Cleist and that she was needed to (Continued From Fir i B el Toolll lbursalves any| lonser We've | Sprinefield Republican spoke here, there is no such thing as | vou I'd like to get into that again.” i ) Sdli o RO S o — “doing your bit”. And it will be so - W. S S nuch to build up the organization mot hearc s e and agnin that this R | i Te = . e o B Ohe ko for revublication ot ailipsws || errdiltieald binielaldieE The kaiser did about as much to |much casier if you put the personal For obvious reasons the young only «of Tennessee, but of othor | Page). credited ta {t or not otherwise credited | is (he las German struggle. | prevent the awful horrors of this men outhern states, He comes nirth & I i paper and also the local REWR |\ \jtar has heard that sime statement | war as Nevo did to check the burn every year since the war began, but i of Rome by his fiddling.—Nor- [ own boy who is over in Irance, or ihitereat in sl wich Bulletin. your neighbo boy who used to run 5 Vearlarn | 5 Y errands for you so cheerfully, or that W, | - e self, are in uniform, one being an judge who ruled. khaki clad youth who a few short Mr. Shinola . one section of the Allicd front or an- | that a woman has a right to wear | years ago used to be your paper oy, profirfetors element into this work. Just consid- in their late "teens and very early er that yoyr efforts will help your | twenties are taking a great deal morc 2 3 B the special request of the Comcil ot 4 National Defense. Major Smith's two sons, like hims the war than they each succeeding vear he has seen Germany strike some new blow at DhatOlavelana Tt e R of the shoe shining estab- S X RO RN A e S Ha : Rev. Laughlin MacLean Watt, : | for shising tan shoes. when they | et ] Rev. Laughlin MacLean Waty, M, want to.—New Haven Union cral months ago, who soliloquized can shine black shoes for a mickel? | i \ s D DLEES R, G T e R of the Balkans. In 1916, sia was { S FHon o after the des ¢ — | thusly a short time after the death of poes the tan polish cost more than i ; 4 speaking under the auspices of the overthrown and mnow the Hun rulec Aud congress i pproaching the | his invalid mother, hix only near rel- yjack? \Well, Mr. Twoinone, it's this SR v g Committee on Public . Informatiof 6 trying to capture Calais and Dover. | time when thene will be meetless | ative Well, lbm’;uuu: LNMENEOtIn0 Mhvay Mo 1 Aee iiete inxela larser mors | o 3 . i { will give the people of Connecticut & day.—Bridgeport Telegram. | one !v:nmw ehind who cares for me and - centage of tan shoes worn, und hesides | 3 thrilling story of what he has seti = 80 i i e DO " they know they can get a dime. No | and heard at the front 1 tel ¥ antc NS o . < le pa o make the orld betler for LGhald N9, > 3 - ‘ Y 2 R anc Lo L e Italian citizens t this city LLRD G b o Rl SRR ORIC R SEL ORI 4 o) W e B G i1 Costs Th e | 4 - : manner in which the Allies are mests WS g 3 ing the problems confronting our men, everybody thought a shake-up | - “Over There stantial subseription of $110,000 for t rtford in the police commission was about . i Major Watt was chaplain to the (iors UOLEINE el War Department means by proposing | piperty honds.—-New Haven Register. | ti 1 ounty commissioners to 41 IS been a vear now since any | o Sl don Highlanders and Black Weiliy an unlimited army. 3 e ; \em to cugage prisoners at Conous disruptions have been ' re- L ) e Tinapedn aonw of fho wie ported. T : . the Somme, the Ancre at 3pmentierdy . == - > : E , R - — o 2 and Ypres. He is a Highlander of Jave you heeded to your count tween the White House and the Po- | a: is the lahor situation. Already = q : e L s 3 3 5 : 4 2 " Al ; the Highl: s, ¥s the bagpipes b1 This means YOU, Mr. Sta Ring the Liberty Bell! tomac will be much more decorative | prisoners at the jail are being taken COMMUNICATED. fand e Regitiehlandary KDlagaRih SoEDN than acres of barracks there in which | to the new jail site in Newington each — SncNeN She o o 3 el o [NRG S Iepn to house civil service clerks.—New to hegin the work of cleaning up LY TO REV. MR. STEEGE a famous Edinburgh church He king up arms in defense of your Last call! Buy a bond! York Sun The land e nalnobodyt haslsuttsred Hit b KLINE. went to France on Chri €, irtillery man and the other in tge engineering corps. ¢ other. In 1915 the Kaiser conguercd | her skirts as short as she pleases, that lonesome boy yvet in his Jishment Russian Poland and the sreater part |Knew that the women will if they | 'teens, noted in these columns sov- . dime If we are to defeat such a mighty Toe, we must be ready o put into tho | e S fight not only every dollar we own, | registered the proof of their patriot- who have Rbih 57 =vime Ve oriatenaur but every drop of bicod in the veins ism, |(n:! ’nnll\ \‘xt\v (:\‘- l'Lt'(>|11x\\|| ‘m keep Hn\*\'::l:\\' in Old Glory. S vive or perish with my country. |of our manhood. That's what the | G0 Gugliolmotti, but i > 3 ; i rmers have peti- THE LAST DAY. A flock of sheep on the grass be- il to work on their farms, so pme, who are forced to desist from s tive land, on account of depen- e s AT now begins to look as though the op- Joseph G. Mann Believes FEnemy - 1914, and served for a time at (i ey, or other sons. By the Uncle Sum goes over the top. The people who are doing most 10 | position of the Newington people to Language Should Not Be Taught. sing the role of the skylark in the '1\‘|‘-”\1~"l base hmmm\_ iv»m h he calls prolong the war are those who think | having the jail located in their town e e cantata “The Swan and the Skylark™ | “the -‘-“li"' SEDOLIRSTLan 0D — the war is about over.—Meriden | was the result of honest sentiment, - Mo un g | bnoMep AL oo Hig el nliogne attached fta How did you like the soldi DedlySJournal: rather than logical argument To the Ed ¢ oy e Although her managers had prev- | the Gordon Highlanders., Soon fthej jshed. But if vou have not done E e the Tditor of the New _Britain | j,ugly falled to agree upon terms | call came to move up to the front and minstrel show ; Herald 5 e i ey ! ; shell Peac rumors from Switzerland According to one member of the ™ “‘m‘_‘ e . | with the society for this same en- | Major Watt got his first touch of-shell pite of Rev. Mr. Steege's plausi- | pagement, Miss Kline put. aside her | fire. After a leave of absence, Major and Scandinavia do not,get the uat- | olice commission, the apparently pie . i 3 - i Lo Ludendorff set out to conauer a | Soreiec stundards of Willam Hart and oy O the American Lutheran | snted to appear, and started back to | Wateh. Thelr ranks had becn res Pvou that Liberty Bond, so you |°rS for the Kaiser out of barbed | peace for the kaiser—Springfield Re- | ganiiel Bamforth, in which the or- yjeve that e tho of German. 1 be-| New York to prepare for the concert. | plenished and broken again and | wire publican s e e fij:_‘ “'\!""m'(”"‘n‘“("{'):‘:p“'_z‘l‘l’]“‘“:“i“'\";\"‘v The Choral society and New Britain | a%ain. They were in the famous the latter received only 85, is not faaet, net evch in wpiiaihee: wa s ovea e Nis dOe 1 ber|] e ileat where HMadne SR Uy ; 0 : appearance: : consideration and will give her a |been for a short time in 1916 with significant as it looks. e explains until time and righteousness shall have | negrty welcome whon she ppears [ the Gordons. There was not in thig that Mr. Bamforth was vanked five redcemed our worst enemy from the | ext swook ; ; RO 'IN”*)“““"‘ ity & itving Sradti points I'wa than \h P:nr\“ ,’,‘,(\( .u\.(: curse of Germany's present guilt, it Born and trained in America, Miss | except. the soldiers. The Cloth Hall ofia GifEencR IR LR SR ALl o Iseens foline ingt: Cog i radicalii) a5 e | Kifiie s)o1e (bTithe! mostipopiilariss | alitamotin bulldiig Snotadiafon S i | that it is likely to go undisputed— | Bamforth belng a’ much ¢ ilo ar measure. at least, should our|j.ano sinkers before the publc to- | beauty. was a heap of broken stofis n. You have witnessed their | | and therefore less strong and agile Government even, put the German | aay: in fact the, demands for her|and the iathedral lay fike n.sill- Norwich vening Record A pade, their drill, and you are con- Now if that mountain were Kimmel | = LN than Mr. [l It this is so, thon’ language under the ban of prohibl- | gervices in concert and festival work | wreck with bare ribs tosthe weath- there was really but little choice be- tion i en Rl sl lie om0 e o two mer T sk ability, True S Elcaney et POSEECR £ as 5 she C ooyt twolmen o desk L True Am ans will, at this cruclal | jpliged to decline a flattering offer Major Watt says, “The German will since it would indicate only two polnts ; period, spent no time explaining the | from the Metropolitan Opera com- | only understand licking and HeAk difference in their examination other good use intended by their more or pany made her at that time but | mighty hard to lick, because he thinks ways, :"’f”_f»‘””"‘:_““';“'*’"‘ll' clinging to "}f which would prevent her leaving New | goftheartedness is softheadedness. agd . . © Clavton pnguage of the German “fathers’, | york during the opera season. Prev- |perhaps he is justified as he holds# ! he roadway at the mnew 2 secause every ounce of true Ameri-'{ jous to the opera Season .she made | nis own lond ‘@nd forty-nine-Asei bridge is badly in need of repairs and canism is today needed to circum- |4 tou; with Pasquale Amato, the 5 noted baritone of the Metropolitan unless they arc made soon there Is an vent the treachery in America of the t in Mvhich they are soon to take( | Mherators must rise cach' loyal citizen | immediate (dansay fofan :l"nm»\uhl}h’ German traitors, who' might be the | Opera company; in joint song reci- e heard a girl say, as she watched | op this great nation—rise prepared to | accident for which the city may be sooner apprchended if every heart | t)1g and since then has been on tour the boys file by: “Aren't they hand- e held liable wore true to the wwle Ameriean | ity the Chicago Symphony orches- e standard upheld by the one language. he these lines appear in print, the ird Liberty Loan will be almost ur bit, there is still an opportunity i pu will find banks in New Britain I len until 9 o'clock this cvening to opular pastime knitting sweat- | | not ple: that it was impossible | you to purchas a bond because — e | S T 3 | As one German writer explains it, many New Biilain scholars | U will find at least one bank N |intend giving thy frmers a helping |1-(. sunk by U-boats if the. matter | b open if you wish to buy a bond. | jand this | were not so hazardous,” a statement | i so reasonable and, indecd, plausiblo banks were closed on Saturday.| How “more American transports would year® ou have secn the soldier boys in ced now, if you were not before, | Instead of Kemmel we could unders THE FIGHT 1S ON ¢ % this country meant business |stand why its worth fighting for o i The fight is on! We or our foe must win! order to raise an army to win this Finland has white . guards, red | There is no compromise,. —no. futile r. You saw boys from New Brit- thought of peace! 2 Already are the battlefields, bestrewn mentioned being Teutonic specimens. | with soldicr dead, and some of them . our boys! ben it instituted the selective draft = 2 | guards and blackguard the last | giving ample evidence that they | of Belgium ¥ “Tvery scrap of genius concentft ed upon alr knowledge and air su- premacy would bring victory néarer, than we dream While the Allies think they can reach standardization in aircraft, the German never goes to bed without wondering if a carpet # tack in the tail of his alrship womit improve its stability, “We shall win throngh the mate= rial resources of America and Britain the undying courage of the remnai® in France, the resilieney o the Ttalians, and above all through the mystery of the certitude of the tri- umph of right over wrong that Has history a connccted whole Arthur ¥, Bestor, e se¢n stern training for the con- nly a short time ago thes Sore St rembaral oLin e & fine looking lot they | With all his might, whatever way he | W 2 1 tra as leading soprano soloist in their 2 Bl can " | The committee on public informa. Certain it is that if a church wishea| fegtival work., Miss Kline has _ap coming from work every To aid our Victory! Now, with mus- | tion, as well as the United States dis- to teach patriotism, American chil- | joareq In musical festivals in Wor y them at the theater, at cles firm trict attorneys and secret service men, dren can never become true blue | Ciyer’ Chicago, Minneapolis, Oma- With iron wills and hearts steeled to | is kept busy these days running down Americans by the least desree of [ o Bugalo Columbus, Ann Arbor, the task, and eradicating German propaganda. Compromisc. In other words, toufh\n: cte. She has also appeared in joint Tt is 2 slow process, says George Creel, children German at least contributes | (ong recitals with Tita Ruffo, the wonderful Italian baritone now fighting in Italy and previously a wember of the Chicago Opera com- pany, and has also done considerahle work with Paul Althouse, tenor of here. You met them elsewhere in the city. Henry Ford is sald to be plannin sce them in khaki, differ- run for President. If he runs in | we must endure privations, shave dis- ished, Women espe- The poetry of Goethe and Schiller cially should guard their tongues, he S not helpinz us to win the war! Ldvises: it has boen found that much Teaching American children German apparent- | 4t the present time, under whatever ger boys, facing with grim deter- | soi from e Be cheerful partners in a wide world's ! being accom; Detroit to Washington fnation the serious task which con- misery, ‘And never once, though evil's ow | | fads entirely, boys but yet no ja flivver it'll take him a long time to | tress. | chairman of the committee, but it is not to their becoming Amervicans. | i nts them let loose harm can be done by what What are you going to do about it? Its myriad furies, must our courage i v is innocent gossip, In all sincerity A Pretext. bul = perpetuates sympathy | tne Metropolitan Opera company of ve vou hought a hond to help the fadl, | (here should be a warning to New ToFR or gives comfort to. the enemy. | yew york who shares with her the vernmient! equip and 'febd these | UNlted States after the war. If the | Our footsteps falter, or our steadfast | pritain women. as well as men, for Germans in this country, even if in- | jncipal parts in “The Swan and the Kaiser lives billion years he'll ney- gazo | cven in this office one has many op- _’“‘f‘"_"l‘ of '”r‘r‘ o 'lf“f;‘ ‘]‘""""_"‘f; ‘n‘; Skylark” next Tuesday night. Miss ! er get it. Bo turned away from that far distant ( Joihiniios of observing how this form | Afford to suffer gladly any finser of | gijno and Mr. Althouse have made| Arthur K. Bestor, who is to speak goal of gossip travels. Over the sewing Suspicion pointed at them because of | ,gny gong records together and the | #t the War Rally at Hartford on May give it to him? Certainly you Where triumph waits, and Victory's | tapie, on afternoon calls and in ihe >hu|‘1‘)u‘nn\\ :'L;t(;u(l:ml to the ooy | fact that their voices blend beautiful- | 11, 1918, is President of Chautauqua luld. Well, they do not ask for Headline:—*Wilhelm Picks Violets flag, unfurled, “back vard conterences,” women have ”\”"”fi ::":‘);"“”” nm"“““'l"y»" ladly | Iy Wil add to the artistic standard of Institution. Chautauqua, New York e thomselves, but Uncle 8am, | Behind the Line £ S Shows Right and Justice vuling hu- |, plg opportunity to hear much war (et o o bteth o any am | the_concert next Tuesday night and in this capacity Is admirably fit= o B > Sam, | Rehing ¢ Lines.” Now we know : i ; S suffer, in so far as birth or any an- A e cs: | ted and qualified to carry on the man-Kindl sossip and when one says that some- k 2 The revised program is as follows 1 ) o must provide for them, asks You | what kind of flowers to send the I “ "(I“ 1514 he: that Mrs) Brown | tccedent relationship has identified PART I work which he has undertaken as Di= contribute, to share your part of | Kajser,--with a wreath of poison vy | The fight is on In Frande ourdrums | oo™ S 540 "eom her son in France m’ m \\n‘h 1‘1 \\l‘rn(;n\ lr)‘r mul:nmfl:s\lv Star Spangled Banner .... Koy .:,‘nu of the .\\;:.A)\‘\n‘, Division of the burden of financing this war. The | for good measure are heard L e sald, etc. * * = this story|Tian) but tney should. most & (T (SRt SO S Committee on Public Information. ITn i N 7 i) the sea behold our colors | ‘" 4 5 5 give every proof of their present Audienc the words of President Wilson, M hn wiil be over tonight. What And on sei | eventnally spreads and loses nothing il dience | : S = wavel f its sensation in its travel is gne)| [Pl timried Joyulty by Hmely ““’rd’: The Swan and the Skylarl Bestor’s work is “to give to the peos : s iy e ooy its s and positive activities on the side of et e el b Those who offered the automobiles | We have joincd hands with Merex, | o010 “one honest, hut over credu Rk ]": I e e o \Waoning ‘Thoma H;”~ hat \P'lfll-x . of 1n§’uxm. tion \\Y)‘mn . ¢ S America v, 5 S e Siats will®enable and inspire each citizen for auction at o ' Liberty i p oo Sip I8 Chorus, orchestra and soloist 2 rasite, o v 2 n [ anions o those splen- E S € ) B ' o0 play inte gently his par in o Bre you a parasite, content to live i meliplaygroundeide | o an ot pl allies, who are daily giving their lives to play intellligently h 1 th ' 2 serve great credit. Half the proceeds | ol e by the thousands to defeat the con- PART TI greatest and most vital struggle exer went to the Red Cross and half for | That dwell in brother love and equity, scienceless and brutal enmemy, Wwho | o ouotire Norma Rellini | undertaken by self-governing na- and state honestly that you have | ;oo po oo Y Luman hove amd Tomad syms- | t I lared | WLl listen fo mo reason but that of i o = . |tions.” His address will likely prove he your hit, or must you shame- = o e thy, [ “I‘nir”:;':" l::‘”"" '\\\‘:»‘.‘»4 "“H' n;":'\”'“‘ ared the sword and the bullet ]“,"1‘11 ;:x:‘\?a a Come Beloved i Hacndel | extremely valuable to the Four Mina ly make the disgraceful admis- % Now ail the patriot fervor our | that eraibe a8 e e Seiiflaceord e ito N Ecripture i halL | Sl B ute Men of the State and all others Our sole objective is to send men blood U9 SR Q\t]l AHW" r-;\ o2 m_ml“"’f i ad=ment iy ithout mercy, because he Arr. by Zimbalist | Who have been making public ad- enough to win. It will be achieved | Our hope of safety, Dpeace, enlight- | Germans and otherwise mi has shown no merey. i as reprisals for German atrochties Discriminating between the old, so- c Fair Pipers . o % Brewer | dresses on any branch of war activ- if it takes i 8o 3 cned ways 2 e e o s 20 millons Of course this story, told “in eon- cyjjed peace-loving Germany, and ; d That's the World in June .... 11)'~\| : ; Stirs in_ our souls, and leaping i 1 3 b Spross Mr. Bostor was formerly professor Loan ov 1t's not too late. 3 . through our veins fidence” spread to some extent and ,ragent rman military despotism Miss Kline E of history and political sclence In an * | American feels the same way about | murns us to soldiers! [n our unity | on being run down proved to be en-'jg ratuous; it is but the camouflage American University, and hus a broad it. our salvation! In our pride of | tirely wrong. The soldier son had 4f the enemy within our g;ltes,_ to of Water R and comprohensive view of the basio sealh e = e written of army lite and in \‘ln» same | conceal for a while mnfi,‘,.lm: h,de‘; eraian - leh Se R Ve e e 5 4 Anc an's estate, his moble enter- | letter told of some German atrocities. | ous monster, born and bred an | s res ing the Great War and the. issues in- Band-wagon proceeding toward St B Bl g \nln:-‘x:f. i Numerous other instances of such'{rained hy that old, so-called peace- bRl e an Barlsigh \'(vl\':-dell1::m»f17. T id ot adl il g 8 foward | patle of Seicheprey states that his |vietorious strength shall zerminate | harmful and false gossip have been |loving nation. Americans should be | . coocoio o rrpesee A EER o0 o coiers ‘on the Amerlcan plate comrades lost 1,500 in the engage- and grow brought to attentfon. Hence watch oo proud of their own language, SRR aons O'Hara | form today. His clear, logical, force= ment. Maybe they'll let the Ameri- { To such invincible unconquerablo f not only vour step, but also your swhich has declarved to the world the Mr. Althouse ful, convinelng presentation of his Ins o Jive in peace and safety. = might tongue, ! standard of Principle upon which is e he Al terpretation of the meaning of the ¢ i g3n secctor alone for' awhile after|,. all the frenzy of. & madman's W s based our unfolding democracy, to be | Orches S0 o P der yourself worth that That all the frenzy & A 5 § TN ol R e e i Norwegian Dance .......... Grieg [ war never fails to ins 1 < brain Syring s hers and wPs IGUE B WUnE U A Spanish Dance Moszkowski | curately inform his audiences e — Shall beat against it uselessly awhile, | mep with its sweltering days and sul- - enemy: whose nmulxg ‘n’“d\-";( r:;:.«u. B Iy are theve found {n one. man Arrested for intoxication, a man in | Then faint and-fail, withering at last | {ry nights will be upon us. Last No- | must be very doubtful indeed, when | =5 Bh o 14 Forest Ronald | executive ability which is required in away! vember Alderman A, M. Paonessa in- history records that the most despised S A e the Direnbar of e Hpeafing Divisi 3 LURANA SHELDON, troduced a resolution in the councll “Kultur” of the ages was taught in Avlward | coupled with the ability effectively to pause and reflect over | pe sent to the Haddam jail. claiming in the N. Y. Times. \structing the park board to submlt : the German language—the language sl st ce of the proposition | that it would cure him of drinking. a ’“,m and estimates for a public! of the Kaiser, an autocratic despot ¢ 1 Know M .... Old Trish | present to the people of the nation " 1! 1 d Spring weiiiii..... Stern {the message which Mr, Bestor desires K- Sccretary Baker to the z b P (dda wonle LIBERTY BELLS. s ing pool in the North [nc seyond compare ) B : the rnoceeds 0 We think a term in Haddam would wimming ¢ onlgl R iitr e rentain Miss Kline ¥ Germany anticipates levying an in- demnity of about billions on the 87 Supposing one of them came vou and asked for an alms. Would ¢e you to show for it? Are you Q5 0 oud poBsessoniof & Bond, lous, woman, repeated in “strict con- fidence” that Mrs. — had told a | friend of hers that she had received a letter from her son, now in a U. S others? (an you hold vour head Ir that vou sat idly by while others de sacrifices for you? Wake up, who have mnot yet helped Secretary Raker. And every good still time. Take your pay relope. go to the nearest bank, and a Bona! ‘Ciimb up on the Lib- ultimate goal which spells Vie- Don't lag! Your country en- iy a Bond! ITED ARMY. the Middletown city court begged to ses of Congress as . i : ring! glad bells: in joyous tones, | park. Such a report has = T SLT R es Ll stz op mastlanyining Rinsimotle ture loans, e lospite the alderman’s re- | America, who from native or for | Bongs of the army neceded by the = Sy Shccess fothis and JUMITE SI8TE [ Eoselved iaaen! ol later than | sympathetic or sentimental reasons | & The Bitterness of Love ... Dunn To OPEN SEASON 3 Ry ¢ From leake to gulf, from sea to sea st that it be made not later than | £ i 5 & b The Flelds o' Ballyclare tates to win the war. If the Why cannot the American people Bioe vink! glad bells fof Liberty ot the January meeting. It is now | are taught tho German language, are SRt plan is carried into effect | have thei o TR ey g 7 | just that mueh handicapped in their ave their own daily war po race toward whole-hearted Ameri- fiying | canism. “As the twig is bent, the tree’s inclined”. Americans have but o 2 . g 2 a6 laneinga the B Dugliant ative | His Faith SI\:;I\‘ Not Fail Us .. nlu_.-»h Hartford Here Tomorrow Afternoon| e bon foreign-bor yarents be- | (From Longfellow's “Saga of King The [0 in the service, | er! bulletin is the g - ing Fent - . & {hey say | children of foreign-born paren i erican bulletin is the proper thing ‘ A e o Sir. You kmow what ths Sl e S s e ey Olaf™y Ring out glad bells o'er a AN about 4 bad penny, etc Well, T'm , & E each children Chorus, orchestra and soloists Wo carried out the work we planned. | [0 1 ceited, I just wanted to tell | English language. To teach s s rhe of vouns webiete Srenieh sreater works are yet to come, g - ~oq | the language of our enemy is the las ¢ < & ans “,f,(":‘ ! ”\Ixtw\ Joice be dumb, | You however, that T recently read| o TN T ation can afford to en- | Who will sell souvenir programs for Ring out, nor let ti € where scientists are getting nnr::i\e:; cournge: and all churches of what- | the benefit of the Red Cross next = . out of the air. No occasion for undue t idle conjec- Anna Held, the famous stage star, | RINE out xlad bells: thy stirring tones e Turner-Malb, ¢ The Pipers of Gordon's Men 5 i Hammond Mr. Althouse Crack Pratt & Whitney Team off " T - g < Ji by's P P Me 2 no limit to the number | from American headquarters? It | Ring on glaa bells vibrant and clear = SRS Jim Luby oncers to Meet they The friends of Liberty ave here Our long lost friend made a ave their surpius, some their all. | o o0 this town this week and left Vithin a vear we | necessary arrangements and an Am- each rvesponded to thy call yernment can call upon | shouldn't tave very long to make the this one first me of the Sunday sea- son for the Pioneers baseball team, will be played tomorrow afternoon at the Bast Ellis street diamond, af 3 o'clock when Jim Luby's pets will e that number. | now that this country is playing such rough 20 mil- | an important role in the great strug- fhe age limit | gle, , {cross bats with the cra Pratt ever denomination, can hardly afford | Tuesday night under the direction of | ywhitney team of Hartford, conquop- T e torants tremble on their | oXcitement. The Western Union has |, ..y 4t a less radical determination | Mrs. H. 8. Parsons is as follows ors of the Camp Devens team in War has said | is said to be ill with multiple mye % “'(””m“. been getting night rates out of the | G/ ' "ot ot forth by the Scripture Mildred Palmer, Mabel Crawford. | Hartford last Saturdas a question now |loma. Physicians claim that there are | The silent bond- Thy noisy din, public for vears, of gur Master, of whom it is written, | Mildred Robinson, Helen Caldwell, R I e “Respectfully. “He loved righteousness and hated | Mildred Leeds, Julic Russcll, Gertrude | the local lineup, including, Clark of h ; ‘L. K. BOGGS.” iniquity”. We cannot hate iniquity as | Hine, Mildred Goodwin Maine, an inflelder;: Fallon of Vei to be n.n- guiding | fliction on record We always said Ring on glad bells; exultingly, W. 8. S.—0 uncompromisingly as Christians The staff of ushers will consist of | mont, an infielder and outflelder, and after. We will not lim- | that if Anna became 1 she would | mog vears and ather of ENOUGH | only fifty cases of this alliterative af Bath tell of our resolve to win. Ring on: Sing on for Liberty This morning’s mail brought a pe- | should, while, a8 Americans, we give | the following club men of New [ Rajv. ap infielder. The W s to raising an army of | pick out something rare, in preference | Until {hy clear melodious soun tition for ":‘vur dmgr to settle an | pjaysible reasons for German musle, | Britain: give promise of mreatly strengtheni U men, or of twice that num- { to measles, mumps, or any of those Have reached to earth’s « remotest | argument, for \ i 'vl"m'”\, and the (Germin liupuage by W. P. Nickerson, A. H. Parker. A.|the home tcam's lineup. Those old = 3 bovad Unum’ means “In God We Trust” | smerican improved, or “made in|A. Marsh, Robert Skinner, Horace | favorites, Schroeder, Goeb, Lynch If necessary the United States | common sicknesses of ordinary mor- WILLIAM GILLEN RODGERS, | while B is sure it means “In Union | Germany Hancock, C. W. Sweet, S. H. Raymond, | Dudack and Begley will again be Pall out every man who is able to | tals ¥ t Is Strength.” —JOSEPH G. MANN. H. C. Humason, H, Forbes, H. C. 3 4 (Copyright) séen in a Pioneer uniform.

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